Sunday, February 3, 2013

Frank Ocean says 'no charges' against Chris Brown

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Frank Ocean says he won't pursue criminal charges against Chris Brown, who is alleged to have punched Ocean in a recent fight.

"As a child I thought if someone jumped me it would result in me murdering or mutilating a man," the R&B star wrote on his Tumblr page Saturday. "But as a man I am not a killer. I'm an artist and a modern person. I'll choose sanity. No criminal charges. No civil lawsuit."

Brown remained under investigation for his role in a fight outside a West Hollywood recording studio on Jan. 27, Los Angeles County Sheriff's spokesman Steve Whitmore said.

Witnesses told deputies that Brown punched Ocean during an argument over a parking space. Ocean later tweeted that he "got jumped by Chris and a couple guys" and suffered a finger cut.

Brown has not commented on the allegation.

Whitmore said Ocean had said he "desired prosecution." He said the investigation was continuing because Ocean has not told authorities that he's had a change of heart.

"It's ongoing until an official statement is made to us," Whitmore said.

Brown, 23, remains on probation for attacking Rihanna on the eve of the 2009 Grammy Awards and is due back in court on Feb. 6 to update a judge on his progress.

Ocean is scheduled to perform at the Grammys on Feb. 10, where he's up for six awards including album of the year.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/frank-ocean-says-no-charges-against-chris-brown-041359397.html

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Turkey: US Embassy bomber had terror conviction

An embassy security guard asks for help at the US embassy just minutes after a suicide bomber has detonated an explosive device at the entrance of the U.S. Embassy in the Turkish capital, Ankara, Turkey, Friday, Feb. 1, 2013, At least two people are dead, officials said. An Associated Press journalist on Friday saw a body in the street in front of an embassy side entrance. (AP Photo/Yavuz Ozden, Milliyet) TURKEY OUT - INTERNET OUT

An embassy security guard asks for help at the US embassy just minutes after a suicide bomber has detonated an explosive device at the entrance of the U.S. Embassy in the Turkish capital, Ankara, Turkey, Friday, Feb. 1, 2013, At least two people are dead, officials said. An Associated Press journalist on Friday saw a body in the street in front of an embassy side entrance. (AP Photo/Yavuz Ozden, Milliyet) TURKEY OUT - INTERNET OUT

Satellite map locates Ankara, Turkey site of a U.S. embassy explosion.

Medics and firefighters carry an injured woman on a stretcher to an ambulances after a suicide bomber had detonated an explosive device at the entrance of the U.S. Embassy in the Turkish capital, Ankara, Turkey, Friday, Feb. 1, 2013. A suspected suicide bomber detonated an explosive device at the entrance of the U.S. Embassy in the Turkish capital on Friday, killing himself and one other person, officials said. (AP Photo/Burhan Ozbilici)

FILE - In this April 14, 2012 file photo, Didem Tuncay, then a diplomatic reporter for Turkish news channel NTV, interviews Iran's Chief nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili in Istanbul, Turkey. Tuncay, a respected television journalist, 38, was injured after a suicide bomber detonated an explosive device at the entrance of the U.S. Embassy in the Turkish capital, Ankara, Turkey, Friday, Feb. 1, 2013, A hospital official said she was " not in a critical conditoion." (AP Photo/Burhan Ozbilici, File)

Emergency personnel are seen in front of a side entrance of the U.S. Embassy in the Turkish capital, Ankara, after a suspected suicide bomber detonated an explosive device, Friday Feb. 1, 2013. The bomb appeared to have exploded inside the security checkpoint at the entrance of the visa section of the embassy. A police official said at least two people are dead. (AP Photo/Burhan Ozbilici)

(AP) ? The suicide bomber who struck the U.S. Embassy in Ankara spent several years in prison on terrorism charges but was released on probation after being diagnosed with a hunger strike-related brain disorder, officials said Saturday.

The bomber, identified as 40-year-old leftist militant Ecevit Sanli, killed himself and a Turkish security guard on Friday, in what U.S. officials said was a terrorist attack. Sanli was armed with enough TNT to blow up a two-story building and also detonated a hand grenade, officials said.

Sanli had fled Turkey after he was released from jail in 2001, but managed to come back to the country "illegally," using a fake ID, Interior Muammer Guler said. It was not clear how long before the attack he returned to Turkey.

Sanli had been a member of the outlawed Revolutionary People's Liberation Party-Front, or DHKP-C, which has claimed responsibility for assassinations and bombings since the 1970s but has been relatively quiet in recent years. Compared to al-Qaida, it has not been seen as a strong terrorist threat.

Sanli's motives were still unclear. But some Turkish government officials have linked the attack to the arrest last month of dozens of suspected members of the group in a nationwide sweep.

Speculation has also abounded that the bombing was related to the perceived support of the U.S. for Turkey's harsh criticism of the regime in Syria, whose brutal civil war has forced tens of thousands of Syrian refugees to seek shelter in Turkey. But Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has denied that.

Officials said Sanli was arrested in 1997 for alleged involvement in attacks on Istanbul's police headquarters and a military guesthouse and jailed on charges of membership in the group.

While in prison awaiting trial, he took part in a major hunger strike that led to the deaths of dozens of inmates, according to a statement from the Ankara governor's office. The protesters opposed a maximum-security system in which prisoners were held in small cells instead of large wards.

Sanli was diagnosed with Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome and released on probation in 2001, following the introduction of legislation that allowed hunger strikers with the disorder to get appropriate treatment. The syndrome is a malnutrition-related brain illness that affects vision, muscle coordination and memory and that can cause hallucinations.

Sanli fled Turkey after his release and was wanted by Turkish authorities. He was convicted in absentia in 2002.

The U.S. flag at the embassy flew at half-staff on Saturday and already tight security was increased. Police sealed off a street in front of the security checkpoint where the explosion knocked a door off its hinges and littered the road with debris. Police vehicles were parked in streets surrounding the building.

The Ankara governor's office, citing the findings of a bomb squad that inspected the site, said Sanli had used 6 kilograms of TNT for the suicide attack and also detonated a hand grenade. That amount of TNT can demolish "a two-story reinforced building," according to Nihat Ali Ozcan, a terrorism expert at the Ankara-based Economic Policy Research Foundation of Turkey.

Officials had earlier said that the bomber detonated a suicide vest at the checkpoint on the outer perimeter of the compound.

The guard who was killed was standing outside the checkpoint. The U.S. ambassador on Saturday attended his funeral in a town just outside of Ankara.

A Turkish TV journalist was seriously wounded and two other guards had lighter wounds.

DHKP-C's forerunner, Devrimci Sol, or Revolutionary Left, was formed in 1978 as a Marxist group openly opposed to the United States and NATO. It has attacked Turkish, U.S. and other foreign targets since then, including two U.S. military contractors and a U.S. Air Force officer.

The group, designated as a terrorist organization by the United States and other European allies, changed its name to DHKP-C in 1994.

The attack came as NATO deployed six Patriot anti-missile systems to protect ally Turkey from a possible spillover from the civil war raging across the border in Syria. The United States, Netherlands and Germany are each providing two Patriot batteries.

Ozcan, the terrorism expert, said that the Syrian regime, which had backed terrorist groups in Turkey, including autonomy-seeking Kurdish rebels, during the Cold War era and through the 1990s, had recently revived ties with these groups.

As Turkey began to support the Syrian opposition, Syrian President Bashar Assad's regime began to try "rebuilding its ties with these organizations," Ozcan said.

Radikal newspaper reported that the DHKP-C had recently been taking an interest in "regional issues," reviving its anti-American stance and taking on "a more pro-Assad position."

Former U.S. ambassador to Turkey, Ross Wilson, speculated that the masterminds of the embassy bombing may have been partly motivated by U.S.-Turkish policy on Syria.

"A successful attack would embarrass the Turkish government and security forces, and it would have struck at the United States, which is widely ? if wrongly ? thought to have manipulated the Erdogan government into breaking with Bashar al-Assad and supporting efforts to remove him from power," Wilson, director of the Dinu Patriciu Eurasia Center at the Washington-based Atlantic Council, wrote in an analysis.

"That might rekindle public support for the group. Alas for DHPK/C, this seems unlikely," he wrote.

Howard Eissenstat, a Turkey expert at St. Lawrence University in the United States, said the bombing showed that a "relatively isolated and obscure group" still has the capacity to cause havoc.

"They really fall outside of our comfortable narratives," Eissenstat wrote in an email to The Associated Press. "And they do seem to have been left in an ideological time warp. There is something distinctly cult-like about them."

The attack drew quick condemnation from Turkey, the U.S., Britain and other nations, and officials from both Turkey and the U.S. pledged to work together to fight terrorism.

It was the second deadly assault on a U.S. diplomatic post in five months. On Sept. 11, 2012, terrorists attacked a U.S. mission in Benghazi, Libya, killing U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans. The attackers in Libya were suspected to have ties to Islamist extremists, and one is in custody in Egypt.

U.S. diplomatic facilities in Turkey have been targeted previously by terrorists. In 2008, an attack blamed on al-Qaida-affiliated militants outside the U.S. Consulate in Istanbul left three assailants and three policemen dead.

______

Associated Press writers Ezgi Akin and Burhan Ozbilici and Christopher Torchia in Istanbul contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-02-02-Turkey-US-Explosion/id-9da0cef67c064fd0868a50051c62a94c

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Sea Launch Rocket Fails During Liftoff, Satellite Lost

PARIS ? A commercial Sea Launch rocket failed 40 seconds after liftoff from its floating launch platform in the Pacific Ocean on Friday (Feb. 1) destroying the Intelsat IS-27 telecommunications satellite and compromising Sea Launch's long road to recovery from its previous failure in January 2007.

Now headquartered in Bern, Switzerland, and owned by an affiliate of Russia's RSC Energia space-hardware manufacturer, Sea Launch AG had emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy restructuring in October 2010 ? a reorganization that was an indirect consequence of the 2007 failure ? and returned to flight in September 2011. Friday's launch failure occured just after the company's Zenit 3SL rocket lifted off from its launch platform at 1:56 a.m. EST (0656 GMT).

With a new lease on life made possible by the backing of the world's largest and third-largest commercial satellite fleet operators, Intelsat of Washington and Luxembourg, and Eutelsat of Paris, respectively,?Sea Launch conducted five successful launches through December 2012?? three for Intelsat, two for Eutelsat.

Sea Launch had been preparing a relatively light manifest for 2013 as it replenished its stock of hardware for the Russian- and Ukrainian-built Zenit 3SL rocket it uses for operations. The company had planned to increase its launch rate, starting in 2014, to four commercial campaigns per year. [Amazing Rocket Launches of 2013 (Photos)]

The only customer whose launch may be affected by the Thursday rocket failure is Israel's Spacecom satellite fleet operator, whose Amos 4 telecommunications satellite is scheduled for launch on a Land Launch rocket in July.

Land Launch uses the same Zenit 3 rocket configuration as Sea Launch, but operates from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. The launch contract with Spacecom is not with Sea Launch, but with Space International Services (SIS) of Moscow, and is part of a contract signed for the 2008 launch of Spacecom?s Amos 3 satellite.

Intelsat's IS-27, a Boeing Space and Intelligence Systems 702MP model weighing 6,215 kilograms at launch, was to have been operated from 55.5 degrees west longitude, where it would have replaced Intelsat's Galaxy 11 and Intelsat 805 satellites. Intelsat said in a Feb. 1 statement that services from these satellites will continue as usual.

But IS-27 was more than a replacement of existing capacity. Its payload included a Ku-band beam over the North Atlantic sea and air routes that would have completed Intelsat?s Global Mobility project, featuring 10 beams on seven satellites allowing uninterrupted coverage for mobile maritime and air customers using Ku-band.

The satellite also carried a beam over the Andean nations and Mexico, and a beam over Brazil.

Intelsat is one of several satellite operators that are using L-, Ku- and Ka-band to develop a mobile satellite services business with maritime and aeronautical customers. Whether the IS-27 loss will affect the contracts Intelsat has signed for mobile satellite services was not immediately known. The company said in its Feb. 1 statement that it is "committed to working with customers to identify the most appropriate solutions for service continuity."

IS-27 also carried a UHF-band payload that Intelsat had hoped to lease to the U.S. Defense Department. But as of the launch date, no customer for this payload, a frequency mainly used by military forces, had made itself known. Intelsat had added a similar payload to the IS-22 satellite, which is already in orbit, and had secured the Australian defense forces as a customer for the life of the satellite.

IS-27 was insured for about $400 million, meaning the world?s space-insurance underwriters are starting 2013 in the red. Satellite insurance rates have been low for the past several years as premiums have far exceeded claims, in part because most of the recent launch failures, until Sea Launch, had been carrying government satellites that did not take out insurance.

The Sea Launch failure is the latest in a series affecting Russian rockets. Russia?s heavy-lift Proton rocket, which through International Launch Services (ILS) of Reston, Va., competes with Sea Launch on the commercial market, in December suffered its third failure in 16 months.

Russia?s small Rockot launcher, which like Proton is built by Khrunichev Space Center of Moscow, successfully launched three Russian military satellites in January but shut down before it could perform a planned de-orbit maneuver.

Failure-review boards are now in place for the Proton and Rockot issues. Sea Launch said it would immediately establish its own board of inquiry.

This story was provided by?Space News, dedicated to covering all aspects of the space industry.

Copyright 2013 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sea-launch-rocket-fails-during-liftoff-satellite-lost-195643371.html

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QuickBase (Jan 2013)


Besides offering? a slew of financial apps online for the SMB such as its Quickbooks solution, Intuit also offers QuickBase?an online database for smaller businesses and personal users who may not be database gurus. We last reviewed Quickbase in 2009. In 2013, QuickBase remains a quick and easy-to-use tool for a single user or small business to create an efficient well-organized database that is not subject to a heavy volume of transactions.
QuickBase is still a very good option as a database solution for SMBs, but, since our last review, the cloud app space has gotten far more competitive and there are areas where QuickBase lags behind its competition.

Database Low Down
QuickBase is a cloud platform that allows you to create custom databases (fashionably called apps these days) on the fly. You can create an app as simple as one that keeps track of the progress of your daily jog to a more complex one to track your business sales. We use Quickbase at PCMag to keep track of dozens of pieces of information about all the thousands of reviews we do each year, for example.

Since the entire platform is online there's no software to deploy or database server to manage, making QuickBase ideal for smaller businesses and personal users who don't have dedicated database administrators on-hand. In fact, QuickBase is tailored to those who aren't database developers, in much the same way as FileMaker Pro is. Like FileMaker, QuickBase has guided steps and ready-made templates to allow users to get up and running in creating a database.

Getting Started and What's New in QuickBase
Since our last review of QuickBase, the services had several updates and enhancements. The latest release was pushed out this past December. Improvements have been made in several features including the way users manage emails within an app?you can now see a single list for all emails in a table. In addition, Intuit has made it easier for customers to view QuickBase subscription bills and billing history. Rules created in forms are now supported in QuickBase mobile. There have also been very specific bug fixes, which are documented on the QuickBase site .

You can try out QuickBase for 30 days as a free trial. Getting started with QuickBase is easy. A wizard helps you create your app either from scratch or with a template. You can also import a spreadsheet to enter data on which to base an app.

I wanted to create a database app based on data I collect from networking devices I test. I keep the data in an Excel spreadsheet. As we found when we last reviewed QuickBase, there still are some limitations to importing data from Excel into QuickBase.

The spreadsheet has to be stripped of any extraneous formatting like column titles, or notes, because QuickBase, understandably, can't do a clean import of such data.

Help instructions provide useful information on how to prepare a spreadsheet for import. Of course, you can also covert the spreadsheet to a comma or tab delimited file, or copy and paste right into QuickBase.

After formatting my spreadsheet for import, I found the import process overall, pretty efficient. I am working off a fairly simple spreadsheet. If you have a more complex file, such as one with formulas or data totals, you may find the import messier if you don't properly format the spreadsheet beforehand.

Once done, QuickBase displays the imported data and lets you edit fields, opt to not bring in specific data, and change the orientation of the chart the data is displayed in, before creating the app.

Working With QuickBase Apps
QuickBase does a good job of breaking down database concepts and designs for average users?very much on par with FileMaker Pro 12's wizards and help resources (although FileMaker has a more visually stimulating and aesthetically-pleasing interface).
Navigating the QuickBase interface to get tasks done is easy if you follow the steps and tutorials. I was able to create filters against my data to pull into several charts and reports. For example, I created a report to show all routers I've tested that gave over 100 Mbps throughput at a specific distance.

Once you navigate away from the wizards, orienting yourself is a bit tricky. I find the QuickBase interface rather cluttered and the menu and toolbars items buried. For instance, I want to create another report against my imported networking device data.

I'm in my app's Home Page and looking to click a button that will allow me to create a new chart or report. Instead, I have options to take a tour, customize my form, create a new record, go into settings, but no way to quickly launch the screen where I can create a new report. I have to go into Records-->Reports and Charts and then I see a button for "New" for creating a new report or chart. This is what I mean by some options being a bit buried in the interface.

As with most database solutions, you can add objects to databases in QuickBase such as images. Adding objects like images is also not as easy as doing so in FileMaker which lets you drag and drop pictures, video, and sound clips into container fields. In QuickBase you have to create forms that are Rich Text and add images that way, or as file attachments. It's just not as simple as in FileMaker.

I also did not see a way to make an ODBC connection to external databases but there's a third-party solution called Qunect that will help you do so. FileMaker feature support for ODBC and jDbC connection to eternal data, another way in which FileMaker may be more of a robust database system for some. Quickbase does offer an API kit for developers to integrate with external data sources and further customize apps.

Fast and Lightweight Cloud Database
QuickBase remains a good way for businesses to create lightweight apps without need for deploying and managing on-premise servers and database software. Working within QuickBase gives fast and responsive performance, even creating charts and reports.

However, some businesses may be wary of having their business processes and apps residing in the cloud, and as we witnessed when Intuit suffered wide-spread outages, if the service goes down, you don't have access to your database. For that reason, some businesses may prefer a hybrid Web/on-premise solution like FileMaker, which also has a more elegant and navigable interface. FileMaker also offers more features for enterprises with its Server edition such as Wan optimization to boost performance and 640-bit support.

Still, for lighter business database needs QuickBase remains a very good database solution. As part of Intuit's suite of cloud apps for small business, QuickBase is super convenient to get started with and there's a wealth of help available for users from on-the-spot Live Chat to a vast knowledge base.

While FileMaker Pro 12 is our Editor's Choice for databases QuickBase is a solid database service that earns four stars as an SMB database; it's especially handy for those who want an all-cloud solution.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/nUzVYPGJcUc/0,2817,2414979,00.asp

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Saturday, February 2, 2013

Dwight Howard out vs Wolves with shoulder injury

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) ? Dwight Howard is sidelined again with an ailing shoulder and disgruntled Pau Gasol is back in the Los Angeles Lakers' starting lineup, where he believes he should have been all along.

Howard was scratched from Friday night's game at Minnesota with a sore right shoulder, and he returned to Los Angeles to receive platelet-rich plasma treatments. This is the same injury that kept Howard out of three games in January.

The All-Star center planned to rejoin the team in Detroit on Sunday, but a timetable for his return was not immediately known.

"He'll play when there is no pain and that will be day-to-day, so we'll have to see," coach Mike D'Antoni said after the team's morning shootaround.

Howard's arrival from Orlando before the season was hailed as a return to championship contention for a Lakers team that was aging with Kobe Bryant and Gasol still the focal points. But Howard hasn't been his overpowering self for much the season. He was slowed early on while recovering from a back injury that happened last season and is now hampered by a shoulder injury that isn't going away anytime soon.

"It's always going to be there," D'Antoni said. "Even if we shut him down for two months, it's still going to be there. Once he gets hit, it's going to hurt. It's a pain thing."

He's still averaging 16.5 points, 11.9 rebounds and 2.4 blocks, but his level of intimidation and athleticism in the paint is not the same.

And the Lakers haven't been the same, either. They entered the game at 20-26, 10th in the Western Conference, and fresh off a loss to the lowly Suns.

The air of invincibility is not there, and Gasol's waning production is a big part of that. One of the most gifted post players of the last decade has been marginalized since D'Antoni replaced the fired Brown, a process that culminated with reduced to a reserve role for the first time in his career last month.

Usually measured and level-headed in his public remarks, Gasol has not hidden his disappointment with D'Antoni's decision.

"Mike's been trying to get his philosophy through us and try to get our team to do it," Gasol said Friday. "At the same time our personnel is a little different than probably what would fit best for that kind of system. It's a work in progress. We're all trying to get a feel for each other. We're all trying to figure things out. We're all trying to win. At the same time, it's been a struggle."

Gasol is averaging a career-low 12.8 points and is shooting a career-low 44.8 percent. He's been bothered by tendinitis in his knees, bursitis in his elbow and a concussion.

D'Antoni has been trying to diffuse the situation with his trademark tongue-in-cheek humor.

"I know he wants to start. I've just kind of got to coach the team the way I think is better," D'Antoni said. "It's not a personality conflict. It's not a dance contest. I like him. My dance card's open."

D'Antoni has been using Earl Clark as the starting power forward alongside Howard. He said he likes how the Lakers start with a smaller lineup.

"I still consider myself one of the best out there," Gasol said. "It's a game that you can't be too self-centered and selfish. You have to put team first and have to make it work somehow. That's what we're trying to do. We're trying to make it work and I try not to be a negative influence at all."

Timberwolves point guard Ricky Rubio defended his fellow Spaniard on Thursday, joking that if the Lakers don't want him, the Wolves would take him. D'Antoni fired back, saying when Rubio coaches a team he can make those decisions. And Bryant took it a step further when asked about some of the criticism Wolves All-Star Kevin Love has received this year.

"You can send him our way," he said.

Asked what he can do to keep Gasol from letting the disappointment affect his play, D'Antoni cracked: "Pay him $19 million. Y'all figure it out. That should help. I think it's fine. He wants to play. I've got it. And he's going to play. He's always going to be in there in the end of big games."

For one night at least, it shouldn't be an issue. Gasol is in the starting lineup and Bryant said it is imperative the Lakers figure out a way to get him back to being a featured part of the offense.

"We haven't used him to his full potential, everybody knows that," Bryant said. "That's something we're trying to figure out and something we'll have to do a much better job at if we want to reach our full potential as a team. We have to use him more."

___

Follow Jon Krawczynski on Twitter: http://twitter.com/APKrawczynski

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dwight-howard-vs-wolves-shoulder-injury-221327648--spt.html

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