Monday, July 29, 2013

Amazon promises 7,000 new jobs ahead of Obama visit

Amazon to bump its US warehouse workforce by 25 percent

Amazon has just announced that it will add 5,000 jobs at 17 fulfillment centers across the US, along with 2,000 customer service positions. The news comes just ahead of a visit tomorrow by President Obama to the retail giant's Chattanooga, Tennessee fulfillment center, where he's set to outline new job-creation policies. Amazon says such jobs typically pay 30 percent more than in retail stores, and all are full-time and include retirement, health care and stock benefits. The company has tripled its workforce over the past three years, and currently employs over 20,000 employees in its US warehouses, and 97,000 worldwide -- neck and neck with Microsoft. Such expansion resulted in a small loss $7 million last quarter, despite growing sales, but Amazon evidently plans to carry on regardless.

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Via: AllThingsD

Source: Amazon

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/07/29/amazon-promises-7000-new-jobs-ahead-of-obama-visit/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Sunday, July 28, 2013

Obama: In America, no war should ever be forgotten

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Six decades after the Korean War ended, President Barack Obama said Saturday that American veterans deserved a better homecoming from a war-weary nation and that their legacy is the 50 million people who live freely in a democratic South Korea.

"Here in America, no war should ever be forgotten, and no veteran should ever be overlooked," he said in a speech at the Korean War Veterans Memorial on the National Mall, where ceremonies marked the 60th anniversary of the end of hostilities on the peninsula.

Obama said the conflict didn't unite or divide the country the same way World War II or the Vietnam War did, respectively, and that U.S. veterans came home to neither parades nor protests because "there was, it seemed, a desire to forget, to move on" by Americans tired of battle.

But they "deserved better," Obama said, adding that, on Saturday's anniversary, "perhaps the highest tribute we can offer our veterans of Korea is to do what should have been done the day you came home."

He appealed for people to pause and let these veterans "carry us back to the days of their youth and let us be awed by their shining deeds." In the audience of several thousand on a sunny and humid morning were dozens of American and Korean veterans of the war. Obama asked them to stand and be recognized.

The 1950-1953 war had North Korean and Chinese troops on one side against U.S.-led United Nations and South Korean forces. It ended on July 27, 1953, 60 years ago Saturday, with the signing of an armistice.

A formal peace treaty was never signed, leaving the Korean Peninsula in a technical state of war and divided at the 38th parallel between its communist north and democratic south. More than 36,000 Americans were killed in the conflict. The U.S. still has 28,500 troops based in the south.

Yet the costs of the war continue to mount even amid relative peace.

Hostility remains between the two Koreas and between the North and the United States, which still has no formal diplomatic relations with the communist nation. That antagonism is rooted in the U.S. commitment to take a lead role in defending the South should war again break out on the peninsula.

Washington also has tried for years to wean its ally off its dependence on the U.S. military, setting and then delaying target dates for switching from U.S. to Korean control of the forces that would defend the South against a possible new attack from the North.

Another legacy is the challenge of accounting for the roughly 7,900 U.S. servicemen still listed as missing in action.

Obama said the war is a reminder that a country's obligation to its fallen and their families endures long after battle. He pledged that the U.S. would not rest "until we give these families a full accounting of their loved ones."

Obama also alluded to the Korean War sometimes being called the "forgotten war" and noted long-standing suggestions that it was fought for naught, summed up in the phrase "die for tie." He disputed that characterization, saying "today, we can say with confidence that war was no tie. Korea was a victory."

When 50 million South Koreans live in freedom in stark contrast to the dire conditions endured by their countrymen in the North, "that's a victory. That's your legacy," he said.

___

Follow Darlene Superville on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/dsupervilleap

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-america-no-war-ever-forgotten-185356604.html

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Saturday, July 27, 2013

NCAA targeting rule highlights Big Ten media day

Old 07-25-2013, 07:01 AM ? #1

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NCAA targeting rule highlights Big Ten media day


CHICAGO ? College football is changing. Conferences have been realigned, a playoff system is being implemented, and rules are forever being tweaked, both for the integrity of the game and its players.

Player safety has been a recurring trend in these rule changes. The NCAA?s new targeting rule, which goes into effect for the 2013 season, is one of them. The rule change was an especially a hot topic at Wednesday?s Big Ten media session at the Chicago Hilton.

?Player safety is on everyone?s mind right now,? Iowa head coach Kirk Ferentz said. ?It was 30, 35 years ago [too]. It?s respect for the game.?

The rule, which will result in automatic ejection and a 15-yard penalty at the discretion of the referee officiating the game, comes into effect if a player hits too high on his opponent?s chest, uses the crown of his helmet for the hit, or creates helmet-to-helmet contact while tackling.

read more: NCAA targeting rule highlights Big Ten media day - The Daily Iowan


It's coming gents, they're gonna' try it out at the collegiate levels, get comfortable with it and then bring it to the NFL. How ironic, the ESPN Tackle/Hit of the Year Award went to Jadeveon Clowney (SC) vs Michigan in the Outback Bowl ... no 'targeting' there, just a solid hit but he would have been gone for a game-an-a-half under the new rules ... .

We'll all gonna' be saying, "We remember when ... " by the time they're done with this.

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Source: http://blackandgold.com/college/59058-ncaa-targeting-rule-highlights-big-ten-media-day.html

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Thursday, July 25, 2013

Google/Motorola now have their own X8 ARM processor, to debut in new Droids

Google/Motorola now have their own X8 ARM processor, to debut in new Droids | 9to5Google

motorola-x8-soc-gpu

Something we didn?t see coming! Google subsidy Motorola announced at today?s Droid event that the new Droid Ultra, Droid Maxx, and Droid Mini?smartphones would be powered by an in-house System-on-a-Chip (SoC). The new ?X8? 8-core processor has a dual core CPU, a quad core GPU and a separate processor for ?natural language processing? and it rounds out with?computing core to control them all.

Brian Klug from Anandtech says that the CPU is a Qualcomm Snapdragon.

Motorola says this processor will double graphics speed and boost CPU by about 25%.

More importantly, it will allow these new phones to ?always be listening? without draining the battery. Speaking of battery, did you hear that the new Droid Maxx has 48-hour battery life? Head over to the event roundup for all of the details. ?Image via Verge

'; jQuery('body').append( content ); } else if ( ! navigator.userAgent.match(/iPhone/) && ! dd_banner_cookie ) { var content = ''; jQuery('body').append( content ); var $hide = jQuery( document.getElementById( 'hide-dd-banner' ) ); $hide.on( 'click', function( event ) { event.preventDefault(); var $ddBanner = jQuery( document.getElementById( 'daily-deal-banner' ) ), date = new Date(); date.setDate(date.getDate() + 10); // add 10 days to today to expire the cookie. var value = "true; expires=" + date.toUTCString() + "; path=/"; document.cookie = "hide-dd-banner=" + value; $ddBanner.animate( {left:'-50px'} ); }); }

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Body acceptance and self-esteem in men - Health, Fitness, and Sports

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PostPosted: Mon Jul 22, 2013 1:23 pm?? ?Post subject: Body acceptance and self-esteem in men Reply with quote

I'm starting to be more and more aware of this as an issue. I had a boyfriend who had always struggled with his weight but got bigger over time. His body acceptance was zero and it interfered with his sexual appetite (and consequently ended the relationship.) Looking back and seeing it for what it is, this makes me sad. I'm not saying that being obese is good for health, but that everyone, male or female, should like their body.

I see men are under a lot of pressure to have a certain body now more than they did 15 years ago. It's good if men want to work out to be healthy, but I see some unhealthy attitudes and practices developing. The way their self-esteem is affected upsets the way they go about relationships too.

Thinking of the kind of men I'm attracted to: I like all sorts of body types. I like skinny rockstars and 'bears' just as much (although I'm not a gay man, I can see what gay men see in bears.) I also like athletic people like runners and cyclists. I even like a geeky computer guys with a 24 BMI and little man boobies (this is probably because I would probably look like this if I was a guy and was back down to my normal weight) Laughing

Men are so insecure and try to bravado it away with 'bro' culture and if they're fat, laughing it off and being 'comedic' fat guys. It's much more acceptable to call a man a 'fat bastard' than it is to say a woman is fat. Their are tonnes of body acceptance blogs and sites for women but not for men. There's this idea that a woman can be hot if she's big, because she can be a BBW and have curves, but big men are just gross unless they have an unhealthily low body fat % and turn all the bulk into muscle.

This affects women, as well because women have relationships with these insecure guys. Also, I see body acceptance as a societal thing that men and women need to do together or not at all.

I think women (or men) should never:

1. Call a man a 'fat bastard'.
2. Sing the 'who ate all the pies' song at a man (this is a popular British song used to make fun of fat people, it's nearly always sung at men.)
3. Make fun of ectomorph men who take their top off and reveal a skinny chest and arms.
4. Make fun of endomorph men who don't have the societally required muscle definition to take their top off.
5. Refer to thin men as 'Skeletor' or a 'bag of bones'.

And I'm sure there are a few others. Who's with me?
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PostPosted: Mon Jul 22, 2013 6:56 pm?? ?Post subject: Re: Body acceptance and self-esteem in men Reply with quote

puddingmouse wrote:
I'm starting to be more and more aware of this as an issue. I had a boyfriend who had always struggled with his weight but got bigger over time. His body acceptance was zero and it interfered with his sexual appetite (and consequently ended the relationship.) Looking back and seeing it for what it is, this makes me sad. I'm not saying that being obese is good for health, but that everyone, male or female, should like their body.

I see men are under a lot of pressure to have a certain body now more than they did 15 years ago. It's good if men want to work out to be healthy, but I see some unhealthy attitudes and practices developing. The way their self-esteem is affected upsets the way they go about relationships too.

To me there seems to be a trend in media, movies, TV, to feature more muscular men than in the nineties. The "ideal" man seems to have grown in muscle mass.

The trend amongst the general public seems to be that people are getting fatter. The number of people having the normal body type (that most everyone had before) men generally had doing manual labour seems to me to be rapidly declining. This pressure you speak of may reflect that, and when most everyone had the normal body type there would be no need for such pressure.

What seems to be strongly trending where I live is the fitness culture amongst most between 16 and 30, or somewhere there about. A seriously large number of girls now hit the gym and it wasn't like that 5 or 10 years ago. Number of gyms have doubled in 2 years and what a 20 year old girl considers a desirable body is way off what it was 10 years ago. This has nothing to do with being overweight but about being "tight", or what they call it... This could be a worrying trend if a normal slim teenage girls feels she doesn't have the muscle tone that is becoming the norm or trend.

puddingmouse wrote:
of the kind of men I'm attracted to: I like all sorts of body types. I like skinny rockstars and 'bears' just as much (although I'm not a gay man, I can see what gay men see in bears.) I also like athletic people like runners and cyclists. I even like a geeky computer guys with a 24 BMI and little man boobies (this is probably because I would probably look like this if I was a guy and was back down to my normal weight)

A BMI of 23-24 seems to be what is generally considered desirable for men, with a BMI on the lower end being desirable for women, like 19-21.

The picture of the geek is more like being way heavier than 24, like obese, or on the low to end of the scale.

puddingmouse wrote:
Men are so insecure and try to bravado it away with 'bro' culture and if they're fat, laughing it off and being 'comedic' fat guys. It's much more acceptable to call a man a 'fat bastard' than it is to say a woman is fat. Their are tonnes of body acceptance blogs and sites for women but not for men. There's this idea that a woman can be hot if she's big, because she can be a BBW and have curves, but big men are just gross unless they have an unhealthily low body fat % and turn all the bulk into muscle.

This affects women, as well because women have relationships with these insecure guys. Also, I see body acceptance as a societal thing that men and women need to do together or not at all.


Depending on where you live, but being fat isn't something few are. In the US 64% were overweight, obese or pre-obese, 10 years ago. Likely significantly higher now and about a third being obese now. Most of western Europe isn't that far behind. With every second or so guy being a bit overweight it can't possibly have the same stigma attached to it as being an aspie, being gay, deaf, etc.

People get the weirdest ideas. This advocacy of being big could be dangerous to some degree. Even losing a little could have positive effect on health. Everyone knows being obese negatively effects health, and advocating the likes of obesity, smoking, drugs, alcohol, speeding, etc., probably shouldn't be done. This may be stretching what you were meaning, and I'm sorry about that, but after watching a few programmes about BBWs, acceptance and such, it did seem a strange culture. Either way society's pressure should not be making people feel bad and get depressed because they don't conform and have trouble shedding their weight. One is what one is and you have to be happy about that and accept yourself.

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PostPosted: Mon Jul 22, 2013 10:02 pm?? ?Post subject: Reply with quote

Eh, I feel there should be moderation for accepting the body completely. There is a very unhealthy culture of accepting unhealthy lifestyles etc, "thin privilege" and all that.

I had health and self-esteem issues in the past, I am at least proud of my 100lbs weight loss. My sense of being now feels pretty good. It is a shame that there are people that accept their unhealthy bodies as fate and that everyone else is wrong, I wouldn't be surprised this type of inflamed attitude is killing people.

Balance, moderation and promoting general good health is key. From experiences, Take full self-confidence within yourself but also take responsibility of health.


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Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Family of Egypt?s deposed president lashes out at military

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Source: http://thechronicleherald.ca/world/1143635-family-of-egypt-s-deposed-president-lashes-out-at-military

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