রবিবার, ৩০ জুন, ২০১৩

ECBC Zeus Messenger Bag


When I test a bag I like to put it through its paces by taking it out into the field and using it. So naturally, when I got the ECBC Zeus Messenger K7-203 in for review, I did what anyone would do to get a feel for the bag's usefulness and durability?I took it to a tradeshow in Taiwan.

From JFK International in New York to Taoyuan International Airport in Taipei, and back, and on to dozens of booth visits and press events in between, the Zeus Messenger served me quite well. For most of Computex I carried with me a laptop, camera, mobile hotspot, paper notebook, a handful of pens, several papers and travel documents, a handful of snacks, and a few dozen business cards. For some meetings I usually also brought along a number of other odds and ends (Spare memory card and batteries, USB SD Card reader, a USB-to-Ethernet dongle, and a pair of headphones), and I usually left meetings with more stuff than I brought, gathering brochures, flash drives, and various branded tchotchkes along the way.

Design and Features
The Zeus Messenger measures 18 by 13.8 by 3.5 inches (HWD), and weighs 2.1 pounds when empty. While that's by no means the lightest such bag we've reviewed, it's a fairly light weight for a sturdy single-compartment messenger bag. The bag itself is constructed of rugged Kodra Nylon, which is not only resistant to abrasion and tearing, and it's also waterproofed to protect your stuff from splashes and drizzles. The Zeus Messenger can be purchased in black, blue, green, linen, or berry. The look is pretty conservative?the blue or black will blend into any office environment?but it's definitely a case of form following function.

Inside, the bag is portioned out with dividers made of light rip-stop nylon, which doesn't monopolize the space meant for stuff but should be fairly durable over the months and years you use the bag. The bag is closed with one main flap secured with both Velcro and buckling nylon straps. This use of two different kinds of closures gives you the option of simply closing the flap when in a hurry?knowing that the Velcro will keep it securely closed?or to snap the buckles for more security.

Behind the large flap is an array of smaller pockets, fitted to everything from pens and sunglasses to notebooks (the paper kind), wallets, and passports. A zippered interior pocket is large enough to slip documents into, but it's just inaccessible enough?you have to peel open the Velcro-secured flap to get to it?that it's not immediately convenient, and I would have preferred a similar zippered document pocket along the back of the bag for more convenient access.

The Zeus Messenger has a single main compartment, which includes a padded laptop sleeve. The lining in this sleeve is soft to prevent scratching the plastic or glass of the laptop, and a removable foam block lets you adjust the pocket to more snugly fit a 13- to 15-inch laptop. Next to the laptop sleeve, inside the main compartment, there are two elastic-topped mesh pockets for stashing a power adapter or two without having to worry about removing a snarled tangle of cords later.

On the outside flap, there's a large zippered ticket pocket. Inside this large pocket is a smaller padded phone pocket (which incidentally works well for a digital voice recorder). On one end of the bag is a mesh pocket for loose objects, and at the other a zippered pocket that can either zip closed to secure small objects or pull out to comfortably store a water bottle.

The wide nylon shoulder strap is easily adjusted, thanks to a large lever-locking clasp that opens for simple adjustment buckle closes and clamps down to keep the strap secure. On the strap is an adjustable shoulder pad, with a stripe of textured rubberized fabric for traction. This alleviates a common problem seen on many messenger bags, wherein the adjustable shoulder strap will adjust itself out of proper position, settling somewhere in the small of your back instead of staying on the shoulder, where it belongs. Instead, thanks to the extra traction provided by that textured strip, the shoulder pad stays put, even as you shift the bag's position to get in or out of a car, or to grab a seat on the subway.

The bag also features a stout nylon handle, which gets extra padding and grip thanks to a strip of neoprene just inside the handle grip. The sturdy nylon always left me feeling secure while carrying the bag, with the weight properly distributed and no sagging. The neoprene underside of the handle made for a more comfortable grip, which was especially important when stuck carrying the bag briefcase style through a customs line at the airport.

On the back of the bag is luggage trolley pass-thru?a wide padded panel that pulls out from the bag and can be slipped onto the extended handle of a rolling suitcase. It's secured with Velcro, so when not in use, it's just a padded panel on the back of the bag, but when you're slogging through the airport with two other suitcases, trying to pull one and carry the other, maintaining enough of a normal posture to keep your shoulder bag from swinging wildly or slipping off a shoulder can become a giant pain in the butt. Being able to slip you shoulder bag onto a suitcase and not have to juggle with the larger bags is a big benefit, and anyone who travels for work or commutes with a second rolling bag will welcome the thoughtful addition.

Performance
So, after taking the ECBC Zeus Messenger halfway around the world and back, how did it do in regular use? While hauling my daily loadout of laptop, camera, notebook, and assorted stuff, it did pretty well. The bag was spacious enough for all of my gadgets, and the assorted pockets and compartments gave me plenty of options for keeping it all organized. The strap length was easily adjusted, but stayed secure after doing so, and the adjustable shoulder pad was good enough that I want it on any messenger bag I use.

My only complaint with the bag, as mentioned before, was the placement of the document pocket?I wanted a way to access my papers without opening the entire bag. One other thing I would have appreciated, and this is purely a personal preference, would be one or two loops on the outside of the bag for attaching a carabiner or similar clip. Aside from these two rather negligible issues, the bag was everything I wanted it to be.

All in all, the ECBC Zeus Messenger K7-203 is a well-constructed messenger bag, with room for all your stuff. The design is thoughtful and orderly, and the bag's structure and sturdy materials let me feel secure filling it with expensive and essential equipment without worrying about whether my things were loose in the bag. After a week of heavy use in three different countries and dozens of unique scenarios, it's safe to say that this is one bag you'll want to grab.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/KaKlbbT1XQ4/0,2817,2421177,00.asp

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Reiss on 'Football Today' podcast

June, 29, 2013

Jun 29

5:00

AM ET

ESPNBoston's Mike Reiss was a guest on ESPN's "Football Today" podcast with Robert Flores on Friday. The podcast can be heard here and included the following topics:

1. Recapping the week that was with Aaron Hernandez.

2. Contrasting Hernandez's demeanor in the courtroom vs. what he was like in the locker room.

3. Gauging the vibe with the Patriots' top decision-makers as it relates to where the Hernandez situation went wrong.

4. Where do the Patriots go from here from a football perspective?

Source: http://espn.go.com/blog/boston/new-england-patriots/post/_/id/4744871/reiss-on-football-today-podcast

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NYC Fourth of July: 'It Begins with a Spark'

NEW YORK (AP) ? What's new this Fourth of July?

A happy face with a wink exploding over New York City as part of Macy's Fourth of July Fireworks 2013 ? the nation's biggest display.

That's one of the spectacles being prepared to light up the sky on Thursday. Forty thousand shells were being loaded onto four barges in the city's Staten Island borough on Saturday in preparation for the massive celebration.

The exact location is kept secret for security reasons.

The barges will sit on the Hudson River for the show to be seen by an estimated 3 million people watching live in New York and New Jersey, plus millions more on television. Grammy-award winning musician Usher has created the soundtrack.

Show co-designer Gary Souza said organizers have scoured the world to find and purchase the most original new fireworks ? from China and Portugal to Spain and Malta.

The theme for this year's 25-minute show is "It Begins With A Spark."

The barges are to be set up on the river between Manhattan's West 24th and 42nd streets, with fireworks shooting about 1,000 feet into the air.

The plans began a year ago in Rialto, Calif., where Souza is part of the current generation of a family that runs Pyro Spectaculars by Souza.

Sixty pyrotechnicians worked on Staten Island all weekend before the holiday to prepare the high-tech digital animation.

This year, two other novelties will be a jellyfish discovered in China that explodes with a whistling sound, and bursting butterflies.

From midtown Manhattan, the Empire State Building will play along, showing off its recently upgraded LED lighting along with the fireworks.

Andy Lewis has been volunteering for the fireworks for the past 26 years.

"It's the best show in the world," said the firefighter from Las Vegas as he and the rest of the crew sat in Staten Island under a tent for lunch, enjoying the view of the New York City skyline across New York Harbor.

The first explosions are scheduled to go off at 9:25 p.m. on Thursday.

"It looks like pyrotechnical chaos at first, then it reins itself in," said Souza, looking at the neatly lined up mortar tubes.

And despite every possible precaution taken to ensure safety, "anything can happen," he said. "It's a dangerous business." Each year, he added, his mother has white-knuckled her way through the spectacle.

Safety is paramount, said executive producer Amy Kule.

After that, she said, "it's about how to make it as entertaining as possible, how to make it bigger and better ? playing with science and technology."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nyc-fourth-july-begins-spark-211727703.html

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Post DOMA, wedding bells on 'Modern Family'?

Wednesday's Supreme Court rulings on same-sex marriage could have a big impact on one "Modern Family" in particular.

The co-creator of the ABC comedy, Christopher Lloyd, told Entertainment Weekly that we might soon see a wedding for one of TV's favorite couples, Cam Tucker (Eric Stonestreet) and Mitchell Pritchett (Jesse Tyler Ferguson).

"It's a real possibility," Lloyd said. ?It?s certainly something we are contemplating on the show in ways we wouldn?t have in prior seasons. ... As you can imagine in Cam and Mitchell?s life, they would be feeling that a door has opened that was closed to them. Wouldn?t it be pretty tempting to think about walking through it? ... From our standpoint, that?s something to explore.?

Many in Hollywood celebrated the rulings with announcements of their own impending wedding bells: Melissa Etheridge revealed that she plans to tie the knot with her partner, Linda Wallem, and Kristen Bell and Dax Shepard recommitted to marrying one another now that their gay friends can host weddings of their own.

Amid the good cheer, Lloyd admitted that it was hard not to rally around his fictional characters, too.

?It?s a funny thing, sitting around and celebrating for your characters," he said. "We were happy for Mitch and Cam."

The actors who portray the loving couple were gleeful about the rulings themselves.

"Remember the old days when #DOMA was around and gay people couldn't get married in California? Crazy right!?" Tyler Ferguson tweeted.

"Im happy for my gay & lesbian friends. Cheers to gorgeous, wonderful & beautiful weddings, long, happy & fruitful lives and then dying," Stonestreet added.

Source: http://www.wmtw.com/Post-DOMA-wedding-bells-on-Modern-Family/-/8792672/20763728/-/ccf25iz/-/index.html?absolute=true

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শনিবার, ২৯ জুন, ২০১৩

Phoenix, Las Vegas bake in scorching heat

PHOENIX (AP) ? A blazing heat wave expected to send the mercury soaring to nearly 120 degrees in Phoenix and Las Vegas settled over the West on Friday, threatening to ground airliners and raising fears that people and pets will get burned on the scalding pavement.

The heat was so punishing that rangers took up positions at trailheads at Lake Mead in Nevada to persuade people not to hike. Zookeepers in Phoenix hosed down the elephants and fed tigers frozen fish snacks. And tourists at California's Death Valley took photos of the harsh landscape and a thermometer that read 121.

The mercury there was expected to reach nearly 130 on Friday ? just short of the 134-degree reading from a century ago that stands as the highest temperature ever recorded on Earth.

"You have to take a picture of something like this. Otherwise no one will believe you," said Laura McAlpine, visiting Death Valley from Scotland.

The heat is not expected to break until Monday or Tuesday.

The scorching weather presented problems for airlines because high temperatures can make it more difficult for planes to take off. Hot air reduces lift and also hurts engine performance. Planes taking off in the heat may need longer runways or may have to shed weight by carrying less fuel.

Smaller jets and propeller planes are more likely to be affected than big airliners, officials said.

The National Weather Service said Phoenix could reach 118 on Friday, while Las Vegas could see the same temperature over the weekend in what would be a record for Sin City. The record in Phoenix is 122.

Temperatures are also expected to soar across Utah and into Wyoming and Idaho, with triple-digit heat forecast for the Boise area. Cities in Washington state that are better known for cool, rainy weather should break the 90s next week.

"This is the hottest time of the year, but the temperatures that we'll be looking at for Friday through Sunday, they'll be toward the top," said National Weather Service meteorologist Mark O'Malley. "It's going to be baking hot across much of the entire West."

The heat is the result of a high-pressure system brought on by a shift in the jet stream, the high-altitude air current that dictates weather patterns. The jet stream has been more erratic in the past few years.

Health officials warned people to be extremely careful when venturing outdoors. The risks include not only dehydration and heat stroke but burns from the concrete and asphalt.

"You will see people who go out walking with their dog at noon or in the middle of the day and don't bring enough water and it gets tragic pretty quickly," said Bretta Nelson, spokeswoman for the Arizona Humane Society. "You just don't want to find out the hard way."

Cooling stations were set up to shelter the homeless as well as elderly people who can't afford to run their air conditioners. In Phoenix, Joe Arpaio, the famously hard-nosed sheriff who runs a tent jail, planned to distribute ice cream and cold towels to inmates this weekend.

Officials said personnel were added to the Border Patrol search-and-rescue unit because of the danger to people trying to slip across the Mexican border. At least seven people have been found dead in the last week in Arizona after falling victim to the brutal desert heat.

In June 1990, when Phoenix hit 122 degrees, airlines were forced to cease flights for several hours because of a lack of data from the manufacturers on how the aircraft would operate in such extreme heat.

US Airways spokesman Todd Lehmacher said the airline now knows that its Boeings can fly at up to 126 degrees, and its Airbus fleet can operate at up to 127.

While the heat in Las Vegas is expected to peak on Sunday, it's unlikely to sideline the first round of the four-week Bikini Invitational tournament.

"I feel sorry for those poor girls having to strut themselves in 115 degrees, but there's $100,000 up for grabs," said Hard Rock casino spokeswoman Abigail Miller. "I think the girls are willing to make the sacrifice."

___

Carlson contributed in Death Valley, Calif. Also contributing were Robert Jablon in Los Angeles, Julie Jacobson and Michelle Rindels in Las Vegas, Michelle Price in Salt Lake City, Cristina Silva and Bob Christie in Phoenix and Susan Montoya Bryan in Albuquerque, N.M.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/phoenix-las-vegas-bake-scorching-heat-202602575.html

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Davis Chides Perry, Says She'll Fight to Stop Abortion Bill (ABC News)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/316103659?client_source=feed&format=rss

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৭ জুন, ২০১৩

PayPal Galactic arrives to address the pressing issue of paying in space

PayPal Galactic arrives to address the pressing issue of paying in space

Space tourism is coming, and it ain't gonna be cheap. The question is, how are the rich folks aboard such craft going to pay for... stuff? Since weighty cash is a non-starter, Paypal has unveiled the PayPal Galactic initiative with SETI and the Space Tourism Society to prepare for the future of extra-planetary commerce. It'll be launched today at noon EST via livestream (see the More Coverage link) by none other than astronaut Buzz Aldrin, who said that future trips to the moon or Mars will require "as many comforts from home as possible, including how to pay each other." PayPal worked with SETI to hatch the project, which will address meaty issues like a standard space currency, the risk of space fraud and dealing with customer support issues. (Sorry, space customer support issues.) We're pretty sure the conversation won't involve how to pay aliens, but as part of the Galactic launch, PayPal will also announce a new crowdfunding campaign on FundRazr to aid SETI. That'll help the ET-seeking outfit with its astrobiology and radio astronomy research and, hopefully, keep its dishes pointed skyward, so maybe one day we can horse-trade with the Ferengi.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/27/paypal-galactic-launch-seti/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Apple launches online store in Russia, avoids Yakov Smirnoff gags

Image

It was last summer when we first heard the rumblings that Apple was preparing to launch a retail presence in Russia, and a year later, it's arrived. The company has opened a localized version of its online store, letting locals snap up the fruity devices without resorting to a middle man. There's no word on if this'll be followed up with a retail presence, but we imagine Apple will have to amend its T-Shirt-based retail uniform for those unyielding Siberian winters.

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Via: 9to5Mac

Source: Apple Russia

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/gByTV3v6g00/

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Rights group reports abuses by Lebanese police

BEIRUT (AP) ? An international human rights group says Lebanon's police forces are mistreating and torturing people including drug users, sex workers and homosexuals.

New York-based Human Rights Watch says its 66-page report is based on over 50 interviews with people detained for suspected drug use, sex work or homosexuality over the past five years.

"Abuse is common in Lebanon's police stations, but it is even worse for people like drug users or sex workers," said Nadim Houry, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch.

In the report released Wednesday, HRW said the most common forms of torture reported were beatings with fists, boots, or implements such as sticks, canes, and rulers.

It said authorities should establish an independent complaints mechanism to investigate torture allegations.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rights-group-reports-abuses-lebanese-police-124525503.html

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বুধবার, ১৯ জুন, ২০১৩

Xbox One DRM rollback cuts family sharing features, digital mirroring of retail games out

In the aftermath of Microsoft's stunning reversal of its Xbox One game licensing plans, we talked to Xbox chief product officer Marc Whitten to find out exactly what will change about Redmond's next game box this November. Whitten thankfully assuaged our primary concern right off the bat: the company's (new) used game policy extends to third-party publishers as well as Microsoft first-party games.

Though gamers won't have to put up with requirements for an internet check-in every 24 hours, some lauded features we'd heard about will not be available as a result -- at least at launch. That includes the sharing between up to ten family members, and playing disc-based games without having the disc in the One. It also means new consoles will need a patch at launch to enable this future / past scenario of disc-based console gaming.

"There are some things -- the family sharing stuff is an example -- where as we move to this system, that functionality goes away," Whitten told us. Another such piece of functionality the console's losing: digitally accessible versions of disc-based games. "You're gonna see your online content but you won't see your physical discs," he said. Should you choose to purchase those games digitally, of course, they'll show up as part of your online persona.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/19/xbox-one-drm-marc-whitten/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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The Messiah Will Be Tweeted

The anti-Internet asifa in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, on June 2, 2013. The anti-Internet asifa in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, on June 2, 2013

Photo by Gedalya Gottdenger

On a Sunday evening in early June, thousands of Hasidic men in long coats and black hats braved the heat to attend two outdoor anti-Internet asifas (or gatherings in Yiddish) organized by leaders of the ultra-Orthodox Satmar community of Williamsburg in Brooklyn, N.Y. Women were forbidden, but the real temptation for the men was already in their laps, where they covertly thumbed their smartphones.

The Hasidic war against the Internet has been an ongoing campaign?in May 2012, a massive asifa held by the anti-Internet rabbinical group Ichud Hakehillos sold out Citi Field in Queens, N.Y.?but this year?s asifa came with a new threat, almost biblical in tone: Those caught using the Internet for nonbusiness purposes, or without content filters, would have their children expelled from the Satmar yeshiva.

The cost of having large families has forced many ultra-Orthodox Jews to do business outside of the community. Often, this means adopting technology that plunges people with 19th-century values into the aggressively uncensored world of Chatroulette and Reddit. While some rabbis are convinced that this is a gateway to pornography addiction (or worse: secular life), many Hasids, from the media-savvy Lubovitch to the ultraconservative Satmar, use the Internet regularly without detracting from their customs. In many cases, it has fostered connectedness among the ultra-Orthodox and boosted their economy. And, most importantly, it may prove to be a remedy for the unchecked sexual abuse that has plagued the community.

The Chabad-Lubovitch sect, headquartered in Brooklyn?s Crown Heights neighborhood, has embraced media for years, with radio broadcasts, public access TV, and now a dynamic Web presence, including Facebook and Twitter. This is part of their interpretation of Ufaratzta, the imperative to spread Hasidism to secular Jews, which, they believe, will hasten the return of the Messiah.

?We?ve always been at the forefront of communication,? says Mordechai Lightstone, a Lubovitch rabbi and social media director for the Lubovitch News Service. Lightstone is also a regular at SXSW, where he draws Jews seeking a Sabbath meal with the hashtag #openshabbat. ?There?s actually a midrash, a Jewish teaching, that says ?Why was there gold in the temple in Jerusalem? Why is there gold in the world? Gold is a source of greed; idols are made out of gold. In this case, gold was there to glorify God?s name and to make a beautiful structure that can be used as a place to encourage people to come together to unite, to pray, and not as a source of greed, fighting, and then war.? The same idea would exist within social media, that it can be used for very negative things and for very positive things.?

He adds, ?I?m convinced that when the Messiah comes, there?s going to be a tweet.?

While the Internet can be a doorway to faith, it can also show others out, as Libby Copeland wrote last year in Slate. But the most likely to drop out may be the ones who are already looking for an exit. At 24, Ari Mandel left the Nikolsburg sect, a branch of Satmar, and spent the next five years in the U.S. Army. The Internet, he says, was instrumental to him leaving the fold, but it wasn?t the cause.

?I was kind of bored,? he says. ?I had outgrown the books that were available in the community, and I just wanted more variety.? At 20, Mandel began sneaking into the public library. Reading was a gateway to the Internet, where he found other Hasidim who similarly questioned their faith.

To Mandel, now 30 and a full-time student at New York University, banning the Internet is not only ineffective, it?s illogical. ?The Internet is a tool,? he says. ?If you?re going to ban the Internet, you should ban the Bible, because there are bad books. You should ban all Orthodox magazines because there is Playboy?that?s just silly. It just makes no sense.?

This recent wave of anti-Internet activity coincides with the release of the Venishmartem Cloud Filter, a software developed in Romania (where the Satmar originated) by the company Livigent ?at a cost of six million dollars and specifically designed to cater to the sensitivities and needs of the Jewish community,? according to their website.

In Late May, Venishmartem held a ?Filterthon? in Midwood, Brooklyn. Orthodox men were invited to bring their electronic devices for free installation of filtering software with features such as ?skin color blocking,? which scans Web pages for immodest quantities of human skin tones, and ?accountability solutions,? which send a user?s browsing history to a third party.

For $7.99 a month, Venishmartem will control their customers? access to certain content as well as their ability to activate and deactivate the filter itself. This effectively creates a virtual Orthodox enclave by shrinking the World Wide Web down to a tiny neighborhood of frum-friendly sites. ?Guard Your Eyes,? Venishmartem?s Internet addiction treatment and prevention wing, offers images of naked Holocaust dead to turn off users who are tempted to seek sexually arousing pictures, among other ?Practical Tips.?

Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/life/faithbased/2013/06/the_internet_isn_t_the_problem_for_the_hasidic_community_it_s_its_best_chance.html

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মঙ্গলবার, ১৮ জুন, ২০১৩

Brazil protesters keep up pressure on government

SAO PAULO (AP) ? Thousands of demonstrators flooded into a square in Brazil's economic hub, Sao Paulo, on Tuesday for the latest in a historic wave of protests against the shoddy state of public transit, schools and other public services in this booming South American giant.

Sparked earlier this month by a 10-cent hike in bus and subway fares and organized via social media, the nationwide protests are giving voice to growing discontent over the gap between Brazil's high tax burden and the low quality of public infrastructure, echoing similar mobilizations in Turkey, Greece and other parts of the globe where weariness with governments has exploded in the streets.

On Tuesday, thousands of people marched on Sao Paulo's City Hall building, where a small group fought police in an attempt to force their way in. Another protest sprang up in the working class Rio de Janeiro suburb of Sao Goncalo.

After an estimated turnout of 240,000 people in 10 cities Monday, the protests are turning into the most significant in Brazil since the end of the country's 1964-85 military dictatorship, when crowds rallied to demand the return of democracy.

Bruno Barp, a 23-year-old law student at Tuesday's demonstration in Sao Paulo, said he had high hopes for the growing movement.

"The protests are gaining force each day, there is a tremendous energy that cannot be ignored," Barp said as demonstrators poured into the central plaza, which was aflutter with banners and echoing with chanted slogans. "All Brazilians are fed up with the government and the poor services we receive, everyone is ready to fight for a change."

Although demonstrations in recent years generally have tended to attract small numbers of politicized participants, the latest mobilizations have united huge crowds around a central lament: The Brazilian government provides woeful public sector even as the economy is modernizing and growing.

The Brazilian Tax Planning Institute think tank found the country's tax burden in 2011 stood at 36 percent of gross domestic product, ranking it 12th among the 30 countries with the world's highest tax burdens.

Yet public services such as schools are in sorry shape. The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development found in a 2009 educational survey that literacy and math skills of Brazilian 15-year-olds ranked 53rd out of 65 countries, behind nations such as Bulgaria, Mexico, Turkey, Trinidad and Tobago, and Romania.

Many protesting in Brazil's streets hail from the country's growing middle class, which government figures show has ballooned by some 40 million over the past decade amid a commodities-driven economic boom.

They say they've lost patience with endemic problems such as government corruption and inefficiency. They're also slamming Brazil's government for spending billions of dollars on sports stadiums in advance of hosting next year's World Cup soccer tournament and the 2016 Olympics, while leaving other needs unmet.

The government spent nearly $500 million to renovate Maracana stadium in Rio for the World Cup even though the venue already went through a significant face-lift before the 2007 Pan American Games. City, state and other local governments are spending nearly $12 billion on projects for the Olympics in Rio.

A cyber-attack knocked the government's official World Cup site offline, and the Twitter feed for Brazil's Anonymous hackers group posted links to a host of other government websites whose content had been replaced by a screen calling on citizens to come out to the streets.

Maria do Carmo Freitas, a 41-year-old public servant from Brasilia, said she was excited about the protests even though she hadn't taken part in Monday's march.

"I'm loving it. It's been a long time since we Brazilians decided to leave our comfort zone to tell our leaders that we're not happy about the way things are going," said Freitas. "We pay too much in taxes and we get bad services in exchange, bad hospitals, bad public education, public transportation is terrible."

An organization advocating for lower bus fares initiated the protesting last week, but demonstrations have since ballooned with no centralized leadership. Groups of Brazilians also staged small protests Tuesday in other countries, including Portugal, Spain and Denmark.

Tuesday's march in Sao Paulo started out peacefully but turned nasty outside City Hall when a small group lashed out at police and tried to invade the building.

Different groups of protesters faced off against one another, with one chanting "peace, peace" and trying to form a human cordon to protect the building while another group tried to clamber up metal poles to get inside. At one point, one person tried to seize a metal barrier from another who was trying to use it to smash the building's windows and doors.

Vandalism and violent clashes with police similarly marred the end of Monday's mostly peaceful march in Rio, which left the city's downtown stinking of tear gas. That march attracted some 100,000 people, ending with a small splinter group doing an estimated $1 million in damage to the historic state legislature building. Another mass protest is planned for Rio on Thursday.

The protests have raised questions about the country's readiness to host the coming high-profile events including a papal visit to Rio and rural Sao Paulo next month. Brazil is playing host this week to the Confederations Cup, which is seen as a warm-up for next year's World Cup.

Police and military had spent the past year pacifying hillside slums in Rio to prepare for the events, even as the grievances were apparently growing among the country's middle class.

President Dilma Rousseff, a former leftist guerrilla who was imprisoned and tortured during the dictatorship, hailed the protests, even though her government has been a prime target of demonstrators' frustrations.

"Brazil today woke up stronger," she was quoted as saying in a statement released by her office.

"Those who took to the streets delivered a message to society as a whole and most of all to levels of government," Rousseff said. "The massive size of yesterday's protests proves the energy of our democracy, the force of the voice of the street and the civility of our population."

She didn't propose any concrete answers to protesters' demands. Some cities have lowered bus fares seeking to quell outrage, so far without any apparent effect.

Brazilians have long tolerated pervasive corruption, which is widely seen as the cost of doing business, or simply living in Brazil. But the billions of dollars in public funds being spent on the coming sporting events have many people questioning the government's priorities.

Gilberto Carvalho, Rousseff's general secretary, said the protests reflect the new demands of a richer Brazil.

"The impression is that we have overcome some obstacles, but society wants more," Carvalho said.

The office of the United Nations' High Commissioner for Human rights said it "urged the Brazilian authorities today to exercise restraint in dealing with spreading social protests in the country and called on demonstrators not to resort to violence in pursuit of their demands."

The U.N. body added in its Tuesday release that it "welcomed the statement by Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff that peaceful demonstrations are legitimate."

Human Rights Watch called on the government of Sao Paulo to make good on its promise to investigate the use of force by police against protesters. Images of police attacking protesters during a rally last Thursday helped spark the record turnouts at Monday's demonstrations, which were held in Sao Paulo, Rio, Brasilia, Belo Horizonte, Curitiba, Vitoria, Fortaleza, Recife, Belem and Salvador.

___

Associated Press writers Jenny Barchfield in Rio de Janeiro, Marco Sibaja in Brasilia and Jill Langlois in Sao Paulo contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/brazil-protesters-keep-pressure-government-203417104.html

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Samsung to live-stream its Galaxy & ATIV event from London

Samsung event

A quick heads up for those of us who can't make it to London on Thursday for Samsung's Galaxy & ATIV event -- it'll be streamed live on YouTube. Specifically, you can find it at youtube.com/SamsungMobile.

Start time is 7 p.m. BST, or 2 p.m. on the east cost of the U.S., or 11 a.m. out west.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/fZMiJje088I/story01.htm

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