iPhone 6 Does Not Play High-Res Audio At The Moment

iphone 6 hires audioWhile there are several handsets which are on the market that have been touted to offer for the alleged high-resolution audio, which is said to be better compared to CD quality audio, those are far and few in between. The LG G2, for example, was able to handle lossless 24-bit/192kHz audio files playback, before that act was followed by the Samsung Galaxy Note 3, which subsequently caused most of the other smartphone companies mulling over the idea of similar capabilities in future handsets. Well, while there are rumors going around of Apple working on a high-res audio tracks catalog for iTunes, one ought to take note that the recently released iPhones will lack high-res audio support.

How is that “no-show” of a feature proven? Apparently, an audio testing expert played purposefully generated sampling quality tones in .wav format via the iPhone 6′s headphone jack, before using a high-res audio recorder that runs at the required 96kHz sampling rate, 24 bits per sample, to detect the playback.

All recorded files were then sent to the Adobe Audition editing software, where it was matched to the original files, and the conclusion was this – the new iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus were unable to support 24-bit resolution audio. Sure, it smells as though Apple purposely restricted such a capability, since the latest iPhones were relying on tailor-made Cirrus Logic 338S1201 audio processor, which is capable of supporting high-res audio in its most recent editions.

iPhone 6 Does Not Play High-Res Audio At The Moment

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Advice For Teen Girls Dating Older Guys

A mom says that ever since her “all-American” 17-year-old daughter started dating a 28-year-old divorced father, she has become rude, disrespectful and even verbally and physically abusive. The teen says she’s in love with her boyfriend of one year and plans to marry him. Worried about her daughter’s future, the mom turns to Dr. Phil for help.

“You need to decide and recognize the choices that you’re making now may have consequences for years and years to come,” Dr. Phil tells the teen in the video above.

Weigh in on the conversation:

Like Dr. Phil | Follow Dr. Phil | Be on the Show

200k BlackBerry Passport orders as Chen narrows losses

Passport_Black_3DeviceBlackBerry’s Passport may have left many confused at the oddly-proportioned messaging smartphone, but initial demand was reassuringly high – for a BlackBerry – the company’s CEO has insisted. 200,000 orders for the square-screened QWERTY handset have been placed since it went up for sale on Wednesday this week, CEO John Chen confirmed, alongside BlackBerry’s announcement that its latest financial quarter … Continue reading

iOS 8 update is fixed: go ahead and update

updateWondering if it’s OK to update your iPhone 6, 6 Plus, or any other iPhone or iPad out in the wild today? It is. While yesterday’s update to iOS 8.0.1 took a bit of a pinch to the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus – cutting out service, good stuff like that – version 8.0.2 has been released. If you … Continue reading

An American Entrepreneur in Paris: How Sylvia Beach fought censorship

Her story is legendary: an American bibliophile who brought her love of literature to Paris and created one of the most well-known and influential bookstores of the twentieth century, Shakespeare and Company. Sylvia’s story is a fascinating one, and something that I have been knocking up against over the past several months.

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Sylvia and Joyce in Paris (source)

It started when I first began to think seriously about diving back into book collecting, and with it a career in books. I have always loved bookstores, and in New York, there was none like the great Shakespeare and Company, where I first stepped 23 years ago.

Throughout my career I have been passionate about the rights of individuals–from artist to business owner, from writer to shopkeeper–and Sylvia’s story speaks directly to that theme as she helped to publish one of the greatest expressions of free speech in the last 150 years.

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The old store in 1920s Paris (source)

A few months ago, I was traveling through Europe, and in Paris to see the wonderful labyrinthine bookstores and antique stores holding Europe’s treasures. I visited the old site of Sylvia’s second store on the Left bank, and fell in awe of the magic that had taken place there. Sylvia herself gathered some of the most influential novelists and writers of the century, along with Gertrude Stein and Hemingway, during the Interwar heyday of the Modernism movement. It was like Midnight In Paris had come alive, and I was so inspired by simply being there.

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Sylvia’s memorial in Princeton

Back on my home turf, I learned that our dear heroine had been buried and memorialized at Princeton University. No small feat, she was the original publisher of Joyce’s Ulysses, famously banned in America for its supposed lewdness, and a book which I am so proud to own and love reading! Her papers are archived here in Princeton where you can read her personal letters like a window to that time period.

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My copy of Joyce’s masterpiece

In 1922, Sylvia remarkably and single-handedly published Joyce’s epic tome. He was notorious for working until the end, trashing printer proofs by adding huge amounts of text and working on his novels and stories up to the very last minute. While other publishers turned their backs on Joyce’s genius, Beach chased it–and like a good entrepreneur, risked everything in order to afford its printing.

Unfortunately for Beach, the risk did not pay off when Joyce eventually sold the rights to the book to Random House in the 1930s and failed to pass any of his advance on to her.

Before Random House’s bid on Joyce’s book, it had been banned in the United States and American readers were clamoring for pirated copies. In 1933, a judge made the landmark ruling allowing sales of James Joyce’s book and countless subsequent written works involving obscenities.

As we close this week–an annual focus to raise awareness of banned books, we have to consider how much Joyce’s masterpeice not only influenced English-language literature and Modernism in general–but, perhaps most importantly, the pursuit of freedom of speech and the written word in American history.

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From the trial on banning Ulysses (source)

Special thanks to Lauren Bailey for her assistance on this article,

Confronting ISIL: The Day and Decade "After"

As the United States assembles a coalition-of-the-threatened against the ISIL terrorist organization, now is the time to begin planning for the “day after.”

ISIL is a new and uniquely disturbing threat to the peoples of the region, its state system, and Western interests in the Middle East and beyond. It controls, or partly controls, an area roughly the size of Belgium across northeast Syria and western Iraq (having dissolved the border in the areas under their rule). The CIA estimates they have up to 31,000 fighters, and their oil revenues alone are thought to bring in $1-2 million a day.

Rarely has a terrorist group assembled such vast resources, and never has one controlled so much territory in the heart of the Arab world. Moreover, ISIL openly proclaims its antagonism to the entire existing Middle Eastern (and ultimately global) state system, which it vows to destroy, and posits itself as a radical alternative.

Because of the rapid, terrifying recent sweep by ISIL out of Syria and into Iraq — seizing control of key strategic locations and major cities like Mosul — response has tended to focus on situation-specific and counter-terrorism oriented approaches. This is understandable, and indeed indispensable. Additionally, the nature and impact of the political aspects of the “day after” must be charted now, at the outset of this lengthy and complex process, in order to ensure that they lay the foundations for regional stability and security.

But ISIL is merely one manifestation of a broader phenomenon of violent Islamist extremism that threatens Western interests and mainstream Muslim-majority societies in many parts of the Islamic world, and under many guises. It’s not enough to simply treat this symptom, although that is certainly essential. Rather the whole disease of violent religious radicalism, with multiple incarnations across the Islamic world, is rooted in ideology and in the failure of states and the collapse of societies. It must be confronted by a sustained strategy that addresses these root causes.

ISIL’s partial obliteration of the Syria-Iraq border is emblematic of the endemic and growing state failure in parts of the Arab world that produced the organization in the first place, and on which it continues to feed. There is a vicious circle of mutual self-reinforcement between state and society failure on the one hand and the rise of extremist non-state actors on the other.

The groundbreaking Arab Human Development Report, issued by the United Nations in 2002, painted a stark, sober and depressing picture of a region in desperate need of development, and social and economic growth. Unfortunately but unsurprisingly, the Report was widely welcomed, but then woefully neglected, with its recommendations languishing in obscurity.

The Report called attention to three crucial requirements for Arab development: human rights and freedoms as the basis for good governance and accountability; the empowerment of women; and improving knowledge acquisition and utilization. Subsequent reports looked at each of these areas in more detail.

The reports did not suggest that a terrorist rampage was the most likely consequence of a failure to address these challenges. For that, the additional brutality of the al-Assad dictatorship, and sectarian misrule by Iraqi governments, were required. But it is state failure, with its disastrous social and political consequences — as exemplified today in not only Syria and Iraq, but Libya and potentially some other Arab countries as well — that lies at the heart of the explosion of violent extremism.

The 2002 Report documented how far behind most of the rest of the globe the Arab world had already fallen. The regional picture is now even more dire.

Some Arab states and societies are pressing forward in a process of dynamic globalization, and developing more open relations based on commerce and interdependency on issues ranging from security to the environment, sustainability to public health. Yet most of the Arab world appears to be sliding ever further back into an insular mindset that views the rest of the world, and its cultural and social influences, with suspicion and hostility. Sectarianism, which wasn’t even mentioned in the 2002 Report, has become a brutal and bloody incubator of violence across and within many Arab states.

The international community is correctly determined to reverse the rise of ISIL by force. But ultimately armed conflict, counterterrorism and law-enforcement are insufficient to reverse the tide of violent extremism. That requires stemming and redressing the causes of regional and state failure, economic malaise, social alienation and cultural degradation. Only by addressing and resolving these root causes can the region, the international community, and the United States break the cycle of repeated and indecisive wars that merely set the stage for another round of conflict.

The only way to eradicate, not just diminish, movements that thrive in such contexts, taking advantage of weak states and societies, is to rebuild those states and societies. This is the challenge now facing the Middle East. Global powers, in their own self-interests, need to be strategic partners in helping the region prepare for not just the day, but decades, after the defeat of ISIL.

2015 Ford Mustang First Drive: Pony Car rebooted

IMG_0820-ford-2015-ford-mustangBeing an uncontested icon in the automotive world is a blessing and a curse. On the one hand, there’s the cachet and instant attention that comes with legendary status. The flip-side, as Ford has discovered with the brand new 2015 Ford Mustang, is that it’s incredibly tough – if not impossible – to please every fan, every time. Hell hath … Continue reading

Flipboard released for Windows Phone [UPDATE: Testing]

fliopboaaaAfter our preview this early April of Flipboard for Windows Phone devices – it’s finally here. Finally, after months of development and preparation for release. At last, Windows Phone 8 and Windows Phone 8.1 users can have access to one of the most popular news aggregators in the land. The app looks much like the version we saw at Build … Continue reading

Oregon Court Says Animals Can Be Crime 'Victims,' Like People. So What Does That Mean?

Last month, the Oregon Supreme Court issued two rulings widely celebrated as major victories for animal rights, granting animals legal protections formerly reserved for humans.

In State v. Nix, the court held that animals — namely, 20 goats and horses, found starving among the bodies of others that hadn’t made it, on the defendant Arnold Nix’s farm — can each be considered individual “victims” under the law.

In State v. Fessenden, also involving an emaciated horse, the court upheld the warrantless seizure of an animal found to be starving, under an “exigent circumstances” exception to the Fourth Amendment.

These decisions have been cheered by many in the animal welfare community and by law enforcement.

But some, like the Animal Legal Defense Fund and Oregon animal welfare attorney Dane Johnson have pointed out the rulings’ limits.

ALDF, for example, expressed disappointment that the court did not go even further and explicitly decide if a broader Fourth Amendment exception — the “emergency aid exception” — also applies to animals. This exception, ALDF writes, is “similar to the exigent circumstances exception in that it allows warrantless entry to save life, but does not require probable cause.”

Johnson expands on this in his own blog post, taking issue with the decisions’ legal limitations as well as their moral boundaries:

Why, for example, do we consider the recognition that individual animals are as much victims of inflicted suffering as human crime victims significant when we kill billions of sentient animals in violent and painful ways every year unnecessarily for food?

The Huffington Post recently caught up with Johnson by email to find out more:

Can you tell us about State v. Nix, and what’s important about the ruling?

State v. Nix is a criminal case involving what the Oregon Court of Appeals described as “dozens of emaciated animals, mostly horses and goats, and several animal carcasses in various states of decay.”

A jury convicted the defendant of 20 counts of second-degree animal neglect. At the defendant’s sentencing hearing, the state asked the trial court to impose 20 separate convictions because the jury had found the defendant guilty of neglecting 20 different animals. But the trial court “merged” the guilty verdicts into a single conviction, then sentenced the defendant to 90 days in jail and three years of probation.

The Oregon Court of Appeals reversed that decision. Oregon’s lower appellate court ordered the entry of separate convictions on each guilty verdict for a violation of ORS 167.325 and resentencing. The defendant appealed to the Oregon Supreme Court, which affirmed the Court of Appeals.

Presumably, the defendant will now receive a stricter sentence.

What does it mean to say that animals can now be considered “victims” under the law? How does this change things?

The Nix case clarifies that under existing Oregon animal cruelty laws, criminal neglect of multiple animals cannot be grouped together into a single charge. It treats animals as individual “victims” for purposes of sentencing.

Under Oregon law, when a defendant is found guilty of committing multiple crimes during a single criminal episode, those guilty verdicts “merge” into a single conviction, unless they are subject to one of a series of exceptions.

One of those exceptions provides that when the same conduct involves two or more “victims,” there are as many separately punishable offenses as there are victims. The defendant in Nix argued that because animals are not “victims” as the law defines that term, only one conviction for multiple counts of animal neglect was allowed.

The Oregon Supreme Court found nothing in the statutes limiting the meaning of the word “victim” to human beings. It determined that a “victim” was instead the subject of whatever protection is provided by the underlying law being violated.

The court rejected the defendant’s view that the victim of an animal neglect case is either the public at large or the owner of the animal. The court reviewed the development of animal cruelty law in the United States and Oregon. It explained that while “early animal cruelty legislation may have been directed at protecting animals as property of their owners or as a means of promoting public morality, Oregon’s animal cruelty laws have been rooted — for nearly a century — in a different legislative tradition of protecting individual animals themselves from suffering.”

Animals are ordinarily considered to be property under the law. Does this opinion mean that, legally speaking, animals are no longer mere property?

The Nix case does not change the fact that animals are considered to be property under Oregon law. In fact, in its opinion, the Oregon Supreme Court expressly acknowledged that “Oregon law regards animals as the property of their owners.”

The court emphasized that its opinion in Nix was not a policy statement about whether animals generally “deserve” to be treated as victims. It explained that the Nix decision “is based on precedent and on a careful evaluation of the legislature’s intentions as expressed in statutory enactments.”

The court found that these intentions were to protect the individual animal’s interest in not being treated with criminal neglect and cruelty, not just to protect the owner’s economic interest in the animals.

This case comes on the heels of another Oregon Supreme Court case finding that police can execute warrantless searches when they believe an animal is in imminent danger. Can you tell me why that case is important?

In its recent opinion in State v. Fessenden, the Oregon Supreme Court upheld the warrantless seizure of a horse in critical condition that led to a successful criminal prosecution for animal abuse and neglect.

The court upheld the seizure as valid under both the Fourth Amendment and the Oregon constitution, which makes warrantless entries and searches unreasonable unless one of a few narrow exceptions applies. One is the “exigent circumstances” exception, which applies to situations in which police must act swiftly to prevent danger to life or serious damage to property.

Since animal neglect is a crime, animals are considered property under Oregon law, and the horse would probably have died before a warrant could be obtained, the court found the circumstances sufficiently “exigent” to justify the warrantless seizure.

Unfortunately, the court in Fessenden did not go further and consider whether an officer could seize an animal without a warrant under the broader “emergency aid” exception.

These two cases, individually and together, seem to show a major shift away from how animals are usually treated under the law: as mere property. Is that right, do you think?

The Nix and Fessenden cases apply existing Oregon law without narrowing it to be even less protective of animals, so in that sense they are helpful to animals. The opinions may also hopefully persuade courts in other states that have held that animals cannot qualify as victims for sentencing purposes.

Unfortunately, however, I don’t think that these two cases represent any major shift away from a view of animals as property. As the court in Nix explained, “Oregon’s animal cruelty laws have been rooted — for nearly a century — in a … legislative tradition of protecting individual animals themselves from suffering.”

This tradition has stood along one that regards animals as property. The court cautiously avoided giving any opinion that animals “deserve” to be treated as victims.

As sentient beings, however, animals have interests that are incompatible with their being treated as mere property. Animals therefore inherently “deserve” to be treated other than as human resources.

But individual animals by the billions continue to be subjected to horrible suffering and death, mostly in industrial agriculture. This exploitation is not considered criminal animal abuse or neglect.

Do you think animals in Oregon have enough legal protections now? How about outside Oregon?

Because animals are generally treated as property under the law, they have few legal protections in Oregon or in other states, and the protections that do exist generally require only that property owners provide the minimal level of care needed to accomplish the owner’s particular human purpose.

Animal interests for legal purposes are usually restricted to not being deprived of the minimal care required to provide an economic benefit to their owners.

You work as an animal welfare lawyer. What do you see as the parts of the law that haven’t yet caught up with how society now thinks of animals?

Society displays profound moral confusion when it comes to animals. The law reflects this confusion despite the fact that it is becoming increasingly clear that nonhuman animals share with us characteristics of sentient beings. Some of these characteristics are being perceptually aware, feeling pain, caring for their offspring and desiring to continue to live.

In other words, society seems to understand that all animals are sentient, but it allows the horrific exploitation of most of them, mainly in industrial agriculture. At the same time, it protects against the neglect and abuse of some of them, such as dogs, cats and the horses and goats involved in the Nix case.

There is no legitimate justification for this different treatment because there is no morally significant difference between the horses and goats in the Nix case and the animals exploited for human purposes, including billions of farmed animals.

Attorney Steven Wise, who brought the personhood suits on behalf of captive chimpanzees in New York, argued in The Oregonian that these recent decisions are a step toward legal personhood for animals. Do you think that’s correct?

The Nix and Fessenden decisions indicate the Oregon Supreme Court’s awareness that, as Professor Wise quoted in his editorial, “the day may come when humans perceive less separation between themselves and other living beings than the law now reflects.”

Although the court acknowledged the current legal status of animals as property, it recognized that individual animals have interests that are incompatible with being classified as property. Hopefully, other courts and lawmakers will also recognize these interests.

You have a statement on your professional website encouraging people to go vegan. Why is that, and how does that statement fit into your practice?

Because animals are sentient, we have a moral obligation not to view and treat them as human resources. The most important thing that we can do to stop exploiting animals is to go vegan.

This interview has been lightly edited for length.

Do you have some professional insight into the animal/human bond? Have another animal story to share? Get in touch with The Huffington Post’s animal welfare editor at arin.greenwood@huffingtonpost.com!

A Way to Win: Election Talk with Celinda Lake

Last week on The Zero Hour we talked about the upcoming election with Celinda Lake, a leading strategist for progressive organizations and liberal Democratic candidates. The conversation was enlightening. It was also (hopefully in the best sense of the word) alarming – as in, a wake-up call. There is much to be done to prevent a Republican victory in November, and not much time to do it.

The good news is that there is substantial polling data which lays out exactly what must be done. The question is, will enough Democrats get the message?

Expanding Social Security

In this first clip we discuss a recent study by Lake Research Partners which shows that voters “overwhelmingly” favor expanding Social Security. They also favor lifting the payroll tax So that millionaires and billionaires pay into the program at the same rate as people below the (which is currently about $117,000).

I was familiar with this study, since I wrote about it recently. The conversation was still enlightening. While I understood that voters favored lifting the tax, I didn’t realize that most voters aren’t even aware of its existence – or that, once they learn about it, they view it as a “loophole” which benefits millionaires at their expense.

And it’s not just that voters “wildly favor” Social Security as a program. They are also deeply concerned about their own retirement, so an expansion to the program is personally as well as politically appealing. It’s particularly attractive to female voters who are critical to Democrats’ prospects in November.

Retirement is a “major anxiety” for women. Married women begin to think seriously about the issue at age 55, while single women become concerned about it at the age of 35.

“Overwhelming” Support

In this clip we discuss the fact that, according to the Lake Research Partners study, 73 percent of independents and 73 percent of Republicans supported expanding Social Security. There are very few issues which have that much ability to sway undecided voters:

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90 percent of Democratic voters also support the idea, and 75 percent of them feel strongly about it, which means that a platform of expanding Social Security (and paying for it by lifting the cap) would be an enormous motivator for turning out the Democratic base on Election Day.

I asked why more Democratic candidates weren’t embracing the proposal, with numbers like these. “I can’t imagine,” she answered. She then went on to comment that officials in Washington tend to think of Social Security is a program which requires taxes and costs money.

“But that’s not how people think about Social Security,” Lake said.

Values Voters Vote Social Security

In this third clip, she goes on to explain that voters don’t think of Social Security as just another program. Instead, it represents a core value among the electorate. Social Security is, as she explains, what political types described as a “valence issue” – as close to motherhood and apple pie as you can get in the real world.

“You want a bipartisan issue?” asked Lake. “People think that this is the best program they ever heard of, better than sliced bread.”

She went on to say that Social Security “embodies fairness” for voters, in addition to being a “very, very popular program.”

The Winning Platform

When asked what other programs could provide a winning platform for Democrats – one which could drive turnout and persuade voters – Lake listed three issues:

Education: As Jeff Bryant notes here, voters are outraged by the idea that education programs (Lake used Head Start as an example) are being cut in order to balance the budget. She notes that the issues is especially important to “drop-off voters” and registered Democrats, both of whom must be motivated to go to the polls in this off-year).

The War on Women: Policies which affect women, along with misogynistic Republican rhetoric, is a critical issue for voters this year.

Economics: The third issue involves the basket of policies Lake describes as “populist middle-class economics,” which includes issues like the minimum wage and Social Security (which voters also see as an economic issue.)

Give ‘Em Heck, Joe!

In this last clip, I floated the idea of sending Vice President Biden out on the campaign trail to talk about economic issues. I asked Lake, who worked for Biden’s 2008 campaign, if she agreed that he has a certain gift for these issues:

“He is the best,” she said.

Will somebody propose that to the President? “Boy, I hope so,” she said. “Hopefully his folks will hear it from your show,” she added, “because I couldn’t agree more.”

The entire interview is here:

To subscribe to The Zero Hour podcast, go here.