Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Western Digital buys Stec to build solid-state business

By Chandni Doulatramani

(Reuters) - Hard drive maker Western Digital Corp will buy troubled Stec Inc to become one of the top players in the high-growth solid-state drive (SSD) industry that has flourished despite high prices of the storage devices.

Stec is one of the oldest makers of solid state drives, which are much faster than traditional hard drives, but it has lost market share to the likes of Western Digital, Seagate Technology PLC and market leader Fusion-io Inc.

The deal to sell Stec for $340 million follows an insider trading scandal that forced out its co-founder and CEO last year. Stec shares have halved in value this year.

Western Digital and other companies that make personal hard drives and traditional PC hard drives are looking to switch to the newer drives that are more reliable and energy efficient.

Western Digital offer of $6.85 per share represents a 91 percent premium to Stec's closing share price on Friday.

Stec shares jumped 87 percent to $6.74 in morning trading on the Nasdaq. Western Digital shares were down 1.5 percent.

"I think Stec was looking at a long series of losses, and their current management team may have been impeding their ability to get business with certain original-equipment manufacturer customers," said Craig-Hallum Capital analyst Richard Shannon.

The deal comes about six months after the Stec's biggest shareholder, Balch Hill Capital, started pushing the money-losing company to consider a sale after the scandal.

Stec has looked at other suitors including Seagate and is unlikely to get higher offers, Benchmark analyst Gary Mobley said in a research note to clients.

Mobley downgraded the stock to "sell" from "hold".

Seagate told Reuters last year that it was looking to buy smaller rivals that have a significant share of the enterprise market.

Stec specializes in hard drives used in servers and data centers.

Stec's co-founder, Manouch Moshayedi, resigned as chief executive in September over insider trading charges. His brother, Mark Moshayedi, took over as the interim CEO.

Stec's revenue has been declining since 2011 and halved in the first quarter this year from a year earlier.

The company's stock trades at 1.3 times forward 12-month sales, mostly in line with the sector average, according to Thomson Reuters data.

The sale is expected to close in the third or fourth quarter of 2013.

Wells Fargo Securities LLC is the financial adviser to Western Digital while BofA Merrill Lynch advises Stec.

(Writing by Sayantani Ghosh in Bangalore; Editing by Don Sebastian)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/western-digital-buys-stec-build-solid-state-business-144838531.html

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Sunday, June 23, 2013

PFT: RGIII changing directions without complications

chad owens gettyGetty Images

Reggie Williams, the Jaguars? first-round pick in 2004, was among the final cuts of the CFL?s Toronto Argonauts on Saturday.

Williams, 30, signed with the Argonauts on May 29. According to the Canadian QMI Agency wire service, Williams had a one-handed TD catch in the Argonauts? final preseason game Thursday vs. Montreal.

While Reggie Williams? stint in Toronto has ended, another former Jaguars receiver is very much a key part of the Argonauts? 2013 plans.

In fact, this ex-Jaguar is the CFL?s top best player in the estimation of TSN and sportswriters across Canada.

Chad Owens, a sixth-round pick of Jacksonville in 2005, was voted the CFL?s best player?on Friday.

Owens, 31, was the CFL?s Most Outstanding Player in 2012 after catching 94 passes for 1,328 yards and six TDs for the Grey Cup-champion Argos. Moreover, he set a league record for all-purpose yards.

Owens could never quite stick with the Jaguars, who released him in January 2008. But he stuck with professional football. He played Arena ball for a year, then landed on the Montreal Alouettes? practice roster for much of 2009. The next year, the Als traded him to Toronto, and he has been a key contributor since.

For former NFL players, making a?CFL roster is easier said than done. There are just eight CFL teams, and the Canadian game is different than the NFL game, with the wider field one example.

Given that Reggie Williams hasn?t been on an NFL roster since 2010, lasting until Toronto?s final cuts may signal he?s retained some professional-caliber skill. That?s one silver lining. Another may well be the success of his former Jaguars teammate, who?s authored quite the impressive career revival in Canada.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/06/21/rg3-changing-directions-no-complications/related/

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Southwest resumes takeoffs after computer glitch

In this Feb. 9, 2012 file photo, a Southwest Airlines Boeing 737 waits to take off at Chicago's Midway Airport as another lands. A spokesman for Southwest Airlines says all departing flights have been grounded due to a system-wide computer problem, Saturday, June 22, 2013. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

In this Feb. 9, 2012 file photo, a Southwest Airlines Boeing 737 waits to take off at Chicago's Midway Airport as another lands. A spokesman for Southwest Airlines says all departing flights have been grounded due to a system-wide computer problem, Saturday, June 22, 2013. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

(AP) ? A system-wide computer problem forced Southwest Airlines to ground its entire fleet of airplanes preparing for late-night departures, and cancellations were expected even after service slowly resumed early Saturday using a backup system, a company spokesman said.

Brad Hawkins told The Associated Press an estimated 250 flights were grounded at least temporarily due to the glitch, which impaired the airline's ability to do such things as conduct check-in, print boarding passes and monitor the weight of the aircraft.

Some flights were on the taxiway and diverted back to the terminal after the problem was detected around 11 p.m. ET Friday, he said. Flights already in the air were unaffected.

Hawkins said service resumed around 2 a.m. ET Saturday after officials began using a different system.

"Backup systems are in place not the main system, so it's slower," he said. "But we are able to start launching these flights."

He said at least some cancellations were expected because the airline doesn't do redeye flights and was near "the end of our operational day."

The late hour of the disruption meant the computer problem affected far more flights on the West Coast, but Hawkins said at least a few on the East Coast were grounded as well. Southwest, based in Dallas, conducts, on average, 3,400 flights a day.

A spokesman for Los Angeles International Airport said of about 25 inbound and outbound flights remaining Friday, only five departing flights were experiencing delays, of 30 to 80 minutes. At LA/Ontario International Airport (ONT), a total of three flights ? all departures ? were affected.

Four Southwest flights were temporarily held in Seattle, said Christina Faine, a Seattle-Tacoma International Airport spokeswoman.

One flight to Oakland, Calif., had been due to leave at 9:20 p.m. and departed before 11 p.m. Faine said late Friday night that an airport duty manager, Anthony Barnes, told her the others were expected to depart shortly.

Steve Johnson, a spokesman for Portland, Ore., International Airport, said he was not aware of any planes held up there.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-06-22-Southwest%20Flights%20Grounded/id-b3296bb8e15a4291a0d2644eead4ffa3

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Taliban offer adds urgency to Idaho POW rally

HAILEY, Idaho (AP) ? The tearful mother of the only known U.S. prisoner of war said Saturday she's feeling "very optimistic" about his eventual release after his Taliban captors offered last week to exchange him for prisoners at Guantanamo Bay.

U.S. Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl's mother, Jani Bergdahl, spoke to about 2,000 people gathered in Hailey, his hometown, in a city park where he played as a toddler and little boy.

About 400 in the crowd arrived astride motorcycles, adorned in leather and patches commemorating America's military missing in action.

Bowe Bergdahl, 27, was taken prisoner in Afghanistan on June 30, 2009. First Jani Bergdahl, then his father, Bob Bergdahl, who accompanied the motorcycle procession on his son's 1978 dirt bike, spoke for a combined 15 minutes about rejuvenated hopes that their son's now-four-year ordeal will soon come to a joyful close.

"We are feeling very optimistic this week," his mother, before addressing her son directly. "Bowe, we love you, we support you, and are eagerly awaiting your return home. I love you my son, as I have, from the first moment I heard of you, the never-ending, unconditional love a mother has for her child."

Buses also brought POW-MIA activists to the event from as far as Elko, Nev.

Though yellow ribbons on Main Street trees and "Bring Bowe Home" placards in Hailey shop windows are a constant reminder of the 27-year-old Bergdahl's captivity, organizers of the event said the Taliban offer has lent an addition element of urgency ? and hope ? to Saturday's gathering.

Many in the crowd said they were Vietnam veterans; some of them supported the proposed prisoner exchange without reservation.

"Give them their guys and get our guy home," said David Blunt, of Elko, Nev., who said he served in the U.S. Army in Vietnam as a medic. "Bring our guy home. He's suffered enough."

Bergdahl is believed held somewhere in Pakistan, but the Taliban said they would free him in exchange for five of their most senior operatives at Guantanamo Bay, the American installation on the southeastern tip of Cuba that's housed suspected terrorists following the Sept. 11 attacks.

The militant group's exchange proposition came just days ahead of possible talks between a U.S. delegation and Taliban members.

Bergdahl's father, Bob Bergdahl, urged those gathered at Hailey's Hop Porter Park to remember everyone, regardless of nationality, who had suffered during the 12-year conflict in Afghanistan that began following the Sept. 11 attacks.

He described his son as "part of the peace process."

"I wish she was the only mother that was suffering in that way," Bob Bergdahl said of his wife. "Mothers all over the world are suffering because of this war, and I don't forget that for even one day."

He addressed his son's captors in Pashto, the Afghan language he's learned since Bowe Bergdahl went missing.

Bob Bergdahl, who has grown a beard and wore all black at Saturday's event, said that while he is physically in Idaho, he's living vicariously through his son, having set his cell phone to Afghan time, in a bid to share as much as he can his son's experience in exile.

Both mother and father talked of Bergdahl as an adventurer, a young man who once helped crew a sailboat through the Panama Canal, disembarked in San Francisco and then rode a bicycle south along the Pacific Ocean to meet family in Santa Barbara, Calif., 350 miles away.

He joined the military at 22 because "he honestly thought he could help the people of Afghanistan," Bob Bergdahl said.

On June 6, the family said it received its first letter from their son in his handwriting in four years, ferried through the International Committee of the Red Cross.

The circumstances of his capture aren't completely clear, though U.S. officials on July 2, 2009, told The Associated Press a soldier had been taken after walking off his base following his duty shift. For some of the motorcycle riders who participated Saturday, those details are something to be sifted through later, after Bergdahl is safely in the arms of his family.

"He didn't go over there on his own," said Randy Danner, a former U.S. Air Force member from Mountain Home, who rode his motorbike to Hailey with a group called the Green Knights. "No matter the circumstances, for our men and women over there who have put themselves in harm's way, we have a duty to support them in any way we can."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/taliban-offer-adds-urgency-idaho-pow-rally-081600377.html

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Whale of a win: Environmental victory protects whales from noise pollution

Michael Jasny, director of the?NRDC?Marine Mammal Project, contributed this article to LiveScience's?Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.

By Michael Jasny,?Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) / June 20, 2013

A gray whale attracts attention by blowing air out of its blowhole as it cruises just off the shore of Washington State, Wednesday, June 19, 2013. A landmark case will protect whales from the painfully loud blasts used in oil exploration.

Alan Berner / The Seattle Times / AP

Enlarge

Here?s a recipe for an environmental train wreck: Take one of the world's most powerful industries, allow it to conduct harmful activities for years without obtaining the basic authorizations required by law, and produce a wealth of science making it plain that those harmful activities are putting endangered and vulnerable species at risk.

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Today (June 20, 2013), a number of conservation groups, including my own,?announced a landmark agreement?that may prevent one such train wreck ? this one in the already scarred Gulf of Mexico.

The underlying problem is airguns.?To search for deep deposits of oil, companies troll the ocean with high-volume airguns that, for weeks or months on end, regularly pound the water?with sound louder than virtually any other man-made source, save explosives. We now know that these surveys can have?a vast environmental footprint, disrupting feeding, breeding and communication for whales and other species over literally thousands of square miles.

It's the sort of activity that ordinarily requires approval under the Marine Mammal Protection Act, Endangered Species Act, and other federal laws. And yet the government has allowed it to proceed without authorization in the Gulf of Mexico, a body of water that may well be the most heavily prospected on the planet.

Industry runs dozens of exploration surveys each year in the northern Gulf, and many of them make use of large airgun arrays. For more than a decade now, the problem has languished, even as the threat posed by airgun exploration has loomed larger and larger.

Our alliance of conservation groups sued over the government's failure. In the end, we reached agreement with both federal officials and industry representatives that will help protect marine mammals while a comprehensive environmental review is underway.?

Among other things, our settlement puts biologically important areas off-limits to high-energy exploration, expands protections to additional at-risk species and requires the use of listening devices to help prevent injury to endangered sperm whales. Our agreement is also forward-looking, requiring industry to develop and field-test an alternative to airguns known as marine vibroseis, which could substantially reduce many of the impacts. Over the long term, the hope is that working together stands a better chance of saving species in the Gulf's biologically compromised, politically heated environment.

Marine conservation in the Gulf isn't like conservation in other places. Among other difficulties, the disruptive activities NRDC is concerned about are affecting the same populations still suffering from the?Deepwater Horizon?disaster.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/8mdPQNNuIAw/Whale-of-a-win-Environmental-victory-protects-whales-from-noise-pollution

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Saturday, June 22, 2013

Kathleen Sebelius?s Thankless, Anonymous, and Partly Failed Effort to Insure More Poor People

The Supreme Court surprised everyone last year when it upheld the bulk of the Affordable Care Act, and the law?s authors and supporters rejoiced. But in a crucial caveat, the Court ruled that one of ?Obamacare?s? cornerstones, the expansion of state Medicaid programs, could not be mandatory. Suddenly, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius got a big promotion. She wouldn?t just be the chief health regulator; now she?d also be the administration?s top negotiator with states contemplating this new choice about whether to expand. A key part of her job became convincing them that extending Medicaid to more poor people was the right choice for their residents, their budgets, and the country.

This was a surprisingly good fit. President Obama had originally wanted former Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle for the HHS job, thinking that his legislative skills would have helped shepherd the health reform bill to passage. (Dasch-le?s vetting revealed tax problems.) In his stead, the president chose Sebelius, a former elected insurance commissioner and governor of conservative Kansas. She knows the states. She knows their leaders through the National Governors Association, where she served on the executive committee. And Sebelius knows how hard it can be to foster acceptance of Washington policies among local politicians. ?It?s really helpful in the place I am now to have been on the other side of those conversations,? she tells NationalJournal.

After the Court?s decision, Sebelius went to work. She kept an ?open-door policy? for governors, she says, meeting with many regularly to advise and cajole them?and occasionally traveling to their states. Instead of laying out a raft of new, strict rules for states to take or leave, Sebelius tried to allow behind-the-scenes negotiations. And she kept the confidences of her ?former colleagues?; she declined to openly criticize recalcitrant state legislators or gloat when a GOP governor acceded. She adopted an unusually personal approach to the issue: Despite her many responsibilities running the sprawling department, she took the lead on expansion. Marilyn Tavenner, who heads the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (the lead agency on the expansion), notes that Sebelius herself has said she wants to be in the room with the governors. ?The secretary does a tremendous amount of that work.?

Yet the results have been disappointing. With most legislative sessions over, about half the states have committed to expanding their Medicaid programs, meaning that millions of low-income Americans, many in the country?s poorest states, will get no insurance next year when the law?s main provisions switch on. Designed to cover more than 30 million uninsured Americans, Obamacare will fall well short of its original goal, and that failure will undermine reform in other ways?disrupting the cash flow for hospitals that serve the poor, seeding confusion among those still eligible for benefits, and cementing deep divides in the health and wealth of states around the country.

The Sebelius strategy may not have unfurled perfectly at every turn. Critics say that HHS has been inflexible on certain rules and that the department has shaped too many others on the fly?unpredictably creating systems the law hadn?t considered and encouraging states to submit ?waiver? applications that will allow the department to work outside the confines of its on-paper regulations. But she still may have achieved the best possible outcome. The Supreme Court empowered states to say no, and an astonishing number of them did. Even the most well-equipped ambassador with the most pragmatic possible approach couldn?t overcome deep opposition to Obamacare.

SALESMANSHIP

Sebelius, Arkansas Gov. Mike Beebe, and their aides were sitting at a conference table in Washington in late February when they finalized a Medicaid expansion deal they could all live with. Beebe and Sebelius, both Democrats, served as governors together; they go back years. But their agreement depended less on personal trust than on legal flexibility.Beebe always favored expansion, but he needed an approach that could pass his state?s GOP-controlled legislature.

The Affordable Care Act said that people earning below 133 percent of the federal poverty level?about $15,000 for a single person?should get insurance through expanded Medicaid. But Arkansas Republicans didn?t want a larger government program. So a team of consultants, HHS officials, and Beebe?s staffers unearthed a vague and decades-old provision in the Medicaid statute allowing its funds to sometimes be used to buy commercial health plans. In a handshake deal after that February meeting, the secretary agreed to let Arkansas use such a mechanism to cover all of its new Medicaid enrollees. Instead of offering poor Arkansans coverage under the state Medicaid program, as the law described, Beebe would let them buy private coverage at the federal government?s expense, a choice that could cost as much as 50 percent more than the conventional program, according to the Congressional Budget Office. It was an expensive solution, but at least it brought one more state on board.

At the time, Sebelius had enjoyed a series of high-profile successes. Not only had she secured promises to expand from nearly every state with a Democratic governor but she?d also recently persuaded seven Republican governors to come along, too. They included anti-Obamacare firebrand Rick Scott of Florida and Jan Brewer of Arizona (who had tangled with the administration on immigration policy). The same day that Beebe announced the Arkansas deal, New Jersey?s Chris Christie, who had his eyes on the 2016 presidential election, also threw his support behind expansion.

The administration thought it was playing a strong hand. Even though the Supreme Court had allowed states to opt out of the expansion, the incentives to opt in were enormous. The federal government will pay 100 percent of the bill for the first three years, and even in later years the contribution will never drop below 90 percent. (Currently, states receive on average 57 percent from Washington.) In a period when many state economies are still shaky, expansion means a huge infusion of federal cash into local economies. Hospitals, which have powerful lobbies, exhorted their state officials to sign up. A series of studies suggested that expansion would both stimulate economic growth and save governors money by allowing them to reduce spending on health care for the uninsured. An analysis by the nonpartisan Urban Institute suggested that many of the states most opposed to the law?the poor ones in the South and elsewhere?had the most to gain.

Yet Sebelius?s success rate was worst in exactly those states. And when a GOP governor capitulated, it was sometimes because Sebelius offered more than just Medicaid funding. She granted a generous waiver to let Arizona restructure its existing Medicaid system. She gave Florida permission to move nearly all of its existing Medicaid population into managed-care plans, answering a request her department had been considering for two years. Gov. John Kasich of Ohio said he received assurances from the White House that he?d be able to split the program in two: People below the poverty line would get traditional Medicaid, while those above would receive federal vouchers to buy private plans on the exchanges. Matt Salo, the executive director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors, said it was important that states felt they were able to negotiate. ?Politics 101 is: When your counterpart wants something, try to see what you can get in exchange for it,? he says, ?even if you want the same thing.?

Ron Pollack, the president of Families USA, which supports health reform, says he has been impressed by the way Sebelius has balanced the strictures of the law with an openness to state realities. He rates her performance as close to ideal, despite the poor results. ?Secretary Sebelius used to be a governor, she used to be an insurance commissioner, so she?s got real sensitivity to what states need,? he says. ?She is a bridge because people trust her and people have experience with her.?

Still, critics say the department could have done more to sweeten the deal for skeptical states. ?Their political strategy was based on, ?Here is a bunch of federal dollars, and we will just let the raw politics of the infusion of that money prevail, and that?s all we have to do,? ? says Dennis Smith, a managing director at McKenna Long & Aldridge, who was Wisconsin?s HHS director until February. ?I think that was a huge mistake.? Wisconsin opted against expansion. Smith argues that the department?s approach was too proscriptive?barring states from asking new beneficiaries to pay more for their care and requiring states to cover a broad array of expensive benefits that exceed the reach of most commercial insurance products.

The Arkansas option went further than Sebelius?s previous side deals. After that February meeting, Beebe announced a plan to voucherize Medicaid for the new beneficiaries. They would get the federal subsidy if they enrolled on the state exchange, purchasing the same plans available to higher-income purchasers. The agreement, as he described it, raised several questions. Would HHS really approve a plan that could cost so much more than traditional Medicaid? Would the new beneficiaries be exposed to the high deductibles and co-payments in the private plans (in apparent conflict with the Medicaid statute)? What legal authority enabled the department to permit a program mentioned nowhere in the Affordable Care Act?

The decision displeased Medicaid advocates (who worried that the Arkansas plan might rob new beneficiaries of key legal protections) and some budget hawks (who noted that Congress had used Medicaid to expand health coverage instead of private insurance specifically because it was so much cheaper). But Sebelius?s call also cheered many close to the process, who thought the ?Arkansas option,? and the flexibility it suggested, would be enough to entice many more states into expanding. National news reports, circulated in state capitals, described the plan as a sort of third option?not rejection, not expansion. ?Any state that has until now been saying ?no? can use this as a way to get to ?yes,? ? Salo said at the time. He guessed that it might lure 10 more states to expand.

For about a month during peak state-budget season, politicians across the country began thinking that everything was on the table. The Florida Senate began exploring its own private-expansion model, which would involve neither Medicaid nor the exchanges. Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam?s office contacted HHS and made a series of eleventh-hour demands that officials told the governor they couldn?t honor. Now, neither of those states looks likely to expand.

Finally, at the end of that month, HHS laid out clear rules about what would and wouldn?t be allowed by states pursuing an ?Arkansas option.? (For the most part, they gladdened Medicaid advocates and disappointed conservative would-be reformers.) Sebelius defends the delay, saying the month of uncertainty didn?t derail states committed to expansion but gave them an opportunity to present the department with their own ideas. ?Beyond what you saw as a month delay were probably daily conversation with not only Governor Beebe but others,? she says. ?To me, that was a better way to try to navigate this process than shipping out massive rules and regulations.?

Sebelius says her objective?as a former state official who knows how little local politicians like directives from on high?has been to give governors and legislators room to take ownership of the Medicaid expansion. ?What we?re trying to do, particularly in the Medicaid space, is not issue a lot of edicts: ?You absolutely cannot do x, y, and z.? ?You absolutely must do these four things,? ? she says. ?This is, frankly, driven by a lot of my sensitivity to states wanting to feel that it?s their program, it?s tailored for them?particularly in some of these more partisan legislative processes?that they are not being told by Washington to do something.?

Some states were never going to expand. Tony Keck, the director of health and human services in South Carolina, says an expansion didn?t fit with Republican Gov. Nikki Haley?s view of the best way to improve the health of the state?s poor. His state would have been open to new Medicaid financing schemes, Keck says, but not if these required them to cover new people. ?They want to get as many people health insurance as possible,? he says. ?We think that?s the wrong way to address the question.? Asked if he could think of a concession Sebelius could have made to induce the Palmetto State to join, he couldn?t name one.

POWERLESS

The Arkansas example may have showed Sebelius at her most flexible and conciliatory, but it also showed the limits of her power. She had made major sacrifices?cost, structure?to help Beebe, an unusually cooperative partner, win over the GOP-controlled Legislature that was reluctant to expand a government program. ?For whatever reason, philosophical or whatever, many of them preferred the private-insurance approach much better than the standard Medicaid approach,? Beebe tells National Journal.

And while Sebelius could at least devise a plan to win over those lawmakers, she had no such luck in certain other states where legislators were less interested in negotiating. The Republican governors of Florida and Ohio endorsed Medicaid expansion, but state legislators, often those aligned with the tea party, refused to follow suit. This was perhaps inevitable: They know less about health policy than their governors (who have expert advisers and entire health departments at their command) and worry more about primary-election challenges from the right. Many will simply never be persuaded to vote for an Obamacare program or an expansion of Medicaid, which they see as deeply flawed. In other states, impossible vote counts may have prevented governors from taking the political risk in the first place.

There?s not much Sebelius can do about that. ?Some of it was waiting for who was going to blink first, and I think we all thought that the states would blink because of the amount of money on the line. And that just isn?t how it worked out,? says Caroline Pearson a vice president at Avalere Health, who has been closely tracking state developments. Pearson estimated in February that only five states would be holding out by year?s end. Now she counts 23 in favor and only three still in play. ?Governors win elections by making the case, ?We improved the economy; we extended health care to our residents,? ? she says. ?The arguments that get legislators unelected is, ?They took the following vote in support of Obamacare.? ?

Sebelius may get another chance after Election Day. Next year, half the states will start their expansions, the rest of the law will roll out, and the secretary will keep talking to governors. The implementation won?t look like the one Congress or the Obama administration had anticipated, but decisions about Medicaid can keep coming. ?There is no timetable,? Sebelius says. ?The door is open.? At this point, she?s just hoping more governors will walk through it.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kathleen-sebelius-thankless-anonymous-partly-failed-effort-insure-085744416.html

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Spreadtrum gets $1.38 billion buyout offer from China's Tsinghua Holdings

(Reuters) - Chinese cellphone chip designer Spreadtrum Communications Inc said it received a $1.38 billion buyout proposal from a unit of government-owned Tsinghua Holdings Co Ltd.

The offer of $28.50 per American depository share represents a premium of 28 percent to Spreadtrum's Thursday closing price on the Nasdaq.

Spreadtrum said its board is evaluating the proposal.

The company develops chips for smartphones, feature phones and other consumer electronics products, supporting 2G, 3G and 4G wireless communications standards.

Spreadtrum, which gets most of its sales from China and Korea, counts HTC Corp and Samsung Electronics among its customers.

Lower-priced smartphones are popular in Asia and are expected to drive growth in the mobile handsets market as the United States reaches saturation.

China has more than 1 billion mobile phone subscribers, with many switching from low-end feature phones to smartphones in the past few years as prices become more affordable with some smartphones selling for less than 1,000 yuan ($160) apiece.

Research firm IDC had forecast that China's smartphone shipments are expected to rise sharply to 460 million by 2017 and will make up nearly all mobile phone sales.

Spreadtrum and other Asian rivals such as Mediatek are improving their technology and are happy to sacrifice profits in exchange for market share in Asia.

Last week, Spreadtrum raised its revenue estimates for the second quarter by $50 million to $270-$278 million citing higher demand from low-cost smartphone makers.

Spreadtrum shares rose 21 percent to $27 in premarket trading.

(Reporting by Supantha Mukherjee in Bangalore; Editing by Saumyadeb Chakrabarty)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/spreadtrum-gets-1-38-billion-buyout-offer-tsinghua-111931522.html

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Friday, June 21, 2013

President Obama to name Jim Comey as FBI director (Washington Bureau)

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Cicadas liven up Staten Island with song and sex

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Cicadas liven up Staten Island with song and sex
The orange-eyed bugs put the New York borough in the spotlight, with an estimated 600 insects for every human.NEW YORK ? There are bugs in the trees. There are bugs on the shrubs, on screen doors, on barbecue grills, on front steps. There are shells of bugs on the ground, crunchy as tempura, and bug bodies clinging onto leaves, their dead orange eyes still beady.

Source: L.A. Times
Posted on: Thursday, Jun 20, 2013, 8:13am
Views: 14

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/128714/Cicadas_liven_up_Staten_Island_with_song_and_sex

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Sao Paulo officials reverse subway, bus fare hike

SAO PAULO (AP) ? Brazilian leaders in Sao Paulo say they are reversing a 10-cent hike in bus and subway fares that has sparked widespread protests across the nation.

Sao Paulo Mayor Fernando Haddad and Sao Paulo state Gov. Geraldo Alckmin said at a joint news conference Wednesday that the fare increase is now reversed.

However, it was not clear what impact the action would have on the protests that have broken out in several Brazilian cities.

The protests have evolved into communal outcries that have moved well beyond the original demand that public transportation fares be lowered.

Protests are continuing in Rio's sister city Niteroi and in northeastern Brazil.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sao-paulo-officials-reverse-subway-bus-fare-hike-212810467.html

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Thursday, June 20, 2013

Peoria mayor voices support for state's attorneys who will not prosecute concealed carry

PEORIA, Ill. -- Peoria Mayor Jim Ardis has said concealed carry is another component to combat crime in the city, but Governor Pat Quinn continues to let the bill sit on his desk.

Because of the governor's inaction, the public is unsure what is legal. Mayor Ardis says that puts pressure on law enforcement to make decisions state leaders can not.

State's attorneys in Peoria, McLean and Tazewell counties will not prosecute concealed carry until the law is clear. Mayor Ardis agrees.

"This was not a decision made in a vacuum,? said Ardis. ?The state's attorneys, police chiefs and sheriffs talked about this, the best way to really uphold the law as they see it and to do what they need to keep the community safe and I think they've done that.?

Illinois is the only state without a concealed carry law.

Governor Quinn is under a court-ordered July 9 deadline to sign concealed carry legislation. If he does not, concealed carry takes effect without any regulations.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/id/52257982/ns/local_news-peoria_il/

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Why squirrels are nuts about solar panels

Squirrels have taken a shine to gnawing through home solar panel wires, according to various reports. The good news is there's a simple solution to prevent squirrels from feasting on your photovoltaic array.

By Charles Kennedy,?Guest blogger / June 19, 2013

SUN BITE: A grey squirrel eats a piece of pizza crust in Wilkes-Barre, Pa. It seems the critters have a taste for clean energy as well.

Mark Moran/The Citizens' Voice/AP/File

Enlarge

Christof Demont-Heinrich wrote a?recent article?on SolarChargedDriving.com, about his home solar system, and the threat that squirrels pose to unprotected systems.

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In 2010 REC Solar installed a 5.59 kilowatt photovoltaic solar array at Christof?s home. He reports that the system has been working great, but complains about the amount of effort it takes for him to keep his solar panels safe from squirrel attack.

His paranoia began when a neighbour had a similar PV system installed in 2011 (under a lease with Sungevity, whereas Christof bought his panels outright), and he noticed that the installers, Namaste Solar, put in place a squirrel guard (a.k.a chicken wire) around the whole system.

He then noticed that REC Solar were installing another PV system (on a lease) in Denver in 2012, and unlike his Solar panels, REC were using a squirrel guard. He wonders whether solar companies don?t bother warning customers who buy, about the damage that squirrels may cause to solar arrays, even though they are fully aware of the threat and put up protection when only leasing the panels.?(Related article:?Solar Power Offers Saudi Arabia a Win-Win Energy Solution)?

James Gandolfini: 1961-2013

James Gandolfini, star of the HBO drama The Sopranos and a character actor in films a diverse as The Man Who Wasn't There and Where the Wild Things Are, died June 19, reportedly of a heart attack, in Italy. He was 51.

Gandolfini played mob boss Tony Soprano with a mix of charm, vulnerability, and menace that won The Sopranos a devoted following and earned the actor a plethora of awards, including three Emmys, five Screen Actors Guild Awards, and a Golden Globe. With a thick Jersey accent, corpulent body, and expressive face, Gandolfini cut an imposing, expressive figure as a character actor in a number of feature films.

Born in Westwood, NJ, in 1961, Gandolfini graduated from Rutgers University and worked as a bouncer and a bartender before pursing an acting career. After landing a role in the 1992 Broadway revival of On the Waterfront, he was cast as a hitman in Tony Scott's True Romance. Gandolfini had small parts in a number of prominent films before The Sopranos debuted in 1999; subsequently, he received prominent billing in the Coen Brothers' noir thriller The Man Who Wasn't There and Spike Jonze's fantastical adaptation of Where the Wild Things Are. He won rave reviews playing a general in the military farce In the Loop.

Recently, Gandolfini had played CIA director Leon Panetta in Kathryn Bigelow's Oscar nominated Zero Dark Thirty. He co-produced and starred in Not Fade Away, a drama about a teenage garage band directed by Sopranos creator David Chase. He also played a casino owner in The Incredible Burt Wonderstone.

According to reports, Gandolfini was in Sicily for the Taormina Film Festival when he was stricken with a heart attack. He is survived by his wife, Deborah Lin, a daughter, and a son from a previous marriage.

For James Gandolfini's complete filmography, click here.

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1927702/news/1927702/

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Event: Credit Risk Management | Middle East Small Business News

Business professionals can gain more information on credit risk analysis and management at an upcoming event by Genesis Institute. Attendees will enjoy valuable insights on several aspects of credit risk during the three-day intensive course.

The course will be led by Mohit Malhotra, Co-Founder and Director of Genesis Institute who has over nine years of experience in the fields of financial modelling, portfolio and investment analysis, business valuation and corporate finance.

Event Details
Credit Risk Management Course
2-4 July, 2013
Hotel Arjaan Rotana, Dubai

For more information, please visit:?www.genesisreview.com.

?

Related posts:

  1. Minimising risk: Export credit insurance
  2. Lacklustre risk management
  3. Financial Crime Risk Management technology market projected to hit USD 3.75 billion by 2012
  4. Lessons in risk management
  5. AMAF hosts corporate risk management workshop

Source: http://www.smeadvisor.com/2013/06/event-credit-risk-management/

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FISA request roundup: where and how often has the government been mining user data?

FISA request roundup where has the government been mining data

As much as the federal government would like it to, the public outrage at the scope of its PRISM program has yet to die down, despite any good the program may have served in the interests of national and local security. The revelations made by Edward Snowdon have cast a bright light on the powers granted our government by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), and many companies are taking the opportunity to push the feds to let them tell the public just how many governmental data requests are being made. Of course, no company can release exactly how many requests were made under FISA -- companies can only publish the number of total data requests, whether they be from the NSA, local law enforcement or elsewhere. Since so many of Silicon Valley's giants have been dishing our data to Uncle Sam on the sly, we figured we'd bring you all the numbers in one place.

At the top of the request list is Yahoo, which received between 12-13,000 requests in the first six months of 2013. During that same time period, Apple received between 4-5,000 requests. Meanwhile, Google reported 8,438 requests between July and December of 2012, Facebook received between 9-10,000 and Microsoft was asked for its users data between 6-7,000 times. Prefer pictures to numbers? A colorful chart awaits after the break.

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Source: Yahoo!, Apple, Facebook, Microsoft, Google, Twitter

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/18/fisa-request-roundup/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Etheridge: Jolie mastectomy 'fearful,' not 'brave'

13 hours ago

Image: Melissa Etheridge, Angelina Jolie.

Getty Images file

Melissa Etheridge, Angelina Jolie.

Angelina Jolie's decision to get a double mastectomy after learning she had the breast cancer gene mutation has been lauded by many as courageous, empowering, and even heroic. But singer-songwriter Melissa Etheridge -- a breast cancer survivor herself -- thinks it's actually the opposite of those things.

Asked about Jolie's recent New York Times op-ed, in which she revealed the news of her mastectomy and breast reconstruction, Etheridge told the Washington Blade that she wouldn't make the same decision for herself. Nor would she encourage others to do so without properly researching their options.

PHOTOS: All of Angelina's Us Weekly covers through the years

"I have to say I feel a little differently," the Grammy-winning chanteuse (who, incidentally, performed at Brad Pitt's wedding to Jennifer Aniston) said of the choice to get a preventive mastectomy. "I have that gene mutation too, and it's not something I would believe in for myself. I wouldn't call it the brave choice. I actually think it's the most fearful choice you can make when confronting anything with cancer."

"My belief is that cancer comes from inside you, and so much of it has to do with the environment of your body. It's the stress that will turn that gene on or not. Plenty of people have the gene mutation and everything, but it never comes to cancer," she continued, noting that surgical removal of one's breasts is "way down the line on the spectrum of what you can do" to lessen your risk of the disease.

PHOTOS: Stars who've had mastectomies

"I've been cancer-free for nine years now, and looking back, I completely understand why I got cancer," she added. "There was so much acidity in everything. I really encourage people to go a lot longer and further before coming to that conclusion (of a mastectomy)."

To be fair, Jolie said in her May 14 editorial that the decision to have a mastectomy was a personal one. Her main point was that women should be informed about the various options available to them.

PHOTOS: Stars who beat cancer

"I want to encourage every woman, especially if you have a family history of breast or ovarian cancer, to seek out the information and medical experts who can help you through this aspect of your life, and to make your own informed choices," she wrote.

"Life comes with many challenges," she explained. "The ones that should not scare us are the ones we can take on and take control of."

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/melissa-etheridge-angelina-jolies-mastectomy-fearful-not-brave-6C10356643

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Immigration splits GOP's national, House interests

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The Republican Party's hope of running stronger presidential races by revamping immigration is about to hit a big hurdle: House Republicans.

Many House Republicans are chilly or openly hostile to the bipartisan bill before the Senate, embraced by President Barack Obama. Even substantial changes to the bill may do little to placate these lawmakers, who demand strict crackdowns on unlawful border crossings and no "amnesty" for people here illegally.

These Republicans don't deny that weak support from Hispanic voters is hurting GOP presidential nominees. And they concede the problem may worsen if Latinos think Republicans are blocking "immigration reform."

These House members, however, worry much more about their own constituents' opposition to the proposed changes. And they fear a challenge in the next Republican primary if they ignore those concerns.

"It's hard to argue with the polling they've been getting from the national level," said Rep. Kenny Marchant, R-Texas, referring to signs of serious problems for Republican presidential candidates if immigration laws aren't rewritten. "I just don't experience it locally."

The proposed immigration overhaul "is very unpopular in my district," said Marchant, who represents suburbs west of Dallas. "The Republican primary voters, they're being pretty vocal with me on this subject." Besides, he said, "if you give the legal right to vote to 10 Hispanics in my district, seven to eight of them are going to vote Democrat."

Many colleagues concur.

"My district is not in favor of creating a system where people who committed a crime can jump in front of those who have tried to come here based on the law," said Rep. Walter Jones, R-N.C., describing what he fears the Senate will pass.

The Senate bill provides a pathway to citizenship for millions of people here illegally, but it tries to keep them from gaining citizenship ahead of people who went the official route.

Rep. Charles Boustany, R-La., summed up the dilemma for Republicans who care chiefly about electing presidents.

"Every member in the House is looking at the immigration debate through a prism of what's of concern in their district," Boustany said.

A Republican Party post-mortem of Mitt Romney's November loss to Obama concluded: "we must embrace and champion comprehensive immigration reform," or "our party's appeal will continue to shrink."

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said on NBC's "Meet the Press" Sunday: "If we don't pass immigration reform, if we don't get it off the table in a reasonable, practical way, it doesn't matter who you run in 2016."

"We're in a demographic death-spiral as a party," Graham said.

House Republicans, however, spend far more time talking and worrying about their own election prospects, not the next presidential nominee's.

"It's a classic challenge when the best interests of the party are at odds with the best interests of the majority of the members individually," said Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla. He is close to Speaker John Boehner and other Republican leaders who want a major immigration bill to pass.

"What it takes to get a deal with a Democratic Senate and a Democratic president makes it extraordinarily difficult for a lot of (House) members," Cole said, "because it can cause you a big problem in your primary."

Some lawmakers say Boehner might allow a far-reaching immigration bill to pass the House even if most Republicans oppose it, with Democrats providing most of the votes. Boehner has chosen that "minority of the majority" route on some less consequential issues. Republicans, however, say it would be harder politically to use the tactic on something as momentous as rewriting the nation's immigration laws.

Rep. Steve Chabot, R-Ohio, exemplifies the leadership's challenge.

"A lot of people do believe that the Republicans need to get this issue behind us for presidential politics purposes," Chabot said. But they "are willing to go a lot further in reaching some agreement than a lot of us believe is good for our country."

Chabot said he would not consider an immigration bill without "very substantial border control" and a visa policy that punishes those who "cut in front of the line by just coming here illegally." The current Senate bill fails those tests, he said.

Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, said the Senate bill "is not palatable at this point" because it would allow "amnesty and lack of security" on the border.

Such opposition can't be pinned solely on the politics of isolated House districts. Republicans running statewide for the Georgia Senate seat, for instance, are among the immigration proposals' toughest critics.

"Everybody is committed to getting the issue dealt with," said Rep. Jack Kingston, but "the Senate amnesty bill probably is not going to do well in the House."

Rep. Paul Broun, also seeking Georgia's Senate nomination, said any immigration deal "must make English the official language of the country." The U.S.-Mexican border, he said, must be secured "totally, whatever it takes. A double fence high enough to make sure it's secure."

Some Republicans wince at talk of massive double fences and making English the official language. They say it fuels arguments that the GOP is unwelcoming to all Hispanics, legal or not.

The "amnesty" issue may be tougher legislatively. The Senate bipartisan team says its bill will collapse without a pathway to citizenship for millions of immigrants here illegally.

Supporters say the proposed pathway isn't "amnesty" because immigrants would have to earn citizenship through an arduous route that includes paying fines and taxes.

It's unclear how many House Republicans will buy that argument.

Defining "border security" also is crucial. The Senate bill's goal is for 90 percent of would-be crossers to be caught or turned back. But it doesn't make citizenship contingent on that target.

Several House Republicans say a border enforcement level of at least 90 percent must be documented before any pathway to permanent legal status ? whether citizenship or not ? could be started for the millions here illegally.

__

Follow Charles Babington on Twitter: https://twitter.com/cbabington.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/immigration-splits-gops-national-house-interests-194350094.html

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Unions strike, protest to support Turkey activists

ISTANBUL (AP) ? Labor unions and political foes of Prime Minister Recep Erdogan rallied by the thousands across Turkey Monday, hoping to capitalize on weeks of initially small-scale protest to register broader discontent.

Two major unions urged their members to hold a one-day strike and join demonstrations in response to a police crackdown against activists who led a wave of protest that have centered on Istanbul's Taksim Square and Gezi Park in recent weeks.

The show of labor force follows a weekend in which police purged activists from an 18-day sit-in at the park that has come to symbolize defiance against the government, while Ergodan's conservative political base held huge rallies in both Istanbul and Ankara.

Monday's rallies had a more structured feel compared with the counterculture-style sit-in at Gezi and spontaneous protests of recent weeks, which at times devolved into clashes between stone-throwing youths and riot police firing tear gas and water cannons.

The rallies went on despite a warning from the interior minister that participants in unlawful demonstrations would "bear the legal consequences."

In Ankara on Monday, thousands of demonstrators waving union flags, jumping and whistling converged at central Kizilay Square in an uneasy face-off about 50 meters away from riot police and a line of trucks.

Turkey's NTV television reported that riot police issued warnings to the demonstrators to disperse, saying the rally was unlawful and authorities would take action if they did not. After about three hours, the protesters left peacefully.

TV images showed hundreds marching in the Aegean Sea coastal city of Izmir.

Behind the strikes were the KESK confederation of public sector workers and DISK, a confederation of labor unions from industries including transport, construction, health care and media. Together they say they represent 330,000 workers. Small unions that group professionals like dentists, doctors and engineers also joined in.

Strikes, however, often have little visible impact on daily life in Turkey, a country of about 75 million, and the call to walk off the job Monday had limited fallout beyond the demonstrations.

Unionists in Istanbul hoped to reach Taksim Square Monday afternoon. But police have maintained a lockdown on the square after unrest continued in pockets of the country overnight.

The standoff between police and protesters began as an environmentalists' rally. But a police crackdown lit a fuse on much broader anger and morphed the movement into a protest against Erdogan's government.

Erdogan's opponents have grown increasingly suspicious about what they consider a gradual erosion of freedoms and secular Turkish values under his Islamic-rooted party's government. It has passed new curbs on alcohol and tried, but later abandoned its plans, to limit women's access to abortion.

Five people, including a policeman, have died and more than 5,000 have been injured, according to a Turkish rights group.

Erdogan has been praised for shepherding Turkey to strong economic growth as many other world economies lagged. But his government's handling of the protests has dented his international reputation. He has blamed the protests on a nebulous plot to destabilize his government and repeatedly lashed out at reports in foreign media and chatter in social media about the situation.

The labor walkout was the second since the protests began. Another took place June 5.

"The first one, we said it's a warning for the government, to listen the streets, to listen the message from the demonstrators, and we asked them to stop this police violence," said Kivanc Eli Acik, a labor leader.

"But after that day, rather than stopping the violence, the excessive police violence and intervention is going much, much bigger. So this is the second warning, the second strong message to the government," he added.

___

Keaten reported from Ankara, Turkey. Ezgi Akin in Ankara and Burak Sayin in Istanbul contributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/unions-strike-protest-support-turkey-activists-133309037.html

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