HTC One mini priced up (but is it “mini” enough?)

HTC’s new One mini may not be due to hit shelves until next month, but that hasn’t stopped retailers from officially pricing up the 4.3-inch smartphone already. Though HTC would only say that it expects the carrier-subsidized One mini to be “two price points” lower than the HTC One, the SIM-free One mini will apparently be £379.99 ($579) unlocked and with tax in the UK.

htc_one_mini_hands-on_sg_41

That’s according to retailer MobileFun, which tells SlashGear that the price is official and not just a place-holder as can often be the case.

HTC One mini hands-on:

In contrast, the same retailer has the original HTC One on sale for £519.99 ($792) including UK tax, a £140 ($213) difference. It also puts the One mini in-between the off-contract price for the Nokia Lumia 720 and Lumia 820 Windows Phones, and £10 less than the SIM-free Galaxy S4 mini.

According to the retailer, the One mini will be in stock in the space of a month, which fits with HTC’s August launch expectations.

Still to be confirmed are carrier prices, though EE, Vodafone, and Phones4u have all said they’ll be offering the One mini in the UK. North American launch details aren’t known, though HTC did tell us that there would indeed be a release, and we’ve previously heard chatter of AT&T 4G support in the Android smartphone.

As we found in our hands-on with the One mini, the new phone sticks relatively closely to the pattern laid out by the original One. The unibody aluminum casing – available in silver and black – is still present, along with the UltraPixel camera, BoomSound front-mounted speakers, and Beats Audio tuning.

However, there are some noticeable differences, though to what extent the mid-range target audience will miss them in daily use is uncertain.


HTC One mini priced up (but is it “mini” enough?) is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
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Barack Obama Nelson Mandela: President Honors ‘Madiba’ On 95th Birthday

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama say the world can honor Nelson Mandela by heeding his example and serving others.

The Obamas are sending their wishes and prayers to the former South African leader on his 95th birthday. Mandela is critically ill in the hospital, although he’s said to be improving and could be discharged soon.

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Nazi-Themed Cafe In Indonesia Sparks Controversy

BANDUNG, Indonesia — Authorities in central Indonesia will ask a restaurant owner to explain his reasons for opening a Nazi-themed cafe that has sparked controversy among locals and tourists, an official said Thursday.

Soldatenkaffee includes a red wall of Nazi-related memorabilia, including a large flag with the swastika and a giant picture of Adolf Hitler. Its wait staff dresses in SS, or Schutzstaffel, military uniforms, and can be seen posing in front of the cafe on its Facebook page.

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Republicans Could See Divisive Senate Primaries In 2014

* Cheney’s run renews concerns about party divisions

* In bid to take back Senate, party can afford few missteps

* Tension between party’s establishment, Tea Party movement

By John Whitesides

WASHINGTON, July 18 (Reuters) – Liz Cheney’s decision to challenge Wyoming U.S. Senator Mike Enzi in a Republican primary next year sets up the type of divisive, intraparty fight that Republican leaders vowed to avoid after the 2012 elections.

The move this week by Cheney, daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney, is unlikely to open the door for a Democrat to win the Senate seat in Wyoming, which is heavily Republican.

But it is rekindling Republicans’ concerns that party feuds could lead to a reprise of the 2010 and 2012 elections, when bitter Republican primary fights in several states produced weakened, gaffe-prone nominees who went on to lose winnable races to Democrats – and thwart Republicans’ hopes of winning a majority in the Senate.

In next year’s elections, Republicans will need a net gain of six seats to take control of the 100-member Senate. Most analysts expect the party to gain some seats – possibly enough to reclaim a majority – but say it cannot afford the types of missteps it has made in the past two elections.

The fields of candidates are still shaping up, but already there are signs of brewing Senate primary fights among Republicans in several states, including Iowa, Georgia and Alaska.

“The Republican path to success in the Senate is pretty narrow. If they lose one or two seats because of a difficult primary, that’s a huge problem – and it’s possible,” said Jennifer Duffy, a Senate analyst for the nonpartisan Cook Political Report.

“They can’t afford a lot of unforced errors,” she added.

Many Republicans still have painful memories of the last two elections, when contentious primaries produced Senate nominees such as Todd Akin in Missouri, Richard Mourdock in Indiana, Sharron Angle in Nevada and Christine O’Donnell in Delaware.

Each rode the momentum of the conservative Tea Party movement to the Republican nomination, then withered amid campaign-trail missteps. Akin and Mourdock stumbled in 2012 by making controversial comments about rape.

During the 2010 campaign, Angle warned that Islamic law was taking hold in some U.S. cities, while O’Donnell – who previously had acknowledged dabbling in witchcraft – made a commercial to try to assure voters she was not a witch.

In the aftermath of the Republican losses last November, party leaders pledged to cut back on internal squabbling and focus on producing disciplined general election candidates.

Republican strategist Karl Rove announced a new political action committee, the Conservative Victory Project, that would back candidates deemed by party leaders to be the most “electable.”

That drew criticism from Tea Party and other conservative groups, whose challenge to party leaders’ authority is at the root of much of the tension within the Republican Party.

‘FISSURES IN THE PARTY’

Cheney’s announcement seemed to reinforce the message that some Republicans were not on board with the party’s unification drive.

She implicitly criticized Enzi’s sometimes accommodating style, saying on Tuesday that “we can no longer afford simply to go along to get along” – an echo of past party clashes between ideologically driven activists and more moderate party pragmatists.

“I think it’s going to open a lot of fissures in the party,” former Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele said on MSNBC. “I think this is an insurgent move by Cheney.”

Republicans have some clear advantages heading into the 2014 campaign, including a playing field in which Democrats must defend 20 Senate seats to 14 for Republicans.

Democrats also are defending seven seats in states won by Republican Mitt Romney in the 2012 presidential election – Arkansas, Louisiana, Alaska, South Dakota, North Carolina, Montana and West Virginia.

But the prospect of ugly Republican nominating battles has given Democrats hope. In conservative Georgia, where Republican Senator Saxby Chambliss is retiring, several Republicans including three members of Congress – Paul Broun, Phil Gingrey and Jack Kingston – already have said they will seek the seat.

In politically divided Iowa, a few little-known Republican contenders are lining up to replace retiring Democratic Senator Tom Harkin. Democrats have rallied around U.S. Representative Bruce Braley as their candidate.

In Alaska, where Republicans are targeting Democratic Senator Mark Begich, Tea Party favorite Joe Miller is facing Lieutenant Governor Mead Treadwell in a race that could be complicated by the potential entry of another Republican: former Alaska Governor and 2008 vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin.

Palin said this month she was “considering” entering the race. Miller defeated Senator Lisa Murkowski in the 2010 Republican primary, only to lose to her in the general election after she mounted a write-in campaign.

SEEKING ‘DISCIPLINED’ CONSERVATIVES

Other states where competitive Republican primaries could develop include South Dakota – where former Governor Mike Rounds is running for retiring Democrat Tim Johnson’s seat – and West Virginia, where conservatives are exploring a challenge to Republican Representative Shelley Moore Capito’s bid for the Senate seat held by retiring Democrat Jay Rockefeller.

Two Republican senators who had been considered vulnerable to primary challenges – Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina – do not have strong primary opponents, but could still get them, analysts say.

Both have drawn the ire of conservatives at times. As his party’s leader in the Senate, McConnell has been accused of not pushing a strong enough conservative agenda, while Graham has been criticized for straying from the party line – most recently in backing a plan to overhaul the country’s immigration system.

“There is definitely a lot of frustration in the (conservative) grassroots and a real hunger for new leadership in Washington and new blood and new energy in the Senate,” said Matt Hoskins, executive director of the Senate Conservatives Fund. The “Super PAC,” or political action committee, once was led by former Senator Jim DeMint of South Carolina, an early booster of the Tea Party movement.

Hoskins said the fund was exploring whether to back conservatives in several states, including potential challengers to McConnell and Graham.

“In Kentucky, Republicans would be better off with a different Republican candidate. Mitch McConnell is a very weak general election candidate,” Hoskins said.

Polls indicate McConnell is vulnerable in Kentucky, but he has nearly $10 million in campaign funds for his race against Democratic challenger Alison Lundergan Grimes, the secretary of state. McConnell also has formed an alliance with fellow Kentucky Republican Senator Rand Paul, a Tea Party favorite.

Jonathan Collegio, a spokesman for Rove’s PAC, said the party’s losses in 2012 had reinforced the need for a more disciplined approach to elections.

That new caution was most evident this year in Iowa, where staunchly conservative Representative Steve King chose not to enter the Senate race after some Republicans expressed concern that his views were out of step with most voters in the state.

“There appears to be a broad recognition now that in order to win general elections, we need high-quality candidates who aren’t just conservatives but are also good fundraisers and disciplined campaigners,” Collegio said.

But Hoskins said his group was still looking for credible conservatives who could win general elections.

“We have primaries for a reason. Republican voters should have choices and there should be a healthy debate,” Hoskins said. “Once you are elected, you aren’t entitled to be there forever. It’s not a lifetime entitlement.” (Editing by David Lindsey and Peter Cooney)

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Whitey Bulger And Stephen ‘The Rifleman’ Flemmi: Former Partners In Crime Battle In Court

BOSTON — James “Whitey” Bulger and Stephen “The Rifleman” Flemmi.

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GPS Guide: Proof That There’s Always A Light At The End Of The Tunnel

The stress and strain of constantly being connected can sometimes take your life — and your well-being — off course. GPS For The Soul can help you find your way back to balance.

GPS Guides are our way of showing you what has relieved others’ stress in the hopes that you will be able to identify solutions that work for you. We all have de-stressing “secret weapons” that we pull out in times of tension or anxiety, whether they be photos that relax us or make us smile, songs that bring us back to our heart, quotes or poems that create a feeling of harmony, or meditative exercises that help us find a sense of silence and calm. We encourage you to look at the GPS Guide below, visit our other GPS Guides here, and share with us your own personal tips for finding peace, balance and tranquility.

Fire — a force of nature created by extreme friction and heat — (thanks for discovering it, cavemen) is a truly incredible phenomenon. Fire allows us to see in the dark, and to clear our cloudy vision. The Greeks were said to believe that the god Prometheus brought fire down from the heavens to make human life easier. He gave mankind the gift of fire, and it truly is a gift. Check out this series of candles below, that have the power to ignite even in the darkest of environments.

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Gabby Douglas Espy Awards: Gymnast Wows In Sexy Black Leather Dress (PHOTOS)

Va va va voom! Gabby Douglas stepped out on the 2013 ESPY Awards red carpet looking all grown up (read: sexy).

The 17-year-old Olympic gold medalist wowed in a black, strapless silk-and-leather dress from IZMAYLOVA’s Fall/Winter 2013 collection, a crystal encrusted Swarovski clutch and black pumps. A smokey eye, long highlighted locks and a glossy nude lip completed the look.

We can’t believe it was only a year ago that the pint-sized gymnast tumbled into our hearts wearing a cute bedazzled leotard and now she’s glamming it up like a true fashionista.

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Trouble falling or staying asleep? The secret to getting a good night’s rest could lie in your mattress.

Certified spine surgeon, Dr. Hooman Melamed, shared his wisdom about how to “sleep right, sleep tight” on a recent KTLA TV appearance. According to Melamed, 80 percent of people experience back pain at some point in their lifetime, and one critical way to help ease this problem is to find a better mattress.

So what should you be looking for? Expensive mattresses aren’t always superior, he said, and certain types are better for certain sleeping positions. For example, side sleepers need to cushion the shoulders and keep the neck in alignment.

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