Friday, July 19, 2013

In zombies, Israelis and Arabs find common enemy

JERUSALEM (AP) ? In one of the central scenes of the summer blockbuster movie "World War Z," Israeli troops funnel Palestinian refugees to safety in Jerusalem behind a massive concrete wall. There, the Arabs and Jews embrace, dance and sing ? shortly before they are all engulfed by bloodthirsty zombies.

Even for such an over-the-top work of science fiction, in which billions of people come back from the dead as horrific zombies to terrorize Earth, one of the most improbable plotlines of the film is that Israelis and Palestinians are fighting on the same side.

Granted, the film assumes that a post-apocalyptic world and a supernatural common enemy are needed to achieve such harmony. But the image of an elusive Mideast peace, coupled with the film's overall positive portrayal of Israel, have not been lost among the region's war-weary moviegoers.

"It's a fantasy, and it seems ridiculous to those who live here, but it is still heartwarming to see Israelis and Palestinians coming together," said Yehuda Stav, a movie critic for the Israeli daily newspaper Yediot Ahronot.

At the core of the cinematic coexistence lies a towering barrier Israel is praised for building to keep out zombies and protect inhabitants of the Holy Land ? Jews and Arabs alike. In reality, Israel's separation barrier with the West Bank ? which Israel says is meant to keep out Palestinian suicide bombers ? is much smaller but much more contentious. Palestinians call it a symbol of occupation that steals their land, hinders their movement and damages their crops.

In the film, Israel is praised for its savvy, survival instincts and peaceful intentions. It is credited with predicting the zombie invasion and preparing proper defenses, making it one of only two nations to prevent a lethal outbreak.

The other, North Korea, adopts a more draconian solution: It extracts the teeth of all its citizen to prevent people from biting each other and spreading the deadly zombie virus.

The movie depicts the Israeli military as courageous and resourceful, the Israeli people as inviting and humane. Even Israel's often criticized system of West Bank checkpoints is portrayed as an effective tool to protect both sides.

"If it weren't for the zombies in the background, you'd think this was an engineered campaign of the Defense Ministry to strengthen Israel's status in the world," Israeli movie critic Chen Hadad wrote in City Mouse magazine. The movie opened in Israel last week.

Such a futuristic Israel in "World War Z" has sparked outrage in the real Arab world, where bloggers and moviegoers have slammed the film as a love song to Israel.

"It's free propaganda for Israel at a time when it occupies other people," complained Ramzi Taweel, a 38-year-old Palestinian cartoonist from Ramallah in the West Bank. "It portrays Israel as a moral power that protects human beings. It justifies the wall. ... The Israeli occupation army in the movie is a humane army that protects the world."

In Lebanon, it is showing in theaters, but some of the Israel scenes have been censored or edited out. It also has been widely distributed in the Gulf, where it has received some thumbs down.

"I don't think it was trying to justify Israel's occupation, but it was glorifying the Israelis by emphasizing peace and harmony of the two nations, which is far from the truth," moviegoer Aleena Khan told the Dubai-based Gulf News. "It was a very rose-tinted version of what the relationship between the Israelis and Palestinians actually is."

But even the fictional love fest comes at a cost. Since the zombies are drawn to noise, the raucous Israeli-Palestinian celebrations prove to be their demise. Their joint rendition of a popular Hebrew song of peace wakes the undead from their slumber, and they ultimately catapult over the wall and bite everything in sight.

Such scenes have raised philosophical debates in the blogosphere about whether the movie is actually for or against Israel's real-life separation barrier.

The setting of "World War Z" migrates to Jerusalem after its hero, Gerry Lane, played by Brad Pitt, arrives to figure out how the Israelis have created a safe zone from zombies. There he meets the chief of Israel's Mossad spy agency, who cites the experiences of the Holocaust, the 1972 massacre of Israeli Olympians in Munich and the surprise war Arabs launched on Israel the following year as lessons that taught the Jewish state to prepare for the unexpected. The spymaster tells Pitt's character that Israel envisioned the threat because officials are encouraged to play devil's advocate, with someone offering a dissenting view if everyone else agrees.

Once pandemonium breaks loose, Pitt manages to escape thanks to a cunning, courageous female soldier, played by Israeli actress Daniella Kertesz, who helps him save the world. Aside from her name, Segen, which is actually Hebrew for the rank of lieutenant, the Israeli depictions are fairly accurate. Though shot in Malta, the scenes appear authentic, as do the street signs, the uniforms and the characters' Hebrew accents.

The rare Hollywood focus on Israel has elicited local pride, with crowds cheering at the sight of the Israeli flag and giggling during Hebrew dialogue.

"It shows that we are strong, we fight to the end and don't give up, but also are willing to help others," Ohad Ben-Aharon, a 19-year-old soldier in the Israeli air force, said after a recent screening in Jerusalem. "It's fictional, but there is also an optimistic message ? that there can be peace."

Another moviegoer was Mark Regev, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's spokesman.

His takeaway?

"We hope the Palestinians indeed agree to live in peace with Israel before the zombies invade."

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Associated Press writers Mohammed Daraghmeh in Ramallah, West Bank; Brian Murphy in Dubai, United Arab Emirates; and Zeina Karam in Beirut contributed to this report.

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Follow Heller on Twitter at www.twitter.com/aronhellerap .

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/zombies-israelis-arabs-common-enemy-152819024.html

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Quotations of the day

"I can't think of another instance in which one has glamorized the image of an alleged terrorist. This is the image of a rock star. This is the image of someone who is admired, of someone who has a fan base, of someone we are critiquing as art." ? Kathleen Hall Jamieson, a communications professor and the director of the Annenberg Public Policy Center at the University of Pennsylvania in a statement as a Rolling Stone cover story featuring a glamorous photo of Boston Marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev is generating controversy, with several retailers announcing that they will not carry the issue.

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"The North Koreans are taking desperate measures to pursue that work. Despite the best efforts of the international community to cut off arms transfers to and from North Korea, it will continue in some form." ? Daryl Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association in comments as Cuba's admission that it was secretly sending aging weapons systems to North Korea has turned the global spotlight on a little-known link in a secretive network of rusting freighters and charter jets that moves weapons to and from North Korea despite U.N. sanctions.

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"We continue to get closer and I continue to remain hopeful that the sides will soon be able to come to sit at the same table." ? U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry after winning Arab League backing for his effort to restart Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/quotations-day-070627283.html

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New Jersey now requires search warrants for cellphone location data

New Jersey now requires search warrants for cellphone tracking data

For all the worries about sweeping US surveillance programs, Americans are claiming at least a few victories in the fight for privacy. Just look to New Jersey's Supreme Court for an example -- it has ruled that police need search warrants to obtain tracking information from cellular carriers. Citing a ruling that requires warrants for GPS tracking devices, the court has decided that attempts to obtain cellphone location data represent searches and fall under constitutional oversight. Cellphone users can expect a reasonable level of privacy when they sign up for service, according to the Supreme Court. While there's no law on the books to restrict tracking, like there is in Montana, the ruling sets a precedent for police monitoring that could extend beyond New Jersey's borders.

[Image credit: Jeff Schuler, Flickr]

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Via: New York Times

Source: New Jersey Supreme Court (PDF)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/07/19/new-jersey-now-requires-search-warrants-for-cellphone-location/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Thursday, July 18, 2013

Cranston: 'I had one girlfriend I wanted to kill'

Celebs

4 hours ago

Bryan Cranston in GQ.

GQ

Bryan Cranston in GQ.

In order to play "Breaking Bad's" teacher-turned-drug-lord Walter White, Bryan Cranston had to tap into his dark side. But based on comments he made in the new issue of GQ, the actor apparently didn't have to dig all that deep.

In fact, he knows exactly what it's like to want to commit murder.

"I had one girlfriend I wanted to kill," he told the magazine, a woman who was a drug addict who followed him to New York when he began working on the soap opera "Loving." The article says she stalked him and threatened to mutilate and kill him, then showed up at his apartment one day.

"I envisioned myself killing her," he said. "It was so clear. My apartment had a brick wall on one side, and I envisioned opening the door, grabbing her by the hair, dragging her inside, and shoving her head into that brick wall until brain matter was dripping down the sides of it. Then I shuddered and realized how clearly I saw that happening. And I called the police because I was so afraid. I was temporarily insane ? capable of doing tremendous damage to her and to myself."

Fortunately, that didn't happen. But the 57-year-old actor said that not internalizing some of White's characteristics over the seasons would be impossible. "When you first start working on a character, it remains outside of you," he said. "The more you work on it, it's like you start dating, getting to know each other, and then trusting each other, feeling confident in each other's company, until, pretty soon ... you kind of glide in."

He added, "The best condition is when the character seeps inside of you, where you almost ingest it."

He's done that admirably ? the versatile actor has gone from that soap opera, to a long-running role in the sitcom "Malcom in the Middle," to "Bad," which returns for its final episodes on Aug. 11 ? and on Tuesday even received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

And one reason he's done it so well is that he truly understands White, for good and for ill. But as he notes, anyone could become a White, given the right circumstances.

"What happened to Walt is something I related to, if I'm truly honest with myself," he said. "I've come to realize that I think everybody is capable of that. If you came into a condition where you were under tremendous stress. And if I knew what buttons to push that threatened you and yours. ... You could become an extremely dangerous person."

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/bryan-cranston-i-had-one-girlfriend-i-wanted-kill-6C10657990

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How Apple could use a fingerprint scan to unlock your iPhone

Apple has stayed quiet ? as usual ? on what it?s been up to with AuthenTec since it acquired the mobile security company a year ago. But a patent filing offers some insight into what the two are partnering on: fingerprint sensors that can be embedded into displays.

The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office on Thursday published a patent application attributed to Apple based on work done by AuthenTec?s co-founder, as noted by AppleInsider this morning. The patent is is for a chip that can be embedded in a mobile device that will sense fingerprints on a display as a way of authenticating a user before giving them access to a device.

Apple?s patent sounds like it will allow the chip to be inserted in the device, but gives Apple?s device engineers more room to work with than traditional biometric security solutions.?From the application:

When using a semiconductor fingerprint sensor, or integrated circuit fingerprint sensor, in a portable electronic device, for example, a mobile telephone, it may be desirable to locate the integrated circuit of the fingerprint sensor separately from the finger sensing region. Separating the finger sensing integrated circuit (IC) from the finger sensing area may be particularly advantageous when the finger sensing area is relatively thin and transparent so that it may be placed over the top of a display of the portable electronic device, and wherein the IC may be located in a nearby non-display region of the portable electronic device.

There?s been a lot of speculation that the next iPhone will have a fingerprint-sensing security feature. Much of that has been assuming the sensor would be under the home button. But being able to put it in a display could mean iOS?s traditional ?swipe to unlock? could seamlessly include another layer of security ? for an iPhone, an iPad, the touchpad of a MacBook ? or possibly even a future wearable device.

Of course, there?s the standard caveat for any Apple patent filing: the company files a lot of patents and it doesn?t necessarily mean the technology will make its way to Apple product some day. But in this case, it?s the first patent application to come out of Apple?s purchase of AuthenTec. We know the two companies were working on a project together even before the acquisition, and this is a good indication of the direction the two are going in.

Source: http://gigaom.com/2013/07/18/how-apple-could-use-a-fingerprint-scan-to-unlock-your-iphone/

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Wednesday, July 17, 2013

South Dakota's Corn Palace renovations get city OK

FILE - In this May 6, 2004, file photo is the Corn Palace blow in Mitchell, S.D., that is redecorated each year with corn cobs, grain and grasses. On Monday, July 15, 2013, the Mitchell City Council approved a $7.2 million upgrade to the quirky landmark dedicated to all things corn in an effort to draw in more visitors. The Corn Palace sees about 200,000 tourists each year. (AP Photo/Doug Dreyer, File)

FILE - In this May 6, 2004, file photo is the Corn Palace blow in Mitchell, S.D., that is redecorated each year with corn cobs, grain and grasses. On Monday, July 15, 2013, the Mitchell City Council approved a $7.2 million upgrade to the quirky landmark dedicated to all things corn in an effort to draw in more visitors. The Corn Palace sees about 200,000 tourists each year. (AP Photo/Doug Dreyer, File)

In this undated photo provided by the Meyer Scherer & Rockcastle is a rendering of what the Corn Palace in Mitchell, S.D., will look like after renovations. On Monday, July 15, 2013, the Mitchell City Council approved a $7.2 million upgrade to the quirky landmark dedicated to all things corn in an effort to draw in more visitors. The Corn Palace sees about 200,000 tourists each year. (AP Photo/Meyer Scherer & Rockcastle)

(AP) ? A quirky eastern South Dakota landmark dedicated to all things corn is undergoing a multimillion-dollar renovation, including new lit domes resembling ears of corn, in an effort to draw in more maize-curious visitors.

The Corn Palace bills itself as the world's only palace dedicated to the grain plant. New murals using about 275,000 ears of corn of various sizes and colors decorate the exterior and interior of the sprawling building each year in the small town of Mitchell. About 200,000 tourists visit the attraction annually.

Originally established in 1892 for settlers to display the fruits of their harvest, the Corn Palace has undergone several changes over the years and is now used for a variety of local activities, including graduations, proms and basketball games. But local officials are looking for something more exciting.

The Mitchell City Council approved a $7.2 million upgrade Monday to the attraction and the adjacent soon-to-be vacated City Hall building, including new domes that will look like an ear of corn with the silks of the corn coming off, said Corn Palace director Mark Schilling.

A balcony, larger murals and a widened lobby are also planned, along with upgrades to the building's heating and cooling systems.

"The Corn Palace is the pride and joy of Mitchell, so we want to make sure our icon is kept fresh and looking good," Schilling said.

The renovations will also help honor the attraction's roots, Schilling added, noting that photos of the original Corn Palace in 1892 show larger murals and different types of domes.

The murals are created with corn of various colors, including blue, orange and black, and are changed annually based on a different theme. They've portrayed such things as Mount Rushmore and cowboys riding horses.

But Doug Dailey, chairman of the Corn Palace Area Development group, said people often drive by and take pictures, without stopping to take a look inside the Corn Palace, which is a free attraction. So the group plans to add exhibits, including one recently purchased from the Indiana State Museum.

"The idea is that people want something to do when they get there, and there really hasn't been anything to do other than to look at it," he said.

Opening up the windows to allow in more light and adding a balcony so visitors can get closer to the corn murals will make the building more inviting, he added.

"At this point, our focus is on tourism, that we can get more visitors and get them to stay longer," he said.

Crews will begin the process of hanging new murals in late August, Schilling said.

A drought last year hurt some of the colored corn used in the murals and the Corn Palace was forced to decorate its building without four colors: blue, calico, orange and light brown.

It was a predicament that worried Schilling and other local officials, but one that comedian Stephen Colbert found humor in. "The Colbert Report" traveled to South Dakota to film a seven-minute "special report" titled, "A Shucking Disaster ? Nightmare at the Mitchell Corn Palace," which lampooned the issue.

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Contact Kristi Eaton at keaton@ap.org or follow her on Twitter at http://twitter.com/kristieaton .

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/aa9398e6757a46fa93ed5dea7bd3729e/Article_2013-07-16-US-Corn-Palace-Expansion/id-b2675923bd5d433a9213cf976e556630

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