Wednesday, July 10, 2013

What Is Your Favorite Android Launcher?

What Is Your Favorite Android Launcher?

The most hardcorest of Android users will root their phones and start from scratch with new ROMs. But, uh, that's more complicated than what the average user wants to go through just to squeeze slightly better performance out of their phone. Luckily, there is an easier way!

An application launcher is an easier way to customize the look and feel of your Android phone without doing any fancy footwork. We're looking for recommendations. What launchers do you all like? Why do you like them?

We'll round up the best responses in a later post. Reveal your knowledge to me!

Source: http://gizmodo.com/what-is-your-favorite-android-launcher-723673148

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Dropbox's Quest To Make Every App Work Offline

Work offline DBX*Screeeeech* That's your favorite app slamming on the brakes the second it loses its data connection. It seems ridiculous that apps can't function offline, until you realize that cloud data sync isn't some simple technology any developer can afford to build. That's where Dropbox comes in. "Users shouldn't even need to know if they're connected or not" CEO Drew Houston tells me.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/gLP3T8jhrfs/

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With new search, Facebook users should check privacy settings

Published: Tuesday, July 9, 2013, 5:39 p.m.

For the past six months, a select group of Facebook users have had a chance to try out the site's hyped "Graph Search" function. For those unfamiliar with it, Facebook's Graph Search function is kind of like a regular search function, only more complicated. But the bottom line is that it indexes everyone's public posts, likes, photos, interests, etc. to make them as easy as possible for everyone else, from friends to exes to cops to advertisers to your boss, to find.

Facebook opened Graph Search to a limited audience earlier this year, but it's rolling it out to everyone over the next couple of weeks, starting this week. So if you were waiting for the right time to go through your privacy settings and hide the embarrassing stuff before the whole world sees it, you can stop waiting. The right time is now.

Some have called Graph Search a privacy nightmare, because it takes information that was hard to find and makes it easy to find. For instance, if you for some reason hit "like" on the page of radical Islamic cleric Anwar al-Awlaki three years ago, your name and face might now pop up when someone at the FBI gets the bright idea on a slow day to search Facebook for "people who like Anwar al-Awlaki."

If Graph Search is a privacy nightmare, it's sort of like the kind in which you find yourself out in public with no clothes on. The bad news is that what's seen can't be unseen. But the good news is that it won't happen if you're already dressed. That is, Graph Search won't take any information that you had set to private (or "friends-only") and turn it public. So if you don't want strangers to see your profile's naughty parts, you can go to your Facebook privacy settings right now and cover them up.

There's an easy way and a hard way to do this. The (relatively) easy way is to click "limit past posts," which will turn all of your old posts to "friends only" in a single swoop. But if you want some things to stay public, or to be visible to friends of friends, you'll need to do it the hard way, which is to click "Use Activity Log" and go through all of your old posts one by one. Oh, and you'll also want to double-check the privacy settings on your "About" page, which controls who can see the basic information on your profile.

Again, the basics are:

Go to your privacy settings and check who can see your future posts and past posts.

To hide individual posts or likes, click "Use Activity Log" and scroll down through your history, editing the privacy settings for each one as you go.

To check who can see your profile information, go to the About page on your profile and click the "edit" button next to each category.

---

Oremus is the lead blogger for Future Tense, reporting on emerging technologies, tech policy and digital culture.

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Source: http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20130709/BIZ/707099893

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Wanda Podgurski Captured: Fugitive Arrested After Taunting Police On Twitter (VIDEO)

SAN DIEGO -- "Catch me if you can."

San Diego County District Attorney Bonnie Dumanis said Wanda Podgurski sent that taunting tweet after skipping trial in January while facing charges of insurance of fraud.

But then authorities did catch her.

Podgurski, 60, was captured on the Fourth of July in Rosarito Beach, Mexico, a popular retirement spot for American expatriates only 15 miles south of San Diego. She pleaded not guilty Monday to failure to appear while free on bail.

Podgurski was sentenced in absentia last month to more than 20 years in prison and ordered to pay more than $1 million in fines and restitution.

Three weeks after her initial tweet on June 5, Podgurski's feed read, "'Help find me before I con anyone else." Two other posts were links to stories about her vanishing act.

Podgurski's Twitter profile reads, "On the run possibly in Iran."

Her account follows 32 people and agencies, many of them FBI branches and other law enforcement authorities. Dumanis' office said the district attorney was the only one Podgurski followed while on the run.

The district attorney's office declined to say how authorities tracked down Podgurski, saying only that information from the Twitter account was turned over to its Computer and Technology Crime High-Tech Response Team, known by the acronym Catch.

Podgurski's attorney, Philip Kent Cohen, declined to comment.

The district attorney's office said Podgurski received $664,555 in disability payments when she was charged. While earning $44,000 a year as a clerk for Amtrak, she allegedly held six insurance policies with premiums that topped $60,000.

She made claims with all six insurance companies after reporting that she fell at her home in August 2006, prosecutors said. Private investigators working for the insurers reported seeing her walk stairs without assistance and drive to the store.

Related on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/07/09/wanda-podgurski-captured_n_3564649.html

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Sunday, July 7, 2013

UK deports radical cleric Abu Qatada to Jordan

AFP/Getty Images

A file picture taken on Nov. 13, 2012 shows terror suspect Abu Qatada arriving at his home in northwest London, after he was released from prison.

By The Associated Press

Britain has deported radical Muslim preacher Abu Qatada to Jordan, ending a more than decade-long battle to remove a man prosecutors have described as a key al Qaeda operative in Europe.?

Abu Qatada ? whose real name is Omar Mahmour Mohammed Othman ? is wanted in Jordan for retrial in several terror cases in which he was sentenced in absentia. Successive British governments have tried since 2001 to deport Abu Qatada, but courts have blocked extradition over concerns that evidence obtained under torture could be used against him.?

Last month, Jordan and Britain ratified and endorsed a treaty aimed at ensuring that does not happen.?

Will Oliver / AFP - Getty Images

A private jet containing terror suspect Abu Qatada prepares to leave RAF Northalt in London on July 7, 2013.

British Home Secretary Theresa May said early Sunday "a dangerous man has now been removed" from U.K. shores, confirming Abu Qatada had been sent to Jordan.

? 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663309/s/2e4e8553/l/0Lworldnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A70C0A60C193276590Euk0Edeports0Eradical0Ecleric0Eabu0Eqatada0Eto0Ejordan0Dlite/story01.htm

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Friday, July 5, 2013

Photo Gallery: USA Football Jamboree

Photo Gallery: USA Football Jamboree - Canton, OH - CantonRep.com Photo Gallery: USA Football Jamboree

Jul 05, 2013 @ 03:09 PM


Source: http://www.cantonrep.com/newsnow/x997478103/Photo-Gallery-USA-Football-Jamboree?rssfeed=true

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Development and evaluation of an immunomagnetic separation?ELISA for the detection of Alicyclobacillus spp. in apple juice

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Source: www.sciencedirect.com --- Friday, July 05, 2013
Publication date: 16 August 2013 Source: International Journal of Food Microbiology, Volume 166, Issue 1 Author(s): Zhouli Wang , Tianli Yue , Yahong Yuan , Rui Cai , Chen Niu , Caixia Guo The immunomagnetic separation (IMS) technique was used in combination with an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) procedure to shorten the total analysis time and improve the sensitivity for the detection of Alicyclobacillus spp. in Apple juice samples. The specificity of IMS?ELISA for twenty strains of Alicyclobacillus spp. and eighteen strains of non- Alicyclobacillus spp. was determined and there was little cross-reaction with non- Alicyclobacillus strains. Artificially contaminated Apple juice with different concentrations of Alicyclobacillus acidoterrestris was detected by IMS?ELISA, and the detection limit of the assay in Apple juice was 10 3 CFU/mL. Furthermore, the sample inoculated with 1 CFU/mL of A. acidoterrestris could be detected as positive after incubation for 24 h. The IMS?ELISA described, allows for the identification of suspect positive samples within 3 h of testing versus 3?5 days required by standard culture methods while significantly reducing the materials and labor required for the detection of Alicyclobacillus spp. in Apple juice samples. As compared with the standard culture method performed concurrently on the same set of samples, the sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of IMS?ELISA for 102 naturally contamina ...

Source: http://rss.sciencedirect.com/action/redirectFile?&zone=main&currentActivity=feed&usageType=outward&url=http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=GatewayURL&_origin=IRSSSEARCH&_method=citationSearch&_piikey=S0168160513003061&_

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