Sunday, September 30, 2012

Nineteen University of Oregon students cited by EPD on Friday night

The Eugene Police Department received 18 calls from 9 p.m. to 3 a.m. Friday night. There were also 35 officer-initiated stops and 22 people were arrested. Official count of citations and charges given out on Friday night:

  • 16 Open container ?(eight University students)
  • 9 ??Minor in possession ?(eight University students)
  • 2 ??Prohibited noise ?(both University students)
  • 2 ??Furnishing/Allowing alcoholic beverages to a minor
  • 1 ???Possession of less than an ounce of marijuana ?(University student)
  • 2 ??Interfering with police

Source: http://dailyemerald.com/2012/09/29/22-arrested-by-epd-party-patrol/

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Five Best Budget Pens [Hive Five]

Five Best Budget Pens Those of us who love our pens know that they can be more than just a writing instrument that we toss out and replace with a new one?they can be great tools that help us work and feel more creative. That said, most of us don't want to drop hundreds of dollars on a pen if we don't have to, so this week we asked you which budget pens were the ones you make sure never to let someone borrow and walk away with. Let's take a look at the top five, based on your nominations.

As with many Hives of this type, we're grouping together some popular models into brands, mostly because many of the brands here have so many varied models (and you voted for them all) that we think it's better to cover more territory than less. Still, you offered up way more great pen nominations than we can feature here, but we only have room for the top five.

Five Best Budget Pens

Pilot Pens (G2, V5/V7, Varsity, G-Tech/Hi-Tec)

Pilot pens were some of the first to show many of us that a writing implement could be more than just a utilitarian device. Whether you were introduced to your first Pilot pen in school or at work, you probably still remember your favorite, and many of you called out your faves?specifically the Pilot G2?for its affordability, its broad availability, and it's smooth, clean writing. Many of you also pointed out how great the V5 and V7 models, which have been around for ages, still are, and others noted that when you wanted a fountain pen, you can't go wrong with the Varsity disposable model. Excellent taste. Photo by hades2k.


Five Best Budget Pens

Zebra Pens (Sarasa, F/G-301, F-701, F-402)

Many of Zebra's most popular models are known for their trademark all-steel, metallic design, and you may remember the first time you encountered one?if it was like the first time I picked one up, they were unlike any other pen you'd seen in a world of disposable plastic pens. They just look sharp and elegant, and using them is just as much fun. Not all of their models are that trademarked steel body though: the Zebra Sansa, for example, is fantastic gel pen with a transparent body and soft grip for smooth, comfortable writing. Many of you also praised Zebra for its portability and attractive design?most of their pens are unibody, and can slide into a pocket or bag without worrying you'll lose a cap in the process. Besides, they really do look and feel good to use. Photo by J Wynia.


Five Best Budget Pens

Uniball Pens (Jetstream, Signo, Onyx, Vision)

Uniball pens come in multiple shapes, sizes, and form factors, but one thing is certain: you reall love them. Whether it's the quick-drying Jetstream series, designed for speedy writers who don't want their ink to smudge, or the rich, smooth black ink of the Signo and Gel lines, or the utility but smooth, free-flowing rollerball feel of the Vision and Onyx lines, Uniball has a pen engineered for whatever writing style you prefer, that's comfortable enough to use for long periods, and at a price point that makes sure you can pick up more than a few and keep them around your home or office. You could write with different Uniball models for weeks and still fall in love with each new one you tried. Photo by Brett Jordan.


Five Best Budget Pens

Lamy Pens (Safari, Al-Star, Vista)

Lamy's line of modern, stainless steel, and brushed aluminum pens earned high praise from those of you who don't want to break the bank on your writing instruments, but don't want to sacrifice good-looking style and comfort either. Whether it's the minimal, solid-color-and-clip design of the Safari line of fountains, gels, and rollerballs, or it's the more metallic tones of the Al-Stars, or even the transparant Vistas, many of you approved of Lamy's affordability and smooth, elegant writing. Even the shapely, designer Accent line earned nominations, and we have to agree?they all look good, and write better. Photo by vinyleraser.


Five Best Budget Pens

Sharpie Pens

Sharpie's best known for their permanent markers, but their new pens offer the same quality non-toxic, smear-proof ink that?at least in this case?won't bleed through the paper as you use it. Sharpie's medium and fine point pens come with soft tips for smooth, consistent writing, and the best part is that they're available virtually anywhere. No refills or fancy designs on these, but those of you who nominated them love them to the point where at least one of you said that if you used one, you'd never vote for anything else. Sharpie's had a rough road with some of their pens, but we have to say: Sharpie's newer pens are great, and well worth a shot, especially considering the price point. Photo by redspotted.


That's it! Now that you've seen the top five, it's time to put them to an all out vote to determine the winner.


We have plenty of honorable mentions this week, mostly because the voting was so ridiculously close that there were multiple ties. First, one goes to The Fischer Space Pen, which many of you nominated for its clean, metallic designs that range from utilitarian to bullet-shaped, and the fact that they can write at all angles. The price doesn't hurt, ranging around $20-$50 for most models, and hey-they work in space!

Also worth mentioning are Bic Pens, including the Atlantis, Cristal, and Round Stic, all of which many of you praised for their affordability, multiple varieties, colors, styles, and writing thicknesses depending on your preference, their super-broad availability, and their smooth feel while writing.

FInally, we want to give a shoutout to Pentel Pens, including the Energel and R.S.V.P, which both offer great style, bang for your buck, and smooth, clean writing when used. Again, they fell just shy of the votes required to make the top five, which should show you how large the volume of nominees this week really was.

We got a ton of great nominees this week?way more than we could feature, even though we wanted to. Have something to say about one of the contenders? Want to make the case for your personal favorite, even if it wasn't included in the list? Remember, the top five are based on your most popular nominations from the call for contenders thread from earlier in the week. Make your case for your favorite?or alternative?in the discussions below.

The Hive Five is based on reader nominations. As with most Hive Five posts, if your favorite was left out, it's not because we hate it?it's because it didn't get the nominations required in the call for contenders post to make the top five. We understand it's a bit of a popularity contest, but if you have a favorite, we want to hear about it. Have a suggestion for the Hive Five? Send us an email at tips+hivefive@lifehacker.com!

Title photo by Bill Bradford.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/8RCKu8YhQ6w/five-best-budget-pens

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Motorola Vs Microsoft: U.S. Court Rules Against Enforcement Of Patent Injunction

The Motorola-Microsoft patent tussle over Xbox 360 and Windows software took an interesting turn Friday as a U.S. appeals court ruled Sept.28 that Google Inc's Motorola Mobility cannot enforce a patent injunction issued against the Redmond giant in Germany.

The injunction if enforced would have barred Microsoft from selling products in Germany including the Xbox 360 and Windows software, Reuters reported.

Predictably, while Microsoft was pleased with the ruling, Google's Motorola unit declined to comment on the same.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco issued the ruling that helps Microsoft win some credits against Google in Germany.

The tussle involves standards essential patents covering H.264 video encoding, which Motorola claims that Microsoft infringed on its standards essential patents for several products including Windows 7 and Xbox 360, The Verge noted.

The German court ruling observation was in line with Motorola's observation granting injunction against infringing products but it did not enforce any ban on infringing products. Earlier, a federal judge in Seattle restrained Motorola from enforcing a ban stating he had to decide on whether such a ban was appropriate with standards essential patents. The Friday ruling upheld the decision, The Verge has added.

As Microsoft filed a lawsuit against Motorola for breach of contract in the United States, U.S. courts are empowered to hold the injunction issued by German court, the 9th Circuit ruled.

"At bottom, this case is a private dispute under Washington state contract law between two U.S. corporations," the court ruled, according to Reuters.

Source: http://www.ibtimes.com/motorola-vs-microsoft-us-court-rules-against-enforcement-patent-injunction-797797

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Saturday, September 29, 2012

Yikes! Fish sports a penis with 4 hooks

A male fish from Mexico has some fearsome genitalia. Equipped with four hooks, the male's sex parts might allow him to grab onto a resistant female during mating, researchers say.

The freshwater llanos mosquitofish, or Gambusia quadruncus, was described this month in the Journal of Fish Biology by a team led by researcher Brian Langerhans of North Carolina State University. Langerhans explained that the male's hooked genitals may be a counter-response to the female's own defenses against undesirable mates.

"Typically, reproduction is more costly in females, so females favor ways of reducing mating with 'lower quality' males, but reproduction is cheap in males and so selection favors ways of mating with as many females as possible," Langerhans said in a statement.

Females of this species have evolved to have a big ball of tissue that blocks most of the genital pore. This means the female would have to deliberately allow the male to mate with her unless the male evolved a counter-response, Langerhans explained.

The four-hooked genitalia could help the males overcome resistance and latch onto a female's genital pore and deposit sperm inside her. (Fertilization in the Gambusia genus takes place inside the female's body and she gives birth to live young.)

Strange as it seems, such hooks aren't unheard of. Another new species (Phallostethuscuulong) that was recently discovered in Vietnam sports sex parts that jut out of its head and are equipped with a rod and a jagged hook to clasp the female during mating.

  1. Science news from NBCNews.com

    1. Vatican brands 'Jesus' Wife' papyrus?as a fake

      An ancient papyrus fragment which a Harvard scholar says contains the first recorded mention that Jesus may have had a wife is a fake, the Vatican said Friday.

    2. Yikes! Fish sports a penis with 4 hooks
    3. How physics can tilt the odds in roulette
    4. Maggot guts help police identify body

The researchers who described that fish in a July edition of the journal Zootaxa similarly said hooking onto his mate probably helps ensure the male's fertilization success. [ Image Gallery: Weird 'Penis Head' Fish ]

Langerhans also described another strange feature in the llanos mosquitofish. The females have a colorful spot on their anus that seems to indicate the location of the female's genital pore, reproductive status and species. The latter could reduce cross-breeding, Langerhans said.

"So it may be thatG. quadruncus evolved different anal spots to help reduce interspecies matings and possible formation of hybrids," he said in a statement.

Follow LiveScience on Twitter @livescience. We're also on Facebook? and Google+.

? 2012 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49215686/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Writer behind Suri's Burn Book blog publishes book

NEW YORK (AP) ? Suri Cruise would never wear denim, is on the Dukan Diet and considers Jay-Z and Beyonce's daughter, Blue Ivy, a rival.

Not the real Suri Cruise, daughter of Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes, but the one written about in a snarky blog ? and now book ? "Suri's Burn Book: Well-Dressed Commentary From Hollywood's Little Sweetheart" (Running Press).

Behind this fictional Suri, who is more Blair Waldorf of TV's "Gossip Girl" than 6-year-old Suri, is Allie Hagan.

About 18 months ago, Hagan thought she had an idea for a fun hobby: writing a humor blog from Suri's perspective.

"Every once in a while on my personal Twitter account I'd make little jokes about what Shiloh Jolie-Pitt was wearing or what Suri was up to, and a friend suggested I start a Tumblr account with that kind of humor about celebrity families," the 25-year-old Hagan, who lives in Washington, D.C., said in a recent interview.

"I knew that if I wrote it from my own perspective, it would come across as unnecessarily mean, possibly creepy. So I tried to think of a different angle."

Typical posts have a fictional Suri commenting on the outfits of other celebrity children or seeming utterly embarrassed by her parents.

One topic Hagan ditched the cynicism over was the recent split of Suri's parents. Her Web site had the highest traffic ever on the day Holmes announced she had filed for divorce from Cruise.

"I felt a lot of pressure because even though I think a lot of people saw it as a humorous kind of huge pop culture event ... I still see (Suri) as a girl whose parents were splitting up and I didn't want to make fun of that," she said.

The resulting post, written as Suri, led with, "Please respect my privacy during this difficult time. (Just mine though ? everyone else is fair game.)"

In the past year, Hagan juggled daily blog posts with more timeless musings for her book of the same name.

She recently quit her day job as an education policy consultant and is now a full-time writer. She says with so much attention placed on Hollywood kids, the possibilities about what to write seem endless.

Hagan hopes Britain's Kate Middleton and actress Diane Kruger will become mothers.

She said the fictional Suri longs to be royalty and "will be distraught" if the Duchess of Cambridge has children.

And Hagan is a fan of Kruger and her longtime boyfriend (and former Holmes' co-star and love interest) Joshua Jackson.

"I think they are so fashionable and there's also that ... Katie Holmes' old-loves connection. I just think it would be fun to write about and I think they're just so cool."

___

Online:

http://surisburnbook.tumblr.com/

___

Alicia Rancilio covers entertainment for The Associated Press. Follow her online at http://www.twitter.com/aliciar

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-09-28-People-Allie%20Hagan/id-5a344ff5728c435aa5c2aa5b3f2bb5c3

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Barca invites 3 Palestinians after Hamas boycott

Associated Press Sports

updated 10:03 a.m. ET Sept. 28, 2012

BARCELONA, Spain (AP) -Barcelona has invited three Palestinians to attend the Oct. 7 match against Real Madrid in response to Hamas calling for a media boycott of the club after it gave a complimentary ticket to an Israeli soldier.

Barcelona announced in a statement that it had accepted the Palestinian embassy's request for tickets for footballer Mahmoud Al Sarsak, who was held in an Israeli jail for three years until being released this year following a hunger strike, along with the president of the Palestinian Football Union Jibril Rajoub and the Palestinian Authority ambassador.

The Spanish club also said it invited Gilad Schalit, the Israeli soldier who was held captive from 2006-11 by Gaza Strip militants, after receiving a request for a ticket for him.

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Barca invites 3 Palestinians after Hamas boycott

BARCELONA, Spain (AP) -Barcelona has invited three Palestinians to attend the Oct. 7 match against Real Madrid in response to Hamas calling for a media boycott of the club after it gave a complimentary ticket to an Israeli soldier.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/49208470/ns/sports-soccer/

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No tax, no blessing: German church insists on levy

In this photo taken on Thursday, Sept. 27, 2012, a woman prays under a statue depicting Jesus and Mary, in the cathedral of Frankfurt, Germany. The road to heaven is paved with more than good intentions for Germany's 24 million Catholics. If they don't pay their religious taxes, they will be denied sacraments, including weddings, baptisms and funerals. A decree issued last week by the country's bishops cast a spotlight on the longstanding practice in Germany and a handful of other European countries in which governments tax registered believers and then hand over the money to the religious institutions. (AP Photo/Michael Probst)

In this photo taken on Thursday, Sept. 27, 2012, a woman prays under a statue depicting Jesus and Mary, in the cathedral of Frankfurt, Germany. The road to heaven is paved with more than good intentions for Germany's 24 million Catholics. If they don't pay their religious taxes, they will be denied sacraments, including weddings, baptisms and funerals. A decree issued last week by the country's bishops cast a spotlight on the longstanding practice in Germany and a handful of other European countries in which governments tax registered believers and then hand over the money to the religious institutions. (AP Photo/Michael Probst)

(AP) ? The road to heaven is paved with more than good intentions for Germany's 24 million Catholics. If they don't pay their religious taxes, they will be denied sacraments, including weddings, baptisms and funerals.

A decree issued last week by the country's bishops cast a spotlight on the longstanding practice in Germany and a handful of other European countries in which governments tax registered believers and then hand over the money to the religious institutions.

In Germany, Catholics, Protestants and Jews pay a surcharge of up to nine percent on their income tax bills ? or about ?56 ($72) a month for a single person earning a pre-tax monthly salary of about ?3,500 ($4,500).

For religious institutions, struggling to maintain their congregations in a secular society where the Protestant Reformation began 500 years ago, the tax revenues are vital.

The Catholic Church in Germany receives about ?5 billion ($6.5 billion) annually from the surcharge. For Protestants, the total is just above ?4 billion ($5.2 billion). Donations, in turn, represent a far smaller share of the churches' income than in the United States.

With rising prices and economic uncertainty, however, more and more Catholics and Protestants are opting to save their money and declare to tax authorities they are no longer church members, even if they still consider themselves believers.

"I quit the church already in 2007," Manfred Gonschor, a Munich-based IT-consultant, said. "It was when I got a bonus payment and realized that I could have paid myself a nice holiday alone on the amount of church tax that I was paying on it."

Gonschor added he was also "really fed up with the institution and its failures."

Such defections have hit the Catholic Church especially hard ? it has lost about 181,000 tax-paying members in 2010 and 126,000 a year later, according to official figures. Protestants, who number about 24 million nationwide, lost 145,000 registered members in Germany in 2010, the most recent year from which figures are available.

But the figures include some people who still want to baptize their children, take communion on major religious holidays, marry in a religious ceremony and receive Christian burials.

The group We are Church, which claims to represent tens of thousands of grassroots Catholics, said many Germans stop paying the tax because they disagree with the church's policies or simply want to save money ? not because they have lost their faith.

"I haven't quit because I still think that I might want to get married in a church one day, even though I know that's absurd," said Anna Ainsley, a 31-old-year banker and a Protestant from Frankfurt. "But when I see my tax declaration, then I think every year that I should finally quit."

Those are the people that Germany's Catholic bishops had in mind when they decreed on Sept. 20 that stopping the payment of religious taxes was "a serious lapse" and those who did so would then be excluded from a range of church activities.

"This decree makes clear that one cannot partly leave the Church," the bishops said in a statement. "It is not possible to separate the spiritual community of the Church from the institutional Church."

Wavering Catholics will now be sent letters reminding them of the consequences of avoiding the church tax, including losing access to all sacraments.

"Maybe you haven't considered the consequences of your decision and would like to reverse this step," a draft of the letter states.

Protestants have taken a less stern position, saying non-taxpayers are still welcome to attend services and take communion. But becoming a godparent, getting married in a church or taking a job in church-affiliated institutions such as hospitals or kindergartens are off-limits to those who stop paying their taxes.

Switzerland and Austria also tax Catholic and Protestant church members. In Denmark, the State Lutheran church collects a tax from its members. Members of Sweden's Lutheran Church pay around 1 percent of their income, collected by the national tax authorities, just as in Finland.

In Italy, tax-payers have the choice of diverting a small part of their income taxes to religious institutions, including the Catholic Church and the country's Jewish community, but the contribution is voluntary.

In none of those countries have the churches taken such a firm stand against dropouts.

So far German courts have stood by the bishops' decision. This week the country's top administrative court threw out a lawsuit against the archdiocese of Freiburg by retired theologian Hartmut Zapp, who has spent years fighting the Catholic Church over the tax.

Zapp argued that a Catholic should be free to stop paying but remain a member of the spiritual community and that his religious beliefs could not possibly be tied to a tax payment.

The archdiocese responded in a statement that "those who lack solidarity bid farewell to the community of believers."

The tax issue presents moral and ethical dilemmas to millions of German believers, even dividing couples.

Sonja Trott, a 34-year-old teacher from Munich, said she quit the Catholic Church 15 years ago because she no longer believed in its teachings.

"Now I'd like to convince my husband that he also should quit, that would save us a lot of money," she said.

But her husband, Christoph, a sales executive, says he cannot imagine refusing to pay on moral grounds because it would seem like a betrayal of his faith. "I don't like paying it, but I do because I fear the step of quitting the church."

He would prefer to donate part of the money to charities "but well, in Germany the payment determines whether I'm allowed to consider myself a Catholic or not."

For other Germans, it's unethical to stop paying the tax but continue to use the church when it suits them.

Christine Solf, a Munich-based consultant, says she doesn't attend services regularly but appreciates the church's charitable work. For her, church membership is also a family tradition.

"I know people who quit for financial reasons but then still want their children to be baptized. That's not OK in my opinion," she said.

___

Juergen Baetz can be reached on Twitter at www.twitter.com/jbaetz

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-09-28-Germany-Pay%20to%20Pray/id-bf7f8858cca84cb9973533a046d5a028

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30 years ago, the CD started the digital music revolution

15 hrs.

The digital music revolution officially hit 30 years ago, on Oct. 1, 1982. While you may be surprised to learn?that the heralds of the coming age were, in fact, the Bee Gees, it probably comes as less of a shock to learn that Sony was at the very heart of it. After years of?research and an?intense period of?collaboration with Philips, Sony shipped the world's first CD player, the CDP-101. Music???and how we listen to it???would never be the same.

Today the CD player might be seen as something of a relic, since our smartphones, iPods and satellite radios provide seamless access to not only our entire music libraries, but to nearly every artist or track available. We can dictate any song or album to an app and have it playing in seconds, or download a new single by visiting an artist's Facebook page.

In such a world, the idea of carrying around a disc loaded with just 10 or 12 tracks and switching it out every hour sounds positively stone-age.?But the MP3 and streaming media are not just the CD's replacements, but its descendants. The future of music in fact made its unofficial debut, believe it or not, in the hands of the Bee Gees.

It was on the BBC show Tomorrow's World in 1981?that the Bee Gees publicly?demonstrated CD technology (and a new album, Living Eyes) for the first time. Artists were excited about the format ? the prospect of a high-quality, track-separated, non-degrading medium was enticing, though many were still skeptical of digital encoding. But music industry heavies like David Bowie and renowned conductor Herbert von Karajan were quick to embrace it, and soon the likes of Dire Straits would hit a million sales and cement the CD's position?as the new standard for music.

That triumph was a long time coming: development of the format began in the '70s, when both Sony and Philips were independently doing research on an digital,?optical disc format to replace cassette tapes and records. Early work at Sony was led by Norio Ohga, who bravely bore the skepticism of his comrades in order to create and demonstrate the earliest versions in 1976 and 1978.

Meanwhile, Philips was on the same track, so to speak. Their original version, an evolution of the laserdisc, was a whopping 20cm in diameter, but after reflection they brought the size of their prototype down to 11.5cm ? the same size, measured diagonally, as a cassette tape.

In 1979, the two companies decided to work together. They set up a task force of less than a dozen people ? engineers who didn't know if they could trust each other. After breaking the ice, however, the team worked for a year and?managed to arrive at a set of standards, called the "Red Book." The manufacturing process and method of encoding were contributed by Philips, while Sony created the digital error-correction that made reading the data reliable.

The new technology was privately inaugurated in 1980, and the first modern CD pressed was Richard Strauss's "Alpine Symphony." The next year, the Bee Gees went on the BBC, and the year after that the CD as we know it today was born.

That October of 1982, the CDP-101 made its debut in Japan alongside the first run of CD albums, led by Billy Joel's 52nd Street. The device was expensive: ?168,000, ?about $730 at the time, or almost twice that when adjusted for inflation. But home audio wasn't cheap then, and there was a market eager to snap up the new, high-fidelity audio format.

The engineers behind it?had really had a task: everything about the system was brand new. As Jacques Heemskerk, one of the senior Philips engineers on the project, told the BBC in 2007:

It was revolutionary in many fields???the optics were new, the disc was new. At the start of development there wasn't even a laser that would work well enough for our needs.?The most advanced laser at the time had a lifespan of only 100 hours.

So the cost was justified by the complexity and novelty of the hardware. Other manufacturers, like Toshiba, Kenwood, and of course Philips, would produce variant CD players over the course of the next year.?

The first CDs to market, with the notable exception of Billy Joel, were mostly classical. In fact, the capacity of the CD was raised during development from 60 to 74 minutes in order to accommodate Beethoven's Ninth Symphony. The creators of the format knew that classical music lovers were more likely to appreciate (and more likely?to pay for) the increased quality of the CD system.?

The pop and rock market, however, was still in love with cassettes, which were more portable and more ubiquitous than ever. 1979 had brought the first Walkman, and cassette players were now standard equipment in car radios. The CD was, for the moment, strictly for the home, where your nice speakers and amp would make the improved fidelity sing. Even there, to this day, some audiophiles swear by vinyl records and an all-analog setup.

It wasn't until later in the '80s that things really took off. Dire Straits'?Brothers In Arms?sold a million CDs in 1985, suggesting that the format had finally hit its stride. It wasn't long before other artists were selling millions upon millions of their albums in CD format. The Discman, introduced in 1984, and the CD-ROM format, enabling computers to read the discs, further accelerated uptake.

The rest, as they say, is history. Since that time, hundreds of billions of CDs have been shipped and sold ? the numbers are near-impossible to track, since the easily duplicated?digital data led to an enormous increase in piracy and counterfeiting, not to mention the billions of copies and mix-CDs made by normal users.

Music CDs?peaked in 2000 with global sales estimated?at around 2.5 ?billion. Soon (legal) digital downloads began to replace physical media for many music buyers. Though its numbers are on the decline,?CDs are still produced today on the order of hundreds of millions, and it will be many years yet before the world's CD factories shut their doors.

The size and shape of the CD, as well as its capacity, portability, and versatility, have been a major factor in how music has been developed and consumed for decades. Albums were written to fill it, new formats like the DVD were made in imitation of it, and entire new trends in media resulted from it. The Compact Disc started the digital revolution for music in the '70s, and we're still feeling the effects.

Devin Coldewey is a?contributing writer for NBC News Digital. His personal website is?coldewey.cc.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/gadgetbox/30-years-ago-cd-started-digital-music-revolution-6167906

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Lady Antebellum Perform for Children in Cancer Ward in ...

Lady Antebellum and Brian

YouTube

The members of Lady Antebellum got the chance to bring smiles to some kids who really need them when they performed recently in the oncology unit at UCSF?s Benioff Children?s Hospital. The ?Need You Now? hitmakers chronicled the visit in a new webisode of Lady A TV that aired Wednesday (Sept. 26).

?We got there and met a lot of the staff who are working every day on a daily basis to try to make these kids? lives as happy and as joyful and as positive as they can be while they?re there,? Hillary Scott says. ?It was just an unbelievable experience.?

Charles Kelley was struck by how the children are rising to their challenges. ?I was really blown away by all of the positive attitudes of the kids, most of them going through stuff that most of us couldn?t even fathom,? he observed. ?So to see them still with high spirits was great.?

While there, Lady A performed an acoustic set in one of the activity rooms, which was broadcast into the rest of the wards for the kids who couldn?t squeeze into the tiny space. Scott gave one lucky young fan a kiss at the conclusion of ?Just a Kiss,? no doubt raising his spirits even higher.

Other highlights of the trip included the musicians jamming with a 12-year-old patient named Brian on the Poison classic ?Every Rose Has its Thorn,? which Kelley assured him would be all he would need to know to score with the ladies. The youngster was particularly interested in learning all he could from Dave Haywood ? the instrumental backbone of the group.

Lady Antebellum also performed over Face Time to another patient?s classmates. When they sang the line ?I?m a little drunk and I need you now,? Kelley jokingly admonished, ?Don?t do that, kids!? The musicians were then presented with some original artwork, which three of the patients had painted for them, before it was time to leave.

Haywood found the experience uplifting, as did his bandmates. ?It?s an honor, and it humbles us to be able to give back, and it humbles us to be able to use our talents to be there and to be able to share a smile with them,? he said following the visit.

Up next for Lady Antebellum is a visit to the Down Under version of ?X Factor.? That Top 10 finalist episode will air on Oct. 2 in Australia.

Watch Lady Antebellum?s Visit to UCSF?s Benioff Children?s Hospital

Source: http://tasteofcountry.com/lady-antebellum-childrens-hospital/

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Friday, September 28, 2012

Apex PRD pickleball program leader receives ?Everyday Hero ...

Posted on September 27th, 2012

 Apex PRD pickleball program leader receives ?Everyday Hero? award from KMGH TV?Pickleball Ken? Marquardt is an ambassador for the burgeoning sport of pickleball. ?Ambassador? is an official volunteer job for those who love the game and help bring people together to play in a particular region.

Pickleball is a racquet sport featuring elements of tennis, badminton, ping pong and racquetball. Its unique appeal draws a wide range of ages and abilities, and for those who encounter ?Pickleball Ken? at the Apex Center, it?s almost impossible not to try it out. In fact, Pickleball Ken has helped bring about 470 players to various facilities in Westminster, Broomfield, Lakewood and Arvada.

For that reason, he was recently chosen to receive the Channel 7 Everyday Hero Award. To learn more about the sport and about Pickleball Ken, visit http://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/7everyday-hero/volunteer-expanding-pickleball-across-metro-area.

Source: http://apexprd.org/apex-prd-pickleball-program-leader-receives-everyday-hero-award-kmgh-tv

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Pink Panther star Herbert Lom dies aged 95: BBC

LONDON (Reuters) - Czech-born film star Herbert Lom, best known as the deranged Chief Inspector Charles Dreyfus in the "Pink Panther" comedies, has died, according to British media. He was 95.

His agent was not immediately able to confirm the reports that Lom died peacefully in his sleep on Thursday. They did not specify where, but he had been based in London.

Born into a poor aristocratic family in Prague in 1917, he shortened his complicated name to Lom and appeared in a handful of locally made movies before emigrating to Britain before the outbreak of World War Two and making his home there.

There he built a career that spanned over 100 films and included more than its fair share of villains.

"In English eyes all foreigners are sinister," he was quoted as saying resignedly in 1991.

He portrayed Napoleon Bonaparte twice, including in "War and Peace" in 1956 alongside Henry Fonda and Audrey Hepburn, and the King of Siam in the first London production of the stage musical "The King and I" in 1953.

Two years later he collaborated with Peter Sellers in the dark comedy "The Ladykillers", and they would work together again in the 1960s and 1970s on the Pink Panther series.

In them Lom played the increasingly crazed Dreyfus alongside Seller's hapless Inspector Clouseau, and the success of his character owed much to Lom's own improvisations.

In an interview with the Independent newspaper in 2004, Lom recalled that it was him who invented Dreyfus's nervous twitch that became his trademark gesture.

"I started winking out of nervousness, and couldn't stop," he said. "It wasn't in the script but (director) Blake Edwards loved it. But it became a problem. I made those films for 20 years, and after 10 years they ran out of good scripts.

"They used to say to me, 'Herbert, wink here, wink.' And I said, 'I'm not going to wink. You write a good scene and I won't have to wink.'"

He also wrote two novels, "Enter A Spy" published in 1971 and "Dr Guillotine" in 1993.

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White, editing by Paul Casciato)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pink-panther-star-herbert-lom-dies-aged-95-123220799.html

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Video: RIM: Watch the Cash Flow

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/49212682/

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Pre-caffeine tech: Facebook gifts, ?Apple apologies!?

2 hrs.

Our?pre-caffeine roundup is a collection of the hottest, strangest, and most amusing stories of the morning.

After a week filled with complaints about the new Maps app found in iOS 6, the latest version of Apple's mobile operating system, the?company's CEO, Tim Cook, has issued an apology to customers along with a list of alternative apps.

Facebook unveiled a new program Thursday that lets users give real gifts ? from $5 Starbucks cards to more expensive treasures, like Jawbone's Jambox wireless speaker ($200) ? and can be done instantly, from an Android phone, and in coming weeks, the iPhone.

Speaking of Facebook, an accused Facebook stalker just got busted for terrorizing women.?

Meanwhile, the feds are accessing private phone call records at a skyrocketing rate.?

And cameras now collect millions of travel records via license plate tracking every single day.?

Plus,?Occupy Wall Street protester has lost his latest bid to prevent the Manhattan district attorney's office from using his tweets against him,?clearing the way for the judge overseeing the case to unseal the tweets and give them to prosecutors.

At least?California schools and employers are now legally banned from demanding user names and passwords on?social media sites such as Twitter,?Facebook and the like.?

Neil Young just unveiled his Pono music player.?

Meanwhile,?according to a study?by Keele University, violent video games help increase your pain tolerance by as?much as 65 percent.?

There's a short film from 2004?starring Robert Downey Jr. that's getting new life on Tumblr...sure it's an ad for Volvo, but still ... Robert Downey Jr.!?

Halloween is just around the corner ... and "Breaking Bad" is big again with kids this year!?

Compiled?by?Helen A.S. Popkin,?who invites you to?join her on?Twitter?and/or?Facebook. Also,?Google+.?

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/pre-caffeine-tech-facebook-gifts-apple-apologies-6151204

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AT&T's new MiFi Liberate is LTE-capable, 'world's first' with touchscreen display

AT&T's new MiFi Liberate is LTEcapable, 'world's first' with touchscreen display

We'll have to give it to AT&T for going with something a wee bit different than what we're accustomed to seeing in the world of handy MiFis -- but with touchscreens apparently being a thing nowadays, it also shouldn't surprise us that the company chose to go this route. Either way, the newly introduced MiFi Liberate will surely be of help to those who need to stay connected while on the go, offering features such as LTE connectivity (provided the network's live in the area, of course), simultaneous pairing of up to 10 WiFi devices, 11-hour battery life, a microSD slot, DLNA capabilities and, as you can see above, a 2.8-inch touchscreen display. Unfortunately, the carrier didn't say when we can expect the Liberate to be up for grabs (or for how much), with a company representative only telling us that it'll be at some point "in the coming months." While we wait for those details, however, feel free to check out the extra pic located just past the break.

Continue reading AT&T's new MiFi Liberate is LTE-capable, 'world's first' with touchscreen display

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AT&T's new MiFi Liberate is LTE-capable, 'world's first' with touchscreen display originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 27 Sep 2012 14:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/kVgTW_Wl7zk/

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Remote Controlled Plane Repair Part III (Chunks)

The problem with flying is gravity. Gravity most often wins and you are left with a plane that will not fly any more. You may have rudder or aeileron damage that can be easily fixed. But what about any Chunks that missing from your plane. They will affect the aerodynamics of flight. You have to repair these.

You may have further damage from a crash beyond aeilerons and rudders. You can repair these with balsa wood or a combination of fill and clear packing tape.

Let us focus on ?Chunks?. These would be large parts of your Styrofoam plane that might be missing due to the crash you must have experienced. These too are repairable. The basic theory of flight is that you have an aerodynamic craft that will fly. When chunks are missing, simply fill them with some type of cloth or excess Styrofoam and then cover this section with clear packaging tape that will fill the gap to the original shape of the damaged section. As long as the air flowing over the surface can?t tell that there is something missing, then it really does not matter what it looks like. If you are sensitive to appearance, then get some spray paint and have at it. Aerodynamics does not care about appearance. If the plane meets the requirements of this simple equation then it will fly, if not, it will not.

If you have completed all the obvious repairs to the plane using the techniques explained above, then you are ready to attempt flight once more. Put the plane on the flight line and do some touch and go landings to see if the plane flies true. If it does not, then make slight adjustments until it conforms to your expectations.

If you have damaged your plane severely you obviously have had some serious damage due to a crash. There is a limit to what can be salvaged and if you have are at the end of your rope, now with this shell of an airplane, then you may not be able to salvage it.

There is a time when you call in your chips and simply accept that you have done all that you can. IE: it?s time to buy a new plane. If you still think you want to salvage the existing plane, then I can not offer you more advise or techniques than have been offered. You will now have to solve your own problems and you will become the teacher. Let me know what you do to get her back in the air. Any day that you don?t learn something from others is a lost day indeed.

The teacher becomes the student.

Source: http://toddsblogs.com/recreationandsports/2012/09/27/remote-controlled-plane-repair-part-iii-chunks/

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International Conference on Leadership in Business and ...

International Conference on Leadership in Business and Management for Sustainable Global Economy (LBMSGE-12)
3rd to 4th November 2012

Venue: Dept. of Management Studies, I.I.T. Delhi, New Delhi, India

The Organizers cordially invites abstracts and full research papers from all over the world to participate in the International Conference on "Leadership in Business and Management for Sustainable Global Economy" (LBMSGE-2012) at I.I.T. Delhi.

THEMES
Leadership Management
Training and Development
Performance Management
Economics Management
Economic Development
Administration, Public Finance, Social Policy, Pricing
Distribution Channels
Contemporary Economics Systems
Financial Institutions Trade
Social Marketing
Theoretical Papers in Business Management
E-Commerce
Cost Accounting
Marketing Communication Risk Management
Financial Management in Information Technology
International Marketing
Business Research Methodologies
Consumer and Personal Selling
Consumer Buying Behavior
Selling and Marketing Areas Banking
Public Policy
Public Insurance
Compensation Management
Accounting for Decision Making
Financial Reporting
Fundamentals of Microeconomics
Database Management Systems in Business
Management Information Econometric
Corporate Finance
Investment and Portfolio Management
International Finance, Banking and Lending Decisions
Derivatives, Risk Management
Business Law, Computer-based Information System
Principles of Management, Marketing
Accounting for Corporate Structures
Managerial Costing and Control
Advanced Corporate Law, Income Tax Law
Business Information Systems, Systems Analysis and Design
Marketing, Conceptual and Logistics / Supply Chain Management
Marketing Islamic Banking
Engineering Management
Emerging issues in Finance, Management, Ethics, Entrepreneurship
Global Business Processes
Online Macroeconomics, Quantitative Data and Information Management
Electronic Commerce
Cost management, Financial management
Capital Markets, Empirical Finance
Asset Pricing, Contemporary Issues in Commerce Research
Public Management Areas
Health Management
Service Marketing, Marketing Strategic Issue
Marketing and Enterprises Resource Accounting reforms
Risk Management
Organizational Development
Strategic Management
Economic and Business Analysis
External Reporting Issues
Management Accounting
Issues, Consumer Behavior
Training and Development
Performance Management
Human Resource Management
Psychology, Advertising
Organizational Politics
Information Management
Auditing and Public Practice
Financial Management
Natural Resource Management.

ACCOMMODATION:

Free one day Accommodation will be available to a limited number of out station (non N.C.R.) Delegates at J.N.U Guest house or nearby other guest houses/hotels around the conference venue. The Tariff rate for next day/subsequent day accommodation is as follows: Double-bed A.C Room at Rs.600/- per person (Indian non N.C.R. delegates) and 30 USD for Foreign delegates on sharing basis per day (check out time noon to noon). Transportation facility from guest house to the conference Venue will be provided by the organizer.

IMPORTANT DATES:

Last Date of Submission of Abstract: 20th Oct. 2012
Intimation of Acceptance of Abstract: 21st Oct. 2012
Submission of Full Length Research Paper with Registration Form and Fee : 25th Oct. 2012
Conference Date: 3rd and 4th NOVEMBER 2012.

REGISTRATION:

The participants are requested to register by sending the duly filled Registration form (online) along with the registration fees details (Through Account Payee Online Bank Transfer/ NEFT/Cash Deposit in Canara Bank A/c).

BANK DETAILS:

Beneficiary Name: Krishi Sanskriti

Bank Name: Canara Bank

Bank Address: Jeet Singh Marg, New Delhi

Account No.: 1484101026988

Account Type: Savings

IFSC Code: CNRB0001484

Swift Code: CNRBINBBBID

PIN Code: 110067

Registration Charges:
Categories

Source: http://thesocialscienceinformer.wordpress.com/2012/09/26/international-conference-on-leadership-in-business-and-management-for-sustainable-global-economy/

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Bizarre tumor case may lead to custom cancer care

This 2008 picture provided by Georgetown University shows Richard Schlegel, M.D., Ph.D., left, and research associate Aleksandra Dakic, Ph.D., in his laboratory at Georgetown University Medical Center in Washington. A discovery allows doctors to grow "mini tumors" from each patient's cancer in a lab dish, then test various drugs or combinations on them to see which works best. Although the approach needs much more testing, researchers think it could offer a cheap, simple way to personalize treatment without having to analyze each patient's genes. "We see a lot of potential for it," said Schlegel, one of the study leaders. "Almost everyone could do it easily." (AP Photo/Georgetown University)

This 2008 picture provided by Georgetown University shows Richard Schlegel, M.D., Ph.D., left, and research associate Aleksandra Dakic, Ph.D., in his laboratory at Georgetown University Medical Center in Washington. A discovery allows doctors to grow "mini tumors" from each patient's cancer in a lab dish, then test various drugs or combinations on them to see which works best. Although the approach needs much more testing, researchers think it could offer a cheap, simple way to personalize treatment without having to analyze each patient's genes. "We see a lot of potential for it," said Schlegel, one of the study leaders. "Almost everyone could do it easily." (AP Photo/Georgetown University)

It's a medical nightmare: a 24-year-old man endures 350 surgeries since childhood to remove growths that keep coming back in his throat and have spread to his lungs, threatening his life. Now doctors have found a way to help him by way of a scientific coup that holds promise for millions of cancer patients.

The bizarre case is the first use in a patient of a new discovery: how to keep ordinary and cancerous cells alive indefinitely in the lab.

The discovery allows doctors to grow "mini tumors" from each patient's cancer in a lab dish, then test various drugs or combinations on them to see which works best. It takes only a few cells from a biopsy and less than two weeks to do, with materials and methods common in most hospitals.

Although the approach needs much more testing against many different types of cancer, researchers think it could offer a cheap, simple way to personalize treatment without having to analyze each patient's genes.

"We see a lot of potential for it," said one study leader, Dr. Richard Schlegel, pathology chief at Georgetown Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center in Washington. "Almost everyone could do it easily."

An independent expert agreed.

For infections, it's routine to grow bacteria from a patient in lab dishes to see which antibiotics work best, Dr. George Q. Daley of Children's Hospital Boston and the Harvard Stem Cell Institute said in an email. "But this has never been possible with cancer cells because they don't easily grow in culture," he said.

The new technique may reveal in advance whether a person would be helped by a specific chemotherapy, without risking side effects and lost time if the drug doesn't work. "Pretty nifty," Daley wrote.

In the case of the 24-year-old, described in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine, lab-dish tests suggested that a drug used to treat a type of blood cancer and some other unrelated conditions might help.

It's not a drug that doctors would have thought to try, because the man technically does not have cancer. But his lung tumor shrank after a few months of treatment, and he has been stable for more than a year. He still has to have operations to remove throat growths that keep coming back, but only about once every five months.

The man, an information technology specialist in suburban Washington who asked to remain anonymous to protect his privacy, has recurrent respiratory papillomatosis, or RRP. It's usually due to infection at birth with certain types of a virus, HPV, that causes genital warts.

The condition causes wartlike growths in the throat, usually around the voice box. These growths usually are noncancerous but can turn malignant, and even benign ones can prove fatal if they spread to the lungs. The main treatment is surgery, usually with lasers to vaporize the growths and keep them from choking off the airway or making it hard to talk.

About 10,000 or more people in the U.S. have the disease, said Jennifer Woo, president of the RRP Foundation. Woo, 29, is a medical student at Georgetown and one of the researchers on the study. She also has the condition but said it is confined to her throat and has required only about 20 surgeries so far.

The man in the study has a much more serious case.

"I was diagnosed when I was 3 or 4. At first, I had to have surgery every 7 to 10 days," the man said in a phone interview. "I get short of breath and my voice will get more hoarse."

Two years ago, the growths to his lungs became extensive and life-threatening, and his physician, Dr. Scott Myers, described the condition at a meeting of Georgetown hospital specialists. "It's crushing the airway," Myers said.

Doctors suggested that the new lab method pioneered by Schlegel and others might help. It borrows an idea from stem cell researchers: adding mouse cells for nourishment, plus a chemical that prevents cell death to an ordinary lab culture medium. That enabled healthy and cancerous cells to keep growing indefinitely.

Researchers grew "mini tumors" from the man's lung mass and from healthy tissue and screened various drugs against them. One proved ineffective. Another worked against the tumor but at too high a dose to be safe. The third did the trick.

A similar approach could let doctors screen drugs for cancer patients.

"What could be more personalized than taking this person's cell, growing it in culture, finding a drug to treat them and then treat them?" said Doug Melton, co-director of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute. The Georgetown method gives an answer quickly enough that it could save lives, he said.

Tyler Jacks, a cancer researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and former president of the American Association for Cancer Research, said the next step is to show that this could work for many different cancers and that it leads to better outcomes in patients.

"It seems to have worked in this one instance, but other tumors might prove to be more challenging," he said.

The National Institutes of Health paid for much of this work and has already sent research teams to Georgetown to learn the method. About a dozen other universities have done the same, Schlegel said.

So far, his lab has grown prostate, breast, lung and colon cancer cells.

Georgetown University is seeking a patent on the method.

___

AP Science Writer Malcolm Ritter contributed to this report from New York.

____

Online:

Medical journal: http://www.nejm.org

Throat disease: http://www.nidcd.nih.gov/health/voice/pages/laryngeal.aspx

___

Marilynn Marchione can be followed at http://twitter.com/MMarchioneAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-09-26-Cancer-Customizing%20Care/id-03632d4e387e4dc287c33ec3a6b9f8a6

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Thursday, September 27, 2012

Superior Replacements to the Boring Stock iPhone Apps [IPhone Downloads]

Superior Replacements to the Boring Stock iPhone AppsWith every iteration of iOS, Apple tweaks their software a little, but for the most part, the default lineup of apps remains unchanged since launch. For a lot of us, these apps just aren't cutting it anymore. Here are the best app to replace them.

The design and function of many of Apple's apps is beginning to feel a bit stale, and many people are growing dissatisified with the experience as a whole. On top of that, many of the apps lock you into Apple's data ecosystem and iCloud. However, plenty of superior replacements exist for Apple's stock apps. From Maps to Notes, we've got you covered regardless of where you're looking for better options.

Superior Replacements to the Boring Stock iPhone AppsApplication to avoid: Maps
Indictment: Apple's new Maps app has been getting its fair share of bad press lately for numerous mistakes ranging from poorly updated maps, to badly implemented search. Thankfully, you have a few really solid alternative choices.
Superior Alternative(s): Waze, MapQuest, Google Maps (in browser).
Notes: Replacing Apple's Maps app really depends on what you're looking for in a maps app. If turn-by-turn navigation is your thing, then Waze is the best of the free apps that provides it.

However, Waze isn't that great as a simple map. For that, we like Mapquest. Even though the ads in the app are rather annoying, it's a simple way to get a top-down view of an area you might already know so you can become more self-reliant in your city. If you'd rather just return to Google, the mobile version of Google Maps works just fine.


Superior Replacements to the Boring Stock iPhone AppsApplication to avoid: Safari
Indictment: On its own, Safari is by no means a bad browser. However, to get its best feature, iCloud syncing, you have to use Safari on your Mac. Not everyone wants to do that. Safari also has it's fair share of usability issues, like the inability to quickly swap to private browsing, and a limited amount of tabs you can keep open at a time.
Superior Alternative(s): Chrome, Dolphin
Notes: Picking the perfect browser for your phone really depends on what you use on your computer. If you're a Chrome user on your desktop, then Chrome is the logical choice on your iPhone or iPad. It syncs up your history, bookmarks, autofill settings, and everything else across every single device.

If you'd like a browsing experience geared specifically to mobile, Dolphin is a gesture-based browser that offers a fun alternative way to browse the web.


Superior Replacements to the Boring Stock iPhone AppsApplication to avoid: Camera
Indictment: Apple's default camera is pretty boring. You can't really tweak your photos, and you don't get standard options like a timer or burst mode. As a straightforward point-and-shoot camera it works fine, but if you want more precision you need to dig deeper.
Superior Alternative(s): Camera+, Camera Awesome.
Notes: Camera+ is easily the most full featured of the iPhone camera apps. Not only does it replicate everything the iPhone's default camera does, it also offers a ton of built-in photo editing tools, filters, and features. You can also lock the focus, set up timers, and shoot in a burst mode for action shots.

For another similar option, we like Camera Awesome, which offers many of the same features as Camera+, but also includes a number of guides to help you take better pictures. Both are great camera apps that supercharge everything great about the iPhone's camera. However, neither do HDR photography, so if HDR is your thing, you'll want to keep the stock camera on hand.


Superior Replacements to the Boring Stock iPhone AppsApplication to avoid: Calendar
Indictment: Much like the Camera app, Calendar is pretty barebones in its functionality. It's not hard to use, but you can't customize the look of it to really suit your specific needs, and overall it's a bit hard to see what's really going on with your calendar.
Superior Alternative(s): Week Cal, Cue, Agenda Calendar.
Notes: You have a ton of options for calendar apps on the iPhone. For a full-featured replacement, we like Week Cal because it does pretty much everything you'd ever want in a calendar. However, for a completely different experience, Cue makes your calendar more of a social experience and works great for people with more social dates than work ones. For a minimalist experience, Agenda Calendar is a simple, but still useful alternative to Calendar.


Superior Replacements to the Boring Stock iPhone AppsApplication to avoid: Mail
Indictment: Mail is made to work well with Apple addresses, but if you're using Gmail it doesn't have a lot of the very simple, but much needed capabilities built directly into Google's email app.
Superior Alternative(s): Sparrow
Notes: If you use Gmail for your email, then the Apple Mail app is pretty lackluster. Sparrow gives you control over your Gmail with access to labels, starred emails, and plenty more. The newest version of Mail in iOS 6 isn't bad if you're not using Gmail, but if you are, Sparrow's the right choice.


Superior Replacements to the Boring Stock iPhone AppsApplication to avoid: Contacts
Indictment: On its own, the Contacts app isn't much more than a digital replacement for pen and paper. You get basic information, and the new Facebook integration helps keep that information up to date, but that's about it.
Superior Alternative(s): Smartr Contacts
Notes: Smartr turns all of your social contacts into an address book. Instead of simply seeing a phone number or email, you get recent Facebook or Twitter updates. This way, you can see a complete history of your contact with someone, which provides welcome context for those people you don't talk to often.


Superior Replacements to the Boring Stock iPhone AppsApplication to avoid: Messages and Phone
Indictment: For the bulk of iPhone users, Messages and Phone are perfectly fine and works as well as Phone and SMS apps possibly could. However, not everyone wants to use their carrier's phone and messages services.
Superior Alternative(s): Google Voice, biteSMS.
Notes: If you don't have a lot of minutes through your cell phone carrier, then Google Voice provides a great replacement. With a few tweaks you can make the experience as seamless as the standard Phone and Messages apps.

For jailbreakers, we like biteSMS because it makes sending and receiving text messages a heck of a lot easier. It offers a lot of great features like Quick Reply, contact pictures, and tons more.


Superior Replacements to the Boring Stock iPhone AppsApplication to avoid: iCloud
Indictment: Okay, so iCloud isn't an app as much as it's a service, but it's built into every Apple app (and many third-party apps) and comes stock with every device. iCloud is great if you happen to use all Apple products. However, the fact that it's difficult to pull documents from it, and you can't share easily them, makes it a pain to use for anything more than a simple backup.
Superior Alternative(s): Dropbox and Google.
Notes: We love Dropbox for storing all your files, and since most productivity apps (and plenty others) support Dropbox directly it's an obvious choice as an iCloud replacement for transferring files. Dropbox gives you direct access to every file you make across any device (including photos), and you're not restricted to Apple's apps. While iCloud is great to backup your phone, it's not good for much else.

As for keeping everything else in sync (like contacts, email, calendars, etc) you can set up everything to sync with your Google account easily. The benefit is that you have access to your data regardless of where you are (or if you're on a Mac). You can push that integration further with all your files with the Google Drive app as well.


Superior Replacements to the Boring Stock iPhone AppsApplication to avoid: Find My iPhone
Indictment: As we learned with Mat Honan's hack earlier this year, the helpful features of the Find My iPhone app can easily be used for evil.
Superior Alternative(s): Prey.
Notes: Prey doesn't have all the same features of Find My iPhone, but that's also part of the appeal. It'll help you find your phone, but you won't be able to erase data, or change any settings. If the Mat Honan hack makes you a little wary to use Find My iPhone, then Prey is an excellent alternative.


Superior Replacements to the Boring Stock iPhone AppsApplication to avoid: iBooks
Indictment: Out of all of Apple's iPhone apps, iBooks is the biggest offender of skeuomorphic design. It makes reading look like a book, and that just feels weird on a digital device.
Superior Alternative(s): Kindle.
Notes: The Kindle app is very simple, but it works really well for reading. You get all types of settings for brightness and fonts to make the reading experience better. Also, your bookmarks are synced across every device you can access the Kindle on. The nice part is you get text on a page and that's it. No weird formatting, and no book-style overlay.


Superior Replacements to the Boring Stock iPhone AppsApplication to avoid: YouTube
Indictment: YouTube isn't packed into iOS 6, but if you're not upgrading to the new operating system, then you're stuck with a pretty ancient YouTube player that doesn't do much but play videos.
Superior Alternative(s): Jasmine, YouTube.
Notes: The official YouTube app is just fine for most people who want to watch a video now and again, but Jasmine really nails the experience. Jasmine is easy to use, and you can do everything you can on a desktop from within the app.


Superior Replacements to the Boring Stock iPhone AppsApplication to avoid: Voice Memos
Indictment: Voice Memos is an incredibly simple app that can record audio, and then share that audio over Email, Messages, or in iTunes. While it works okay, its functionality stops there.
Superior Alternative(s): Audio Memos, Evernote.
Notes: Audio Memos is great because it syncs up across Dropbox, Evernote, and FTP. It also has handy features like a lock code, the ability to link recordings together, and more. If you're a hardcore Evernote user, the Evernote app also features recording options that link directly into your Evernote account.


Superior Replacements to the Boring Stock iPhone AppsApplication to avoid: Notes
Indictment: Notes is about as simple as it gets. It's a writing pad that syncs with iCloud. Not everyone likes iCloud, and a lot of people aren't fans of the ruled notebook appearance of Notes.
Superior Alternative(s): Simplenote, Drafts,
Notes: Depending on what you use Notes for, you have a couple of solid options. We're huge fans of Simplenote because it makes syncing your notes across a variety of devices simple. It's also a nice, minimalist writing environment with just a blank page and a spot for text. If you want the ability to organize those notes into different services, Drafts speeds up the process and lets you quickly jot down a note, and then send it off to a variety of different services.


Superior Replacements to the Boring Stock iPhone AppsApplication to avoid: Reminders
Indictment: Reminders is an exceptionally cool to-do list app that uses geo-fencing to remind you to do tasks when you're in a specific location. Unfortunately, they're not particularly easy to set up and the Reminders app doesn't come with a lot of options.
Superior Alternative(s): Checkmark
Notes: The nice thing about Checkmark is that it's dead simple to use. Three taps and you have a location-based reminder. You don't need to futz about in menus or anything else. Checkmark also works just like Apple's Reminders app. When you're in a certain area, you'll get a notification reminding you to do something. As a trigger to get things done, it works remarkably well and is much easier to use than Reminders.


Superior Replacements to the Boring Stock iPhone AppsApplication to avoid: Music
Indictment: Until iOS 6, the Music app hadn't been updated or changed since it first launched. Now, it's a little slicker looking, but it's still the same experience.
Superior Alternative(s): Panamp, Groove 2, Track 8.
Notes: Depending on what you want from a music player, you have a few different choices. Panamp is a much faster experience than Music, and even though it hasn't been updated in a while it's still a slick, easy-to-use experience. Track 8 is another visual overhaul, but it's definitely a better option for anyone looking for a more visual player. If you're not happy with Music's boring playlist creation, then Groove 2 does it all for you automatically. Groove 2 creates smart, interesting playlists on the fly, and does a much better job of choosing music than Music.


Superior Replacements to the Boring Stock iPhone AppsApplication to avoid: Podcasts
Indictment: When Apple released its Podcasts app, it pulled those podcasts out of the default Music app and stuffed them inside an ill-fitting, counter-intuitive container. The Podcasts app's best feature is the fact it auto-downloads new podcasts, but it's not very easy to use, has an overly-complicated menu, and isn't the prettiest thing to look at.
Superior Alternative(s): Downcast, Podcaster.
Notes: Downcast does everything the Podcasts app does, and it does it much better. You can also use it to create customized playlists, and turn your podcasts into your own radio station. If you'd prefer a podcast app that functions about the same as the old Music app, then Podcaster does the trick.


Superior Replacements to the Boring Stock iPhone AppsApplication to avoid: Stocks
Indictment: Stocks is great for quickly glancing at a few stock prices, but it doesn't have enough options to fully track your portfolios, or take an in-depth look at the stocks you're investing in.
Superior Alternative(s): Stockwatch, Bloomberg
Notes: If you need more than just a glancing info at your stocks, then both Stockwatch and the Bloomberg app provide all types of customizable information. You can create your own tickers, track stocks, and plenty more. You don't get the option for the stock ticker in Notification Center, but at least you'll get more useful information.


Superior Replacements to the Boring Stock iPhone AppsApplication to avoid: Weather
Indictment: The default Weather app is fine for quickly glancing at the current temperature and looking at the upcoming forecast, but its usefulness stops there. You can't get an in-depth look at incoming weather, nor can you see otherwise common calculations like wind, or "feels like."
Superior Alternative(s): The Weather Channel, AccuWeather, Weather Underground.
Notes: It's not hard to find a weather app in the App Store, but the big ones made by the Weather Channel, AccuWeather, and Weather Underground are the most feature-rich for most people. All of these apps give you access to full five day forecasts, up to the minute data, and pretty much everything else you'll ever need.


Superior Replacements to the Boring Stock iPhone AppsApplication to avoid: Calculator
Indictment: For most people, the default Calculator app is perfect for a quick calculation, and the added scientific calculator in landscape mode fills in the gaps for most people. But if you need features like graphing, you'll have to head into the App Store.
Superior Alternative(s): QuickGraph.
Notes: You have a lot of options for graphing calculators in the App Store, but QuickGraph is on the coolest of the free options. On top of normal calculator functions, you also get 2D and 3D plotting, a library of equations, photo library saving, and plenty more.


Superior Replacements to the Boring Stock iPhone AppsApplication to avoid: Videos
Indictment: The only real problem with the Videos app is that its playback is limited to just a few different formats. If you download a lot of videos in a variety of formats, Videos simply doesn't do the trick.
Superior Alternative(s): GoodPlayer
Notes: GoodPlayer can handle a ton of different formats (way too many to list here). It's also a perfectly functional video player that does everything you'd expect, including subtitles, cropping, mirroring, and more. That said, the stock Videos app has access to decoders the other video apps don't and can often play in higher definition.


Obviously you don't need to go through and replace every stock Apple app on your homescreen, but if you're looking for more function out of your phone, you'll need to replace at least a few of them.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/o4jxBuiPJU0/superior-replacements-to-the-boring-stock-iphone-apps

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