Tuesday, 15 January 2013

China?s Online Population Rises by 51 Million in 2012


China has added 51 million new internet users in last year, the Associated Press reports citing data from the China Internet Network Information Center.

Compared to 2011, China's internet user population rose 10 percent, bringing the total number to 564 million. That's more than the entire population of Russia and the U.S. combined.

The increase is largely due to a surge in mobile web surfing. The number of Chinese web surfers who access the internet from mobile phones, tablets and other wireless devices, rose 18.1 percent in 2012 to 420 million.

China's huge web usage growth comes despite the government's measures to prevent access to a large number of online services. The world'…
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Quentin Tarantino Drops N-Word At Golden Globes

'Django Unchained' filmmaker shocks press backstage at Golden Globes by addressing his film's controversies head-on.
By Josh Wigler, with reporting by Josh Horowitz


Quentin Tarantino at the 2013 Golden Globes
Photo: Getty Images

Monday, 14 January 2013

Moontoast Raises $5M For Premium Social Ads

moontoast logoSocial advertising startup Moontoast just announced that it has raised $5 million in Series B funding. CEO Blair Heavey told me that the company currently works with about 50 clients. It's not an enormous list, but one that includes names like Universal, Lexus, Nike, Ford, Lady Antebellum, Time, and Simon & Schuster. Advertisers use Moontoast to create custom, interactive ads for social media ? the ad types listed on the Moontoast site include a "social store", surveys, sweepstakes, and a unit to offer free MP3s in exchange for email addresses.

BOKU Co-Founder Ron Hirson Departs To Take On EIR Roles At Khosla Ventures And Mayfield Fund

ron_hirson_boku-240x300Ron Hirson, the co-founder and president of mobile payments company BOKU, is stepping down from his full-time position at the company. Hirson is leaving to take on entrepreneur-in-residence roles at two separate venture capital firms, Khosla Ventures and Mayfield Fund, according to an announcement issued by the company today.

Android 4.2.2 potentially spied lurking in a Czech overview (video)

Android 422 possibly spied lurking in a Czech review video

There's still some doubt as to whether or not Android 4.2.2 is real, or just a figment of the imagination for Nexus 4 owners wanting the latest code. While we can't guarantee that last group's satisfaction just yet, SmartMania.cz may have provided the next best thing. As part of an overview of the Nexus 4, the Czech site ever-so-casually shows at the 6:30 mark that its device is running the unannounced OS. The 4.2.2 sighting is almost incidental to the rest of the clip, although the time given to the rest of the software suggests there's no major differences visible to the everyday observer. We've reached out to Google and will let you know if the firmware is authentic and coming to other devices. In the meantime, the latest batch of potential evidence is visible after the break.

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Via: HDblog.it (translated)

Source: SmartMania.cz (translated)

Bill Clinton Introduces ?Lincoln? for Best Motion Picture at Golden Globes

The Golden Globe Awards had a surprising guest presenter Sunday evening.

To a standing ovation, former President Bill Clinton walked onto the stage to introduce “Lincoln” for 2012's best motion picture in the drama category (video follows with transcript and commentary):

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Manchin, McCain To Introduce Bill Creating Mass Violence Commission

Sunday, 13 January 2013

Golden Globes 2013 Predictions: Best Picture

A strong field of contenders has made this category harder to predict than ever.
By Kevin P. Sullivan


Anne Hathaway in "Les Miserables"
Photo: Universal Pictures

Shenzen New Degree?s Touch Panel Tech Doesn?t Mind The Rain And Still Delivers Killer Input Detection [Video]

20121219130325_95152Shenzen New Degree Technology was one of the companies showing its stuff in the Eureka Park portion of CES 2013, and this China-based hardware startup had some impressive tech to show off related to touch input. Combining capacitive and resistive touch-based input with a means to make it work even on solid stainless steel surfaces, Shenzen New Degree hopes to pave the way for a wide range of new products with built-in controls that are highly durable, retaining their touch sensitive abilities even after considerable wear and tear.

Nixon at 100: Was He ?America?s Last Liberal??

January 9 marked what would have been Richard Nixon’s 100th birthday and reignited an old debate among conservatives. Some view him as an underappreciated statesman who is a victim of a liberal double standard. Conrad Black proclaimed in a 2011piece on NRO that Nixon was “halfway to Mount Rushmore.” I have a more negative take: I believe that Richard Nixon governed more as a liberal than anything else, and that the Watergate scandal set back the cause of conservatism. From our failure to control runaway spending to restrictions on campaign finance, we are still dealing with the repercussions of his mistakes.

There is clear evidence that Nixon didn’t really like or trust conservatives, even if he hired a bunch of them. Rather, he used them and freely abandoned their principles when convenient. In a 1983 interview, he told historian Joan Hoff that his many liberal initiatives as president (from the creation of the Environmental Protection Agency to his calls for universal health insurance) reflected his own background and association with the “progressive” wing of the Republican party.

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Strikeforce results: Pat Healy says UFC move ?a done deal,' wants to ?mix it up' with Joe Lauzon

What Games Are: The Fun Boson Does Not Exist

wpid-Photo-12-Jan-2013-1553.jpgPerhaps the biggest roadblock facing the development of generation-two social games is the addiction to metrics. Social game makers still believe that fun is about finding the right behaviours, the right metric to measure fun and the right way to maximise that. They are wrong. Fun is, and always has been, a dynamic quality. They need to learn that there is no "fun boson".

TourWrist puts a twist on the photo sphere (hands-on video)

TourWrist puts a twist on the photo sphere handson video

You've heard of Instagram, right? Are you familiar with Microsoft's Photosynth and Google's Photo Sphere on Nexus phones and tablets? How about Apple's brilliant continuous-scan panorama mode on iOS devices? Well mash all this up and you get TourWrist, an app / social network for sharing photo spheres. The app started life as a social network for virtual tourism and gained one million users since launching in 2010. Here in Las Vegas, the company just launched the latest version of TourWrist with a focus on capturing photos spheres. Unlike Microsoft's and Google's approach, which stitches 360-degree images from discrete pictures, the app uses continuous-scan like Apple's panorama mode. The resulting photo spheres are truly impressive and look significantly better than the competition, especially when captured in tricky lighting conditions. All 360-degree images can be shared with other TourWrist users, Instagram-style, and with other social networks by linking to an HTML5-compatible viewer. Take a look at our gallery below and peek after the break for our hands-on video and sample photo sphere captured on site.

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Golden Globes 2013 Prediction: Best Actress

Jessica Chastain and Jennifer Lawrence will likely win big, but should they?
By Amy Wilkinson


Jessica Chastain in "Zero Dark Thirty"
Photo: Universal Pictures

Fitbit Flex, the new, colorful way to count steps, calories, and more

The Fitbit Flex made an appearance at CES 2013 and we were there to check it out first-hand. If you're looking for a way to integrate your iPhone into your fitness and health routine, the Fitbit flex is a perfect option. It'll not only track your steps but your distance traveled, calories burned, and more.

Once you've put on and set up the Fitbit Flex, you're good to go. It'll track all of your data and then beam it wirelessly via Bluetooth to your iPhone or Android device. Fitbit Flex also includes a built in alarm system as well.

If you're looking for a way to drop off some of that holiday weight, the Fitbit Flex can help keep you on track and on your way. The Fitbit Flex is set to be released this spring in a multitude of colors for $99.95.

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Saturday, 12 January 2013

NVIDIA News Roundup from CES

Android Central

If the Tegra 4 processor, Project Shield and NVIDIA Grid caught your eye during CES, I wouldn't blame you. Having sat in the front row for the press conference prior to CES, I can attest to the fact that great things are coming from the company in the first half of 2013.

With that in mind, I've wrapped up all of the NVIDIA news in one place. Hit the quick links below for the best NVIDIA news and announcements from CES 2013:

For more on NVIDIA, be sure to keep it locked @AndroidCentral and @MobileNations. However, I also encourage you to follow @nvidiategra and @nvidia… and keeping an eye on the NVIDIA Blog may not be a bad idea either :)



Olloclip previews mountable Photo Dock case for iPhone 5

Mobile photography fans will already be familiar with Olloclip's iPhone 5 lens which provides excellent macro, wide-angle, and fisheye capbailities. At CES 2013, they began showing off a new case to go along with it called the Photo Dock. It offers a flip-up section which doubles as an access point for an Olloclip as well as a more prominent shutter button. Along the bottom of the case is a removable section that has tripod mounts in both vertical and horizontal orientations, as well as a shoe mount if you want to get fancy with LED lighting or an external microphone.

I'm really digging how this case stands to offer a lot of functionality and a moderate amount of protection without getting too unwieldly. The only other real competitor in the integrated photography space is Diff, but being able to pare everything down to a slim, simple case may give Olloclip the edge. Expect the Photo Dock case to become available by the end of this quarter for around $50. Any takers?



Cate Blanchett Attends "The Secret River" Opening in Sydney

Proudly welcoming a new Sydney Theatre Company play, Cate Blanchett attended opening night of "The Secret River" on Saturday (January 12).

The Artistic Director of the company wore a shiny long-sleeved gold-and-black dress and heels as she posed with co-director Andrew Upton.

Beginning their final season as Co-Artistic Directors, "The Secret River" is based off of Kate Grenville's novel, following two families divided by culture and land in 19th century London.

In anticipation of the 2013 theatre season, Ms. Blanchett released a statement saying, "Originally conceived as a sign-off season for both of us, our 2013 season has a lot of our passions and favourite artists and is brimming with some of the relationships and partnerships that have inspired us during the last five years."

This Partying Porcupine Talks Just Like a Pixar Character

Chances are you may have rung in the new year with excess of some kind or another, but there's no way in hell you were this cute while you were doing it. Teddy here can get away with knocking over his glass and just generally making a mess because of that endearing squeaking nose. You, on the other hand, just yell incomprehensible nonsense. And so, the moral of the story is: this year, if at all possible, be a porcupine. [YouTube] More »


?Now? App Scans Instagram To Find You Something Fun To Do Nearby

Now Experience Feature DoneYou're bored at home asking "What should I do?" Meanwhile people nearby are shooting Instagrams of the fun events they're at. Now is a free iOS app that uses Instagram's API to sort through photos in real-time, organize those from the same time and place into events, and show you the events as a feed. Now harnesses the powerful Instagram API to help you discover parties, concerts, bar nights, and share them too

Far From the Rotten Crowd

Wednesday
Up in the morning here at the Watergate for a long e-mail exchange with my smart friend, Cathy Rasenberger, on the subject of Al Jazeera?s planned purchase of Al Gore?s ?Current? unsuccessful cable system. Cathy, a friend for close to four decades, literally since she was a student at Madeira, is now an extremely able and accomplished guru in the world of TV, and cable in particular.

Without dwelling on Al Gore and his personality, we talked about the economics of the deal. She explained that the relevant number was not how many people were watching ?Current? now but how many households could potentially watch it. By that measure, said Cathy, the price paid by Al Jazeera is not excessive. It would be difficult and extremely time consuming for Al Jazeera to build up to as many households as Current potentially reaches right now, she explained, and perhaps impossible.

By shelling out $500 mill right now, Al Jazeera gets those households in one fell swoop.

Plus, Cathy said, Al Jazeera was a far fairer and more balanced news entity than I gave it credit for.

As I said, I have known her for a long time, know her to be extremely fair minded and competent, so let us wait and watch about the subject for a time. I am happy to learn new facts, and I guess I have now.

Then, off to CNN to do a short interview. The highlight was running into Wolf Blitzer. He has a major, pivotal role in Skyfall and I told him I had seen it nine times and always got a thrill out of seeing him on the screen. He was obviously extremely happy to have been in the movie, as well he might have been.

He pointed out that his scene in the movie is key — I won?t tell you how — and was pleased to have been so helpful to James Bond.

Then, a lightning trip to the National Gallery of Art. Then, back home for a haircut. I have been going to the Watergate Barber Shop for about forty years now and I feel comfortable there. The barbers all cut my father?s hair before me, and they can recall exactly their conversations with him about the Redskins, the poor doomed Redskins.

Then a nap, and then Alex and I raced off to The Mayflower Hotel on Connecticut Avenue, NW, to attend the Centenary of Richard Nixon?s birth, a celebration of Nixon hands from long ago honoring the greatest peacemaker America has ever known.

I was exploding with emotion as Alex and I walked into the hallway of the Mayflower. I remembered walking in there with my Pop to see a Cadillac with gold trim from the movie, The Solid Gold Cadillac, and also seeing preparations being made for Ike?s inauguration in 1953. (My father held me on his shoulders to watch Ike go by in a Lincoln convertible, if I recall correctly.) Long time passing. How I wish my father were alive. I wish I wish I wish.

There were cocktails in a large reception room. I saw my mentor and kind guardian, former Commerce Secretary and kind heart, Fred Dent; old pal and war hero, and helper in life, Peter Flanigan and his lovely wife; my great friend Ken Khachigian and his Meredith and two lovely daughters; Aram Bakshian, world?s smartest human; and many others whom I remembered more or less well from Nixon White House days.

The men and women in the room were uniformly intelligent looking, alert, friendly, but much more than that — they looked sane.

More and more I notice that at airports and shopping centers, the other people look insane and frantic. I guess I do, too. But these men and women looked relaxed, happy, content. Different by far from what I usually see in L.A., very different from what I see in Malibu, but oddly similar to what I see in Sandpoint, Idaho.

Off at the corner of my eye was Henry A. Kissinger, getting a lot of attention from the press and autograph seekers. He looked cheerful.

Then the lights flashed and some men rang a chime, and we all went across the hall to dinner. It was in a room where I have spoken in the past. We found our table, and then out of the blue appeared my dear pal, Phil DeMuth. Now, talk about an astoundingly great friend: Phil had a head cold, but even so, had flown all the way from LAX just for this event, arriving just in time to get to it before we even did, but out of sight at the cocktail hour. With him was his wonderful brother, Chris, and his charming sister in law, Susan. Chris was head of the AEI for dogs? years and has been a fantastically good friend to the Steins. (He and AEI threw an 80th birthday party for my father that Pop called ?the happiest day of his life.?) Also at our table were wonderful Wlady and his lovely wife, Joanna.

Tricia Nixon began the evening with a superb short speech about her father and mother. Then there was fine appearance by Rev. Franklin Graham, and then dinner. Then we all sang ?Happy Birthday? to RN as a kinescope of him playing ?Happy Birthday? on the piano ran on screens for accompaniment.

After the meal, Fred Malek gave an upbeat, irreverent fund-raising appeal. Then Pat Buchanan made a spectacularly good speech, one of the best speeches I have ever heard. It recited accomplishments and anecdotes about RN, some extremely funny about RN?s witty wish to not be burdened by excess paperwork. It ended with what Pat wished he could say right now to Mr. Nixon about the ?jackal pack? that brought him down. Quoting from F. Scott Fitzgerald?s immortal comments about the inherited rich who clung to Gatsby then dumped him abruptly, a line addressed to Jay Gatsby, Pat said he would tell RN, ?They?re a rotten bunch. You?re better than the whole lot of them put together.?

This got a huge cheer and made me very happy because I had actually said that to Mr. Nixon in San Clemente after he resigned. It is one of my favorite analogies to RN in literature. Of course Fitzgerald had no idea of Nixon or his enemies when he wrote the book, but he knew types.

(I should add for completeness that before Fred Malek spoke, I gave the briefest speech imaginable about how I would never turn my back on Richard Nixon, the peacemaker.)

Pat?s speech was just terrific but I suspect that Aram, smartest of the smart, could have done even better.

Then Dr. Kissinger spoke. In a thick accent, he talked about the state of the world when RN took office. No major Arab state had full diplomatic relations with the U.S., China was our bitter enemy, the Soviet Union was implacably hostile, and we were bogged down in a quagmire in Vietnam where we had 500,000 troops and many thousands getting killed every year.

With a Democrat Congress, by the time he was forced from office, all had changed. The war in Vietnam was over and we had gotten back our POWs. We had opened relations with China. We had a major arms reduction agreement with the Soviet Union. We had full diplomatic relations with every major Arab state and Soviet influence in the Mideast was nil.

Dr. Kissinger spoke with magnificent generosity, never mentioning his immense part in these astounding coups. It was a breathtakingly powerful litany about what a powerful, thoughtfully and resolutely led America can do. (President Obama, kindly take notes. Firmness plus strength and you win nothing by weakness.) I am not sure I have ever heard a better speech than Dr. Kissinger?s tonight.

Then, the piece de resistance: a very short speech by Julie about how grateful her father and mother would have been and what wonderful parents they had been.

?He was the best father in the world,? she said simply and there was not a dry eye in the house. I am bound to say that Tricia?s speech at the beginning was also magnificent. She said we were all part of her family and that moved me very much.

Then, the event was over. I kissed Julie goodbye and talked briefly to David Eisenhower. Then I looked for Peter Flanigan but he was gone. I wonder if I will ever see these people again. I will never work with such kind people as Fred Dent, who grasped my shoulder and reassured me that things would be all right as I was sobbing the day RN resigned. We all tried so hard to keep the peacemaker in office and the Pharisees laid him low. But what times we had.? We were so young and so full of idealism. (Hey, now I remember I had Cathy Rasenberger over to lunch at the White House.) We are old now but still believe in America, the state founded on idealism about human worth. That?s something. And how fortunate to have worked with such sane people.

And Nixon?s bad days lasted only for a time. We still live in the world Richard Nixon built and every day we are at peace, we have him to thank — along with our hero fighting men and women and their families — for it.

What splendid men and women I got to work with. I am reminded of a line from The Last Picture Show or a paraphrase, ?If it hadn?t of been for him, I wouldn?t have known what it was all about, whatever it is? (again, a paraphrase). And, of course, it was my Pop and my Mom who put me where it all could happen. I have been blessed so far beyond what I deserve it is incalculable.

Now, to sleep. Thank you, Ron Walker and Sandy Quinn and everyone else from the RN Foundation who made such a great evening of it. Thank you.