Sunday, November 11, 2012

Foreign air power is crucial to Mali battle plan: sources

BAMAKO (Reuters) - Malian troops backed by foreign air power will lead the assault to recapture Timbuktu and other northern cities from al Qaeda-linked militants, under a battle plan now being considered, Malian army sources said.

West African bloc ECOWAS is expected to submit a version of the plan to the United Nations Security Council for approval, paving the way for war in Mali's vast desert amid fears the region could become a new terrorist training ground.

"International forces will not do the ground fighting, that role will belong to the Malian army," a military officer familiar with the plan, who asked not to be named, said on Friday.

"Air strikes will be the responsibility of the international force," he said, adding foreign partners would also provide logistical and intelligence support and soldiers and police to secure areas captured by the Malian army.

Military planners from Africa, the United Nations and Europe in Mali's capital Bamako last week drew up a battle plan that would involve a foreign force of more than 4,000 personnel, mostly from West African countries. It remains unclear how much of the force would come from Western nations.

The plan covers a six-month period, with a preparatory phase for training and the establishment of bases in Mali's south, followed by combat operations in the north.

A second Malian military source said the army expected Islamist rebels to try to avoid conventional fighting by slipping away into remote mountains or blending in with local populations.

"That is the main problem, and it will fall to our intelligence services to solve it," he said.

Once viewed as an example of progress towards democracy in Africa, Mali fell into chaos after a coup in March that toppled the president and left a power vacuum that was quickly exploited by rebels to take over the north.

The Security Council gave African leaders 45 days from October 12 to draw up a plan for military intervention to retake the north, but diplomats say any such operation is months away.

Foreign powers are divided on the pace of an intervention. Regional powerhouse Algeria says it prefers a negotiated solution, while former colonial master France - which has several citizens held hostage by al Qaeda-linked groups in the Sahara - wants a swift war.

Delegates from Islamist group Ansar Dine are holding talks with regional mediator Blaise Compaore, the president of Burkina Faso, and members of the Tuareg rebel movement MNLA have sought to join efforts to solve the crisis.

Another Islamist group in the zone, MUJWA, told Reuters this week that a foreign intervention in Mali's north would lead to an Iraq-style quagmire.

The head of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) warned on Thursday that a military intervention in northern Mali would have a high humanitarian cost.

Access for aid workers is already precarious in the north, where 500,000 people - half the remaining population - depend on foreign aid, ICRC President Peter Maurer said.

(Writing by Richard Valdmanis; editing by Andrew Roche)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/foreign-air-power-crucial-mali-battle-plan-sources-121058250.html

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Saturday, November 10, 2012

Sony Xperia advance on sale unlocked in the U.S.

Android Central

The Xperia Advance (known elsewhere in the world as the rugged Xperia Go) is now available to Americans through online retailers like Newegg for a scant $249.99. Beyond being pretty dang tough, here's what you can expect spec-wise. 

  • 3.5-inch 480 x 320 display
  • 1 GHz dual-core processor, 512 MB of RAM
  • Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich (Jelly Bean is on the way)
  • 5 megapixel camera with LED flash and 720p video recording
  • IP67 dust and water resistant ("the highest level of dust and water resistance available on Any Android smartphone" as of October 29)
  • UMTS HSPA 850, 1900, 2100
  • GSM GPRS/EDGE 850, 900, 1800, 1900
  • DLNA and USB host connectivity

So, entry-level, but a decent, affordable unlocked phone with a fair bit of ruggedness to boot. Good enough for any of you, or does it make more sense to sign on to a contract for something higher-end? Is the IP67 rating an attraction at all? Anyone in the UK pick up the European version? What do you think?

read more



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/CM_c3jFnoGc/story01.htm

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PUYB Blog Tour: 5 Things You Should Know ... - Workflow: Writing

  • Chris Shella?s Best Advice Ever for Writing Urban Fiction Legal Thriller Novels

    5307 readers Chris Shella?s Best Advice Ever for Writing Urban Fiction? Legal Thriller Novels By Chris Shella Advice, Advice Advice?. What advice could I give new writers on how to write Urban Fiction Legal Thrillers? HMMMM. Well you do know as a lawyer I?m allergic to giving free advice. So instead of charging my usual 500 hour fee

  • Use of the word ?Latest?

    2210 readersEnglish is often blamed for confusion and ambiguity that stems not from the language, but from the use of the language. Your eBook: Click here to download the Basic English Grammar ebook. Original Post: Use of the word ?Latest?

  • Bios and Nonfiction

    2348 readersI realize that the agent reading the bio of a query wants to see relatedness between the writer and the subject about which they write, so with that in mind - can revealing help or hinder in any way what a prospective agent thinks when weighing the...

  • Pump Up Your Book February 2011 Authors on Tour Facebook Party this Friday!

    2726 readersWE?RE HAVING A FACEBOOK PARTY!!!! Pump Up Your Book will be hosting the February 2011 Authors on Tour on Friday February 25, 2011 at 9 ? 11 p.m. (eastern time ? adjust to your time zone). Tell your book friends that not only will this give them an opportunity to chat with their favorite authors

  • Credit cards Fran?ais : Cartes de cr?dit Itali...

    25 Tips on How to Improve your Credit Rating

    1776 readers(Photo credit: Wikipedia) A bad or poor credit rating can boundary your borrowing options. It is the worst feeling in the world when your credit has been declined. This is an especially painful situation for a person who works as a freelancer who does not have a lot of regular work engagements and will need to

  • Pump Up Your Book Announces Charles Rosenberg?s ?Death on a High Floor Virtual Book Publicity Tour 2011?

    8300 readers Join Charles Rosenberg, author of the legal thriller, Death on a High Floor (Sliding Hill Press), as he virtually tours the blogosphere December 5 ? 16 2011 on his first virtual book tour with Pump Up Your Book! About Charles Rosenberg Charles B. (?Chuck?) Rosenberg has been the credited legal script consultant to three prime time television

  • Ben Marcus

    InDefinite Podcast Episode #35: Ben Marcus

    5760 readersListen: Episode #35: Ben Marcus Ben Marcus reads for the InDefinite Podcast this week from his new novel The Flame Alphabet. Ben Marcus is the author of Notable American Women, The Father Costume, and The Age of Wire and String, and just released novel, The Flame Alphabet. His writing has appeared in Harper?s, The New

  • This is Your Life! with Frank Zaccari, author of ?Inside the Spaghetti Bowl?

    5507 readers This is Your Life! is Literarily Speaking?s newest feature.? Here we spotlight different authors to find out who they are behind the book.? Where were they born?? What?s their family life like?? What did they play with as a child?? All these things mold them into the talented authors they are today. Today?s guest is

  • The Pirate?s Guide to Blogging ? International Talk Like a Pirate Day

    4294 readersYarr and avast there me hearties! It be International Talk Like a Pirate Day again, and that can mean only two things: Firstly, it be meaning that people across the globe will be saying "it be" when they mean "it is". And secondly, it be meaning that I be divulgin' the most well kept secret

  • A Tip for the First Time Novelist

    5522 readersKath here.? Please welcome first time author Adam Mitzner to WU today. Adam?s?debut thriller, A CONFLICT OF INTEREST, is garnering terrific reviews.? Publishers Weekly, in a?Starred Review calls it an ?assured debut, a legal thriller, compares favorably to Presumed Innocent? Mitzner tosses in a number of twists, but his strength lies in his characters and

  • Source: http://workflowwriting.com/680559/puyb-blog-tour-5-things-you-should-know-with-v-frank-asaro-author-of-the-tortoise-shell-code.php

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    Friday, November 9, 2012

    Whoops! Romney's 'transition' website spotted by blogger

    7 hrs.

    Before the?election,?Mitt Romney's staff prepared a transition website, in case the?former Republican nominee was elected president of the United States. And even though Romney didn't win the election, the site saw the light of day ??for a few moments anyway.

    Taegan Goddard, author and former policy advisor, caught the slip up and captured screenshots of the now removed pages. He posted them on his blog, Political Wire.

    "I'm excited about our prospects as a nation," a quote, attributed to Romney, declared on the site's main page. "My priority is putting people back to work in America."?There were details for prospective applicants, who wanted a position with the administration, as well as a rundown of the inauguration?process.

    Some are jumping to make jokes about the fact that Romney's staff had this transition website ready, but let's be realistic: This kind of preparation is far from unusual. Accidentally making the site live, even for a few minutes, though?? that's the mistake.

    Want more tech news?or interesting?links? You'll get plenty of both if you keep up with Rosa Golijan, the writer of this post, by following her on?Twitter, subscribing to her?Facebook?posts,?or circling her?on?Google+.

    Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/whoops-romneys-transition-website-spotted-blogger-1C6918824

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    Thursday, November 1, 2012

    Post-Sandy Weekly Reader: Mix It Up at Lunch Day, Flu Vaccines ...

    Scientists Move Closer to Lasting Flu Vaccine. My children, reluctant recipients of flu shots since their arrivals in our family, will celebrate this one. Which reminds me to ask my annual question: Have you had yours? The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends them for nearly everyone, and reminds us that you cannot get the flu from the inactive viruses in the shot, and that reliable blind studies have borne that out. In an odd way, I appreciate the lesson that the voluntary flu shot offers kids: sometimes, the right choice isn?t the pleasant one.

    It?s ?Mix It Up at Lunch Day,? a day on which many schools encourage their students to cross social boundaries, move out of their comfort zones and connect with someone new. You?ll note that Bryan Fischer, of the American Family Association, an evangelical conservative group,? has declared the agenda of ?Mix It Up at Lunch Day? to be ?toxic? and encouraged its members to keep their children at home, in order to prevent their being pushed to participate in dangerous interactions with their fellow students. Maybe we need a campaign to reassure those children that ?it gets better,? too.


    There?s Homework to Do on School Lunches. Some students aren?t happy with the new, healthier lunch options mandated by the Department of Agriculture. They?re throwing away the healthy options and complaining that they?re not getting enough to eat. I have some sympathy with their attitude ? although I know, for example, that canned vegetables are good for me, I won?t eat them, although I will eat the same things fresh. I?m always leery of food prepared in a way that?s shrouded in mystery. So to Jane Brody?s excellent ideas regarding encouraging students to embrace the healthier meals, I?ll second and expand on her last one: I believe children who know where their lunches come from, who?s making them and that care goes into them are more likely to eat them. While we?re encouraging kids to ?mix it up? in the lunch room, we need to get them behind the scenes as well.

    Lenore Skenazy: Murders by Nanny Illuminate the Nature of Fate, as Did the Boy Who was Grazed by a Meteor. Despite its unwieldy title (which my editorial experience suggests was not the author?s fault) this piece by the always-thoughtful Ms. Skenazy is worth a read. I?m not sure I agree with her entirely ? I think our minds are simply better able to grasp the random nature of a meteor than the random natures of our fellow humans, so much so that using the word ?random? gave me pause. I?m not sympathetic to the people out there who want to blame the family of two murdered children in various ways, but I do understand the need to grasp at straws to reassure ourselves that this will not, cannot happen to us ? because, of course, we know that some form of equally unlikely tragedy could. 2:36 p.m. | Updated A reader just pointed out to me that the meteor strike Ms. Skenazy uses here for comparison was a hoax.

    An ?Educational? Video Game Has Taken Over My House. This has been on my to-read list for a while now, but after one of my children, home from school to await the storm yesterday, devoted as many of her free hours as I would allow to Minecraft, I came back to it. As you probably know, Minecraft is a popular open-ended game that allows players to build, interact and explore in the Minecraft world. But, writes Lisa Guernsey, ?I?m alarmed at how the minutes can turn into hours if I?m not there to tell my kids to take a break. I love that they are creating things, talking about their creations, and planning ahead for new projects. But I hate that the real thing ? their Legos, the cardboard boxes saved for building forts ? can?t hold a candle to Minecraft in capturing their interest.? I?ve concluded that the only way to ?beat? Minecraft is to join it ? or rather, the only way to know how I really feel about the amount of time two of my children are spending on the game is to play. I?m sure that will be the subject of a later post.


    Source: http://parenting.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/10/30/post-sandy-weekly-reader-mix-it-up-at-lunch-day-flu-vaccines-and-minecraft/

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    Causation warps our perception of time

    ScienceDaily (Oct. 31, 2012) ? You push a button to call the elevator to your floor and you wait for what seems like forever, thinking it must be broken. When your friend pushes the button, the elevator appears within 10 seconds. "She must have the magic touch," you say to yourself. This episode reflects what philosophers and psychological scientists call "temporal binding": Events that occur close to one another in time and space are sometimes "bound" together and we perceive them as meaningful episodes.

    New research published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, suggests that binding may reveal important insights into how we experience time.

    Research has shown that our perceptual system seems to pull causally-related events together -- compared to two events that are thought to happen of their own accord, we perceive the first event as occurring later if we think it is the cause and we perceive the second event as occurring earlier if we think it is the outcome.

    So how does this temporal binding occur?

    Some researchers have hypothesized that our perceptual system binds events together if we perceive them to be the result of intentional action, and that temporal binding results from our ability to link our actions to their consequences. But psychological scientist Marc Buehner of Cardiff University, UK wondered whether temporal binding might be rooted in a more general capacity to understand causal relations.

    "We already know that people are more likely to infer a causal relation if two things are close in time. It follows, via Bayesian calculus, that the reverse should also be true: If people know two things are causally related, they should expect them to be close in time," Buehner says. "Time perception is inherently uncertain, so it makes sense for systematic biases in the form of temporal binding to kick in. If this is true, then it would suggest that temporal binding is a general phenomenon of which intentional action is just a special case."

    Buehner decided to test this hypothesis in two experiments using an event-anticipation paradigm. Participants in the experiments had to predict when a target light would flash. In the Baseline condition, the target flash was preceded by a signal light; in the Self-Causal condition, participants pressed a button to generate the target flash; in the Machine-Causal condition, a separate machine pressed the button to generate the target flash. According to the causal binding hypothesis, the Self-Causal and Machine-Causal conditions should lead participants to anticipate the target flash earlier relative to Baseline; according to intentional binding accounts, only participants in the Self-Causal condition would show early anticipation.

    The results showed that Baseline predictions were significantly later relative to the predictions of participants in both the Self-Causal and the Machine-Causal groups. The prediction time was not significantly different between the two causal groups, however. These findings suggest that intentionality is not a necessary condition for temporal binding to occur, confirming Buehner's hypothesis.

    "Understanding the past gives us an advantage in predicting the future," says Buehner. "If we have a causal story of why things are happening, we are better prepared to expect what is to come. Merely knowing the past in the absence of causal understanding -- such as in the Baseline condition -- does not afford better preparedness."

    "Causation instills a subjective time warp in people's minds," he observes.

    Buehner believes that these findings may have practical implications for usability engineers and interface designers.

    "People's perception of wait times and delays are becoming increasingly important. Here we can show that such perceptions are subject to systematic distortions depending on people's causal beliefs. For example, if people believe that they (or someone or something else) are in charge, the time appears to pass faster."

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    The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Association for Psychological Science.

    Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


    Journal Reference:

    1. Marc J. Buehner. Understanding the Past, Predicting the Future: Causation, not Intentional Action, is the Root of Temporal Binding. Psychological Science, 2012

    Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

    Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

    Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/1hbpaQ9vGNM/121031142005.htm

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