Friday, January 13, 2012

Intel demos Medfield-based smartphone reference design at CES (video)

There we go! Head past all the months-old Ultrabooks in Intel's CES booth, and you'll stumble across something less pedestrian: a reference smartphone, based on the chipmaker's Medfield platform. How it looks is irrelevant, really -- that chintzy, fingerprint-prone slab of plastic offers no hints as to what the Samsungs and HTCs of the smartphone world are going to create. What matters here is what's inside: this 4-inch handset packs a single-core 1.6GHz Intel Atom Z2460 chip, XXM 6260 modem and Intel GMA graphics, along with your requisite WiFi radio, accelerometer, etc. (Intel had Gingerbread installed, though that'll hardly be current by the time Medfield starts shipping.)

Though battery life will naturally vary by manufacturer, this particular device houses a 1,460mAh juicepack promising 45 hours of audio playback, eight hours of 3G voice calls, five hours of 3G browsing or 14 days of standby. At the same time, Intel was demoing Modern Combat 2, as you can see in that lead shot, and playing HD video playing through the phone's micro-HDMI slot. Look closely at those videos below, and you'll see the output is mostly smooth with some slight stuttering, though trust us when we say video playback and gaming were more fluid on the device itself. Have a peek below and judge for yourselves, and hopefully one day in the not-too-distant future we'll be able to size up the battery life situation too.

Continue reading Intel demos Medfield-based smartphone reference design at CES (video)

Intel demos Medfield-based smartphone reference design at CES (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 Jan 2012 15:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/01/10/intel-demos-medfield-based-smartphone-reference-design-at-ces-v/

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SEC wants banks to say more on European debt exposure (Reuters)

Jan 9 (Reuters) ? The Securities and Exchange Commission has urged banks to publish more details about their exposure to European sovereign debt, a factor in the recent bankruptcy of the futures brokerage MF Global Holdings Ltd (MFGLQ.PK).

In guidance issued on Friday, the regulator's Division of Corporation Finance said disclosures by publicly-traded financial institutions have been "inconsistent in both substance and presentation."

It said this could make it harder for investors to discern how much risk the banks are taking, both individually and relative to each other, and how the exposures will affect operating results or financial health.

The SEC urged that banks reveal direct and indirect exposures "separately by country, segregated between sovereign and non-sovereign exposures."

It said they should also provide more details on hedging, through such instruments as credit default swaps, and sums they might need to raise if forced to close out their positions.

"In determining which countries are covered by this guidance, registrants should focus on those experiencing significant economic, fiscal and/or political strains such that the likelihood of default would be higher than would be anticipated when such factors do not exist," the SEC said.

The non-binding guidance was issued about two months after MF Global filed for bankruptcy protection, amid a liquidity crunch spurred by investor and customer worries about its $6.3 billion bet on sovereign debt from Belgium, Ireland, Italy, Portugal and Spain.

MF Global had revealed that exposure in the prior week.

Worries about European debt exposure have also weighed on the stocks of Morgan Stanley (MS.N) and the investment bank Jefferies Group Inc (JEF.N).

The SEC is trying to learn more about some of the more opaque means that banks use to reduce the risk of credit losses, including derivatives and off-balance-sheet financings. This could reduce the threat of further liquidity shortfalls.

An SEC spokesman declined to comment.

Another regulator, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, has stepped up oversight of leverage at brokerages after concluding that MF Global had not been fully candid in disclosing its European debt exposure as little as one month prior to the bankruptcy.

Jon Corzine, a former New Jersey governor, stepped down as MF Global's chief executive on November 4, four days after the New York-based company's bankruptcy filing. (Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Additional reporting by Carrick Mollenkamp in New York and Sarah N. Lynch in Washington, D.C.; editing by Carol Bishopric)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120110/bs_nm/us_sec_banks_europeandebt

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Thursday, January 12, 2012

US denies role in Iranian scientist's death (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton says the U.S. played no role in the killing of an Iranian nuclear scientist and says the U.S. is looking for an international understanding with Iran that ends its uranium enrichment program.

Clinton categorically denied any U.S. involvement in Mostafa Ahmadi Roshan's death.

Reports said two assailants on a motorcycle attached a magnetic bomb to Roshan's car, killing him and his driver Wednesday. Roshan was a chemistry expert and director of the Natanz uranium enrichment facility in central Iran.

Clinton called recent Iranian threats to close off the Persian Gulf "provocative and dangerous." She said the U.S. was committed to keeping the international waterway open. She called it "part of the lifeline that keeps oil and gas moving around the world."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iran/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120111/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/us_us_iran

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Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Who gets auto insurance cheapest? | Auto Insurance FAQ

When shopping for auto insurance, you will quickly learn that quotes can vary greatly from one company to another. Find the lowest price you could pay today with our FREE quote comparison tool! Most companies offer some discounts to their potential clients. There are many different factors that will affect the cost of auto insurance from one person to the next.Who gets auto insurance cheapest?

It is important for you to keep a variety of factors in mind when shopping for car insurance. Once you know what you need, try our ZIP code search and start saving!

Your Accident Record

Your accident record will affect your auto insurance rates.

  • Your accident history will affect your car insurance rates. If you drive safely and avoid accidents, you will most likely receive excellent rates. Your rates will still be very good if you have been in an accident, but not one that you caused.
  • Good rates can still be available to you with some companies if you have had a single accident for which you are at fault. Many companies offer forgiveness benefits making it possible for a driver to have one accident without much change in their premiums. Of course, your final rates can still be affected by the severity of the accident.

An individual who has never been in an accident caused by the individual or by someone else will receive the cheapest auto insurance rates.

Your Driving Record

Who gets auto insurance the cheapest?Your driving record can affect your car insurance rates.

An auto insurance company will offer you good rates for your car insurance if you do not have traffic violations.

  1. You will receive a good price for your auto insurance if your record is clean of any speeding tickets, stop sign violations or other traffic offenses.
  2. Even if you have had a traffic violation, it is still possible to receive cheap rates on auto insurance. Some companies will forgive one traffic violation. If your traffic violation was some time ago and you do not carry any points on your license currently for the traffic offense, you can still receive good rates.

Individuals who have never been convicted of Driving Under the Influence or other serious and related offenses will receive the best car insurance rates. Of course an individual with one more DUI convictions can struggle to receive affordable car insurance rates.

Your Credit Rating

A credit rating is going to affect the premiums you pay for auto insurance. A company will charge you the lowest rates if they feel confident that you will pay your auto insurance on time each month.

  • The best auto insurance rates will be offered to you if you have excellent credit. If your credit score is very high, you will be able to receive superb rates for your auto insurance. This is especially true if you also have a good driving history and receive a good rating for your accident history.
  • You can also receive good auto insurance rates if your credit is not top-notch but overall is still very good. This is especially true if you have a good payment history with your priory insurance company or with other bills for which you pay a set fee every month or every few months.
  • If your credit is poor, it is not likely that you will be able to receive the cheapest auto insurance rates. You can still receive reasonable rates if you have a good driving record and a record with no or very few accidents.

Comparison Shopping

You will receive auto insurance the cheapest if you use comparison shopping. With a few simple steps you can find the lowest car insurance rates and best coverage available to you.

  1. Gather the details of your current auto insurance coverage or determine what level of coverage you would like to have for your auto insurance.
  2. Get online so that you can enter all information on the forms for comparison quote shopping. Be prepared to receive quotes from more than one auto insurance company.
  3. Carefully review not just the prices but all the level of coverage and other benefits provided with each quote you receive.
  4. Keep in mind that the lowest quote might not be the cheapest. For example, some extremely low quotes might have deductibles that you could not afford if you were in an accident. Carefully review the details of all quotes before selecting the one that is truly the best deal for you.

Comparison shopping makes it possible for you to receive several different quotes for auto insurance. It is difficult to receive the cheapest auto insurance if you are only going to shop with one or even two insurance providers.

You will also benefit from competitive rates when using the Internet for comparison shopping. Companies will offer you lower premiums when they know you will be receiving quotes from several different companies.

Other Discounts

There are various types of auto insurance discounts offered by insurance companies that can help you to receive the cheapest rates for coverage. You should compare discounts offered by more than one company to find those companies offer discounts that apply to you.

Auto Insurance CheapestFor example, you should check with the insurance provider you are currently using for other types of insurance.

There is an excellent chance that the company will provide you with lower rates on your car insurance if you add this type of insurance to your current policies.

Some companies will also offer you a discount if more than one driver at your address uses the same auto insurance company. Consider receiving a quote from the same company where other members of your household insurance their car.

Companies will often provide you with reduced rates for your auto insurance if your car has advanced safety or security features. You should also look for companies that offer you lower rates if you are someone who completed a driver?s education course at some point. Many companies will even offer good student discounts if drivers have excellent grades.

Once again it is important to compare rates from more than one company in order to find those that offer the most special discounts.

Final Thoughts on Cheap Auto Insurance

The people with the best driving records and best credit ratings will receive the best auto insurance rates. See what you could be paying with a FREE quote comparison! ?It is essential to shop around and receive auto insurance quotes from more than one auto insurance provider in order to receive the lowest rates and best levels of coverage especially if your credit or driving history is less than ideal. Start your comparison now with a FREE ZIP code search!

Source: http://www.autoinsurance.org/who-gets-auto-insurance-cheapest/

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Tuesday, January 10, 2012

HTC Titan II Windows Phone features 16MP camera

HTC Titan II

?

HTC has announced a new Windows Phone that blows every other phone available in the market, at least in terms of camera. Dubbed as Titan II, the phone will arrive on AT&T supporting its 4G LTE network.

In addition to the fast speeds, the Titan II comes with a whopping 16 megapixel camera sensor that makes it at par with some of the digital cameras. The main camera is supported by a 28mm wide-angle lens (f2.6), 720p HD video recording support and LED flash.

Titan II runs Windows Mango OS and features 4.7-inch WVGA display, 1.5GHz processor and 1.3MP main camera.

[Via Windows Team Blog]

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Monday, January 9, 2012

Pure intros the Contour 200i and Sensia 200D, we rock out with our hands on


It's the same old story -- a company coming to the States, attempting to make a splash in the US during the craziest tech week of the year. In the case of Pure, however, the company actually has some pretty cool looking products to show off.

Take the Contour 200i Air, a slick Airplay speaker system that offers up the same build quality as some of the pricier models in this space. We played with the device a bit, and have to say, the half-circle build really is quite nice. The speaker also has a bit of heft to it -- it's not really small by any stretch -- after all, the thing does have to support iPads, via the built-in dock in the front. It also gets fairly loud, though at higher volumes, the bass does tend to distort things, a fair bit. Look for it to hit the US around March for $329.

Also making its debut tonight is the oddly named Sensia 200D, a little football-shaped music system with a touch display on its front. Like the 200i, the Sensia feels like a solidly built product -- one with some weight to it. We fiddled around with the thing, a bit. The touchscreen wasn't quite as responsive as we liked, though that may have had something to do with the fact that the player really couldn't do much at the moment -- the company's network was down, and without connectivity, the thing is really just a pretty-looking paperweight.

When it does work, you can use the device to stream music from your home computer, listen to internet radio stations and use the Pure Music service, which the company promises will hit North America at some point this year. We'll be sure to put the thing through its paces at some time in the future, when the internet gods are smiling on us a bit more. The Sensia will run you $450 when it hits our shores in April.

Pure intros the Contour 200i and Sensia 200D, we rock out with our hands on originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 08 Jan 2012 20:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/V6R3dP3f5WE/

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Thursday, January 5, 2012

Sudden reunification could be trouble for Seoul

(AP) ? A single, reunified Korea has long been a cherished dream of people on both sides of the world's most heavily fortified border. South Korea even has a Cabinet-level ministry preparing for the day.

And while Kim Jong Il's death last month has raised those hopes higher among some in Seoul, few are eager to talk about the cold reality: Sudden reunification could be traumatic for both countries.

Any North Korean collapse and hurried reunification, analysts say, could spell the end of Pyongyang's ruling class while flooding Seoul with refugees and causing huge financial burdens ? perhaps trillions of dollars ? for South Koreans who have only recently gotten used to their country's emergence as a rising Asian power.

Korea observers aren't predicting such a collapse or the kind of "big bang" reunification that happened in Germany, which saw the overnight fall of the communist side and its swift absorption into its Western neighbor. The new North Korean leader, Kim Jong Il's son Kim Jong Un, is fast consolidating power, winning key backing from the government and military.

Still, the extraordinary changes in North Korea following the Dec. 17 death of the man whose iron rule lasted 17 years have stirred up dreams of a single Korea among some in the South. And not just in those with memories of life before the country was divided into U.S.- and Soviet-occupied zones in 1945.

The Swiss-educated Kim Jong Un "is less allergic than his father was to introducing new ideas from the world. That will help ease isolation and open room for reunification," said Bae Sang-il, a 36-year-old office worker. "A generational change is meaningful in North Korea."

Many South Koreans support the idea of eventual reunification, but they seem more wary of the huge costs that will come with it.

A poll in South Korea late last year, before Kim's death, showed just over half of those interviewed believed they would eventually be better off after reunification, although more than two-thirds said the costs are bigger than the benefits.

Both countries talk about reunification, but they have very different notions of what it would be.

North Korea sees it as a two-state federation, with each state abiding by its own rules and regulations but as one Korea.

South Korea and its U.S. ally would likely balk at anything other than a Korea that's a liberal democracy, or at least moving in that direction.

From Seoul's point of view, slow and steady are crucial for any successful reunification. A sudden reunification would be a serious blow for South Korea's vibrant economy and well-ordered society.

South Korea, whose constitution enshrines the goal of reunification, will be much better off, analysts say, if it can gradually build up a North Korean economy that Seoul estimates is about one-fortieth its own size.

Officials in Seoul will be faced with a monumental set of problems, whatever happens. They will likely have to open up the North's economy to trade and investment, quickly raise the living standards of millions, control the flow of North Koreans into the South, and retrain North Korean bureaucrats so they can help run the country under new policies.

This will be very expensive.

A South Korean government-affiliated institute said recently that the cost could be up to $240 billion after a year and up to $2.4 trillion after a decade.

South Korea's president has urged his country to prepare for reunification by studying the possibility of adopting a tax aimed at raising money for the costs of integration. The idea has largely stalled for the time being.

The German model is often raised for Korea, but there are important differences.

Germans in the west largely footed the bill for reunification after the collapse of communism, bringing the overall infrastructure of the former East Germany up to a standard similar to that in the West.

North Korea's population, however, is about half the size of the South's, while East Germany's population was only a quarter of the West's, according to Erik Lueth, an economist at the Royal Bank of Scotland. East Germany, he points out, was one of the wealthiest of the Soviet affiliated states; North Korea is much poorer than the South, and there are estimates of widespread malnutrition.

Also, East Germany's ruling elite, chafing under the Soviet yoke, was not averse to the idea of uniting with West Germany and even accepting its capitalist system. North Korean leaders, analysts say, won't quickly accept a system that would take away their power and seek accountability for a rule that the United States and others say often trampled on rights.

"Reunification would be terrible for North Korea's elite and wonderful for the North Korean people, although there would be a traumatic period of adjustment," said Ralph Cossa, president of Pacific Forum CSIS, a Hawaii-based think tank. "For the top handful of North Korean leaders, reunification under Seoul would mean jail or worse."

For South Korea, reunification "will no doubt be messy and costly, even if it comes with a whimper, not a bang," Cossa said. Still, "living with a hostile, unpredictable, nuclear-armed North Korea is not much fun either."

Reunification could also provide eventual benefits for the South's economy.

Economist Marcus Noland at the Peterson Institute for International Economics describes a "peace dividend" that would come with a reduction in military tensions and the associated drop in military spending this would allow. The North also has abundant natural resources and a relatively well-educated and cheap labor force.

Predicting the future is, of course, a gamble, especially in a place as unpredictable as North Korea. That hasn't stopped people from trying: Paddy Power, an Irish betting agency, is offering odds of 12 to 1 that Korean reunification occurs before 2020.

History, however, provides some potential clues about North Korea's future. Despite famine, international isolation and outside skepticism, North Korea survived the 1994 death of Kim Il Sung, the North's founder and father of Kim Jong Il.

"Now, despite a food shortage and economic hardships, the regime will probably be able to avoid a worst-case scenario due to unity among its top officials and assistance from China," former South Korean Foreign Minister Han Sung-joo wrote recently in the Chosun Ilbo.

So reunification, at least for the time being, seems a distant dream. And that may be a good thing for Seoul.

___

Associated Press writers Hyung-jin Kim and Sam Kim contributed to this story from Seoul. Follow AP's Korea coverage at twitter.com/APklug and twitter.com/samkim_ap

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-01-04-AS-Koreas-One-Korea?/id-1a61fc98cbfb420ca08f649fbeb2fe46

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