Obama, Butch Harmon To Play Golf In Florida

PALM CITY, Fla. — Tiger Woods’ former swing coach says he’ll play and practice with President Barack Obama on Saturday.

Obama is at the Floridian resort in Palm City, Fla., for a weekend of golf with friends.

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Kathryn Hamm: Top 5 Myths About Gay & Lesbian Wedding Photography

Thankfully, there are more photographers than ever who are ready, willing and able to serve them. But is that enough? Not always.
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Barry Manilow & Broadway: Singer Returns To The Broadway Stage

NEW YORK — It took a little while before Barry Manilow felt comfortable on Broadway.

The Man Who Makes the Whole World Sing is used to far bigger venues than the 1,710-seat St. James Theatre, one of the smaller theaters on the Great White Way.

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Islands Want Climate Change Seen As Security Threat By UN

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The Marshall Islands and other low-lying island nations appealed to the U.N. Security Council to recognize climate change as an international security threat that jeopardizes their very survival.

Tony deBrum, a minister and assistant to the Marshall Islands president, said Friday the island nations are facing opposition from Security Council permanent members Russia and China and a group of more than 130 mainly developing nations, which argue that the U.N.’s most powerful body is the wrong place to address climate change.

DeBrum told reporters after a closed Security Council meeting on the “Security Dimensions of Climate Change,” organized by Britain and Pakistan, that he hopes more council members will be convinced that “this is a security issue and not just an economic-political-social issue.”

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Beware the Wolf in Drone’s Clothing

There isn’t a huntsman’s ax on the planet sturdy enough to save you from these gnashing jaws, no locale remote enough to shield you from its prying eyes. Written, produced, and directed by Mato Atom, Seagulls reimagines the classic Little Red Riding Hood fable in the modern era where Predators roam the skies like a pack of big bad wolves. More »

Samsung Series 5 UltraTouch review: a solid, if slightly overpriced, mid-range Ultrabook

Samsung Series 5 UltraTouch review a solid, if slightly overpriced, midrange Ultrabook

If you read our latest laptop buyer’s guide, you may have noticed we included a lot of high-end PCs. Which makes sense: we’ve been quite busy reviewing flagship devices since Windows 8 went on sale last fall. We’re talking the best Microsoft’s partners have to offer: twisting screens, dual screens, 8-second boot-up times. That’s been fun, and we’re pretty sure those are the more interesting products to read about, but even so, we decided it’s high time we started reviewing some more mid-range systems — you know, those models that don’t cost $1,200.

So, in the coming months, you’re going to see us review more of these everyman systems, in addition to those lustworthy flagships. First up: the Samsung Series 5 UltraTouch. We’ll admit, we’re a little tardy here, as this went on sale late last year, but if you’ve never heard of it, it’s basically last year’s Series 5 Ultrabook with a touch panel appended. For the money ($800 and up), you get some modest specs (Core i3 / i5 processors with hybrid storage and a 1,366 x 768 screen), though if our research is correct, those are the same basic specs you’ll find on most competing models. Given that, any display snobs can show themselves the door now, before we even get started. But what if you’ve been looking for a more affordable Windows 8 system? How does Samsung’s entry stack up?

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PS4 Controller Leaked? Looks Like It’s Got a Touchscreen

An image has surfaced showing off what appears to be a prototype controller for the upcoming PlayStation 4 (aka “PlayStation Orbis) console. The photo shows a controller that looks largely like a Dual-Shock, but with the addition of a smooth area in the middle that could be a touchscreen of some sort.

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The controller is connected to a large metal box which could possibly be a PS4 dev kit, but that’s unconfirmed. The new controller also has an illuminated LED strip on the back edge, which I presume can change colors like the current PlayStation Move controllers can.

I’m hoping the smooth area on the controllers is actually an LCD or OLED screen of some sort, because it would be cool to be able to display things like inventory or remaining ammo on a controller without taking up all of the space of the bulky Wii U remote. It also looks like theres a perforated area below the touchpad which could be a speaker and/or a microphone.

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The best news about this is that it looks like Sony is sticking with a tried-and-true controller format, which makes hardcore gamers like myself happy. As much as I enjoy the occasional gesture-controlled game on my Kinect, Wii or Move, they’re not the main games I enjoy. We won’t have to wait very long to find out if this is the actual PS4 controller design, as Sony has their big PlayStation press conference scheduled for this coming Wednesday, Feb. 20th at 6pm Eastern.

[via Kotaku and GameTrailers]

Large Hadron Collider stops for two years of tune-ups, goes out on a high note (video)

Large Hadron Collider goes silent for two years of repairs and retrofits

We’ve long known that the Large Hadron Collider would need to take a break, but that doesn’t take the edge off of the moment itself: as of Valentine’s Day, the particle accelerator has conducted its last test for the next two years. The giant research ring will undergo sweeping repairs and upgrades that should should give it the superconducting connectors needed to hit the originally planned 14TeV of combined collision energy, versus the 8TeV it’s been limited to almost since the beginning. CERN’s machine arguably earned the downtime. After a rough start, it went on to produce rafts of collision data and healthy evidence of the elusive Higgs boson. If you’re still down, think of the hiatus as doing us a favor — it postpones any world-ending disasters until around 2015.

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Via: Ars Technica

Source: CERN

Iron Throne Cake: Pay the Fondant Price

Everyone in Westeros is fighting over the Iron Throne, which is kind of funny, since it looks like a very uncomfortable chair. Of course, the whole point is that he who sits on it should never do so comfortably. Never be comfortable with such power.
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I prefer this Iron Throne cake. It is the throne without all of the responsibility and constant bleeding. This tasty throne was created by The Cake Geek, and it was made with chocolate, vanilla, strawberries and fondant sculpted into countless swords.

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Have your throne and eat it too. That’s what Robert Baratheon always said. Or would have, if he had seen this cake.

[via When Geeks Wed via That’s Nerdalicious]

Nokia Lumia 620 Review

Here’s a spoiler: Nokia’s Lumia 620 is arguably the most balanced device in the company’s current line-up, and it makes a case for being the best mainstream smartphone on the market today. Excessive praise for a cheap Windows Phone? Perhaps, but when it comes to blending price, specifications, size, and flexibility, the Lumia 620 ticks plenty of boxes for the everyday consumer, as well as demonstrating exactly what it is that still gives us hope for Nokia in the future. Read on for the full review.

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Hardware

It’s XpressCovers all over again; only better. Nokia has played with interchangeable covers for its Windows Phone range before, but the Lumia 620 has the most eye-catching system yet. Multiple color options out of the gate – Nokia expects the Lumia 620 to be popular with teenage users, first-time smartphone adopters, and geeks needing a second device, so is covering its bases with hue and finish – make for a readily customized handset that recalls S40 devices of old.

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That’s not to say the covers are old-tech. Our positive impressions start with the quality: the Lumia 620 may be offered on £150 ($235) pre-pay plans, but it doesn’t feel a cheap phone. More than that, though, Nokia has come up with distinctive designs, thanks to its “Dual Shot” construction process, which pairs two layers of translucent and/or opaque plastic, with either matte or gloss finish. There’s a punchy, shiny green with a yellow inner, or a spunky two-tone magenta, for those wanting a stand-out device, while the white and the matte cyan are more discrete. Nokia will also offer a black shell for no-nonsense sorts.

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Stripping off and reattaching covers is a matter of pushing the camera lens on the back and levering out the core of the phone. Cleverly, the headset jack is built into the shell – it docks with a cut-out in the phone – increasing structural rigidity as well as making for easy replacement should the connector break. There’s no need to restart the Lumia 620 when you switch covers, meaning you’re up and running again in seconds, and Nokia expects the shells to be under £20 ($31) meaning they’re not extortionate. Our only mild complaint is the overall thickness: accommodating removable husks and the double-layer construction of the cases themselves means the Lumia ends up reasonably chubby: short and squat with its 115.4 x 61.1 x 11 mm dimensions.

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A fancy suit wouldn’t be much to call home about if the rest of the Lumia 620 didn’t hold up, but happily Nokia has learned from its spec mistakes with the Lumia 610. Inside there’s a 1GHz Snapdragon S4 Plus processor paired with 512MB of RAM and 8GB of storage; owners also get a microSD card slot for expanding that by up to 64GBz. Connectivity includes quadband HSPA+ (850/900/1900/2100) and quadband GSM/EDGE, meaning that – though Nokia has no US launch plans it can tell us about right now – the phone will actually work on both AT&T and T-Mobile 3G networks.

Then there’s WiFi a/b/g/n and Bluetooth 3.0, though Nokia also finds room in the budget for NFC, which can be used to instantly pair the Lumia 620 with a wireless speaker, for instance. There’s also a front-facing camera, something the Lumia 610 lacked, albeit running at a conservative VGA resolution. A 5-megapixel camera with LED flash is on the back.

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With a slowly growing movement of smartphone users rebelling against the ever-increasing size of handset displays, it comes as little surprise that the Lumia 620′s 3.8-inch display got some interest. Helping keep the overall bulk of the phone down, it’s 800 x 480 WVGA resolution doesn’t get close to the 720p or above of more expensive handsets, but that’s not to say it’s a bad panel. In fact, Nokia wheels out its ClearBlack LCD technology again to good effect, with excellent outdoor-visibilty and decent color reproduction.

Software

You know what you get with Windows Phone 8 on a recent Nokia: a clean UI that lends itself well to the first-time audience likely lured in by the Lumia 620′s affordable price; a shortage of some of the must-have apps (though the situation is, gradually, improving); and a bevy of Nokia’s own software enhancements to sweeten the overall deal. So, you get the usual Metro interface with Live Tiles, solid Office 2013 and Xbox integration, and the convenience of hooks into SkyDrive, with the bonus of Nokia Music, the various camera add-ons, and augmented-reality.

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Nokia Music is a useful addition, particularly if you’re not of a mind to create your own playlists (Spotify is now on Windows Phone, which ticks a big box many would-be users were hung up on), and you can’t argue with the price (since Nokia bundles free access). Audio quality from the Lumia 620′s headphone output was solid, while the speaker belies the compactness of the phone, making up for some loss of finesse at higher volumes with sheer strength of sound.

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As for overall performance, bar a couple of glitches when the Lumia 620 froze momentarily, the 1GHz dualcore processor served Nokia well. You’d have to be looking particularly closely to see the difference in app-loading speed and other factors between the cheap Nokia and, say, its top-of-the-range Lumia 920 sibling. In SunSpider, the browser test of Javascript performance, the Lumia 620 managed a speed of 1,453.4ms (lower is better).

Camera

5-megapixels may not pit the Lumia 620 against any of the higher-end smartphones we’ve seen in the past few months, but it’s good for a budget device, and the Nokia uses its pixels well. Given good light, preferably outdoors, and the stills are great for the price: sharp and with accurate colors. Close-ups are also crisp, and even in lower-light situations the Lumia 620 avoided the murk and noise that generally affects cheaper phones.

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As for video, that maintains the accuracy of color and overall balance, though it’s best to keep as steady a hand as you can since the optical image stabilization of the Lumia 920 isn’t present here. Audio capture is also good.

Nokia throws some extra camera apps into its Windows Phone range, the most interesting of which are Cinemagraph and Smart Shoot. Cinemagraph is an easy way of creating a mash-up of photo and video, grabbing a brief clip and then allowing you to mask out all but specific areas you still want to have moving. They can then be shared to the usual social networks, though they’re stored on Nokia’s server and farmed out as links. However, save one to your computer and you’ll find it’s a .gif that can be used on Tumblr or other sites.

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As for Smart Shoot, that uses the facial recognition technology Nokia acquired when it bought Scalado, and basically fires of a clutch of stills in rapid succession and then allows you to piece together the perfect group shot using faces snipped from different frames. It’s the same system as we’ve seen on BlackBerry 10, and works reasonably well, though you do need to be facing the camera head-on – and with nothing obscuring your face – if Smart Shoot is to correctly identify you.

Phone and Battery

We have high expectations of Nokia devices when it comes to phone and battery life, a leftover of Symbian phones’ particular strengths in those categories. Happily, the Lumia 620 holds up in that respect too, despite the different OS: we comfortably managed a day and half of use – with push email, a mixture of streaming and cached audio from Nokia Music, photography, web browsing, some GPS use, a few calls, and some messaging – before having to go near the microUSB charger. Phone calls, meanwhile, were crisp, as well as loud through the speakerphone, and we had no problem clinging to a signal.

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Wrap-Up

Reset your expectations of a smartphone. Stop thinking of it as an either/or decision Android or iOS; put yourself in the mindset of the everyman. We’ve praised Windows Phone before for its suitability to a new smartphone user, and the Lumia 620 fits that category well. The hardware is cheap but distinctive and easily customized; the software is fit for purpose – email, browsing, camera, and multimedia are served well, and while there are still missing apps, it’s questionable whether the target audience will notice their absence – and the price can’t be argued with.

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Still, we can’t help but think that the Lumia 620 is wasted on newbies. More than a few of the tech professionals we’ve spoken to in recent weeks – people who have their pick of the top-tier smartphones, and who probably have most of the must-haves sitting on their desk – have professed a degree of affection for the new baby Nokia. Yes, the diminutive size and carefree covers help, but it’s really more the singularity of purpose that draws you in.

The Lumia 620 does its job, for the right price, with minimal compromise. There are no obvious omissions, like the missing front camera of its predecessor, and services like Nokia Music and Cinemagram give it a degree of out-of-the-box completeness that’s arguably missing from other devices. For the price we’d recommend it over a cheap Android handset, especially if you’re a new smartphone user, but there’s plenty more than low-cost appeal in the Lumia 620′s favor.

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Nokia Lumia 620 Review is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
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