Saturday, October 26, 2013

'Loyal Soldier' Sebelius Vows To Stay Put, Fix HealthCare.gov





Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius speaks Thursday in Phoenix.



Laura Segall/Getty Images


Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius speaks Thursday in Phoenix.


Laura Segall/Getty Images


This has not been an easy month for Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.


Republican Sen. Pat Roberts of Kansas — who learned the political ropes working for Sebelius' father-in-law, then a Kansas congressman — called for her to step down over the debut of HealthCare.gov, the problem-plagued website where people are supposed to apply for coverage under the Affordable Care Act.


Invited on the usually friendly-to-Democrats The Daily Show, Sebelius was lampooned by host Jon Stewart, who challenged her to a race of sorts: "I'm going to try and download every movie ever made, and you're going to try to sign up for Obamacare, and we'll see which happens first."


And while she was able to laugh off Stewart's opening gag, Sebelius had trouble clearly explaining why, if businesses have been given an extra year to implement Obamacare, individuals shouldn't have the same delay.


Sebelius served six years as the Democratic governor of largely Republican Kansas. She is the daughter of the late Ohio Gov. John Gilligan. University of Kansas political science professor Burdett Loomis says she remains popular at home, despite the hits she's been taking in Washington:




"This hasn't been an easy time for her. The Obamacare rollout has clearly been problematic; she pretty much got roasted on Jon Stewart; but she's been a loyal soldier to Barack Obama and I think she truly believes that Obamacare is in the best interest of the country."




Seven years ago the Bush administration unveiled Medicare Part D, which provides seniors with prescription drug benefits. The website for that program had a similarly rocky debut. The HHS secretary then was former Utah Gov. Mike Leavitt, who notes Sebelius did not make many of the key decisions regarding the rollout of Obamacare. Leavitt says he empathizes with Sebelius:




"It's much like being the pilot of an airplane full of passengers sitting on the tarmac with a series of complications you don't entirely control. It's better to say to the passengers, 'This is where we are. This is how much time we expect it'll take. ... Here's what we're doing to remedy it and here's how it's going to affect you. We're doing our best.' "




Before being elected governor, Sebelius was Kansas insurance commissioner. The Republican occupant of the job now, Sandy Praeger, says the glitches in the rollout of Obamacare are not Sebelius' fault.


"The complexity of what she's having to deal with is massive and in an environment that's been pretty politically charged, to say the least. So I have a great deal of sympathy for what she's having to work through," says Praeger. "I know she's probably very frustrated."


Praeger says calls for Sebelius to resign are totally inappropriate. And in an appearance in Phoenix, Sebelius rejected Republican demands she step down.


'The majority of people calling for me to resign I would say are people who I don't work for and who do not want this program to work in the first place," Sebelius said Thursday. "I have had frequent conversations with the president and I have committed to him that my role is to get the program up and running, and we will do just that."


Sebelius is expected to testify before a House committee investigating the Affordable Care Act's implementation as soon as Wednesday.


Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/26/240839038/loyal-soldier-sebelius-vows-to-stay-put-fix-healthcare-gov?ft=1&f=1014
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With Sonnen vs. Silva, TUF: Brazil gets the circus just ahead of Carnival


There was a time when the thought of Chael Sonnen in Brazil was good ol’ diabolical fun. That was back when the UFC was trying (somewhat) desperately to find a venue to house the second Sonnen-Anderson Silva encounter, and the "Gangster from West Linn" had already pissed off Brazilians for his comments towards Silva, towards all other Silvas, all the Nogueiras, all cariocas in general, every football team from Flamengo to Vasco de Gama, and anybody residing within earshot of the Amazon.

Back then, it was like he was going to be lowered into Brazil for a one-of-a-kind comeuppance -- like he was going there to meet his certain doom. It had a Man Against the World flare to it. The thing was poetic, but it never came off. At least not in Brazil. It happened, less dramatically, in Las Vegas instead.

You know what though? Better late than never.

Dana White revealed Monday night on Fox Sports Live that Sonnen would coach opposite Wanderlei Silva on the next edition of TUF: Brazil. Taping starts in January. And this one is all about slaking that bloodthirst, baby!

Silva and Sonnen have been most uncivil with one another going back to the good old days when Sonnen was lugging around that fake belt. Though he has a fight with Rashad Evans on the immediate horizon at UFC 167, Sonnen eggs the thing along each time he appears on UFC Tonight with little Wandy-barbs heading into commercial breaks.

And Silva? Bro, Silva keeps pumping out colorless videos where he speaks Portuguese into a camera directly to Sonnen, huffily pointing his finger into the lens while a guitar solo wails hideously in the offing. This is meant to be ominous.

Whether it comes off that way or not these back-and-forth antics make the situation simple. These guys need to fight.

Soon enough, at long last, they will. Right after they coach against one another down in Brazil with a group of up-and-coming pawn pieces in which to enact their rivalry vicariously. There will be cheap frills here, and some guilty pleasure. But in terms of keeping good marketable company men relevant? This is really the appropriate way to go about it for everyone involved.

Nobody in North America (with the exception of MMA Junkie’s John Morgan) watched the first two seasons of TUF: Brazil. That changes with the addition of Sonnen, against his arch-nemesis Wanderlei. Just booking the two for a fight would have been good enough. But to have Sonnen in Brazil -- "with security," as Dana White assured him during that meta-reveal on FOX Sports Live -- makes for good television.

And TUF is the appropriate kind of set-up for guys who feast on extended drama. Sonnen, who knows how to push buttons. And Wanderlei who blows cartoon fire from his top and temples when his buttons are pushed. It’s hard not to love the comical upside here. That there's a fight attached to it makes it all the better.


Source: http://www.mmafighting.com/2013/10/22/4866312/with-sonnen-vs-silva-tuf-brazil-gets-the-circus-in-time-for-carnival
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Not Another &#@*$! Pledge Drive

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Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thisisnpr/2013/10/22/236245578/not-another-pledge-drive?ft=1&f=
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Netflix Third-Quarter Earnings Beats Expectations; Stock Soars 10 Percent



Netflix


"Orange Is the New Black"



Netflix on Monday said it earned 52 cents per share, up from 13 cents a year ago, on revenue totaling $1.106 billion, up from $905 million in the same quarter last year.



The company reported having 31.45 million U.S. subscribers.


The results were better than analysts were expecting.


PHOTOS: From 'Arrested Development' to 'House of Cards,' Exclusive Portraits of Netflix's Stars


Wall Street analysts had projected that Netflix would earn 49 cents a share on revenue of $1.1 billion. They estimated that U.S. subscribers would reach about 31 million.


Netflix could be at an inflection point, given that it is reportedly talking to U.S. cable TV providers interested in adding Netflix and its on-demand library and original programming like Orange Is the New Black and House of Cards to their offerings.


Netflix already boasts more U.S. subscribers than HBO, which has about 28.7 million.


Company CEO Reed Hastings said in a letter to shareholders on Monday that he intends on doubling the investment in original content in 2014, but even after doing so the expenditure will represent less than 10 percent of Netflix's overall global content expense.


Netflix shares closed 6 percent higher Monday at $354.99, a new high, and were up another 10 percent after the closing bell.


Hastings also addressed the volatile Netflix stock in his letter to shareholders, writing: "Despite the huge swings in our stock price since our 2001 IPO ($8 to $3 to $39 to $8 to $300 to $55 to $330), we've continued to grow our membership every year fairly steadily. We do our best to ignore the volatility in our stock."


During a video presentation on YouTube to discuss earnings, Hastings said he took the unusual step of addressing the price of the stock in his letter because he believes "momentum investors" are driving the price higher and "it worries me."


Earlier on Monday, SNL Financial reported that Hastings has made about $38.5 million cashing in stock options since the third quarter of 2011, after having halted a trading plan following a stock plunge.


During the video presentation, Hastings was asked about his relationship with Carl Icahn, the billionaire investor who began buying millions of Netflix shares a year ago for under $59 a share.


"He says he likes people who make him money," Hasting said of Icahn. "He's happy with me for now."


Other nuggets from the YouTube presentation, which also featured chief content officer Ted Sarandos, include that the final season of Breaking Bad won't be available on Netflix until next year and that the company is considering making movies, though it would likely begin with documentaries. Sarandos said that Netflix is not interested in streaming live sports, despite reports suggesting that it had discussed such a possibility with the NFL.


In his letter, Hastings said that the company should have up to 31.8 million paid streaming domestic subscribers at the end of the fourth quarter, which will contribute up to $177 million in profit. He predicted as many as 9.7 million international streamers, which would contribute a loss of up to $73 million. The DVD business, he predicted, would generate a profit of up to $110 million, up from $107 million in the third quarter.


Also in the letter, Hastings said that Orange Is the New Black is Netflix's "most watched original series ever" and that it "enjoys an audience comparable with successful shows on cable and broadcast TV."


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheHollywoodReporter-Technology/~3/4EARUHZUR-o/story01.htm
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Obama's tech expert becomes target over healthcare website woes


By Roberta Rampton and Sarah McBride


(Reuters) - Todd Park has gone from steering his healthcare information technology company through a blockbuster IPO to occasionally sleeping on a mat in his office while working to repair the troubled new U.S. government healthcare website.


Park, the chief technology officer for the White House and a top advisor to President Barack Obama, now finds himself among a handful of officials with targets on their backs as Republicans try to root out who is responsible for this month's glitch-ridden rollout of Healthcare.gov.


Five years ago, Park was a private-sector tech success story having led his company to an initial public offering and starting a second one that was attracting millions of dollars in venture capital.


The 40-year-old helped build the original Healthcare.gov website in 90 days in 2010 when he was chief technology officer at the Department of Health and Human Services. The website then provided information about public and private insurance programs, sorted by zipcode.


The White House trotted him out in July to talk up the new version, which is designed to be the main portal for millions of uninsured Americans to buy coverage through federal exchanges, an important part of Obama's signature domestic policy achievement, the 2010 Affordable Care Act.


"I've taken a look at the early prototypes. They're incredibly impressive. And the teams are using all kinds of advanced technology to make sure that that experience will only help insurance," Park said in a CNBC TV interview in July.


But the exchanges' debut on October 1 was anything but impressive, beset by technical glitches. Three weeks later, many people are still unable to sign on and enroll.


Park, the son of Korean immigrants who grew up in Ohio and earned an economics degree from Harvard, has kept a low profile despite being part of what the government described as a "tech surge" racing to fix the website's problems.


An administration source said, however, that Park's work has been so demanding that he has on occasion slept on a mat in his office.


His direct role in Healthcare.gov is unclear - as is the role of other White House and health department officials. The administration's lack of transparency has angered Republicans and some Democrats trying to get answers about who is responsible for the troubled rollout and who will repair it.


REPUBLICAN DEMANDS PARK DOCUMENTS


At the first oversight hearing called by Republicans on Thursday, U.S. House of Representatives Energy and Commerce Chairman Fred Upton of Michigan criticized the administration for being "allergic to transparency."


And at least one powerful Republican has set his sights on Park.


House Oversight Committee Chairman Darrell Issa this week asked Park and White House Chief Information Officer Steve VanRoekel to hand over documents about their involvement in the website's woes.


"You surely maintained significant involvement in the oversight and development of Obamacare's critical information technology infrastructure," Issa said in a letter.


The White House declined to make Park available for an interview. In a statement, White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough said, "Todd's infectious passion for public service, tireless work ethic and technology expertise and experience make him a huge asset to our White House team."


Park now draws a salary of $165,300, significantly less than his $270,000 base salary at his Boston-based company, Athenahealth in 2008. The amount does not include the 5.4 percent of the company, then worth $570 million, he owned at the time of its initial public offering in 2007. The company now has a market capitalization of more than $5 billion.


After graduating from Harvard with a degree in economics in 1994, Kim first worked for the consulting firm Booz Allen Hamilton before he and a fellow consultant, Jonathan Bush, decided to try becoming healthcare entrepreneurs.


What started as a maternity care business became focused on medical management software and related services.


Brandon Hull, co-founder of Cardinal Partners, one of Athenahealth's backers who still sits on the board, said Park can often convey ideas with passion. Hull recalled sitting in the audience at a Philadelphia health conference several years ago while Park, striding across the stage during a presentation, accidentally fell off, mid-speech. He quickly surfaced and climbed back on stage to finish his talk, Hull said.


PROBLEM SOLVER


In early 2008, Park co-founded Castlight, a company that provides tailored data about healthcare costs. In 2011, it was No. 1 on The Wall Street Journal's list of "The Top 50 Venture-Backed Companies."


"When we started Castlight, people said, 'Oh, you can't get pricing data,'" said Bryan Roberts, one of Park's co-founders. "He loves to solve problems that other people think can't be solved."


Park was a donor to Obama's 2008 election campaign, giving a total of $33,100 to Obama and the Democratic National Convention, according to the Open Secrets non-profit organization that tracks campaign contributions.


He was recommended for his current job by Aneesh Chopra, Obama's first chief technical officer. Chopra told Reuters that it would have been inappropriate for Park as a political appointee to be deeply involved in activities like contract procurement and project management of the new Healthcare.gov.


David Brailer, health Information Technology chief for the Bush Administration for two years, also said Park's job would have been removed from the nuts-and-bolts of the contract.


But Brailer, who said he thinks "very highly" of Park, said that does not mean he will be protected from Republicans and some Democrats who say that someone needs to be held accountable for the website fiasco.


"I have no doubt he's probably going to be one of the people they're trying to blame for this," Brailer said.


(Reporting by Roberta Rampton and Sarah McBride; Editing by Karey Van Hall and Grant McCool)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obamas-tech-expert-becomes-target-over-healthcare-website-222453170--sector.html
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Fox orders full season of new sitcom 'Dads'




FILE - This publicity image released by Fox shows Seth Green, left, and Peter Riegert in a scene from "Dads." Fox says it’s ordering a full season of the new comedy “Dads." An additional nine episodes was ordered for a total of 22 half-hours, Fox announced Friday, Oct. 25, 2013. (AP Photo/Fox, Jennifer Clasen, File)






LOS ANGELES (AP) — Fox says it's ordering a full season of the new comedy "Dads," which came under early fire by critics.

The series is about two best friends and business partners whose fathers move in. It stars Seth Green, Giovanni Ribisi, Peter Riegert and Martin Mull. An additional nine episodes were ordered for a total of 22 half-hours, Fox announced Friday.

The pilot episode of "Dads" was slammed by critics as crass, sexist and exploiting racial stereotypes, and producers promised a change in tone. Seth MacFarlane, the creator of Fox's animated comedy "Family Guy," is among the producers of "Dads."

Fox Entertainment Chairman Kevin Reilly cited the show's appeal to young adult viewers in announcing the additional episodes, calling it "an asset we can grow." The show airs on Tuesday.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fox-orders-full-season-sitcom-dads-000359545.html
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Man charged with extortion over threats to Midwest water supply


By Kevin Murphy


KANSAS CITY, Missouri (Reuters) - A Missouri man was charged on Friday with trying to extort $10,000 from the FBI by saying that he could help authorities investigate a threat to contaminate the public water supply of four Midwest cities.


Manuel Garcia, 69, of Kansas City, called police and federal agents to report that he knew of two men who intended to pour 55-gallon drums of unspecified contaminants into water systems in Kansas City and St. Louis, Missouri, and Wichita and Topeka, Kansas, according to statement from the U.S. attorney's office in Kansas City.


Garcia said the two men, named Raul and Shariff, tested the plan on some horses and the animals went into convulsions and died, according to a federal affidavit. Garcia said that in exchange for $10,000 and a grant of immunity, he would try to locate the pair, the affidavit said.


"I want to assure the community that our water supply is safe," Tammy Dickinson, U.S. attorney for the Western District of Missouri said in the news release. "We don't believe there was ever a credible threat to public health and safety."


A week ago, city officials in Wichita emailed employees to be alert to any suspicious activities involving the public water system. The FBI acknowledged investigating threats to water in four Midwest cities at that time.


An FBI agent who listened to Garcia's calls, recognized his voice, the affidavit said. Garcia is in federal custody pending a court hearing.


(Editing by Greg McCune and Leslie Gevirtz)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/man-charged-extortion-over-threats-midwest-water-supply-224259676.html
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Jony Ive And Marc Newson Customize An Unreleased Mac Pro For (RED) Auction


Apple head of Human Interaction Jony Ive and designer Marc Newson have customized a one-off Mac Pro in brilliant crimson for the (RED) charity. Apple is a (PRODUCT)RED partner and often produces editions of its products for the organization, whose proceeds go to fighting to eliminate Aids.


The charity recently announced that Apple alone had helped it raise over $65 million.


The machine is absolutely beautiful, making me wish that all of Apple’s Mac Pro machines came in colors like this one. The machine is one that Apple has yet to release, announcing only that it would be available in December. The auction has an estimated $40K-$60K price tag attached.


130819RD_macpro_128_key and front


Ive and Newson have collaborated on several other one-off items and customizations like a Leica camera, Gold Apple EarPods and a Neal Feay-fabricated desk.


The images on the Sotheby’s site appear to be comped together, so it’s likely this isn’t even a final product, but it’s still striking.


130819RD_macpro_back_263


We’ve reached out to (RED) and Apple to see if they have any more details to share. Jony And Marc’s (RED) Auction has garnered donations from a bunch of other designer types like Deiter Rams, clothiers like Christian Louboutin and artists like George Lucas.


130819RD_macpro_280_open_key


For reference, here’s our hands-on video of the “real” Mac Pro from Apple’s event earlier this week.





Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/qUXrfEGwXMk/
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Friday, October 25, 2013

LG Optimus F6 (T-Mobile)


LG's Optimus F6 ($49.99 up front and $10/month for 24 months or $289.99) has some of the looks of a higher-end phone—the disco-ball reflective pattern on the back evokes LG's Nexus 4, and the brushed-metal highlights on the side are a classy touch. But this Android phone has the performance, storage and capabilities of an older, less-expensive device. You can do better for less on T-Mobile.



Size, Screen, And Storage
At 5.03 by 2.59 by .4 inches (HWD), the 4.44-ounce Optimus F6 is not as wide as many new smartphones—a good thing if you value single-handed use—and barely chunkier. A large physical Home/Power button helps avoid the embarrassment of extracting the phone from your pocket upside-down.



The F6's 4.5-inch, 960-by-540-pixel display can feel more crowded than that size would suggest, however. Credit a joint effort by LG and T-Mobile to clutter the notification menu: The usual strip of wireless-control widgets, LG's "QSlide apps" list, a brightness control, and a T-Mobile widget counting how many voice minutes and text messages you've used all combine to eat up more than half the screen. The last is particularly dumb, since T-Mobile's plans all come with unmetered voice and text usage. Disable it in the T-Mobile My Account App by pressing the menu button and selecting Options.


Yes, Menu button—LG replaced the standard Recent-Apps button with one for the menu function Google has been trying to kick to the curb since Android 3.0. This means you can't invoke Google Now with a simple upward swipe; instead, you must press and hold the Home button to bring up the recent-apps list, then tap the "G" button.


You can pry off the back to expose a removable 2,460mAh battery, micro SIM slot, and microSD card slot. Filling the latter should be your first priority, as the F6 ships with an advertised 4GB of storage but offers only 1.1GB for use out of the box. That's borderline cruel, and also a silly way to save a few bucks—phone vendors routinely hand out press kits on giveaway 4GB flash drives.


Calls, Battery Life, and Bandwidth
Voice quality is a mixed bag. Incoming calls sounded fine, but my own voice sounded just a bit muddy—more so via the microphone than in speakerphone mode—in voicemails left from the F6. Whispers didn't come through at all; other phones I've tried haven't had that issue. Noise cancellation suppressed all but the higher notes of a whirring engine, although the resulting background whine wasn't too fun to listen to.


Like some other Android phones I've tested, the F6 had a hang-up with Bluetooth voice dialing: When I spoke a contact's name through a Plantronics hands-free kit, the phone heard me clearly. But it repeatedly heard phone numbers as unrelated people's names.


I cannot, however, complain much about battery life here. It lasted for 15 hours and 3 minutes of talk time. That's not as good as T-Mobile's estimate of 19.5 hours but still far better than average. After being left idle for 24 hours, the F6 showed 91 percent charge left; that's also great.


The F6 connected to T-Mobile's LTE network with excellent results—the Speedtest.net app clocked a stellar download speed of 47.01 Mbps in Santa Clara, Calif., with an upload speed of 9.5 Mbps. As a backup to that, you've got T-Mobile's also speedy HSPA+ and the option to connect to WiFi's a, b, g, and n flavors, 5GHz networks included.


Camera, Connectivity, and Apps
The most obviously cut corner here after the inadequate storage would be the mediocre 5-megapixel back camera. Its still images exhibited problems with focusing and cast a gauzy glow around bright or backlit objects that made me think "2009 camera phone."


The front camera, with only 1.3 MP of resolution, has the same problems. And videos from either side looked even worse, maxing out at about 20 frames per second in indoor shots. The back camera's touted 1080p resolution seemed too much for its older, slower processor to properly encode, judging by the blurring that wasn't such a problem in the front camera's 720p video.


The long and often redundant list of add-on apps—once again, an Android vendor has seen fit to install both Google's Chrome and a lesser browser, then throw in task-manager and file-manager utilities that most Android users don't need—hides a few interesting surprises. A QuickRemote app can turn the phone into a remote for a TV or a cable box, although it failed to recognize a 2009-vintage Sony HDTV, and an LG Backup app can save your apps and settings to a microSD card.


The LG Gallery app played a QuickTime movie, something stock Android can't do. And under the Display category of LG's version of the Settings app, you can also enable "Smart Screen," which keeps the screen lit if the phone sees your eyes focused on it. You may also want to jump into the "Language & Input" category to disable the distracting "blam-blam" noises made by the LG keyboard's haptic feedback.


This thing is also on the sluggish side—it benchmarked not much faster than the 2011-vintage Galaxy S II—and needless visual effects like the way app icons and widgets bounce into view as you shuffle from home screen to another add to the lag factor.


Conclusions
An unsubsidized price of less than $300 is hard to ignore, but T-Mobile has better cheap choices. For instance, if you can do without a front camera, LG's own Optimus F3 is $50 cheaper and a good deal more compact, while the $120 Nokia Lumia 521 offers a cleaner Windows Phone interface free of aftermarket trimmings, albeit with a considerably smaller selection of apps.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/LmddTEb9bNo/0,2817,2426301,00.asp
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Seagate cooks up game-changing cloud storage hardware



Brags about "reinventing" or "disrupting" this or that kind of technology are so common these days they might as well be white noise. But Seagate seems to have just developed a new kind of storage system for the cloud that might well be quite disruptive -- if it ever gets implemented by cloud builders.


Seagate calls it the Kinetic Open Storage platform, and it's designed as a way to enable cloud data centers to improve the way they handle storage by having the storage system itself offload as much of the processing related to storage as possible.


Here's how it works in plain English: KOS involves hard drives that use Ethernet as their sole physical interconnect. Not Ethernet as in an SATA-attached drive with an Ethernet controller, but Ethernet, period. Instead of using an OS-level filesystem, data is fetched from and stored to the drives using a key/value system serialized with Google's Protocol Buffers mechanism. (The API used for data access is to be open source.) Most everything else you'd associate with cloud data center storage is done away with.


A crucial thing about this setup, Seagate claims, is how it moves many of the issues normally associated with the OS or storage-management layer -- quality of service, migrating data between drives, at-rest encryption, etc. -- to the drives themselves. By getting rid of much of the hardware associated with the traditional storage tier, you make racks denser, use less energy per unit of storage, leverage the existing data-transport fabric in the data center (i.e., Ethernet), and have storage "truly ... disaggregated from compute".


Another professed advantage to ditching all of that cruft is an increase in write performance -- up to 400 percent, according to David Chernicoff at ZDNet. Ditto any common file manipulation, like copying or moving from one drive to another: All of that can be offloaded to the drives themselves.


A break this radical from the way storage traditionally works wouldn't come without a cost, though. Here, the cost would be software development, as every piece of software that touches a file system in some way would have to be reworked to use KOS. Even with the KOS tools offered for free -- e.g., the drive simulator and developer's tools, and the KOS API itself -- the cost of such re-working would be far from trivial.


One of the reasons why drop-in replacements for existing storage systems are so appealing is because, well, they're drop-in replacements. Many of the problems still faced by cloud storage systems -- e.g., write bottlenecks -- are solved either by throwing more hardware at the problem, or at the software level, by more intelligently managing data throughput. Microsoft's new release of Windows Server has some intriguing new storage features in this vein, for instance.


But again, tossing out the entire storage layer as we know it is a colossal project.There isn't even a date set for when the hardware itself will be available to testers, let alone vendors or end users. And the costs of moving to such hardware in the long run can't be ignored -- including the sunk costs of ditching so much existing legacy storage. (There's no word on if existing drives could be retrofit to use this system; I don't think it's likely.)


All this leaves a wide margin of time to see whether or not Seagate's new game-changer really will change any games. But the bare outlines of the idea alone are tantalizing.


This story, "Seagate cooks up game-changing cloud storage hardware," was originally published at InfoWorld.com. Get the first word on what the important tech news really means with the InfoWorld Tech Watch blog. For the latest developments in business technology news, follow InfoWorld.com on Twitter.


Source: http://www.infoworld.com/t/storage/seagate-cooks-game-changing-cloud-storage-hardware-229572
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Comcast's HBO + Internet Plan Is the One You've Been Waiting For

Comcast's HBO + Internet Plan Is the One You've Been Waiting For

No cable, no problem. The rumors that Comcast is going to let you pay for HBO like you pay for Netflix are true. Comcast is now the first company to let you have HBO without being trapped in a basic cable plan.

Read more...


    






Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/iHDQVaevjQA/comcasts-hbo-internet-plan-is-the-one-youve-been-wa-1452189413
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Tests prove Roma couple are mystery girl's parents

In this undated photo released by charity ''The Smile of the Child'' shows a 4-year-old girl at an unknown location. Greek authorities on Friday, Oct. 18, 2013 have requested international assistance to identify the four-year-old girl found living in a Gypsy camp with a couple arrested and charged with abducting her from her birth parents. A police statement says the child was located Wednesday, Oct. 17, 2013 near the town of Farsala, central Greece, during a nationwide crackdown on illegal activities in Gypsy camps. (AP Photo/The Smile of the Child)







In this undated photo released by charity ''The Smile of the Child'' shows a 4-year-old girl at an unknown location. Greek authorities on Friday, Oct. 18, 2013 have requested international assistance to identify the four-year-old girl found living in a Gypsy camp with a couple arrested and charged with abducting her from her birth parents. A police statement says the child was located Wednesday, Oct. 17, 2013 near the town of Farsala, central Greece, during a nationwide crackdown on illegal activities in Gypsy camps. (AP Photo/The Smile of the Child)







Minka Ruseva, daughter of Sasha Ruseva, left, laughs in a Roma neighborhood of Nikolaevo, Bulgaria, Friday, Oct. 25, 2013. Sasha Ruseva, a Bulgarian Roma woman from this town, is under investigation by Bulgarian authorities trying to find out if she is the mother of a suspected abduction victim in neighboring Greece known as "Maria" whose case has triggered a global search for her real parents. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda)







Minka Ruseva, daughter of Sasha Ruseva, left, dances along with other children in a Roma neighborhood of Nikolaevo, Bulgaria, Friday, Oct. 25, 2013. Sasha Ruseva, a Bulgarian Roma woman from this town, is under investigation by Bulgarian authorities trying to find out if she is the mother of a suspected abduction victim in neighboring Greece known as "Maria" whose case has triggered a global search for her real parents. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda)







A Bulgarian Roma child stands next to a pig in a Roma neighborhood of Nikolaevo, Bulgaria, Friday, Oct. 25, 2013. Sasha Ruseva, a Bulgarian Roma woman from this town, is under investigation by Bulgarian authorities trying to find out if she is the mother of a suspected abduction victim in neighboring Greece known as "Maria" whose case has triggered a global search for her real parents. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda)







Bulgarian Roma children play with bicycles in a Roma neighborhood of Nikolaevo, Bulgaria, Friday, Oct. 25, 2013. Sasha Ruseva, a Bulgarian Roma woman from this town, is under investigation by Bulgarian authorities trying to find out if she is the mother of a suspected abduction victim in neighboring Greece known as "Maria" whose case has triggered a global search for her real parents. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda)







(AP) — The mystery is solved — but the future of the young girl known only as Maria is still uncertain.

DNA tests have confirmed that a Bulgarian Roma couple living in an impoverished village with their nine other children are the biological parents of the girl found in Greece with another Roma couple, authorities said Friday.

Genetic profiles of Sasha Ruseva, 35, and her husband, Atanas, matched that of Maria, Interior Ministry official Svetlozar Lazarov said Friday.

Ruseva says she gave birth to a baby girl four years ago in Greece while working as an olive picker but gave the child away because she was too poor to care for her. She since has had two more children after Maria.

Maria has been in a charity's care since authorities raided a Roma settlement in Greece last week and found she was not related to the Greek Roma couple she was living with. Her discovery triggered a global search for her parents, fears of possible child trafficking and interest from authorities dealing with missing children cases in Poland, France, the United States and elsewhere.

Human rights groups have also raised concerns that the news coverage about Maria and the actions taken by authorities were fueling racist sentiment against the European Union's Gypsy minority, who number around 6 million.

The Bulgarian prosecutor's office and Greek authorities were "seeking clarification on whether the mother agreed to sell the child," the Interior Ministry said in a statement.

The Rusevs and their other children live in a dilapidated, mud-floored house outside the remote Bulgarian village of Nikolaevo, 280 kilometers (175 miles) east of the capital, Sofia.

The Roma, or Gypsy, quarter here houses some 2,000 people. Most here are jobless, living in extreme poverty, trying to stay warm in shabby houses. Children played Friday in mud-covered streets as pigs, cats and hens ambled by.

Minka Ruseva, a 14-year-old who is one of the Rusev family's children, stood in front of their dilapidated two-room house. Minka said she saw pictures of Maria on TV and thought she was her sister.

"I like her very much, she looks very much like me and I want her back home. We will take care of her and I can help my mother," she said.

Stoyan Todorov, a neighbor of the Rusevs', complained of the hardships that he and his family face every day. He said Bulgarian authorities do not care about helping the Roma and come "only on the eve of elections, hoping to get our votes."

"Look how we are living in total misery," he continued. "Years ago, a man was murdered in our neighborhood and nobody paid attention. Now there are crowds of concerned people here because of one girl."

As he spoke, he pointed at the scores of reporters from across Europe who had descended on the remote area.

"The truth is that we do not have the money to look after our kids," Todorov said.

Greek officials, fearing that Maria's 2009 birth record contained false information, have ordered a nationwide check of all Greek birth records in the last six years to ferret out welfare fraud or other irregularities.

The Greek Roma couple, now in pre-trial detention, have been charged with allegedly abducting Maria and committing document fraud. They told authorities they had received Maria after an informal adoption and their lawyer said Friday they planned to seek legal custody of the girl.

Under Greek law, child abduction charges can include cases where a minor is voluntarily given away by its parents.

"We are very, very happy with this outcome, because we have proved what we said from the outset ...the adoption, as it happened, was not of a legal nature but it was not abduction," the Greek couple's lawyer, Costas Katsavos, told the AP.

"Now, as the birth mother has been found, we will ask to gain — through legitimate processes — custody of little Maria, whom the family truly sees as its own child."

At the Gypsy camp in Farsala, central Greece, where Maria was found, residents said the couple had been vindicated.

"They are saying the woman stole the girl. She didn't steal her. The Bulgarian gave the child to her ... we've had Maria here for five years," neighbor Christina Pavlos told The Associated Press.

There was no word on where Maria herself hoped to live. The Greek charity "Smile of the Child," which has been looking after her, would not comment on the case.

___

Paphitis reported from Athens, Greece. AP Television staff in Farsala, central Greece, and Associated Press writer Derek Gatopoulos in Athens, Greece, contributed.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-10-25-Greece-Mystery%20Girl/id-a47b83bd5aea4ca9990dd2bf0edf325a
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GoGroove SonaVerse O2i


Plenty of bargain-basement PC speakers litter the shelves of electronics stores, but the question is whether any are good enough for the price. The USB-powered GoGroove SonaVerse O2i ($39.99 direct) tries to deliver actual bass response in a portable design, thanks to dual passive radiators on the sides of each enclosure. Unfortunately, the main cone drivers just aren't high enough quality, and sound too harsh to listen to for extended periods of time.



Design
The SonaVerse O2i consists of a pair of white plastic speakers with prominent blue LED lighting surrounding each front-facing black grille. Each enclosure measures 5.8 by 4.4 by 2.7 inches (HWD), and the set weighs 2.5 pounds. The black plastic grilles are roughly textured, and a single front-loaded 2-inch paper cone driver peaks out from behind each one. The passive radiators are also made of paper, but have some serious excursion, which hints at decent bass response. The left speaker has a GoGroove logo, while the right speaker has a SonaVerse O2i logo; at least it's easy to tell which is left and which is right.


A 5-foot combination USB and audio cable runs from the back of the left speaker; there's also a hardware volume knob on the back. The USB cable is a good idea, as it means you don't need a bulky AC adapter, and don't have to plug the system into a wall. If you don't want to lose a USB port on your laptop, you can always buy a USB-compatible AC adapter. That said, the USB port isn't a digital audio connection, like it is on more expensive speakers; in this case it's just for power. So you still need to plug in the 3.5mm wire. And if your laptop is like mine, the USB ports and headphone jack are on opposite sides, which looked pretty terrible once I plugged in the O2i's two cables.


GoGroove SonaVerse O2i


The two speakers are connected by a thin, 3-foot cable with an inline hardware dial for the blue LED grille borders. At the beginning of the dial's travel, it turns on the LED lighting, which is bright and extremely noticeable, like you'd find on an inexpensive no-name PC case. The rest of the dial's travel does, well, nothing. You would think it's a brightness control, but it appears the dial is completely unnecessary and could have just been an on/off switch.


Performance
Sonically, I didn't expect much for 40 bucks; these speakers shouldn't compete with $100 and $200 models. Really, I was just hoping for something reasonably pleasant to listen to, maybe with a bit of kick and the ability to turn it up on occasion. The O2i delivers most of that, except the most crucial thing: The biggest issue with the O2i is its harsh-sounding treble. A single 2-inch paper cone driver isn't going to do all that well with high frequencies.


Tracks like Rage Against the Machine's "Fistful of Steel," which is very smoothly recorded for a hard rock/metal track, sounded tinny and brash. When I turned up the volume, I heard a reasonably punchy kick drum, but I winced at each and every cymbal hit. It's just not a pleasant sound. Warmer sounding recordings, like Depeche Mode's "Suffer Well," fared better, but just about any singer-songwriter, electronic, or rock track I tried was simply too harsh to listen to for long. Our standard bass test track, The Knife's "Silent Shout," threatened to obliterate the tiny drivers in the O2i; the distortion was palpable at medium volumes, and as I turned them up I feared for their lives.


The thing is, I wish I could recommend the O2i, because the world needs decent-quality, low-cost speakers. As laptops get smaller and smaller, there's less and less room for proper drivers, which means anemic bass response and tinny highs without an external boost of some kind. GoGroove's larger SonaVerse Ti system costs $5 less and is arguably more attractive, but that one doesn't sound all that great either. The Xmi X-Mini Max deliver clear, detailed sound for $20 more, and are much more portable, but their tiny size precludes any bass punch whatsoever. The Edifier Exclaim e10 remains our favorite low-cost stereo PC speaker system, but at $100 it's more than twice the price of the O2i. The problem is, even despite its low price and convenient design, the O2i simply isn't pleasant to listen to—regardless of how you may feel about the blue light rings.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/nYfqQ3IEMvg/0,2817,2426223,00.asp
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Join Us For TechCrunch Bangalore


India’s startup ecosystem is showing some promise. In the first half of 2013, for example,  investors dropped $400 million into 141 deals, and startup Red Bus had a sweet $150 million exit. In other words, the time is right for our first ever event in India: TechCrunch Bangalore, which we are hosting with PlatformPlay in India’s tech hub on November 14-15.


TechCrunch Bangalore will focus on how to build companies in India that will go global — the question is how and when India’s startups will crack the code.


The event will feature a hackathon, startup pitch presentations and startup exhibits. On the second day there will be speakers, panelists and TechCrunch editors (including me!) on stage.


In the hackathon, over 400 hackers were shortlisted from over 750 entries. Picked from across the country, these hackers will work in groups to create their hack in just 24 hours. The following day, each team will get 60 seconds to speed-pitch their creation to a panel of expert judges and audience members.


The pitch presentations will showcase 50 startups selected from over 400 entries, each launching their products before a live and online audience. The judging panel for the event will include VCs,  investors, seasoned entrepreneurs and tech and product experts.


The main conference keynotes will feature speakers from across the globe, including Turochas ‘T’ Fuad, CEO and Co-founder, Travelmob and Keith Nilsson, Partner, TPG Growth.  In addition, Troy Malone, Evernote Corporation and Anthony Hearne, Outbrain, will join us for panels in Bangalore.


The winning teams will be awarded tickets to the TechCrunch New Delhi event, planned for August 2014, and a chance to attend TechCrunch Disrupt San Francisco 2014. TechCrunch and PlatformPlay will host two additional India events together next year in Pune and New Delhi.


The exhibits in Startup Zone are a great place for attendees — especially investors, media and potential partners — to look over some great new entrants to the startup scene.


You can find more details on the event here.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/Skt0iCTVJW0/
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The Weirdest Thing on the Internet Tonight: 8,336,615 (New York)

"We are lonely but never alone" makes an equally appropriate slogan for both big city and digital living. With infinite possible connections at both our physical and virtual fingertips, why do so many people feel so isolated from the rest of the Earth's seven billion hguman inhabitants? Filmmaker Paul Riccio explores this phenomenon in the engrossing visual monologue 8,336,615 (New York).

Read more...


    






Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/xBCiWO-KZg8/the-weirdest-thing-on-the-internet-tonight-8-336-615-1449207063
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Mouse To Scorpion: "Is That All Ya Got?"


Click here to listen to this podcast


Rodents called grasshopper mice have an unusual favorite food. Not grasshoppers. No, they really like scorpions. You can see the problem. But the mice shrug off any scorpion stings. And a new study shows how.

Researchers injected common house mice with scorpion venom. The mice nursed the injection site for several minutes. But grasshopper mice injected with venom fussed for only a few seconds. In fact, they were more bothered by saline solution. 

So what’s going on? In the house mouse, a specific type of nerve-cell signaling-channel got activated by the venom. But this same channel in grasshopper mice stayed inactive in the presence of venom—meaning the mice remained blissfully ignorant.

In addition, a separate pathway did react to the scorpion venom—and it actually temporarily blocked pain signals. Meaning that for grasshopper mice, scorpion venom is actually an analgesic. The work is in the journal Science. [Ashlee H. Row et al, Voltage-Gated Sodium Channel in Grasshopper Mice Defends Against Bark Scorpion Toxin]

Understanding details of this system could lead to new approaches in the treatment of pain in people. So that someday we might ask, “Scorpion, where is thy sting?”

—Sophie Bushwick

[The above text is a transcript of this podcast] 


Follow Scientific American on Twitter @SciAm and @SciamBlogs.
Visit ScientificAmerican.com for the latest in science, health and technology news.

© 2013 ScientificAmerican.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mouse-scorpion-ya-got-001408651.html
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The Sun Spewed Out a Beautiful Solar Flare This Week

The Sun Spewed Out a Beautiful Solar Flare This WeekThe sun emitted a solar flare at 8:30 pm EDT on October 23rd, and NASA captured in all its glory at its Solar Dynamics Observatory. Doesn't it look pretty?

Read more...


    






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1 dead, 40 hurt in Mexican candy factory explosion


CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico (AP) — An explosion inside a candy factory in the border city of Ciudad Juarez on Thursday left one person dead and at least 40 injured, Mexican authorities said.

The blast took place on the second floor of the Dulces Blueberry factory and caused the floor to collapse, injuring people working downstairs, said factory worker Ismael Bouchet.

"I was able to help five people who walked out of the building but as soon as they were out they went into shock and fainted," he said outside the factory, which produces gummy bears, jelly beans, peach rings and other sweets.

Authorities said the cause of the blast hadn't been determined but Bouchet said a steam boiler had been installed recently in the area.

Ciudad Juarez Civil Protection Director Fernando Mota said firefighters found a body inside and that six of the at least 40 injured are in serious condition. Several workers are missing and could be trapped inside the building, he added.

Firefighters and rescue crews continued to search the building for more victims Thursday night.

Bouchet said people could smell acid in the area where the explosion occurred.

"Since the morning, several co-workers said there was a bad smell, that it smelled of acid and because it was a new area we thought it was normal," Bouchet said.

Photographs of workers being helped by paramedics showed people with injuries that resembled chemical burns.

Dulces Blueberry employs 300 people and the candy is sent to a distributor based in El Paso, Texas, which lies across the border from Ciudad Juarez.

Ciudad Juarez is a manufacturing hub and the assembly plants there employ many of its residents.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/1-dead-40-hurt-mexican-candy-factory-explosion-001013800.html
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Watch: Mariah Carey Gives Her First Interview About New Single ‘The Art Of Letting Go’



"[Letting go is] not easy, it's something you have to learn how to do"





Early last week, Mariah Carey blessed her Lambs with the news that she is planning to release a new single titled The Art of Letting Go on November 11 and today we get to see Mimi doing a bit of promo for the single release. Mariah sat down to talk with CNN about her new single (and, as I understand it, was not interested in talking about anything else — not American Idol, not Miley CyrusMariah only wanted to talk about Mariah) which you can watch in full in the embed above. We still don’t know if The Art of Letting Go will remain the title track of her new album (ie. even tho MC‘s album was supposed to be titled The Art of Letting Go, things may have changed since the release date was delayed) but I’m hoping we will get more information about Mimi‘s new album soon … which may come right around the time that her new single is released on Facebook. Check out the interview above and then start counting down the days on your calendars, y’all. Mariah Carey will deliver her new single in just over 2 weeks!





Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/pinkisthenewblog/~3/taVIhTR0uJI/watch-mariah-carey-gives-her-first-interview-about-new-single-the-art-of-letting-go
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Delegates To Debate Watered-Down Plan For Antarctic Marine Preserve





A lone emperor penguin makes his rounds, at the edge of an iceberg drift in the Antarctic's Ross Sea in 2006.



John Weller/AP

Less than 1 percent of the world's oceans are set aside as protected areas, but diplomats meeting now in Australia could substantially increase that figure.


Delegates from 24 nations and the European Union have convened to consider proposals to create vast new marine protected areas around Antarctica.


This same group met over the summer and didn't reach consensus, so it's now considering a scaled-back proposal.


The Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources exists principally to regulate fishing around Antarctica. But some members — including the United States — have been pushing the organization to create vast new marine protected areas. One proposed region would shield swaths of the Ross Sea. A second would apply to the waters off East Antarctica. The potential protected areas are getting a push from conservationists like Bob Zuur at WWF-New Zealand.


"Last year I sailed through the Ross Sea," Zuur said at a news conference Wednesday in Hobart, Australia. "I saw dozens of whales, hundreds of seals and albatrosses and thousands of penguins. And that was just the wildlife on top of the water. The wildlife on the seafloor rivals that of the tropics. This area is really the Serengeti of the southern seas."


That advocacy is backed by the scientists who report to CCAMLR (participants call it "camalar"). Marine biologist and fisheries scientist Christopher Jones is chairman of the group's scientific committee. And at the news conference in Australia Wednesday he said members of that committee agree that human activity in the area should be limited, to ensure the long-term health of the ecosystem.


"Whether or not the science is adequate is not the issue here," Jones said. The real issue, he suggested, "is the political will."



CCAMLR already met in July but failed to reach the required consensus to set aside these areas. In particular, conservationists say, Russia and Ukraine balked at creating huge zones where fishing would be off limits forever. Toothfish, sold in the U.S. as Chilean sea bass, is harvested in some of these areas. The marine preserve would still leave some fishing grounds open but would close others, including sensitive spawning grounds of toothfish and other species.


After the July meeting, the United States and New Zealand scaled back the size of the regions of Ross Sea they proposed to protect by 40 percent. That would still make it the largest marine preserve in the world.


"I think all of us were disappointed that the Ross Sea proposal was reduced in size," said Andrea Kavanagh at the Hobart news conference. "We are hopeful this is the last time it will be watered down, and if it's passed as it is, we'd all be quite supportive of it."


Negotiators now plan to spend more than a week seeing whether they can come to a consensus. If they can, that could also open the door to discussions about creating additional marine protected areas around Antarctica. CCAMLR's scientific committee has identified nine areas in seas around the continent as candidates for preservation.


These waters have had less human disturbance than any other oceans on Earth.


"To get a consensus on having this network in place is going to be quite a long process," says Jones, the committee's chairman. "We've already made a lot of progress, though."


One small preserve off the South Orkney Islands is already on the books. And creating one or two vast preserves at this meeting could be a huge step forward.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NprProgramsATC/~3/FOEK52WVf-Y/delegates-to-debate-watered-down-plan-for-antarctic-marine-reserve
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Thursday, October 24, 2013

Johnny Knoxville Has 'So Much' More For 'Bad Grandpa .5'


'Jackass' tells MTV News all the crazy stuff that didn't make the final film.


By Kevin P. Sullivan, with reporting by Brandon Rae








Source:
http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1716094/johnny-knoxville-jackass-bad-grandpa-interview.jhtml

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Ladies’ Choice

A woman votes at a polling station on September 10, 2013.
Women frequently change their names for marriage or divorce, leaving their identification out of date.

Photo by Andrew Burton/Getty Images








Last June the U.S. Supreme Court struck down a key part of the Voting Rights Act, resulting in several states, among them Texas and North Carolina, racing to enact draconian new voter ID laws. While the first wave of attention focused on the ways such laws disproportionately impact minority voters, young voters, and the elderly, a slew of articles this past weekend point out that voter ID laws may also significantly suppress women’s votes. Indeed some have even suggested that this is the next front in the war on women, and suppressing female votes is part of the GOP’s concerted effort to ensure victories in states like Texas, where women like Wendy Davis threaten to topple the GOP with the support of female voters. It’s beyond disputing that women have ensured that Democrats, up to and including President Obama, have achieved major wins in recent elections. Female voters decided 22 of 23 Senate races in the 2012 election.











Dahlia Lithwick writes about the courts and the law for Slate. Follow her on Twitter.










But a closer look at whether voter ID laws will invariably harm liberal women and Democratic candidates at the polls suggests that something more interesting, and more complicated, may be going on here. We don’t actually have very good data to support the claim that voter ID laws will disproportionately disenfranchise progressive women. In fact some election law experts tell me the opposite may be true: These laws may hurt conservative women instead.










The problem around women and voter ID is neither new nor complicated: Women often change their names when they marry and divorce. Men don’t. Because some of the new voter ID bills frequently demand that a voter’s name correspond to her most up-to-date, legally recognized name at the polls, they erect a barrier for women who haven’t kept their ID current to reflect changing marital status. And since, at least according to one source, American women change their names about 90 percent of the time when they marry or divorce, they are at significantly higher risk of being unable to provide an ID that matches their current legal name.










If the slew of new voter ID laws may hit divorced women hardest, consider that women in red states in fact have much higher divorce and remarriage rates.












As the many articles considering the problem suggest, in some states that is about to get even worse. As ThinkProgress reported last week, the new Texas voter ID law demands that “constituents show original documents verifying legal proof of a name change, whether it is a marriage license, divorce decree, or court ordered change.” Photocopies will not be accepted. If you don’t have those original documents, you must pay a minimum of $20 for new copies. So in some states, female voters face two hurdles—showing they are who they claim to be and producing original documents indicating that they really are married and divorced.










Interestingly, almost everyone arguing that progressive women will be disproportionately harmed by these laws cites a single study done in 2006 by the Brennan Center for Justice. According to that study, only “48% of voting-age women with ready access to their U.S. birth certificates have a birth certificate with current legal name—and only 66% of voting-age women with ready access to any proof of citizenship have a document with current legal name.” The survey concluded that “using 2000 census citizen voting-age population data, this means that as many as 32 million voting-age women may have available only proof of citizenship documents that do not reflect their current name.” (Emphasis theirs.)










But the Brennan study looked only at proof of citizenship documents, not photo IDs, so it may not in fact prove the argument being advanced here. The Brennan study made no findings with respect to a gender differential on current photo IDs. I asked around, but I was unable to find many good studies that showed whether women would be disproportionately disenfranchised by Texas-style voter ID laws. That doesn’t mean that photo ID laws won’t disproportionately affect women. But it does mean the Brennan study doesn’t quite prove it.










Moreover, when I spoke to several election law experts about the problem, more than one of them confirmed my suspicion that women who change their names may tend to skew more conservative than women who don’t. Or as Sam Issacharoff, a professor at NYU law school, explained it to me, “During the 2012 presidential election, I thought the Pennsylvania [voter ID] law was unlikely to have any partisan effect because the way the ID law was drafted there was likely to have an impact on more Republican than Democratic voters, in part for the reasons you identify. Women in particular who are married and change their name I thought were likely not Democratic voters.”










Something else to consider: If the slew of new voter ID laws may hit divorced women hardest, consider that women in red states in fact have much higher divorce and remarriage rates. And women in the South have especially high remarriage rates. So it’s not at all clear that liberal women will be disenfranchised in greater numbers than their conservative counterparts. I’m told that women generally get hassled more at the polls because they rarely resemble the image on their photo ID in the first place.










The truth is that if Republicans want to scuttle Wendy Davis’ electoral chances, there are demonstrably easier ways of getting the job done. After all, the same Texas Legislature that passed the restrictive voter ID law was found by a federal court to have intentionally tried to pass a redistricting plan that would have redistricted Wendy Davis out of business. And, overall, there is good data to suggest that voter ID laws will clearly disenfranchise Hispanic and African American voters, poor voters, students, and other groups that skew Democratic. But the issue of women and voter ID is less clear-cut.










Ultimately, the data is still fairly bad on both sides of the voter ID debate, although it’s pretty much delusional on the vote fraud side. NYU’s Issacharoff sums it up this way: “Republicans think as a matter of deep faith that there is a lot of in-person, election day voter fraud. Many Democrats believe that the ID laws and the like have resulted in a lot of voter suppression. But there is precious little empirical evidence of either. The in-person vote fraud stuff is nonsense. But the ID laws seem to target populations that are isolated from mainstream society and do not participate. Mean, offensive, hopefully unconstitutional, and all that. Just not all that effective, best I can tell.”










All this ambiguity in the data is why Judge Richard Posner stirred up such a hornet’s nest last week when he admitted to HuffPost Live’s Mike Sacks that he made a mistake when he wrote the decision in 2007 upholding Indiana’s voter ID law. He now believes the dissenters in the voter ID case had it right. But beyond questions about whether judges should recant their own decisions in the media, Posner’s mea culpa forces all of us to contend with our assumptions about the motivations behind voter ID laws and the proof we have to support them. And when it comes to female voters, it may be that what looks like everyday Republican voter ID deviousness, will prove to be the sound of them shooting themselves in the foot.








Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/doublex/2013/10/how_voter_id_laws_might_suppress_the_votes_of_women_republican_women.html
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