The All New Apple TV

The All New Apple TV

Apple TV has been redesigned to be small in size but big on entertainment. Rent from the largest selection of HD movies — many available the same day they come out on DVD. Watch Netflix titles instantly. Rent TV shows, commercial free in HD. And stream photos and music from your computer to your widescreen TV. Best of all, Apple TV is just $99.

Design. Apple TV, streamlined.

Our most entertaining design yet.

The sleek new Apple TV has been completely retuned for your entertainment. It’s 80 percent smaller than the previous generation — even with a built-in power supply. Which makes it perfect for sitting neatly on a widescreen TV stand or squeezing into a crowded media cabinet. Not only does the new Apple TV have an amazingly small footprint, it’s also incredibly energy efficient. It stays cool without a fan, so it’s never noisy. And when it’s not filling your living room with drama, romance, and comedy, it uses less power than a night-light.

All streaming. No hassle.

Everything you want to watch — movies, TV shows, photos, and more — streams wirelessly to Apple TV. That way you don’t have to worry about managing storage or syncing to your iTunes library. HD movie and TV show rentals play over the Internet to your widescreen TV, while music and photos stream from your computer. Either way, all you have to do is click and play. Since Apple TV features a powerful A4 chip, it streams everything effortlessly, without frozen screens or stutters. Video looks crisp and clear. And just like watching a DVD, you can fast-forward through opening credits, pause for a popcorn break, or replay a hilarious scene until you memorize every line.

Get connected with Apple TV.

Setting up Apple TV is about as simple as it gets. Just plug the power cord into the wall and connect Apple TV to your widescreen TV using an HDMI cable (sold separately). Since everything streams wirelessly to Apple TV, that’s all you need. Well, that and a comfy couch.

Read more:  http://www.apple.com/appletv/

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School shopping no spree in slow economy

School shopping no spree in slow economy

8.18.10 – Dread puts parents in delay. Big prices and small budgets have turned the once pleasant annual purchasing party into an allegory of a flagging economy, producing parental angst and industry cheerleaders who urge the moms and dads to at least “buy American.”

Shiny new shoes, pristine No. 2 pencils, a snappy lunchbox: Back-to-school shopping was once a welcomed ritual, an autumnal rite for parent and child.

No more. Big prices and small budgets have turned the once pleasant annual purchasing party into an allegory of a flagging economy, producing parental angst and industry cheerleaders who urge the moms and dads to at least “buy American.”

The days of shelling out a sensible or at least comfortable amount for junior’s school needs are gone. On average, American parents spend from $545 to $671 per child, according to the National Retail Federation. Costs for college-bound offspring are in the $900 range. The official “BTS” (back-to-school) industry annually tops $67 billion, the group said.

Meanwhile, “BTSD” (back-to-school dread) has ensued.

Even as the first day of school looms, parents are in delay mode. Almost two-thirds have not figured out how much they can spend this year, while 55 percent have not purchased a single item, says the Chase Slate-U.S. News Consumer Monitor, which has plumbed the parental psyche in a survey that reveals worry and, yes, denial.

Souce: www.educationnews.org

By: Jennifer Harper – The Washington Times

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Tsunami triggered by one-two punch

Tsunami triggered by one-two punch
First recorded observation of unusual earthquake sequence

A giant earthquake that triggered a deadly southwest Pacific tsunami was actually two great temblors, finds a pair of new studies in the Aug. 19 Nature. These results uncover an unusual sequence of geological events that is the first of its kind to be observed by scientists, the study authors say.

The earthquakes, which likely struck within two minutes of each other on September 29, 2009, spawned a tsunami that killed nearly 200 people in Samoa, American Samoa and Tonga. Scientists assumed that a single quake under the ocean floor had caused the devastation, but the pattern of far-flung aftershocks, aberrant tsunami waves and the inexplicable movement of a Tongan island cast doubt on that simple explanation.

“We knew right off the bat that something was weird about this earthquake,” says geophysicist Eric Geist of the U.S. Geological Survey in Menlo Park, Calif. Geist wasn’t involved in the current studies but has puzzled over the anomalous signs produced by the quake. “This is a very complicated event, and these studies, for me, really helped explain a lot.”

The earthquake that everybody knew about was a whopper: a magnitude-8.1 quake in which the ground was pulled apart along a fault. The hidden quake was a different type.  It happened about 70 kilometers from its predecessor on a thrust fault where the west-moving Pacific plate dives under the east-bound Tonga block of the Australia plate, an event called subduction. These two plates scrape past each other 24 centimeters each year, “the fastest plate tectonics on the planet,” says study coauthor John Beavan of GNS Science in Lower Hutt, New Zealand.

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A magnitude-8.1 quake in the southwest Pacific triggered a second quake, comprised of two magnitude-7.8 subevents, where the east-moving Tonga block of the Australia plate meets the west-moving Pacific plate. Keith Koper/University of Utah Seismograph Stations

The two research teams separately uncovered the presence of a second earthquake using different data. Beavan and his colleagues found that tsunami gauges on the ocean floor measured a big positive pressure wave, a suspicious sign since a ground-extending earthquake would cause a drop in pressure.

Another big clue came from GPS stations on the northern Tongan island of Niuatoputapu, which has been steadily moving east. On its own, the first earthquake would have sent the island slightly back to the west. But instead, the island jumped about 40 centimeters to the east. “It was completely out of kilter,” Beavan says. The best explanation was that a second thrusting fault earthquake had caused the motion.

The other research group, led by seismologist Thorne Lay of the University of California, Santa Cruz, spotted abnormalities in seismic data that led them to dig deeper into the seismic records.

“We were able to pull together a self-consistent story of the triggered thrust earthquake, and clearly it was as big as the first event,” Lay says. “It was a magnitude-8 hidden earthquake. And you would think, ‘Well, aren’t seismologists a bunch of idiots. They can’t even find a magnitude-8 earthquake,’ but it was obscured by the strong shaking from the first one.”

Lay and his team built a model in which the normal fault earthquake happened first, triggering the hidden thrust-fault quake, Lay says. Beavan’s team’s study didn’t have the resolution to parse the timing of the earthquakes, but he says that he suspects Lay and his colleagues’ timeline is correct.

Both studies peg the second earthquake at a magnitude 8.0. Lay and his colleagues were able to distinguish two distinct but nearly simultaneous energy releases from the second earthquake, which they call subevents. Each of these subevents, they estimate, was magnitude 7.8, which combined to hit the 8.0 mark.

“We pretty well understand what’s going on with these earthquakes,” Beavan says. “The fact that these two studies, which use completely different techniques, both come up with the same answer is really nice.”

Understanding all of the forces involved may be useful in building better models of how earthquakes can trigger one another and tsunamis. This is the first example of a normal fault earthquake setting off a thruster fault quake, Geist says, which “will set off a lot of interesting research on the mechanics of subduction zones and how they behave.”

Souce:  www.sciencenews.org
By Laura Sanders
Web edition : Wednesday, August 18th, 2010
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Intel to buy McAfee for $7.68 billion

Intel to buy McAfee for $7.68 billion

Intel plans to buy security company McAfee for

$7.68 billion–the biggest acquisition in its 42-year history.

The chipmaker said Thursday it has entered into a definitive

agreement to buy all of McAfee’s common stock at $48 per share

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