In Reckless Fashion, Rapid Online Pursuits of Political Admirers

It was nearly 9 p.m. on a Friday when Ms. Cordova, who was preparing to head out for the night with a friend, logged onto Twitter and discovered that Representative Anthony D. Weiner had sent her a suggestive photo of himself in gray boxer briefs.

?It didn?t make any sense,? Ms. Cordova, a 21-year-old college student in northwestern Washington State, said in her first extensive interview since Mr. Weiner confessed in a news conference Monday to sending her the photo. ?I figured it must have been a fake.?

Ms. Cordova?s experience with Mr. Weiner appears to fit a pattern: in rapid and reckless fashion, he sought to transform informal online conversations about politics and partisanship into sexually charged exchanges, at times laced with racy language and explicit images.

Ms. Cordova, who had traded messages with Mr. Weiner, a New York Democrat, about their shared concern over his conservative critics, said she had never sent him anything provocative. Asked if she was taken aback by his decision to send the photo, she responded, ?Oh gosh, yes.?

Ms. Cordova spoke to The New York Times as Mr. Weiner faced intensifying calls for his resignation because of his acknowledged online sexual communications with at least six women over the last three years. On Wednesday, House leaders began a concerted effort to persuade Mr. Weiner to step down, worried that the sensational coverage of his online sexual liaisons had created political chaos and was subjecting the Democratic Party to ridicule.

The women who have acknowledged encountering Mr. Weiner on social media and then having personal communications with him varied in age, race and location, and even in their willingness to engage the congressman in sexual discourse. But in each case Mr. Weiner?s online conduct in many ways mirrored that of his offline life ? he was aggressive, blunt, feisty and willing to push boundaries with an apparent disregard for the possible consequences.

The women came to his attention after he had come to theirs. Usually they were admirers of his scrappy progressive politics and youthful energy, and either posted an enthusiastic comment on his Facebook page or sent him an admiring Twitter message.

Ms. Cordova was first impressed with Mr. Weiner after she saw him take on Representative Michele Bachmann, a Tea Party-backed Republican from Minnesota, on Fox News?s ?Hannity.? Ms. Cordova and her boyfriend thought the congressman was smart and funny, and they both started following him on Twitter.

?I tweeted words of support for him as a politician, and I retweeted his tweets often beginning around early to mid-April,? Ms. Cordova said, in a series of conversations by phone and e-mail over the past two days.

She added that in mid-April, ?he thanked me for the support? using a direct message ? a private note sent via Twitter ? and he then signed up as her follower on Twitter, meaning that he could easily read all of her posts.

Ms. Cordova said that after Mr. Weiner began following her, critics of the congressman started sending her harassing messages. She said she then began communicating, always electronically, with the congressman about their shared annoyance with those critics.

Ms. Cordova provided a portion of her communications with Mr. Weiner to The Times, in which they messaged back and forth about the online detractors and their tactics. But Ms. Cordova would not make all of her interaction with him available for review.

?I have not sent him any suggestive messages,? Ms. Cordova said.

She said she was, however, surprised by his informal tone. ?He was just very casual,? she said. ?It wasn?t like talking to a U.S. congressman.?

A spokeswoman for Mr. Weiner did not dispute Ms. Cordova?s account.

Mr. Weiner, at his news conference on Monday, said he had sent Ms. Cordova the underwear photo ?as part of a joke.? But Ms. Cordova said the image was not in keeping with the tenor of their previous interactions.

?I still didn?t get the joke part of it,? she said.

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ESA: Facts and figures about the gaming industry in 2010

With the entire gaming industry gathered in Los Angeles for E3, the Entertainment Software Association has taken the opportunity to share quite a few interesting tidbits on how the format and demographic that make up the gaming industry are changing. In its latest annual report, titled "Essential Facts About the Computer and Video Game Industry", the group notes that video games aren't a child's hobby anymore -- in fact, 82% of gamers are adults.

The average gamer is 37 years old and has been playing games for 12 years. Forty-two percent of gamers are women, with those that are 18 or older representing a greater portion of the game-playing population at 37% compared to boys boys age 17 or younger which account for 13% of the market. People beyond the age of 50 are also increasingly turning to games for entertainment, accounting for 29% of gamers -- an increase from 9% in 1999.

The best-selling genres in general include action games with 21.7% of the pie, followed by sports games with 16.3% and shooters at 15.9%, though when focusing on PC gaming the picture changes quite a bit. Apparently those sitting in front of a mouse and keyboard prefer strategy (33.6%), role-playing (20.3%) and even casual games (19.5%), no doubt due to the increasing popularity of free web-based games like the ones you find on Facebook.

Furthermore, as another indication of the rapidly evolving online marketplace the report claims that digital format sales in the form of subscriptions, full games, add-on content, mobile apps and social network gaming accounted for 24% of all game sales in 2010, contributing $5.8 billion to the total of $15.9 billion spent in content. Factoring in hardware and accessories the total consumer spend in the games industry last year was $25.1 billion. Other findings:

  • 45% of parents reported playing video games with their children on a weekly basis,
  • 9 out of 10 parents say they pay attention to the content of the games their children play
  • 68% of parents believe that games provide mental stimulation or education value
  • 65% of gamers play games with other gamers in person.
  • 55% of gamers play games on their phones or handheld devices
  • 86% know of the ESRB and 98% are confident in its accuracy and recommendations.

The study gathers sales data collected by NPD throughout 2010 and demographics from 1,200 U.S. households that have been identified as owning a video game console or a personal computer used to play gaming software. Although we would have loved to see some international figures, this still sheds some light about the current state of the industry and questions some common misconceptions about gamers. It's definitely worth checking out [PDF].

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Source: http://www.techspot.com/news/44167-esa-facts-and-figures-about-the-gaming-industry-in-2010.html

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Razer announces dual-sensor 6400dpi mice

Razer has introduced a new 4G dual sensor system, which takes advantage of both an optical and a laser sensor for enhanced tracking accuracy. Razer claims the sensor has ten times faster surface detection than any one from the previous generation.

The company has implemented the sensor system into its popular professional gaming mice, starting with the newest incarnations of the Razer Mamba ($130.00 or ?130.00) and Razer Imperator ($80.00 or ?80.00). Both will be available at razerzone.com this month, and worldwide next month.

The mice calibrate themselves to the surface you're using so that they are primed to optimally track your swipes more rapidly and accurately. The dual sensor system also lets you determine the cutoff height for tracking to stop when the mouse is lifted from the surface. This is useful for gamers who pick up their mice to accommodate wide swiping motions, such as in low sensitivity FPS games.

The flagship pride of the Razer brand, the Razer Mamba (pictured left) features 2.4GHz gaming-grade wireless technology, a 6400dpi 4G dual sensor system, and longer battery life. Here are the product features:

  • Gaming Grade Wireless Technology
  • 6400dpi 4G Dual Sensor System
  • Dual mode wired /wireless functionality
  • 1000Hz Ultrapolling /1ms response time
  • Multi-Color Lighting
  • Up to 200 inches per second* /50g acceleration
  • Approximate size: 128mm x 70mm x 42.5mm
  • Battery Life: 16 hours (continuous gaming usage)

The Razer Imperator (pictured right) delivers exceptional ergonomics that reduces strain during extended gameplay, features the new 6400dpi 4G dual sensor system and an improved rubberized side grip. Here are the product's features:

  • 6400dpi 4G Dual Sensor System
  • Rubberized contoured thumb grip for added control
  • Ergonomic right-handed design
  • Adjustable side buttons
  • Razer Synapse Onboard Memory
  • Up to 200 inches per second* /50g acceleration
  • Seven independently programmable Hyperesponse buttons
  • On-the-Fly Sensitivity adjustment
  • Approx. size in mm; 123(l) x 71(w) x 42(h)

"I'm really excited by the leaps and bounds we've come in developing the world's most precise and advanced sensor technology, Robert "RazerGuy" Krakoff, President of Razer USA, said in a statement. "We worked closely with many pro-gamers to fine-tune the sensor under intense gaming conditions, ensuring it achieved a level of tracking accuracy that met their high-level demands. The mouse is core to any gaming setup. It's where our roots are, when we pioneered competitive gaming and developed the world's first gaming mouse. Today, it is still one of the key areas for our R&D and it's quite exciting to bring such a significant sensor evolution to gamers worldwide."

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Intel's 'Ultrabook' Strategy is Outdated

Intel's 'Ultrabook' Strategy is Outdated

Posted on 8th Jun 2011 at 07:28 by Clive Webster with 53 comments

While it?s good news for customers that Intel is aiming to make superportable laptops that rival the MacBook Air affordable for many, via its ?ultrabook? project, it shows a slightly outdated mode of thinking. When asked what would make superportable laptops successful, Intel?s executive vice-president Sean Maloney replied that a low price would do it. Low price = more sales = more profit, the conventional wisdom goes. Or does it?

The problem with the equation above is that low price = low margin, and you therefore rely on huge sales to make significant profits. And the drive to lower prices can lead to design compromises ? plastic rather than aluminium shells, steel rather than magnesium alloy skeletons, cheap components that fail more quickly or are louder or slower. This is the PC industry for the last 30 years.

But it?s a flawed business model ? just look at UK box-shifter Mesh, which ceased trading recently. Equally, look at Acer. For years it has been trimming its costs to be ultra-efficient while also climbing the league tables in terms of units sold. All this effort was in many ways the pinnacle of the low-price philosophy of making money from computers. And it failed: Apple is more profitable.

That?s the shift that we?re seeing: so far, we?ve made do with stuff that kind of works, does a job and doesn?t cost too much. Now we want technology that?s cool, that looks like it could be from the future and that we?re not embarrassed to leave out on the coffee table. Make something desirable and it will sell, even if you whack on a decent margin. And from that decent margin you can invest in customer support (how many negative stories have you heard about Apple customer support? How many positive ones?) and into the creation of new, even more desirable kit.

Of course, the Apple success story doesn?t end at merely charging extra for desirability, there?s the fact that it takes a 30 per cent skim of any software sold for that desirable item. However, the point that it?s desirability and not cheapness that really makes money these days doesn?t crumble in light of the App Store levy caveat. Hopefully superportable laptop makers won?t forget this fact, despite Intel?s out-of-date thinking about them; certainly if preview shots from Computex 2011 are anything to go by, Asus hasn?t with its UX21. Could we see desirably light laptops without a prohibitive price? Possibly, but I?m hoping that the latter doesn?t undermine the former.

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Android or Windows? Now You Don't Have to Choose

A startup called BlueStacks wants to end all your worrying about whether an app will run on a specific operating system. The company's technology, which it's showing off at trade shows, lets users run apps on operating systems they weren't designed for.

The  software lets Android apps run on Windows, and lets Android apps run within the browser on Google's ChromeOS. It can run Windows on top of Android or vice versa. The company will make the software available for download, but it can also be built into apps, and will come preinstalled on some hardware. "We don't care about the operating system anymore," says BlueStacks CEO Rosen Sharma. "It's all about apps."

Software "emulators" already make it possible to run software designed for one operating system on another, but emulators tend to run slowly because they translate code from one form into another. Sharma says the performance hit can make them 10 to 100 times slower than an application running within its native environment. In contrast, the BlueStacks software interfaces directly with the device's hardware, meaning apps can run more smoothly and with better performance.

Many people now think of their smart phones and tablets as their main computing devices, a trend that is likely to accelerate as the power and variety of mobile devices increases. "For kids these days, their first computing experience is the phone," Sharma says, adding: "All the cool apps are on Android and iPhone." He also believes that many apps could benefit from having access to a larger screen, keyboard, or mouse.

BlueStacks's technology could also let tablet manufacturers hedge their bets by providing a device that can run Windows for business applications, but can also run Android apps. According to the BlueStacks website, the forthcoming ViewSonic ViewPad Pro 10 tablet, which runs both Windows 7 and Android, will be powered by BlueStacks. Sharma also says that a version of BlueStacks will be available for users to download at the end of June?it would enable them to run Android apps on existing Windows devices.

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For Edwards?s Adult Daughter, a Recurring Role: Family Glue

But those in the Edwards inner circle knew that Cate, 29, was stepping into a familiar role, one that she has filled for half of her young life.

The night before the court appearance, Ms. Edwards, a lawyer like Mr. Edwards and her mother, Elizabeth, was at her father?s side as he planned his legal strategy with his defense team at their home near Chapel Hill. She and her father had just returned from her little brother?s baseball game.

?She?s a sounding board for John,? said a person familiar with the meeting that night.

?Cate sticks with her dad,? said Glenn Bergenfield, a close friend of the family who introduced Elizabeth to John when they were all in law school together and is godfather to their young son.

?Despite all the things that have happened, she wants her father to succeed and her family to stay together,? Mr. Bergenfield said. ?It?s not any more complicated than that.?

At the courthouse, Ms. Edwards, a graduate of Harvard Law School, appeared composed. She has come by her strength the hard way, having coped with more than her share of pain, much of it on the public stage.

Fifteen years ago, when she was barely a teenager, her 16-year-old brother, Wade, was thrown from a car and killed on his way to the family beach house. For two years, her mother later wrote, Cate slept on two chairs pushed together in her parents? room, but she emerged as the glue that would hold the family together.

That experience laid the foundation for her to face the cascade of crises that would follow: her father?s political losses, the revelations that he had an affair and a child with his campaign videographer while he was running for president in 2008, her mother?s public and prolonged battle with breast cancer, and then in December, her mother?s death.

?It?s very, very hard to imagine how you would cope when you haven?t faced tragedy,? Ms. Edwards told Harper?s Bazaar in 2007, after her mother?s cancer recurred. ?But the strength exists, and you do get through it,? she said. ?Having been through Wade?s death is the only way I know I can move on from this kind of emotional hardship.?

On a cold rainy Saturday in December, in front of nearly 1,000 people, Ms. Edwards delivered her mother?s eulogy. ?One thing remains true and will never change, which is that we?re still a family,? she said. She was the executor of her mother?s will, and with that came the mantle of family guardian.

Last week, it fell to her to drive with her father to court in Winston-Salem and face the cameras with him after he pleaded not guilty to felony charges related to his long-secret affair.

No one will ever know if Elizabeth Edwards, who was estranged from her husband but had reconciled with him to some degree before she died, would have stood with him ? his defense, after all, is based on his effort to keep the affair secret from his wife.

But Elizabeth Edwards made it clear before she died, friends said, that she wanted her family to support him as a father and that Cate Edwards should do what she could to keep the family together.

?She said that Cate should never feel like she is betraying her mother?s memory,? said a friend of Elizabeth?s who could be called as a witness and spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Watching the courthouse scene on television was hard for Mr. Bergenfield. ?It brought tears to my eyes, the whole perp walk,? he said. But, he added, ?Cate has been through harder times than even this with her father, and there was no doubt about what she was going to do.?

Friends say that she has slowly but deliberately established herself as her own person.

She is an associate at Sanford Wittels & Heisler in Washington. Her passion is to end racial and gender discrimination; she has supported same-sex marriage (a disagreement with her father).

She has been planning her fall wedding to Trevor Upham, a medical resident whom she met when they were students at Princeton and who served as a pallbearer at her mother?s funeral. And she travels home regularly to the family compound.

People who watched Cate grow up in the Raleigh area had no doubt that the girl who looked like her mother but was much like her father would be an interesting blend of them both. Although she is not as charismatic as John nor as talkative as her mother, they say, she is funny, centered and savvy.

Friends expect Ms. Edwards to continue to help Mr. Edwards through his likely trial, and help bring up her siblings, Jack, 11, and Emma Claire, 13.

?She is a very steady presence,? said a person familiar with the legal discussions. ?Obviously they?ve been through a lot, but their lives are focused on moving forward.?

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Tech sector unemployment half the U.S. national average

With an unemployment rate of under 4% in the tech sector, there?s a shortage of qualified technology professionals, TechFlash reports.

In the U.S., the overall unemployment rate sits at 9.1% ? more than double the number of jobless tech workers.

Companies are finding that positions may stay open for months as they try to find the right person to fill the spot. Finding someone who has the qualifications and experienced needed for the job is getting harder and harder, according to the Dice.com survey.

It?s good news for the technology professionals who, thanks to the law of supply and demand, are enjoying higher salaries.

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Source: http://thenextweb.com/industry/2011/06/09/tech-sector-unemployment-half-the-u-s-national-average/

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Intel's 'Ultrabook' Strategy is Outdated

Intel's 'Ultrabook' Strategy is Outdated

Posted on 8th Jun 2011 at 07:28 by Clive Webster with 53 comments

While it?s good news for customers that Intel is aiming to make superportable laptops that rival the MacBook Air affordable for many, via its ?ultrabook? project, it shows a slightly outdated mode of thinking. When asked what would make superportable laptops successful, Intel?s executive vice-president Sean Maloney replied that a low price would do it. Low price = more sales = more profit, the conventional wisdom goes. Or does it?

The problem with the equation above is that low price = low margin, and you therefore rely on huge sales to make significant profits. And the drive to lower prices can lead to design compromises ? plastic rather than aluminium shells, steel rather than magnesium alloy skeletons, cheap components that fail more quickly or are louder or slower. This is the PC industry for the last 30 years.

But it?s a flawed business model ? just look at UK box-shifter Mesh, which ceased trading recently. Equally, look at Acer. For years it has been trimming its costs to be ultra-efficient while also climbing the league tables in terms of units sold. All this effort was in many ways the pinnacle of the low-price philosophy of making money from computers. And it failed: Apple is more profitable.

That?s the shift that we?re seeing: so far, we?ve made do with stuff that kind of works, does a job and doesn?t cost too much. Now we want technology that?s cool, that looks like it could be from the future and that we?re not embarrassed to leave out on the coffee table. Make something desirable and it will sell, even if you whack on a decent margin. And from that decent margin you can invest in customer support (how many negative stories have you heard about Apple customer support? How many positive ones?) and into the creation of new, even more desirable kit.

Of course, the Apple success story doesn?t end at merely charging extra for desirability, there?s the fact that it takes a 30 per cent skim of any software sold for that desirable item. However, the point that it?s desirability and not cheapness that really makes money these days doesn?t crumble in light of the App Store levy caveat. Hopefully superportable laptop makers won?t forget this fact, despite Intel?s out-of-date thinking about them; certainly if preview shots from Computex 2011 are anything to go by, Asus hasn?t with its UX21. Could we see desirably light laptops without a prohibitive price? Possibly, but I?m hoping that the latter doesn?t undermine the former.

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City Room: Anthony Weiner?s Wife Is Pregnant

Their marriage has become the subject of intense speculation and scrutiny amid an embarrassing online sex scandal.

Now, Representative Anthony D. Weiner and Huma Abedin are about to make news of a different kind: they are expecting their first child.

Ms. Abedin, 35, is in the early stages of pregnancy, according to three people with knowledge of the situation.

The pregnancy, which the couple has disclosed to close friends and family, adds a new dimension to questions about the future of their marriage.

Mr. Weiner, 46, has admitted to engaging in salacious online conversations with at least six women over the last few years, including an incident last month in which he sent a photograph of himself in underwear to a college student in Washington state. He apologized to his wife and declared that they have no intention of splitting up.

?We will weather this,? Mr. Weiner said on Monday, during his emotional news conference. ?I love her very much, and she loves me.?

But Ms. Abedin, a longtime aide to Hillary Rodham Clinton, has remained silent about the topic as she keeps up a hectic schedule at the State Department.

Ms. Abedin returned to work this week and departed on Wednesday for a trip to Northern Africa with Ms. Clinton.

A State Department spokesman declined to comment Wednesday afternoon.

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The Search for E. coli Gains Speed

German bean sprouts were declared dangerous on Monday morning and safe by Monday afternoon.

Bean sprouts were briefly added to the list of foods seen as potential sources of E. coli 0104?a new strain that has infected more than 2,300 people and killed 23 in Germany over the past three weeks. The list of potentially dangerous foods includes cucumbers, lettuce, tomatoes, and other raw salad vegetables.


The rapid reprieve for sprouts can be attributed to the availability of high-speed pathogen-specific tests. These assays, laboratory procedures that measure the biochemical activities of food samples, can now return reliable results in as little as 10 to 24 hours.

"As soon as we finished sequencing the DNA of this strain, we made the results public, like any ethical company would," says Nir Nimrodi, head of food safety at Life Technologies, which has developed a custom test for E. coli 0104.

Life Technologies, a California-based biotechnology company with laboratories in Darmstadt, Germany, started shipping custom testing kits to European laboratories this week so that food suspected of carrying the pathogen could be tested as quickly as possible.

"We all have E. coli right now in our bellies," Nimrodi says, "but not all the strains are dangerous, and even fewer of them are deadly to those infected. And if you use a general E. coli test, even if it tests positive, it does not mean you have discovered a source. With a strain-specific test, you can find out if you have been watering plants with infected water and need to stop, or if you have a specific crop of vegetables that are affected and need to be recalled."

It can take as long as 10 days to gather results using traditional laboratory testing methods, but the new test can determine the presence or absence of the hybrid E. coli pathogen in hours.

"It has implications for public health and epidemic monitoring," says Michael Somers of Children's Hospital Boston. "The less time you have to spend growing patient specimens and subtyping something like E. coli, the easier it is to find the source of an epidemic."

He added that "about 10 percent of the people infected with E. coli develop hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS)." The kidney infection develops four to 10 days after bloody diarrhea appears. Some 90 percent of HUS cases in children are attributed to E. coli infections.

According to researchers, the new strain is a hybrid of enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC) and enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC).

EAEC was first identified in 1987 and is well-documented as a cause of persistent diarrhea, especially in children in the developing world, and as a food pathogen that is increasingly resistant to antibiotics in industrialized countries. EHEC is associated with hemorrhagic colitis and HUS. It is the leading cause of acute renal failure in children.

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