Thursday, June 20, 2013

Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 MDP benchmarks: prepare for ludicrous speed

Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 MDP benchmarks prepare for ludicrous speed

Today we had a chance to play with Qualcomm's latest MDP devices (tablet and phone) which pack the company's mighty Snapdragon 800 SoC (MSM8974). The tablet is slightly larger than than last year's and features an 11.6-inch 1920 x 1080-pixel display, 2GB of LPDDR3 RAM, 32GB of built-in flash storage (with microSD expansion), USB 3.0 support and a 12 megapixel AF rear camera with flash (2MP fixed-focus in front). All of this is crammed into a slim (0.46 inches / 11.7mm) chassis that's powered by a 3400mAh Li-ion battery and incorporates a bevvy of radios (LTE band 17, WiFi ac, Bluetooth 4 LE, GPS, NFC) and sensors (including pressure and humidity).

The phone shares most of the tablet's specs but swaps the screen for a 4.3-inch panel (1280 x 720 pixels) and the battery for a smaller (1500mAh) pack. We put these Snapdragon 800-equipped MDPs through their paces by running our usual suite of benchmarks (plus a few more). The results? Prepare for ludicrous speed! More after the break.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/MYhtmy2N2Pc/

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Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 Benchmarks: This Thing Has a Face-Melting GPU

Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 Benchmarks: This Thing Has a Face-Melting GPU

While most high-end Android phones currently sport Qualcomm's Snapdragon 600, there's another chip announced earlier this year waiting to hit the scene: the Snapdragon 800. Now, the first benchmarks of that new chip are in?and its GPU promises to smoke the competition.

AnandTech has a raft of numbers comparing the Snapdragon 800's CPU and GPU to chips like the Snapdragon 600, Apple's A6 and A6X, and the Exynos 5 Dual and Octa, which have been neatly complied by Ars Technica. What they make clear is that, while the chip's CPU is only a modest upgrade over the 600, its GPU is going to blow you away. First, the CPU scores:

Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 Benchmarks: This Thing Has a Face-Melting GPU

The Snapdragon 8000 almost manages to keep pace with the Tegra 4, though never manages to beat it. Look at the GPU scores, though, and it's quite a different story:

Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 Benchmarks: This Thing Has a Face-Melting GPU

Here, the 800 smokes both the Tegra 4 and the A6X?impressive given Tegra 4 tablets are yet to land and Apple is usually ahead the game in terms of graphics. The only thing to ponder here?other than the huge promise such GPU performance offers?is power consumption. Qualcomm claims it'll be on par with the 600, but it's worth being a little skeptical about that claim?at least until devices start shipping. [Anandtech via Ars Technica]

Graphics by Ars Technica

Source: http://gizmodo.com/qualcomm-snapdragon-800-benchmarks-this-thing-has-a-fa-514245637

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Thursday, June 13, 2013

$99 Android tablets could begin launching this year

Vice President Joe Biden knows how to work a room. In remarks made on Tuesday night at a fundraiser for Massachusetts Senate candidate Ed Markey in front of an audience of donating (doting?) Democrats, Biden went for the jugular. In a reference to Al Gore, who introduced Biden at the Washington, D.C., event, Biden said, [...]

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/99-android-tablets-could-begin-launching-195040131.html

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Ahead of the Bell: Corinthian Colleges

NEW YORK (AP) -- Shares of Corinthian Colleges Inc. declined in premarket trading Tuesday as the company disclosed that it is under investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

In a regulatory filing, the Santa Ana, Calif., company ? which runs Everest, Heald and WyoTech colleges and offers online degrees ? said that it received a subpoena from the SEC on June 6. The company said that it was told it was under investigation in a letter that came with the subpoena.

Corinthian said that the subpoena requested documents and other materials related to student information in areas such as recruitment, attendance, completion, placement, defaults on federal loans and on alternative loans, as well as compliance with U.S. Department of Education financial requirements, standards and ratios, and other corporate, operational, financial and accounting matters.

Corinthian said it plans to cooperate with the SEC investigation.

In April the company said that it lost money in its fiscal third quarter, pressured by a decline in new student enrollments. New student enrollments dropped 5.7 percent to 26,738, while total student population declined 6.2 percent to 87,776.

Corinthian's stock dropped 42 cents, or 15.1 percent, to $2.37 in premarket trading 75 minutes before the market open.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ahead-bell-corinthian-colleges-122353895.html

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Anne Frank: The Biography

New material allows German historian and biographer Melissa M?ller to offer readers a deeper, more nuanced view of the world's most famous Holocaust diarist.

By Elizabeth Toohey / June 11, 2013

Anne Frank: The Biography By Melissa M?ller Holt, Henry & Company, Inc. 480 pp.

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In Teju Cole?s "Open City," a Moroccan character named Khalil claims that Europe lacks freedom because ?[i]f you say anything about Israel, you have your mouth plugged with the six million.? He is, of course, referring to the six million Jewish victims of the Holocaust.

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The beauty and value of Anne Frank?s diary, and the life-story that emerged from its publication, lies in the way it transforms that statistic into an individual life of artistic and intellectual promise. ?When I first read the diary as an adolescent, Anne?s voice resonated: we shared a birthday and Jewish heritage, and I related to her crushes, rebellions and ambitions.

Initially I worried that revisiting that narrative might be superfluous and even (I?ll admit it) potentially dry. Yet Melissa M?ller?s updated version of Anne Frank: The Biography is anything but.

In her comprehensive and nuanced portrait of Anne and her collapsing world, M?ller has given us Anne Frank for adults. Whether describing the dynamics of Otto and Edith Frank?s marriage, assessing the leaks that may have lead to the family?s discovery (some of this is new material), or sketching a picture of Anne?s world in the Annex and then, hauntingly, the camps, M?ller?s work is flawlessly researched and compellingly written.

While offering a portrait of Anne ? her growth as a writer, family, and relationships with friends and boyfriends (?Hello? Silberberg?s story is especially interesting)? ? M?ller also details Hitler?s rise to power and its dire consequences for the Jewish people of Europe. To follow the inexorable movement from the Nuremberg Laws to the 1938 pogroms to the Dutch Jewish Council?s compliance in rounding up victims for the camps is to be given a radical lesson in the material consequences of apathy and fear.?

American audiences, who tend to cast themselves as heroes in World War II, might note our strategy ?to delay and effectively stop for a temporary period of indefinite length the number of immigrants into the United States,? as undersecretary of state Breckenridge Long put it. It was these practices that successfully kept the Franks in Holland, where all but Otto would be sent to their deaths at Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen.

M?ller subtly contrasts the tentativeness of Nathan Straus, the powerful New York businessman and Otto?s longtime friend, who would only support his immigration through ?established channels,? with the ?helpers,? Miep Gies, Johannes Kleiman, Elisabeth ?Bep? Voskuijl, and Victor Kugler, gentiles who went from working for Otto to supplying his family with provisions at great personal risk during their two years in hiding.

The diary itself takes on a life of its own. M?ller?s discovery of a new five-page entry in the 1990s, when her biography was originally published, caused enough of a stir to make the front page of The New York Times. These pages ? initially suppressed by Otto, who excluded them from the diary but gave them to a friend for safe-keeping ? shed a different light on Edith through Anne?s maturing understanding of her parents? marriage, which M?ller expands on through her research.

The diary itself is shown not as a simple window into the Annex but as the carefully constructed project of an aspiring writer, one who was inspired by a radio broadcast out of London calling for eyewitness accounts, diaries and letters especially, to be collected after the war.

Anne thus planned the diary as a basis for her first book, and it is only by remembering that this ambition was realized that the tragedy of her death is in small part mitigated. She was on the last train from Westerbork, a Dutch internment camp that was relatively habitable (relatively being the operative word here), to Auschwitz, where she and her sister were then transported to Bergen-Belsen.?

Be forewarned that the penultimate chapter, ?The Last Train,? is a painful read.

Throughout the biography, M?ller establishes the unifying theme of Nazism as the relentless attempt to rob every Jewish person of individuality, epitomized by the edict that Dutch Jews register for ?voluntary emigration? but substitute ?Sarah? and ?Israel? for each family member?s first name.

In a similar vein, Miep Gies warns again casting Anne as a symbol for the six million, insisting she instead serve as a reminder of the individuality of each life lost. In an age of political apathy, when genocides have become all too common and prominent figures like the artist Charles Krafft emerge as Holocaust deniers, revisiting Anne Frank?s life thus becomes more important than ever.

Elizabeth Toohey is a Monitor contributor.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/9x76r9hrobs/Anne-Frank-The-Biography

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Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Librarian (Reference/Instruction) Posting #0000889 | Jobs in Libraries

This is a list of job announcements for any type of library within Georgia and the Southeast.

Posted by: Georgia Perimeter College

Posted date: 2013-Jun-11

Location: Georgia Perimeter College

Georgia Perimeter College, Newton Campus seeks a Librarian who will participate in reference and circulation services; teach and coordinate library instruction classes; participate in collection development; and participate on various committees in a team environment.
The Newton Campus of Georgia Perimeter College is located in Covington, GA. on Hwy. 11 near I-20 (exit 98).

Source: http://www.georgialibraries.org/jobs/index.php?post_id=1134

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Unusually massive line of storms aim at Midwest

(AP) ? A gigantic line of powerful thunderstorms could affect one in five Americans on Wednesday as it rumbles from Iowa to Maryland packing hail, lightning and tree-toppling winds.

Meteorologist are warning that the continuous line of storms may even spawn an unusual weather event called a derecho (duh-RAY'-choh), which is a massive storm of strong straight-line winds spanning at least 240 miles. Wednesday's storms are also likely to generate tornadoes and cause power outages that will be followed by oppressive heat, said Bill Bunting, operations chief at the National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Okla.

The risk of severe weather in Chicago, Indianapolis, Cincinnati and Columbus, Ohio, is roughly 45 times higher than on a normal June day, Bunting said. Detroit, Baltimore, Washington, Milwaukee, Pittsburgh and Louisville, Ky., have a risk level 15 times more than normal. All told, the area the weather service considers to be under heightened risk of dangerous weather includes 64 million people in 10 states.

"It's a pretty high threat," Bunting said, who also warned that the storms will produce large hail and dangerous lightning. "We don't want to scare people, but we want them to be aware."

Wednesday "might be the worst severe weather outbreak for this part of the country for the year," said Jeff Masters, meteorology director at Weather Underground.

You can have tornadoes and a derecho at the same time, but at any given place Wednesday the straight-line winds are probably more likely.

Last year, a derecho caused at least $1 billion in damage from Chicago to Washington, killing 13 people and leaving more than 4 million people without power, according to the weather service. Winds reached nearly 100 mph in some places and in addition to the 13 people who died from downed trees, another 34 people died from the heat wave that followed in areas without power.

Derechoes, with winds of at least 58 mph, occur about once a year in the Midwest. Rarer than tornadoes but with weaker winds, derechoes produce damage over a much wider area.

Wednesday's storm probably won't be as powerful as 2012's historic one, but it is expected to cause widespread problems, Bunting said.

The storms are the type that will move so fast that "by the time you see the dark sky and distant thunder you may have only minutes to get to safe shelter," Bunting said.

The storms will start late morning or early afternoon in eastern Iowa, hit Chicago by early afternoon and move east at about 40 mph, Bunting said. If the storm remains intact after crossing the Appalachian Mountains, which would be rare for a derecho, it should hit the Washington area by late afternoon or early evening, he said.

For Washington, Philadelphia and parts of the Mid-Atlantic the big storm risk continues and even increases a bit Thursday, according to the weather service.

___

Online:

The Storm Prediction Center: www.spc.noaa.gov

Seth Borenstein can be followed at http://twitter.com/borenbears

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-06-12-Big%20Storm/id-27f2eac32a9e40e08c6516eef0a3361f

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