Wednesday, January 30, 2013

China may lift ban on video game consoles after thirteen years ...

The Chinese government banned video game consoles in 2000 because they corrupted the country?s young people. Thirteen years later, the Chinese gaming industry is worth nearly $10 billion and the Ministry of Culture is reconsidering its console ban.

In the global video game industry, the United States dominates in terms of money. The video game industry generated approximately $50 billion in 2012 and last year, $18 billion of that came from the United States. The US? dominance, however, won?t last forever as more and more countries begin to spend more time and money on video games. China is growing at an exponential pace. Something that has kept the US gaming industry generating more revenue than China is the console industry. Video game consoles like the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3, as well as the retail games they play, generate huge sales revenue every year, but consoles are banned in China and have been since 2000. That?s about to change, though.

?We are reviewing the policy and have conducted some surveys and held discussions with other ministries on the possibility of opening up the game console market,? a source within the Chinese Ministry of Culture told China Daily, ?However, since the ban was issued by seven ministries more than a decade ago, we will need approval from all parties to lift it.?

Game consoles were banned in China on the grounds that they corrupted young people. Within five years of the ban though, the online gaming boom swept through China, making MMOs like World of Warcraft?huge business. Video game companies like Tencent have helped to expand China?s online gaming base, and online games currently make up nearly 90-percent of all gaming revenue in China. ?

The entire Chinese gaming industry generated nearly?$10 billion in 2012.

?China now has more online gamers than the US and, I believe, Japan combined,? said Tencent VP David Wallerstein in 2012, ?[This] year, the Chinese online game market will be about $8 billion, and the global market for online games is about $15 billion. So it?s roughly half.?

Wallerstein?s estimate actually ended up being about a billion dollars low, and the trend is expected to continue. By 2017, the Chinese gaming market is expected to reach $21.7 billion by 2017.

Numerous video game companies have tried to move past the ban. Sony even gained legal approval to release the PlayStation 2 in the country back in 2003, later giving it a limited run in 2004. Unfortunately for Sony, the console was a catastrophic failure as hardware and software pirates flooded the market. Other companies have found loopholes in the ban. Lenovo?s Eedoo CT510, a Kinect-style motion control game console, was sold as an ?exercise console.?

Who will tackle the Chinese game console market first? Sony may try its hand again. In November the Japanese manufacturer was granted a ?China Cumpulsory Certificate? that is valid through 2016, a necessary certification for imported products like the PlayStation 3. With the next generation of consoles on the way though, manufacturers like Sony, as well as Nintendo and Microsoft, are likely lobbying for permission to sell their consoles in the People?s Republic. OF course, if the ban is completely lifted, that could also clear the way for another console manufactured by one of the many Chinese gaming companies operating in China.?

Source: http://www.digitaltrends.com/gaming/as-chinas-gaming-industry-nears-10-bil-the-country-may-lift-ban-on-video-game-consoles-after-thirteen-years/

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Criminal Procedure ? ineffective assistance - Wisconsin Law Journal

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Source: http://wislawjournal.com/2013/01/29/criminal-procedure-ineffective-assistance-88/

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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Mali military enters fabled town of Timbuktu

Chadian soldiers patrol the streets of Gao, Northern Mali, Monday Jan. 28, 2013. Malian soldiers descended on the city of Timbuktu on Monday after al-Qaida-linked militants fled into the desert having set ablaze a library that held thousands of ancient manuscripts. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

Chadian soldiers patrol the streets of Gao, Northern Mali, Monday Jan. 28, 2013. Malian soldiers descended on the city of Timbuktu on Monday after al-Qaida-linked militants fled into the desert having set ablaze a library that held thousands of ancient manuscripts. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

Chadian soldiers patrol the streets of Gao, Northern Mali, Monday Jan. 28, 2013. French and Malian troops held a strategic bridge and the airport in the northern town of Gao on Sunday as their force also pressed toward Timbuktu, another stronghold of Islamic extremists in northern Mali, officials said. Malian soldiers descended on the city of Timbuktu on Monday after al-Qaida-linked militants fled into the desert having set ablaze a library that held thousands of ancient manuscripts. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

Children cheer foreign visitors arriving in the streets of Gao, Northern Mali, Monday Jan. 28, 2013. French and Malian troops held a strategic bridge and the airport in the northern town of Gao on Sunday as their force also pressed toward Timbuktu, another stronghold of Islamic extremists in northern Mali, officials said. Malian soldiers descended on the city of Timbuktu on Monday after al-Qaida-linked militants fled into the desert having set ablaze a library that held thousands of ancient manuscripts. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

A young child runs through the deserted side streets of Gao , Northern Mali, Monday Jan. 28, 2013. French and Malian troops held a strategic bridge and the airport in the northern town of Gao on Sunday as their force also pressed toward Timbuktu, another stronghold of Islamic extremists in northern Mali, officials said. Malian soldiers descended on the city of Timbuktu on Monday after al-Qaida-linked militants fled into the desert having set ablaze a library that held thousands of ancient manuscripts. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

Malian soldiers are stationed at the entrance of of Gao, Northern Mali, Monday Jan. 28, 2013. French and Malian troops held a strategic bridge and the airport in the northern town of Gao on Sunday as their force also pressed toward Timbuktu, another stronghold of Islamic extremists in northern Mali, officials said. The sign , a reminder of Islamic extremists, reads " Al Hesbah, together for the pleasure of God almighty and the struggle against sins."(AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

(AP) ? Backed by French helicopters and paratroopers, Malian soldiers entered the fabled city of Timbuktu on Monday after al-Qaida-linked militants who ruled the outpost by fear for nearly 10 months fled into the desert, setting fire to a library that held thousands of manuscripts dating to the Middle Ages.

French Col. Thierry Burkhard, chief military spokesman in Paris, said that there had been no combat with the Islamists but that the French and Malian forces did not yet control the town.

Still, there was celebration among the thousands of Timbuktu residents who fled the city rather than live under strict and pitiless Islamic rule and the dire poverty that worsened after the tourist industry was destroyed.

"In the heart of people from northern Mali, it's a relief ? freedom finally," said Cheick Sormoye, a Timbuktu resident who fled to Bamako, the capital.

Timbuktu, a city of mud-walled buildings and 50,000 people, was for centuries a seat of Islamic learning and a major trading center along the North African caravan routes that carried slaves, gold and salt. In Europe, legend had it that it was a city of gold. Today, its name is synonymous to many with the ends of the earth.

It has been home to some 20,000 irreplaceable manuscripts, some dating to the 12th century. It was not immediately known how many were destroyed in the blaze that was set in recent days in an act of vengeance by the Islamists before they withdrew.

Michael Covitt, chairman of the Malian Manuscript Foundation, called the arson a "desecration to humanity."

"These manuscripts are irreplaceable. They have the wisdom of the ages and it's the most important find since the Dead Sea Scrolls," he said.

The militants seized Timbuktu last April and began imposing a strict Islamic version of Shariah, or religious law, across northern Mali, carrying out amputations and public executions. Women could be whipped for going out in public without wearing veils, while men could be lashed for having cigarettes.

Just over two weeks after the French began their military intervention in Mali, French and Malian forces arrived in Timbuktu overnight, the French military spokesman said Monday.

"The helicopters have been decisive," Burkhard said, describing how they aided the ground forces who came from the south as French paratroopers landed north of the city.

But the French have said Mali's military must finish the job of securing Timbuktu. And the Malians have generally fared poorly in combat, often retreating in panic in the face of well-armed, battle-hardened Islamists.

During their rule in Timbuktu, the militants systematically destroyed cultural sites, including the ancient tombs of Sufi saints, which they denounced as contrary to Islam because they encouraged Muslims to venerate saints instead of God.

The mayor said the Islamists burned his office as well as the Ahmed Baba institute, a library rich in historical documents.

"It's truly alarming that this has happened," Mayor Ousmane Halle told The Associated Press by telephone from Bamako. "They torched all the important ancient manuscripts. The ancient books of geography and science. It is the history of Timbuktu, of its people."

Some manuscripts had been removed from Timbuktu or hidden away for safekeeping from the Islamists.

"UNESCO is very concerned about the reports coming out of Timbuktu as to damage on cultural heritage there," UNESCO chief spokeswoman Sue Williams said from Paris.

The destruction recalls tactics used by the Taliban in 2001 when they dynamited a pair of giant Buddhas carved into a mountain in Afghanistan. The Taliban also rampaged through the national museum, smashing any art depicting the human form, considered idolatrous under their hardline interpretation of Islam. In all, they destroyed about 2,500 statues.

Mali's Islamists still control the provincial capital of Kidal farther north and are believed to have dug a network of tunnels, trenches and caves from which they can launch attacks.

Nana Toure, a native of Timbuktu now living in the capital, said she was delighted to hear that the French had arrived but worried how long the Malian soldiers could hold the town without help.

"French troops must not leave us alone then because those who fled may come back and cause problems for us," she said. "French troops have to stay a bit to stabilize the place."

___

Hinnant reported from Paris. Associated Press writers Carley Petesch in Johannesburg, Thomas Adamson in Paris, and Rukmini Callimachi in Sevare, Mali, contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-01-28-AF-Mali-Fighting/id-2ef14c2c7e614e598f6035c3ec11b628

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Monday, January 28, 2013

OPINION: India should Follow Arab Countries to Check the Crime ...

Nothing shocked India with as much intensity of tragedy in its sixty five year of history as that of the brutal gang rape of a 23-year old girl and her subsequent death out of trauma.

The public reaction was extraordinarily exceptional. A part of the feeling of the nation was either numbed or dead. India could not decide how to come to terms with the news.

How a man in whose hand is trusted the protection of a daughter, the dignity of a sister and the care of a mother can turn out to be worse than a devil or a demon! Humanity, indeed, has shown the ugliest face of its shameful and disgraceful act!

The suspense about what would happen to the rape-victim came to an end with her shocking death. Her suffering, certainly, implies a symbolic struggle against atrocity a helpless girl in India goes throughout her life.

From womb till every stage of her breathing, a female lives under the constant fear of shame and humiliation.Through such violence as rape, trafficking, forced prostitution and sexual exploitation, the so-called civilized world seems to be a very terrible place for a woman to survive.

Cruelty against a girl is universal. It begins even before the very birth happens. Thousands fall victim to gender selective abortion i.e., boys being preferred to girls.

Islam took notice of this evil practice hundreds of years back. It regards female infanticide as adult murder. The Quranic injunction strictly forbids the evil practice: ?When the infant girl, is buried alive, is questioned, for what crime she was killed.? (Surah 81:8 ? 9)

It further mentions: ?You shall not kill your children for fear of want. We will provide for them and for you. To kill them is a grievous sin.? (Surah 17:31)

India?s census commissioner once estimated that several million fetuses were aborted in the country in the last two decades because they were just female. Many more fall prey to sexual offenders, to ?honour killings? and to acid attacks, most often for refusing a suitor. A large number of them are burnt to death each year in ?kitchen accidents? because their dowry is seen as being too modest.

Still a shocking number of women are killed within their own walls through domestic violence. Sexual abuse of girls, often by relatives, though widespread, shrouds in taboo. Millions are trafficked while some are sold. The list of horror is endless. The picture is all too clear. India is confronted by the Slaughter of Eve, a systematic gendercide of tragic proportion.

According to World Health Organization, one woman in seven is the victim of rape or attempted rape during her life time in India.

While the facts are known and the figures are easily available to the government, the issue has never been taken seriously till the brutal gang-rape and death of a young girl that stirred the conscience of India. Violence against women should be considered as one of the great crimes of humanity. There should not be any room for complacency in face of rape and degradation of women.

Well! India does not have the dearth of legal documents that call for the eradication of atrocity against women, yet the nation has failed to stop the occurrence of crime against women particularly the frequency of rape incidents that happen even now every day in every city without a stop.

The innocent girls continue to fall victims to the lust of the criminals. India stands as a helpless bystander in view of the growing reports of rapes in the streets and outskirts of cities.

What is needed is the stronger commitment to form strict laws. India should not feel shy in following Islamic laws for harsher punishment to the rapists. Those found guilty to outrage the modesty of a girl must be stoned to death.

At the same time, society as a whole has responsibility to change attitudes and stereotypes that maintain women?s inferiority. It must also maintain a code of conduct in persuading its women not to mingle with men pointlessly. The bar culture must also come to an end along with culture of making girlfriends and boyfriends outside the sanctity of marriage.

It is time India broods about the safety of its women in the way Arab countries do. Islamic principles will certainly help it overcome the challenges the nation is facing at present to check the crime against women.

azeemamu@gmail.com

Source: http://www.tripolipost.com/articledetail.asp?c=5&i=9821

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Thursday, January 17, 2013

As IAEA arrives in Tehran, Iran braces for full force of US sanctions

As Iranian officials prepare for a new round of negotiations with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), US sanctions set to hit Tehran in February have Iranians worried that billions of dollars long stuck in bank accounts outside the Islamic Republic could soon become cemented in place.

The new US Treasury sanctions, which go into effect Feb. 6, will formally regulate global banking constraints that Iranian banks and businesses have been facing, on an informal basis, for more than two years.

Senior Iranian officials slammed the measures, calling them one of many ?purely political? sanctions the US has imposed on Iran since the country?s 1979 revolution and subsequent establishment of an Islamic Republic.

RECOMMENDED: How much do you know about Iran? Take our quiz to find out.

?The US is a member of the ?5 plus 1,? and if they really want to solve this problem ? if they are really worried about our activities, they can refer to it through technical [nuclear negotiations], and not politically,? said Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast in a phone interview from Tehran. ?If they think they can achieve their goals with sanctions, that is a very big mistake.?

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Sanctions have been a key part of the US strategy to force Iran to negotiate over its nuclear program, which the United States and its allies claim is intended for producing nuclear weapons. Tehran insists its program is peaceful, intended for medical research and meeting the energy needs of its rising population.

Iran last met with the so-called ?P5 plus 1? powers ? the United States, China, France, Germany, Russia, and Britain ? in Moscow in June, but the negotiators made little progress in reaching an agreement. In spite of some reports within the international community that the talks may be delayed, Mr. Mehmanparast said Iran?s deputy nuclear negotiator, Dr. Ali Bagheri, has been communicating with his European counterpart, Helga Schmid, and that another round of talks with the ?P5 plus 1? is expected later this month.

'SHACKLING' IRAN'S MONEY

The aim of Washington?s February sanctions measure is for Tehran?s oil revenues to become largely ?shackled? within any country buying oil from Iran, undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence David Cohen declared at a conference in Washington last month.

This means Iran?s international oil customers ? even those with State Department waivers exempting them from US Treasury penalties for purchasing Iranian oil ? will officially be at risk of being cut off from the US banking system if they allow transfers of Iran?s oil revenues back to Tehran?s Central Bank.

If implemented, the National Iranian Oil Company would be formally forced to keep its oil revenues in local bank accounts inside countries purchasing its oil, and could only use those oil earnings to purchase "permissible" services and goods, such as food, medicine, and basic medical equipment, from those oil customers as imports back into the Islamic Republic.

Iran?s oil sales first began to decline in 2010 due to the rise in transaction costs for purchases of Iranian oil resulting from sanctions. Oil sales plummeted further after the European Union imposed an oil embargo against Tehran in July 2012. To push Iran?s oil sales down even more, Washington now directly penalizes foreign companies that purchase Iran?s oil, and sanctions banks that facilitate financial transactions, such as money transfers, with the Islamic Republic.

The main purchasers of Iran?s oil today are refineries from Japan, Turkey, China, Taiwan, South Korea, and India. The US State Department has waived US Treasury sanctions against these countries in exchange for significantly reducing their volume of oil purchases from Iran, as well as for South Africa, Sri Lanka, Singapore, and Malaysia, who do business with Tehran on a smaller scale.

STEADY EXPANSION

Iran-based business owners say a considerable chunk of Tehran?s oil revenues have already been tied up and locked in international bank accounts for more than two years because of US sanctions legislation, which was first imposed in 2006 and seriously implemented after 2007. International banks have become increasingly wary of authorizing money transfers to pay for goods ? even those licensed by the Treasury Department as permissible ? for fear that a transaction with any Iranian entity could trigger a cut-off from the US banking system as a whole.

As a result, roughly 80 percent of Iran?s financial transactions have been re-channeled through banks in Turkey, South Korea, India, China, and Russia, according to financial advisers inside the Islamic Republic. Thus the new sanctions slated to take effect this February will merely tighten an already-existing noose around Iranian government and private sector money.

?This phenomenon has been happening in practice anyways. The US is now just widening the net,? says Erich Ferrari, a Washington-based lawyer specializing in sanctions and US Treasury financial regulations. ?Those who are going to deal with Iran will keep doing so, but it?s going to get harder to pay them.?

Early this month, President Obama signed new legislation intended to prevent Iran from receiving precious metals such as gold or materials like steel and graphite, among others, as payment for its oil. Iranian economists say these measures, expected to take effect in the next six months, will pressure the trading partners Iran has left to regularize their transactions with the Islamic Republic and bring them firmly online with US policies.

Tomorrow, Tehran will host new discussions with the IAEA. The UN nuclear agency has said it hopes Iran will address concerns about evidence the IAEA claims to have showing that in the last decade, Iran may have conducted tests geared toward nuclear weaponization at the Parchin military complex, roughly 20 miles outside of Tehran. Iran denies the charge, and says the IAEA?s evidence is based on faulty intelligence, which it has not even seen.

Mr. Mehmanparast, the Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman, would not comment on whether the IAEA inspectors would be allowed to visit Parchin, saying only that Iran looks forward to the next set of meetings with the IAEA.

?We hope to achieve a final result in which they accept completely our right to our activities. We are waiting to solve their worries about our nuclear activities,? he said. ?If they really want to have some agreement with the Iranian side, [the IAEA] can reach this very soon."

Follow Roshanak Taghavi on Twitter @RoshanakT

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iaea-arrives-tehran-iran-braces-full-force-us-210323761.html

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NBA: Atlanta 109, Brooklyn 95

Published: Jan. 16, 2013 at 10:06 PM

ATLANTA, Jan. 16 (UPI) -- Jeff Teague sent Atlanta storming to a big first-half lead Wednesday and the Hawks went on to down Brooklyn 109-95.

The Hawks had lost six of their last seven, including an embarrassing setback against Chicago Monday in which they scored a franchise-low 20 points in the first half.

Teague made 12-of-18 shots from the field and scored 28 points along with 11 assists. Atlanta built a 16-point cushion at intermission and boosted it to 24 during the third period.

Devin Harris added 18 points for the Hawks and Al Horford had 17 points and 13 rebounds. Atlanta, which had a 10-minute scoreless stretch against Chicago, hit 57 percent of its shots against the Nets.

Brook Lopez scored 22 points for Brooklyn, which will host Atlanta Friday.

Source: http://www.upi.com/Sports_News/2013/01/16/NBA-Atlanta-109-Brooklyn-95/UPI-27791358392014/

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Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Gym equipment donated to school | ShetlandTimes.co.uk

Staff and pupils at Sandwick junior high school will be able to get fit thanks to a donation of gym equipment from BP.

The company is updating its fitness suite at the Sullom Voe Terminal and had surplus equipment that was still in excellent condition.

BP contacted Shetland Islands Council to see if any schools

could make use of it. Sandwick headteacher Stuart Clubb had been considering creating a gym at the school and was delighted to take up the offer.

He said: ?It?s a fantastic facility for the school and for the wider community and it will further enhance the opportunities to encourage pupil health and wellbeing which is very important in a school setting.?

The new gym, in a former classroom, includes two rowing machines, two treadmills, a cross trainer, two exercise bikes, a multi-gym, a bench and a set of dumbbells.

Mr Clubb said: ?We have a lot of staff who are into fitness and exercise so they will familiarise themselves with the equipment and will get training so that they can supervise pupil use. Once we have that in place we will look at how we can offer access to the wider community.

?We are 100 per cent committed at looking at ways of allowing members of the community to come into school to use the facility. We were particularly keen to secure this for south mainland Shetland because this is one of the few areas in Shetland that doesn?t have this kind of gym facility so it will be a great asset.?

Will Arthur, who works at BP Sullom Voe, arranged for the equipment to be transported to the school.

?We at BP are delighted that we have found a good home for the equipment.

?We are particularly pleased it is going to a school and that it will bring benefits to the wider community.?

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Source: http://www.shetlandtimes.co.uk/2013/01/15/gym-equipment-donated-to-school

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Thursday, January 10, 2013

Foxconn Confirms Bribery Investigation After Chinese Authorities Detain Employee

Foxconn, the Taiwan-based electronics manufacturing giant that works with companies like Apple,?Samsung and Sony,?has confirmed that it is being investigated on charges of bribery by Chinese authorities. At least one of Foxconn?s employees has been detained after being accused of accepting bribes from suppliers.

The bribery case was first reported by Next Magazine, a Taiwan-based news magazine. The investigation involves a Foxconn unit responsible for purchasing surface-mount technology equipment and components. A Shenzhen, China-based?executive at the unit was detained in September after he allegedly took bribes.

According to the?China Times?(link via Google Translate), Foxconn?s own internal investigation is taking a look at more than 10 employees who may be involved in the case.?In the meantime, the company has also stopped working with suppliers who may be involved. Foxconn announced that it has already began adjusting its purchasing procedures and taking steps to ensure a similar scandal does not reoccur. In an emailed statement, a Foxconn Technology Group spokesperson said:

?We can confirm that we are working with law enforcement officials who we brought in to work with our own internal audit team as part of an investigation into allegations against a number of Foxconn employees related to illegal payments from supply chain partners.? Since the matter is under investigation, we are not able to comment further.? However, we can say that the integrity of our employees is something we take very seriously and any employees found guilty of any illegal actions or violations of our company?s Code of Conduct will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.? We are also carrying out a full review of our policies and practices to identify steps we can take to strengthen such measures to further mitigate against such actions.?

Other high profile controversies Foxconn has weathered include accusations of?poor labor conditions and a string of suicides by workers at Foxconn factories across China (which the company responded to by installing large nets).

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2013/01/09/foxconn-confirms-bribery-investigation-after-chinese-authorities-detain-employee/

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Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Investing Resolutions - Zacks.com

by Brian Bolan

January 02, 2013 | Comments : Recommended this article: (0)

This page is temporarily not available.? Please check later as it should be available shortly. If you have any questions, please email customer support at support@zacks.com or call 800-767-3771 ext. ?9339.

It is a brand new year, and no thanks to the Mayans, we have a big rally on our hands for the first day. Someone is bound to give us some story about how a gain on the first day is a good or bad sign for the markets, but I want to remind you the year is made up of many more days than just the first one.

As we start 2013, many people make resolutions about losing weight or make an effort to quit smoking or some other goal that will be a positive in their lives. But what about the investing resolutions that you have made or SHOULD make?

I am going to start off with one of my own, and I hope we can get a good list going of ideas that will help us in 2013. For me, I think my investing resolution is going to be to have better stops put in place shortly after making an investment. Stops can help me limit my losses and protect gains, and if I did that in 2012 I think I would have had much better performance. At least my losses wouldn't be north of 20%.

How about adding one of your own investing resolutions for 2013 and I will try to give at least one more.

-Happy New Year!

Source: http://www.zacks.com/stock/news/89537/new-year-new-market-new-you

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CTIA consolidating events in 2014 for single 'super show'

CTIA

A quick bit of inside baseball from the trade show front this morning. CTIA-The Wireless Association today announced that its 2014 lineup will be consolidated into a single "super show" in September in Las Vegas. In past years (and continuing in 2013), CTIA has hosted a pair of events, with the spring show having a more of a consumer focus, and the fall show focusing on the enterprise space.

The move isn't all that surprising to those of us who attend these events -- the fall show has been dwindling the past couple years now, but we'll just have to see what the consolidation does in terms of major announcements. The CTIA "Super Mobility Week" -- as it's also being dubbed -- is the same week in 2014 as the IFA conference in Berlin. In 2012 we saw the announcement of the Samsung Galaxy Note 2 and Galaxy Camera there, with the original Galaxy Note appearing there in 2011, and the original Galaxy Tab tablet in 2010.

CTIA's hardly the only mobile game, however, with CES in January in Las Vegas, Mobile World Congress a month or so later in Barcelona, and any number of standalone events throughout the year.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/szh_BTCWlnA/story01.htm

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