Thursday 25 July 2013

World champion Greene out of London Diamond League

LONDON | Wed Jul 24, 2013 7:44pm BST

LONDON (Reuters) - World champion Dai Greene has pulled out of the 400 metres hurdles at this weekend's Diamond League meeting in London in a bid to get fit to defend his title in Moscow next month.

The 27-year-old Briton, who has struggled with injury and illness all season, withdrew from last week's Monaco Diamond League meeting with an Achilles problem.

"World Champion @DaiGreene will not compete in London after failing to recover from a slight niggle in his leg. Main focus is now the Worlds!," his management company tweeted on Wednesday.

Greene beat Puerto Rico's Javier Culson to win the world title in Daegu in 2011. He finished fourth at last year's Olympics but has been struggling to find any form this year and took his first victory of 2013 at the British championships earlier this month.

"So disappointed that I'm having to withdraw from the Anniversary Games this weekend. Hopefully it will pay off at the world champs," Greene tweeted.

The world championships start on August 10.

(Writing by Alison Wildey; Editing by John Mehaffey)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/UKSportsNews/~3/gbkGtuFeBo4/uk-athletics-world-greene-idUKBRE96N14Q20130724

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Wednesday 10 July 2013

Farrah Abraham: Kicked Out of Rehab For Being "Disruptive Influence," Taking Pics of Tan Mom

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/07/farrah-abraham-kicked-out-of-rehab-for-being-disruptive-influenc/

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The Daily Troll: Mayoral commercials coming at cable viewers. 'Delivering the vision' at Microsoft ... on Thursday? Officers get jobs back at Monroe.

The Daily Troll: News for your evening commute.

The Daily Troll: News for your evening commute. Art work by Noel Franklin

Mayor ads coming to cable?

State Sen. Ed Murray will begin airing some Seattle mayoral campaign commercials on cable TV tomorrow, joining incumbent Mike McGinn and Bruce Harrell in the broadcast battle, Publicola reports. The story also notes that Peter Steinbrueck will pass on TV ads, instead concentrating on "direct voter contact." Steinbrueck's campaign manager, Tom Van Bronkhorst, tells us that the decision is not about money, or lack thereof. It's just that direct mail pieces are a better way to reach potential supporters. The strategy would be the same, he said, "even if I had an extra $200,000 in cash right now." Van Bronkhorst said focus group research has shown that Steinbrueck's supporters tend to be very active. "We don't think they are going to be home watching TV in the summer," he said.

Publicola takes the Murray release as an occasion to grade the candidates' commercials: A for Harrell, B for McGinn and C for Murray. Not sure we agree, but the grades sure are explained well.

Microsoft shakeup coming Thursday

Microsoft's expected organizational shakeup will take place on Thursday, according to influential national tech news site, All Things D. Based on that report, which came out late Monday, Puget Sound Business Journal and GeekWire, among others, reprised some of the potential scenarios for changes. But nobody really knows, at least anyone who is talking. Meanwhile, All Things D writer Kara Swisher got an email today from Ford CEO Alan Mulally?? who left Boeing for that job?? confirming that he had advised Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer on how to revamp the company.

"While we clearly are not part of any Microsoft reorganization or its business operations," wrote Mulally, "we have shared with Steve ? as we have with many others who have asked ? the elements of the Ford business transformation, including the importance of having a compelling vision and the relentless implementation of a plan that delivers the vision."

Given Mulally's performance at both Boeing in Puget Sound and Ford, that's promising for the long run at Microsoft?? presuming Microsoft doesn't conclude that Boeing's smartest move ever was to take off for Chicago.

Officers back to work

An arbitrator overturned the firing of three Monroe Corrections Center employees whose mistakes, the state had once suggested, might have contributed to the murder of fellow guard Jayme Biendl. She was murdered in the prison chapel in 2011 by inmate Byron Scherf, who faces the death penalty.?The Herald reported today that the Department of Corrections must offer the officers their jobs back; Corrections officials are reviewing the ruling by the arbitrator, who said a larger climate of complacency, not individual mistakes, created dangerous conditions that Scherf exploited.

Amanda Knox retrial

An Italian court will again try once-exonerated Seattle resident Amanda Knox for the murder of her roommate, Meredith Kercher, in Perugia. Associated Press notes that Knox is not expected to attend. But Italian prosecutors will be there with their theories.?

All's quiet inside Green Hill

All was apparently calm inside the Green Hill juvenile facility on Monday, contrary to our report from yesterday. Some activists did demonstrate?? noisily?? outside the facility, according to The Centralia Chronicle, but?Green Hill Superintendent Marybeth Queral told the paper there had been no work stoppage or hunger strike in sympathy with Guantanamo Bay inmates. A spokesman for the Department of Social and Health Services said checks by officials in Olympia with the facility, which is part of DSHS, also indicated no difficulties.

Love the Daily Troll? Now you can?sign up to get it in your inbox every afternoon. And to catch up on the most recent news, click here.

Source: http://crosscut.com/2013/07/09/thedailytroll/115472/daily-troll/

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Christian Hernandez Leaves Facebook For White Star Capital, Raising $100M Fund

Christian Hernandez, a long-time employee for Facebook in Europe, is leaving the company to go full-time at White Star Capital, an early-stage VC investment firm founded by Eric Martineau-Fortin. Hernandez was most recently Facebook?s director for EMEA, and before that had been head of platform partnerships for the region. White Star to date has backed some 20 companies both in the U.S. and Europe, including Betaworks, Science, Bloglovin? in Sweden, Execution Labs in Canada and Dollar Shave Club. Two companies have exited: Summly, sold to Yahoo!; and Ludia, sold to Fremantle. It says it?s raised $70 million in follow-on financing. TechCrunch understands that White Star is currently raising money for a new fund of $100 million, with about 80 percent of that from institutions and family offices. So far $20 million has been committed.

TechCrunch also understands that White Star has not gone through the Financial Conduct Authority process yet, which means they are still at the early stages of the fund: most VCs defer that until the end, although you can?t fundraise in the U.K. until you?re registered with the FCA.

christian hernandezHernandez has also been angel investing on the side, and those holdings will be combined with White Star?s portfolio. Both he and Martineau-Fortin will be managing partners, and at the same time the firm is announcing two principals: John Henderson (most recently of Summly) and David Szekely. The news was laid out in a Facebook post from Hernandez as well as an announcement from White Star.

Hernandez has had a long career to date that includes, before Facebook, several years at Google and, prior to that, Microsoft. Since September 2011, he?s also been on the board of advisors at Seedcamp, the European startup accelerator. Those two sides of his experience ? first-hand with the heavy hitters and investing in and advising startups ? gives him and White Star a shot at bringing in dealflow as well as helping portfolio companies partner and exit to bigger players.

White Star will focus primiarly on seed and A rounds, filling what some still see as a gap in the market for early-stage companies particularly in Europe. The other big focus will be to provide funding specifically for startups to scale internationally, playing on White Star?s existing U.S./European pedigree.

As for what kinds of companies White Star will pick, the focus sounds like it will be on homing in on niches rather than expansive platform plays: included are ?affinity networks? ? think more-targeted social networks around special interests ? as well as niche e-commerce opportunities and social games. More generally, it will also put a strong emphasis on mobile-focused companies.

As for Facebook, the company officially confirmed Hernandez?s departure in June, at the same time that U.K. commercial director Stephen Haines left London to move to New York to work directly on Facebook?s network partnership with Omnicom. It doesn?t look like they?ve tapped a replacement for Hernandez yet. Nichola Mendelson, the company?s newly appointed VP for EMEA, will likely be addressing that as she settles into her new role, which she only took on at the beginning of this year.


Founded in 2007, White Star Capital invests in early-stage companies to help them scale internationally. We support the growth of firms across the social, mobile and e-commerce space.

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Christian Hernandez Gallardo is Facebook?s Director for the UK and Pan-Euro. He leads Facebook?s commercial operations in the region, and is tasked with establishing strategic partnerships with innovative companies to develop technology and marketing solutions that help them connect and engage with Facebook?s more than 1 billion users. Christian joined Facebook in 2009 and led the international expansion of the company?s Business Development, Developer Relations, Gaming and Platform businesses. Prior to Facebook, Christian worked at Google where he was...

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/9MhK9nPFffc/

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Crash investigators turn to cockpit decisions

In this Saturday, July 6, 2013 aerial photo, the wreckage of Asiana Flight 214 lies on the ground after it crashed at the San Francisco International Airport, in San Francisco. The pilot at the controls of airliner had just 43 hours of flight time in the Boeing 777 and was landing one for the first time at San Francisco International. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

In this Saturday, July 6, 2013 aerial photo, the wreckage of Asiana Flight 214 lies on the ground after it crashed at the San Francisco International Airport, in San Francisco. The pilot at the controls of airliner had just 43 hours of flight time in the Boeing 777 and was landing one for the first time at San Francisco International. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

In this Saturday, July 6, 2013 aerial photo, the wreckage of Asiana Flight 214 lies on the ground after it crashed at the San Francisco International Airport, in San Francisco. The pilot at the controls of airliner had just 43 hours of flight time in the Boeing 777 and was landing one for the first time at San Francisco International. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

An unidentified family member of one of two Chinese students killed in a crash of Asiana Airlines' plane on Saturday, cries at the Airlines' counter as she and other family members check in a flight to San Francisco at Pudong International Airport in Shanghai, China, Monday, July 8, 2013. The Asiana flight crashed upon landing Saturday, July 6, at San Francisco International Airport, and the two of the 307 passengers aboard were killed. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)

Asiana Airlines President and CEO Yoon Young-doo, left, speaks with an unidentified family member of one of two Chinese students killed in an Asiana Airlines plane crash on Saturday at San Francisco International Airport, at the transit lounge of the Incheon International Airport in Incheon, west of Seoul, South Korea, Monday, July 8, 2013. (AP Photo/Korea Pool via Yonhap) KOREA OUT

Deborah Hersman of the National Transportation Safety Board speaks at a news conference , Monday, July 8, 2013 in South San Francisco, Calif. An Asiana Airlines Boeing 777 crashed upon landing Saturday, July 6, at San Francisco International Airport, and two of the 307 passengers aboard were killed. (AP Photo/George Nikitin)

(AP) ? Investigators trying to understand why Asiana Airlines Flight 214 crash-landed focused Monday on the actions of an experienced pilot learning his way around a new aircraft, fellow pilots who were supposed to be monitoring him and why no one noticed that the plane was coming in too slow.

Authorities also reviewed the initial rescue efforts after fire officials acknowledged that one of their trucks may have run over one of the two Chinese teenagers killed in the crash at San Francisco International Airport. The students were the accident's only fatalities.

National Transportation Safety Board Chairman Deborah Hersman said investigators watched airport surveillance video to determine whether an emergency vehicle hit one of the students. But they have not reached any firm conclusions. A coroner said he would need at least two weeks to rule in the matter.

The students had been in the rear of the aircraft, where many of the most seriously injured passengers were seated, Hersman said.

The NTSB also said part of the jet's tail section was found in San Francisco Bay, and debris from the seawall was carried several hundred feet down the runway, indicating the plane hit the seawall on its approach.

Investigators have said Flight 214 was flying "significantly below" its target speed during approach when the crew tried to abort the landing just before the plane smashed onto the runway. Authorities do not know yet whether the pilot's inexperience with the Boeing 777 and landing it at San Francisco's airport played a role.

The airline acknowledged Monday in Seoul that the pilot at the controls had flown that type of plane for only a short time and had never before landed one at that airport.

Asiana spokeswoman Lee Hyomin said pilot Lee Gang-guk had logged nearly 10,000 hours operating other planes but had only 43 hours in the 777, a plane she said he was still getting used to.

It's not unusual for veteran pilots to learn about new aircraft by flying with more experienced colleagues. Another pilot on the flight, Lee Jeong-min, had 12,390 hours of flying experience, including 3,220 hours on the 777, according to the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport in South Korea.

Lee Jeong-min was the deputy pilot helping Lee Gang-guk get accustomed to the 777, according to Asiana Airlines.

It was unclear whether the other two pilots were in the cockpit, which in the Boeing 777 typically seats four. But that would be standard procedure at most airlines at the end of a long international flight.

NTSB lead investigator Bill English said pilot interviews were going slowly because of the need for translation. The interviews began only after agents from the Korean Aviation and Rail Accident Investigation Board arrived from South Korea.

New details of the investigation have also raised questions about whether the pilots may have been so reliant on automated cockpit systems that they failed to notice the plane's airspeed had dropped dangerously low, aviation safety experts and other airline pilots said.

Information gleaned from the Boeing 777's flight-data recorders revealed a jet that appeared to be descending normally until the last half-minute before impact.

The autopilot was switched off at about 1,600 feet as the plane began its final descent, according to an account of the last 82 seconds of flight provided by Hersman.

Over the next 42 seconds, the plane appeared to descend normally, reaching about 500 feet and slowing to 134 knots (154 mph), a 777 pilot for a major airline familiar with Hersman's description told The Associated Press. The pilot spoke on the condition of anonymity because his company had not authorized him to speak publicly.

But something went wrong during the following 18 seconds. The plane continued slowing to 118 knots (136 mph), well below its target speed of 137 knots (158 mph) that is typical for crossing the runway threshold. By that time, it had descended to just 200 feet.

Eight seconds later, with the speed still falling, Hersman said, the throttles were moved forward, an apparent attempt by the pilot to increase speed. But it was too little, too late.

Five seconds later, at 50 percent power, speed began to increase.

A key question raised by the NTSB's account is why two experienced pilots ? the pilot flying the plane and another supervising pilot in the other seat ? apparently didn't notice the plane's airspeed problem.

Part of the answer to that question may lie in whether the pilot flying, after switching off the autopilot, still had the plane's autothrottle engaged during the descent.

Aviation safety experts have long warned that an overreliance on automation is contributing to an erosion of pilots' stick-and-rudder flying skills. It's too soon to say if that was the case in the Asiana crash, but it's something NTSB investigators will be exploring, they said.

"It sounds like they let the airplane get slow and it came out from under them," said John Cox, a former US Airways pilot and former Air Line Pilots Association air crash investigator.

"There are two real big questions here: Why did they let the airplane get that slow, and where was the non-flying pilot, the monitoring pilot, who should have been calling out 'airspeed, airspeed, airspeed,' " Cox said.

More than 180 people aboard the plane went to hospitals with injuries. But remarkably, 305 of 307 passengers and crew survived, and more than a third didn't even require hospitalization. Only a small number were badly hurt.

The passengers included 141 Chinese, 77 South Koreans, 64 Americans, three Canadians, three Indians, one Japanese, one Vietnamese and one person from France.

Three firefighters ? and two police officers without safety gear ? rushed onto the plane to help evacuate trapped passengers, including one who was trapped under a collapsed bulkhead.

They had gotten everyone off the craft except one elderly man, who was in his seat, moaning and unable to move.

"We were running out of time," San Francisco Fire Department Lt. Dave Monteverdi recalled Monday at a news conference. "The smoke was starting to get thicker and thicker. So we had no choice. We stood him up and amazingly, he started shuffling his feet. That was a good sign...we were able to get him out and he was pretty much the last person off the plane."

The two dead passengers were identified as 16-year-old students from China who were scheduled to attend summer camp in California with dozens of classmates.

One of their bodies was found on the tarmac near where the plane's tail broke off when it slammed into the runway, the other was found on the left side of the plane about 30 feet (10 meters) away from where the jetliner came to rest after it skidded down the runway.

The flight originated in Shanghai, China, and stopped over in Seoul, South Korea, before making the nearly 11-hour trip to San Francisco.

NTSB investigators are also sure to examine whether pilot fatigue played a role in the accident, which occurred after a 10-hour nighttime flight. As is typical for long flights, four pilots were aboard, allowing the crew to take turns flying and resting. But pilots who regularly fly long routes say it's difficult to get restful sleep on planes.

The accident occurred in the late morning in San Francisco, but in Seoul it was 3:37 a.m.

"Fatigue is there. It is a factor," said Kevin Hiatt, a former Delta Air Lines chief international pilot. "At the end of a 10-hour flight, regardless of whether you have had a two-hour nap or not, it has been a long flight."

The two teenagers killed in the crash were close friends and top students.

Wang Linjia showed talent in physics and calligraphy; Ye Mengyuan was a champion gymnast who excelled in literature. Both were part of a trend among affluent Chinese families willing to spend thousands of dollars to send their children to the U.S. for a few weeks in the summer to practice English and hopefully boost their chances of attending a U.S. college ? considered better than China's alternatives by many Chinese families.

The girls posted their last messages on their microblog accounts Thursday and Friday. The last posting from Wang said simply, "Go."

___

Lowy reported from Washington.

___

Associated Press writers Jason Dearen, Terry Collins, Paul Elias, Lisa Leff and Sudhin Thanawala in San Francisco, Gillian Wong and Didi Tang in Beijing, and Hyung-jin Kim in Seoul also contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-07-08-US-San-Francisco-Airliner-Crash/id-a3f3fa530fd84a08b64e5e843583785a

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Video: Stocks Shake Off Taper Talk

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Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/52425496/

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Garmin's clever 'HUD' puts directions right onto your windshield

garmin

4 hours ago

Garmin hud

Garmin

The Garmin HUD, shown on a transparent film attached to the windshield.

The latest tech from Garmin isn't a bigger or higher-resolution screen on a GPS unit, but a clever way of putting your turn-by-turn directions straight onto the windshield, fighter pilot-style. If you're tired of candy-colored maps and a bright LCD in your face at night, this retro-futuristic setup could be for you.

Garmin's "HUD" or "head-up display" is a bit like those in pricier rides ? like F-16s (and the occasional Cadillac). It eschews the LCD screen entirely; Instead, the dash-top device has a small but bright monochrome display that is simply reflected in a special transparent sticker you put on the windshield. There's also an included reflecting lens in case your windshield is for some reason unsuitable.

Why get this, you ask? Some people will prefer the minimal, single-color display over the occasionally gaudy and distracting LCD. A bit of cool blue text, an arrow or two, and some voice directions are more their style. And automatically adjusting brightness means it'll be visible in broad daylight but won't blind you in darkness.

Garmin

Garmin

The HUD unit, reflectors, and car kit.

The HUD unit costs $130 and pairs with your smartphone ? but it relies on a Garmin app for its map data, so be ready to drop at least another $30 for that. You may also want to pack a car charger kit, since your phone will have to be on and transmitting location data over Bluetooth for the entire trip.

You can pick up a HUD at Garmin's website starting later this summer.

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

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663301/s/2e5ff882/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Cgarmins0Eclever0Ehud0Eputs0Edirections0Eright0Eyour0Ewindshield0E6C10A560A784/story01.htm

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