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Wednesday, 10 December 2014

More veiled Russophobia? Forbes names YotaPhone 2 'most disruptive smartphone' of 2014

Yotaphone_1

© AFP Photo / Kirill Kudryavtsev

Head of Yota Devices Vladislav Martynov holds a Yotaphone with a dual screen during its presentation in central Moscow on December 2, 2014.



For once being disruptive is a good thing. magazine describes the new Russian designed YotaPhone 2 as 2014's Most Disruptive Smartphone. The review calls it exciting and innovative and is "a rare beast" with both a radical and conformist design.

According to reviewer Ewan Spence, the developers created a product which combines features which makes it stand out among other smartphones. They are modern and innovative designs; the second e-Ink display on the back of the device and its unique software.

The model features a power-saving electronic paper-like screen on the back that displays basic information like a clock and message alerts and can also be used to read books. There are special apps just for the display and games are available too. A second regular display lights on only when needed for more complex tasks.


"YotaPhone 2 has clearly shown that a dual screen form factor is workable, and in many cases desirable. Yota has brought something new for consumers in the smartphone world," he says.


The review describes the gadget's looks as "a rare beast," radical enough "to appeal to the geekerati, but polished and conformist enough that the regular consumers looking for something a little different will feel right at home with the handset."


The device is not perfect, says Spence but has enough functionality for most users. He also says it takes a little bit of trial and error to get everything set up, but later it works smoothly with little maintenance required. The developers have also announced a new Android update for the device.


Yotaphone_2

© AFP Photo / Kirill Kudryavtsev



"But for now I'm happy to recommend this new and innovative smartphone," concludes Spence.

The YotaPhone 2 was first unveiled to the public earlier this year at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. The official launch of sales is scheduled for December, with the line of smartphones set to go on sale in Russia. The phone is then expected to hit European markets, with sales in China and South-East Asia expected to start in the first quarter of 2015. The devices will be marketed mainly online.


The smartphone has already become famous in China after Russian President Vladimir Putin gave one to his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping during the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in Beijing .The Chinese leader became first owner of the new YotaPhone 2. The special edition of the smartphone included a data protection system, developed by Russian engineers, which makes its security "unique."


The first version of Yotaphone was praised by early-adopters, but it was also criticized for having a mediocre interface and glitches. The second model aims to address the problems of its predecessor.


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Feds say cleaning up most contaminated nuclear weapons site in US is too costly

nuclear_waste

© Reuters/Yuriko Nakao



The United States government recently argued in court filings that the state of Washington's request of $18 billion over 14 years to address the nation's most polluted nuclear weapons production site should be rejected based on expense.

The US Department of Justice said in a court filing on Friday that the cost of the state's proposal for a hastened cleanup of the Hanford Nuclear Reservationwould cast into doubt other nuclear projects funded by the Department of Energy.

Accordingto , the filings in US District Court by the DOJ and the state of Washington were part of the state's lawsuit that seeks a more pressing timeline for Hanford's cleanup.


Friday was the deadline for the parties to comment on new cleanup timelines, as the DOE said many of the existing timelines were at risk of being missed.


Hanford, located along the Columbia River in south-central Washington, is the site of 177 massive underground nuclear waste storage tanks, making it the largest collection of nuclear waste in the US. For four decades, the site was home to plutonium development for use in the production of nuclear weapons.


As RT previously reported, a deal was recently struck between the DOE and Washington state to allow a leaky radioactive storage tank at Hanford to remain as is for more than a year before its contents are removed.


In its court filing, Washington state again criticized federal management at Hanford and asked for an intensified oversight plan to address its leak-prone waste tanks and the construction of a $13 billion vitrification plant to treat waste for future burial.


The state said in its filing that the DOE wants to establish future cleanup deadlines at the expense of hard deadlines already agreed to by the parties in a 2010 consent decree, which sprang from a 2008 lawsuit following the department's failure to meet an earlier set of deadlines for the plant and its waste tanks.


The construction project"should be matched with the best project management plans in the country,"the state contended."Energy, however, implies that such planning is impossible."


The state asked for more than 100 new deadlines to keep the Department of Energy's cleanup process on track, yet the Department of Justice argued the plan was out of reach.


"The state's proposal would require a dramatic and unrealistic increase in funding that, if mandated, would jeopardize DOE's ability to carry out ongoing cleanup operations on other parts of the Hanford site and at other sites across the country,"documents filed by the Justice Department stated.


Hanford's construction and waste management get $1.2 billion annually from the federal government, more than one-fifth of the Department of Energy's annual budget for national environmental cleaning projects.


The state's plan requires $4 billion over the next five years, on top of the current level of annual funding, the Justice Department said.


The Justice Department also said the state's plan would violate the 2010 consent decree for cleanup, as the proposal would demand new storage tanks and treatment facilities.


The federal government has claimed construction work at Hanford has fallen behind because of technical issues.


Hanford contains"53 million gallons of High Level Radioactive hazardous waste, equivalent to 2,650 rail cars full of waste,"according to the Washington State Dept. of Ecology, making it the most contaminated nuclear site in the United States. Or, as Heart of America Northwestcalledit,"the most contaminated site in the Western Hemisphere."


In 1943, construction began on Hanford as part of the top-secret Manhattan Project.


"Hanford was the producer of the plutonium that fueled the 1st test explosion in Alamogordo, New Mexico on July 16, 1945. The same plutonium also powered Fat Man, the five-ton atomic bomb that exploded over Nagasaki on August 9, 1945,"according to Heart of America Northwest.


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Pit bull attack on San Diego woman results in surgery and permanent scars


A 70-pound female Pit Bull, who appeared to have recently had puppies, viciously attacked a beagle being walked by his owners and then bit the owner in the face on Sunday. The incident occurred near the intersection of 40th and Myrtle in City Heights, California, around 4 p.m., according to 10News.

Craig Moreno, who lives nearby, said he had just come home when he saw the woman on the corner in a position that looked like she was a hugging a dog. Then he heard her scream for help and realized she was trying to pull a beagle out of the jaws of the huge Pit Bull.


Several other people were also trying to help, Moreno said, so he just jumped right in and also held onto the beagle.


But the Pit Bull did not let loose - not even when a neighbor hit it with a golf club. It continued until someone found the woman's water bottle and began pouring water onto the dog's face. Moreno described to 10News how they pulled harder as they poured the rest of the water into the dog's face and it finally let go.


The woman's face was covered in blood, and the tip of her nose was torn open, he said.


Neighbors managed to get a leash on the Pit Bull. Several told the 10News reporter that they are familiar with the dog, which is often on the streets but had always been friendly with people. However, they also said the dog is very aggressive with other dogs.


The neighbors pointed out a house on 39th Street to officers and said it is the home of the Pit Bull. Video footage shows that dog food and water had been left outside the gated front yard.


A San Diego County Department of Animal Control officer left a notice at the home for the occupant to contact the agency and indicated to News10 that several calls had been received from neighbors complaining about the dog during the past four years.


The Pit Bull is now being held in quarantine at the shelter. The matter is still being investigated by the animal control agency to determine if criminal charges against the dog owner will be filed.


The owners of the beagle were identified as Dan Maier and his wife. Mr Maier told 10News that the dog's name is Apple and that the Pit Bull had inflicted puncture wounds on his side which required surgery. They were able to take him home from the veterinary clinic on Monday.


Maier said his wife's injuries also required immediate surgery, and she may have permanent scars. He said that his wife has no medical insurance and they had spent thousands of dollars for veterinary care for Apple, and they still do not know who owns the vicious dog.


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UK 'weather bomb' brings hundreds of lightning strikes, and power outage to 17,000 homes

weather bomb ireland



The storm brought powerful waves to UK coasts, including here at Portstewart in Northern Ireland



High winds and huge waves are affecting north-western parts of the UK as bad weather hits power supplies and travel.

The "weather bomb" has brought hundreds of lightning strikes, temporarily cutting power across the Western Isles, affecting 17,000 homes.


The Met Office has warned parts of Scotland and Northern Ireland to "be prepared" as the rapidly developing storm threatens gusts of up to 80mph.


Wind speeds are expected to peak on Wednesday afternoon and early evening.


BBC weather presenter Carol Kirkwood said it would be a "wild" day from north Wales northwards, while it would be "blustery" further south.


Explosive cyclogenesis - known colloquially as a "weather bomb" - is when a storm intensifies as the pressure at its centre drops rapidly (by more than 24 millibars in 24 hours). The storm currently affecting parts of the UK formed in this way.


Speaking from Barra in the Outer Hebrides, Donald MacLeod, coxswain of the island's lifeboat, said there was rain, hail and "plenty of wind".


He said the storm had "grown through the night", adding: "The swell conditions are pretty bad to the west - it's showing about 14m (45ft)."


Mr Macleod said this was "a lot deeper than we normally see" and was "definitely something to be wary of".


Power supplier Scottish and Southern Energy said the problem affecting the Western Isles was caused by lightning, but electricity has now been restored to most homes.


whitehave lightening strikes



North-west England was also hit by high waves, as seen here at Whitehaven in Cumbia



Western Isles Council said all schools and nurseries would be closed, along with many other facilities. Many schools in the Highlands are also closed.




Lightning over 24 hours from 09:30 GMT on Tuesday, with darker colours showing more recent strikes



In Aberdeenshire, about 20 vehicles got stuck in icy conditions on the B974 Banchory to Fettercairn road. A gritter was sent and the vehicles were later freed.

Ahead of the forecast storms, ferry operator Caledonian MacBrayne warned of severe disruption to its services.





High waves crash onto the promenade in Blackpool



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Large number of grey seals washing up dead on Cornish beaches, UK


© Caz Waddell



Huge numbers of dead seals have been found stranded on Cornish beaches recently, and wildlife experts admit they are baffled.

Cornwall Wildlife Trust says it has attended almost twice as many strandings of seals as would normally be expected for this time of year adding that, throughout October and November, 35 dead seals have washed up along the Cornish coastline, and over the same period a further 37 seals have been rescued alive from Cornish beaches by British Divers Marine Life Rescue.


Caz Waddell, from Cornwall Wildlife Trust said: "While bad weather will undoubtedly have been the cause of some of these strandings, the sheer number of cases has left us slightly baffled. We don't yet have any answers as to why this is happening, but it shows just how important it is for people to tell us about any stranded marine animal they see. The more animals we can study, the more we can try to get to the bottom of what might be going on."


"Although it would be easy to assume that large numbers of stranded seals might mean we have large populations of seals in our waters, this is simply not the case. Many people don't realise that grey seals are actually an endangered species worldwide, and we are incredibly lucky to have them around our shores. Britain currently has over a third of the entire world's population, and this of course means that we have an international responsibility to help in their protection and conservation."


Sue Sayer from the Cornwall Seal Group added that while surveys by the group have shown that overall seal numbers in Cornwall have been relatively stable over the last eight years, recent strandings have included young adults in their prime.


"If we are losing breeding age adults from the population the implications for future generations could be huge. Whilst it is sadly quite common to find dead pups at this time of year, deaths of adult seals are more serious and we are concerned about the numbers that are dying around our coast", said Sue


"Grey seals in Cornwall are highly mobile, moving internationally around the Celtic Seas. At least two individuals found dead in Cornwall were known to have been breeding seals from the island of Skomer in West Wales, an important Special Area of Conservation for seals. This highlights how important it is to remember the bigger picture. The large numbers of strandings occurring in Cornwall is of concern not just to us locally, but nationally as well."


The Marine Strandings Network coordinates the investigation and recording of all dead stranded animals in Cornwall. Volunteers are sent to each animal in order to gather data about the individual, as well as the state of our marine environment such as incidents of pollution, entanglement in storm-damaged or discarded net, evidence of bycatch, and disease. Where possible animals are sent on to post-mortem to establish how they died.


Niki Clear from the Marine Strandings Network said that at the moment the spike in deaths remains a mystery.


"Further down the line these present trends may be nothing more than anomalies and the situation may return to normal. It's only by gathering information about each case that we can build up a true picture of what is happening. We need to collect as much information as possible from these seals - and in fact from any dead marine animal we find", said Niki.


"It's not just seals that wash up dead along the Cornish coastline. The Marine Strandings Network has also attended over 80 strandings of dead dolphins, porpoises and whales, as well as three turtles, and one basking shark in the last year. In addition almost 2,000 stranded seabirds have been reported, plus thousands of fish and jellyfish.


The Marine Strandings Network is now asking people to help by reporting any stranded dead animal to their 24-hour hotline on 0345 201 2626. Live stranded animals should be reported immediately to British Divers Marine Life Rescue on 01825 765546. The public are advised never to approach any stranded animal.


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Palestinian settlement minister dies after IDF soldiers hit him with stun grenade, beat him with rifles, helmets


© AFP/Abbas Momani

Palestinian official Ziad Abu Ein, in charge of the issue of Israeli settlements for the Palestinian Authority, lies on the ground after a scuffle with Israeli forces during a demonstration in the village of Turmus Aya near Ramallah, on December 10, 2014.



The settlement minister in the Palestinian Authority (PA), Ziad Abu Ein, died after a confrontation with Israeli soldiers during a West Bank protest, witnesses and medics said. President Mahmoud Abbas called Abu Ein's death a "brutal act".

There are conflicting reports on how Abu Ein, a leading member of Abbas' Fatah movement and cabinet minister, died.



Several media outlets say he was reportedly struck in the chest with a tear gas canister fired by Israeli troops, after which he collapsed. Other reports say Israeli forces beat Abu Ein with the butts of their rifles and their helmets. Following the violent altercation, he was later rushed to the hospital in Ramallah by ambulance, but reportedly died en route.

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Ahmed Bitawi, the director of the Ramallah hospital, told AFP Abu Ein "was martyred after being beaten in the chest.

According to IDF sources, the military believes that his death was a result of a heart attack, the reports.





© Reuters/Mussa Qawasma

Palestinian Ziad Abu Ein (C), Head of the Anti-wall and Settlement Commission, argues with Israeli soldiers as they prevent him from crossing to Al-Shuhada Street in the West Bank city of Hebron November 29, 2014.



Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas condemned "the brutal assault that led to the martyrdom" of Abu Ein, labeling it "a barbaric act that cannot be tolerated or accepted,"the official Palestinian news agency WAFA reported.

"We will take the necessary measures after the results of the investigation into the incident," Abbas said. He later annoucned three days of morning for Abu Ein.


Riyad Al-Maliki, the Palestinian foreign minister said that "Israel will pay for the "murder."



Jibril Rajoub, a Palestinian official, announced the halt of security coordination with Israel following Abu Ein's death.

The Israeli military said it was looking into the incident and is awaiting an autopsy.




Abu Ein's death follows violent overnight clashes near Shilo, an Israeli settlement in the northern West Bank located 28 miles (45km) north of Jerusalem. The clashes were reportedly sparked after settlers accused Palestinians of stealing a mare. Palestinians in turn said the settlers pelted their vehicles with cars. Troops from the Israeli Defense Forces were deployed to quell the violence.

Mahmoud Aloul, another leading member of the Fatah movement, told AP the incident occurred when he and Abu Ein joined dozens of protesters carrying olive tree saplings during a protest against land confiscations near the West Bank village of Turmus Aya.

Abu Sassaka, an assistant to Abu Ein who told Reuters he never left the minister's side, said Israeli soldiers fired tear gas and stun grenades at dozens of Palestinians as the approached the site where they intended to plant saplings, saying it was viewed as off-limits to Palestinian farmers.


After the marchers and soldiers began pushing each other, Sassaka told the agency the soldiers fired tear gas near the legs of the Palestinians.




He said one soldier hit Abu Ain in the chest with his rifle butt, an account confirmed by other witnesses.

Abu Ein was in charge of a Palestinian Authority department, whose work concerned Israeli settlements and the Israeli separation barrier. Previously, he served as deputy minister for prisoner affairs.


Abu Ein's death follows violent overnight clashes near Shilo, an Israeli settlement in the northern West Bank located 28 miles (45km) north of Jerusalem. The clashes were reportedly sparked after settlers accused Palestinians of stealing a mare. Palestinians in turn said the settlers pelted their vehicles with cars. Troops from the Israeli Defense Forces were deployed to quell the violence.


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New Facebook artificial intelligence will 'mediate' your online activity


© Getty Images



Let's say you're out drinking with your buddies, things get out of hand, you pull out your smartphone, you take a selfie in the middle of all this drunken revelry, then you take 30 or 40 more, and, without hesitation, you start uploading them to Facebook.

It's a common thing to do. But Yann LeCun aims to stop such unbridled behavior - or at least warn people when they're about to do something they might regret. He wants to build a kind of Facebook digital assistant that will, say, recognize when you're uploading an embarrassingly candid photo of your late-night antics. In a virtual way, he explains, this assistant would tap you on the shoulder and say: "Uh, this is being posted publicly. Are you sure you want your boss and your mother to see this?"


The idea is more than just an idle suggestion. LeCun is the New York University researcher and machine-learning guru who now oversees the Facebook Artificial Intelligence Research lab, a team of AI researchers inside the internet giant that spans offices in both California and New York, and this rapidly expanding operation is now laying the basic groundwork for his digital assistant.


Fashioning such a tool is largely about building image recognition technology that can distinguish between your drunken self and your sober self, and using a red-hot form of artificial intelligence called "deep learning" - a technology bootstrapped by LeCun and other academics - Facebook has already reached a point where it can identify your face and your friends' faces in the photos you post to its social network, letting you more easily tag them with the right names.


'Uh, This Is Being Posted Publicly. Are You Sure You Want Your Boss And Mother To See This?


Today marks the one year anniversary of LeCun's Facebook lab - known as FAIR inside the company - and its research is powering the world's largest social network in more ways than one. The team's deep learning algorithms now examine your overall Facebook behavior in an effort to identify the right content for your news feed - content you're likely to click on - and they'll soon analyze the text you type into status posts, automatically suggesting relevant hashtags. But LeCun and his team are also looking towards AI systems that can understand Facebook data in more complex ways - and guide you in directions you may not go on your own.


"Imagine that you had an intelligent digital assistant which would mediate your interaction with your friends," he says, "and also with content on Facebook."


For some, this is a harrowing proposition. They don't want machines telling them what to do, and they don't want machines identifying their faces and storing them in some distant data center where they can help Facebook, say, target ads. But for LeCun, FAIR's work is about giving you more control over your online identity, not less. He also envisions a Facebook that instantly notifies you when someone you don't know posts your photo to the social network without your approval. "You will have a single point of contact to mediate your interaction but also to protect your private information," he says.


He and his Facebook team are by no means alone. Their work is part of a much larger movement towards deep learning, which seeks to automate online tasks by mimicking the behavior of the massive networks of neurons in the human brain. Taping the power of hundreds or even thousands of computers, Google uses deep learning to hone its search engine, recognize the commands you speak into your Android phone, and identify images on its Google+ social network. Microsoft uses it to translate Skype calls from one language to another. And everyone from Twitter to Yahoo is following suit.


The technology has become so important to the internet's biggest names that we're seeing a kind of arms race for deep-learning talent. Google snapped up Geoff Hinton, the University of Toronto professor who founded the deep learning movement alongside LeCun and others. Chinese search giant Baidu recently nabbed Andrew Ng, who helped found the deep learning program at Google. And since he was hired last year to run FAIR, LeCun has stolen some notable names from the Mountain View search giant, including Jason Weston and Tomas Mikolov.


The Power of Language


Deep learning isn't really a new technology. LeCun, Hinton, and others have explored the basic concepts since the'80s, and according to John Platt, a longtime research at Microsoft, the software giant was using similar techniques to provide handwriting recognition on tablet PCs a good ten years ago. But as Platt points out, thanks to recent advances in computer hardware - and the internet's ability to generate the massive amounts of data needed to help train neural nets - the technology has recently taken off in enormous ways.


Across the industry, it's already reinventing image and speech recognition. But like Google, LeCun and FAIR are pushing for more. The next big frontier, he says, is natural language processing, which seeks to give machines the power to understand not just individual words but entire sentences and paragraphs.


Before coming to Facebook, Mikolov led the creation of a deep learning system called Word2Vec, which aims to determine the particular relationships between words, and Google says this was used to improve its "knowledge graph," the system that helps the company's search engine map all those complex connections among websites. Now, he and Weston have brought this kind of expertise to the Facebook lab.


In the short term, LeCun explains, Facebook aims to create systems that can automatically answer simple questions. The company recently demonstrated a tool that can ingest a summary of The Lord of The Rings and then answer questions about the books. And it's exploring a kind of artificial short-term-memory that seeks to improve translation systems that use what are called "recurrent neural nets." Just as you can think of a neural net as the cerebral cortex that handles the translation itself, he says, his team is building a system akin to the hippocampus that can serve as "scratch pad" memory for that cortex.


'An AI-Complete Problem'


The larger aim, LeCun says, to create things like his digital assistant, things that can closely analyze not only photos but all sorts of other stuff posted to Facebook. "You need a machine to really understand content and understand people and be able to hold all that data," he says. "That is an AI-complete problem."


But at the same time, the team is looking beyond this sort of thing, hoping to anticipate that ways that Facebook will evolve in the more distant future - five or ten years down the road. LeCun hints this might involve the Oculus Rift - the virtual reality headset that Facebook acquired earlier this year - saying his team has at least discussed research with the Oculus team.


Certainly, there are limits to the company's AI ambitions. At one point, LeCun indicates that Facebook is not yet exploring AI in combination with robotics. But he does say this is something he's interested in exploring with his academic research, under the aegis of NYU. It's the next logical step.


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