BP Claims Appeal Over Gulf Oil Spill Settlements To Be Heard This Week

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — A federal appeals court is wading into a high-stakes dispute over the terms of a multibillion-dollar settlement of claims arising from BP’s massive 2010 oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

A three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals is scheduled to hear arguments Monday by attorneys for the London-based oil giant and for Gulf Coast businesses that say the nation’s worst offshore oil spill cost them money.

BP asserts that the judge who approved the deal and a court-appointed claims administrator have misinterpreted the settlement, allowing thousands of businesses to secure hundreds of millions of dollars in payments for inflated and fictitious losses.

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Regina Weinreich: Fireworks in the Water Line: Gasland II on HBO

What would the July 4 holiday weekend be without fireworks? Somehow the ones emerging from the faucets of ordinary citizens who happen to live where fracking chemicals have infiltrated the water system are not what the patriotic have in mind. The onscreen vision of pipes aflame, along with director Josh Fox’s banjo playing, were part of the spectacle of a special evening at Guild Hall, the second of the Hamptons International Film Festival’s Summerdocs series. When Josh Fox made his Oscar nominated documentary Gasland in 2010, the thorough expose had many thinking, what more could he have to say? The answer is plenty, to judge from the two-hour sequel to air on HBO Monday night. This story is an ongoing investigation of the practice of hydraulic drilling, meant to end our dependency on foreign oil and keep our energy sources here at home. Which sounds like a good plan, but as the documentary demonstrates, we need to pay attention to a hidden agenda that benefits the fossil fuel industry, while raping the environment. Fracking for the Fatherland? Think again.

At Friday’s preview, Guild Hall was packed for the screening and Q&A led by Alec Baldwin. His very pregnant wife Hilaria was in the crowd, as was Mariska Hargitay and Debra Messing, arriving just in time to elude the red carpet. Alec Baldwin seemed almost as passionate an opponent to fracking as Fox, who brings new evidence that the plan is to mine this energy source to sell to markets overseas, again destroying America’s natural resources to profit an industrious few. While many insist, this is not the whole story, the documentary’s evidence is frightening and clear, and should make everyone pay attention to this debate, and to consider clean alternatives, renewable energy like solar or wind power. As Fox has affirmed, this debate is not about what’s happening in any one person’s backyard, but to the planet.

A version of this post also appears on Gossip Central.

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Asiana Airlines Flight 214 Crew Tried To Abort Landing Seconds Before Impact: NTSB

SAN FRANCISCO — Pilots of Asiana Flight 214 were flying too slowly as they approached San Francisco airport, triggering a warning that the jetliner could stall, and then tried to abort the landing seconds before crashing, according to federal safety officials.

The Boeing 777 was traveling at speeds well below the target landing speed of 137 knots per hour, or 157 mph, said National Transportation Safety Board chief Deborah Hersman at a briefing Sunday on the crash.

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Switched On: Hard drives face hard truths

Each week Ross Rubin contributes Switched On, a column about consumer technology.

DNP Switched On Hard drives face hard truths

The PlayStation 4‘s is upgradeable; the Xbox One‘s is not. For at least the second consecutive generation (the third for the Xbox), hard drives will be offered as part of the gaming experience for two of the home video game powerhouses: Microsoft and Sony. For the Xbox line, which offered a model without a hard drive in the last generation, the inclusion of an internal HDD represents, along with its x86 processor, a return to the approach Microsoft took with the original Xbox.

Indeed, the Xbox One will load disc-based games onto the hard drive automatically. Both Sony and Microsoft will also offer access via the cloud. In fact, following up on its purchase of Gaikai, Sony plans to offer a range of gaming from the cloud to multiple platforms. This may include older titles that it cannot support on the PlayStation 4 due to a lack of native backward compatibility. If such capability is expected to work, why bother to have hard drives in these consoles at all? Indeed, hardware makers of many stripes are starting to ask that question.

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New Orleans Gun Vigil Brings Together Grieving Moms, City Mayor (PHOTOS)

NEW ORLEANS — July 4, 2012, was Independence Day as usual for New Orleans native Chanda Burks. As she’d done almost without exception in recent years, Burks and her three sons, Jared, 17, Vaughn, 11, and Cameron, 7, left their quiet New Orleans neighborhood, Tall Timbers, and headed to the bustling Ernest N. Morial Convention Center downtown. The family would spend the holiday weekend engaging in three days of seminars, interactive workshops and shopping brought to town by the Essence Music Festival.

This year, Burks went to the same venue, but with a different purpose: To grieve with other moms and plead with the public to put an end to the violence that took the life of her 17-year-old son.

“This year is the first year that Jared would have been going to the concerts with me,” Burks told The Huffington Post. Her son was shot and killed during an encounter in the early morning hours of Sept. 15, 2012, she said.

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The Army’s Insurgent Tracking Software Is Now Being Used to Track Gangs

The Army's Insurgent Tracking Software Is Now Being Used to Track Gangs

We all know that social media is the criminal’s worst enemy. But this summer, a group of researchers are collaborating with police to test software that can reliably predict whether a person is part of a gang based on their social networks, building on similar software used to track insurgents in Afghanistan.

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Victor Burt: An Education in Incarceration

It’s time we as a society must decide whether or not the tools we use to protect us will eventually be our undoing.
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Abby Sims: Athletes’ Recovery From Injury — Are They Set Up To Fail? Part II

When reporters inform us how long an athlete is expected to be out of action from an injury, they are reporting what they’ve been told. No one should base a fantasy team or bet the under on these predictions.
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The OnBeat Solar Headphones Want To Charge Your Phone While You Listen To Music

OnBeat

Solar panels need plenty of sun to work well so why not carry them around on your head? That’s the slightly off-the-wall thinking behind this U.K.-based Kickstarter campaign aiming to produce a pair of solar headphones.

The OnBeat headphones have a flexible solar panel embedded around the band where it’ll be exposed to ample rays — assuming you’re wearing the headphones outdoors. The panel then charges a pair of lightweight lithium ion batteries located inside the ear cups, and there’s a USB port on one of the cups for outputting charge to the smartphone or tablet you want to keep topped up on the go.

Exactly how much charge you’re going to get from such a small panel is unclear — especially considering the entire panel is not going to be in full sun at once, being as it’s curved around your head. OnBeat’s creators say the solar cell has a surface area of 55cm3 with a charge capacity of approximately 0.55W.

The creators also claim the headphones can keep another device juiced up all day, albeit they’re not backing up that claim with any sample charging data yet. It seems likely the output is only going to be enough to keep your phone or tablet ticking over rather than fully charging it, so manage your expectations accordingly. The headphones themselves can also be charged via USB from a computer or mains socket if you want to make sure their batteries contain a full power charge when setting out.

On the audio side, the headphones have the following vital statistics:

  • Audio driver unit size: 40mm
  • Impedance: 32 +/- 10% Ohm
  • Frequency response: 20hz to 20,000Khz
  • Sensitivity: 100 +/- 3 dB

OnBeat’s creators say they are taking to Kickstarter to seek funds in order to be able to pay for a large enough initial production run to hit their manufacturer’s minimum order. Which means they are seeking a rather ambitious £200,000 ($298,000) to get their solar headphones off the ground and onto people’s heads. RRP is intended to be around £119.00 per pair, but it has multiple pledge tiers offering the headphones for a lot less, starting from £69.

Microsoft shuttering MSN TV as Xbox One takes WebTV baton

Microsoft is shuttering MSN TV, the service which put internet access on users’ TV sets as early as 1996 as WebTV, shifting remaining users – and their content – over to SkyDrive. The decision, Microsoft says, was made because “there are many new ways to access the internet” since WebTV initially launched, and as such it will be ceasing service on September 30. The decision comes amid rivals like Apple and Google ramping up their smart TV plans, while Microsoft itself is renewing its efforts on dominating the living room with the upcoming Xbox One.

msn_tv_box

The original service was actually a Microsoft acquisition, with the software giant acquiring the startup WebTV in mid-1997. A set-top box – in actual fact a thin-client which used a TV as its display – the hardware went through several iterations, all of them relatively low-powered since the heavy lifting was done remotely. Functionality has, at various times, included email, web browsing, photo and video streaming, and network file access.

Microsoft plans to shift all users onto its more current services, including pushing photos stored on the STB to SkyDrive, and email to Outlook.com. MSN TV users should make sure all the photos they want to keep are converted to “Shared Photos”, Microsoft says, as only those will be automatically synchronized to SkyDrive.

Even if the MSN TV service itself is closed down, that doesn’t mean the boxes themselves are useless. Hooked up to a network, they’ll show videos and music stored on a PC, as well as any locally stored photos.

Microsoft also has a couple of offers for dial-up customers, as well as those who want to switch to MSN Premium; there’s six months of free service on offer to assuage the loss of your MSN TV service.

For many, the fact that MSN TV was even still operating will come as something of a surprise. Microsoft had not been offering the boxes themselves for some years, and the company’s home entertainment and streaming media attentions had turned instead to Xbox and, most recently, the Xbox One. In fact, the new console has some similarities with the second ever WebTV box, the “WebTV Plus”: both hook up in-line with a TV and PVR (or, in the case of WebTV, a VCR) and can remotely schedule recordings.

Where MSN TV was focused on internet access, however, Xbox One is more about gaming and multimedia; with tablets, notebooks, and smartphones all so much cheaper and more prevalent, the need to browse the internet on a TV is far reduced.

VIA CNET


Microsoft shuttering MSN TV as Xbox One takes WebTV baton is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
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