Single Celebrities: 20 Stars Whose Love Lives Are Never In The Press (PHOTOS)

Ever wonder if Joseph Gordon-Levitt is dating anyone? Or how about Jessica Chastain?

It appears there are a handful of celebrities who always seem to be single, despite being some of Hollywood’s hottest and most famous stars. Take Charlize Theron for instance — the Oscar-winning actress hasn’t been linked to a man since ending her nine-year relationship with Stuart Townsend in 2010. (There was the Eric Stonestreet rumor, but he denied the romance).

And Gordon-Levitt’s love life has been a mystery! The handsome actor hasn’t had a confirmed girlfriend since the late 1990s, when he was dating Larisa Oleynik — they called it quits in 2002.

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John F. Kennedy Memorabilia Draws Hundreds To Massachusetts

BOSTON — A preview of John F. Kennedy memorabilia including notes by his special assistant on the day the president was assassinated is drawing hundreds of people to the northern Massachusetts town of Amesbury.

David Powers, who died in 1998, was Kennedy’s assistant and close personal friend of his and his wife, Jackie. Powers also was the first curator of the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Boston until he retired in 1994.

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OVER IT: Taylor Swift Has To Decide — Is She A High School Senior Or A 20-Something Sweetheart?

Let’s begin with this.

“Oh, darling, don’t you ever grow up, don’t you ever grow up. Just stay this little. Oh, darling, don’t you ever grow up, don’t you ever grow up. It could stay this simple.”

Ah, remember those sweet lyrics to Taylor Swift’s song “Never Grow Up,” off her album Speak Now? Well, I kind of wish she would forget them.

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Clean Your Doormat Because It’s Covered In Germs

When we think of germ hot spots, we’re usually imagining dirty areas inside our homes. But there’s actually one place outside the house that needs a lot of attention: the welcome mat. According to Prevention magazine, our doormats are one of the dirtiest spots. And editor Rebekah George even told CBS that the germs from mats can easily creep their way inside. “You walk around, you pick up germs, then you rest your shopping bags on your welcome mat while you fish around for your keys, and you bring the bags inside and rest them on your countertops, spreading all those germs to the countertop,” she said.

Luckily, there’s a quick solution for this nasty little problem. Simply clean the doormat with a disinfectant spray and be mindful of the placement of shoes in the home. You can either use a cleaner like Lysol or make your own (we found a great one from The Frugal Life). We think it’s a good idea to tackle this once a week.

Germs aren’t something you can avoid, but lessening the chance of tracking them into your home by following this little tip is a great way to help protect you and your family.

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iOS lock screen can be bypassed with some button mashing… again (video)

iPhone 5 review

It seems that every time Apple introduces a new version of iOS, it creates some new method to get past the software’s lock screen. A YouTube tutorial reveals the rather simple combination of button presses and fake emergency calls necessary to give you access to anyone’s iDevice — or more specifically to the iOS phone module, from where you can make calls or view and edit contacts. You’ll have to be quick-fingered, however, as you have to push the home button rapidly after getting into the iPhone’s contact list. You can learn how to do it after the break, but until Cupertino issues an update, we’d suggest keeping your beloved fondlephone close by.

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Via: Gizmodo, S1riOS6 (Spanish)

Michael Astrue: Lawmakers Have ‘Really Walked Away From Social Security’

WASHINGTON — Outgoing Social Security Commissioner Michael J. Astrue has some parting shots for Congress, the White House and advocates for seniors. They have all “really walked away from Social Security,” he says, leaving the program “fraying because of inattention to its problems.”

Instead of making the hard choices to fix Social Security’s financial problems, policymakers “use it as a tool of political rhetoric,” Astrue said.

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American Airlines, U.S. Airways Merger: Companies Agree To $11 Billion Deal, Creating World’s Largest Airline

DALLAS — American Airlines and US Airways have agreed to merge in an $11 billion deal that would create the world’s biggest airline.

The combined carrier will be called American Airlines and be based in Fort Worth, but US Airways CEO Doug Parker will run it.

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Dreamliners Grounded In Poland Through October

WARSAW, Poland — Poland’s airline LOT said Thursday it is keeping both its Boeing 787 Dreamliners grounded through October while the U.S. aircraft maker seeks to eliminate a potential safety threat that occurred in some planes.

The 787s have been grounded around the world after some of them developed battery problems that threatened to cause fires.

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Satechi releases $40 mini router that fits in a purse, works as a repeater

Satechi releases minirouter that fits in your purse, works as a repeater

If you’ve ever found yourself stuck in the only corner of a hotel room where the WiFi actually works, then Satechi may be able to get you back to the desk. Its Multifunction Mini-Router not only gives you a private, 300 Mbps WiFi access point from a hotel’s wired internet, but functions as a repeater that can distribute a weak wireless signal elsewhere in the room, too. It also works as a standard home router, of course, and even has a bridge mode which lets you take an existing WiFi network and re-transmit it with a different name (and security), useful for combo networks like those in a cafe, for instance. Finally, the client mode lets you plug the Satechi box into a wired device like a Smart TV or set top box to give it WiFi capability — letting you dodge the hefty freight of proprietary WiFi dongles often not included with such devices. That’s a lot of functionality for $40, but if we had you at “WiFi repeater,” check the PR and video after the break.

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Source: Satechi

Elon Musk Lays Out His Evidence That New York Times Tesla Model S Test Drive Was “Fake”

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Tesla Motors CEO and founder Elon Musk definitely isn’t the best guy to try to pull a fast one on. The visionary entrepreneur set Twitter a titter when he claimed earlier this week that New York Times writer John Broder had fudged details about the Tesla Models S car’s range in cold weather, resulting in what he termed a “fake” article. Musk promised evidence, and now he has delivered, via the official Tesla blog.

In keeping with his brief description of what was wrong with the review from his original tweet, Musk laid out how vehicle logs (standard practice after Tesla ran into issues with Top Gear, which dramatized a breakdown where none actually existed) showed that the car Broder was driving for his article was improperly charged, took an unscheduled side trip and essentially seemed to have been set up to fail.

Musk breaks down what went wrong in a number of bullet points, but basically Broder’s car never ran out of juice completely; was charged to a level which he knew wouldn’t be enough to get to his destination at one point; actually exceeded its anticipated range; was driven past charging stations which could’ve helped it finish the journey; and was taken for a lengthy detour through Manhattan not included in the original trip plan.

Other problems add to the reported deception, including climate control settings that run counter to Broder’s stated claims in the article about what he did with in-car heating (turned up the temp when he said he turned it down). The smaller details aren’t necessarily the most consequential, but the fact that Musk has record of even these smaller contradictions in his test vehicle’s logs helps to paint a picture of a writer who seems to have been blatantly gunning for Tesla from the start.

Musk says that Broder altered details and the conditions of the test to help fit with his pre-existing opinion, which he arrives at thanks to a quote from Broder in an article published in 2012. Broder essentially attempts to deflate the sunny image of a future filled with electric cars, claiming that “the state of the electric car is dismal, the “victim of hyped expectations, technological flops, high costs and a hostile political climate.” To be fair, in that article Broder also goes on to give plenty of space to electric car supporters, too, and even gives the last word to Chris Paine, the documentary filmmaker behind Who Killed the Electric Car?, ending on Paine’s implied accusation that the oil and gas industry are behind stalling the electric future of car transport.

But overall, Musk’s evidence is pretty damning, especially backed up as it is by solid data from the Model S itself. He ends by calling for the NYT to launch an investigation into the article and its writing, and after an attack like this, I’d guess the NYT would have to do just that in order to be able to come up with a satisfactory response.