Sunday, October 27, 2013

Lyoto Machida willing to fight Anderson Silva for UFC middleweight title

yoto Machida didn't let being friends and training partners with Mark Munoz stop him from knocking him out on Saturday at UFC Fight Night 30. Post fight, "The Dragon" also made clear that he also wouldn't let his long-time friendship and teammate relationship with Anderson Silva stop him from fighting "The Spider" if a title were on the line.

Of fighting friend Munoz, Machida admitted that the situation "upset" him but that "I am a professional. I have to do my job and that is all I did."

As for who he wants next, Machida declined to name names but made clear that all he wants is UFC gold once more, this time in his new division - middleweight.

"I don't know [ who I want to fight next]," Machida told Gareth Davies.

"It is very hard to say but for sure I want to be champion. I want the belt."

When asked about fighting the man he replaced on short notice against Munoz, the injured Michael Bisping, Machida seemed amenable.

"Yeah. It's a great match up. It's a great fight for me," he said.

Still, Machida wants the middleweight belt that his friend Silva held for so long. Anderson rematches the man who took the title from him, Chris Weidman, in a couple months, and Machida said he'd fight whoever wins that bout, even if it is Silva.

"Yeah. For sure," Machida said flatly and with a smile.

As recently as a couple weeks ago, Silva has said he'd never fight Machida but the new middleweight doesn't seem to share that sentiment now that he's a hot 185 pounder himself.

"If I want the belt," Machida explained.

"I have to chase the belt."

Follow Elias on twitter @EliasCepeda

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/lyoto-machida-willing-fight-anderson-silva-ufc-middleweight-160052819--mma.html
Tags: Bosses Day   Battlefield 4 beta   how i met your mother   emmy winners   tommy morrison  

Time Machines - Wireless wonder


Welcome to Time Machines, where we offer up a selection of mechanical oddities, milestone gadgets, and unique inventions to test out your tech-history skills.


Time Machines


This device famously exhibited the potential of tuned radio waves and their ability to wirelessly convey a signal. In 1899, it transmitted a message successfully from Britain, across the English Channel's 32-mile expanse, to a receiver in France. Its business-minded inventor went on to pioneer an industry in communication that changed the world. Tune in past the break for more about this breakthrough gadget.


DNP Time Machines TKTKTK


Marconi's tuned transmitter and wireless telegraphy


Guglielmo Marconi's tuned radio transmitter, and its application in wireless telegraphy, offered a way to send and receive messages across great distances and succeeded in allowing simultaneous signals without interference. Not only was Marconi fervent about his ideas, but he was also a sharp businessman who knew his way around the patent office. His story is that of a brash technology startup, prepared to change the world.


Marconi didn't have a formal education; he had been turned down for official admission into the University of Bologna (Italy) had to settle for auditing classes without credit. He sat in on many courses taught by Augusto Righi, a physics professor, who had been experimenting with electromagnetic waves. Marconi was determined to find a practical way of harnessing those waves for sending information and often called on Righi for advice. Basing his experiments on theories posited in the previous decade by Heinrich Hertz, he developed a contraption that, devoid of connecting wires, could ring a bell two rooms away as he struck a telegraph key.


Marconi was hooked. He began incorporating ideas from contemporaries such as Oliver Lodge, who had discovered some basic tools for transmitting a signal using electromagnetic waves. Marconi's goal was to employ these concepts to facilitate "wireless" telegraphy. As his work progressed, he attempted to boost signals by increasing the electrical current, but that was only feasible on a small scale. Soon, he discovered that by grounding one end of his antenna wires, he could boost signal strength to such a degree that he could send telegraph signals more than two miles away, unhindered by geographical or man-made obstructions.



Marconi developed a system that allowed multiple transmissions from a single device to be sent to various receivers in different locations.



In 1896, Marconi was ready to seek avenues for commercialization. After being turned down by the Ministry of Post and Telegraph in his own country, he packed up and headed to England. He managed to set a meeting with William Preece of the British postal system and it was a huge success, ending with an offer to support his research and development.


By 1897, Marconi had registered the Wireless Telegraph and Signal Company, Ltd. and with more resources at his disposal, he began his work in earnest, opening a factory the next year and setting to work on increasing the range for transmitting and receiving. The transmitter used at the time was made up of a wooden frame wrapped with two lengths of wiring: one for the transmission mechanism and the other for the antenna and grounding. Early tests of the device's abilities involved sending signals to passing ships and covering the distance from London to Cornwall. In 1899, he made his biggest attempt yet, successfully sending a telegraph signal across the English Channel all the way to France -- a distance of 32 miles.


At the time, multiple wireless transmissions would consistently cancel each other out, rendering the messages incomprehensible. To solve this problem, Marconi developed a system that allowed multiple transmissions from a single device to be sent to various receivers in different locations. It was a remarkable feat at the time and interest in the commercial applications began to grow.



Marconi's Wireless Telegraph Company, Ltd., landed lucky patent number 7777.



Soon after, he changed the name of the company to Marconi's Wireless Telegraph Company, Ltd., landed lucky patent number 7777 and pursued even larger-scale projects, eventually leading to the landmark transmission of the letter "S" across the Atlantic, a distance of 2,100 miles. Many doubted the validity of the first transmission, but several witnesses verified the results of a subsequent test, and so began the era of intercontinental radio communication.


While Marconi was one of many who helped to pioneer wireless communication -- Nikola Tesla was working on similar technology in the US -- he had an unmatched zeal and business savvy that allowed him to widely distribute his ideas and technologies, and to truly influence the world on a grand scale. The lasting effects of Marconi's developments ripple throughout contemporary society. It can be seen in our widespread use of radio, TV and the prized wireless spectrum, which companies today treat as valued, albeit invisible, real estate.


[Image credit: SSPL/Getty Images]


Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/10/27/time-machines/?ncid=rss_truncated
Tags: reggie wayne   Covered California   Cody Rhodes   Justin Morneau   Dedication 5  

Kim Kardashian & Kanye West Engaged! What The Celebs Are Tweeting!





kim ring


We can hardly believe that Kim Kardashian and Kanye West are finally getting hitched! And we're not the only ones!


Celebs took to Twitter to shout out their congratulations to the newly engaged couple.


Funny girl Ellen DeGeneres couldn't resist a joke along with her congrats. She tweeted:




Ha! Ch-ch-check out more amazing tweets …AFTER THE JUMP!!!












P.S. CLICK HERE to "follow" Perez on Twitter!


P.P.S. CLICK HERE to "like" Perez on Facebook!


[Image via Instagram.]



Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,





Source: http://perezhilton.com/2013-10-22-kim-kardashian-kanye-west-engaged-twitter-ellen-degeneres-leann-rimes-celebs
Tags: kanye west   2013 Emmy Winners   Boulder Flooding   Seamus Heaney   jessica biel  

Xbox One Kinect shrinks minimum distance requirement to 4.6 feet



Microsoft said it improved Kinect on the Xbox One, and now a leaked setup manual indicates how little space it requires to operate. The PDF NeoGAF spotted notes that a minimum 1.4 meters (just over 4.5-feet) between the user and Microsoft's new do-all sensor is all that's required. For those of us with cozy living quarters, this could be a bit more generous than the last one's recommended six to eight-foot gap. We've reached out to Microsoft for an official comment and will update this post if we hear back. Until then however, we're hoping that November 22nd will mark the end of us rearranging our living room to play the latest Dance Central.


DNP Leaked Xbox One manual notes shorter gaps between the Kinect and you are feasible


Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/10/23/xbox-one-kinect-needs-less-distance/?ncid=rss_truncated
Tags: Cam McDaniel   Scandal   Dallas Latos   the league   lsu football  

Democrats want 'Obamacare' deadlines moved back

(AP) — After uniting against Republican efforts earlier this month to delay President Barack Obama's health care law, a growing number Democrats in Congress now want to extend the enrollment deadline, and one senator wants to delay the penalty for not complying.

Six Senate Democrats up for re-election next year have proposed delaying the new March 31 deadline for applying for coverage while the program's problems are ironed out. A seventh, West Virginia's Joe Manchin, is co-authoring a bill to postpone the $95 penalty for people who fail to meet the deadline for acquiring insurance.

While their proposals are short on details, all argue that it's not fair to hold millions of Americans accountable for buying insurance when the primary instrument for enrollment — the HealthCare.gov website — has prevented many people from doing it.

Even the law's biggest boosters are aggravated that enrollment process for the national health care law they had hoped to tout on the 2014 campaign trail has gotten off to such a bad start.

"If we want this law to work, we've got to make it right, we've got to fix it," Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., one of the law's leading authors, said at a House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing Thursday on the sign-up problems.

Contractors for the health insurance website told the committee the government failed to thoroughly test the complex enrollment system before its Oct. 1 launch. The system crashed as soon as consumers tried to use it. A web of confusing deadlines and penalties for not obtaining health insurance persists.

As Democrats began to fret about the political consequences ahead of the 2014 midterm elections, the administration late Wednesday said it was granting what amounts to a six-week filing extension. The March 31 deadline for having insurance became the new deadline for applying for it.

But that's not enough for a growing number of Senate Democrats.

Manchin is teaming with Sen. Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., on a bill that would waive for one year the $95 penalty for not enrolling in the program.

"It should be a transition year. For one year, there should be no fines," Manchin said Wednesday on Fox's "The O'Reilly Factor."

The six Senate Democrats seeking re-election next year urged the Obama administration to postpone the March 31 deadline.

"As you continue to fix problems with the website and the enrollment process, it is critical that the administration be open to modifications that provide greater flexibility for the American people seeking to access health insurance," Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., wrote to Obama on Tuesday. Extending the open enrollment period and clarifying other parts of the law, she added, "would be a great start."

Also supporting Shaheen's effort are Democratic Sens. Tom Udall of New Mexico, Mark Begich of Alaska, Mark Udall of Colorado, Mark Pryor of Arkansas and Kay Hagan of North Carolina, aides to the lawmakers said.

"I am asking the administration to extend the open enrollment period by two months, and waive the penalty for the individual mandate for the same period of time, to make up for time that is being lost while the website for the federal exchange is not functioning," Hagan said Thursday.

All of the Senate Democrats earlier this month joined in rejecting legislation passed by the House to delay for a year the law's requirement that people buy health insurance as well as the tax subsidies for helping them do it, as a condition for ending the partial government shutdown.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-10-24-US-Health-Overhaul-Democrats/id-8b3143cc38d24529badadd2c23c5ac0b
Similar Articles: aapl   dolly parton   jermichael finley   downton abbey   september 11  

GoGroove SonaVerse Ti


The GoGroove SonaVerse Ti ($34.99 direct) does its best to banish the poor reputation of inexpensive PC speakers. It sports slim enclosures, nifty blue LED lighting, and the ability to be powered by a USB connection instead of a bulky wall-wart-style AC adapter. That said, they just don't sound all that great. If you only have $35 to spend and your laptop has anemic speakers, this pair will sound better to you, but you'll need to spend a bit more for quality audio.



Design
The SonaVerse Ti measures 9.1 by 2.7 by 3.8 inches (HWD); both speakers together weigh just 1.8 pounds, which doesn't bode well for the size of the driver magnets inside. The speakers themselves are made of black injection-molded plastic, with a glossy top and base shaped like an upside-down shield. A GoGroove logo is affixed to the left speaker, while a SonaVerse Ti logo sits on the right speaker grille.


A short 2.5-foot wire connects the two speakers to each other, which is just enough to surround a 24-inch widescreen desktop monitor with little slack. Blue LED lighting emits from the base of each speaker, and makes the SonaVerse Ti system appear to float slightly; it's a pretty cool effect as long as you like LED lighting.


The cabling amounts to a plus and a minus. A 5-foot combination USB and 3.5mm cable is permanently attached to the left speaker. You must plug both connections into your PC for the SonaVerse Ti to work; the USB only acts as power, and doesn't mean you're getting a sonically pure digital connection like it does on more expensive PC speakers. That said, the SonaVerse Ti's design means you won't need a separate, bulky wall-wart-style AC adapter, which can be a plus.GoGroove SonaVerse Ti


Performance
Each speaker contains two tiny 1.5-inch paper cone drivers and a 5.5-watt amplifier. Accessory Power says there's also a "passive bass woofer" inside, but I couldn't see it; the enclosures aren't vented, and there's no visible passive radiator, so it must be inside and just as small as the main drivers.

The company rates the frequency response at 135Hz to 20kHz, which is unusually honest, as there really isn't much bass response here. While you'll hear more of an electric or acoustic bass than you'll hear over, say, MacBook Air speakers, you still won't get any real sense of kick drum punch.


Our testing with actual music tracks bore that prediction out. Flunk's "Indian Rope Trick" sounded harsh, and the synthesized deep bass was completely missing from the recording during playback. Our standard bass test track, The Knife's "Silent Shout," distorted heavily as I turned up the volume. Depeche Mode's "Suffer Well" sounded flat, with little image projection from all of the various electronic bleeps and bloops behind Dave Gahan's voice. Rage Against the Machine's "Fistful of Steel" was simply too bright, and not pleasant to listen to.


In the end, the SonaVerse Ti doesn't deliver on one of my goals, which is to find and recommend a low-cost pair of PC speakers for music fans on a really tight budget. GoGroove's own SonaVerse O2i is even smaller, but that system is $5 more and has similarly harsh sound. The Xmi X-Mini Max sound clear and detailed for $20 more, and are much more portable, but their tiny size precludes any bass punch whatsoever. The Edifier Exclaim e10 remains our favorite low-cost stereo PC speaker system, but at $100, it's more than twice the price of the SonaVerse Ti.


If your standards are modest and you find these at a discount to replace a blown-out or worn-out pair of desktop speakers, or just need something to make music audible for background listening, the SonaVerse Ti will do the trick. But anyone who enjoys quality audio should keep looking. 


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/o-6eXGx0T20/0,2817,2426257,00.asp
Related Topics: channing tatum   Beyond Two Souls   Victoria Duval   nasdaq   Disney Infinity  

For Obamacare To Work, It's Not Just About The Numbers





Ashley Hentze (left) gets help signing up for the Affordable Care Act from a volunteer in Florida. The government says that 40 percent of the expected enrollees for 2014 must be young and healthy for health insurance premiums to remain affordable.



Chris O'Meara/AP


Ashley Hentze (left) gets help signing up for the Affordable Care Act from a volunteer in Florida. The government says that 40 percent of the expected enrollees for 2014 must be young and healthy for health insurance premiums to remain affordable.


Chris O'Meara/AP


Relatively few people have enrolled in new health insurance plans since the Affordable Care Act exchanges launched this month. But some health care experts say it's early days yet — and that getting the right proportion of healthy, young new enrollees is just as important as how quickly people sign up.


The Congressional Budget Office projects that 7 million people will buy health insurance for 2014 through the new exchanges, integral to the implementation of the government's new health care law.


Federal officials say that the exchanges have received 700,000 applications since launching Oct. 1. But so far, it appears that most of those being enrolled are signing up for Medicaid, the government health care system for the poor, rather than private insurance plans.


As a result, many health insurance companies say they've received only a trickle of enrollment through HealthCare.gov, the federally run marketplace that serves 36 states and has been plagued by major technical problems.


The Obama administration said Friday that the federal exchange will work smoothly for the vast majority of users by the end of November. But some are concerned about the financial consequences for the government and insurers if enrollment on the exchanges falls short.


Health care expert Larry Levitt, senior vice president for special initiatives at the Kaiser Family Foundation, says the higher numbers of Medicaid enrollees is not surprising, since Medicaid is free, whereas most people will have to pay something for private insurance.


"As soon as you sign up for a plan, the insurer is going to ask you for the first month's premium," Levitt says. "And given that the coverage won't be effective until Jan. 1, anyway, I certainly wouldn't be in a rush to pay money that won't really help me for a couple months."


Getting The Right Demographic Mix


Levitt says he doesn't expect a surge of enrollments to start before mid-November. But if the exchanges' technical problems and bad publicity dampen enrollment significantly, what might be the financial impact for the government? In the short term, Levitt says, it would actually save the government money.


"If fewer people enroll, not only will the government be paying out less in tax credits, but they'll be taking in more money in the form of penalties, because of the individual mandate," he explains.


Uninsured individuals must sign up by March 31 or face a penalty: 1 percent of their annual income or $95, whichever is higher. The penalty rises in later years.


But for insurance companies participating in the exchanges, it's not just a question of whether the exchanges fall short of the 7 million enrollment target for the first year. Robert Zirkelbach, spokesman for America's Health Insurance Plans, the association that represents U.S. health insurers, says the demographic mix of participants is crucial.


"It's not simply the absolute number of people that are covered that's ultimately going to determine whether coverage is affordable," he says. "It's the type of people that decide to purchase."



In fact, to keep the premiums low and make the system work financially, the government estimates that 40 percent of those 7 million people projected to sign up in the first year need to be young and healthy.


"Because if only people who are older and have high health care costs decide to purchase coverage now, that's going to mean that next year, when open enrollment comes around again, premiums may be significantly higher than we see today," Zirkelbach says.


Rising premiums could lead to a downward spiral for the exchanges, because the increases could convince young, healthy people to pay the penalty rather than sign up for insurance that costs significantly more.


Also, since some operating costs for the exchanges, like computer servers and call centers, will be paid with fees on each policy sold, fewer policies could undermine the exchanges themselves financially. And higher premiums would end up costing the government more in subsidies.


Expecting A Rush Before Penalties Kick In


Jonathan Gruber, an economics professor at MIT, helped develop both the Affordable Care Act and a similar Massachusetts health care system back in the 1990s. He says the Massachusetts program was initially delayed for several months and then signed up just 123 people in its first month of operation.


"We have to stop over-reacting to day-to-day noise," Gruber says. "When we passed this law in Massachusetts, I was on the board that implemented it, [and] we got a report every month on how they were doing. That's probably about the right frequency to be thinking about this."


Gruber also says there was a rush of younger, healthy people signing up in Massachusetts as the prospect of a penalty loomed closer.


"What you saw was a big rush, right at the end, among the healthiest enrollees," Gruber says. "The mandate kicking in really seemed to matter. And remember — in this law, the mandate doesn't effectively kick in until April 1."


The Obama administration can only hope that the early problems don't sink the exchanges before they set sail.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2013/10/25/240798427/for-obamacare-to-work-its-not-just-about-the-numbers?ft=1&f=1019
Similar Articles: columbus day   aaron hernandez   Asap Rocky   Lisa Robin Kelly   phoebe cates