Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Romney defends business record in face of attacks

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney is greeted by a crowd after a campaign stop at the Opera House, Sunday, Jan. 8, 2012 in Rochester, N.H. (AP Photo/Jim Cole)

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney is greeted by a crowd after a campaign stop at the Opera House, Sunday, Jan. 8, 2012 in Rochester, N.H. (AP Photo/Jim Cole)

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, speaks as New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie listens at left during a campaign rally in Exeter, N.H., Sunday, Jan. 8, 2012. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)

(AP) ? Presidential candidate Mitt Romney on Sunday defended his time in private business and insisted he understands the country's tough economic times because he once feared losing his job.

"I know what it's like to worry about whether you're going to get fired," the former Massachusetts governor told a crowd gathered at the historic Rochester Opera House. "There were a couple of times when I was worried I was going to get pink-slipped."

Romney did not provide any details or concrete examples of when he feared he would be laid off or fired. His aides refused repeated requests for additional information.

Romney, who grew up in Michigan while his father served as the state's governor, became a multimillionaire when he was CEO of Bain Capital, a venture capital firm.

A spokeswoman said Romney feared losing his job "as a young person just out of college."

Before running Bain Capital, Romney attended Brigham Young University and Harvard, where he studied for law and business degrees. After graduating with honors, Romney was hired as a consultant by Boston Consulting Group. He then went to work at Bain & Co., the consulting firm that eventually spun off Bain Capital.

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich attacked Romney this weekend for making those millions while laying off workers.

Gingrich referred to Romney's job at Bain as "a Wall Street model where you can flip companies, you can go in and have leveraged buyouts, you can basically take out all the money, leaving behind the workers."

Democrats have also repeatedly attacked Romney's tenure at Bain.

At the rally Sunday, Romney told the crowd that Bain created more jobs in the long run.

He said he once stocked shelves at Staples, the successful office supply company.

"I'm not perfect, but I do get it, and I will use what I know to get America working," Romney said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-01-08-Romney/id-7b138766d0f1469ab684c34e57863d6f

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Belkin reveals Advance N900 DB router, keeps your MW3 marathon top priority with IntelliStream

Belkin has added another wireless networking kit to it's N-series lineup here at CES. The company has announced its Advance N900 DB, a dual band WiFi router capable of 450Mbps speeds per band. Featuring six MultiBeam antennas, the tech makes watching Hulu Plus from your basement much easier and looks to cut down on those pesky dead spots. Also outfitted with IntelliStream, the device automatically prioritizes video and gaming streams and houses a 600MHz multi-thread processor that multitasks across all networked devices. For connected storage or wireless printers, the N900 packs two USB 2.0 ports enabling access to those peripherals from workstations other than your desk. If you're looking to take the leap, the router will be available for pre-order this month and at retailers in April, setting you back two Benjamins. See the PR after the break for all the details.

Continue reading Belkin reveals Advance N900 DB router, keeps your MW3 marathon top priority with IntelliStream

Belkin reveals Advance N900 DB router, keeps your MW3 marathon top priority with IntelliStream originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 08 Jan 2012 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/01/08/belkin-reveals-advance-n900-db-router/

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Merkel, Sarkozy press for quick Greek solution (Reuters)

BERLIN (Reuters) ? Germany and France warned Greece on Monday it will get no more bailout funds until it agrees with creditor banks on a bond swap and pressed for an early deal to avert a potential default in the euro zone's most debt-stricken nation.

Chancellor Angela Merkel and President Nicolas Sarkozy, the euro zone's two leading powers, insisted after talks in Berlin that private sector bondholders must share in reducing Greece's debt burden, along with new European and IMF lending.

They rejected both a call by a European Central Bank policymaker to abandon plans to make private investors take losses, and a leaked International Monetary Fund memo that cast doubt on Athens' ability to reform its public finances.

"We must see progress on the voluntary restructuring of Greek debt," Merkel told a joint news conference. "From our point of view, the second Greek aid package including this restructuring must be in place quickly. Otherwise it won't be possible to pay out the next tranche for Greece."

Merkel and Sarkozy both voiced their determination to press ahead with a tax on financial transactions opposed by Britain, but they appeared to diverge on the timing.

Sarkozy, facing a strong left-wing challenge in his struggle for re-election in May, suggested France could go it alone and challenge other states to follow suit.

Merkel said all 27 EU finance ministers should report in March, and the 17-nation euro zone should move ahead if other countries continued to block an EU decision. But she acknowledged that she did not have full agreement on this within her centre-right coalition government.

A Greek government official said talks with private bondholders on a debt swap key to averting default were progressing but there was no deal yet. However, a senior insurance executive briefed on the negotiations said they were very difficult and likely to be unsuccessful.

The executive, who is not directly at the table, said roadblocks included whether a debt writedown would trigger credit default insurance or not, and how a sufficient number of creditors could be corralled into joining an agreement.

The only hedge fund on the steering committee representing private creditors, Madrid-based Vega Asset Management, walked out last month. French bank BNP Paribas (BNPP.PA), which has a strong interest in a deal given its large exposure to south European sovereign debt, said last week that agreement was near, but other banking sources are more skeptical.

Merkel's tough comments highlighted growing concern among European governments that a potential collapse of the Greek rescue negotiations poses the most immediate threat of destabilizing the entire 17-nation euro currency and the global economy.

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Euro zone crisis in graphics http://r.reuters.com/hyb65p

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FISCAL PACT

On other issues, Merkel and Sarkozy said they aimed to wrap up negotiations among euro zone countries this month on a new fiscal pact tightening budget discipline, to be signed at the latest on March 1. The latest draft would give more power to the executive European Commission to reject national budget plans that deviate from agreed EU targets.

Euro zone states agreed last month to press ahead with an agreement outside the EU treaty after Britain vetoed plans to amend it to allow stricter enforcement of deficit limits.

The German and French leaders also agreed to ask the ECB to recommend how the euro zone's rescue fund, the European Financial Stability Facility, could be made most effective.

Berlin has so far opposed calls from Paris and elsewhere to increase the size of the 440 billion euro EFSF, but it might be politically easier to relent in response to an ECB call.

Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos said last week that Athens risked an uncontrolled default in late March unless it agrees a new aid package with the so-called troika of the euro zone, the ECB and the IMF by then.

An internal IMF memo, quoted by the German magazine Der Spiegel on Saturday, said the freefall of the Greek economy has made international lenders' plans to rescue Greece obsolete, threatening the debt sustainability of the embattled euro member state.

Merkel said she wanted Greece to stay in the euro zone, and a private sector debt writedown was "a necessary but not sufficient precondition to get Greece back onto an acceptable path."

"Greece should get a chance but Greece remains a special case," she said, adding that Athens must commit to further economic reforms.

ECB Governing Council member Athanasios Orphanides wrote in Friday's Financial Times that dropping plans to force losses on investors would "help restore trust" in the euro zone and lower the borrowing costs of other governments in the currency area.

It was not clear if he was expressing a personal view or speaking for the central bank. Former ECB president Jean-Claude Trichet long opposed private sector involvement in debt relief, only reluctantly accepting a "voluntary" bond swap last July.

A perceived risk of writedowns on other euro zone government bonds has spooked investors and been one major factor in raising borrowing costs for other southern European states.

Spain and Italy have to issue hundreds of billions of euros in bonds in 2012 starting this week to roll over maturing debt.

The risk premium on Spanish and Italian bonds over safe-haven German 10-year Bunds narrowed slightly on Monday, and the ECB disclosed that it had kept a tight rein on its purchases of government debt in the first week of the new year, spending just 1.1 billion euros.

The two-year-old debt crisis has raised doubts about whether the euro zone will survive in its current form, especially in non-euro Britain and the United States.

British Prime Minister David Cameron, an avowed Eurosceptic, said in a television interview he believed the single currency area would most likely hold together "but it has to take some pretty decisive steps."

(Additional reporting by Annika Breidthardt in Berlin, Ed Taylor and Philipp Halstrick in Frankfurt, George Georgiopoulos and Ingrid Melander in Athens and; Writing by Paul Taylor, editing by Mike Peacock)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120109/bs_nm/us_eurozone

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Monday, January 9, 2012

Intel's Nikiski Concept: The Strangest Laptop I've Seen Has a Keyboard-Wide Transparent Touchscreen Display [Intel]

Of all of the promises Intel made today about the future of ultrabooks, none was quite as appealing—or at least, attention-getting—as this wonderfully odd concept that uses a keyboard-wide transparent trackpad that doubles as a window into your screen. Hello, Nikiski. You're beautifully odd machine. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/AvixSFi_Y4Y/intels-nikiski-concept-the-strangest-laptop-ive-seen-has-a-keyboard+wide-transparent-touchscreen

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TMRnews: 2013 Ford Mondeo Surfaces Again in clear new image. http://t.co/xNeT0cqR (TMR)

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Sunday, January 8, 2012

Would You Pay $299.99 for Sprint?s Galaxy Nexus?

It appears that the cat is out of the bag and if the ?leak? holds true, the Samsung-made Galaxy Nexus has a date with Sprint. The leaked ad pretty much highlights everything we already know about the Galaxy Nexus, but fails to mention one particular piece of info. Though the ad is very exciting and has probably brought tears to the eyes of many, it fails to mention pricing for Sprint?s ?first 4G LTE phone.?

Currently the only major U.S. carrier selling the Galaxy Nexus is Verizon, which currently offers the device for $299.99. That?s about $100 ? $50 higher than any starting point for most of Sprint?s top-shelf smartphones. Considering that the Galaxy Nexus? guts will include a shiny new LTE radio, it?s very likely that we?ll see a bump in pricing.

This makes us wonder, how many of you are ready to pony up $299.99 for a pure Google experience? Please feel free to cast your vote and leave a comment explaining what led to your decision.

Source: http://www.sprintfeed.com/2012/01/would-you-pay-299-99-for-sprints-galaxy-nexus/

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Saturday, January 7, 2012

Apple Vs. Content Producers: Already Butting Heads Over iTV?

By Devin Coldewey

There?s a problem with the idea of an iTV, rumors of which have been sloshing about for a long time, but with greater intensity since Steve Jobs? biography hinted at one. Unlike an Apple (AAPL) TV, an iPhone, an iPad, or other devices, an Apple TV wouldn?t be tied to a Mac, and it wouldn?t take advantage of iTunes the way those devices do. It?ll be related, of course, but it doesn?t promote the ?hub? idea that drives iPhone owners to buy Macs, Mac owners to buy iPhones, and all the other crossover purchases that interweave the Apple ecosystem.

Instead, it would be an Apple-designed window into content that Apple has very little control over. And while you can bring a new idea to the TV space, as set-top boxes and Google (GOOG) TV have, you can?t make the TV space play nice. Google learned that the hard way. And it looks like Apple may be facing a similar challenge.

USA Today has a story on the so-called iTV, with a few juicy nuggets hidden amongst a bedding of fluff. They say that Jonathan Ive has a big, beautiful 50-inch television in his studio. And several sources describe difficulties on Apple?s part securing the content that would be necessary to make their device worthwhile. After all, people using a next-generation content consumption device don?t want to be told that Fox shows are available but not Universal ones. We?re supposed to be leaving all that 20th-century dross behind.

The thing is that guys meeting with Apple over show licenses aren?t stupid. They?ve seen what Apple has done to the music industry over ten years, and they have no intention of entering the lion?s mouth, as their friends at the labels did. In the early 2000s, of course, the labels had no idea that Apple was a lion, and really, neither did Apple. But things are different now, and the guys at Warner and HBO and Turner and so on are happy to make a power play. After all, until someone revolutionizes the channel by which people at large get their TV shows, they?re still king. And Apple can?t revolutionize without their express permission.

That?s not to say they don?t recognize an opportunity. They smell money, but they?re not willing to bite until they can be sure they aren?t falling into a trap. Some of them went along with Google for a lark, but as we saw, they didn?t like the way Google did business (they tend to want to give things away). Apple may be happy to charge, but they also tend to take quite a bit of the sale, and it?s likely that the content producers aren?t willing to let their prize possession, new TV shows, be used as a money-printing machine by Apple. And Apple doesn?t want to leave anything to the discretion of the content producers, who could deep-six the iTV at the drop of a hat and get into bed with Google purely out of spite. And believe me, the TV industry isn?t short on spite.

Difficulties, however, are not failures. They are made to be overcome, and Apple, if it indeed has its sights set on the living room and the burgeoning net-broadcast TV sector (for which people can be made to pay handsomely), will do what it needs to in order to seal the deal. Time, in the end, is on their side: they are sitting on enough money to choke the entirety of the TV business, and they know that their device will be a moneymaker for all involved (not the users, naturally). ?Softly, softly, catchy monkey? is their motto. Google?s was a bit more ?Leeroy Jenkins?.

Note that there is plenty of time for this to pan out, and the devices we?ll be seeing at CES next week will have a long, full life (which is to say, about six months) before we start seeing the inevitable reports from Digitimes of Apple ordering five million 50-inch LCD panels.

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Source: http://seekingalpha.com/article/317797-apple-vs-content-producers-already-butting-heads-over-itv?source=feed

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