Monday, December 19, 2016

Russian ambassador Andrey Karlov shot in Ankara


Karlov was speaking at an exhibition in the capital when he was shot in the back by unidentified man, Turkish media say.


Russia's ambassador to Ankara has been shot and wounded in a gun attack in the Turkish capital, according to Turkish media.

Andrey Karlov was speaking at an exhibition when he was shot in the back multiple times on Monday evening, Turkish media said.

The attacker let the guests out of the exhibition venue after he shot the diplomat, according to the reports.


Turkish media reported that a gun fight ensued after Karlov was shot.

Interior minister Suleyman Soylu has reached the location of the attack.

"There are at least three wounded people who were taken to the hospital," Turkey's NTV television said.

A witness talking to Turkey's CNNTurk television said that the attacker was acting alone.

"He said that I will not leave this place alive," the attacker said, according to the witness.

The attacker reportedly talked about the situation in Aleppo after he shot the ambassador multiple times.
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Source: Al Jazeera and news agencies

Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Apple's new wireless AirPods available now


Apple's new wireless AirPods are finally available.

The company on Tuesday began taking orders for AirPods at its online store, and said it would start delivering the US$159 earphones to customers, Apple Stores, resellers and carriers next week.

At the iPhone 7 launch in September, Apple Senior Vice President of Worldwide Marketing Phil Schiller said the AirPods would be available in October, but the company missed that target time frame due to unexplained delays.

Missing the deadline for release of any hot product is bad news for a company, but what made the AirPods miss worse was that the they were supposed to offset some of the sting consumers felt over Apple's decision to omit the traditional headphone jack in the iPhone 7.

"Someone clearly dropped the ball, because without something like this with the iPhone 7 the attached sales for the earbuds were stalled, and it made it harder to sell iPhone 7s," noted Rob Enderle, principal analyst at the Enderle Group.

"Both products should have shown up at the same time," he told TechNewsWorld.

Missed Opportunity


However, the absence of AirPods doesn't seem to have affected iPhone 7 sales that much.

"Sales of the iPhone 7 seem to be doing well," said Ross Rubin, principal analyst at Reticle Research.
"The absence of AirPods hasn't been a deal breaker for consumers interested in the phone," he told TechNewsWorld.

On the other hand, the late release certainly will impact sales of the AirPods.

"Apple missed an attractive cross-sell opportunity when the new iPhones were released," Rubin noted, "and they missed the Black Friday opportunity, when there would have been increased traffic going through stores."


AirPods still could be a popular item this Christmas, though.

"It's a relatively small product, easy to pick up online, easy to ship," Rubin pointed out. "It could still wind up in stockings or under trees."

Chip Trouble


Apple is being mum about what caused the delay in bringing the AirPods to market, but several reports link it to the new W1 wireless chip in the headphones.

"There's definitely been a problem with the supply chain, and the best I can figure it was related to the custom Apple W1," said Kevin Krewell, a principal analyst at Tirias Research.

If that's the case, though, it wouldn't explain why Apple could ship the Beats Solo 3 and Powerbeat 3 headphones, which also use the chip. Another Beats model, however, the X BT, also is experiencing delays and may not reach retail shelves until next year.

"It could be that Apple needed more time fine-tuning the chip for rated battery life," Krewell told TechNewsWorld.

Battery life is one of several drawbacks that have dampened demand for products similar to the AirPods.

"There aren't a lot of products like this in this segment, largely because they are expensive, easy to lose, have poor battery life, and the sound quality isn't in line with their cost," Enderle said. "Most folks in this price band prefer headphones, because they provide a much better experience at the same price and they are harder to lose."

Sync Challenges


Some reports have blamed sync problems for the delay.

"It's rumored that the AirPods were receiving signals slightly out of sync," said Jeff Orr, senior practice director for mobile devices at ABI Research. "The stereo effect was not working right."

In most Bluetooth earbuds, the signal from a device is transmitted to one of the buds and transmitted to the other via some kind of wired connection between them.

AirPods don't have any wires so the signal is sent to each bud separately and must be received by them simultaneously. If not, the signal is out of sync, which scotches the audio experience.

If there were sync problems with the AirPods, though, those problems didn't appear in the demo units, noted Orr, who attended the Apple event when the earphones were announced.

"It's hard to know what caused the delay, and I don't know if we'll ever know what the cause was," he told TechNewsWorld.

More Than Music Buds


The AirPods offer more than just a new way to listen to music, which is why Apple had to make sure it made the product right from the time it left the starting gate, observed Ian Fogg, a senior director at IHS Markit.


"AirPods is part of Apple's vision for mobile," he told TechNewsWorld.

"It isn't just a Bluetooth headset that you listen to music on or answer phone calls. It's a voice interface for not only listening but for also speaking so you can interact with your watch or phone seamlessly without having to pair or reconnect them," Fogg explained. "It's an extension of the Apple Watch and iPhone experience."

One of Apple's historic strengths has been perceiving when and how to nudge the consumer market to accept new user interfaces, said Brad Russell, a research analyst at Parks Associates.

"AirPods are major move forward for hearables, wireless audio technology and voice control interfaces," he told TechNewsWorld.

"They don't have to be great -- just good enough to add value to the smartphone," Russell continued.

"Apple EarPods were never the best earbud on the market, but their stylish design, comfortable fit and inline remote added significant value at the time to become an iconic symbol of the iPhone brand."
_By John P. Mello Jr.
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John Mello is a freelance technology writer and contributor to Chief Security Officer magazine. You can connect with him on Google+.

Source: TECH NEWS WORLD

Monday, December 12, 2016

The 37 best websites for learning a new skill

When you can learn a new skill at your own pace in the comfort of your own home, there's no excuse not to.Francisco Osorio/Flickr

Forget overpriced schools, long days in a crowded classroom, and pitifully poor results.

These websites and apps cover myriads of science, art, and technology topics.

They will teach you practically anything, from making hummus to building apps in node.js, most of them for free.

There is absolutely no excuse for you not to master a new skill, expand your knowledge, or eventually boost your career.

You can learn interactively at your own pace and in the comfort of your own home. It’s hard to imagine how much easier it can possibly be.

Honestly, what are you waiting for?

Take an online course

 

edX— Take online courses from the world’s best universities.
Coursera — Take the world’s best courses, online, for free.
Coursmos — Take a micro-course anytime you want, on any device.
Highbrow — Get bite-sized daily courses to your inbox.
Skillshare — Online classes and projects that unlock your creativity.
Curious — Grow your skills with online video lessons.
lynda.com — Learn technology, creative and business skills.
CreativeLive — Take free creative classes from the world’s top experts.
Udemy — Learn real world skills online.



Learn how to code

 

Codecademy — Learn to code interactively, for free.
Stuk.io — Learn how to code from scratch.
Udacity — Earn a Nanodegree recognized by industry leaders.
Platzi — Live streaming classes on design, marketing and code.
Learnable — The best way to learn web development.
Code School — Learn to code by doing.
Thinkful — Advance your career with 1-on-1 mentorship.
Code.org — Start learning today with easy tutorials.
BaseRails — Master Ruby on Rails and other web technologies.
Treehouse — Learn HTML, CSS, iPhone apps & more.
One Month — Learn to code and build web applications in one month.
Dash — Learn to make awesome websites.

Learn to work with data

 

DataCamp — Online R tutorials and data science courses.
DataQuest— Learn data science in your browser.
DataMonkey— Develop your analytical skills in a simple, yet fun way.

Learn new languages

 

Duolingo — Learn a language for free.
Lingvist — Learn a language in 200 hours.
Busuu — The free language learning community.
Memrise — Use flashcards to learn vocabulary.



Expand your knowledge

 

TED-Ed — Find carefully curated educational videos
Khan Academy— Access an extensive library of interactive content.
Guides.co — Search the largest collection of online guides.
Squareknot — Browse beautiful, step-by-step guides.
Learnist — Learn from expertly curated web, print and video content.
Prismatic — Learn interesting things based on social recommendation.


Bonus

 

Chesscademy — Learn how to play chess for free.
Pianu — A new way to learn piano online, interactively.
Yousician— Your personal guitar tutor for the digital age.

By Kristyna Zapletalova

Written by @kristynazdot, founder and CEO of maqtoob.com  —  app discovery platform for inspiring entrepreneurs. At the moment, it features 1,500+ handpicked tools for startups, small businesses, and freelancers.

Read the original article on Medium. Copyright 2015.
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Source: Business Insider

Wednesday, December 7, 2016

Donald Trump is Time’s person of the year for 2016


Donald Trump is Time’s person of the year for 2016, the magazine’s editor announced Wednesday morning on NBC’s “Today” show.

“When have we ever seen a single individual who has so defied expectations, broken the rules, violated norms, beaten not one but two political parties on the way to winning an election that he entered with 100-1 odds against him,” Time managing editor Nancy Gibbs said. “I don't think we have ever seen one person operating in such an unconventional way have an impact on the events of the year quite like this.”


The Time magazine cover announcing Trump as its person of the year shows him seated in a chair and bills him as “president of the divided states of America.” But the president-elect, who spoke to "Today" via telephone after Gibbs, refused to take the blame for dividing the country.

"When you say divided states of America, I didn't divide them. They're divided now. I mean, there's a lot of division," he said. "And we're going to put it back together and we’re going to have a country that's very well healed and we’re going to be a great economic force and we’re going to build up our military and safety and we’re going to do a lot of great things. And it’s going to be something very special."

"I think putting divided is snarky. But again, it’s divided. I'm not president yet. So I didn't do anything to divide," he added later.

Trump complained last year that he had not been selected as Time's person of the year for 2015, when he finished in third place behind German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. The Manhattan billionaire took to Twitter upon the announcement, writing that "I told you @TIME magazine would never pick me as person of the year despite being the big favorite. They picked person who is ruining Germany."

On Wednesday, Trump told NBC that winning the 2016 person of the year award was "a tremendous honor."

Gibbs said 2016 “may have been one of the more straightforward years” in terms of selecting a person of the year, with Trump the obvious choice. Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton, the first female presidential nominee of a major political party and the likely winner of the popular vote, was the magazine’s runner-up person of the year. Hackers, taken as a group, came in third after an election cycle in which cyberattacks played an outsize role.

“The person of the year, as we always remind people, is the person who has had the greatest influence on events, for better or for worse,” Gibbs said. “The fascinating thing this year is, I’ve never seen so much agreement over who had the most influence or the most disagreement over whether it was for better or for worse.”
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Source: POLITICO


Monday, December 5, 2016

Ban Ki-moon apologizes to Haiti for cholera outbreak

UN chief apologises for the international organisation's part in the 2010 outbreak blamed on Nepalese UN peacekeepers.

The UN chief formally presented a 'new approach' to the cholera epidemic in Haiti [AP]

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has apologised for the first time to the people of Haiti for the international organisation's role in a deadly cholera outbreak that has killed more than 9,300 people and infected more than 800,000.

"On behalf of the United Nations, I want to say very clearly we apologise to the Haitian people," he said three times, in Haitian Creole, French and English, to the UN General Assembly on Thursday.



"We simply did not do enough with regards to the cholera outbreak and its spread in Haiti ... We are profoundly sorry for our role," Ban said.

According to numerous independent experts, cholera was introduced to Haiti by infected Nepalese UN peacekeepers sent to the Caribbean country after the massive 2010 earthquake.

Cholera, a disease that is transmitted through contaminated drinking water and causes acute diarrhoea, is a major challenge in a country with poor sanitary conditions.

The UN reiterated its rejection of claims that it is also legally responsible for the damages from the health emergency.

"We do not change our basic legal position," UN Deputy Secretary General Jan Eliasson told reporters on Thursday.

The UN chief also formally presented the 193-nation General Assembly with a "new approach", a two-pronged programme to help the families of the cholera victims and support the battle against the disease.


The UN hopes the new proposal will raise $400m over two years, but funding for prior UN assistance to Haiti has been slow to arrive.


Aid to victims

Ban urged donors to finance the programme and confirmed on Thursday that two programmes were planned, each costing $200m.

One will strengthen the fight against the epidemic, which resurged after Hurricane Matthew devastated the country in early October, and improve the country's sanitary infrastructure.

Some 72 percent of Haitians have no toilets at home and 42 percent still lack access to drinking water, the UN says.
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Source: ALJAZEERA


Thursday, December 1, 2016

Relevant news this week

FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/Getty Images

1. Trump starts 'thank you' tour through states he won

President-elect Donald Trump, most of his Cabinet picks in place, kicks off his "Trump USA Thank You Tour 2016" on Thursday with a massive rally at the U.S. Bank Arena in Cincinnati. Earlier in the day, Trump and Vice President-elect Mike Pence, the governor of Indiana, will hold an event in Indianapolis with Carrier Corp, the heating and air-conditioning company that agreed this week to keep at least 800 jobs in Indiana that it had planned to move to Mexico. No details have yet been released on the price of keeping those jobs in Indiana, and hundreds of workers at the plant could still lose their jobs. Trump's victory tour will focus on states where he beat his Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton, in the election. [Politico, The Salt Lake Tribune]

 

2. Colombian Congress approves new peace deal with FARC rebels

Colombia's Congress ratified a revised peace deal with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, known by its Spanish acronym FARC, on Wednesday night, marking a major step toward ending five decades of civil war. Voters in October narrowly rejected the first version of the accord, which opponents said was too lenient on the rebels. The new deal exposes more rebels to criminal prosecution, but critics accused President Juan Manuel Santos of ramming the agreement through and sidestepping the will of the people by seeking lawmakers' approval instead of holding another referendum. [USA Today, The New York Times]

 

3. Pelosi reelected as House Democratic leader

Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) won another term as House Democratic leader on Wednesday, surviving a challenge from Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) in a closed-door vote. Ryan received 63 votes, while Pelosi got almost exactly the two-thirds she predicted, with 134 votes. Although the vote was far from close, it amounted to the largest defection against Pelosi since she took over the party's House leadership in 2002. Still, the victory demonstrated that Pelosi's influence within the party remained solid despite the Republicans' win in the November elections, in which they retained control of the House and Senate and put Donald Trump in the White House. [The Hill, The Associated Press]

 



4. Death toll reaches 7 in eastern Tennessee wildfires

The death toll from wildfires eastern Tennessee rose to seven on Wednesday, with at least 53 other people treated for injuries at hospitals. The fires have engulfed two tourist towns — Gatlinburg and Pigeon Forge — near Great Smoky Mountains National Park. More than 700 homes and businesses have been destroyed, nearly half of them in Gatlinburg. Park Superintendent Cassius Cash said the fire that swept through the park and nearby areas was "likely to be human-caused." The fires, which had burned 16,000 acres by late Wednesday, spread so quickly that many of the thousands forced to evacuate left with only the clothes on their backs. One woman at a shelter said it was like "hell opened up." Rainfall finally arrived in the drought-stricken area, helping firefighters douse the blaze, but brought new threats — mudslides, floods, and tornadoes. [The Washington Post, Los Angeles Times]

 

5. OPEC agrees to first output cut since 2008

OPEC agreed to its first production cut since 2008 on Wednesday, sending oil prices surging by more than 9 percent. The deal came after Saudi Arabia, the world's largest producer, agreed to what Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih described as "a big hit," shouldering the largest of the 1.2 million barrels a day in cuts. Iran had been resisting cuts, insisting it should be allowed to regain market share it lost under recently lifted Western sanctions. Under a compromise, Iran will be allowed to boost production slightly from its October level. Traders said the oil rally might quickly fizzle, as the cuts won't be enough to end a global glut. [Reuters]

 

6. Veterans head to North Dakota to protect pipeline protesters

Two thousand U.S. military veterans plan to form a human shield around protesters against the Dakota Access oil pipeline project on the edge of the Standing Rock Sioux reservation in North Dakota, protest organizers said Wednesday. The veterans are expected to arrive in time for next week's deadline the federal government has set for the protesters to leave their camp near the construction site. The state this week backed away from a threat to cut off supplies to the camp. Protesters vow to stay and continue rallying for a change in the route of the $3.8 billion pipeline project, which they say threatens the reservation's water supply and sacred Native American sites. [Reuters, The New York Times]

 

7. Officer who fatally shot Keith Lamont Scott won't be charged

A Charlotte, North Carolina, prosecutor said Wednesday that Brentley Vinson, the police officer who fatally shot Keith Lamont Scott in September, will not face charges. Vinson is black, as was Scott. Police said Scott had a handgun when he was shot in a confrontation outside his apartment building, but the killing sparked demonstrations calling for police to release dashboard and body camera footage. Mecklenburg County District Attorney R. Andrew Murray said in a news conference that Vinson's use of deadly force was justified because he feared for his own life and the safety of his fellow officers. [The Charlotte Observer]

 



8. Ohio State attack suspect possibly inspired by al Qaeda, ISIS

The student who injured 11 people at Ohio State University this week might have been inspired by al Qaeda propagandist Anwar al-Awlaki, who was killed in a 2011 drone strike in Yemen, and the Islamic State, investigators said Wednesday. The suspect, Abdul Razak Ali Artan, was shot and killed by a campus police officer shortly after witnesses say he plowed his car into pedestrians, then got out and slashed people with a butcher knife. Angela Byers, the F.B.I. special agent in charge of the agency's Cincinnati office, said investigators have found no evidence anyone else was involved directly in the attack, although ISIS claims Artan was a "soldier" of the extremist group. Awlaki and ISIS both have called on Muslims to launch independent attacks on the U.S. [The New York Times]

 

9. Crew said plane ran out of fuel before Colombia crash

Minutes before a plane crashed in Colombia on Monday, killing 71 people, the pilot reportedly informed air traffic controllers that he had "run out of fuel," The Associated Press reported Wednesday. Bolivian flight attendant Ximena Sanchez, one of six people who survived the crash, told a rescuer the same story. "We ran out of fuel. The airplane turned off." The pilot also said in a leaked recording that he was requesting permission to land because the plane had suffered a "total electric failure." The aircraft crashed about eight miles from the MedellĂ­n airport. Investigators still have not said what they believe caused the plane, which was carrying a Brazilian soccer team and journalists, to crash. [The Associated Press, USA Today]

 

10. Big Mac inventor Jim Delligatti dies at 98

Jim Delligatti, inventor of the McDonald's Big Mac, has died at his home in a Pittsburgh suburb. He was 98. Delligatti first served the now-iconic sandwich — two beef patties, special sauce, lettuce, cheese, pickles, and onions on a three-layer sesame-seed bun — at his Uniontown, Pennsylvania, McDonald's outlet in 1967. The chain started serving it nationwide the following year. Delligatti said he was just improvising his own version of double-decker sandwiches served elsewhere. "I would never have dreamed that my creation would turn into a piece of Americana," he once said, according to McDonald's. [CNN]
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Source: THE WEEK


How neglect and bad decision can kill and make people cry

Colombian authorities say evidence is growing that a plane carrying a Brazilian football team crashed because it ran out of fuel as it tried to land. 

The plane had no fuel on impact, an official said, corroborating audio of the pilot asking to land because of a fuel shortage and electric failure.

The capital Bogota was mentioned on the flight plan as a possible refuelling stop, but the plane did not land there.

The plane plunged into a mountainside near Medellin late on Monday.


Only six of the 81 people on board the plane survived.

"Having been able to do an inspection of all of the remains and parts of the plane, we can affirm clearly that the aircraft did not have fuel at the moment of impact," civil aviation chief Alfredo Bocanegra told a news conference.


Freddy Bonilla, another aviation official, said regulations stipulated that aircraft must have 30 minutes of fuel in reserve to reach an alternative airport in an emergency, but "in this case the plane did not have" it.

"The engines are the electrical source... but without fuel, obviously the electrical source would have been completely lost," he added.

In a leaked tape, the pilot can be heard warning of a "total electric failure" and "lack of fuel". Just before the tape ends, he says he is flying at an altitude of 9,000ft (2,745m).

The plane was carrying the Brazilian football team Chapecoense, who had been due to play a cup final against Atletico Nacional in Medellin on Wednesday evening.


Fans gathered at the Atletico Nacional stadium in Medellin on the evening the match was due to be playe -- copyright Reuters

Refuelling stops

The team flew from Sao Paulo to Santa Cruz on a commercial flight, then switched to the chartered aircraft.

Brazil's O Globo reported that because of a delayed departure, a refuelling stop in Cobija, on the border between Brazil and Bolivia, was abandoned because the airport did not operate at night.

The pilot had the option to refuel in Bogota, but headed straight to Medellin.

"The pilot was the one who took the decision," Gustavo Vargas, a representative of Lamia, which operated the plane, was quoted as saying in Bolivian newspaper Pagina Siete. "He thought the fuel would last."

Approaching Medellin, the pilot asked for permission to land because of fuel problems, without making a formal distress call.

But another plane from airline VivaColombia had priority because it had already reported mechanical problems, the co-pilot of another plane in the air at the time said.

The pilot of the crashed plane is heard asking urgently for directions to the airport before the audio recording ends.

Officials say the plane's "black boxes", which record flight details, will be sent to the UK to be opened by investigators. A full investigation into the crash is expected to take months.


On Wednesday night, when the match had been due to take place, tens of thousands of fans gathered at the Medellin stadium - and at Chapecoense's home ground in Chapeco - to pay tearful tributes.

Many wore white and carried candles as a mark of respect. Chapecoense lost 19 players in the crash. Twenty journalists were also killed.



Of the survivors, Chapecoense said that two players remained in a critical but stable condition, while the club's goalkeeper had had one leg amputated and might still lose his other foot.

An injured journalist also remained in critical condition, the club said.
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Source: BBC