Thursday, January 31, 2013

Nintendo Q3 earnings show 3 million Wii Us sold, sales forecasts lowered again

Nintendo Q3 earnings report show

Nintendo's Q3 earnings report is out, and it's sold just over 3 million units of its new Wii U console (at a loss) along with 11.69 million pieces of software. The other big news is that it's adjusted sales forecasts downward -- again, after it announced they were being cut back in October. However, since the flagship console is sold at a loss, while Nintendo is predicting 17 percent lower revenue, its prediction for net income has actually moved up by eight billion yen ($87 million).

It's not all bad news however, as it's showing about $160 million in net income for the year, compared with last year's losses. The 3DS has jumped up to 29.84 million sold, while the original Wii is within shouting distance of the 100 million number. We're digging through the report now, so hit the source link to check it out for yourself or check back in a moment for more data.

Developing...

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Source: Nintendo Q3 earnings (PDF), Financial Forecast adjustment (PDF)

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/BfjtGJUv-Vo/

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Samsung renames Galaxy Premier as Galaxy Pop for its multi-colored Korean debut

Image

Premier League, Premier Cru, Premier Inn, all names which exude class and distinction, but presumably have little traction in Samsung's home of Korea. It's there that the company has decided to re-brand the Galaxy Premier as the Galaxy Pop, marketing the smartphone in a variety of kid-friendly colors like gray and orange. Samsung's also dialing the CPU down from 1.4GHz, compared to the 1.5GHz chip we saw in the international version -- but otherwise remains the same handset we've already seen. It's priced at 700,000 won (around $645) and comes with a free flip cover thrown in.

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Via: Sammobile

Source: Samsung (Flickr)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/30/samsung-galaxy-pop/

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Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Bright future for society journals: The advantages of advanced open access publishing

Bright future for society journals: The advantages of advanced open access publishing [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 30-Jan-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Stefan Schmidt
hymenoptera@zsm.mwn.de
49-089-810-7159
Pensoft Publishers

A success story announced by the International Society of Hymenopterists and Pensoft Publishers

The open access model has created a range of new opportunities for the dissemination and popularization of scientific research, but many society- or institution-based academic journals continue on a subscription basis.

In 2011, the International Society of Hymenopterists (ISH) decided to move their publication, the Journal of Hymenoptera Research (JHR), from a conventional, subscription-based model to open access with Pensoft Journal Systems (PJS 2.0). The two years of positive experience are described in an Editorial in the latest issue of JHR.

One of the many positive changes that JHR has been experiencing since the switch is a flexible schedule allowing an unlimited number of published articles per year, as opposed to the earlier restriction of two issues per year. "The open access model and online publication of Pensoft offers a wide range of additional dissemination services", says Dr Stefan Schmidt from the Zoologische Staatssammlung in Munich, Germany.

These services include data publishing and automated export of "atomized" content, that is, separate parts of the articles - like species descriptions and images - to important scientific databases and global aggregators." Amongst these platforms are the Encyclopedia of Life, the wiki Species-ID, and the Plazi Treatment Repository.

Open access facilitates public outreach of research through press releases associated with published articles. Since May 2011, Pensoft has been supporting authors in "translating" the technical texts into press releases with accessible language and illustrative media, which then result in postings on science news distributors, mass and scientific media and through the social networks (Twitter, Facebook, Google+, etc.). The service means a wider outreach and popularity for the research performed by the authors as well as for hymenoptera research more broadly.

"The results are more than obvious the journal started a new life, experienced a visible growth and became a place to go for Society members and specialists with an interest in Hymenoptera", Schmidt says, adding that "while we put a lot of effort into technological development, we continue to produce a high resolution full-colour printed version with a subscription option for individuals and institutions, and offer a discount on printed copies and open access fees for Society members."

"The Journal of Hymenoptera Research was the first society journal that trusted the novel journal publishing platform of Pensoft. I am convinced that using the previous print-based, and PDF-only publishing model (even in open access) brings a lot of trouble to institutional and society journals. Many of them simply struggle to survive. We are glad to witness such a successful transition of JHR", concludes Prof. Lyubomir Penev, founder and managing director of Pensoft Publishers.

###

Original source:

Schmidt S, Broad GR, Stoev P, Penev L (2013) The move to open access and growth: experience from Journal of Hymenoptera Research. Journal of Hymenoptera Research 30: 10.3897/JHR.30.4733. doi:10.3897/JHR.30.4733

Additional information:

International Hymenopterists Society (ISH): The Society aims to encourage scientific research and promote the diffusion of knowledge about sawflies, bees, ants, and other wasps. Membership is open to all persons with an interest in Hymenoptera and members are entitled to receive discounts on open access fees and for printed copies of the journal.

Pensoft Journal System (PJS 2.0) is a novel editorial management system launched by Pensoft Publishers in early 2013. PJS 2.0 completes for the first time ever the cycle from article authoring, through submission, community peer-review and editing, to publication and dissemination within a single online collaborative platform. PJS 2.0 has its own online, collaborative, article-authoring tool (Pensoft Writing Tool, PWT) that provides a large set of pre-defined, but flexible, templates of different types of article. In the PWT environment, the authors can work collaboratively on their manuscripts online and may also invite external contributors, such as mentors, potential reviewers, linguistic and copy editors, colleagues, etc., who may watch and comment on the text during the manuscript preparation. PJS 2.0 also optionally allows open, public and community peer-review processes.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Bright future for society journals: The advantages of advanced open access publishing [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 30-Jan-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Stefan Schmidt
hymenoptera@zsm.mwn.de
49-089-810-7159
Pensoft Publishers

A success story announced by the International Society of Hymenopterists and Pensoft Publishers

The open access model has created a range of new opportunities for the dissemination and popularization of scientific research, but many society- or institution-based academic journals continue on a subscription basis.

In 2011, the International Society of Hymenopterists (ISH) decided to move their publication, the Journal of Hymenoptera Research (JHR), from a conventional, subscription-based model to open access with Pensoft Journal Systems (PJS 2.0). The two years of positive experience are described in an Editorial in the latest issue of JHR.

One of the many positive changes that JHR has been experiencing since the switch is a flexible schedule allowing an unlimited number of published articles per year, as opposed to the earlier restriction of two issues per year. "The open access model and online publication of Pensoft offers a wide range of additional dissemination services", says Dr Stefan Schmidt from the Zoologische Staatssammlung in Munich, Germany.

These services include data publishing and automated export of "atomized" content, that is, separate parts of the articles - like species descriptions and images - to important scientific databases and global aggregators." Amongst these platforms are the Encyclopedia of Life, the wiki Species-ID, and the Plazi Treatment Repository.

Open access facilitates public outreach of research through press releases associated with published articles. Since May 2011, Pensoft has been supporting authors in "translating" the technical texts into press releases with accessible language and illustrative media, which then result in postings on science news distributors, mass and scientific media and through the social networks (Twitter, Facebook, Google+, etc.). The service means a wider outreach and popularity for the research performed by the authors as well as for hymenoptera research more broadly.

"The results are more than obvious the journal started a new life, experienced a visible growth and became a place to go for Society members and specialists with an interest in Hymenoptera", Schmidt says, adding that "while we put a lot of effort into technological development, we continue to produce a high resolution full-colour printed version with a subscription option for individuals and institutions, and offer a discount on printed copies and open access fees for Society members."

"The Journal of Hymenoptera Research was the first society journal that trusted the novel journal publishing platform of Pensoft. I am convinced that using the previous print-based, and PDF-only publishing model (even in open access) brings a lot of trouble to institutional and society journals. Many of them simply struggle to survive. We are glad to witness such a successful transition of JHR", concludes Prof. Lyubomir Penev, founder and managing director of Pensoft Publishers.

###

Original source:

Schmidt S, Broad GR, Stoev P, Penev L (2013) The move to open access and growth: experience from Journal of Hymenoptera Research. Journal of Hymenoptera Research 30: 10.3897/JHR.30.4733. doi:10.3897/JHR.30.4733

Additional information:

International Hymenopterists Society (ISH): The Society aims to encourage scientific research and promote the diffusion of knowledge about sawflies, bees, ants, and other wasps. Membership is open to all persons with an interest in Hymenoptera and members are entitled to receive discounts on open access fees and for printed copies of the journal.

Pensoft Journal System (PJS 2.0) is a novel editorial management system launched by Pensoft Publishers in early 2013. PJS 2.0 completes for the first time ever the cycle from article authoring, through submission, community peer-review and editing, to publication and dissemination within a single online collaborative platform. PJS 2.0 has its own online, collaborative, article-authoring tool (Pensoft Writing Tool, PWT) that provides a large set of pre-defined, but flexible, templates of different types of article. In the PWT environment, the authors can work collaboratively on their manuscripts online and may also invite external contributors, such as mentors, potential reviewers, linguistic and copy editors, colleagues, etc., who may watch and comment on the text during the manuscript preparation. PJS 2.0 also optionally allows open, public and community peer-review processes.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-01/pp-bff012913.php

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Spanish economy shows glimmers of hope, but prime minister gets no love

Despite signs that Spain's crippling recession might be easing, Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy looks to have no easier a year in 2013 as austerity bites, Catalonia bucks, and corruption lurks.

By Andr?s Cala,?Correspondent / January 29, 2013

Spain's Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy speaks during a presentation at the Prado museum in Madrid Tuesday.

Juan Medina/Reuters

Enlarge

It looks like 2013 is going to be another hard year for Mariano Rajoy.

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Despite modest signs that his government's draconian austerity program is helping ease Spain's harsh recession, the Spanish prime minister faces a host of challenges in his second year. The economic crisis still has not bottomed out, the threat of secession in Catalonia is growing, Mr. Rajoy's popularity is plummeting, and now a court-led investigation has uncovered a 22 million euro corruption scheme with his Popular Party (PP) that promises to further erode its already fading public support.

?The diagnosis is clear,? says Jaime Pastor, political science professor at the Universidad Nacional de Educaci?n a Distancia and an expert in mass movements. ?Rajoy has portrayed himself as the leader who averted a bailout, but instead he is not only facing the territorial challenge of Catalonia, but also infighting from the more radical right wing."

"We are looking at more political and social instability ahead. If investors? trust erodes, if the cost of borrowing increases again, we are looking at a severe political crisis,? Dr. Pastor says.

A hard road

Rajoy?s political woes stem from a grueling economic crisis that began in 2007 when a housing bubble burst, catalyzing a broader recession in every sector that greatly outstripped the state?s ability to confront soaring poverty. The central government, as well as regional and municipal governments, turned to credit, and the deficit ballooned to dangerous levels, threatening the broader EU economy.

Rajoy came to office a little over a year ago, after his party swept regional and national elections. The PP won on the national level with a 16 percentage point difference (45 percent to 29 percent) over the runner-up Socialist Party, and with more than enough parliamentary seats to pass any legislation.

But his government has had only limited success in dealing with the debt crisis. Spain?s economy contracted for the fifth consecutive year in 2012, by 1.4 percent, and 2013 is forecast to be worse. The ranks of unemployed, which are expected to continue to swell, have already reached 26 percent ? the highest in Spain's history ? and account for one-third of all jobless Europeans. Meanwhile, evictions continue to skyrocket, and the dramatic social plight is only compounded by unprecedented public spending cuts and tax hikes that have eroded the country?s safety net.

Still, there have been modest positive signs. Rajoy has, so far, successfully managed to delay for months what appeared to be an imminent bailout of the Spanish economy, which could yet threaten the European and global economy. His government?s draconian austerity measures are showing early positive signs at a macroeconomic level, even if they are far from trickling down, and the market?s rates to lend money to Spain have dropped significantly in the past few months.

But even taking into account Spain's economic plight and the backlash that was sure to accompany the government's harsh remedies, Rajoy is still rapidly losing political support, even within his own party, as scandals and a secessionist drive in Catalonia undermine his ability to govern.

Support for the PP has plummeted 14 percentage points since the November 2011 elections, from 44 percent to 30 percent, while center and more radical left parties have more than doubled their followers, according to a recent poll by newspaper El Pa?s. Rajoy?s approval rating is now only 21 percent, down from 35 percent in March 2012, and 84 percent of Spaniards say they don?t trust his leadership.

Tense relations with Spain's European partners over crisis management have diplomatically hurt Rajoy, and rich but indebted Catalonia, the country?s economic motor, is also trying to pummel through a secessionist path that is threatening Spanish cohesion.

The Catalonian parliament last week approved a bill legally embarking the region on a path to independence and on a constitutional collision course with the central government. The outcome is uncertain. A new regional leadership in the Basque Country also wants to redefine its ties to Spain, but it insists it will negotiate, rather than impose a path to independence.

Corruption scandal

But now a years-old court investigation into the PP finances, which has so far incriminated the party?s former treasurer and other top leaders, has uncovered a corruption scheme that allegedly involved millions in kickbacks to PP parliament members and former government officials.

Private donations, many apparently from some of the country?s main construction firms, were reportedly funneled as monthly cash envelopes sourced from a 22 million euro ($30 million) secret Swiss bank account held by the PP?s former treasurer, according to a rare public acknowledgement by a former PP member of parliament in El Pa?s last week.

In an effort to control the fallout, Rajoy promised an internal investigation into the PP?s finances and external audit, and he has distanced his government from implicated party officials and promised full collaboration with courts, regardless of the consequences.

The court investigation is ongoing and no top government official has been implicated, but it has severely damaged the government?s credibility and its ability to govern. And with the rival Socialist Party still mired in its own infighting and unpopularity, there is no obvious alternative to the PP, should the scandal bring it down.

?We will witness the government?s loss of legitimacy, but with no alternative from the left, popular disaffection will increase along with the fear of a social explosion,? Pastor says.

Government shakeup?

Dropping lending rates, which allow the government to finance public spending, indicate markets are confident the reforms and EU support are enough to avert a bailout. Exports are growing, the deficit appears manageable, and a recovery could begin in 2014.

But it?s all riding on the assumption that the government can deliver on still-pending reforms, which in turn depends heavily on the internal political stability.

In this scenario, analysts are betting a government shakeup to incorporate apolitical technocrats, as opposed to the ideologically-driven PP politicians, will be required to restore credibility.

?I think it?s more probable that technocrats are involved to regain public trust, rather than a change of government,? Pastor says. ?The government will have to curb its spending cuts, though, in this political situation, and the challenge is convincing those outside Spain that the crisis is under control.?

EU and European Central Bank officials will visit Madrid in coming weeks to review Spain?s economy, and Rajoy has decided to delay intervening in the Catalonian defiance until the region legally makes an unconstitutional move.

Reining in PP infighting will be trickier, though, depending on the court?s findings, a debilitating process that could still take months to resolve.

Regardless, Rajoy is running out of political capital, and Spain?s ability to return to economic growth will depend on his ability to manage popular frustration, regional defiance, and now his own party?s unity.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/pr_tQC5Mcsk/Spanish-economy-shows-glimmers-of-hope-but-prime-minister-gets-no-love

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Daft Punk's New Album Due In Spring

'No one sounds like Daft Punk and I'm very, very excited to hear their new stuff,' says German DJ/producer Boys Noize.
By Gil Kaufman, with additional reporting by Akshay Bhansali


Daft Punk
Photo: Getty Images

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1700937/daft-punk-new-album.jhtml

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Smartphone growth is slowing rapidly, but feature phone surprise aids Nokia

One fascinating thing about IDC?s report on handset sales in the fourth quarter of 2012 was that smartphone sales growth declined to 36%, which was three points below the projected 39% growth rate. That 36% may still sound like a big number? except that a year earlier, smartphone growth was 55%, far above the 40% growth firms had projected. That is the discrepancy that may well be causing headaches for a number of companies, from Apple (AAPL) to LG (066570).

[More from BGR: BlackBerry 10 debuts on Wednesday ? strap in for a wild ride]

Just one year ago, smartphone growth surprised industry experts by 15 percentage points ? but by the Christmas quarter last year, the growth rate had slowed down by 19 points. The rapidity of that slow-down can make production planning tricky indeed.

[More from BGR: Apple releases iOS 6.1 to iPhone, iPad and iPod touch users]

IDC?s numbers also reveal an even more interesting tidbit about an overlooked aspect of the handset market: the feature phone market.

Feature phone sales declined to 263 million units in Q4 2012. But a year earlier, feature phone sales were 269.6 million units. This means that the feature phone sales dipped just 2.5% year-over-year. This is an astonishingly small decline. IDC probably left the feature phone discussion out of its handset market press release precisely because the rate of decline does not fit the industry narrative.

Smartphone sales growth is coming down from its Q4 2011 peak faster than projected, yet feature phone sales are not declining as steeply as expected. This means that the world is moving towards smartphone-driven handset volumes on a slower schedule than most companies planned for. And this?is the gap that Nokia (NOK) is currently trying to exploit.

Vendors like Motorola, Sony (SNE) and LG may have pulled out of the feature phone market too early, leaving Nokia with the chance to attain feature phone volume growth simply by gaining market share faster than the overall industry shrinks. It is not that hard to hit 3% market share growth in an industry that is shrinking by 2.5% if all other major brands have practically abandoned the field.

Of course, feature phone ASP erosion is fierce, meaning that even maintaining steady volumes can lead to a 15% annual revenue decline. This was reflected in Nokia?s Christmas quarter, where revenue performance in the Asia-Pacific and Latin American markets was markedly weaker than volume performances.

Nevertheless, maintaining robust feature phone volumes until cheap Windows Phones arrive gives Nokia a narrow bridge to viability.

For vendors like Motorola, HTC (2498), LG and RIM (RIMM), the smartphone growth slowdown is bad news indeed. Samsung?s (005930) volumes are exploding and Apple is plotting ways to accelerate emerging market sales. If global smartphone volume growth slows down below 30% by summer, an industry shake-out is inevitable. The current number of major brands has only been made possible by 40%-plus growth in 2011 and early 2012.

This article was originally published on BGR.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/smartphone-growth-slowing-rapidly-feature-phone-surprise-aids-184053373.html

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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Activists cautiously welcome immigration reform push

PHOENIX (Reuters) - Proposed changes to immigration law unveiled on Monday could be the answer to the prayers of illegal immigrants like Maria Duran, but she is waiting to see the details.

A bipartisan group of Republican and Democrat senators announced "tough but fair" steps that they hoped could be passed by Congress this year to give 11 million illegal immigrants a chance to eventually become American citizens.

Activists like Duran, who sat up all night with others at a prayer vigil for immigration reform outside the capitol building in Phoenix, Arizona, were pleased but cautious.

"It's the best moment for immigration reform in years, but we need to see more details," said the 50-year-old homemaker, who left Mexico to live in the United States 28 years ago, but still does not have legal status.

The proposed steps are part of the first concerted drive for comprehensive immigration reform since a similar overhaul was defeated by Republicans in Congress in 2007.

It would offer probationary legal status to immigrants who register with the government and pay a fine and any back taxes.

They will also have to learn English, continue to pay taxes and demonstrate a work history in the United States to apply for legal permanent residency.

However, many of the details still need to be worked out and the proposal also seeks to ensure as a first step that the porous border with Mexico is secure and that foreigners in the United States temporarily return home when their visas expire.

Some activists were encouraged by the level of bipartisan support from the four Democrat and four Republican senators who put forward the proposal. They include Charles Schumer, a New York Democrat, and John McCain, a veteran Arizona Republican.

But they also worried that the proposal made tightening enforcement - including adding agents and surveillance systems to the southwestern border - a precondition for all other measures in the package.

"It's really heavy on enforcement. That has always been one of the wedge issues in the community for activists," said Gaby Pacheco, a campaigner in Florida who was brought to the United States from Ecuador at the age of eight.

While the government's own figures showed arrests on the southwest border at a 40-year low in 2011 and deportations at a record high, Pacheco said, "I don't think Republicans are ever going to be satisfied with enforcement measures."

'AMNESTY' OR 'EARNESTY'?

For Juana Garcia, a 27-year-old illegal immigrant from Mexico working in agriculture, reform could ease the fear she and her husband have of deportation and being separated from their five children - all of whom were born in the United States and therefore have citizenship.

The pair are seasonal workers who drive to Wisconsin to work the crops there before returning to Florida's strawberry fields and orange groves - all the while worried that they will be pulled over for a traffic stop and detained.

Garcia, speaking in Spanish, said she has no problem with provisions requiring immigrants to pay fines and back taxes before getting a green card. But she said that while immigrants want to learn English, they may need help finding time or child care to attend classes after laboring in the fields all day.

Arizona Governor Jan Brewer, a Republican whose support for her state's tough crackdown on illegal immigrants in 2010 made her a major White House antagonist on the issue, gave the proposal a cautious welcome.

"I am pleased that there is expressed recognition of what we have been saying in Arizona: immigration reform will not succeed unless and until we have achieved effective border security," Brewer said in a statement.

However, it met with a decidedly mixed response from other Republican leaders nationally, who said that while they supported some kind of immigration overhaul, they were unclear if this was the right one.

"My understanding is it's basically just saying that we're going to give everybody amnesty," said Steve Munisteri, chairman of the Republican Party of Texas.

"But we do need immigration reform that recognizes the fact that we have a lot of people already here, that are necessary to be here, that are hard-working, law-abiding people that would add to the country," he added. "We should figure out a way for those people to have a way to stay."

Some others in the party, which lost Hispanic votes in the November election that gave President Barack Obama a second term, saw support for the measure as way of building bridges to Latinos, who are the country's fastest-growing ethnic group.

"There's no question about it. We've got to deliver a better message to Hispanics and immigrants ... a segment of people we lost badly," said Chad Connelly, chairman of the South Carolina Republican Party, adding that legislation could find support if it involved better border security and assimilation measures.

"I've heard some people say this is more like 'earnesty' than 'amnesty. 'Earnesty,' as in earning their way to citizenship," he added.

(Additional reporting by Ian Simpson in Washington, David Adams in Miami, Saundra Amrhein in Tampa, Corrie McLaggan in Austin, Harriet McLeod in Charleston Virginia and Verna Gates in Birmingham, Alabama; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and David Brunnstrom)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hispanic-activists-welcome-immigration-reform-push-seek-details-000326265.html

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Complete list of winners at 19th annual SAG Awards

(AP) ? A complete list of winners at Sunday's 19th annual Screen Actors Guild Awards:

MOVIES:

Actor: Daniel Day-Lewis, "Lincoln"

Actress: Jennifer Lawrence, "Silver Linings Playbook"

Supporting actor: Tommy Lee Jones, "Lincoln"

Supporting actress: Anne Hathaway, "Les Miserables"

Cast: "Argo"

Stunt ensemble: "Skyfall"

___

TELEVISION:

Actor in a movie or miniseries: Kevin Costner "Hatfields & McCoys"

Actress in a movie or miniseries: Julianne Moore, "Game Change"

Actor in a drama series: Bryan Cranston, "Breaking Bad"

Actress in a drama series: Claire Danes, "Homeland"

Actor in a comedy series: Alec Baldwin, "30 Rock"

Actress in a comedy series: Tina Fey, "30 Rock"

Drama series cast: "Downton Abbey"

Comedy series cast: "Modern Family"

Stunt ensemble: "Game of Thrones"

___

Life Achievement: Dick Van Dyke

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-01-27-SAG%20Awards-List/id-0664329c7db541f38992c4cb1af7b75e

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Monday, January 28, 2013

App.net adds File API, talks "unbundling", gives members 10GB of cloud storage

App.net adds File API, expounds on

App.net, which pivoted to a Twitter-style service when Twitter began choking out third party client developers, has now taken a bold new step towards what just might be a bigger, unbundled future. And, oh yeah, that future comes with 10GB of cloud storage for members. Dalton Caldwell writes on the App.net blog:

Imagine a world in which your social data (e.g. messages, photos, videos) was easier to work with. For instance, imagine you could try out a new photo sharing service without having to move all of your photos and social graph. In this world, your photos are held in a data store controlled by you. If you want to try out a new service, you can seamlessly login and choose to give permission to that service, and the photos that you have granted access to would be immediately available.

And that storage, part of the new Files API:

App.net ?member? and ?developer? tier accounts now have access to a 10GB bucket of file storage. This storage can be accessed by App.net applications in order to read/write files.

10GB for $36 a year could be compelling, depending on how services tie into it and build on it. Apple's iCloud is free, Dropbox has a ton of buy-in from iOS developers, and Google and Microsoft continue to escalate size and value with Google Drive and SkyDrive.

But none of it is very social, at least not yet. Many of us probably don't need another Twitter. A surprising amount of us might need a better social web service. Something that lets us keep our stuff our stuff while we explore the migration patterns between giant corporations and hungry young upstarts.

This could be interesting.

Source: App.net



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/QE_Y4Je-ee8/story01.htm

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Sunday, January 27, 2013

State weighs expanding Medicaid - Health & Fitness - The Olympian ...

BRAD SHANNON | Staff writer ? Published January 27, 2013 Modified January 26, 2013

Washington officials are moving ahead quickly to set up a new health insurance marketplace where the uninsured can start buying health plans later this year. But one other major element of Obamacare ? the expansion of Medicaid to cover more of the state?s poorest people ? is high-centered in the Legislature.

About 250,000 low-income adults in the Evergreen State would become eligible for coverage under the Affordable Care Act if Washington chooses to fully expand the program.

The expansion is one of the changes prompted by the federal health care reform that could eventually get care to more than 800,000 of the state?s 1.1 million uninsured, state Insurance Commissioner Mike Kreidler said.

The extra coverage comes at federal expense for the first three years and in the early years Washington comes out ahead. But some Republicans worry that the state will be saddled with a hefty bill in later years as federal budgets shrink.

The Medicaid debate is happening as Washington?s Health Benefit Exchange is moving ahead.

The exchange, which is a marketplace for policies that would give families a choice of private health plans similar to what workers at major companies already are offered, starts signing up consumers to buy private health-insurance policies starting Oct. 1.

?We?ve got a lot to do? before then, Richard Onizuka, chief executive officer for the Health Benefit Exchange, said Friday in an interview. But he said he is confident the new exchange entity can hit its target dates for approving eligible health plans, starting a call center for consumers and informing the public of the big changes that lie ahead.

Just last week, the exchange moved to a new website separate from the state?s Health Care Authority where it began life. The exchange?s staff is getting new email addresses this week, marking the final break between government and the new private agency that will operate in part with public dollars.

Like the Medicaid expansion, the exchange also is dogged by concerns about costs, with some lawmakers questioning its $50 million a year budget.

When state lawmakers set up the exchange in 2012, they gave its 11-member governing board the ability to levy a premium fee on insurers that take part. The Association of Washington Business and other business advocates have raised questions publicly about the impacts of such a fee on insurers and consumers.

Onizuka said last week that a 4 percent fee, worth $13.69 per policy per month, would raise enough money to cover the exchange?s budget once the federal start-up grant runs out in 2015.

Or the exchange could tap the $26 million yearly windfall that the state expects to receive from an existing premium tax once more people buy insurance, he said. That would allow the premium surcharge to be cut in half.

Onizuka anticipates that 130,000 of the state?s 1.1 million uninsured residents will use the exchange in the last quarter of the year, giving them insurance coverage effective Jan. 1 next year. And the number of enrollees could grow to 343,750 by the end of 2015 as more consumers take advantage of the system.

The exchange also can route Medicaid-eligible consumers into that program instead.

Currently, Medicaid excludes single adults, focusing only on those who are elderly, disabled and who have kids. But the expansion would allow single adults to qualify with incomes of up to $15,000 a year, or about 138 percent of the federal poverty line.

Under Obamacare, the federal government is covering costs for all people who become newly eligible for Medicaid in 2014-15. The state share would rise after that, topping out at 10 percent of costs in 2020.

But some Republicans and their allies in the Legislature worry that the state might be saddled with a hefty bill in later years.

?We?re still early in the budget process trying to figure out the dynamics of that. Let?s face it: They?re broke back in D.C. and if people think this 90-10 split is going to go in perpetuity, the dollars just aren?t there,? Sen. Rodney Tom, a Democrat who leads the mostly Republican governing coalition in the Senate, told reporters late last week. ?And so what happens if that goes to a 50-50 or they pull the rug entirely??

House Republican Leader Richard DeBolt of Chehalis said the Senate?s Republican budget writer, Andy Hill, and the House GOP?s budget writer, Gary Alexander, ?are looking at it from all angles and what guarantees we can get, and are there offramps in it that allow us to move out of the program if the federal government doesn?t meet their obligations.?

But Kreidler, Democratic lawmakers like Rep. Dawn Morrell of Puyallup and a coalition of groups, such as the AARP and the Washington State Hospital Association, see Medicaid expansion as a no-lose proposition, at least in the short-term.

That is because the state gets a net gain of funding in the first biennium ? including higher federal support for the working poor on the Basic Health Plan and unemployable adults on Disability Lifeline ? if the Medicaid population is expanded to include adults who are poor, without kids and not disabled.

In the short term, the Affordable Care Act saves the state $140 million if Medicaid is expanded, according to state budget estimates.

Morrell, chairwoman of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Health and Human Services, thinks the savings could be even more than that.

She says the fiscal realities are sinking in on lawmakers, some of whom are still shifting from their campaign stances attacking Obamacare as they learn more about coverage for poor people in their districts.

?I think we have to get past the rhetoric and to the plain facts,? Morrell said. ?I don?t even say ?if? we do this. I say ?when? we do this. ... I look at it as it?s the right thing to do.??

Gov. Jay Inslee voted for federal health care reform as a congressman in 2010 and favors the full expansion of the program. The Medicaid expansion would have been automatic under the Affordable Care Act until the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the requirement that states do it.

If the state chooses not to expand Medicaid, the people left uncovered likely will do what they?ve been doing, according to Onizuka, which often is to show up at hospital emergency rooms where the costs of care are much higher.

Insurance Commissioner Kreidler?s office estimated in a report last May that the uninsured pass on their costs to the insured to the tune of $1,017 a year per insured family on average.

The Washington State Hospital Association is warning lawmakers that the viability of hospitals will be at risk if Medicaid is not expanded. The ACA reform cuts Washington hospitals? reimbursements in several programs by $3.1 billion over the next 10 years ? cuts that take effect and have a serious impact on hospitals? budgets whether the state expands Medicaid or not.

Senate Health Care Committee chair Randi Becker, a Republican whose district overlaps rural areas of Thurston and Pierce counties, hasn?t signed on for expanding Medicaid but is looking at it.

?At the end of the day, the Affordable Care Act is the law of the land and it?s up to us to implement it in the best way possible,? Becker said in an email Friday. ?That?s why you?re hearing us ask so many questions.?

ONLINE

For more information about the state?s health care exchange, go to wahbexchange.org and wahealthplanfinder.org.

Jordan Schrader contributed to this report. Brad Shannon: 360-753-1688 bshannon@theolympian.com theolympian.com/politicsblog @BradShannon2

Source: http://www.theolympian.com/2013/01/27/2399738/state-weighs-expanding-medicaid.html

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Video: Post Show Thoughts: Paul Ryan Speaks Out

A Second Take on Meeting the Press: From an up-close look at Rachel Maddow's sneakers to an in-depth look at Jon Krakauer's latest book ? it's all fair game in our "Meet the Press: Take Two" web extra. Log on Sundays to see David Gregory's post-show conversations with leading newsmakers, authors and roundtable guests. Videos are available on-demand by 12 p.m. ET on Sundays.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3032608/vp/50606210#50606210

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Links to this post - Family Home and Life: Grandparent's Say It ...


It's a rainy day here in sunny AZ. No not typical but it's nice to have. Of course I will be?ready?for it all to leave by tomorrow and return the sunshine to us. It seems the weather has been a little wonky around the nation this winter. Sort of can't make up it's mind what season it is or something. Where ever you are I hope you are enjoying this Saturday morning. Please take a few minutes to read our linkers here and enjoy their stories too. It's so good to have you here :)
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This is a link up for older bloggers; you don't need to be a grandparent to ink up.?Link up to three post, not to your home page, and link that back to Family Home and Life. While you are here I hope you will visit the other linkers and come back to see who links up later. We all love comments! No Etsy shops or giveaways please. This link closes on Monday night.?

Be sure to visit Lisa at?Grandma's Briefs?to join her linky, GRAND Social, on Mondays. Thank you for linking up with me!




If you are reading this post anywhere else but at Family Home and Life then it was used without permission! Please report it! Copyright ? Family Home and Life 2010-2013 All Rights Reserved

Source: http://www.familyhomeandlife.com/2013/01/grandparents-say-it-saturday_26.html

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Abortion opponents march in Washington

Anti-abortion activists and supporters of legal abortion stand in front of the Supreme Court in Washington, Friday, Jan. 25, 2013, on the 40th anniversary of the Roe v. Wade decision. Thousands of anti-abortion demonstrators marched through Washington to the steps of the U.S. Supreme Court to protest the landmark decision that legalized abortion. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Anti-abortion activists and supporters of legal abortion stand in front of the Supreme Court in Washington, Friday, Jan. 25, 2013, on the 40th anniversary of the Roe v. Wade decision. Thousands of anti-abortion demonstrators marched through Washington to the steps of the U.S. Supreme Court to protest the landmark decision that legalized abortion. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Anti-abortion protestors march to the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, Friday, Jan. 25, 2013, in a demonstration that coincides with the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision that created a constitutional, nationwide right to abortion. Thousands of anti-abortion demonstrators marched through Washington to the steps of the U.S. Supreme Court to protest the landmark decision that legalized abortion. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

Abortion rights protesters hold signs as anti-abortion activists march past the Capitol to the Supreme Court in Washington, Friday, Jan. 25, 2013, as they observe the 40th anniversary of the Roe v. Wade decision. Thousands of anti-abortion demonstrators marched through Washington to the steps of the U.S. Supreme Court to protest the landmark decision that legalized abortion. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Anti-abortion activists march past the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, Friday, Jan. 25, 2013, as they observe the 40th anniversary of the Roe v. Wade decision. Thousands of anti-abortion demonstrators marched through Washington to the steps of the U.S. Supreme Court to protest the landmark decision that legalized abortion. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Sisters from the Disciples of the Lord Jesus Christ Franciscan community in Prayer Town, Texas, near Amarillo, join anti-abortion activists at the Supreme Court in Washington, Friday, Jan. 25, 2013, as they observe the 40th anniversary of the Roe v. Wade decision. Thousands of anti-abortion demonstrators marched through Washington to the steps of the U.S. Supreme Court to protest the landmark decision that legalized abortion. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

(AP) ? Thousands of anti-abortion demonstrators marched through Washington to the steps of the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday to protest the landmark decision that legalized abortion.

The annual event took on added significance for many in the crowd since it coincided with the 40th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court decision that created a constitutional right to abortion in some circumstances. The demonstrators, carrying signs with messages such as "Defend Life" and "Defund Planned Parenthood," shouted chants including "Hey, Hey, Ho, Ho, Roe v. Wade has got to go." They packed the National Mall and surrounding streets for the March of Life.

"I just felt this 40th year marked a huge anniversary for the law," said one demonstrator, Pam Tino, 52, of Easton, Mass, who also participated several years ago. "Forty is a very important year in the Bible as well, in terms of years in the desert. And I just felt like maybe this year that was going to be something miraculous that might happen. We might see something going forward with the cause."

With the re-election of President Barack Obama, she added, "we just have our walking papers. Now we just feel like we have to keep the battle up."

The large turnout reflected the ongoing relevance of the abortion debate four decades after the decision.

It remains a divisive issue with no dramatic shift in viewpoint on either side; a new Pew Research Center poll finds 63 percent of U.S. adults opposed to overturning Roe, compared to 60 percent in 1992. Earlier this week, abortion opponents marked the anniversary with workshops, prayers and calls for more limits on abortion rights. And even as Obama this week reaffirmed his commitment to "reproductive freedom," state legislatures continue to consider varied restrictions on a woman's ability to receive an abortion.

Among the speakers at Friday's rally was Rick Santorum, the former Pennsylvania senator and staunch abortion opponent who last year unsuccessfully sought the Republican presidential nomination.

He recalled the love and support the country showed for his young daughter, Bella, who was born with a serious genetic condition and whose illness led him to take some time off from the campaign trail. He cited his daughter's life ? "she is joyful, she is sweet, she is all about love" ? as a reason to discourage abortion even in instances when women are told that it would be "better" for their unborn children to have one.

"We all know that death is never better ? never better. Really what it's about is saying is it would be easier for us, not better for her," he said. "And I'm here to tell you ... Bella is better for us and we are better because of Bella."

He said the anti-abortion cause was made up of people who every day advocate for their position outside abortion clinics and at crisis pregnancy centers.

"This movement is not a bunch of moralizers standing on their mountaintop preaching what is right," Santorum said.

One demonstrator, Mark Fedarko, 44, of Cleveland, said he regularly stands outside of abortion clinics in hopes of discouraging women from going inside.

"There's God's law and man's law," he said. But I follow God's law first. Like it says right here, thou shall not kill. That's the end of the story. We need to protect these children."

____

Follow Eric Tucker on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/etuckerAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-01-25-Abortion%20Anniversary/id-6049bd390ab244e1a3073e63942815de

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Saturday, January 26, 2013

Mobile Miscellany: week of January 21st, 2013

Mobile Miscellany week of January 21st, 2013

If you didn't get enough mobile news during the week, not to worry, because we've opened the firehose for the truly hardcore. This week brought a new smartphone from Xolo to India, HTC's crackdown on a custom ROM distributor and the UK's largest mobile spectrum auction to date. These stories and more await after the break. So buy the ticket and take the ride as we explore the "best of the rest" for this week of January 21st, 2013.

Xolo A500 debuts in India with Android 4.0

Mobile Miscellany week of January 21st, 2013

A new Android 4.0 smartphone known as the Xolo A500 became available within India this week, and from all appearances, it's entirely run of the mill. That said, with a price of ?6,999 ($130), it may just turn a few heads. The Xolo A500 sports a 4-inch WVGA (800 x 480) display, along with a dual-core 1GHz CPU (Snapdragon S4 Play) and dual-SIM functionality. You'll also find a 5-megapixel rear camera, along with a front-facing VGA shooter. The device includes a 1,500mAh battery, 512MB of RAM, 4GB of built-in storage and supports microSD cards up to 32GB in size. [Fone Arena]

Ofcom kicks off 4G spectrum auction in UK

The largest mobile spectrum auction to date in the UK began this week, which is set to nearly double the wireless resources available to Britons. In all, 28 lots of spectrum are available across the 800MHz and 2600MHz bands, which will add 250MHz of spectrum to the 333MHz in use today. Telefonica (O2), Vodafone, EE, Hutchison (Three), Niche Spectrum Ventures (BT), HKT and MLL are participants in the auction, which carries a total reserve price of £1.36 billion. According to UK regulator Ofcom, the auction will take place in several rounds over the coming weeks. [Android Central]

AT&T CEO reveals interest in smartphone financing

Mobile Miscellany week of January 21st, 2013

Verizon's Lowell McAdam now has some company. During this week's earnings call, AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson revealed that AT&T is similarly monitoring T-Mobile's shift to drop the subsidized business model and instead provide customers the ability to finance their new smartphone purchase. While Stephenson may lack grace with his words, the intent is clear: "We expect there to be some dynamics in the marketplace that -- and we'll have to respond to some of it -- we find interesting, like the handset financing that they're doing." Curiously, Stephenson admitted that AT&T has considered the approach in the past, but like Verizon, much of how his company responds will depend on consumers' reception of T-Mobile's new approach. [FierceWireless]

US Cellular now offers carrier billing for online shopping

Mobile Miscellany week of January 21st, 2013

US Cellular announced this week that it now supports carrier billing for online purchases. The system was launched in partnership with Boku, and subscribers may pay for goods at participating merchants by entering their mobile number at checkout and then confirming the purchase with a text message. From there, customers will find the total amount of the purchase added to their wireless bill. [PhoneScoop]

AT&T working to integrate Data Sense for Windows Phone 8

Data Sense is one of the more unique features of Windows Phone 8, which allows users to monitor their data usage and squeeze more from their data plan through the magic of server-side compression. Verizon is the only carrier to support the feature within the US, but that may soon change, as AT&T has revealed that it's "exploring Data Sense and how to optimize the experience" for its subscribers. About damn time, right? [FierceWireless]

HTC forces shutdown of custom ROM site

Mobile Miscellany week of January 21st, 2013

A provider of many popular Sense-based ROMs is no more. This week, HTCRUU closed its doors and took its repositories offline in acquiescence to legal threats from HTC. Historically, HTC has taken an admirably lax approach to distribution of customized Sense ROMs, which are popular among enthusiasts of the company's smartphones. Naturally, many other sources exist for custom Sense blends, which raises the question of whether this move was but a one-off showing of legal force, or whether HTC will take a more active approach to ending the underground custom ROM community. Those interested can learn more of the situation on Reddit. [Android Police]

Other random tidbits

  • Following in the footsteps of Android and iOS, Microsoft has upped the mobile data cap of app downloads and updates for Windows Phone to 50MB. [WPCentral]
  • The Meizu MX2 is now available as a subsidized handset for customers of China Unicom. The smartphone can be gotten for free with all two-year plans of ¥226 or more per month, or with all three-year plans of ¥156 or more per month. [GSM Arena]
  • Colombia's state-owned telecom, UNE EPM, announced that it would invest $2.5 million to bring LTE services to Barranquilla -- the country's fourth most populous city -- which sports a population of approximately 1.8 million. [RCR Wireless]
  • An internal leak has revealed that the HTC 8S will become available at Bell Mobility on February 1st. [MobileSyrup]
  • Videotron has announced that it'll begin selling the Nexus 4 on January 30th. Similarly, Fido is accepting reservations (and a requisite $40 deposit) for the smartphone, which it's targeting for an early February arrival. [MobileSyrup 1, 2]

[Buy More Stuff photo credit: jbhthescots / Flickr]

[Mobile Miscellany photo credit: Thristian / Flickr]

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/26/mobile-miscellany/

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Gulf Coast Travel + Leisure | Outdoors: Jan. 24-30 ? geramylyfom ...

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Friday, January 25, 2013

MYOB CEO Tim Reed talks small business | Dynamic Business ...

If you run a business, chances are you?re using at least one MYOB product. We sat down with the software giant?s CEO before Christmas to discuss small business trends for 2013 and to find out what the company can do to make your life easier.?

Since launching in 1991, MYOB has become synonymous with business management software. Their products are already used by more than one million businesses across Australia and New Zealand and they are still growing.

Tim Reed joined the company 10 years ago and became CEO in 2007. He explained MYOB?s close relationship with the small business community and shared some helpful advice about how to get ahead in tough times.

How important is small business to the economy?

I?m very passionate about small business, very passionate about the challenges that small businesses face and believe they are often the forgotten party at the table. They contribute so much to the local economy, they are integral to strong communities, they are the businesses that ? when the going gets tough ? stand by their team members, do the best they can for their clients, frequently put the business second to the needs of team members and the needs of clients and are generally underappreciated for their role in the community.

How does MYOB use its clout to champion the cause of small business?

I think at MYOB I have an opportunity ? that we, as a business, have an opportunity ? to develop great products that make it easier for them to succeed and to reach their business dreams. To advocate and to lobby on behalf of small businesses and I?ll frequently talk to different government ministers or speak on behalf of small business. We do a lot of research on behalf of small business at MYOB, which we publish and make available to make sure that they?re part of the overall national conversation. I feel like we have a great opportunity to give back to some of the businesses that have given so much to us over the years.

Have you had any personal experience running a small business?

I grew up in a family that lived from small businesses. All my life my dad ran small businesses.

Can you tell us what kind?

He had an educational supplies wholesaling business that he started the year I was born, he then ran a bus and tour company for a period of time, we were in tourism for a number of years ? owning and running a holiday resort ? and now he runs a bus tour business.

I?m also an investor in a small business ? a health services provider, which I did specifically to understand what it is to be a small business owner and to understand the pressures, the trade offs, the red tape requirements that small businesses have to deal with today. Just to make sure that that experience remained relevant to me.

What do you think are the biggest pressures facing small business at the moment?

At MYOB we run one of the largest surveys of small and medium businesses in the country and we ask that question every time.

Right now, it is fuel prices for most businesses. So the most common response over the last 9 or so years has been interest rates but fuel costs and fuel prices are really the top concerns.

This is followed quite closely by cashflow. For every one business that has grown revenue over the past 12 months, two businesses have had revenue contract. When you?re running a business where revenue is getting smaller and smaller, one of the questions on your mind is ? am I going to be able to pay the bills next month? Can I meet the payroll? Will I be able to pay the rent? I actually think it?s quite a positive thing that people recognise that cashflow is something they actually need to actively manage in these times.

The third one that is on business owner?s minds is pricing and price margins and profitability. What that tells us is that business owners right now see costs increasing and don?t have the confidence to pass those increases on to their clients. The one note that I would make there is that our qualitative research over time has said that small business owners in particular frequently underestimate their ability to charge for their services. All small business owners should keep that in mind when thinking about their ability to price.

What MYOB products can help business through these hard times?

I?d start with MYOB Atlas, which is a platform that allows a business to build a website in less than 30 minutes. All you have to do is answer questions about your business, you choose layouts and themes, upload pictures and you have a search optimised website that?s out there for the world to see. What our research has shown is that those that do have a website are far more likely to see revenue growing than those that don?t. It?s quite a low cost product and it will really help businesses break through that digital divide and enable them to be online and be found online.

The second one I would mention is MYOB LiveAccounts.It offers a full range of invoicing, expense management, a payroll module ? it?s really targeted to the 0 to 5 employee market. Those are the businesses that our research says are finding the conditions really tough right now. Live Accounts allows those businesses to get their bookwork done and in doing so give them a good view as to the financial situation of their business, which will enable them to make better decisions.

What are some tips you could give small business owners to increase their profits??

When times are tough you first want to make sure the foundations of your business are strong. That starts by making sure the existing client relationships you have are healthy. Especially at the end of one year or the start of a new year is a great time to pick up the phone and have a conversation and by doing that you remain top of mind to that person and you?re far more likely to get more business from them going forward.

Make sure you have healthy team relationships. People are motivated and inspired by business owners, who can explain the story of the business and are out there working alongside the team members. That?s what small businesses do much better than large corporations.

The third thing is get online. When we have a look at the differences between what businesses that are performing well are doing and what businesses that are finding it more difficult are doing or are not doing, the biggest single factor is that businesses that are online are far more likely to see their revenue grow and be optimistic about the future. Build a website, set up a Facebook page, set up a LinkedIn account and just learn. You don?t have to be a master the day you start. Just get online and get started. You?ll find it?s a really exciting journey that will lead to better business outcomes.

What?s next for MYOB?

We?re continuing to invest in our cloud-based platforms. Account Right Live is the next generation of our flagship small business product. Most Australian small businesses have an MYOB management system and most of them run a product called MYOB Account Right. It has been in the market for 20 years and is the gold standard for small business accounting and payroll in this country. In November this year we brought out a version that allows a small business owner to run their books in the cloud or on the desktop or both. It allows them to get the full benefit of the cloud. That means they can invite their accountant or bookkeepers in and they can all work on the books at the same time.

Are there any entrepreneurs or small business owners you look up to?

There are so many small business owners I admire but I had the great fortune of being a judge in the Telstra business of the year awards and this year a business called bikeexchange.com.au were the winner of the MYOB small business of the year winner and then the overall winner of the Telstra Business of the year. They are an incredibly inspiring story. They set out with an objective of helping bike retailers get online and start benefitting from the digital ecomony. They?ve done a fantastic job and their business is booming.

Source: http://www.dynamicbusiness.com.au/news/myob-ceo-tim-reed-talks-small-business-25012013.html

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Wall Street brawl: Billionaires hurl insults on CNBC

3 hrs.

It was the smackdown heard round the world when billionaires Carl Icahn and Bill Ackman behaved more like bar-room brawlers (complete with expletives like "bull----!") on live television Friday?over their differences about a nutritional-supplements company.

"Our goal here was to shine a light on Herbalife," Pershing Square founder Ackman??said on "Fast Money," referring to the company which he called "a well-managed pyramid scheme."?Ackman has accused Herbalife of luring people, most of them low-income, into a distribution system he calls fraudulent.?

He said Friday on CNBC that the nutritional-supplement company "deserves the highest level of scrutiny." Ackman recently announced that he took a massive short position against Herbalife, essentially betting that the company's stock will tumble.

"Frankly, Carl did me a favor by picking on me,"??he?said?on?CNBC.

"Ackman is a liar," Icahn?said. "He's got one of the worst reputations on Wall Street."?Icahn also accused Ackman of destroying companies by publicly shorting their stocks.

"He's like the crybaby in the schoolyard,"?Icahn?said.

On Friday, Icahn, who has criticized Ackman's much-publicized short in Herbalife, issued a written statement.?"To get the record straight, I never asked Ackman to be my friend," Icahn wrote. "Quite to the contrary, Ackman has stated to me on more than one occasion that it's a shame we are not friends because then he could have invested with me. But, even if we were friends, I would never have invested with him because I believe he takes inordinate risks. HLF I believe proves this point."?

Ackman's?firm?manages?$12 billion in assets.?Carl Icahn, a fellow activist investor and one of the richest men in America,?has?an estimated fortune of nearly $15 billion.

Traders at the New York Stock Exchange punctuated the air with "oohs" and "aahs" during the arguing, while social networks lit up, with financial journalists and market watchers tweeting and posting as fast as their fingers could type.?

The setting was during the final half-hour of CNBC's "Fast Money Halftime Report" with Scott Wapner, who found himself as much of the story as the two participants.

Icahn repeatedly berated Wapner. Icahn insisted he was the one being bullied and on several occasions used the word "bull----" to describe his feelings about the on-air forum.

"I've really sort of had it with this Ackman guy," Icahn said early on.

"Carl, you think I want to you invest with you?" Ackman charged later.

"I wouldn't invest with you if you were the last man on Earth!" Icahn bellowed in an exchange typical of the show's tenor.

At the core of the dispute was Icahn's furor with Ackman over the latter's short position on Herbalife.?In turn, Ackman released a statement Thursday that recalled a legal dispute between the two parties 10 years ago that resulted in Icahn having to pay Ackman's investors $4.5 million plus interest.

While each combatant scored style points during the battle, if the winner was to be declared from the performance of Herbalife, Icahn scored a clear victory.

The company's shares surged as much as $2.15 in the half-hour melee, though gains cooled afterwards.Nearly as importantly, it was great theater.

Twitter lit up, with participants frantically posting updates."Move over Snooki and The Situation.. here comes CNBC's version of "Jerry Springer With Limos" (Hat tip Sir Arthur!!)," investor Doug Kass tweeted.

CNBC's own Jim Cramer, host of "Fast Money," wondered, "Whatever happened to the dignity of wealth!??"And financial news site Business Insider simply labeled it "The Greatest Moment In Financial TV History."

? 2013 CNBC LLC. All Rights Reserved

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/wall-street-brawl-investment-titans-hurl-insults-cnbc-1C8119011

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