Monday, November 28, 2011

Oil rises above $99 in Asia as stock markets gain

(AP) ? Oil prices rose above $99 a barrel Monday in Asia, taking a cue from gains in stock markets after a strong start to the U.S. holiday shopping season.

Benchmark crude for January delivery was up $2.49 to $99.30 a barrel at midday Bangkok time in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract rose 60 cents to settle at $96.77 on Friday.

In London, Brent crude was up $2.13 at $107.99 on the ICE futures exchange.

Oil took its cue from Asian and European stocks, which were mostly higher Monday after record 226 million shoppers visited stores and websites during the four-day U.S. holiday weekend starting on Thanksgiving Day. That was up from 212 million last year, according to early estimates by The National Retail Federation.

Reports that France and Germany might circumvent European bureaucracy to get nations using the euro common currency to comply with strict rules for budget discipline also boosted sentiment.

Crude has fallen from above $103 more than a week ago amid investor concern that Europe's debt crisis will undermine global economic growth and oil demand.

In other Nymex trading, natural gas was up 0.3 cent at $3.545 per 1,000 cubic feet. Heating oil added 4.8 cents to $2.99 a gallon and gasoline rose 6.6 cents to $2.52 a gallon.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-11-28-Oil-Prices/id-ec9731fddf8b4792b5224ac6da6bf1bf

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Poll predicts Putin's party to get just 53 percent (AP)

MOSCOW ? A poll released Friday predicts that Vladimir Putin's party will receive 53 percent of the vote in Russia's parliamentary election, now a little over a week away.

While still a majority, this would be a significant drop for United Russia and deprive it of the two-thirds majority that has allowed it to amend the constitution without seeking the support of the three other parties in parliament.

United Russia dominates political life in Russia and has received more favorable coverage during the campaign, but it is increasingly disliked by those who see it as representing the interests of a corrupt bureaucracy.

The new poll by the independent Levada Center put the Communists in second place with 20 percent, a boost that suggests they may benefit from the protest vote on Dec. 4.

But many Russians have become disillusioned with the electoral process. Only parties that have the Kremlin's approval are allowed to field candidates, and past elections have drawn strong accusations of vote rigging.

"Forgery, the semblance of a (political) struggle, this won't affect my life and will likely be unfair. This is a summary of a Russian citizen's attitude today to what is going on," Levada Center sociologist Boris Dubin said at the presentation of the polling data.

Nearly half of those surveyed said they expected the vote count to be manipulated.

Nikita Pasternak, a 26-year-old businessman, is among the many Russians who say they see no point in voting.

"Our votes mean absolutely nothing, everything has already been decided," he said. "Putin will be president and United Russia will win the election."

Putin, now prime minister after eight years as president, plans to run for a third term in March, an election he is considered certain to win.

In 2007, United Russia won more than 64 percent of the vote and was awarded 315 of the 450 seats in the State Duma, parliament's elected lower house. The higher percentage of seats is explained by votes that went to parties that failed to rise about the 7 percent threshold; these votes are then distributed to the parties that made it in.

The new poll predicts that the Communist Party's share of the vote will rise to 20 percent from less than 12 percent four years ago. The poll also shows an uptick for the two other smaller parties in parliament: the nationalist Liberal Democratic Party and Just Russia, a party established with Kremlin support to steal votes from the Communists.

The Levada poll was conducted Nov. 18-21 among 1,591 people across the country and has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.4 percentage points.

(This version CORRECTS Corrects that poll shows 53 percent not 56 for United Russia. Adds details, photo, byline.)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111125/ap_on_re_eu/eu_russia_election

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Luxury gifts few Americans can afford

America?s rich like to spend money. In fact, the top 10 percent are responsible for half of all consumer spending in the U.S., according to the Wall Street Journal. And this holiday season, they are projected to spend even more than usual. Of course, the wealthy do not spend their money at Walmart but buy the luxury items through specialized channels. 24/7 Wall St. looked at some of the most expensive holiday gifts the wealthy buy one another.

According to the American Affluence Research Center, the rich will increase their spending this holiday season even more than they usually do. They will spend $23.5 billion on holiday gifts, an increase of 2.3 percent compared to last year. Spending among the average consumer, on the other hand, is expected to decrease.

The rich do not spend their money at the same places as the average consumers. Luxury gifts do not come from Target. They are purchased directly from top tier companies and are often available only in select cities. A Franck Muller Aeternitas Mega Grande Complications watch, for instance, is available only by special-order and only in New York or Geneva. Similarly, many high-end collections from designers such as Stefano Ricci are only available in a small number of stores in major cities, such as New York and Beverly Hills. This is doubly the case for airplanes, yachts and luxury automobiles.

24-7 Wall St.: The sodas America no longer drinks

One reason luxurious goods are so expensive is because they are less common. Only a few hundred luxurious sports cars, for example, are made for many models. Many of the finest cigars, wines and scotches are also produced in limited quantities. This rarity shortens supply, drives demand and ensures that the products are available only to a certain class of people.

To compile this list of the eleven holiday gifts Americans cannot afford, 24/7 Wall St. looked through the recommendations of Robb Report magazine, the self-ascribed ?definitive authority on connoisseurship for ultra-affluent consumers,? and chose one of the most expensive items in eleven categories. We then looked at what it is that makes each item luxurious.

1. Bugatti Veyron Grand Sport
Category: Automobiles
Price: $2,000,000

The Bugatti Veyron Grand Sport, which is capable of producing 1,001 hp and 922 ft-lbs of torque, took more than five years to develop. The automobile reaches 60 mph in a mere 2.5 seconds and is capable of exceeding speeds of 250 mph. Better still, the top comes off.

24-7 Wall St.: Jobs that require the most education, but pay the least

2. Airbus A380 Prestige
Category: Aviation
Price: $346,300,000

The A380 is the world?s largest passenger aircraft. Although not a common gift, Airbus has reportedly sold at least one of the massive jets to a private buyer. The A380 has the capacity to carry 525 passengers in a comfortable three-class configuration, and up to 853 in a single-class configuration. Interested customers will have to spend nearly $350 million on the aircraft.

3. Arturo Fuente Fuente OpusX
Category: Cigars
Price: $36.95 per cigar

Due to its limited production, the Fuente OpusX is one of the rarest cigars in the world. It is the first all-Dominican puro, with each cigar aged for two or more years. According to Robb Report, ?only the very best rollers are permitted to make the OpusX, and a separate OpusX room, reserved solely for the creation of these cigars, has been set aside at the Santiago factory.?

24-7 Wall St.: Ten cars Americans love the most

4. Alfa Nero
Category: Boating & Yachting
Price: $177,238,602

The Alfa Nero superyacht includes an office, dressing area, bathroom with a steam shower and hot tub, and a private outdoor patio with a second hot tub. And that?s just in the boat?s master suite. Better still, the yacht includes a rear pool area that converts into a helipad or dance floor, a sun bathing deck, a gym, beauty salon, and a cinema. One can rent the yacht for more than $1.1 million per week. To purchase, the yacht costs $177,238,602.

5. Goldmund Media Room
Category: Electronics
Price: $300,000

The Goldmund Media Room is a ?media room home theater speaker system.? The audio/visual system is custom built and configured for each customer?s unique theater space. The starting price is $300,000, and it includes 128 aluminum-enclosed speaker drivers, each with its own amplifier. Of course, there are plenty of options for upgrade.

Click here to see more holiday gifts Americans can?t afford

Copyright ? 2011 24/7 Wall St. Republished with permission.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45404290/ns/business-holiday_retail/

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Sunday, November 27, 2011

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Daily Crunch: Hot Stuff

1482Here are some recent posts on TechCrunch Gadgets: ScottEVest Introduces The Puffer Jacket 2011 Holiday Gift Guide: Laptops Are A Geek?s Best Friend LuvBook S: Japan Gets Super-Cute ?Hello Kitty? Laptop The Kindle Fire, What Is It Good For? They?re Rioting Over BlackBerrys In Indonesia (And Other Black Friday Insanity That?ll Make You Fear For The Future)

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Excluded from cabinet, Libya's Berbers fear isolation (Reuters)

JADU, Libya (Reuters) ? After playing a central role in the revolt that toppled Muammar Gaddafi, members of Libya's long-oppressed Berber minority, known among themselves as Amazigh, thought they had finally won a voice.

But a new interim government lineup that did not give them even a single cabinet seat has caused alarm that they may once again be banished to the sidelines of public life.

"We do not disagree with the new government, but we want to be represented and included with ministerial positions. We feel we are not included," said Ali Muhammed Shetwi, a senior member of the council of Jadu, an Amazigh town of roughly 20,000 perched on the cliff of a plateau in Libya's Western, or Nafusa, Mountains.

Shetwi was dressed in a similar style to Arab elders in the region, with a white robe knotted at his shoulder, a skull cap and brown waistcoat. It was only the subtle red and blue Amazigh design sewn at the hem of his clothes that differentiated him from the majority Arab population in Libya.

The tension between Amazigh and Arabs is one of the deepest of the many faultlines inside Libyan society which will make it hard to forge a united and cohesive state out of the ruins of Gaddafi's 42-year-rule.

Amazigh leaders responded immediately when the 51-member National Transitional Council (NTC) named the new government on Tuesday without including a single Amazigh minister.

On Wednesday, a group calling itself the Libyan Amazigh Congress said it was suspending all relations with the NTC. When the cabinet was inaugurated on Thursday, five Amazigh NTC members boycotted the ceremony.

DEMANDS OF THE NEW GOVERNMENT

In Jadu, where the blue, green and yellow flag of the Amazigh is painted on shop shutters and lampposts, residents gave a variety of views on how to deal with the lack of representation.

Elders like Shetwi say they accept the new leadership and believe their ethnic rights will be respected but want Amazigh to get senior posts to give them a voice in the nascent government.

Omar Saeed, an unemployed resident and one of Shetwi's companions, said he was willing to wait before complaining as the interim government will only last for seven months before a National Assembly is elected.

"We can accept this during these seven months, but in the future we need to be represented," he said. "First of all we are Libyan, but we are also Amazigh. Therefore the government should be Arab and Amazigh together."

Others - the younger crowd - were disheartened and prepared to stage public protests in the capital.

"The Amazigh must be represented according to their percentage of Libya's population and their share of the fighting. We need at least one ministerial position. Amazigh fought all over Libya," said art graduate Jamal Shadwi, who was plastering the walls of Jadu's central square in preparation for a festival to celebrate Libya's liberation.

A few meters away, accountant Tariq Labah, was recruiting people to head to Tripoli and occupy the main square.

"We are all going to Tripoli for a sit in, to peacefully protest (the lack of) ministerial positions for Amazigh," he said, surrounded by around 30 young men. "The Nafusa mountains was one of the first places to turn against Gaddafi," he added.

Some say they will "continue to revolt" if things do not change. In the capital, protests have been small so far. After decades of suppression, those identifying themselves as Amazigh are probably fewer than 5 percent of Libya's 6 million people.

LIFE UNDER GADDAFI

The Amazigh are fearful of continued isolation and say they want human rights, education and services.

"During Gaddafi's rule, there was nothing called "Amazigh," said elder Shetwi, adding that Amazigh towns were ignored. "Look around, it is not like a town in a country that is rich with oil. There are no nice buildings or services, the roads are awful and people have moved out."

During Gaddafi's rule, the Amazigh language was forbidden and Jadu residents say posters were hung in police stations stating that families were prohibited from naming their children with traditional Amazigh names.

Horror stories of long jail sentences for those who spoke the Amazigh language in public are rife in Jadu. One story repeated by many in Jadu tells the tale of a man who entered prison when his daughter was one year old. When he left, she was already married.

Yahya Baroni a retired electrician, says he and other Amazigh were forced into the army to fight Gaddafi's war with Chad in the 1980s.

"I was working for a foreign oil company and Gaddafi put me in the army for eight years," he said angrily. "When I retired he paid me a pension of $100 a month. I wanted to hang myself."

Baroni, who comes from a prominent family which prospered before Gaddafi came to power, says the Amazigh and towns like Jadu were deliberately isolated by Gaddafi, who feared the Amazigh would rise up against his Arab state.

"None of my four sons are working. The Amazigh like hunting in the desert but Gaddafi repeatedly confiscated our hunting rifles," he said.

The old city of Jadu lies in ruins. The sandstone walls of Baroni's family home have crumbled and the wood rafters of the collapsed roof are scattered in the street. Baroni says that Amazigh heritage was deliberately not preserved and families were moved into concrete houses in the new town.

Tired of being voiceless, the aging electrician says he wants Libya to be like America - myriad races tied under one nationality.

"The prime minister said that he wants qualified people in his cabinet," he said. "I studied electric engineering in the US, Italy and West Germany. I worked with Mobil Oil. There are lots of Amazigh who are qualified, even me."

(Editing by Peter Graff)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111125/lf_nm_life/us_libya_amazigh

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Saturday, November 26, 2011

Qualcomm challenges LCDs through new e-reader

(AP) ? A new electronic display is poised to challenge power-hungry LCDs after U.S. mobile chip maker Qualcomm Inc. teamed up with a South Korean bookseller to introduce a new e-reader.

The "Kyobo eReader" was unveiled this week in Seoul and will reach South Korean consumers as early as Dec. 1, Kyobo Book Centre officials said Thursday.

The e-reader features Qualcomm's 1.0 GHz "Snapdragon" processor, a custom Kyobo application based on Android and a 5.7 inch "XGA" mirasol display.

The mirasol display uses ambient light instead of its own in much the same way that a peacock's plumage gets its scintillating hues. Qualcomm's mirasols have already been used in a few Chinese and South Korean phones, and in an MP3 player on the U.S. market. The display contains tiny mirrors that consume power only when they're moving, easing battery drain. Mirasol displays also quickly change from one image to the next and show video.

The global market for e-readers is dominated by bright LCDs and grayscale "e-ink" screens. LCDs consume relatively more battery power while e-ink screens are slow to refresh.

The introduction of the e-reader jointly developed by Qualcomm and Kyobo signals increasing competition in the global market for tablets.

U.S. online retailer Amazon.com Inc. and bookseller Barnes & Noble Inc. have recently released tablets of their own, Kindle Fire and Nook Tablet, and are challenging Apple's iPad in pricing.

Qualcomm CEO Paul Jacobs noted South Koreans' near-100 percent literacy rate and digital reading skills during a launching ceremony in Seoul on Tuesday, according to the San Diego-based company. Fifteen-year-old South Koreans scored highest in their ability to absorb information from digital devices, according to a 2009 study by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. Over 80 percent of households in South Korea have broadband Internet access.

The e-reader featuring the mirasol display will be priced at 349,000 won, or $302, said Seoul-based Kyobo, South Korea's largest bookseller.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-11-24-AS-TEC-SKorea-Qualcomm-E-reader/id-ddd883a9fc2d4fadb38d8e80c558bc4e

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Yemen gunmen kill five in Sanaa, 17 dead in south (Reuters)

SANAA (Reuters) ? Gunmen killed at least five people protesting against a deal to end the rule of Ali Abdullah Saleh in Yemen's capital on Thursday, a day after the president bowed to pressure and agreed to step down, while the army killed 17 Islamists in the south.

If the deal goes according to plan, Saleh will become the fourth Arab ruler brought down by mass demonstrations that have reshaped the political landscape of the Middle East.

"We were marching on Zubayr street demanding Saleh and his followers be tried when we were attacked by armed men in civilian clothes who opened fire on us directly," a protester who identified himself as Nael told Reuters.

The deal, brokered by Yemen's wealthier Gulf neighbors, granted Saleh and his relatives immunity from prosecution.

The latest bloodshed in Sanaa, which witnesses blamed on Saleh loyalists, underscored the volatility of the impoverished country after 10 months of street protests aimed at toppling the leader that brought Yemen to the brink of civil war.

Thursday's shooting followed street clashes between Saleh's foes, once united in protest against him, inspired by the example of revolts in Tunisia, Egypt and then Libya.

The clashes between Saleh's foes pointed to the challenges Yemen faces in a transition away from Saleh's era and the network of his relatives still in positions of military and economic power.

At least 45 people were wounded in the attacks, said Mohammad al-Qubati, director of the field hospital near the square that Yemenis demanding an end to Saleh's 33-rule made the center of their campaign.

Saleh signed the deal in the presence of Saudi King Abdullah in Riyadh. Saudi Arabia and the United States had urged Saleh to step down as political deadlock over his rule pushed the country toward chaos they feared could embolden Yemen's al Qaeda wing.

Under the deal, whose terms were echoed in a U.N. Security Council resolution, 69-year-old Saleh transfers powers to his deputy before the formation of a new government with opposition parties and early presidential elections.

Hundreds of people have been killed over the course of the demonstrations aimed at toppling Saleh, including many in Sanaa's Change Square, a stretch of the capital's thoroughfare where protesters have lived for nearly a year.

In the south, armed tribesmen freed a French woman and two Yemenis working for the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) on Thursday, two days after they were abducted, Yemeni and French officials said.

In unrest in the south, the army killed 17 Islamist fighters with artillery fire against their positions near Zinjibar, the capital of Abyan province where al Qaeda-linked militants have seized swathes of territory, a local official said.

"OUR REVOLUTION"

The protesters' solidarity cracked after they appeared to achieve their goal of ousting Saleh. Youth protesters on Thursday turned on an Islamist party, once allied to Saleh, that backed their campaign against him.

Protesters in the square hurled bottles and stones at members of the Islah party, which took part in Saleh governments before throwing its weight against him and courting the protests against him with supplies of food.

"The people want the fall of Islah!" shouted groups of demonstrators, a play on the slogan demanding the downfall of regimes -- a refrain of the political upheaval rippling through the Arab world since the start of the year.

Fistfights broke out between members of Islah and supporters of the youth groups that shaped the Sanaa protests, which appeared to have secured their goal when Saleh agreed to quit.

The youth organizers deride the coalition of opposition groups that took part in the accord Saleh signed, and call them partners to his crimes and part of a political elite they hope to overthrow completely.

"Our revolution, down with Islah!" chanted protesters who skirmished with members of the Islamist group.

"We will not allow our revolution to be hijacked, Islah should leave the square," said Sami Atfari, a 22-year-old English student.

The political paralysis Yemen has endured in the struggle over Saleh's fate has seen long-standing conflicts with two distinct secessionist movements in the north and south, and another with militant Islamists, stir anew.

Those crises, as well as the position Saleh's son, nephew and other relatives have in controlling key military units and sectors of the country's industry and trade, highlight the challenges any post-Saleh government would face.

"You already have Islah and the youth groups fighting one another, and that's apart from the (northern separatist) Houthis and the southern conflict," said Theodore Karasik of the INEGMA thinktank.

"As for the relatives, they're supposed to have immunity and to leave their jobs and supposedly fade off into the sunset," he said. "But we'll see."

(Reporting by Mohammed Ghobari and Abdelrahman al-Ansi in Sanaa, and Mohammed Mukhashaf in Aden; Writing by Joseph Logan; editing by Sami Aboudi)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111124/wl_nm/us_yemen

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Heathrow predicts massive gridlock in UK strike

(AP) ? A nationwide public-sector strike next Wednesday in Britain threatens to paralyze operations at Heathrow, Europe's busiest airport.

BAA, the airport's operator, said Friday 12-hour delays for arriving passengers are likely because the Nov. 30 strike will hit the U.K. Border Agency's ability to support normal operations.

An estimated 2 million workers are expected to protest changes in public-sector pensions with a 24-hour walkout ? billed as potentially the biggest union action since 1979.

The lines at Heathrow's immigration counters are expected to be so long that passengers will need to be held on planes, BAA warned.

"This in turn would quickly create gridlock at the airport, with no available aircraft parking stands, mass cancellations of departing aircraft and diversions outside the U.K. for arriving aircraft," Normand Boivin, the chief operating officer for Heathrow, warned in a letter to airlines.

The letter, written Thursday and shared with The Associated Press, urged airlines to reduce the number of passengers they bring in on Nov. 30 because BAA had "reluctantly concluded that the U.K. Border Agency wouldn't be able to come up with a contingency plan to ensure business-as-usual."

Boivin said the border agency expects to be functioning at less than 50 percent of normal productivity.

British Airways and Virgin Atlantic Airways both agreed to waive fees for rebooking flights on Nov. 30 and expressed concern over the strike's impact on business.

The U.K. Border Agency acknowledged travelers could see longer waiting times at airports but said it has considered "all options" to make sure it's prepared for the strike and aims to minimize any disruptions.

It said the security of Britain's borders is the agency's top priority, though unions have criticized moves to draft in civil servants and contractors to cover for striking immigration officials.

"Our members take two to three months to train - the idea that people can cover after a few days' training is absurd," said Mark Serwotka, leader of the Public and Commercial Services union.

The Home Office said it has undertaken "significant work" to plan for the strike, which includes training managers, staff and contractors to the high standards it requires to carry out border checks and asking staff around the world to provide additional cover on Nov. 30.

Government ministers have warned the nationwide could cost the economy half a billion pounds and lead to job losses.

Heathrow Airport handles 180,000 passengers on a typical day, according to BAA.

Gatwick Airport also warned passengers to be prepared for "significant disruption" at immigration and said it asked carriers to give passengers the chance to change their flights.

Gatwick's chief operating officer, Scott Stanley said the airport is working with the border agency and airlines to put contingency measures in place and ensure disruptions are kept to a minimum.

"Unfortunately, airport staff cannot man the desks at the border zone but we will provide all necessary assistance to the Border Agency and we are determined to make sure that the needs and welfare of all our passengers will be met on the day," Stanley said.

___

Cassandra Vinograd can be reached at http://twitter.com/CassVinograd

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-11-25-EU-Britain-Strike-Heathrow-Airport/id-eb2d43359f6341e1a39a05b59abe423d

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Friday, November 25, 2011

Deere 4Q profit up 46 percent on strong sales

In this Aug. 31, 2011 photo, young attendees to the Farm Progress Show, in Decatur, Ill., inspect and climb aboard a new John Deere 4940 Self-Propelled Sprayer, in Decatur, Ill. Deere & Co. said Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011, strong demand for its farm equipment helped boost the company's fourth quarter profit by 46 percent, and next year should be better because Deere expects demand will remain robust.(AP Photo/Seth Perlman)

In this Aug. 31, 2011 photo, young attendees to the Farm Progress Show, in Decatur, Ill., inspect and climb aboard a new John Deere 4940 Self-Propelled Sprayer, in Decatur, Ill. Deere & Co. said Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011, strong demand for its farm equipment helped boost the company's fourth quarter profit by 46 percent, and next year should be better because Deere expects demand will remain robust.(AP Photo/Seth Perlman)

In this Aug. 31, 2011 photo, the John Deere logo is seen on the back of a combine at the John Deere farming equipment exhibit area during the Farm Progress Show, in Decatur, Ill. Deere & Co. said Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011, strong demand for its farm equipment helped boost the company's fourth quarter profit by 46 percent, and next year should be better because Deere expects demand will remain robust. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman)

Deere & Co. says strong sales of its farm equipment helped boost its fourth-quarter profit by 46 percent and says it expects robust demand will lead to further growth next year.

The quarterly results beat Wall Street expectations, and Deere shares rose more than 3 percent in afternoon trading.

The Moline, Ill., company said Wednesday that equipment sales were up 20 percent in the quarter. That included 14 percent sales growth in the United States and Canada, and 31 percent growth in the rest of the world outside those two countries.

The sales growth helped Deere generate net income of $670 million, or $1.62 per share, for the three months ended Oct. 31, up from $457 million, or $1.07 per share, a year ago.

Revenue grew 20 percent to $8.6 billion from $7.2 billion a year ago. Both sales volume and equipment prices increased.

Analysts surveyed by FactSet expected earnings of $1.43 per share on revenue of $7.91 billion.

Deere said equipment sales will increase about 15 percent in fiscal 2012 and profit will grow to $3.2 billion from $2.8 billion in fiscal 2011.

"We are proud of the company's performance in 2011 and look forward to building on these gains in 2012 and beyond," Chairman and CEO Samuel Allen said in a statement. "We have great confidence in the company's future and our role in helping feed, clothe and shelter the world's growing population."

Deere's report offers an indication of how well farmers worldwide are doing because the company is the world's largest maker of agricultural equipment. Deere said it expects farmers to have another good year in 2012 because the demand for agricultural commodities remains strong.

Deere said it expects net U.S. farm income will decline slightly from 2011's projected $115.7 billion to roughly $109.2 billion in 2012.

"I think overall they are betting on a strong farm economy," Edward Jones analyst Jeff Windau said.

Rising steel and administrative costs may be a bit of a concern for investors, Windau said, but Deere's recent results have been great.

"It's an outstanding quarter and a great forecast," Windau said.

Deere has been rolling out new products throughout 2011 to comply with new federal pollution regulations. As part of that, Deere has increased prices for most of its equipment, but its R&D costs have also risen considerably.

Credit Suisse analyst Jamie Cook said in a research note that's it's hard to criticize Deere's fourth-quarter performance, and the company's profit outlook for 2012 is more optimistic than expected.

During the fourth quarter, about 41 percent of Deere's net sales came from outside the United States and Canada.

To help meet the growing demand, Deere announced plans in 2011 to build new manufacturing plants in Brazil, China and India to better serve customers in those countries as well as expansion projects at several of its existing plants.

Deere's total employment has grown about 10 percent over the past year. Just over half of Deere's 61,000 employees are based in the United States. Spokesman Ken Golden said the number of U.S. jobs is up about 9 percent in 2011 while jobs outside America have grown by about 11 percent.

Jefferies & Co. analyst Stephen Volkmann told clients Wednesday that Deere's guidance for fiscal 2012 is more optimistic overall. He said the outlook includes a $500 million increase in raw material costs and a 10 percent increase in research and development expenses.

For all of Deere's fiscal 2011, the company reported net income of $2.8 billion, or $6.63 per share. That's 50 percent higher than the previous year's $1.87 billion, or $4.35 per share.

In addition to agricultural equipment, Deere makes construction and forestry equipment, such as backhoes, excavators, riding mowers and leaf blowers. But construction and forestry sales represent a small portion of Deere's business compared to its agricultural equipment.

Its shares rose $2.51, or 3.5 percent, to $74.43 in afternoon trading after rising as high as $75.98 earlier in the session. Its shares are up 24 percent from a 52-week low of $59.92 in early October. They peaked over the past year at $99.80 in April.

__

Online:

Deere & Co.: www.deere.com

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-11-23-Earns-Deere/id-046a4262f4534a63bdf0f560744153e9

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HIV Patients at Heightened Risk for Certain Cancers (HealthDay)

TUESDAY, Nov. 22 (HealthDay News) -- A weakened immune system and unhealthy lifestyle habits such as smoking put HIV-infected patients at increased risk for cancer, according to a new study.

The researchers also said that starting antiretroviral therapy at an earlier stage of HIV infection might reduce cancer risk.

The primary goal of the study, one of the first to compare the risk of cancer in HIV-infected patients, was to determine how much of the increased risk was the result of the disease and how much was due to other risk factors, such as smoking, the researchers said.

The study authors compared the rates of 10 types of cancer that occurred among HIV-infected patients and HIV-free patients from Kaiser Permanente in Northern and Southern California between 1996 and 2008.

Six of the cancers were more common in HIV patients than in HIV-free patients, including Kaposi's sarcoma, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, Hodgkin's lymphoma, melanoma, anal cancer and liver cancer. Lung and oral-cavity cancers were also more common among HIV patients, but most of the risk of those cancers appeared to be associated with lifestyle habits such as smoking.

Prostate cancer was less common in HIV patients than in HIV-free patients.

Further investigation suggested that a weakened immune system was associated with the increased risk of cancer in HIV patients.

"Taken together, we believe our results support cancer-prevention strategies that combine routine prevention activities, such as smoking cessation, with earlier HIV treatment to help maintain a patient's immune system," lead author Michael Silverberg, a research scientist with the Kaiser Permanente Division of Research in Oakland, said in a Kaiser news release.

The study appears in the current issue of the journal Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers and Prevention.

More information

The U.S. National Cancer Institute has more about HIV and cancer risk.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/cancer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111123/hl_hsn/hivpatientsatheightenedriskforcertaincancers

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This holiday season, the tablet goes mainstream (AP)

SAN FRANCISCO ? `Tis the season of the tablet. Despite the gloomy economy, shoppers are expected to shell out for tablet computers this December, making them about as popular as candy canes and twinkling lights.

The glossy-screened gadgets are the most-desired electronic devices this holiday season. And, of all the gifts people are craving, tablets are second only to clothing, according to the Consumer Electronics Association. The industry group expects U.S. consumers to spend an average of $246 on electronic gifts, including tablets.

With help from his three siblings, Bob Cardina, 26, plans to purchase an iPad for his parents for Christmas. Cardina and his sister live in Washington. His parents live in Tampa, Florida. So he's excited to be able to video chat with his parents ? them on the new iPad, him on his iPhone. He thinks his mother will be especially happy with the gift. One of her friends has an iPad and she's "definitely taken a liking to it," he said.

To be sure, tablets were on some wish lists last year, but they were mostly prized by gadget geeks. In the past year, they have become more mainstream. Consumers have become comfortable using touch screens, especially as smartphones continue to proliferate. Tablets are popping up in unexpected places, too. Apple Inc.'s iPad in particular is being used as a learning tool in schools, a digital cash register in shops and a menu at restaurants.

In 2010, people were "trying to figure out what the whole tablet thing was about," says Gartner analyst Carolina Milanesi. "Now, people know what to do with a tablet."

For some people, the device has become indispensable for playing and working. While you can surf the Web, send emails and watch movies on a laptop or smartphone, consumers are gravitating to tablets because they can be more convenient.

The iPad is still expected to far outsell other tablets this year. According to Gartner Inc., nearly 64 million tablets will be sold worldwide by the end of the year. Some 73 percent of them will be iPads. By Gartner's estimate, Apple will sell 47 million iPads this year ? a figure it could certainly achieve, given that it sold 25 million of them by the end of September.

But while many think of the iPad as synonymous with the word "tablet," plenty of shoppers will be looking for a more affordable tablet to give this year.

Two of the most promising competitors come from online retailer Amazon.com Inc. and book seller Barnes & Noble Inc. The companies, major players in the e-reader market, recently released tablets of their own that undercut the iPad's $499 base price: Amazon's Kindle Fire, which costs $199, and Barnes & Noble's Nook Tablet, which costs $249. The Fire, which uses a heavily modified version of Google Inc.'s Android tablet software, is expected to be particularly popular with gift givers in part because of its low price.

"When you get below $200, sales go up dramatically," says technology analyst Rob Enderle.

Enderle thinks the Fire will be a popular gift, especially for kids. To him, it seems sturdier than the iPad with a display built from scratch- and crack-resistant Gorilla Glass, and it's cheap enough that parents won't be upset if a child manages to break it.

Tom Mainelli, an analyst at research group IDC, expects the Fire and Nook Tablet to take the second- and third-place spots, respectively, behind the iPad during the last three months of the year.

Rather than hurting Apple, he believes the success of newer tablets will help grow the entire tablet market.

"I don't think Apple loses just because Amazon wins," he says.

One of these Kindle Fire buyers is 24-year-old Ximena Beltran Quan Kiu, who purchased the device for her mother as a Christmas gift. Beltran Quan Kiu says her mom bought a Samsung Galaxy Tab for herself about a month ago, but didn't like it and returned it. She's hoping her mom warms up to the Fire, though, which she can use for reading, surfing the Web and watching movies.

To help make sure her mom likes it, Beltran Quan Kiu is also giving a year's membership to Amazon's express shipping program, Amazon Prime, which includes free streaming of more than 10,000 movies and TV shows and the ability to borrow certain books from Amazon's Kindle Owners' Lending Library.

"It might not be the iPad, but it can hold its own against the iPad," she says.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111124/ap_on_hi_te/us_tec_holiday_shopping_tablets

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Thursday, November 24, 2011

Thanksgiving Day proclamation by President Obama (AP)

President Barack Obama's Thanksgiving Day proclamation as released by the White House:

One of our nation's oldest and most cherished traditions, Thanksgiving Day brings us closer to our loved ones and invites us to reflect on the blessings that enrich our lives. The observance recalls the celebration of an autumn harvest centuries ago, when the Wampanoag tribe joined the Pilgrims at Plymouth Colony to share in the fruits of a bountiful season. The feast honored the Wampanoag for generously extending their knowledge of local game and agriculture to the Pilgrims, and today we renew our gratitude to all American Indians and Alaska Natives. We take this time to remember the ways that the first Americans have enriched our nation's heritage, from their generosity centuries ago to the everyday contributions they make to all facets of American life. As we come together with friends, family and neighbors to celebrate, let us set aside our daily concerns and give thanks for the providence bestowed upon us.

Though our traditions have evolved, the spirit of grace and humility at the heart of Thanksgiving has persisted through every chapter of our story. When President George Washington proclaimed our country's first Thanksgiving, he praised a generous and knowing God for shepherding our young republic through its uncertain beginnings. Decades later, President Abraham Lincoln looked to the divine to protect those who had known the worst of civil war, and to restore the nation "to the full enjoyment of peace, harmony, tranquility and union."

In times of adversity and times of plenty, we have lifted our hearts by giving humble thanks for the blessings we have received and for those who bring meaning to our lives. Today, let us offer gratitude to our men and women in uniform for their many sacrifices, and keep in our thoughts the families who save an empty seat at the table for a loved one stationed in harm's way. And as members of our American family make do with less, let us rededicate ourselves to our friends and fellow citizens in need of a helping hand.

As we gather in our communities and in our homes, around the table or near the hearth, we give thanks to each other and to God for the many kindnesses and comforts that grace our lives. Let us pause to recount the simple gifts that sustain us, and resolve to pay them forward in the year to come.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, BARACK OBAMA, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim Thursday, November 24, 2011, as a National Day of Thanksgiving. I encourage the people of the United States to come together ? whether in our homes, places of worship, community centers, or any place of fellowship for friends and neighbors ? to give thanks for all we have received in the past year, to express appreciation to those whose lives enrich our own, and to share our bounty with others.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this sixteenth day of November, in the year of our Lord two thousand eleven, and of the independence of the United States of America the two hundred and thirty-sixth.

BARACK OBAMA

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111123/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_obama_thanksgiving_proclamation

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Bachmann assails Obama on supercommittee breakdown, accuses president of being 'AWOL' on debt (Star Tribune)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/165159699?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Neutrino fever produces media storm

Lisa Grossman, reporter

The internet is hungry for news about neutrinos, and it is being fed ? even if that news is, well, old.

Last week, the OPERA collaboration announced the results of new tests that bolstered their stunning result, first announced in September, that neutrinos go faster than light.

The saga of those Einstein-defying neutrinos appeared to take a dramatic turn today, with a flood of news stories reporting that a second experiment in the same lab showed that the subatomic particles are obeying the speed limit after all.

Time and repeated experiments will tell which group is right. But it bears mentioning that the results of the second experiment are not new. A number of outlets ? including New Scientist ? reported it a month ago after a paper about it was posted online.

The feeding frenzy seems to have been sparked by a press release that landed in our inboxes this morning from the UK Science Media Centre, "an independent venture working to promote the voices, stories and views of the scientific community to the national news media when science is in the headlines". The centre offered a comment from physicist Jim Al-Khalili of the University of Surrey, who, when the initial news broke in September, had publicly vowed to eat his boxer shorts on live television if the result held up.

When the news broke on Friday that the OPERA team had redone their experiment with a new and improved particle beam, and the troubling neutrinos didn't go away, Al-Khalili's inbox apparently overflowed with people demanding he follow through. As he blogged on Friday:

"I have been prompted to write this blog, instead of chilling with a glass of wine after a busy week and watching a movie on TV, because of the flurry of comments via email and Twitter that I have received today regarding the latest news from the Opera neutrino experiment... Now, many people mistakenly believe that this second repeated experiment is the confirmation needed for me to fetch the ketchup."

He went on to explain how a pair of theorists at Boston University, Andrew Cohen and Nobel laureate Sheldon Glashow, predicted on 29 September ? less than a week after OPERA announced their original results ? that such speedy neutrinos should leave a tell-tale trail of particles in their wakes. As we wrote at the time:


In the paper, Glashow and Cohen point out that if neutrinos can travel faster than light, then when they do so they should sometimes radiate an electron paired with its antimatter equivalent ? a positron ? through a process called Cerenkov radiation, which is analogous to a sonic boom. Each electron-positron pair should carry away a large chunk of the neutrinos' energy: Cohen and Glashow calculated that at the end of the experiment, the neutrinos should have had energies no higher than about 12 gigaelectronvolts. But OPERA saw plenty of neutrinos with energies upwards of 40 GeV.

The ICARUS collaboration, which has been studying the same beam of neutrinos as OPERA since last year, looked for just that sort of radiation, and didn't find any. They put out a paper on 17 October saying: "Our results therefore refute a superluminal interpretation of the OPERA result." Again, we and others wrote about it at the time.

Al-Khalili is not a member of the OPERA or ICARUS teams, and the memo from the Science Media Centre was presented as an "expert reaction". But many in the media reacted as if the ICARUS paper was hot off the press, even as they linked to an updated preprint dated 22 October and physics blogs from the same week.

It just goes to show how desperate we all are to hear something definitive about these neutrinos. Stay tuned to our ultimate guide to neutrino news.

Source: http://feeds.newscientist.com/c/749/f/10897/s/1a486d27/l/0L0Snewscientist0N0Cblogs0Cshortsharpscience0C20A110C110Cneutrino0Efever0Eproduces0Emedia0Bhtml0DDCMP0FOTC0Erss0Gnsref0Fonline0Enews/story01.htm

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Wednesday, November 23, 2011

EU Investigates Apple-Samsung Patent War (NewsFactor)

Will the Apple-Samsung legal war turn into unfair competitive advantages? The European Union wants to find out.

The head of the EU's antitrust division said Tuesday that his agency was investigating the two companies' patent dispute. Competition Commissioner Joaquin Almunia told news media that the EU has requested information from both Apple and Samsung, but has not yet received answers.

"We need to look at this because [intellectual property] rights can be used as a distortion of competition," he said.

'Tool to Abuse'

Almunia noted that, in technology, standardization and IP rights "can be used as a tool to abuse." The EU has the authority to fine companies as much as 10 percent of their global revenue for violating its rules.

Apple has sued Samsung in a number of countries, with various successes thus far, contending that Samsung has violated patents and other intellectual property rights. Apple is also suing HTC and Motorola, and Samsung has countersued Apple.

Recently, the patent war compelled Samsung to tweak its Android-based Galaxy Tab tablet in one European market, in an attempt to route around a legal injunction obtained by Apple. Last week, Samsung released its Galaxy Tab 10.1N in Germany, in which the only discernible difference, in addition to the letter "N" being added to the model name, was that a metal frame, or bezel, wrapped around the edge of the device.

In August, Apple had won a preliminary injunction that blocked the original Galaxy Tab, the 10.1, because of an alleged design infringement. The injunction, which applies only in Germany for products made by the South Korean company, also claimed the Tab was an iPad imitation.

Another change made by Samsung, in order to get around a Dutch injunction obtained by Apple for a software infringement, is how software on its Galaxy smartphones allows users to flip through a photo gallery.

'Killer Patents'

The tweaks are only tiny end-runs in a worldwide war. The main target of Apple's legal strikes, according to patent observer Florian Mueller, could be the Android platform itself -- either to slow down the march of Android devices, increase the cost to its makers, or ban the platform entirely in certain markets.

Mueller, whose Foss Patents site follows technology-related patents, has noted that, in another legal battle between Apple and Samsung in Australia, the relevant Apple patents were not tablet-specific. Rather, they are "very broad and can hardly be worked around, unlike various other intellectual property rights" that Samsung is attempting to work around in Europe.

In fact, Mueller said, the patents are so broad that he didn't believe any company will "be able to launch any new Android-based touchscreen product in Australia anytime soon without incurring a high risk" of legal action by Apple.

He said this could include any Android-based smartphone or tablet in that market and, if Apple won the final trial in its Australian lawsuit next year, Android touchscreen mobile devices would be banned in Australia -- unless Apple settled with Google or Samsung.

If the validity of the Apple patents at issue in Australia is upheld in the trial, Mueller said, "those are killer patents" that Google and its Android OEMS "must be very afraid of."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nf/20111122/bs_nf/81097

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States aim to close roll-your-own loophole

Seth Wenig / AP

A cigarette is made using a machine in New York. States, including New York, are trying to close a loophole that some shops are exploiting to sell cigarettes en masse.

By David B. Caruso, The Associated Press

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There is no place in the U.S. more expensive to smoke than New York City, where the taxes alone will set you back $5.85 per pack. Yet, addicts who visit Island Smokes, a "roll-your-own" cigarette shop in Chinatown, can walk out with an entire 10-pack carton for under $40, thanks to a yawning tax loophole that officials in several states are now trying to close.

The store is one of a growing number around the country that have come under fire over their use of high-speed cigarette rolling machines that function as miniature factories, and can package loose tobacco and rolling papers into neatly formed cigarettes, sometimes in just a few minutes.

The secret to Island's low prices is simple: Even though patrons leave carrying cartons that look very much like the Marlboros or Newports, the store charges taxes at the rate set for loose tobacco, which is just a fraction of what is charged for a commercially made pack.

Customers select a blend of tobacco leaves, intended to mirror the flavor of their regular brand. Then they feed the tobacco and some paper tubes into the machines, and return to the counter with the finished product to ring up the purchase.

The savings come at every level. Many stores sell customers loose pipe tobacco, which is taxed by the federal government at $2.80 per pound, compared with $25 per pound for tobacco made for cigarettes. The shops don't pay into the cigarette manufacturer trust fund, intended to reimburse government health programs for the cost of treating smoking-related illness. And the packs produced by "roll-your-own" shops are generally also being sold without local tax stamps, which in New York include a $1.50 city tax and a $4.35 state tax.

New York City's legal department filed a lawsuit against Island Smokes on Nov. 14, arguing that the company's Manhattan store and another on Staten Island are engaging in blatant tax evasion.

Every package of cigarettes sold in the state, the suit argued, must bear a New York tax stamp. Businesses that sell unstamped cigarettes are violating both local law and the federal Contraband Cigarette Trafficking Act, city lawyers said. The suit, filed in federal court in Manhattan, also accused the store of violating a state law requiring cigarettes to meet fire safety standards.

"By selling illegally low-priced cigarettes, defendants not only interfere with the collection of city cigarette taxes, they also impair the city's smoking cessation programs and impair individual efforts at smoking reduction, thereby imposing higher health care costs on the city and injuring public health," the complaint said.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who has advocated for aggressive legal action against cigarette sellers who avoid taxes, was to announce the lawsuit at a news conference Monday.

A pack contains 20 cigarettes and sells for around $13 in New York City after taxes are added. That compares with the national average in 2010 of $4.80 a pack, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A pack from Island Smokes can cost less than $4 a pack.

Everything about the business is legal, precisely because the company is neither selling cigarettes, nor manufacturing them, said Jonathan Behrins, a lawyer for Island Smokes. It is simply selling loose tobacco and tubes, he said, and giving customers access to the rolling machines to make the cigarettes themselves.

What's the harm?
"What's the harm?" he said. "They are not selling unstamped cigarettes."

Behrins said the business, whose owners include a New York City police captain, opened in April. It has developed a clientele of people who are trying to save money, and don't mind spending some time at the machines, rolling their own product.

"It's a certain demographic that rolls their own. They don't really want to be bothered with Bloomberg reaching into their pockets."

He likened the operation to a brew-your-own-beer store, and chafed at the idea that it might cost the city substantial tax revenue. Some smoke shops use roll-your-own machines that can churn out a carton of 200 cigarettes in eight minutes, but Behrins said Island's machines are far slower. City investigators said it took them about 45 minutes to make one carton.

"This is why I don't understand why the city has us in their sights," said Behrins.

Legal battles over shops using roll-your-own machines are ongoing in several states.

Wisconsin's Department of Revenue this year informed machine owners that they need manufacturing and distribution permits to operate. Enforcement of the order has been put on hold while a judge considers the matter.

In West Virginia, a judge ruled in September that a tobacco shop there was violating state and federal law by failing to charge excise taxes on cigarettes made by customers in automated, on-site rolling machines.

New Hampshire's Supreme Court ruled in July that a roll-your-own tobacco shop there was effectively a cigarette manufacturer, and thereby had to pay into the national fund that reimburses Medicare for smoking-related illnesses. The New Hampshire attorney general said those payments amount to about $5.33 per carton. The Massachusetts attorney general has also classified retailers who use roll-your-own machines as manufacturers.

That argument has also been adopted by the U.S. Treasury Department's Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, which issued a ruling Sept. 30 that retailers who give customers access to roll-your-own cigarette machines are manufacturers, and are subject to the same licensing rules as other cigarette makers. Those regulations, among other things, would require the shops to apply for a permit before going into business, post a bond, and keep certain inventory records.

All of those rulings are being fought by manufacturers of the machines, which include companies like RYO Machine Rental of Cincinnati, which said it has 1,700 machines at stores in 40 states.

Behrins called the legal attacks "downright frightening," and blamed them on governments trying to drum up extra cash in tight times.

"They are looking for money every way they can. Parking tickets. Red light cameras. You name it. They are just ringing it up to bring in revenue."

He also echoed claims, made by Island Smokes in some of its marketing materials, that the roll-your-own cigarettes produced in its stores are healthier than commercially produced packs, because they don't contain some of the same chemical additives.

That brought a rebuke from New York City's health commissioner, Dr. Thomas Farley.

"Claiming that this is healthier is a second scam ... it's totally false," he said. He said the health risks from cigarettes come from inhaling the cancer-causing agents produced by burning tobacco leaves. "There is nothing safe about an 'all natural' tobacco leaf."

Farley also defended the city's high taxes on cigarettes, saying that studies had shown that they are pressuring people into quitting, or not taking up the habit, and thereby saving lives.

Source: http://bottomline.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/11/21/8935098-states-aim-to-close-roll-your-own-loophole

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With "Speak Now" Swift goes from country gal to Broadway baby (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) ? Taylor Swift has such an exceptional flair for capturing intimate moments and little emotional quirks on her records that it was bracing to realize, a tour or two back, that the sensitive girl with the teardrops on her guitar is really, at heart, a Broadway baby.

Emotionally aware songwriters aren't supposed to be spectacular show women, too. Would we have thought less of Carole King, Laura Nyro or Joni Mitchell if they suddenly declared that what they really want to do is direct "Les Miserables"? (Answer: probably.)

Swift is baiting Black Friday shoppers with a combo CD/DVD package, "Speak Now World Tour -- Live," commemorating her not-even-yet-completed 2011 arena/stadium trek (which wraps up this week at Madison Square Garden).

Its success comes in capturing how Swift's touring show scales Lloyd Webber-ian levels of pomp and pageantry while still staying true to the barely post-adolescent poetry that made her country-pop's greatest populist practitioner.

As with a Madonna tour, nearly every number gets its own production design and costuming.

The song "Speak Now," her bouncy musical-comedy remake of the last reel of "The Graduate," has Swift and some colorfully skirted backup singers doing vintage girl-group-style choreography as they bust in on a former beau's wedding.

"Mean," her hilariously jolly kiss-off to her critics, is a relaxed bluegrass hootenanny set on the kind of big, wooden porches that still exist in America, even outside the sphere of Cracker Barrels.

"Haunted" (the studio version of which was recently featured on "True Blood") trades those friendly banjos for a brooding mini-orchestra and the rural duds for flowing gowns and elaborate crimson goth, making a lost first love sound just as apocalyptic and look just as Victorian as it should.

And then there's the show's silly, giddy climax, "Love Story," where Swift fashions herself into a Juliet who steps onto the Capulet family balcony, lifts off, and floats over the entire arena, a rigging effect that makes Garth Brooks' old soaring stunts look like something out of the Carter Family era.

Apparently, Swift is the kind of girl who hears a term like "flying buttress" and thinks literally.

As part of anyone else's set (as if anyone else would have the budget to pull this sort of stuff off), these set pieces would read as over-the-top shtick.

To non-converts, they still will. But Swift's aim is at least to offer some multi-sensory enhancement for her tunes' emotionally detailed narratives, as opposed to making her production numbers into completely unrelated sexual-surrealist fever dreams, a la Gaga and Ciccione.

You can get a kick out of the big-budget tableaux and Trevor Nunn-meets-"Glee" choreography, though, and still feel that the tour's best moments are its simplest ones, which are built into the show just as craftily as any of its engineering feats.

Savant that she is, Swift knew even a show as elaborately staged and timed to the second as this one -- or especially a show as carefully produced as this one -- benefits from having the audience coming in still hoping for some one-night-only spontaneity.

On this tour, that came in the form of the solo acoustic mini-set Swift did from the far end of the arena each night, where, in addition to her ukulele version of "Fearless," she'd do a couple of unexpected cover tunes of artists who originally heralded from the city being visited.

On both the CD and DVD, that part of her show is represented by Train's "Drops of Jupiter"... still a great song, even if Pat Monahan is the bogeyman to hipsters.

The audio version has her additionally tackling Kim Carnes' "Bette Davis Eyes" (which, brace yourself, came out eight years before T-Swift did) and a too-short snippet of the Jackson 5's "I Want You Back."

The Target-exclusive version of the DVD offers, as bonuses, additional solo videos of Gwen Stefani's "Sweet Escape" -- a sweet choice indeed -- and David Mead's rather more obscure "Going Back to Nashville."

With Swift devoting all this stage time to covers and 2010's "Speak Now" album, what goes neglected are songs from her first two studio albums.

The audio disc contains nary a pre-2010 selection. The considerably longer DVD, which includes her full two-hour-plus set, includes just one song from her 2006 debut and four from her sophomore album, to enhance the dozen tracks from "Speak Now."

That's no complaint, since "Speak Now" really is one of the best and most fully realized pop albums of the last decade.

Swift might be one of the few stars alive who could get away with completely jettisoning most of the song that originally made her a star just five years into her recording and touring career because the audience really cares more about the brand new stuff.

For proof that she's getting better at her advanced age of 21, or that she can command a stage sans bells and whistles, you only have to look to her reading of "Dear John," the epic ballad that is (presumably) her bitter send-off note following a brief and apparently scarring relationship she had with John Mayer.

She pulls out all the acting stops, which is not to say that it's any less searing as a musical thespian's showcase than it was on record as a spookier, disembodied audio confession.

Yes, maybe there's something more than a little show-bizzy about the fact that, when Swift finally gets to the critical line, "I'm shining like fireworks over your sad, empty town," actual fireworks go off behind her.

But if you're the type of person who's into the Carter Family and Cameron Mackintosh, you'll just go along for the doubly cathartic ride.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/music/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111121/music_nm/us_reviews_music_speaknow

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U.S., South Korea tops in Android app downloads (Appolicious)

Though Google?s Android operating system continues to extend its reach around the world, when it comes to app downloads, the ecosystem?s biggest market is still its home turf: the U.S.

According to a new study from market research firm research2guidance and AndroidPIT, there have been some 3.49 billion total app downloads from the Android Market since Google introduced the operating system, and half of those downloads have originated in the U.S.

But as TechCrunch reports, research2guidance?s data also reveals some other interesting tidbits. While the U.S. remains the No. 1 market for apps, it?s not growing nearly as fast as some other markets around the world. That?s likely because there are a lot of choices for apps in the U.S., with the Android Market from Google competing with the likes of GetJar and Amazon?s Appstore. And that?s not to mention Apple?s iOS operating system muscling in on Android?s market share and smaller competitors such as the BlackBerry from Research In Motion and Microsoft?s Window?s Phone 7.

Meanwhile, the second-largest Android app market isn?t a Western European nation such as the UK as one might expect, it?s South Korea. The Asian nation accounts for the most total app downloads this side of the U.S. with 603 million in total (about 9 percent of all the apps downloaded).

You might blame South Korea?s relatively high number of Android users on Samsung, a leading Android device maker that calls South Korea home. And the country is growing as an Android market, too: research2guidance suggests that a big part of that growth might be South Korea?s fast, widespread and relatively cheap cellular coverage that makes it easy and convenient to own a smartphone.

In terms of downloads each month, South Korea takes third with about 4.5 percent of the Android apps downloaded. In front in the monthly category is the UK (which takes third in total downloads with around 680 million), clocking in at just under 7 percent of monthly downloads. In second is Germany with about 6.7 percent of monthly downloads; it takes third in total downloads with just approximately 380 million apps downloaded.

The study also finds that while the U.S., South Korea, the UK and Germany might account for the largest app markets by volume, they?re not necessarily the app markets where users download the most apps. In fact, that honor belongs to Sweden. While the country doesn?t have as a high an Android smartphone penetration rate as other countries, the firm reports that smartphone users there tend to download more apps per smartphone user, around five per month. By comparison, Germany notches about 4.5 apps downloaded per person per month; South Korea and the UK each account for roughly 3.5 apps per person; and the U.S. gets fewer than 2.5 apps per person.

According to research2motion, this means that there are several different kinds of Android app markets out there, with some capable of becoming ?cash cow? markets in which there is a large number of Android users and those users are downloading a lot of apps. The U.S. and some European countries, on the other hand, might be considered ?saturated markets,? where there are a lot of smartphones but not a lot of apps being downloaded, and therefore relatively less money to made.

With research2guidance?s data, app developers may be able to find better targets for their apps by looking to other markets. Android developers often complain about low sales because getting noticed in the Android Market can often be difficult. Perhaps focusing on a different segment of the Android population will help more developers become more successful in developing Android apps, which will encourage more development and more quality Android software.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/software/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/appolicious_rss/rss_appolicious_tc/http___www_androidapps_com_articles10281_u_s_south_korea_tops_in_android_app_downloads/43685559/SIG=12ur40k47/*http%3A//www.androidapps.com/tech/articles/10281-u-s-south-korea-tops-in-android-app-downloads

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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Retailers trying to rekindle the impulse buy

Americans don?t shop the way they used to. It?s not only that they?re going to the mall less often. Consumers in this post-recession era are also less likely to stick around and browse after they walk into a store. Marketing pros say that shoppers tend to come armed with oodles of Web research on brands and prices. They buy, then leave. No browsing. No impulse buys.

The industry calls them ?mission shoppers.? Such consumers visit fewer stores per trip ? three, vs. five before the recession, according to research firm ShopperTrak. That means retailers need to ?get more out of every person that walks through the door,? says David Maddocks, a former chief marketing officer for Nike?s Converse brand who now runs a consulting firm.

As retailers have improved the e-commerce experience in recent years, they haven?t invested in their stores, pushing an increasing number of shoppers online. ?While e-commerce has been getting better, the stores have been getting worse,? says Ron Boire, chief executive officer of electronics retailer Brookstone. ?A lot of retailers pulled a ton of labor off the floor in ?08 and ?09, and now they are figuring out how to put it back in.?

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Gap?s Old Navy is using more greeters at its stores. Lowe?s is arming its floorwalkers with iPhones so they can instantly check inventory and make suggestions if a certain item is unavailable. Foot Locker trains associates to ditch the traditional ?how may I help you?? for ?What kind of shoe are you looking for?? It?s a subtle change that?s more likely to start a conversation, says CEO Ken Hicks.

Retailers are also reconfiguring stores to encourage browsing. Old Navy has remodeled about a third of its 1,000 stores, installing a ?racetrack? layout to compel shoppers to circumnavigate the store and see more merchandise. The revamped outlets feature wider aisles to accommodate the strollers pushed by Old Navy?s target customer ? thirtysomething moms. Shelves and displays are lower so shoppers need look no higher than 10 feet. And they no longer have to trek to the back of the store to try on clothes; in the redone stores, the changing rooms are in the middle, and there are ?quick fit pods? for speedy try-ons.

Old Navy has boosted impulse buys at checkout, too, by stocking shelves near its registers with such Gen X favorites as Mad Libs books and superhero lunch boxes. The result of all the changes: Shoppers at the remodeled stores are spending $2 more per visit, according to Gap, helping turn Old Navy into the company?s best-performing unit.

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Other stores are taking a page from Nordstrom, which has long grouped merchandise in lifestyle categories to encourage shoppers to purchase entire outfits rather than single articles of clothing. Body Central, a Jacksonville, Fla.-based apparel chain aimed at 18- to 35-year-old women, now organizes its clothing into such categories as ?club? (evening wear) and ?casual? (weekend wear). Over the past 12 months sales at the publicly traded company were up 22 percent. Body Central also has upgraded window displays and installed laptops that play hit music. ?There?s a plethora of information out there and more choices for the customers, and that puts pressure on execution,? says CEO Allen Weinstein. ?We?ve taken it up a notch.?

As retailers upgrade stores, they?re also cognizant of making the shopping experience more Web-like. Teen clothier Pacific Sunwear equips salespeople with iPads so they can create outfits for customers and place orders for out-of-stock items. That?s improved sales, because ?we have 18-year-old guys selling to 18-year-old girls and (the clerks) don?t necessarily know what they want,? says Bill Bieluch, director of IT projects at the chain.

Brookstone couldn?t add Wi-Fi and iPads to its 300 stores fast enough, says Boire. The devices are being used to demonstrate pricey toys such as helicopters and robots that can be controlled using a mobile app. The tablets are also handy when staffers want to pitch items available online but not in stores. Next, Boire wants handheld checkout devices like the ones Apple uses in its stores. He?s been racing ahead because he?s worried that improvements in e-commerce will accelerate consumers? migration to the Web. And then the mission shopper will become a permanent fixture, rather than a recession-induced phenomenon.

The bottom line: Retailers are tweaking stores to lure Web-savvy mission shoppers. Old Navy makes $2 more per customer in its revamped outlets.

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Copyright ? 2011 Bloomberg L.P.All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45308303/ns/business-holiday_retail/

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