Obama Calls for Bipartisan Effort to Fight for U.S. Jobs

In a State of the Union address to a newly divided Congress, Mr. Obama outlined what he called a plan to ?win the future? ? a blueprint for spending in critical areas like education, high-speed rail, clean-energy technology and high-speed Internet to help the United States weather the unsettling impact of globalization and the challenge from emerging powers like China and India.

?The rules have changed,? he said.

But at the same time he proposed budget-cutting measures, including a five-year freeze in spending on some domestic programs that he said would reduce the deficit by $400 billion over 10 years.

Drawing a stark contrast between himself and Republicans, who are advocating immediate and deep cuts in spending, Mr. Obama laid out a philosophy of a government that could be more efficient but would still be necessary if the nation was to address fundamental challenges at home and abroad.

?We need to out-innovate, outeducate and outbuild the rest of the world,? he said. ?We have to make America the best place on earth to do business. We need to take responsibility for our deficit and reform our government. That?s how our people will prosper.?

Just weeks after the shooting in Tucson that claimed six lives and left Representative Gabrielle Giffords, Democrat of Arizona, gravely injured, Mr. Obama received a reception that was muted and civil.

There were no boos or a shout of ?You lie!? as in speeches past. Many Republicans and Democrats sat side by side ? the first time anyone here can remember such mixing ? and nearly all wore black-and-white lapel ribbons in honor of the dead and injured. Ms. Giffords?s colleagues held a seat open for her.

The president?s speech, lasting slightly more than an hour, lacked the loft of the inspirational address he delivered in Tucson days after the shooting. But it seemed intended to elevate his presidency above the bare-knuckled legislative gamesmanship that has defined the first two years of his term.

Reaching out to Republicans who have vowed to end the pet projects known as ?earmarks,? Mr. Obama pledged to veto any bill that contained them. He tried to defuse partisan anger over his health care measure with humor, saying he had ?heard rumors? of concerns over the bill, and he reiterated his pledge to fix a tax provision in the measure that both parties regard as burdensome to businesses.

He drew sustained applause when he declared that colleges should open their doors to military recruiters and R.O.T.C. programs now that ?Don?t Ask, Don?t Tell,? the policy barring gay men and lesbians from serving openly, has been repealed.

And he tried to charm Republicans by weaving the new House speaker, Representative John A. Boehner of Ohio, into his narrative about American greatness, citing Mr. Boehner?s rise from ?someone who began by sweeping the floors of his father?s Cincinnati bar? as an example of ?a country where anything is possible.?

Still, the good will lasted only so long. Moments after Mr. Obama finished speaking, Representative Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin, the chairman of the House Budget Committee, delivered the official Republican response, in which he criticized Mr. Obama as doing too little to attack the deficit.

And Representative Michele Bachmann of Minnesota, who delivered her own Republican critique with the backing of the Tea Party wing, complained that instead of creating ?a leaner, smarter government,? Mr. Obama had created ?a bureaucracy that tells us which light bulbs to buy.?

The president sought to use Tuesday night?s address to shed the tag of big-government liberal that Republicans have placed on him, and to reclaim the mantle of a pragmatic, postpartisan leader that he used to ride to the presidency in 2008.

With one eye toward his 2012 re-election campaign, Mr. Obama offered a rosy economic vision. The president who once emphasized the problems he had inherited from his predecessor was instead looking forward and making the case that the nation had at long last emerged from economic crisis.

?Two years after the worst recession most of us have ever known, the stock market has come roaring back,? Mr. Obama said. ?Corporate profits are up. The economy is growing again.?

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Obama Pitches Global Fight for U.S. Jobs in Address

In a State of the Union address to a newly divided Congress, Mr. Obama outlined what he called a plan to ?win the future? ? a blueprint for spending in critical areas like education, high-speed rail, clean-energy technology and high-speed Internet to help the United States weather the unsettling impact of globalization and the challenge from emerging powers like China and India.

?The rules have changed,? he said.

But at the same time he proposed budget-cutting measures, including a five-year freeze in spending on some domestic programs that he said would reduce the deficit by $400 billion over 10 years.

Drawing a stark contrast between himself and Republicans, who are advocating immediate and deep cuts in spending, Mr. Obama laid out a philosophy of a government that could be more efficient but would still be necessary if the nation was to address fundamental challenges at home and abroad.

?We need to out-innovate, outeducate and outbuild the rest of the world,? he said. ?We have to make America the best place on earth to do business. We need to take responsibility for our deficit and reform our government. That?s how our people will prosper.?

Just weeks after the shooting in Tucson that claimed six lives and left Representative Gabrielle Giffords, Democrat of Arizona, gravely injured, Mr. Obama received a reception that was muted and civil.

There were no boos or a shout of ?You lie!? as in speeches past. Many Republicans and Democrats sat side by side ? the first time anyone here can remember such mixing ? and nearly all wore black-and-white lapel ribbons in honor of the dead and injured. Ms. Giffords?s colleagues held a seat open for her.

The president?s speech, lasting slightly more than an hour, lacked the loft of the inspirational address he delivered in Tucson days after the shooting. But it seemed intended to elevate his presidency above the bare-knuckled legislative gamesmanship that has defined the first two years of his term.

Reaching out to Republicans who have vowed to end the pet projects known as ?earmarks,? Mr. Obama pledged to veto any bill that contained them. He tried to defuse partisan anger over his health care measure with humor, saying he had ?heard rumors? of concerns over the bill, and he reiterated his pledge to fix a tax provision in the measure that both parties regard as burdensome to businesses.

He drew sustained applause when he declared that colleges should open their doors to military recruiters and R.O.T.C. programs now that ?Don?t Ask, Don?t Tell,? the policy barring gay men and lesbians from serving openly, has been repealed.

And he tried to charm Republicans by weaving the new House speaker, Representative John A. Boehner of Ohio, into his narrative about American greatness, citing Mr. Boehner?s rise from ?someone who began by sweeping the floors of his father?s Cincinnati bar? as an example of ?a country where anything is possible.?

Still, the good will lasted only so long. Moments after Mr. Obama finished speaking, Representative Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin, the chairman of the House Budget Committee, delivered the official Republican response, in which he criticized Mr. Obama as doing too little to attack the deficit.

And Representative Michele Bachmann of Minnesota, who delivered her own Republican critique with the backing of the Tea Party wing, complained that instead of creating ?a leaner, smarter government,? Mr. Obama had created ?a bureaucracy that tells us which light bulbs to buy.?

The president sought to use Tuesday night?s address to shed the tag of big-government liberal that Republicans have placed on him, and to reclaim the mantle of a pragmatic, postpartisan leader that he used to ride to the presidency in 2008.

With one eye toward his 2012 re-election campaign, Mr. Obama offered a rosy economic vision. The president who once emphasized the problems he had inherited from his predecessor was instead looking forward and making the case that the nation had at long last emerged from economic crisis.

?Two years after the worst recession most of us have ever known, the stock market has come roaring back,? Mr. Obama said. ?Corporate profits are up. The economy is growing again.?

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Age of Empires Online will have free-to-play business model

Robot Entertainment and Microsoft have revealed more information about their upcoming entry in the Age of Empire franchise, including talk of a free-to-play business model. Age of Empires Online was first announced last summer and incorporates various MMO elements with the real-time strategy gameplay that earned AoE its popularity.

The game will launch later this year with Greek and Egyptian civilizations and PvP/co-op play. Unlike previous versions, AoE Online has a persistent system so civilizations develop and earn resources when you're not playing. You'll also be able to gain experience and equipment by questing and crafting -- and that's where real money comes in.

Although much of the game will be free to everyone, players will be able to unlock additional content by purchasing a one-time Premium Civilization upgrade. In addition to special abilities and other perks, premium members gain access to "rare" and "epic" loot tiers, whereas non-paying users can only get "common" and "uncommon" items.


There are also plans for "booster" packs that let gamers buy new quests and gameplay types. Additionally, players will be able to customize the appearance of their civilization buy purchasing vanity items. The companies haven't released any information about how much the premium membership or microtransactions will cost.

People tend to get concerned about the balance of free-to-play games. Paying users sometimes gain an "unfair" advantage, which forces free players to lay down some cash if they want to be competitive. Microsoft's Ian Vogel recognized the issue in a comment on Gamasutra and said the company is paying close attention to balance.

"We're carefully looking at balance issues, and will be through the life of this product, and some of that will include how matchmaking works," said Vogel. "We don't want to nickel and dime you; we're trying to build a community. We're not just trying to sell you a product. We want to have something that's living and growing moving forward."

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O2 To Build Nationwide Wi-Fi Network, Compete With BSkyB and BT

O2 To Build Nationwide Wi-Fi Network, Compete With BSkyB and BT

No sooner had news emerged that BSkyB was in talks to buy UK public Wi-Fi network The Cloud, than Telefonica-owned  mobile operator o2 announces that it is to do the same, just a day later.

The Independent reports that the operator wants to differ from its rivals by offering what it calls the first ?truly free, public Wi-Fi platform? in the UK, making it accessible to both its customers and any other person who wishes to use it.

It is thought that o2 would use the opportunity to refresh the public Wi-Fi market but also allow some of the burden to be shifted from mobile networks, allowing customers to receive faster internet speeds in public places. To start with, the company will activate around 450 public hotspots in a number of restaurants, shops and sports stadiums.

The move not only competes with BSKyB, which has not yet completed, but also BT. The former would operate 22,000 wireless hotspots around Europe, with BT controlling 65,000 across the UK.

Tim Sefton, new business development director at O2, said:

?We know that Wi-Fi as a technology has great potential and can be a very fast service. However, customers are discouraged by barriers, which include complexity in activation, uncertainty about where Wi-Fi is free and the variable quality of the experience.?

The increase of public Wi-Fi hotspots will help reduce the strain on mobile operators whilst providing reliable internet service in a number of popular locations. O2 is trying to offset some of that data as its customers become more data-hungry, something that other companies could also look to do in the near future by rolling out similar services or introducing devices like Femtocells which rely on a users home broadband connection to deliver mobile signal in areas of low signal.

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A Time-Lapse Movie Shot Inside the Brain

A new type of micro-endoscope lets scientists watch nerve cells and blood vessels deep inside the brain of a living animal over days, weeks, or even months. A team led by Mark Schnitzer, associate professor of biology and applied physics at Stanford University, developed the endoscope?an optical instrument used to peer into the body?along with a system to insert it into the same spot time after time. This feature allowed scientists to track changes in minute features, such as the connections between cells in the brain.

"I think it will be a potent tool for tracking properties of cells over long periods of time in response to changes in the environment, over the course of learning, during aging or the progression of disease," says Schnitzer. Some developmental and neurodegenerative diseases, for example, damage connections between neurons deep in the brain.

Of particular interest to neuroscientists is the hippocampus, an area deep in the brain that is crucial to memory. Previously, scientists had been able to look at regions such as this one in detail only with highly invasive methods and at a single point in time. "But a lot of brain disorders occur slowly," says Schnitzer. "We don't just want a snapshot, we want a time-lapse [movie] on a time scale that is relevant to the progression of the disease."

Schnitzer's team has been developing the micro-endoscope for several years. Dubbed the optical needle, it is 500 to 1,000 microns in diameter at its tip?about half the width of a grain of rice. While the device resembles a scaled-down version of the endoscopes now commonly used for surgery, the tiny lens is slightly different. The small size of the device means that a curved lens, typical in most microscopes, is impractical. Instead, its lens is made from a material that has internal variations in its refractive profile to guide rays of light.

In the new study, published online this month in Nature Medicine, researchers demonstrate that they can use the micro-endoscope to observe the same spot in the brain over time. They first implant a glass guide tube into an animal's brain, placing it just above the area of interest, with a tiny microscope slide covering its tip. They can then insert the micro-endoscope into the tube, taking pictures of the cells using a standard two-photon microscope. After imaging, "you can pull the microneedle out, return the animal to its cage, then reinsert it [days or weeks] later and look again," says Schnitzer.

Elly Nedivi, associate professor of neurobiology at MIT, says that being able to return to the same spot again and again may be one of the most important applications of the micro-endoscope. "You could use it to see if drugs are having an effect, such as whether a tumor is responding to treatment," she says.

In their initial experiments, the Stanford researchers examined neural structures in the hippocampus, one of the only places in the brain where new neurons are born in adulthood. Schnitzer hypothesized that, because of this close proximity to new cells, these structures would change with the formation of new memories. "But that's not what we found," he says.  "After looking at more than 4,000 dendrites, we saw very few instances of change."

In a second set of experiments designed to see how the brain changes in response to disease, Schnitzer's team injected cancer cells into one side of a mouse's brain. These cells then grew into tumors, allowing scientists to observe the changes in blood vessels that accompany cancer. Researchers found that the vessels on the cancerous side of the brain were unstable, and blood flow slowed down. The healthy side of the brain remained stable.

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Yahoo cuts 140 workers, Google plans to hire 6,000

Yahoo has dismissed some 1% of its workforce prior to releasing its fourth quarter financial results later today. This marks the second round of layoffs in six weeks, following a 4% (600+ person) reduction in December. The company hasn't mentioned an exact number of affected employees, but estimates suggest around 140.

"The personnel changes we are making are part of our ongoing strategy to best position Yahoo for revenue growth and margin expansion and to support our strategy to deliver differentiated products and experiences to the marketplace," Yahoo said in a statement. Similar reasons were cited in December's layoffs.


In contrasting news, Google has announced that 2011 will be its largest hiring year yet. The company plans to add more than 6,000 new workers, most which will be stationed at its Mountain View headquarters. The search giant also intends to pick up more than 1,000 new workers in Europe, including Munich, Germany.

Google expanded its personnel by 4,565 last year and it plans to employee more than 30,000 people by 2012. The company reported fourth-quarter revenue of $8.44 billion last week, along with announcing that cofounder Larry Page will replace decade-long CEO Eric Schmidt, who will become Google's executive chariman.

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Obama Counters G.O.P. Attacks on Spending With Plan to Extend Freeze

But Mr. Obama declined to suggest additional ways to rein in the unsustainable growth of Medicare and Medicaid or to resolve the long-term financial problems facing Social Security. Instead, he is waiting for the new political dynamic of divided government to sort itself out before inviting Republicans to plunge into the risky business of addressing the costly entitlement programs.

The approach he laid out would extend a partial freeze of domestic spending that he proposed last year while providing new economic ?investments? in areas like research and education.

Mr. Obama also called upon House and Senate Republicans to join him in simplifying the corporate tax code by eliminating loopholes in exchange for lowering the 35 percent rate and perhaps to overhaul the individual income-tax system as well.

The annual address before a joint session of Congress allowed Mr. Obama to directly answer the new House Republican majority that has spent weeks attacking him as spending too much. But he also spoke to a national television audience, in effect beginning a public debate about national priorities at a time of large annual deficits and unmet public needs that likely will last through his term and re-election campaign.

As a ?downpayment? on reducing annual deficits, Mr. Obama called for extending to five years the three-year spending freeze that he called for in last year?s address. The frozen spending would cover a wide range of domestic programs, from farm aid to transportation, but only about one-seventh of the federal budget ? limiting the overall deficit reduction.

The freeze would exempt the biggest and fastest-growing areas of the federal budget, which besides Medicare and Social Security includes Medicaid and military spending. But the Pentagon is coming in for cuts in the annual budget Mr. Obama will send to Congress in three weeks: Administration officials say he will embrace proposals from the defense secretary, Robert M. Gates, squeezing $78 billion from military accounts over five years.

The five-year freeze in so-called discretionary domestic spending would reduce deficits by more than $400 billion in the 10 years through fiscal year 2021, the administration said. By comparison, a group representing most House Republicans last week called for cutting $2.5 trillion over that decade.

Mr. Obama acknowledged that his budget-cutting measures would not go far enough at a time when an aging population and rising health care costs are driving up projected annual deficits. Both sides, he said, ?have to stop pretending that cutting this kind of spending alone will be enough.?

But the president declined to embrace the recommendations of a bipartisan majority on the fiscal commission he first announced in last year?s State of the Union address. He said then of the commission, ?This can?t be one of those Washington gimmicks that let?s us pretend we solved a problem.?

Its report in December proposed to cut all long-term spending, including for Medicare and Social Security, and to end a raft of tax breaks in exchange for lower income tax rates, and apply some revenue savings to reduce deficits. But the naysayers on the commission included its three House Republican members, including Representative Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin, the new chairman of the House Budget Committee, who delivered the Republican response to Mr. Obama speech Tuesday night.

Mr. Obama ?recognizes we have to do more,? said Gene Sperling, the chief White House economic adviser. ?But he also recognizes that it?s only going to happen if we create a frame and an atmosphere that allows both houses and both parties to work together.?

The president?s decision not to use the fiscal commission?s report as the starting point for bipartisan negotiation pleased many liberal groups that have been lobbying the administration against it. But it disappointed centrist anti-deficit groups.

?He really has to kick off this discussion,? said Maya MacGuineas, president of the bipartisan and centrist Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. ?It was his commission. They reported at the end of last year. There needs to be a follow-up and it needs to come from the president.?

?If their plan is to wait until 2013, that may well be too late,? Ms. MacGuineas added. ?There is no guarantee that credit markets are going to let us off the hook for that long.?

But other budget analysts said Mr. Obama was smart not to get out front too soon, while newly empowered Congressional Republicans still are struggling to come up with the spending cuts required to fulfill their ambitious campaign promises.

?Major deficit reduction will not happen without bipartisan negotiations, and it would have been a mistake for the president to lay out a detailed deficit-reduction plan now, only to have his opponents attack it and try to blow it up,? said Robert Greenstein, founder of the liberal Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

?The last two times that we had large, successful bipartisan negotiations on the budget ? in 1990 and 1997 ? the president did not lay out all the changes he would be willing to accept before the negotiations began,? Mr. Greenstein added. ?Why should this time be different??

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Digital Storm launches Enix PC with vertical layout

Digital Storm has launched a new desktop offering that utilizes a vertical design with improved cooling and a smaller footprint. The Enix rotates its mATX motherboard 90-degrees from the norm, so the "rear" I/O panel is situated on top of the chassis. This orientation takes advantage of heat's natural tendency to rise, and we've seen a similar layout in cases such as Silverstone's Raven 2 Evolution.

The Enix is available in four adjustable configurations with pricing starting at $1,132, which gets you a dual-core 3.10GHz Core i3-2100 Sandy Bridge processor, Asus' P8P67-M motherboard, 4GB of DDR3 1600MHz RAM, an Nvidia GeForce GT 220 1GB, a 1TB Hitachi or Seagate-branded HDD, a DVD burner, a 750W "Digital Storm Certified" PSU, and a free factory CPU overclock of up to 3.9GHz.


The max default configuration is costs $2,160 with a Core i7-2600K, an Asus P8P67-M Pro, 8GB of RAM, a 1TB Western Digital Caviar Black, and a GTX 580 1.5GB. All of the systems have an optional CPU overclock of up to 5.2GHz for an extra $99, along with GPU, RAM and OS tweaks.

The company recommends outfitting the Enix with liquid cooling if you select a 4.7-5.2GHz OC, but all systems are put through a 72-hour stress-test to ensure stability before shipping. It's also worth noting that all of Digital Storm's gaming desktops are currently 10% off.

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iPhone Review: Bad Company 2

They say they devil is in the details, in which case you should imagine Bad Company 2 for the iPhone as having red skin, horns, a trident tail and breath that smells worse than wet, rotten garlic. What really kills Bad Company 2 is the lack of fine polish ? and that, sadly, makes a huge difference to the overall experience.

This is a shame, because Bad Company 2 initially looks good. It has a lengthy singleplayer campaign, which slots neatly into the story of the full, proper Bad Company 2, plus a four-player multiplayer mode that?s supported over WiFi and 3G. The graphics are lush, and it packs in plenty of variety too, despite a disappointing tendency to resort to turret sequences.

The multiplayer is especially impressive, in fact. While five levels and support for four players might not sound like a lot, it?s actually a perfectly judged limitation for a mobile phone game. If you want to sit down and invest yourself in lengthy tournaments and huge clan matches, then you're better off going back to the full version of the game. The iPhone version is much more suited to drop-in, drop-out games that keep you occupied while you?re patiently enduring whatever dross happens to be on TV.


Unfortunately, midway through enjoying these delights, the devil tends to rear his ugly head. There are numerous tiny niggles, such as performance problems on anything less than a full-spec iPhone, and a few crashes to the home screen too.

Worst of all, however, is the way the level design frequently infringes on the game itself, with players constantly getting caught in corners or bumping straight into the walls due to occasionally unresponsive controls. It?s never enough to ruin the game, not at first, but it's a constant irritation and the only saving grace is that the game is balanced so that, on medium difficulty, it?s actually quite hard to die.

While it?s impressive that so much detail and depth has been brought to the iPhone version, with melee attacks, iron sights and secondary fire options putting Bad Company 2 a step above most iPhone shooters, it?s still a shame that some basic features are lacking. There?s no Game Centre support, for example, while the three different control configs are only titled A, B and C, meaning you have to spend time trying each in turn if you want to see how they work.


On the whole, Bad Company 2 remains an interesting and enjoyable addition to the app store, but it?s mainly because of the quantity that?s on offer, rather than the quality of the experience. A few performance tweaks and some further level optimisation is all that would be needed to elevate Bad Company 2 on the iPhone to Recommended status. Lacking them, however, means it?s stuck at being merely average.

Verdict: Fun and lengthy, Bad Company 2 is wounded by a few design oversights and missing features. Still, it?s definitely worth picking up if you?re itching for some mobile violence.

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Treating Genetic Disorders Before Birth

Physicians may one day be able to treat genetic blood diseases before a child is even born. In a study of mice that was published this week in the Journal of Clinical Investigation, researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, have found that transplanting a mother's own stem cells into her fetus populates its bone marrow with healthy cells while avoiding immune rejection.

If the findings hold true in humans, stem-cell transplants from mother to fetus could prime the fetus for a bone-marrow transplant from its mother?or a donor that is tissue-matched to the mother?after birth.

Diseases such as sickle cell anemia and beta thalassemia result from abnormal red blood cells and can be treated with bone-marrow transplants. But it's not always possible to find a match.   And standard bone-marrow transplants, even between tissue-matched donors, must be followed with a lifetime course of immunosuppressive drugs.

Scientists theorize that bone-marrow transplants performed when a fetus is still developing would override this problem. They suspect that the fetus's immature immune system could be tricked into adopting those foreign cells and recognizing them as its own. "The fetus is wired to tolerate cells?when it encounters cells from mom, it tolerates them," says Tippi MacKenzie, the pediatric surgeon at UCSF who led the new research.

Research in animals has shown the promise of that approach. But early tests in humans came up against a serious setback?the donor cells were being rejected and killed off before a fetus could assimilate them, and no one was quite sure why. "It's a conundrum," says MacKenzie.

The blame, it seems, may be mom's. MacKenzie and her colleagues found that when they injected a fetus with hematopoietic stem cells (which populate bone marrow and give rise to blood cells) that were not matched to the mother or fetus, the infusion prompted an influx of maternal immune cells into the fetus.

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