Friday, June 13, 2014

How to Watch the World Cup Online (PCMagazine)

World Cup: How To Watch

World Cup madness is about to begin, whether you like it or not. But how do you find out how your new favorite footballer, Cristiano Ronaldo, is doing on the field when you're away from your couch?
If you can't be near your TV for the full schedule of games—and who can?—then you'll have to do what everyone else is likely doing and stream them.
Some of the ways to do this are legal and some are a little less so, but that shouldn't shock FIFA, the organization that runs the World Cup.
So gear up by setting up your calendar to remind you when games begin, and then use this guide to score a virtual seat. Things kick off this afternoon at 4 p.m. ET with Brazil vs. Croatia.
WatchESPN
ESPN TV Everywhere
ESPN is live-streaming all the games, with one catch—you need a cable subscription. If you subscribe to one of ESPN's cable partners (click right), sign in with your cable credentials and watch online or via apps for iOS,Android, and Windows devices. For those without cable, the ESPN FC Soccer & World Cup app (on Androidand iOS) will have will have live match video highlights. "Watch goals and key plays from the app moments after the action," ESPN says. The app will also feature breaking news and analysis so you can stay up to date with the watercooler chatter.

Comcast Xfinity
Speaking of cable, Comcast announced that every 2014 FIFA World Cup match will be available in Spanish via Instant On Demand, which lets viewers start a broadcast over from the beginning. Xfinity will have all 64 matches in Portuguese, select matches in Korean, as well as alternate feeds for every game via its Web and mobile streams of ESPN3 Surround. English-speaking Xfinity customers, meanwhile, can also tap into ESPN streams on the Xfinity World Cup site, Xfinity Mundial, and the Xfinity TV Go mobile apps.

Hola 
Hola
Hello is olá in Portuguese, but to watch broadcasts from around the world you'll want Hola instead. For those without cable, the app acts as a VPN proxy so that you can benefit from the largesse of other nations. Use it to tap into English-language broadcasts from the United Kingdom (BBC), Canada (CBC), Australia (SBS), and Ireland (RTÉ).

Univision Deportes
Brush up on your Spanish because every game can be found on Univision's siteand on its apps (iOS and Android). But like ESPN, if you want to watch the quarterfinals, semifinals, and finale you'll need a cable subscription.

ESPN Radio
If you don't mind just listening to the games, then ESPN Radio will have them allonline, on its app (for iOS, Android, and Windows). Meanwhile, SiriusXM will air 56 of the games on Channel 84. In cases where two matches are airing simultaneously, one will air on SiriusXM 84, with the other on SiriusXM 85.

TuneIn
Alternatively you can listen with TuneIn online or via app (iOS, Android, andWindows).

Thursday, June 12, 2014

Microsoft Fights U.S. Request for Data Stored Overseas (PCMagazine)

Microsoft is fighting a U.S. government request to turn over customer email data that is stored in Redmond's Dublin data center.
The summons was granted in December as part of a criminal inquiry, and Microsoft lost an appeal in April to have the search warrant annulled.
But the company is still fighting, saying in a Monday court filing that if the judicial order is upheld, it "would violate international laws and treaties, and reduce the privacy protection of everyone on the planet."
The issue, according to the New York Times, stems from Microsoft's insistence that the same rules for a search warrant in the physical world should apply online. James C. Francis, who issued the April ruling, pointed to the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, which he said creates a hybrid search warrant-subpoena that would allow for access to data stored overseas.
According to the Times, Microsoft's protest is believed to be the first case of a corporation challenging a domestic search warrant pursuing digital information overseas.
In the post-Snowden age, when companies like Google and Yahoo are taking added steps to encrypt users' emails, it's no surprise that some organizations have moved their data abroad.
"Over the course of the past year, Microsoft and other U.S. technology companies have faced growing mistrust and concern about their ability to protect the privacy of personal information located outside the United States," Redmond's filing said. "The government's position in this case further erodes that trust, and will ultimately erode the leadership of U.S. technology companies in the global market."
Microsoft currently manages a global network of more than 1 million computers, stored in more than 100 data centers, spread across 40 countries, hosting more than 200 online services used by more than 1 billion customers worldwide.
The ongoing case is expected to continue in late July, according to the Times, which suggested that after Judge Loretta Preska's July 31 ruling, there may be more appeals.
U.S. telecom giant Verizon filed a brief on Tuesday in solidarity with Microsoft, encouraging other companies to join the fight.
"The search warrant in this case is no run-of-the-mill investigative measure," Verizon said in its filing. "If enforced, it would violate international understandings, harm American business, subject Americans to potential liability abroad, and invite foreign governments to unilaterally obtain electronic communications and data of Americans in the United States."

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

The depressing truth about e-waste: 10 things to know (TechRepublic)

By                                        June 11, 2014
Where do our cell phones and laptops go to die? Here are 10 things to know about the growing electronic waste problem and how to properly recycle these items. 
ewaste2.jpg
A small Chinese child sitting among cables and e-waste, Guiyu, China.

In 2012, the United Nations reported that in five years, the world's electronic waste would grow by 33% from 49.7 million tons to 65.4 million tons. That's the weight of 200 Empire State Buildings or 11 Great Pyramids of Giza.
Considering the lifespan of a cell phone is now only 18 months and a laptop's life span is only around two years, that rapid growth rate isn't surprising. What is surprising, however, is how little the public knows about e-waste and how to properly dispose of electronics. Here are 10 things to know about the e-waste life cycle.

1. What counts as e-waste

Electronic waste includes all discarded electric or electronic devices with battery power or circuitry or electric elements. This includes mobile phones, television sets, computers, printers, and entertainment devices such as stereo systems, as well as refrigerators, washing machines and dryers.

2. Where e-waste goes

Electronic waste is a globalized business, and about 70% to 80% of it is shipped to landfills in many developing nations, where it is sorted and sold for scrap metal or burned to extract materials, which is harmful to people and the surrounding environment. The US also sends e-waste to prisons, where it is processed in under-regulated environments.
In 2012, the US generated more than 9 million tons of e-waste, which was a huge jump from its 2 million tons in 2005.StEP
In 2012, the US generated more than 9 million tons of e-waste, which was a huge jump from its 2 million tons in 2005According to the EPA, 141 million mobile devices were ready for end-of-life management in 2008, but they made up less than 1% of discarded electronics. Of the electronic waste the US generated, only 25% was recycled. The other 75% was sent to landfills in the US or abroad.

3. Why it matters to properly dispose

Electronic waste can have many toxic elements inside. According to the United Nations' Solving the E-Waste Problem (StEP) Initiative, which is a collaborative global effort to raise awareness and promote innovation in disposing and recycling e-waste, up to 60 elements from the periodic table can be found inside e-waste items, as well as flame retardants and other toxic chemicals. For example, cadmium is one found in personal computer batteries and monitors. It is extremely toxic to humans and the environment. Other harmful elements include:
  • Lead, which is in most electronic equipment
  • Beryllium, a lightweight metal in many electronics
  • Mercury, in many lighting displays
  • Polyvinyl chloride, often used for cabling in circuit boards

4. What it can be turned into

The metal from these devices can be used for many things, if extracted properly. Cell phone batteries and metals inside the phone can be used to make new ones, or for jewelry, art, metal plates, or other electronics. A company in India, Attero, extracts metals like gold, platinum, and selenium safely from used devices, refurbishes others, and helps businesses with end-to-end electronic asset management. It's a small dent in the grand scheme, but companies like this are important -- and profitable.

5. Where to dispose e-waste

There are several good resources to find out about local or regional e-waste recycling programs. The EPA and the Electronics Take Back Coalition offer information about e-Stewards, which are responsible recyclers. If there is no e-Steward near you, look at the manufacturer or store recycling programs. For instance, Staples and Best Buy both have recycling programs.

6. How to vet a collector

ewaste1.jpg
Burning waste in Ghana, where there are no regulations or precautions regarding the toxic materials.
There are a great deal of fake electronic recycling programs, which is why it's important to look at websites like the ones in No. 5 before recycling. This e-waste cycle is a lucrative business because these organizations can make a lot of money by exporting the items to developing countries that use the scrap metal rather than recycling them for reuse, but they do not monitor or pay for any safety precautions for the people that root through the waste and disassemble it.

7. The laws regarding e-waste vary widely

Why is information about electronic waste so hard to come by? First of all, there have been many attempts to develop federal laws to deal with e-waste, but a consensus has never come to fruition. The Responsible Electronics Recycling Act of 2013, which would make it illegal for the US to send toxic e-waste to other nations was never passed. The Senate introduced the same one in March 2014, but it still hasn't passed.
If we recycled a million laptops, it would save the energy equivalent of the electricity used by 3,657 US homes in a year.
EPA
The Coalition for American Electronics Recycling (CAER) includes more than 100 companies operating over 218 facilities in 34 states, including Waste Management, Sims Recycling Solutions, which is the largest recycling company in the world, and many big-name tech companies like Dell and Microsoft. The organization is trying to promote the passage of this bill. Most states have their own e-waste disposal laws, but only 25 states have passed e-waste recycling laws.

8. Companies are trying to promote trade-ins

In May, Apple unveiled a new trade-in program for iPhones, offering a higher value on iPhone 4 and 4S, and putting that credit towards a new version. Apple has recently made a bigger deal of its clean energy efforts in data centers, and is promoting its recycling programs as well. Dell is also doing its part -- Dell Reconnect is a program at many existing Goodwill locations across the US that promotes responsible recycling of old computers, and the company also helps businesses recycle equipment. Google partnered with Sims Recycling Solutions for a program to promote recycling old devices.

9. The e-waste capital of the world is Guiyu, China

Though China is second behind the US in amount of e-waste generated, it is also the place where most e-waste is dumped by the US. Guiyu, which is a town in Guangdong Province in China's main manufacturing zone, has been a main hub for electronic waste for years. The roads are covered in plastic, wires, and other e-waste. A study showed pollution comes from the burning of circuit boards, and throwing hydrochloric acid on items to recover steel and copper. It's dangerous for workers, residents, visitors, and the surrounding areas. Other studies showed people in Guiyu had higher levels of lead in their blood.

10. Even in the digital age, information is scarce

Because there are no federal laws -- and state laws obviously aren't a top priority -- it's difficult to understand exactly how the world deals with e-waste, even as the numbers of disposed electronics grow and the life span of our devices get shorter. It's also hard to find out how much waste is out there, because of the amount that is said to be recycled by these small companies, but is actually sold to other countries. Even on the EPA website, it says "reliable data on exported e-waste is not available."
But there is this information from the EPA that drives home the importance of recycling e-waste. If we recycled a million laptops, it would save the energy equivalent of the electricity used by 3,657 US homes in a year, and one ton of circuit boards can contain 40 to 800 times the amount of gold and 30 to 40 times the amount of copper mined from one metric ton of ore.


Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Maps: 5 apps that take you beyond Google and Apple (TechRepublic)


Made by MapMyFitnessMapMyWalk is great for accurately tracking your walks, whether they are for business, travel, exercise, or leisure. Create routes, find routes, or save routes, count calories, mileage, and pace, and even sync your music. The company also has separate apps for biking, hiking, and running, but here's a quick tip: you can do all the activities from any of the apps by just using the "Activity" setting when recording your workout.



Open Street Map is an open source map of the world, created and amended by people all over the planet. It emphasizes local knowledge, so if you're in a city and know of a new route or location, you can feel free to add it. There are many types of contributors, from mapping enthusiasts, to professionals, to humanitarians that help add things during disasters. The map shown here was listed as a great example of a community-made map of Pompeii, Italy.

Citymaps is a global social mapping tool, made to integrate with social media and your personal preferences. You can create your own maps on the go, explore your friends maps, and share yours with others. Each store or restaurant location is represented by its logo, making them easy to find, and the app offers turn-by-turn directions as well.

NASA Earth Now

This app visualizes global climate data from satellites so you can view carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, air temperatures, and water vapor levels. At the bottom are color-coded legends to show you how they vary around the world. The Earth can rotate 360 degrees, and you can zoom in and out with the swipe of a finger.

Star Walk

This stargazing app allows you to map the constellations, no matter where you are. There are over 200,000 celestial bodies to view on the app, which gives you information, extra views, and stories about them. Just point your phone to the night sky.

Monday, June 9, 2014

E N M I O P I N I O N: Por: Ricardo Tribín Acosta

Una vida dedicada al servicio

Ese seria para mí un epitafio o recordatorio ideal para alguien que ya se nos ha ido físicamente de este mundo y su mejor legado haya sido el servicio desinteresado a sus gentes, incluyendo en ello a los más cercanos. José Antonio Monsalve, un personaje de una magnifica empresa colombiana quien laboraba allí al comienzo de los años setenta., le repetía a sus empleados una frase que conservo con agrado desde entonces “Servir es mi ocupación”, pues ella hace de la vocación del servicio una meta de vida.

De ahí que el definir las profesiones, actividades laborales, sociales, o de representación como: Presidente, Gerente General, Monseñor, Gestor, entre muchas otras más, se aparta de un concepto más práctico y útil que expresa que “la más alta posición que un ser humano puede ocupar es la de servidor incondicional”.

Dar sin esperar recompensa alguna, es también un objetivo muy mentado , mas bastante difícil de internalizar, ya que de una u otra forma las personas anhelan siempre el agradecimiento por las buenas acciones realizadas, mas les es difícil aceptar el no molestarse si los conocidos : “mil gracias” o “tome esto a cambio” no se dan. Vanidad de vanidades, cuando será que nos dejarás descansar?



Miami, Junio 7 de 2014

Friday, June 6, 2014

Resultados de la Rueda de Negocios del Congreso Hemisférico/ Business Matchmaking Results, 35th Hemispheric Congress


Durante la celebración del Congreso Hemisférico del 2 al 5 de junio, se realizó la Rueda de Negocios para sus 23  países miembros y que en esta oportunidad se suma Polonia, China y los miembros de la  Asociación Iberoamericana de Cámaras de Comercio – AICO

Esta actividad  se llevo a cabo durante dos jornadas: el  3 y el  4 de junio.

El total de 230 empresas e instituciones participantes incluyó las  industrias de energía, gas, energía renovable, información y tecnología, aviación, alimentos, muebles,  madera, construcción, textiles y otros; además de  servicios de telecomunicación, informáticos,  logísticos y cadenas de supermercados

Se firmaron intenciones de negocios por un monto de 23 millones de Dólares Nortemericanos más la intención de erigir una planta de generación de energía entre Polonia y Honduras por un monto de 120 millones de dólares haciendo un total de 143 millones de dólares en intenciones de negocios a mediano plazo sumando a los Negocios concretados por 124.000 dólares..

Todo se logró en 1.356 citas con más de 163 productos y servicios demandados y ofertados.

Adicionalmente también fueron concertadas 50 alianzas de negocios, 29 representaciones,   14 servicios de consultoría, 59 asistencias técnicas e información relevante y 3 financiamientos.

Como parte del Congreso se creó e inauguró el  Polish Trade Center dónde se concretaron 7 convenios de representación para:

  • Realizar un evento de la magnitud del Congreso Hemisférico y la Expo en Polonia.
  • Reclutar por la Agencia Regional de Comercio en Polonia  empresas para el Miami Free Zone.
  • Una Carta de Intención de financiamiento para una empresa polaca de Información y Tecnología – IT por un monto de 300.000 dólares a corto plazo.
  • Un contrato de representación con la empresa SLAIKA SIED METROPOLITARNA con su producto: luces de transito.
  • Contrato de representación con la empresa Cerad con su producto de lozas de cerámica para pisos y revestimientos, teniendo ya 20 contenedores en Miami para su comercialización.
  • Contrato de representación con la empresa Solaris para buses y tranvías.
Esto es una  muestra de la magnitud de contactos y negocios que se realizaron en el evento de negocios más importante del hemisferio, convertido ya  en un escenario global, en el  que más países y empresas se integran año a año.

*******************************************************************************************************
The 35th Hemispheric Congress held in the Biltmore Hotel (June 2-5, 2014) organized the Business Matchmaking among its 23 countries, members of the Congress, with Poland, China and also the Chambers from AICO (Interamerican Chambers of Commerce Association).

Participants included 230 companies and business organizations, with signed trade intentions for $23 Millions. Also there was signed a contract for installation of an energy plant in Honduras from Poland, for a total of $ 143 Millions. Business for immediate trade were  $124 K. 

As an additional benefit were created 50 business alliances, 29 representations, 14 consultant services,  59 technical assistances and 3 financing contracts.

A Polish Trade center was open with the following immediate results:
  • To schedule a similar business exhibition in Poland 
  •  Recruitment of Polish companies for the Miami Free Zone
  •  Financing of an IT Polish Company for $300 K
  •  A representation contract for SLAIKA SIED in Miami
  •  Business Contract for Ceramic Products from Polan with 20 Containers in stock
  •  Business Contract with Solaris for Buses and Streetcars.
 These important results are an important sample of the economic benefits from the event, which is considered the most important one in the hemisphere with a world reach, trend from the increasing integration of companies and countries from all over the world.

Why Have Female Hurricanes Killed More People Than Male Ones? by Ed Yong

HurricaneIsabel
Hurricane Isabel, as seen from space. Credit: Mike Trenchard, Earth Sciences & Image Analysis Laboratory , Johnson Space Center.
Here’s a simple fact with an uncertain explanation: historically, hurricanes with female names have, on average, killed more people than those with male ones.
Kiju Jung from the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign made this discovery after analysing archival data about the 94 hurricanes that hit the US between 1950 and 2012. As they write, “changing a severe hurricane’s name from Charley to Eloise could nearly triple its death toll”.
Why?
The names certainly don’t reflect a storm’s severity, and they alternate genders from one to the next.
Jung team thinks that the effect he found is due to unfortunate stereotypes that link men with strength and aggression, and women with warmth and passivity. Thanks to these biases, people might take greater precautions to protect themselves from Hurricane Victor, while reacting more apathetically to Hurricane Victoria. “These kinds of implicit biases routinely affect the way actual men and women are judged in society,” says Sharon Shavitt, who helped to design the study. “It appears that these gender biases can have deadly consequences.”
But Jeff Lazo from the National Centre for Atmospheric Research disagrees. He’s a social scientist and economist who has looked into the public communication of hurricane risk, and he thinks the pattern is most likely a statistical fluke, which arose because of the ways in which the team analysed their data.
Let’s look at each of these arguments in turn.
First, Jung’s team asked nine people to rate the name of US hurricane on a scale of 1 (very masculine) to 11 (very feminine). They found that the more feminine names were linked to more damage (normalised to today’s value) and deaths. (They excluded Katrina because that was such a huge outlier.)
To test their hypothesis about gender biases, the team ran six experiments. (For stats junkies, here’s the table showing all the numbers behind the experiments; note that each one involves a fresh group of volunteers.)
When the volunteers saw a list of hurricane names, and nothing more, they guessed that male storms would be more intense than female ones. After reading a more detailed scenario about an incoming hurricane, they predicted that the storm would be riskier and more intense if its name was Alexander rather than Alexandra.
After reading another similar scenario, they were more likely to say that they would evacuate their homes if Hurricane Christopher was hypothetically bearing down upon them, than if Hurricane Christina was doing so. Likewise, if they read a voluntary evacuation order, they were more likely to comply in the face of Hurricanes Danny, Victor or Alexander than Hurricanes Kate, Victoria, or Alexandra respectively
These differences aren’t due to explicit sexism. When the team asked people directly if male or female hurricanes would be more dangerous, the responses were evenly split. “This suggests that the effects in the main experiments are implicit in nature,” says Shavitt. In other words, gender stereotypes influence our thoughts and behaviour, whether or not we buy into them outright.
But Lazo thinks that neither the archival analysis nor the psychological experiments support the team’s conclusions. For a start, they analysed hurricane data from 1950, but hurricanes all had female names at first. They only started getting male names on alternate years in 1979. This matters because hurricanes have also, on average, been getting less deadly over time. “It could be that more people die in female-named hurricanes, simply because more people died in hurricanes on average before they started getting male names,” says Lazo.
Jung’s team tried to address this problem by separately analysing the data for hurricanes before and after 1979. They claim that the findings “directionally replicated those in the full dataset” but that’s a bit of a fudge. The fact is they couldn’t find a significant link between the femininity of a hurricane’s name and the damage it caused for either the pre-1979 set or the post-1979 one (and a “marginally significant interaction” of p=0.073 doesn’t really count). The team argues that splitting the data meant there weren’t enough hurricanes in each subset to provide enough statistical power. But that only means we can’t rule out a connection between gender and damage; we can’t soundly confirm one either.
Other aspects of the team’s analysis didn’t make sense to Lazo. For example, they included indirect deaths in their fatality counts, which includes people who, say, are killed by fallen electrical lines in the clean-up after a storm. “How would gender name influence that sort of fatality?” he asks. He also notes that the damage a hurricane inflicts depends on things like how buildings are constructed, and other actions that we take long before a hurricane is named, or even before it forms.
Then, there are the six experiments. As is common in psychology, the volunteers in the first three were all college students. “There is no reason to think that University of Illinois undergraduate students in hypothetical scenarios would have any relation to real-world decision making to populations in hurricane vulnerable areas,” says Lazo. The participants in the last three were recruited via Amazon Mechanical Turk—an online platform for finding volunteers.  Again, it’s unclear how representative they were of people who live in coastal, hurricane-prone towns.
Finally, Lazo says that there’s a lot of evidence on how people respond to hurricane threats, and how their decisions are influenced by their social situation, vulnerability, culture, prior experience, sources of information, when the hurricane makes land, and so on. “Trying to suggest that a major factor in this is the gender name of the event, with a very small sample of real events, is a very big stretch,” says Lazo. And if the archival analysis isn’t as strong as it originally seemed, then what the team has basically done is to show “that individuals respond to gender”—hardly a big deal. [Update: To clarify, I mean that there's already a huge amount of evidence that individuals respond to gender, not that the biases themselves are no big deal. Of course, they are.]
All of this matters because Jung’s conclusions, if they’re right, could have implications for how hurricanes are described. “It may make sense to move away from human names, but other labels could also create problems if they are associated with perceptions of mildness or gentleness,” says Shavitt. “The key is to provide information and labels that are relevant to the storm’s severity.”
Lazo says, “If there’s reasonable validity to their findings, it is worth further exploration with real hurricane-vulnerable subjects. That would be the proper conclusion to their study, and absolutely not any specific policy recommendations about changing naming conventions!”