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The intemperate, extreme nature of today’s education establishment just keeps getting more and more absurd, as evidenced by details of a recently filed lawsuit surrounding claims that a teacher was suspended after bringing garden-variety tools to class. Attorneys… |
Category: News
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Government paranoia: Teacher suspended after showing students garden tools
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Doctors walk out of national Obamacare implementation meeting

According to live tweets and images sent from ophthalmologist Dr. Kris Held, nearly all doctors had walked out in protest and disgust of Obamacare implementation talks at a prominent national health care meeting. Typically, The American Society of Cataract and Refractive… -
Forty percent of parents still giving kids dangerous medication that harms children

Despite years of warnings from the medical establishment about the dangers over-the-counter medications pose for young children, it is alarming to know that as many as 40 percent of parents are still giving their kids these harmful substances. The latest University… -
Eat these six delicious healing foods high in fiber to regulate your digestion

Fibers are considered an important part of our daily diet. Yet, there are no nutrients taken into our bodies from fiber, and fiber content is not even digestible. So what’s the point? Fiber functions primarily to ensure proper and complete digestion of the nutrients… -
Crazy scientists develop implantable microchip that supposedly induces appetite suppression

Pretty soon every bodily function will be capable of regulation and control by futuristic, man-made technologies, and this bionic insurgence is apparently starting with the human appetite. As reported by BBC News, U.K.-based scientists have developed an implantable microchip… -
Research: Low vitmain D levels found in chronically depressed people

The most recent study that supports an association of mental health and vitamin D was conducted in Amsterdam, Netherlands. It’s focus was chronic depression. It was entitled “The association between low vitamin D and depressive disorders,” was published in the April… -
Your home is filled with toxic flame retardants

Two new studies published in the journal Environmental Science & Technology confirm that the average home is filled with toxic flame retardant chemicals that may cause anything from cancer to hormonal problems to birth defects. In the first study, researchers from… -
Children’s dislike of healthy foods may pose a serious threat to their future – Learn to help them eat healthier

Children’s dislike of healthy foods may pose a serious threat to their future. Parents, especially health-conscious parents, knowing that they are the greatest influences on their children’s habits, can feel pressured to correctly instill healthy eating patterns. If… -
Eating watermelons can help reduce blood pressure

According to a new study, a pre-hypertensive condition is one of the major risk factors for serious health threats such as strokes and heart attacks. However, not too many people are aware that simply eating watermelons can be very effective in naturally fighting off… -
Californians sign petition to inject children with mercury, implement Orwellian police state modeled after Nazi Germany

Activist Mark Dice is at it again, this time asking citizens on the street of California to sign a petition mandating maximum mercury injections for children along with door-to-door gun confiscations using police and military forces. Astonishingly, person after person… -
If Congress passes Internet sales tax legislation, you lose

It’s almost as if some in Congress forget that we’ve been down this path before. Garbage legislation, now under the moniker of the Marketplace Fairness Act, has been discussed in various guises and masks over the last 20 years or so. Streamlined Sales Tax. Remote Sales Tax. Distant Sales Tax. They’ve been tried, debated and debunked each time before.
But it’s funny how larger than ever state budget deficits perk up the ears of slimy congressmen on the umpteenth attempt at an Internet sales tax. While proponents like J Marra, writing for BetaNews this week, are in favor of this bill, I stand tall against it, without hesitation.
Speaking from Experience
As a small business owner myself, already reeling in yearly time wasted in wading red tape, I have full right to be fired up about this new effort. Even though my business only does taxable commerce in Illinois, I have numerous colleagues in the IT industry who would be affected by this legislation. Any time government tries to impose new taxes and says that it is merely filling in the gaps is cause for alarm.
Remember when big government lied to us and claimed that Obamacare would save money for everyone across the board? It’s the same flawed thinking that leads some to estimate costs rising for individual plan claims up to 32 percent under the massive legislation. Rule of thumb: the more government gets involved, the worse off we generally are.
Just about 20 years ago, the Supreme Court made a landmark ruling in Quill v. North Dakota that set an important precedent in today’s debates. In that case, the court said, rightfully so, that obligating businesses to collect taxes on behalf of jurisdictions which they have no presence was too burdensome to enforce and expect of them.
Yes, you can say that the case was pitted in the discussion surrounding mail order catalogs and their sales across state lines, but the basis for argument is the same. Should businesses large and small be held liable for collecting taxes on any number of items they may sell to any person online in the vast United States?
Small Business Nightmare
If this junk legislation passes, it means that businesses with online sales across state lines will be liable for tax collection across roughly 9,600 different jurisdictions in the country. As if small business owners didn’t have enough paperwork and red tape to wade through already to keep their businesses legal.
Proponents of this smelly pile refute the tax liability mess by claiming simplified “tax calculation software” will be available to affected merchants in efforts to simplify tax liabilities. Reality to Congress: QuickBooks has been around for over 20 years now, and taxes have not gotten any easier for US small businesses. I’m not sure how another band aid to a broken, over-complicated tax system is going to make life any easier or the burden any less troublesome.
One of the bills sponsors, web giant Amazon, has come out in favor of the legislation. Not surprisingly, Amazon already has the vast, expensive technical infrastructure in place to handle such broad tax collections. So much so that it’s even offering expertise in the form of tax compliance services to other businesses. The online retailer has got more to gain financially from this bill passing than just “leveling the playing field” as it claims publicly.

The 3,007 counties of the USA, as shown above, are just a sliver of the jurisdictions that small businesses would be liable in collecting taxes if this legislation passed. All because they survive by selling across state lines. Whatever politicians calls the legislation, it’s the same tax increase that has failed time and time again in congress. (Image courtesy of: mapsfordesign.com)
It’s also interesting to note that this bill has zero language addressing how States would force brick and mortars to collect taxes for purchases made in person by out-of-town residents. After all, the name of this bill is the Marketplace Fairness Act, and in the interest of fairness, shouldn’t brick and mortars be held to the same legislation that is burdening their out-of-state competitors?
Five states do not collect any form of state sales tax, including Alaska, Delaware, Montana, New Hampshire, and Oregon. So if I were a Washington resident I could make the short trek into Oregon and get away without paying any sales taxes. Yet sitting back in my recliner, ordering from the same vendor in the comfort of my home, would yield a fully taxable purchase. That’s fairness? Depends on who you ask, I guess.
Bill sponsors claim that the reason brick and mortars cannot be held to the same standard is because, presumably, it would be too difficult to impose questions upon each buyer about what state and county they come from. But hypocritically, they agree, that imposing the same burden on online retailers is justifiable because they can wrangle in some legal language providing cost-effective tax calculation software that will make the process seamless.
No Silver Bullet
If there’s one thing I know as a small business owner, it’s that nothing surrounding government legislation is as easy as it’s portrayed. I don’t care how much software you toss my way.
Here’s a suggestion to a Congress hell-bent on raising taxes: how about focusing efforts on cleaning up our broken tax code instead? It’s already been proven that Americans as a whole waste 6.1 billion hours annually merely complying with federal tax laws. That’s the equivalent labor time of 2.1 million full time workers! Talk about waste to the nth degree.
While there has been no silver bullet plan as of yet, the attention Herman Cain received for his (flawed, but commendable) 9-9-9 flat tax plan was a step in the right direction, at least as food for thought. If Congress was discussing ways to reduce tax loopholes and administrative overhead/complexity, we wouldn’t have talk about ways to raise taxes on Americans to fill budget deficits.
While the Senate tries its best to ram through the Marketplace Fairness Act as fast as possible, I urge all commonsense Americans to not only sign the public eBay petition against this grimy monstrosity, but also reach out to their representatives and tell them why you are opposed to any new tax increases of this nature.
Legislation supporters claim this is out of fairness to the mom and pops losing money due to online retailers, yet the very ones that will be hurt most are the small-timers selling on the web who will be burdened with more red tape, overhead, and administrative waste.
Fix the glaring mess we already have, Congress — then perhaps we can discuss just cause for more taxation.
Photo Credit: Jane0606/Shutterstock
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CCleaner 4.01 freshens up your browser

Piriform has released CCleaner 4.01 and CCleaner Portable 4.01, a minor update to its popular Windows freeware system cleaning tool. Version 4.01 is the first release since version 4.0 split users into free and paid-for camps by restricting product features to Pro license holders only.Most of version 4.01’s tweaks are available to both free and paid-for users, and revolve around improving existing tools and adding cleaning support to several new applications.
Improvements in CCleaner 4.01 revolve around better support for existing browsers: there’s improved cleaning for Google Chrome’s History along with better compatibility with Internet Explorer 10 and later builds of Firefox (version 19 and upward).
Windows 8 users should benefit from improved Registry cleaning thanks to an optimized cleaning algorithm, while both new tools introduced in version 4.0 – the Duplicate File Finder and Pro-only System and Browser Monitoring feature — also gain unspecified enhancements and optimizations.
Application-specific cleaning has been further developed too: added in version 4.01 are support for Adobe Acrobat XI, VSO Blu-ray and DVD Converter Ultimate, Oxygen XML Editor 1.4 and Connectify Hotspot, while two tools already supported — Mailwasher Pro and Google Earth — both gain improved cleaning.
The update is rounded off with the usual minor tweaks and bug fixes. CCleaner 4.01.4093 and CCleaner Portable 4.01.4093 are both available as free-for-personal-use downloads for PCs running Windows XP or later. Pro licenses are currently available for $24.95, a saving of $8 on the MSRP.
Photo Credit: Liv friis-larsen/Shutterstock
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AT&T launches its internet of things effort and it’s pretty big
AT&T is finally ready to unveil its home automation and security product, and it’s a pretty big deal. The product is built on AT&T’s acquisition of Xamboo in 2010, and it will put AT&t in competition with security giants such as ADT as well as a variety of startups building out routers, hubs and “http://gigaom.com/2013/04/18/zonoff-gets-3-8m-to-connect-the-smart-home-with-super-software/”>software for the connected home.
It’s also AT&T’s first foray into an over the top service. The company will offer the service in all areas where it provides wireless service, which may not seem like a big deal, except that the system will connect to both the AT&t wireless network as well as the wireline broadband inside a home. Looks like Ma Bell is ready to make some money on other people’s pipes.
What’s inside Digital Life
As for the service, it’s pretty compelling for the average person who’s evaluating a home automation or security system, especially if AT&t does open up the platform later as it promises it will. There are two basic packages. The cheaper entry-level package costs $29.99 a month plus $149.99 for equipment and installation. It includes 24/7 home monitoring, a wireless keypad, a remote some sensors and an indoor siren. The more expensive package includes all of that plus three more sensors of the owner’s choice for $39.99 a month and $249.99 for the gear and installation.
AT&T also has a slew of add-on devices including water leakage sensors, wireless cameras and thermostats that a consumer can buy and add to the plan for a monthly fee. AT&T has staffed two call centers around the clock in the U.S. and has provided a battery with the system to ensure that the product is reliable and online all the time. The wireline broadband and AT&T wireless provide redundancy for the connectivity.
Glen Lurie, the president of emerging enterprises and partnerships at AT&T, explained that the whole plan behind the system is for it to be secure and easy for customers to use. That’s why for example, you can’t just bring any old connected device onto the Digital Life network. Much like AT&T’s wireless network, the AT&T wants to test the devices before it will allow them on your home network. Lurie declined to tell me when AT&T would bring on additional partners. He also declined to tell me what companies AT&T is partnering with at launch.
And yet …
However, AT&T’s plan is pretty darn basic at the entry-level and adding standard components for really useful automation and security can bring the total installation and gear cost to about $600 and the monthly service fees to about $55 a month if you add the security camera ($200 installed) and energy management ($150 installed) packages. Remote door locks, water shut-off valves and other tweaks are extra.
That’s not crazy considering you get an integrated app that’s actually quite nice to use for controlling everything, but it’s still a significant investment: especially given the closed nature of the ecosystem.
I’m currently contemplating a $210 set of connected door locks (the non-connected locks are about $85) and so I know that adding connected gadgets to your home isn’t cheap. Because for some of these devices, like thermostats or door locks are also installed into the home, you had better hope you like the overall service. Of course, that’s great for AT&T, because it presumably reduces churn. My colleague Kevin Tofel and I had a good discussion of how to choose a home automation system this week on the internet of things podcast.
And once I have those locks I’ll have to wait for a system such as MobiPlug or SmartThings to support those locks if I want to integrate them into my existing home network. Or maybe I’d have to hope my locks are supported by a software vendor such as Zosoff. Plus, I’d have to do the equivalent of programming scenes that AT&T already has its app. The Leave Home scene will turn down your air, turn off the lights and lock your doors, for example.
Lurie claimed that AT&T is ahead of its competitors by about two to three years, noting that many of the home security products from companies such as Comcast or Time Warner Cable are provided by outside vendors and don’t have an integrated ecosystem like what AT&T is offering.
I think the integration is wonderful, but I do think it will be more powerful when I can bring in some of my existing connected devices onto the AT&T Digital Life network. While the hub that comes with the service supports Wi-Fi, 915 Mhz and other radios, the devices connect in a proprietary mesh that AT&T uses because it ensures security. It also ensures I can’t bring my own devices into the Digital Life family just yet.
But for those without my own particular hangups, the product is certainly worth a look. It launches in 15 markets on Friday including Atlanta, Austin, Texas; Boulder, Colo.; Chicago, Dallas, Denver, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, Philadelphia, Riverside, Calif.; San Francisco, Seattle, St. Louis and select areas of the New York and New Jersey areas.It will be in 50 markets by the end of 2013, available for purchase online and for testing at AT&T wireless stores.

Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.- A look back at mobile in Q1
- Report: The Ongoing Battle for the Digital Home
- What the shift to the cloud means for the future EPG

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Google exec wants search to have ‘emotional intelligence’ and be more ‘loving’
Google’s engineering director Ray Kurzweil, who has long been known for both his bold futurist predictions and his work in artificial intelligence, has laid out his vision for where search is headed in a new interview with Wired — and he’d apparently like to see Google become more like a friend with search benefits. Kurzweil starts off the interview by saying that he’s working at Google to help its search engine pick up more semantic meanings and thus help users receive good answers to more complicated questions.
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TalkAndroid Daily Dose for April 25, 2013
With hectic schedules, it can be hard to keep track of everything in your news feed. That’s why we created the TalkAndroid Daily Dose. This is where we recap the day’s hottest stories so you can get yourself up to speed in quick fashion. Happy reading!!
Apps
Iron Man 3 game hits Android devices, gives all gamers a chance to be their inner Tony Stark
Carriers
T-Mobile, Washington State AG agree to settlement on claims of deceptive no-contract advertising
Google Glass
Next iteration of Google Glass may look like traditional sunglasses with two see-through displays
Smart glasses like Google Glass expected to ship 9 million units by 2016
Phones
HTC makes statement regarding injunction, will transition to improved microphones
LG will show off a smartphone with a flexible OLED display this year
LG Optimus G Pro for AT&T render surfaces on Twitter
Samsung to delay the launch of its security software for Galaxy smartphones
Miscellaneous
Huawei announces departure from U.S. market, then reverses course
Updates
T-Mobile HTC One S gets Jelly Bean
Come comment on this article: TalkAndroid Daily Dose for April 25, 2013
Visit TalkAndroid for Android news, Android guides, and much more! -
Study shows major generational divide on online privacy attitudes
A study published this week by the USC Annenberg Center for the Digital Future found that young adults don’t care as much about online privacy as older Internet users. Individuals between the ages of 18 and 34, known as Millennials, were found to be more willing to hand over their personal data or web behavior to online businesses. Although 70% of young adults agreed that companies should never be allowed to access their personal data, compared to 77% by those older than 35, Millennials were more willing to give up some privacy if they benefited from it, such as receiving coupons or other business deals.
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T-Mobile, Washington State AG agree to settlement on claims of deceptive no-contract advertising
T-Mobile launched new “no-contract” service plans last month in an effort to differentiate themselves in the U.S. market. As we noted when examining the plans, the new hardware financing options could lead consumers to pay an even greater amount to get out of the non-existent contract than what they would have paid under the old system that used early termination fees. That possibility led Washington’s Attorney General Bob Ferguson to pursue an agreement to get T-Mobile to disclose these new terms in their advertising and offer customers a chance to cancel with no penalty if they were an early adopter of the new plans.
T-Mobile’s new no-contract terms offer consumers several options to obtain hardware to use with their new plan. One could use a device they had purchased elsewhere that is compatible with the T-Mobile network or they could pay the full retail price for a device up front. Many consumers will opt for a third option which is a plan that finances their hardware purchase over a set term, typically 24 months. According to T-Mobile’s terms, a consumer is only eligible for a financing plan if they have a valid T-Mobile service contract in place. If service is canceled, consumers are on the hook to make a balloon payment to pay off the remaining balance for their hardware. That could be a large amount if done during the first part of the 24 month financing period.
In entering into the new agreement that will apply nationwide, Ferguson noted “T-Mobile was failing to adequately disclose a critical component of their new plan to consumers, and we acted quickly to stop this practice and protect consumers across the country from harm.” T-Mobile and the attorney general filed an Assurance of Discontinuance today in which T-Mobile agrees to:
- Not misrepresent consumers’ obligations under its contracts, including those contracts that have not restrictions or limitations;
- Not fail to adequately disclose that customers who terminate their T-Mobile wireless service before their device is paid off will have to pay the balance due on the phone at the time of cancellation;
- Not misrepresent customers’ true obligations under the terms of its contracts for the sale of service or equipment;
- Make clear the consequences of cancelling T-Mobile service, including restrictions or limitations on cancellation; fees and costs; and early termination fees;
- More clearly state in all advertisements the true cost of telephone equipment, including the requirement the customer carry a wireless service agreement for the life of the 24-month financing plan;
- Instruct representatives to fully disclose obligations under the terms of its contracts, including developing a “Frequently Asked Questions” page; and
- Train customer service representatives to comply with the settlement within 21 days of signing.
Along with the above actions going forward, T-Mobile agreed to allow customers who entered into one of the new agreements between March 26 and April 25, 2013 the opportunity to cancel without penalty if they do so pursuant to the terms of their agreement and return their hardware to T-Mobile. T-Mobile also agreed to pay attorney’s fees in the amount of $26,046 to the state of Washington. T-Mobile will be contacting via email buyers who entered into one of the new agreements to advise them of their rights and options pursuant to this action.
source: Washington State Office of the Attorney General
via: phoneArenaCome comment on this article: T-Mobile, Washington State AG agree to settlement on claims of deceptive no-contract advertising
Visit TalkAndroid for Android news, Android guides, and much more! -
Google offers to promote rivals’ services to appease EU antitrust officials
Google may wind up settling with antitrust officials in the European Union but it likely won’t get away virtually scot-free like it did in the United States. The Associated Press reports that Google is offering some more concessions to European antitrust regulators, including an agreement to “display links to three rival specialized search services close to its own services, in a place that is clearly visible to users.” In other words, whenever Google shows sponsored search results for its own services, it must also display links to rivals’ services nearby. Previously, Google had agreed to clearly label its own services in searches as sponsored results in an attempt to satisfy critics who claimed that the company is pushing down rivals’ products to promote its own.
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Missed out on a WWDC ticket? Try an alternative conference, one block away
Some Apple developers might be bummed if they didn’t score tickets to the Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco, which sold out Thursday in record time — less than five minutes. But there is an alternative.
Targeting Apple developers and designers and other interested people, regardless of whether they are card-carrying iOS or Mac developers, the second-ever AltWWDC will go down on June 10-14 at San Francisco State University’s downtown campus. That’s a block away from Moscone West, the site of the official Apple event. The schedule is in flux, although the event does have a few speakers locked in, including Victor Agreda Jr. of the Unofficial Apple Weblog and Mac developers Mike Lee, Saul Mora and Brent Simmons.
The conference will go beyond code and design to also include business and legal issues and lifestyle topics, said an organizer, Rob Elkin. Still, organizers will display live blogs from bloggers covering the official conference keynote for all to see.
The first AltWWDC event was held last year, after Elkin wanted a place to work and talk with people while he was in San Francisco around the time of last year’s conference, even without a ticket to the official show. He and a friend, Judy Chen, put on the event, which attracted 70-80 people at the busiest times, Elkin said. It happened to be one of a few events going on at the same time as the official Apple conference. This year the alternative efforts, including IndieDevLab, are joining forces. Elkin expects many more people this time around. “As you can imagine, it’s a little bit hectic right now,” he said.
This year’s AltWWDC attendees won’t be there in person to see Apple folks reveal the nitty-gritty coding details about future platforms that could be announced, such as iOS 7 and OS X 10.9. But there will be talks and plenty of like-minded people to mingle with. Lunch and working space will be available, too, on a first-come, first-serve basis.
And it’s free! That sure beats WWDC’s $1,599 sticker price.

Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.- Takeaways from connected consumer’s second quarter
- Forecast: Tablet App Sales To Hit $8B by 2015
- How consumer media will change in 2013

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Would you like some storage in your storage?
A new type of memory device that will allow for much greater miniaturization and efficiency than current RAM has proved to have a surprising property. German researchers reported in a recent issue of Nature Communications that ReRAM (resistive memory cells) has a battery-type effect in which the devices actually store charge. This helps explain some anomalous behavior in memristors, the class of circuit elements that subsumes ReRAM.
Resistive memory cells (ReRAM or RRAM) have the potential to become a front-runner technology among nonvolatile memories. First developed by HP in 2008, ReRAM exhibits fast switching times and is suitable for low-power applications, because it requires less voltage. ReRAM differs from conventional computer memory by using ions (charged atoms) for storing data, rather than electrons, which owing to their tinier size are harder to control, impacting both data storage density and energy use.

The new research study reports that the ions in ReRAM behave like a battery. The data storage function in ReRAM is realized by the movement of ions between the memory cell’s two electrodes, silver or copper on the active end, and platinum, for example, on the inert end. A positive voltage leads to metal depositing at the counter electrode, which eventually forms a filament that short circuits the cell by connecting the two ends. This corresponds to the cell’s “on” state, while the “off” state can be restored by applying an oppositely polarized voltage.
A byproduct of this switching is the generation of an electric voltage, meaning the ReRAM cells act like tiny batteries. This finding has an impact not just for potentially improving data readout (an idea that the research team has patented), but also has theoretical implications. ReRAM, with active electrochemical components, violates the definition of memristors as passive circuit elements. The researchers argue that their finding means the memristor concept needs to be expanded, and that ReRAM cells are real memristors, something memristor pioneer Leon Chua has also argued.
Image via Jülich Aachen Research Alliance

Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.- Cleantech and investment in 2013
- The next generation of battery technology
- Cleantech third-quarter 2012


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