BlackBerry’s budget ‘Americano’ phone reportedly caught on camera

BlackBerry Cseries reportedly caught on camera

There have been rumors that BlackBerry would introduce a touch-only parallel to the Q5, and we may have just glimpsed that smartphone in the wild. Both BBin and CrackBerry have photos of what’s reportedly the “Americano,” the first device in the low-end C-series. The handset appears to be a smaller, more rounded counterpart to the Z30. There’s nothing to support claims that the “Americano” will use the Q5’s Snapdragon 400 processor and 5-megapixel camera, but there is a Verizon logo hinting at the possibility of a US launch. We also haven’t heard of a release date for the phone, assuming it’s released at all. We won’t be surprised if it launches relatively soon, however; when BlackBerry is discounting the Z10, there may be a hole in the lineup before long.

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Source: BBin, CrackBerry

America’s Poorest States: 24/7 Wall St.

Last year, household income remained effectively unchanged, according to data released this week by the U.S. Census Bureau. This is despite the fact that the U.S. added nearly 2.2 million jobs in 2012.

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This Underwater Airplane Flies Through The Ocean Unlike Any Submarine Before It

It all started with a little crab.

While conducting tests with a conventional submersible that crawled on the bottom of the sea, ocean engineer Graham Hawkes came nose to nose with a little crustacean that was poised to fight the underwater machine.

“I remember stopping and laughing,” Hawkes told The Huffington Post. “But I thought, ‘That crab has got it all wrong. These fish are moving in three dimensions. This guy is scurrying along the bottom. So am I. We’ve both got it wrong.'”

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Yes, atomic bomb that fell in US almost went off, says document

"Yeah. It would have been bad news — in spades."

(Credit: Screenshot by Edward Moyer/CNET)

Newly declassified documents are on everyone’s mind these days, as are inadequate safeguards on national-security programs. But the latest secret doc to see daylight makes the NSA’s surveillance missteps look rather like child’s play — at least in comparison to nuking your own country.

That’s right, the Guardian reports that the US nearly took out a nice chunk of the Eastern seaboard in 1961 when a B-52 bomber broke apart in midair over North Carolina and dropped two hydrogen bombs — one of which came one electrical switch away from detonating.

The incident has been talked about for years, but this is the first time this secret document discussing the matter has been published in declassified form, the Guardian says.

The document — obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request by journalist Eric Schlosser (whom some may know as the author of “Fast Food Nati… [Read more]

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Cassidy Lynn Campbell, Transgender Teen, Named Homecoming Queen

On Friday night, transgender teen Cassidy Lynn Campbell was crowned homecoming queen at a California high school.

Campbell, a 16-year-old student at Marina High School in Huntington Beach, was shocked when blue and gold balloons revealed she had won the crown on Sept. 20, according to KTLA. “I instantly just dropped to the ground and started crying,” she said.

She is the first transgender homecoming queen at Marina High School and hopes that her win echoes outside her town.

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All Your Favorite NES Games in One Swirling Vortex of Nostalgia

All Your Favorite NES Games in One Swirling Vortex of Nostalgia

Remember before video games had polygons? Or online play? Or more than just an "A" and "B" button? When ducks were hunted and princesses were in another castle? Well now you can stare into that cyclone of NES history with this tornado of video-game-days-gone-by from Pop Chart Labs.

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Grand Theft Auto V lays claim to “fastest to $1 billion” sales crown

Suggesting that they’ve attained the honor of becoming the fastest entertainment property in history to achieve worldwide retail sales of $1 billion dollars, GTA V sets itself up against not only other video games, but feature films as well. Though it’s not the same industry save its ability to entertain, it is entertaining (perhaps ironically), […]

San Jose State Punter Harrison Waid Ejected For Starting Fight Against Minnesota (VIDEO)

San Jose State punter Harrison Waid managed to get ejected late in the fourth quarter against Minnesota when he started a fight after a failed onside kick attempt. Waid got knocked down at the end of the play and then went after the Minnesota player who hit him.

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Caleb And Joshua Bledsoe, Twin Brothers, Accused Of Trying To Kill Their Father

Twin brothers Caleb and Joshua Bledsoe are accused of trying to kill their father, but their father doesn’t see himself as a victim, saying he will “never abandon” his sons.

The 25-year-olds were arrested after allegedly locking William Bledsoe in his Ellensburg, Wash., home and setting it on fire in the early morning of Monday, Sept. 16, according to ABC News.

The Ellensburg Police Department said in a Facebook post that the elder Bledsoe was evacuated before Kittitas Valley Fire and Rescue arrived, adding:

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Obamacare Exchanges Could Weather Government Shutdown: State Officials

By Sharon Begley and Lewis Krauskopf

NEW YORK, Sept 21 (Reuters) – U.S. State officials behind the launch of President Barack Obama’s healthcare reform on Oct. 1 say they could weather a federal government shutdown, though the scenario would add new pressure to the political attacks and technical issues that have weighed on the program’s introduction.

Several officials running new state-based insurance exchanges that are due to open for enrollment next month said they expected to have access to funds in the case of a shutdown, which if it happens, would also start on Oct. 1, the beginning of the the fiscal year.

But they were unsure of the consequences for the federal agencies they work with, in part because they have not been briefed by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), the agency taking the lead in implementing the reform law.

The exchanges are key to the success of “Obamacare,” as they aim to help millions of uninsured Americans receive benefits by providing government subsidies to buy insurance.

Officials involved in building the online marketplaces have already warned of technical bumps and glitches in the first few weeks after they go live, contributing to a slow start to enrollment.

Independent experts believe that “the effects of a government shutdown on the implementation of the ACA (Affordable Care Act) are likely to be pretty small,” said Paul Van de Water, a policy analyst at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a Washington-based non-profit think tank.

The main reason, he said, is that the money flowing to the 16 states and the nation’s capital that are running their own ACA exchange is what’s called a “permanent appropriation,” enshrined in the 2010 healthcare reform law. Because the funds are not subject to annual appropriations, they will continue to be available to states that need to pay employees and contractors and buy equipment and supplies.

What is even less clear is the ability of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to operate a federal data “hub” that underpins both the state-run exchanges and the 34 state exchanges that fall under the purview of the administration.

The possibility of a federal government shutdown became more likely late last week, when congressional Republicans voted to fund the government but not the implementation of Obama’s healthcare law.

The Democrat-controlled Senate is unlikely to go along. If the two chambers cannot agree on a spending bill by Sept. 30, it will trigger a government shutdown the next day.

Previous shutdowns, as well as a memo issued by the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) last week, shed some light on how another one would affect the rollout of the ACA.

OMB told federal agencies that they could continue to run “entitlement programs, such as social security benefits, for which an indefinite appropriation provides the funding.”

During the longest government shutdown, from Dec. 16, 1995, to Jan.6, 1996, similar procedure allowed almost all employees of the Social Security Administration to continue working (and get paid), because Social Security “is a permanent program” that does not require annual appropriations from Congress to operate, said Van de Water.

The benefits established under the healthcare reform law, including federal subsidies to help people pay insurance premiums, “are also entitlements provided in permanent law,” he said. “Under the OMB memo it seems highly likely that CMS would conclude that the people necessary to carry out the ACA could continue to work.”

Federal employees working on Obamacare could therefore keep reporting to their desks even if they are not deemed “essential.” OMB defines essential employees as those “providing for the national security,” which means the military continues to operate during a government shutdown, or “the safety of life and property,” which means people such as meat inspectors, FBI agents and federal prison guards remain on the job.

CMS referred questions about who would work and what ACA-related functions would be affected by a shutdown to OMB. In a statement, OMB spokesman Steven Posner said “agencies are still in the process of reviewing relevant legal requirements and updating their plans. Determinations about specific programs are being actively reviewed as agencies undertake this process.”

KEEPING THE HUB OPEN

Another key question concerns how a shutdown would affect Obamacare’s core information technology (IT) component, called the federal data services hub.

The hub funnels personal information, such as income, from databases at the Internal Revenue Service, other federal agencies and private data companies back to the state exchanges, indicating whether someone is eligible for federal subsidies to purchase health insurance.

“I have not been provided any information from CMS on whether the hub would operate” in the event of a government shutdown, said Rocky King, executive director of Cover Oregon, that state’s Obamacare marketplace.

That will depend on how CMS interprets OMB’s directive in two areas: contractors and information technology.

Contractors led by CGI Group Inc and Quality Software Services Inc have built and will operate much of the information technology (IT) underpinning the exchanges. Even if the data hub is allowed to operate during a government shutdown, “it needs continuous maintenance,” said Michael Marchand, spokesman for Washington Health Plan Finder, that state’s ACA marketplace.

OMB says that a contractor “may continue to proceed with its work” during a shutdown if the agency it’s working for “already obligated funds representing the entire price under a contract” before the shutdown.

“This seems to say that if there is an issued contract, the contractors can keep working,” said Van de Water.

CMS declined to say whether the IT contracts for Obamacare meet that criterion.

IT operations are allowed to continue only under limited circumstances, according to the OMB memo. One circumstance is if “their continuation is necessarily implied from a congressional authorization or appropriation of other continued functions.”

States running their own Obamacare exchanges are also uncertain about whether their own employees will get paid in the event of a shutdown, and whether they will have access to the federal grants that support their operations. The ambiguity stems from the fact that the grants, totaling tens and even hundreds of millions of dollars, did not come in the form of a lump payment deposited in a state’s bank account.

“These are draw-down grants so the money is not in our bank,” said Oregon’s King, referring to a system in which the federal government deposits funds in accounts that states draw from as expenses are incurred. “No information has been shared with me that we would be prevented from continuing that draw-down, but I just don’t know.”

Kevin Counihan, chief of Connecticut’s Access Health CT exchange, said he should have enough money to operate for about four months in the event of a shutdown. Should the federal data hub not be operational, the state could still accept applications, he said. Officials in Colorado also said their exchange would function, but the state would have to make adjustments if the shutdown was prolonged.

Federal payments to subsidize insurance for eligible buyers – those with incomes less than four times the federal poverty level, or $62,040 for a couple – would not be in jeopardy because they are due just before coverage begins, not when someone enrolls. Anyone buying health insurance by Dec. 15, 2013, is covered as of Jan. 1, 2014.

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