University Of Illinois Professor Fined For Refusal To Attend Ethics Training

Lou Van den Dries, a tenured math professor at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, was fined $500 for skipping mandatory ethics training from 2006 until 2009 by the Executive Ethics Commission.

The ethics training is required annually, takes an hour to complete, and can be done in person or online. It is mandatory for all University of Illinois staff under the State Officials and Employees Ethics Act.

However, it was not the challenge of the training session that bothered Van den Dries, but rather the ideology behind it.

Read More…


‘Brand X With Russell Brand’ Premiere: New FX Show Focuses On Dalai Lama And Spirituality

Russell Brand heads to American TV for the first time with his own FX late-night series, “Brand X” (premieres Thursday, June 28 at 11 p.m. ET).

The British comedian and actor — best known stateside for his role in “Forgetting Sarah Marshall” — goes back to his stand-up start on “Brand X With Russell Brand.” On the first episode of the half-hour show, Brand gets quite spiritual. He kicks off the premiere discussing his meeting with the Dalai Lama and how rumors started that he regaled the Tibetan high priest with tales of his sex life.

“I feel like spirituality is the most thing in our lives,” Brand explains to his straight man and Roosevelt Institute fellow, Matt Stoller, wondering why the US and UK don’t have a figure similar to the Dalai Lama. He goes on to discuss Mel Gibson, circumcision and even fellow new FX star Charlie Sheen (whose new series “Anger Management” premieres Thursday as well at 9 p.m. ET).

Read More…
More on Spiritual Development


Midwest Heat Wave Could Break Records As Temps Rise In Chicago, St. Louis, Kansas City

By Kevin Murphy

KANSAS CITY, Mo, June 28 (Reuters) – The Midwest cities of Cincinnati, St. Louis, Chicago and Kansas City could approach or break heat records on Thursday, as a massive high pressure system sent temperatures higher throughout most of the country.

Drought conditions have contributed to the early and sustained heat, according to Alex Sosnowski, expert senior meteorologist at AccuWeather.com. He said both St. Louis and Kansas City, Missouri could hit 107 degrees Thursday. The high temperatures will move into the northeast Friday.

“A lot of these places haven’t had a lot of rain, and dry soil contributes to heat,” Sosnowski explained, when asked why the high temperatures are being seen so early in the summer. “The sun’s energy doesn’t go into evaporating moisture, so it heats the ground and that heats the air. It takes a really big rainfall event to bust a drought like this.”

Though scattered thunderstorms are expected to throttle back the heat in the Midwest for Friday, Sosnowski does not see anything that would make much of an impact in dry areas.

The weather conditions have contributed to wildfires blazing across Colorado which have destroyed hundreds of homes.

The high temperatures and drought conditions also are damaging crops – U.S. corn prices have soared 17 percent this month as the hot dry weather persists in the main growing area of the Midwest.

For the fifth day in a row Wednesday, no place in the country was hotter than Hill City, Kansas, a farming community in the northwest part of the state. Hill City and Phillipsburg, Kansas tied for the nation’s hottest spot on Wednesday at 115 degrees, according to the National Weather Service. The Thursday forecast is 109 degrees.

“It feels like you have a big old furnace blowing in your face,” said Rayson Brachtenbach, a technician at Elliott Plumbing, Heating, Air Conditioning and Electric in Hill City.

Brachtenbach said the hot weather has kept Elliott busy repairing air conditioning systems with compressors lacking the capacity to cool houses in the extreme heat. “Five or six days around 115 degrees is really hard on them,” he said.

A city in the Midwest having the nation’s high temperature for five days in a row is very unusual, said Chris Foltz, a meteorologist for the NWS in Goodland, Kansas.

“It’s what you expect in the desert of Nevada or California,” Foltz said. “Hill City is where the high pressure is anchored. It’s like the heat perpetuates itself.”

In Chicago, summer school was closed Thursday for 10 public schools that lack air conditioning.

In Indiana, burn bans are in effect 74 of 92 counties, and 45 counties have restrictions on shooting off fireworks.

Continuing high temperatures in the south have led the Birmingham, Alabama, police to decide to check on the sick and elderly through Sunday.

“We want to ensure our citizens remain safe during the excessive heat outbreak,” said Birmingham Police Chief A.C. Roper. (Reporting by Mary Wisniewski, Kevin Murphy, Christine Stebbins, Keith Coffman, and Susan Guyett; Editing by Greg McCune and Jackie Frank)

Read More…
More on Heat Wave


William Laney: ‘Where Do The Homeless Get Those Fancy Clothes?’

To those who have jobs and housing — but who struggle to make ends meet — it often appears as though the jobless and homeless may actually be better off.
Read More…
More on Careers


Shooting Challenge: A World Without People [Shooting Challenge]

Remember that scene in Vanilla Sky? Tom Cruise runs into Times Square. And it’s empty. You can’t close off Times Square yourself, but through clever photography and patience, you could duplicate the effect. More »

Microsoft reportedly plans Windows 8 upgrades all the way from XP, wants us to just let go of the past

Windows 8 Release Preview hands-on

Microsoft has been promising a cheap-and-cheerful upgrade path to Windows 8 for those who buy new PCs. But what about that five-year-old PC in the basement? If the historically well-connected Mary Jo Foley of ZDNet is right, the upgrade path will go further back — much further. Although upgraders will still want Windows 7 if they need to carry over absolutely everything, tipsters claim that settings can transfer from releases as old as Windows Vista SP1. Those with truly ancient PCs (we’re looking at you, corporate customers) can even bring over personal files from an OS as dated as Windows XP SP3. Like we saw last time around, some of the 7-to-8 upgrade rules are a bit Byzantine — 7 Professional users can’t step down to the non-Pro Windows 8 release, for example, and it’s equally verboten to change language editions or move from 32- to 64-bit code without a full-scale reinstallation. The extra-long olive branch will be slightly unusual for Microsoft if it’s confirmed, but then the company is also trying to move along a user base that in some cases has clung to XP for more than a decade. Redmond is no doubt eager to get rid of our dependency issues.

Microsoft reportedly plans Windows 8 upgrades all the way from XP, wants us to just let go of the past originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Jun 2012 15:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceZDNet  | Email this | Comments

Chrome for iOS hits US App Store

Chrome for iOS, announced at Google IO just a few hours ago, has already begun to hit the App Store, though there’s a sting if you’re expecting the full Google browser experience. The new browser is the latest iteration of Chrome, bringing features like tab sync to iPhone and iPad; however, it’s not built on the speedy underlying engine of Chrome on other platforms, such as Android.

In fact, it’s more like a reskin of what Apple is already offering in iOS, dressing up the existing WebKit engine with a shiny new Chrome UI. One of Apple’s limits for iOS apps is that they’re unable to change those underlying components:

“It’s not the Chrome rendering or JavaScript engines — the App Store rules forbid that. It’s the iOS system version of WebKit wrapped in Google’s own browser UI. The pressure for Apple to allow users to specify a third-party app as their default browser is going to increase significantly after this. (As I type this, it’s not yet in the App Store.)” John Gruber

There’s also no support for setting anything other than Mobile Safari on the iPhone or iPad as the default browser. That means every time you click a link in an email or app, Safari will leap up to load it rather than Chrome for iOS.

It’s unclear whether the inevitable increase of pressure on Apple to change its policies will have any impact in the long run. The company has proved reluctant to allow other browsers to occupy the space that Safari currently does, rightly assuming that controlling the web experience is an important aspect of the “walled garden” ecosystem.

You can download Chrome for iOS here [iTunes link].

mza_7018159370061996214.480x480-75
mza_351128687782731508.480x480-75
mza_7454495502417639441.480x480-75
mza_3127909238396993164.480x480-75
mza_8172919720581984401.480x480-75
mza_1501488335153262452.320x480-75
mza_1491809327681417810.320x480-75
mza_3746201019922951548.320x480-75
mza_3541306397317265971.320x480-75
mza_3397913173255590530.320x480-75


Chrome for iOS hits US App Store is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


The Best Bike Lock [Video]

Leave a bicycle locked up on the street, and a pro with the right tool can spring it faster than you can buy a Slurpee. We’re not bike thieves—not even close—and we were able to slice through cheap locks with $20 bolt cutters and a hacksaw, on our first try. More »

Google TV will get subscription billing, support for movie and TV purchases in Google Play

Google TV will get subscription billing, support for movie and TV purchases in Google Play

While it didn’t merit a spot in either keynote, the Google TV platform is also getting an updated version of the Google Play store. Along with a new UI that looks a lot like the one on other Android devices it will have support for purchasing movies, music and TV shows as mentioned yesterday, and also subscription billing. The “Bring Your App to the Big Screen” presentation is still going on, we’ll let you know if any other new elements are revealed. There’s a new post on the Google TV blog mentioning apps like the one announced by Sirius XM, and the new hardware from partners LG, Sony and Vizio. Finally, the team is also focusing on its updated APIs for developers building not only apps for the TV (like the Google I/O app itself, which has been working smoothly this week streaming video), but also second screen applications just as we pointed out earlier. The last update and potentially most curious? Mentioned during the presentation, later this year Google TV will no longer require hardware manufacturers to provide a physical keyboard on their input device.

Google TV will get subscription billing, support for movie and TV purchases in Google Play originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Jun 2012 15:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceGoogle TV Blog, Google TV Developers  | Email this | Comments

Microsoft plans Xbox Music to rival iTunes, Spotify

Microsoft is reportedly planning to make a big push in its music service to rival that of Apple’s iTunes as well as popular music streaming service Spotify. According to Bloomberg, citing inside sources, the new Xbox Music will combine the best features of both rival services so that customers can purchase songs and sign up for music streaming.

Microsoft has been in talks with the major record label companies, including Universal Music Group, Warner Music Group, Sony Music, and EMI to secure the necessary music rights. The negotiations may still be in the early stages, although the company plans to launch the service later this year.

Xbox Music’s streaming aspect will work similar to Spotify, charging usrs a monthly or annual fee, while still letting consumers purchase digital music through an online store similar to iTunes. Music may also be stored on an online locker that’s accessible by multiple mobile devices running Windows Phone 8 or Windows 8. It would be similar to Apple’s iCloud, where songs purchased elsewhere can also be stored and accessed for a monthly or annual fee.

[via MacRumors]


Microsoft plans Xbox Music to rival iTunes, Spotify is written by Rue Liu & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.