Saturday, March 30, 2013

OUYA game console ships with over 100 available games | Android ...

We had known the OUYA game console was set to begin shipping to Kickstarter backers on March 28. And well, that seems to has begun without any delays. The OUYA team shared the news on their company blog in a post titled Shippin? ? the interesting part here, they begin with a thank you. You see, they are thanking the backers for well, backing them and making the console a success.

ouya_console-580x4131-540x38411

Or maybe more accurately, a success to date. You see, there is still the non-internet crowd that they will need to please. We are not going to see how well that turns out until June 4 when the console makes its way into retail outlets. The good news for now though, the OUYA team managed to drive enough buzz and enough hype to convince developers that it will be worth their time to bring games to the console.

According to details coming from OUYA, they were able to launch the console with 100 plus games. As of last evening they were claiming 104, but that number may have already grown. Regardless of the specific amount, some of the game titles new OUYA users can look forward to playing include one called Save the Puppies as well as Final Fantasy III, Beast Boxing Turbo, Stalagflight and Knightmare Tower.

Time will tell which, and how many additional games will follow. OUYA has also said they signed up over eight thousand developers. The eight thousand developer count makes it seem like additional games are a given, however looking at this from the other side brings us to wonder why eight thousand developers and only 104 games.

[via OUYA]

Source: http://androidcommunity.com/ouya-game-console-ships-with-over-100-available-games-20130329/

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Thursday, March 28, 2013

PFT: Pro Day attendees knock Te'o as first-rounder

Manti TeoAP

As the calendar approaches April, the pre-draft spin cycle will soon hit overdrive.

The rules are simple.? Teams that don?t like a player will say good things about him, hoping that someone with a higher pick will take the player, which will push a more viable prospect down the board.? Teams that like a player will say bad things about him, hoping that he?ll still be there when the team makes its pick.

It?s important to keep those rules in mind when considering any off-the-record assessments of players by scouts and coaches who, depending on the teams for which they work, may be hoping to influence what other teams will or won?t do.

Jason Cole of Yahoo! Sports spoke to scouts and coaches from multiple unnamed teams who attended the Monday Pro Day workout of Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te?o.? And none of those folks regard Te?o as a first-round pick.

?Nice player, but not worth a first-round pick.? Not in my view,? said an unnamed ?AFC personnel man.?

?He?s not a star,? an AFC head coach said.? ?If I?m taking a linebacker in the first round, I want a guy who can change my defense.? Trust me, I?ve been wrong about linebackers before, but this guy doesn?t fit the bill of what I spend a high pick on.?

?[H]e?s not good enough in my view,? an NFC defensive coordinator said.

We don?t doubt for a second that these sources said what Cole says they said.? But without knowing which team they work for, it?s impossible to know whether they really mean it.

It?s a common reality of the pre-draft process.? Scouts and coaches knock certain players, possibly because the scouts and coaches believe what they?re saying ? and possibly because they have an agenda.? When it comes to the draft, everyone has an agenda.? When it comes to the strategy-driven NFL, everyone periodically (or more often) tells untruths to advance their agenda.

We?re not saying it?s right or it?s wrong.? That?s just the way it is.? But that makes it impossible to put much stock in the things being said by unnamed sources who may be secretly hoping that the player they?re knocking slides into their laps.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/03/27/notre-dame-pro-day-attendees-knock-teo-as-a-first-round-prospect/related/

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Saturday, March 23, 2013

Leatherman One Hand Tool (OHT) ? Use it with one hand tied behind your back

Leatherman has released another tool in?their?Military/EMT-aimed multi-tools. ?The 16-tool OHT is designed so that both the blades AND the pliers can be operated with one hand. ?The OHT has both?needle-nose?and regular pliers with wire cutters, 4 blades including a strap cutter, saw, can opener, bottle opener, screwdrivers, ?threaded?attachment?for??#8-32 Cleaning Rod, and O2 bottle wrench. ?It [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2013/03/21/leatherman-one-hand-tool-oht-use-it-with-one-hand-tied-behind-your-back/

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Monday, March 18, 2013

Why I switched from iPhone to Android, Part 3

Blogs

For me, switching phones didn?t involve a dramatic moment of decision. It was a gradual process. I carried both the Samsung Galaxy S III and my iPhone 4S around every day for a couple of months and I kept both of them synced with the same apps and data. Any time I needed a screen in my hand, I could pull out whichever device I wanted.

It wasn?t long before I noticed that I was almost always choosing the Samsung. Usually, I went for the iPhone when I needed a piece of data that could only easily sync between Apple devices: things like Reminders, and documents stored in iCloud. I switched those services over to platform-agnostic alternatives, which arguably is something I should have done even if I?d stuck with iOS.

After that, I?d only pull out my iPhone for one reason: to take a photo. The iPhone continues to kick the butts of all challengers as a camera.

I noticed that I was charging the Samsung every night and that the battery in the iPhone was lasting a whole week or more. And that?s when I realised that I needed to get over a totally fake, self-absorbed stigma (?But?I?m an?iPhone?user. This other phone isn?t an iPhone!?) and get on with it.

But I?m actually a bit of a wimp, aren?t I? I stepped off of one nice boat and onto another.

If you?re?not?a tech columnist and you don?t have the option of experimenting with Android and Windows Phone and Blackberry 10 without first making a two-year commitment, switching from any device platform to any other requires a leap of faith and a period of itchy uncertainty. You?ll dog-paddle through choppy seas until once again there?s a steady teak deck under your feet and an umbrella drink in your hand.

In the meantime, yeah: you?re going to swallow a lot of seawater. A transition to Android is particularly tough because so many of the platform?s problems are so well known and emphatically repeated.

I?ve heard them all. Hell, I?m probably one of the tech columnists who originated some of those same criticisms; I?ve written about and reviewed every edition of Android and every wave of phones since the beginning. But it?s 2013 and nearly all flagship phones ship with Android 4.1 or 4.2. Most of the problems I complained about from 2009 to 2011 have been solved, or else they?re no longer nearly as serious as they once were.

And that observation was just as important a factor in my decision to switch as any of the four big Android features I wrote about in part 1 and part 2. When Google addressed these deal-breaking complaints, they put Android in a position where the right phone could be an attractive option for me.

Fragmentation

Fragmentation (the problem of releasing one piece of software that works on such a bewildering range of devices) is an issue with the release of Android OS updates. I?ll have more to say about this later.

Fragmentation?doesn?t?seem to affect the Google Play app library, however. I use the same broad collection of apps with every Android phone I test, and I can?t remember the last time I encountered one that doesn?t work on all devices. Even games, which make intense and specific demands of the hardware, are a ?one size fits all? release. Accessing Android apps is no different from accessing iOS apps: it?s all one big pool, provided that your phone runs a modern edition of the OS.

Malware

Malware is certainly a threat, but after a year?s worth of wary exploration of the subject, I believe it to be a manageable one.

The quantity of Android malware cited in reports from Trend Micro (a maker of security software) and other researchers is shocking. The details of Android malware tell a more reassuring story. It?s a familiar one: if you don?t want to unwittingly install malware on your phone,?don?t install pirated software. That?s the primary vector for malicious Android software.

Further, if you only use Android?s canonical app repository (Google Play), the numbers say you?ll avoid 99.5 percent of all Android malware. Want to drop the risk to almost nil? Spend all of five or ten seconds looking at the app description in the Play Store before installing. Play Store app descriptions contain much more information (including a ballpark on the number of downloads, and a list of the permissions the app requests) than the iTunes App Store. For maximum safety, avoid apps with few downloads and few reviews.

Android phones can be jailbroken (in a sense) to run unsigned software just by digging into the prefs and flipping a switch (another example of the choice, choice, choice offered by Android). That increases the risks. Android phones can also be pwned through malicious links (via sites, emails, or texts), like any other phone.

But the bottom line is this: Yes, an Android phone is less safe than an iPhone? but that doesn?t make it ?unsafe.? The best practices I use when installing new software on an Android device are no different from what I use with my iPhone. Overall, I don?t feel as though my Galaxy S III is any riskier to use.

Does the increased risk from malware make Android tougher for me to recommend to novice users? Sure. But the iPhone already wins that recommendation well before the issue of security hits the table.

Stability and Reliability

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Android is less stable and reliable than iOS, but that doesn?t make it ?unstable and unreliable.? I need to force-reboot my iPhone about ten times a year. On Android, it?s??mmmmaybe?twenty five? So yes, it?s a higher number on Android, but no, both devices need a kick in the head so infrequently that I can never recall the last time I administered one.

And the frequency of app crashes are probably even closer. The main difference is that an iOS app crashes elegantly: it simply fades backwards into the app launcher, like one of the upper-class dames on Downton Abbey?fainting into a chaise lounge upon hearing frightful news.

An Android app?crashes, sometimes with a dialogue box and an error code, even. There?s an argument to be made that Android is more helpful than iOS in death. When an iOS app keeps crashing, all a user can do is wait for the developer to release a bug fix, or delete the app (and all of its associated data) and reinstall it from the App Store. An Android user can see if a web search for the error code turns up an explanation of what went wrong and how to fix it. An advanced Android user can also take an active role in fixing the problem if he or she wishes, by manually clearing app caches and stores.

That said, yeah, the user would probably have preferred that the app never crashed to begin with. Anyway. Overall, I give iOS a grade of A- for stability and reliability. Android gets a B+. It?s a difference that shows up easily on a yearly spreadsheet but it?s difficult for me to see the iOS advantage in day-to-day usage.

Where are the apps?

Android?s App Store isn?t as rich as the iTunes App Store, but the two are damn close. I wouldn?t have switched if I couldn?t find the apps I needed to make the Galaxy S III do everything I was doing with my iPhone.

Most of the time, I could find feature-equal Android versions of the same apps I had been using in iOS. When I couldn?t, I found Android substitutes that I liked just as much or even more. BeyondPod is as good as Downcast, and Press is the Google Reader app that I kept hoping to find for my iPhone.

I just can?t name a single iOS-exclusive app that?s important enough to me that it would prevent me from switching.

That?s a subjective call, of course. Plenty of people define their phones as ?the host organism for OmniFocus.? Samsung could give away free unlocked Galaxy S IIIs in every box of Cheerios and it wouldn?t convince those folks to switch. Also, games produced by smaller studios are typically ?iOS first? or even ?iOS only.? I?m not a serious gamer, so that limitation doesn?t affect me.

The sole significant limitation of the Android app library, as I experience it, is that the?very best?apps available on iOS are usually better than the very best apps available on Android. Mostly I?m thinking of the apps that Apple creates in-house. iPhoto, iMovie, and iWork are breathtaking achievements; each is an example of a developer working through the limitations of a teensy handheld device. I can?t think of examples that correlate in the Android library.

This shouldn?t be interpreted as ?iOS apps are better.? I find that it?s no longer universally true that iOS apps are better designed than Android apps. Indeed, most of the top mobile apps available cross-platform have absolutely identical user interfaces across all devices.

Nor is it true that the Android editions of successful apps usually arrive long after the iOS release, or not at all. iOS has an edge there, but I find it to be a small one. The real advantage of the iOS app library is that new ideas usually land there?first, and then they arrive on Android after a successful incubation period. Android users have Flipboard and Instagram and Path, but they had to wait for ?em.

I was pretty surprised and thrilled by this example: pClock, one of my favourite iOS apps of all time. You?d expect to see Evernote or Waze or other big-studio apps in both app stores. But even this tiny, esoteric app (it helps me keep track of time when I?m giving a presentation) is available for Android. I?m just not hurting for apps in any way.

The Price Of Android

Security, Stability, and Software. I can?t say that Android is superior to iOS in any of these categories. But it?s so close now that none of them presented any sort of obstacle to switching. The difference is so slight that they were easily obliterated by the advantages of Android, as I perceived it.

Which isn?t to say that Android devices are the best phones that anybody can buy, or (oh my?word,?no) that the platform is free of nuttiness and frustrations.

OS Fragmentation

The largest problem with Android by far is the fragmentation of the platform for OS updates. When Apple fixes bugs or adds features to iOS, every iPhone receives it simultaneously. Android users only get this kind of simplicity and security if they own a Nexus-branded device. Those phones receive their system updates directly from Google.

The Samsung Galaxy S III shipped in late autumn, with Android 4.0 preinstalled. Google started shipping Nexus devices with Android 4.1 in July. By the time my carrier pushed the update to my phone in December, a rival carrier had already released it a month earlier? and Google had begun shipping Nexus devices with Android 4.2.

Amazing, isn?t it? And the Galaxy S III isn?t some freak media player manufactured in North Korea. It?s the hottest Android phone from the market?s dominant maker of Android devices. Sure, I?m confident that the Galaxy S III will receive updates for the entire natural life of the device. But I?m?just?as confident that this is going to be a pain in the butt forever.

And who?s responsible for bug fixes??Another?major hassle. Even a patch for a critical problem has to pass through several turnstiles before I?ll receive it. First, Google fixes Android. Then, Samsung gets the fix, and it applies it to its own OS distribution. Carriers gets the update from Samsung, and then, finally, it?s pushed to the customers.

Lots can go wrong at any step of the process?and this example assumes that Google and Samsung and telecoms don?t waste time bickering about where the problem is.

Pre-Installed Carrier Junk Apps

Another terrible problem with Android:?bloatware and crapware.

KATE VANDENBERGHE

Phones often come preinstalled with page after page of apps and onscreen widgets that offer no benefit to the user, and which try to trick them into using their carrier?s paid services instead of the free alternatives bundled with Android. Some carriers even lock these apps to the device, so they can?t be removed.

The Galaxy S III is (largely) uncontaminated by this practice, because Samsung decided to impose some discipline. Nexus devices are free of crapware because Google wants to maintain the brand as ?pure Android.? But God help an inexperienced user who walks into a store and picks up any of the Android devices at the other end of this spectrum.

Power Management

I wish that Android phones were as aggressive about protecting battery life as iOS. Many Android apps can get away with keeping the GPS radio powered up long after it?s needed, for example. iOS keeps a steel ruler at the ready. It raps the knuckles of an app at the first sign of power-greedy behaviour.

The Galaxy S III delivers about the same battery life as I got with iPhone 5, or the iPhone 4S. But its battery has half again the capacity of the iPhone. I wonder how much longer it would last if Android provided better power management.

That Camera!

This isn?t an Android fault per se. But dear Lord, how I miss the iPhone?s camera!

I performed some meticulous cross-platform camera tests last spring. I posted a series of blind comparisons to my Flickr account and was pleased to find that readers often picked a Galaxy S III photo over one from the iPhone 5.

Fab. But you don?t prize a camera for taking great photos outdoors on a sunny day. The iPhone can take decent photos under anything but the most wretched of circumstances. That?s why I still often carry my iPhone 4S with me. It?s a tiny camera that takes terrific photos and it has both iPhoto and Wi-Fi.

The iPhone is still the only phone that has what I consider ?a real camera? as opposed to ?an excellent smartphone camera.? Both Nokia and HTC have made solid first steps towards bringing their cameras up to that standard. But while they?re pointing to their cameras as a signature feature and an object of pride, only Apple is backing up those claims with camera that?s truly great from wall to wall and floor to ceiling.

Yep, I?m An Android User

As I said at the?very beginning, this isn?t the story of why Android is Way Totally So Much Better Than iOS. This is the story of this one dude who switched phones. Andy Ihnatko moving to Android isn?t a pivotal moment in the history of mobile computing. I just thought that a detailed piece of my observations, concerns, and experiences would be of interest to anybody who?s curious about Android. And given the revolutionary improvements in the platform over the past year, I thought it was timely.

Nonetheless, I held on to this article for a few weeks. I kept re-reading and re-writing, and along the way I expanded it from a newspaper column to a multipart web series. I just wanted to be extra-sure that I had expressed my opinions and my intentions clearly.

I anticipated that many would find value in what I wrote, that many others would find fault with it, and that both would make solid points when they shared those opinions. I was proven correct.

I was also correct when I anticipated that a small percentage of Android and Apple fans would unite in misreading this series as a merciless takedown that slams Apple for being a doomed, stuck-in-the-mud company whose smug pride allowed better companies to innovate their way past the iPhone. Android and Windows fans who have descended to tribalism want to see Apple die. They want it as badly as Gollum wants the Ring, and they express that sentiment with just as much dignity. Apple tribalists see the corporate logo as a tattered but proud flag that cries out for brave men and women to rally round, link arms and defend it; even praise for a competing product is seen as an attack.

The members of both of these tribes need to hear something important: it?s time to stop talking about ?iOS versus Android.? That stage of mobile device development is done. From this point onward, we should to talk about ?iOS?and?Android.?

We should all be?thrilled?that consumers can choose between these two highly-polished platforms. They?re being produced with creativity and pride by two companies with sharply different philosophies that target different audiences. We should also be intrigued by Windows Phone, and curious about Blackberry 10, and hopeful that the Ubuntu On Phones project evolves into something great.

I can sense that this isn?t getting through to a few of these folks, so I?ll be blunt: If you give half a damn about which multi-billion-dollar corporation ?wins? a totally made-up contest, then you need to drop acid and spend some time in an ashram.

I switched for a wonderful reason: because Apple and Google and Blackberry and other makers are all competing with each other to produce a phone and an operating system that I, personally, will love. Has there ever been a better time to be a tech consumer?

I didn?t switch because Apple has in any way dropped the ball. Apple is in fine shape. The iPhone, and iOS, are terrific products that continue to speak to people on a direct, compelling level. The iPhone, and iOS, improve and impress with each iteration, despite some well-documented wobbles along the way.

Claiming that Apple has fallen behind is nonsense. Besides the evidence of their entire product line, it denies proper credit to Google and the makers of Android handsets. Android has received so much traction and attention because it?s had a hell of a great year. Google?finally?delivered a version of the OS that combined power, stability, and even sophistication. Samsung, HTC, and other makers?finally?shipped some phones that in their own individual ways were just as well-made and feature-rich as the iPhone.

And while nothing can equal the style of an iPhone 5, a good Android phone no longer looks like the remote control to a DVD player that you threw away nine years ago.

As late as 2011, the iPhone was the phone you wanted if you wanted the most powerful and sophisticated smartphone on the market. Android was the phone you wound up with if your company refused to approve the iPhone you wanted. I look at the marketplace today and I insist that these two platforms are?absolutely on equal footing.?Each has its own strengths and weaknesses. It?s just a matter of figuring out which device suits?you?best.

The iPhone simply no longer suits?me,?that?s all.

I?ve always admired Apple for avoiding tunnel vision while still not distracting itself from a clear, simple definition of what the company is supposed to be doing. It adds new things to the product line the same way an architect adds new buildings to a property.

(?A trampoline park?would?be awesome. But how does it further the objectives of an assisted-living facility for the elderly??)

Over the past ten years, Apple?s been transitioning further away from the user of 1977, who delights to discover that their new computer came with a complete schematic and a disassembly of its boot ROMs. It?s been focusing more aggressively on the kind of user who doesn?t particularly care that they just bought a $1300 desktop whose RAM and hard drive can?t be upgraded.

With every move and every update, Apple increases the appeal of its products to shopping centre consumers. These consumers want the document they created on their notebooks to miraculously show up on their desktops and their phones as well. They don?t care about sharing it with others. They want desktops that are sleek and beautiful. They?ll probably buy new ones before they?ll consider upgrading the desktops they already own. They don?t want to have to figure out why a feature that works with 29 of the apps they?ve installed doesn?t work with the other six; they?d rather do without that feature entirely, no matter how powerful it is.

These are all just neutral observations, not scathing accusations. Apple?s focus on consumers created iCloud, the 2012 iMac, and a simple mechanism for sharing photos to Facebook and Twitter. These are?perfect?products for consumers.

I still recommend the iPhone and iOS highly to people who can clearly define the function of their phones. I wouldn?t say ?people who don?t expect very much.? The iPhone is ideal if your needs are easy to anticipate. That means Apple is likely to have anticipated them. The iPhone ecosystem tends to fray when you?re looking for a custom fit and a flexible tool.

The iPhone is still my go-to recommendation for people who want as few surprises as possible and the easiest phone to use and maintain. An iPhone is a delight fresh out of the box and for the life of the device. An Android phone is a delight starting around?week two, after you?ve made a bunch of minor adjustments that change it from ?Good for the majority of users? to ?great for you, personally.?

That said, you should keep in mind that ?easy to use? comes in two forms. The iPhone is superior to a flagship Android phone at ?easy to use on day one.? But it plateaus after a month. Android, I suggest, keeps getting easier to use as it continues to adjust to you and you keep learning new ways to get better performance.

The damnedest thing about my six months with the Samsung Galaxy S III ? and the one line from this whole series most likely to be quoted out of context by Apple-bashers ? is that my Samsung is easier to use than my iPhone.

In my experience, that is. Your needs aren?t my needs, your relationship with a phone is different mine, and maybe you can even stomach the flavour of cooked broccoli.

Choice, choice, choice. Ain?t it grand?

And that?s the story about how and why I switched from an iPhone to an Android phone.

And in the end?

I will end this the same way I?ve often ended so many discussions of Apple products:

I?ve switched from the iPhone to the Samsung Galaxy S III because it?s the best there is at the kind of things I need my phone to do. And as soon as something comes along that?s better, I?ll switch again.

I bet the first device that makes me think about switching from Android is something made by Apple. I still love my MacBook and haven?t even considered switching, despite liking a lot of the features and concepts in Windows 8. And though I like Android as a phone OS, on tablets it?s still mostly hopeless. My iPad is still the blue flannel security blanket that I must carry with me everywhere I go and it remains an indispensable part of my workflow.

I?m still an Apple fan and still glad to be an Apple user. It?s a relief to know that if I?d gone through with that idea to get an Apple tattoo in 2003, I wouldn?t need to get it lasered off today.

?

By Andy Ihnatko,?Macworld.

Andy Ihnatko is a noted author, columnist at The Chicago Sun Times and Macworld, a regular on Mac Break Weekly, host of The Ihnatko Almanac on 5by5.tv, frequent speaker, Apple guru, geek extraordinaire, and an Internationally Beloved Industry Personality.

Source: http://www.macworld.com.au/blogs/why-i-switched-from-iphone-to-android-part-3-89169/

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Argentina: Boot camp for a politically savvy pope

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) ? Pope Francis has honed his leadership skills in one of the most difficult classrooms on the planet: Argentina, where politics has long been a blood sport practiced only by the brave.

Rising through Argentina's Roman Catholic hierarchy in times of dictatorship, capitalist excess, economic crisis and populist fervor, Francis has sought to secure a place for his church in an increasingly modern, secular society.

It might be just the training a pope needs before taking on the problems of the world's 1.2 billion Catholics and helping them recover from scandals over sex abuse and feuding and corruption at the highest levels of the church's hierarchy.

"Buenos Aires is a microcosm of the world's problems. He's going to have to deal with political crises and we have political crises here. This is a scale model of the world's inequality," his former spokesman, Guillermo Marco, told The Associated Press. "But we also have wonderful people, we're passionate, we're prone to fighting .... Bergoglio is all that!"

With Argentina's justice system putting dictatorship-era officials on trial for human rights violations like never before, the Buenos Aires archbishop drew a line against blaming the church as a whole for the key support that Catholic leaders provided to the murderous 1976-1983 junta.

"The church was, is and will be persecuted," Jorge Mario Bergoglio said from the pulpit during a particularly tense phase in 2007, before a police chaplain was given a life sentence for junta-era tortures and killings. "The methods were and are the same: disinformation, defamation and calumny."

Behind the scenes, Bergoglio became a skilled operator, welcoming politicians from all sides into his office and offering his opinions on matters having more to do with state than church.

President Cristina Fernandez and her allies saw that as a threat, political analysts say, but Marco said Francis sees politics as his duty, and "never runs away from conflict."

When the country's economy collapsed in 2002, Bergoglio got fed up at the politicians pointing fingers while the jobless stormed supermarkets, desperate for food. He made headlines by writing that "Argentina looks ever more like a funeral procession where everyone wants to console the family but no one wants to carry the dead."

He also won wide acclaim for standing with the survivors and blaming political corruption for Argentina's mass tragedies, such as a nightclub fire that killed 194 people or a commuter train accident that killed 51. "We can't afford to be idiots, fools, toward those who sponsor the culture of death," he said.

Another pope with a personal touch, John Paul II, campaigned to bring down the Cold War's Iron Curtain. Today's challenges have more to do with poverty, inequality and corruption. Francis has seen it all.

"He wasn't living in a separate house protected by bodyguards, or riding in a car with tinted windows, aloof to reality. No. He lived that reality," Marco said. "If the subway was late, he was late. He took a bus like everyone else and heard the protests, because people would recognize him on the streets and would say, 'Do Something!'"

The challenge is to respond to the "social debt without stoking new exasperations and polarizations," Bergoglio said in 2010. "We have to overcome the constant state of confrontation that deepens our ills. The homeland is a gift; the nation, a duty. We have to pray for the prudence of its authorities and the austerity of its citizens, so we can live in peace."

His clashes with Fernandez and her late husband and predecessor, President Nestor Kirchner, became evident in 2004. Every May 25, Argentina celebrates its declaration of independence, and church leaders deliver a "Te Deum" address challenging society to do better. Political leaders traditionally sit in the front row.

The Kirchners took it personally that year when Bergoglio publicly questioned "the exhibitionism and strident announcements" of those in power. They never came back.

With popular backing and in clear defiance of the church, they pushed for mandatory sex education in schools, free distribution of contraceptives in public hospitals, and the right for transsexuals to change their official identities on demand. Argentina became the first nation in Latin America to legalize same-sex marriages.

Fernandez's slogan became "we're going for more."

Bergoglio responded in kind.

In last year's address, he said Argentina was being harmed by demagoguery, totalitarianism, corruption and efforts to secure unlimited power: a strong message in a country whose president has ruled by decree and left scandals unpunished.

"He's not looking for conflicts, but he doesn't avoid them. His language is direct and plain. From that perspective, he doesn't act like a diplomat," said Rosendo Fraga, an analyst with the New Majority consulting firm. "He knows how to conciliate, gather strength and look for meeting ground."

That's difficult in highly polarized Argentina. Gabriela Michetti, an opposition lawmaker who considers Francis her spiritual guide, said that every time he would speak about poverty, or the need to cool tempers, he was talking to all Argentines. But the Kirchners saw them as direct attacks.

"Kirchner branded him as the big opposing force, but Bergoglio didn't like that, because he wanted to be seen as a pastor and not a politician," Michetti said.

Others say Bergoglio was born for politics.

"Bergoglio likes politics more than 'dulce de leche' (Argentine caramel)," said Ignacio Fidanza, an analyst at lapoliticaonline.com.

"Bergoglio is always sending signals of an austere church, one that rejects ostentation, and he does it like politicians do it: through words and gestures, successfully, because his actions have an impact," Fidanza added.

Bergoglio is familiar with the Vatican's byzantine politics, having served in three important congregations since becoming a cardinal in 2001. But he seemed less than critical of its shortcomings, even after internal turf battles, intrigue and allegations of corruption emerged in leaked papal documents.

Those revelations featured heavily in the conclave. U.S. cardinals in particular insisted that the new pontiff must clean up the mess within the Vatican's own walls to restore credibility to the church as a whole.

Reforming the bureaucracy could make the Holy See more responsive to the needs of the church in the field and more governable at home. It now operates like a collection of independent fiefdoms, where the right hand doesn't know what the left is doing.

In a 2012 interview with veteran Italian Vatican journalist Andrea Tornielli, Bergoglio acknowledged that the church is both "saint and sinner," but said one cannot allow the sins to overshadow "the saintliness of so many men and women who operate in the church."

It was a message not unlike his position on the church's actions during the Argentine junta's "dirty war," which has left the new pope open to criticism that he cares more about protecting the image of the church than exposing its failings.

"The Roman Curia has its defects," Bergoglio said, "but it seems that what is being highlighted is the bad and not the good being done by the lay and consecrated men and women who work there."

___

Associated Press writers Michael Warren and Almudena Calatrava in Buenos Aires, Argentina, and Nicole Winfield in Rome contributed to this report.

___

Luis Andres Henao on Twitter: https://twitter.com/LuisAndresHenao

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/argentina-boot-camp-politically-savvy-pope-214815262.html

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Android Game Review ? Basketball Free Throws

Today we present to you ?Basketball Free Throws? by new developer Utkarsh Vaidya. The name speaks for itself, since the goal is to score as many free throws as possible. With a slingshot. The game is quite self-explanatory and allows a quick and easy access. You shoot the ball by adjusting power and angle of the shot via touch-control. Unlike in other basketball games there is no line indicating the trajectory, which I actually prefer, since the game becomes a bit more challenging. All in all it sounds like a a solid game, but

There are some flaws in Utkarsh Vaidya?s developing debut. First of all there are the sloppily designed objects, for instance the slingshot.? The sounds are relatively realistic, yet repetitive, but the lack of music spoils the atmosphere. The scope is not overwhelming either: There is only one level and one gameplay mode. But the most annoying thing was, that from time to time your perfectly shot basketballs just disappear mid-air and you lose one of your 15 tries per game.

Despite its teething problems, ?Basketball Free Throws? was quite entertaining and trying to beat the record kept me busy for a while. But we can?t ignore the flaws, so all in all this leads to solid 14 points.

Reviewed by Dennis Heizmann

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/playandroidmagazin/~3/RJwCAPV7Xv8/

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the year is 3940, global warming changed to global cooling,casuing a global winter,and all nations of the world are at war with thier neighbors.you are fighting on the front lines between america,canada, and russia.

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GOP report calls for sweeping reforms to compete

By Michael O'Brien, Political Reporter, NBC News

?

The Republican National Committee released an audacious set of recommendations on Monday aimed at revitalizing the party following the drubbing suffered by GOP candidates last November, calling for sweeping changes to the party's infrastructure, outreach and nominating process to contend for the White House in 2016.

The RNC's 100-page report, the "Growth and Opportunity Project," is the election autopsy ordered by Chairman Reince Priebus last fall.

Handout / Getty Images

Chairman of the Republican National Committee, Reince Priebus, appears on ''Face the Nation'' on March 17, 2013 in Washington, D.C.

Culled from more than 52,000 contacts with voters, party consultants and elected officials, it calls for drastic changes to almost every major element of the modern Republican Party.

"When Republicans lost in November, it was a wake-up call. And in response I initiated the most public and most comprehensive post-election review in the history of any national party," Priebus was set to say in remarks Monday morning at the National Press Club. "As it makes clear, there?s no one reason we lost. Our message was weak; our ground game was insufficient; we weren?t inclusive; we were behind in both data and digital; our primary and debate process needed improvement."

In essence, the report argues for a more data-driven Republican Party in which the RNC assumes increased authority for party-building efforts.

The report calls for increased outreach to women, young voters and minorities ? especially Hispanics. The document acknowledges the GOP?s policy on immigration has become a ?litmus test? for what will be a key constituency?necessary for the party?s success in the next four years and beyond.

"We are not a policy committee, but among the steps Republicans take in the Hispanic community and beyond, we must embrace and champion comprehensive immigration reform," the report says, nodding at other points to the bipartisan reform efforts currently before Congress. "If we do not, our Party?s appeal will continue to shrink to its core constituencies only."

The report also notes a growing generational divide on the issue of gay rights, calling the issue a "gateway" for young voters deciding whether to align with the GOP.

But the report is hardly focused on social issues alone. Its top recurring theme arguably involves building a robust Republican data infrastructure, and applying a commitment to testing and analysis of almost every operation of the RNC.

Priebus is advised to hire a chief technology officer and digital officer by the end of April, and give them wide latitude to inform aspects of the party from fundraising to media strategy and messaging and beyond.

"Those teams will work together to integrate their respective areas throughout the RNC and provide a data-driven focus for the rest of the organization," Priebus will say. "And they will be the new center of gravity within the organization."

The GOP's digital revamp ? as with most of the other elements of the report ? was prompted by the Obama campaign's far more sophisticated operation in 2012.

Many of the reforms proposed by the Growth and Opportunity Project, however, will encounter stiff resistance in corners of the Republican Party and broader conservative movement ? because of a deep distrust of the official GOP among the grassroots.?

Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin encapsulated the sentiment during her speech on Saturday before the Conservative Political Action Conference.?

"Now is the time to furlough the consultants, and tune out the pollsters, send the focus groups home, and toss the political scripts," she said, "because if we truly know what we believe, we don't need professionals to tell us."

And some of the report's declarations are sure to ruffle feathers on the Right.

The report says bluntly at one point that "third-party groups that promote purity are hurting our electoral prospects," an indirect reference to groups like the Club for Growth, which has promoted challenges to Republicans regarded as more electable who are accused of transgressing against conservative principle.

The report also calls super PACs a "wild card" that threaten to weaken an eventual nominee due to the onslaught of negative advertising during primaries. (2012 Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney suffered from this type of friendly fire during his slog to the nomination.)

The report calls for broader changes to the Republican primary system, too, especially as it relates to picking a presidential candidate. It calls for prohibiting primary debates before Sept. 1, 2015, and limiting the total number of debates to 10 or 12 -- and possibly docking delegates from candidates who ignore the rules.

The report also calls for holding the Republican National Convention in late June or July, necessitating that the primary process concludes between late April and mid-May.?

To accomplish that, the Growth and Opportunity Project recommends for a major ??and likely contentious ? overhaul to the primary calendar in which groups of states in a similar region would vote on the same date. The so-called "regional primary system" would follow traditional nominating contests in states like Iowa and New Hampshire, for which there would be an exception.?

Furthermore, the report recommends that Republicans ditch caucuses and conventions ??venues in which conservative activists traditionally dominate ??in favor of primaries for picking a nominee.

Among the report's assorted other recommendations:

  • Establish a new "Growth and Opportunity Inclusion Council" tasked with reaching out to Hispanics, African Americans, Asians and Pacific Islanders, Native Americans and other minority communities;
  • Commit an initial $10 million to improving outreach to minority communities;
  • Set up an "RNC Celebrity Task Force of personalities in the entertainment industry" to attract young voters, and encourage Republican leaders to "participate in and actively prepare for interviews" on the Daily Show, the Colbert Report and other media aimed toward younger Americans;
  • Place a greater emphasis on early voting in political strategy, messaging and budgeting;
  • Invest in full-time field staff in states beginning at a much earlier point in election cycles;
  • Convene a quarterly summit of Republican pollsters, ensure an accurate model of likely voters and turnout for polling, and recommend that GOP polls include a 25 percent subsample of respondents who can be reached by cell phone only;
  • Explore making more efficient television advertising purchases, including possibly shifting resources away from paid media and toward organizational efforts and alternative methods of voter contact;
  • Work with outside conservative groups (to the extent that it's legal) to better define different organizations' responsibilities;
  • Encourage a well-funded conservative group (akin to Democrats' group, American Bridge) dedicated to full-time tracking and research of Democratic candidates;
  • Expand the RNC's low-dollar fundraising program, and seek more efficient finance staffing;
  • "Convince Congress to remove the biennial aggregate contribution limits," or, absent that, seek to increase the contribution limits for federal campaigns;
  • Abolish the public financing system for presidential campaigns, including the matching funds program;
  • Replace taxpayer funding of national party conventions with a system in which party committees could raise additional funds for the conventions;
  • Allow party committees to raise additional funds to support the maintenance of their buildings and facilities.

Source: http://firstread.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/18/17351259-gop-report-calls-for-sweeping-reforms-to-compete-in-2016?lite

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Weigel thinks Pope Francis embodies Church?s future

This is a syndicated post from CNA Daily News. [Read the original article...]

Rome, Italy, Mar 16, 2013 / 04:01 pm (CNA).- Catholic author and scholar George Weigel believes that Pope Francis embodies the type of Catholicism that is needed for the Church to thrive in the modern cultural context.

?I think Pope Francis embodies the Church's turn into the Evangelical Catholicism of the future in a profound way,? Weigel told CNA on March 15, just two days into the new papacy.

?If he can reform the Curia and turn it into a more effective instrument of the New Evangelization, while concurrently being the Church's principal evangelist, he will have done precisely what the Church needs in these first decades of the new millennium,? he said.

Weigel, who is the author of the official biography of Pope John Paul II and numerous other books on contemporary Catholicism, has just released ?Evangelical Catholicism: Deep Reform in the 21st-Century Church? (Basic Books, $27.99).

In a March 8 interview with CNA before the election of the new Pope, Weigel explained that he was motivated to write the book because it ?seemed to me two years ago that a number of things were beginning to come into focus.?

?I had been thinking about the long trajectory of modern Church history for a long time ? and it finally came clear to me that this ?Church of the New Evangelization? or ?Evangelical Catholicism? was the prism through which all of that deep reform that had been underway since Leo XIII was being focused,? he explained.

In fact, Weigel asserted, the Church was and is at ?a hinge moment? in its history, a time when ?a new mode of being Catholic was being born, and that this was not dissimilar from other such transition points in Catholic history.?

His aim in writing ?Evangelical Catholicism? was to describe a future that ?is already being born,? and to offer ?some very specific suggestions on how to accelerate that.?

Weigel spends the first half of his latest work explaining his vision of Evangelical Catholicism which ?is being born out of 120 years of Catholic reform.?

It places ?friendship with Jesus Christ at the center of the Christian experience, a friendship nurtured by an intensified sacramental life and a deeper encounter with the Bible, all of which lead to a Church in mission,? he explained to CNA.

In the second half of his book, Weigel looks at the numerous vocations, institutions and apostolates in the Church and offers his ideas for how to carry out an Evangelical Catholic reform.

Some of the areas he addresses are: the episcopate, the priesthood, consecrated life, the liturgy, the lay vocation, the intellectual sphere, the Church?s public policy advocacy, and the papacy.

In the interview, Weigel offered his thoughts on the ?Global South,? the area where the Church has grown the most in the recent decades, which also happens to include the new Pope?s homeland of Argentina.

?I think there is real opportunity now in Latin America to move in this direction,? he said, pointing to a 2007 document issued by the bishops of Latin America that ?marked the real turning point from institutional maintenance, Counter-Reformation Catholicism, in Latin America, which had counted on the ambient culture to carry the faith for 500 years.?

?That?s not there anymore, so it has to be proposed and proposed and proposed again.?

Weigel also reflected on the ?developed world,? where the vital areas of Catholicism ?are the Evangelical Catholic parts.?

In his view, ??Catholic Lite? is finished. It?s going to take another 20 years for some people to figure that out, but it?s over.

?And it?s over for a very simple reason. It doesn?t work,? he stated.

?It?s incapable of engaging this toxic culture and it?s incapable of inspiring people to embrace the full symphony of Catholic truth and then share that.?

When it comes to Pope Francis, Weigel believes that he understands this reality well.

?He has lived a Gospel-centered ministry in Argentina. He knows that a ?kept? Church ? ?kept? in the sense of legal establishment, cultural habit, or both ? has no future, given the acids of secularism.?

(5)


Source: http://www.dfwcatholic.org/weigel-thinks-pope-francis-embodies-churchs-future-39942/.html

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32-year-old man adopted by former foster mother

By Monica Garske and Lea Sutton, NBCSanDiego.com

Nearly 20 years after being ripped apart from his foster parents, a 32-year-old man was officially adopted Friday in San Diego, Calif., by the woman he has always considered to be his mother.

Maurice Griffin was abandoned as a baby. At age three, he found a loving family in foster parents Lisa Godbold and her husband, Charles.

?The whole reason we got into foster care in the first place is because we wanted to adopt Maurice,? recalled Godbold.

Over the next 10 years, Godbold and her husband eventually became Griffin?s foster parents, giving him the stable, happy home he had always dreamed of.

?It was a great, loving family,? said Griffin, remembering the trips to Sunday school and brunch with his foster family.

But Griffin?s happy family life didn?t last long.

Griffin says the foster system failed him, and he was abruptly taken away from the family at age 13. He and Godbold didn?t want to get into specifics about why Griffin was taken from the family, but both of them agreed it was a very painful and difficult time.

?It?s like being abducted from your family and being told to deal with it,? said Griffin.


?It was torture; it broke our hearts,? added Godbold. ?Not knowing where he was and not being able to have contact with him was like having a child abducted.?

From there, Griffin bounced from other foster homes to group homes, where he says he was abused and mistreated.

Through the years and tough times, Griffin held on to his fond family memories.

Meanwhile, Godbold tried time and time again to find her long lost foster son ? never giving up.

In 2009, Godbold tracked Griffin down on the internet using social media. From that point on, they vowed never to lose each other again.

Their enduring mother-son bond led them to a San Diego courtroom Friday, where Godbold officially adopted Griffin as her son.

?I?m excited ? this is 20 years overdue,? said Griffin minutes before heading into the courthouse with his soon-to-be mother.

Though the adoption proceeding was short, Griffin said it was the moment he?s been waiting for all his life.

?This is probably the happiest moment in my life. I love my family and I?m happy to be home,? said Griffin, adoption paperwork in hand.

Godbold was also overwhelmed with emotion and said adopting Griffin ? even at 32 years old ? was a privilege.

?This completes the circle. He?s always been my son, but this just completes the circle,? she added.

Griffin now joins Godbold and her two biological children to form a happy family once again. Sadly, Godbold?s husband passed away during the time they lost contact with Griffin.

Griffin said he would have loved to be adopted by Charles Friday too, as he was a man he always admired and loved. Both Godbold and Griffin believe Charles was proudly watching over them on this special day.

Their story of family, love, loss, struggle and perseverance is something they hope will impact other foster children and foster families out there.

Godbold says the message is simple: don?t give up.

?Don?t give up ? persevere. Keep looking for that love, that family connection, whether it?s with an infant or your 32-year-old child,? she added.

Griffin lives in San Diego and Godbold lives in San Jose, Calif., but now that they?re mother and son, they?ll be getting together often.

?She?s my mother,? said Griffin. ?She has always been my mother.?

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/16/17340940-32-year-old-man-adopted-by-former-foster-mother?lite

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Explore This 3D, Neon Map of the Internet Right From Your Phone

Right now, as you read this, you are cruising through a mind-numbingly complex pathway of wires and cables that shoots bits of data from point-to-point around the globe. And Peer 1's Map of the Internet lets you see what it looks like...as a neon disco map. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/hMn4ahBJAWQ/explore-this-3d-neon-map-of-the-internet-right-from-your-phone

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Dixie Chicks' Maines moving on as solo artist

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) ? Natalie Maines is starting out nervous on stage, almost 10 years to the day that the Dixie Chicks spitfire slammed then-President George W. Bush and forever changed the fate and fortunes of the country superstars.

On this night she barely speaks between songs.

Her hair slicks up in a punkish pompadour. She looks slimmer than when the Dixie Chicks began a hiatus in 2007 that may never end. The crowd at the South by Southwest music festival to hear Maines perform her solo debut "Mother" for only the second time is a healthy size, but it is also far from a packed house.

"We missed you, Natalie!" one fan hollers.

Maines smiles but doesn't banter back.

"I ask myself, 'Why is that? What are you doing, girl?'" Maines told The Associated Press the next morning at a downtown Austin hotel. "I think right now I have so much to remember. This is the most guitar I've ever had to play."

Now 38 and a solo artist for the first time in her career, Maines is candid about the past and guarded about the future. Ask whether the Dixie Chicks will ever record new music again, she curls in her chair with tense energy and declines to predict.

"I think I thought time would heal and that I would come around. But just like the song says, I'm still waiting," said Maines, pulling a lyric from the band's defiant 2006 smash single "Not Ready to Make Nice."

Fellow Chicks Emily Erwin and Martie Maguire don't needle her to reunite in the studio, Maines said, but she acknowledges that choosing the solo project "Mother" as her first album since 2006 may not have been their first choice. "I'm pretty sure they would rather I be making a Dixie Chicks record, but they would never say that, thank God," Maines said.

Now rehash her takedown of then-President Bush in 2003 and ? well, on second thought, don't bother.

Maines does that herself.

"Good thing I'm not a told ya so kind of person or I might point out that 10 years ago today I said GWB was full of bull and I was right," she tweeted on March 10, three days before her first South by Southwest performance.

When the Texas-born Maines told a London crowd at the start of the Iraq invasion she was ashamed to be from the same state as Bush, the Dixie Chicks became pariahs of the country music industry that vaulted them to stardom. Radio stations blackballed the Dixie Chicks from playlists and legions of fans turned their backs.

The Dixie Chicks stayed firm during the backlash, and released "Taking the Long Way" in 2006 that won five Grammys and was a best-seller despite being largely ignored by country radio. Maines now refers to the group as "tainted" but is still open to performing live with the Dixie Chicks, and two shows are scheduled in Canada this summer.

Those concerts will be a different sound than "Mother." The album is Maines putting her take on covers that span from Pink Floyd (the album title borrows from "The Wall"), Eddie Vedder's "Without You" and Jeff Buckley's "Lover, You Should've Come Over."

Guitar virtuoso Ben Harper produced the album and performed with Maines at SXSW for a lively show that skewed far more on the side of rock and Americana than the bluegrass and country combination of the Dixie Chicks. Maines first played at the 2,700-seat Moody Theater that is the home studio for Austin City Limits ? a big and tough venue to fill at SXSW, given the 2,200 other artists all vying for attention.

Maines doesn't expect to win back fans that Dixie Chicks lost, and isn't sure who will embrace her different sound now.

"I like what the three of us had together," Maines said of the Dixie Chicks. "I did what was required. It felt like my job. I felt like a businesswoman in the industry I was in. I feel like I accepted that and waved that country flag but always felt like I was holding on to who I was, and we were still considered rebellious in the Top 40 country market. But it was news to me that people thought I was something I wasn't.

"The cat just feels out of the bag now," Maines said. "I'm not sure I can go back to that."

___

Follow Paul J. Weber on Twitter: www.twitter.com/pauljweber

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dixie-chicks-maines-moving-solo-artist-150201837.html

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Steubenville High School Football Players Found Guilty of Rape

Steubenville High School Football Players Found Guilty of RapeThe two Steubenville high-school football players who stood trial this week on rape charges were found guilty this morning.

The trial, which divided a small Ohio town and uncovered a history of adults associated with the football program protecting players from prosecution, came to a close Sunday morning as Trent Mays and Ma'lik Richmond were found delinquent by the juvenile court, which was decided by a sole judge and not a jury. The two boys will be jailed a minimum of one year, and now face a possible sentence of juvenile jail until they turn 21.

Details of the rape of the 16-year-old West Virginia girl spread through social media the morning after an August 11th party where Mays was seen leaving with the intoxicated girl. A series of texts and tweets from phones confiscated by the state were used as evidence against the defendants. A photo of the unconscious girl being carried by undisclosed males surfaced online months after the assault.

The Ohio Attorney General will announce later today whether additional charges will be brought in the case, including against other boys at the party.

Source: http://gawker.com/5990960/steubenville-high+school-football-players-found-guilty-of-rape

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GOP Leaders Begin 2016 Auditions

Just two months into President Barack Obama's second term, Republican leaders are lining up to diagnose their party's ills while courting conservative activists ahead of what could be a crowded presidential primary field in 2016.

Die-hard conservatives attending the Conservative Political Action Conference in suburban Washington were already picking their favorites for 2016.

Thousands of activists who attended the gathering gave Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul a narrow victory over Florida Sen. Marco Rubio in their unscientific presidential preference poll. Paul had 25 percent of the vote and Rubio 23 percent.

Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, a favorite of social conservatives who unsuccessfully challenged Mitt Romney for the nomination last year, was third with 8 percent.

Rubio and Paul, both first-term U.S. senators, topped a pool of nearly two dozen governors and elected officials who paraded through the same ballroom stage over three days at the Conservative Political Action Conference. There were passionate calls for party unity, as the party's old guard and a new generation of leaders clashed over the party's future.

The ballroom stage was emblazoned with the words "America's Future: The Next Generation of Conservatives," making clear the party's interest in showcasing a new wave of talent. The gathering evoked the ending of one period and the beginning of another.

Sharp competition among Republican leadership comes as Obama's role as the head of his party is unquestioned. Even looking to the next presidential election, there is a smaller pool of possible Democratic candidates largely waiting on former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton to shape her plans. Democrats concede she would be the strong favorite to win her party's nomination if she ran.

There is no such certainty on the Republican side, regardless of the outcome of the conservative straw poll.

Several high-profile Republicans are jockeying for elevated leadership roles.

Earlier in the week, Paul insisted on a new direction in Republican politics: "The GOP of old has grown stale and moss-covered."

The straw poll victory offers little more than bragging rights for Paul, who is popular with the younger generation of libertarian-minded conservatives who packed the conference in suburban Washington. Nearly 3,000 people participated in the online survey and more than half were younger than 26.

Paul's father, former Texas Rep. Ron Paul, won the poll in 2010 and 2011, while presidential nominee Mitt Romney took the honor last year. Ron Paul unsuccessfully competed for the Republican nomination in 2008 and 2012.

Rubio drew thunderous applause by proclaiming that the Republican Party doesn't need any new ideas: "There is an idea. The idea is called America, and it still works," he said in a speech aimed squarely at middle-class voters.

First-term Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, who placed sixth in the straw poll, on Saturday encouraged Republicans to be aggressive but also warned them to focus on middle-class concerns: "We need to be relevant."

The Republican gathering also featured Romney, who delivered his first speech since his Election Day loss four months ago on Friday.

He offered a valedictory of sorts, thanking activists for supporting his campaign, while conceding mistakes -- although he didn't offer any specifics. In a nod to the next generation, he urged conservatives to learn lessons from the nation's 30 Republican governors.

Romney heaped praise on his 2012 running mate, Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan, while naming a handful of governors who have sought a larger national profile, including Bob McDonnell of Virginia and Chris Christie of New Jersey.

Neither Christie nor McDonnell were invited to the conference after rankling conservatives in recent months for, among other things, supporting efforts to expand Medicaid coverage as part of Obama's health care overhaul.

Most of the candidates have been working to raise their national profiles while tiptoeing around questions about their presidential ambitions.

Walker told The Associated Press late last month that a 2016 presidential bid "would be an option," although it wasn't something he was "actively pursuing."

Paul has said he's "seriously considering" running for the White House. Ryan, the House Budget Committee chairman, has avoided such questions and instead continued his central role in one of Capitol Hill's most significant policy debates.

Another former vice presidential candidate, ex-Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, mixed anti-Obama rhetoric with calls for a more inclusive Republican Party. "We must leave no American behind," she said after likening Washington leadership to reality television.

Palin took a shot at the president's call for universal background checks on gun purchasers, saying, "Dandy idea, Mr. President -- should have started with yours." She also mocked Michael Bloomberg by sipping soda from a "Big Gulp" cup -- the type of supersized, sugary drink that the New York mayor tried to ban in an effort to fight obesity only to have a judge strike down the restriction.

Source: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/03/17/early-republican-auditions-for-2016-election/

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Sunday, March 17, 2013

SOUTHGATE: Mayor to seek third term this fall (VIDEO)

Southgate Mayor Joseph Kuspa, first elected in 2009, will seek a third two-year term this fall. Photo by Alan Burdziak

SOUTHGATE ? Mayor Joseph Kuspa will seek a third two-year term in this year?s city election.

Terms for all elected officials are up and Kuspa is the only person who has filed for office so far. First-term Treasurer James Dallos has said he intends to run again but other officials? plans are unclear.

Three City Council members ? Jan Ferencz, Phillip Rauch and Chris Rollet ? are ineligible to run because of term limits. Officials are limited to four consecutive two-year terms. Any of the trio can run again in the following election.

Kuspa, 56, said there are several projects that began during his administration that he would like to see completed. Those include three major projects at or near the Southgate Shopping Center at Trenton and Eureka roads: the creation of a public space at the former location of Montgomery Ward; a multimillion-dollar expansion of MJR Theater adjacent to the center; and renovation of the old Farmer Jack building into the new location of Downriver Gymnastics, currently based in Riverview.

While the city has a balanced budget, Kuspa said Southgate still has to be proactive in order to maintain long-term solvency. Expenses are expected to go up again this year and savings only can be realized in a few areas of the general fund, he said.

?We have gone through the budget,? he said. ?There?s very few areas that we think we can do any additional cost savings. We really are at a point in the budget where we have to look at the key things that contribute to our budget and obviously payroll and staffing is the major expense for any community.?

Contracts for all employee unions ? fire, police command and patrol, Teamsters, Department of Public Service employees, municipal employees and secretaries ? expire at the end of this fiscal year, June 30.

?To say we have had some conversations is true,? Kuspa said. ?I?ll just leave it at that. We?re starting the process of the negotiations.?

The process of cutting expenses began in 2009, when cities were beginning to feel the impact of declining property values and tax collections. Kuspa said because of the city?s proactive approach, Southgate is in better shape than those who acted more slowly. Property values in the city are expected to remain flat this year after three years of double-digit declines. Continued...

?There?s not a lot left in the budget to glean from,? Kuspa said. ?We?re at a point now where we?ve gone through three years of cutting our budgets and finding new ways to provide services, making some public/private partnerships as it relates to the services that we have here in Southgate.?

Collaboration with other communities is vital and the city has been pioneering such efforts since before Gov. Rick Snyder made it a requirement to receive a portion of state-shared revenue, he said. In 2009, Southgate was a founding partner in the Downriver Central Dispatch, which handles emergency calls for Allen Park, Lincoln Park, Southgate and Wyandotte. A new consolidated animal shelter with those three cities, the Downriver Central Animal Control Agency, is expected to open soon.

There are a number of private/public partnerships in the city including contracting with JRV consulting to run the Recreation Center and with Crystal Gardens to run the Senior Center, banquet facility and golf course clubhouse.

In his first run, Kuspa survived a primary and then won the general election, facing off against former mayor Dennis David, who was mayor from 2003 to 2005. In 2011, he ran unopposed. While it is still early on, he said he hasn?t thought much about facing off against a challenger this year.

?I really don?t think in those terms because we have an agenda here,? he said. ?I have a great staff. ? We?re moving the city forward. If I do have a challenger, we?ll deal with that. Obviously, we?ll run a campaign that?s comparable to two people in the race, three people in the race, whatever it is. But I think we have a good, compelling story to tell.?

Contact Staff Writer Alan Burdziak at 1-734-246-0882 or aburdziak@heritage.com. Follow him on Facebook and @AlanBurdziak on Twitter.

Source: http://www.thenewsherald.com/articles/2013/03/17/news/doc514377caa726d364201059.txt

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