Thursday, October 24, 2013

Mobile Payments Provider Fortumo Launches Program To Help Chinese Developers Expand Into New Markets


Mobile payments provider Fortumo has launched a program that will serve as a “one-stop shop” for Chinese developers that want to distribute their apps in other countries. Called Fortumo Expand, the program offers Android, Windows Phone and Windows 8 developers access to the Estonia/U.S.-based company’s network of mobile carriers in 80 countries, as well as localization, testing, distribution and marketing services.


Fortumo Expand is a counterbalance to the company’s direct billing agreements with the three major telecoms in China, which helps foreign developers gain a larger foothold by allowing them to offer carrier billing for their apps. While working with Western clients like Rovio, EA, Gameloft, Zeptolab and Badoo, Fortumo saw that it was just as difficult for their counterparts in China to scale internationally, especially if they do not have partners in other countries to help deal with differences in language, culture and business practices.


Fortumo Expand will be headed by Martti Mustila, who was formerly Head of Global Developer Programs at Nokia.
Fortumo Expand
“We want to help Chinese developers get visibility. For Android developers, we help them publish in independent app stores and carrier stores. In the best cases, if an app is doing well, we can also build up a promotional campaign for them,” says Mustila. Fortumo Expand’s monetization plan follows the same model as the company’s other developer programs. The mobile operator takes a cut, while Fortumo charges a 2% to 5% commission.


Fortumo is already working with 30 Chinese app development companies, primarily in the gaming sector. Developers who sign on for Fortumo Expand can decide which countries they want to enter. Fortumo is especially active in Brazil, Russia, Latin America and Southeast Asia, where most consumers make mobile payments through carriers and not with credit cards.


In addition to gaining access to Fortumo’s international network of 300 mobile operators, developers will also have the option of distributing their apps in 23 third-party app stores and receiving monthly reports so they can see which emerging markets have the most revenue potential. Fortumo Expand offers developers free localization and testing services for their first app through Symbio and free advertising for Windows Phone and Windows 8 apps from AdDuplex.


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Farrell: Likely Peavy, then Buchholz in Games 3, 4

BOSTON (AP) — Boston Red Sox manager John Farrell said he will probably start Jake Peavy in Game 3 of the World Series against the St. Louis Cardinals, followed by Clay Buchholz in Game 4.

Farrell said after Boston's 8-1 victory in Game 1 on Wednesday night that he will likely give Buchholz another day of rest.

"We'll probably look to give him every extra day we can," Farrell said, "and that would point to Sunday, being Game 4."

Buchholz gave up five runs in eight innings and two runs in five innings in his AL championship series starts against Detroit; Peavy gave up seven runs in three innings in his only ALCS start. Asked before the World Series opener whether Buchholz had an injury, Farrell said, "Not to the point of keeping him out of starting."

Farrell said he wanted to see the Cardinals in the first two games; his decision also could be influenced by whether it looks as if the Red Sox would need their Game 3 starter to come back for a potential seventh game.

Jon Lester started against St. Louis' Adam Wainwright in Game 1, with John Lackey scheduled to go for Boston against Michael Wacha in Game 2 on Thursday night at Fenway Park. St. Louis is expected to start Joe Kelly and Lance Lynn in Games 3 and 4.

Wacha, a rookie whom the Cardinals obtained with a compensatory draft pick when Albert Pujols signed with the Angels, was 4-1 with a 2.78 ERA in the regular season, spending part of the year with Triple-A Memphis. He is 3-0 with a 0.43 ERA in the postseason.

"I want the ball in big situations. There's none bigger than the World Series," Wacha said. "And so I'm excited about getting it and I think every guy on our team wants the ball in these kinds of situations."

When he found out he would be starting Game 2 at Fenway Park — his first time pitching in the ballpark — it created a whole bunch of new things to be excited — and worried — about.

"This is kind of a tricky little ballpark with the dimensions and that kind of stuff. One pitch can really kind of change a game," Wacha said. "You try not to think too much about it, just try to approach it just like any other game, any other stadium. And that's just making pitches down in the zone and try not to give them too much of a chance to lift it."

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-10-24-World%20Series-Pitchers/id-37c8ea11781443dd89e376b9b340429c
Category: Romain Dauriac   Cody Rhodes   George Duke  

Carrie Underwood Sounds Off On The "Challenge" Of Her Sound Of Music Gig!





carrie underwood sound of music challenge


Carrie Underwood will do just about anything to make her stint as Maria in NBC's The Sound of Music production flawless, even if it means punching in some extra hours at rehearsal!



In fact, the songstress is SO dedicated to the 3 hour LIVE spectacle that she decided to show up to NYC a whole three weeks early to prep.



The country bombshell explained:




"This is a live show on TV. So this is definitely a challenge for all of us.I wanted to be here and have all my lines memorized and everything and be ready for it. It's been really wonderful,. Audra [McDonald] and Laura [Benanti] are incredible. Stephen [Moyer]'s great. It's nice to be surrounded by that much talent."



Dayuuummm! Talk about dedication!



Then again, Carrie knows a thing or two about what it takes to make audiences jaws drop on live TV since hypnotizing the masses on American Idol.



Clearly if Carrie has anything to say about it, this will be an unforgettable small screen moment!!!



And who can resist such a classic??!






Will U tune in December 5 for NBC's The Sound of Music??



  • I'd rather have the sound of silence! (12%)


  • Yes! (88%)


Total Votes: 290







[Image via WENN.]



Tags: , , , , ,





Source: http://perezhilton.com/2013-10-23-carrie-underwood-sound-of-music-extra-work
Category: randall cobb   Cameron Douglas   russell wilson   9 news   pharrell  

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Canada sex offender pleads not guilty to US charge


SEATTLE (AP) — A violent sex offender who fled Canada pleaded not guilty Wednesday to a harassment charge in Seattle as police explored the possibility of additional charges related to a sexual assault.

Wearing a red jail uniform with his hands shackled in front of him, Michael Sean Stanley made a first appearance by video feed from the local detention center. Seattle Municipal Court Judge Karen Donohue set his bail at $100,000.

Nic Gross, the public defender appearing for Stanley, sought his release and suggested that Stanley could be required to check in daily if the court wanted those conditions. Gross said that Stanley has an uncle and a cousin in the area who could get him work as a laborer, but Donohue questioned those family links and said the circumstances of his flight raised concerns about whether he would show up for future court hearings.

"The court does have concerns with the lack of ties Mr. Stanley has to Seattle," Donohue said.

The harassment case came from an incident Tuesday morning in which police say Stanley threatened someone who asked him to be quiet. Authorities are still working to re-book Stanley on more serious charges, saying he is being investigated for assaulting a 16-year-old boy.

In the assault case, authorities said Stanley met a boy at a west Seattle grocery store, struck up a conversation and walked with him to an alley where he plied the teen with alcohol and attacked him. The boy pulled a knife and was able to escape, police said.

Stanley had registered as a sex offender with the King County sheriff's office and listed his address as an intersection just a block away from Seattle's Pike Place Market, a scenic destination for both tourists and locals. It's also near a preschool, even though he had been ordered to stay away from children in Canada.

Ilene Stark, executive director at Pike Market Child Care and Preschool, said the community felt threatened by Stanley's arrival in the area. The preschool reviewed its lockdown plan, kept in constant contact with security in the area, and provided images and descriptions of Stanley to teachers and parents.

"It's been intense," Stark said. "It felt like there was a threat in our community and that we needed to be much more vigilant — more than in everyday life. It was disconcerting."

Stark said she was saddened that something horrible apparently had to happen before Stanley was collected by U.S. law enforcement. At the same time, she said her sadness was coupled with relief knowing that there is more legal control over Stanley's whereabouts.

Detectives believe the attack on the teen happened before police received several calls reporting noise in an alley and Stanley threatening someone who asked him to be quiet. When police arrived, Stanley became combative and said he had a knife. He appeared intoxicated, according to authorities. He was arrested and jailed for investigation of harassment.

Stanley most recently served a 32-month prison term after what parole documents describe as a case in which he lured two mentally challenged boys into an apartment, lit a crack pipe and blew smoke in their faces and then sexually assaulted them. Parole documents also describe another case in which Stanley broke into an elderly woman's apartment while she was sleeping and sexually assaulted her.

He was being monitored by police under a peace bond, which Canadian authorities can get to impose conditions on individuals in the community. Stanley's peace bond has 20 conditions, including one ordering him to stay away from children.

Police in Canada issued a public alert earlier this month after Stanley cut off his electronic-monitoring bracelet. Officials described him as an untreated, violent offender who posed a significant risk.

An American citizen, Stanley crossed the border and was located in the Seattle area last week. Canadian officials decided not to seek extradition.

Before Tuesday, there was no reason to arrest Stanley since Canada hadn't pursued an extraditable warrant and he wasn't wanted for any crimes in the United States, authorities said.

Edmonton, Alberta, police spokesman Chad Orydzuk told The Associated Press that Stanley's arrest in Seattle was "unfortunate but we can't provide comment. It's not our file."

"If he continues to break the law down south you can imagine how difficult it would be for us to comment if he broke the law in different jurisdictions in the States. For us to comment on that, we couldn't keep up with that, if this was to continue," he said.

Orydzuk said when Stanley breached the monitoring conditions in Edmonton, officials searched for him and notified the public and other agencies. Unconfirmed sightings of Stanley led schools in several west-central Saskatchewan communities to lock their doors and keep children inside.

___

Follow Mike Baker at https://twitter.com/MikeBakerAP.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/canada-sex-offender-pleads-not-guilty-us-charge-180756104.html
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Test for Saudis: How far to push ire over America?


DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — In Washington last week, arms regulators announced that Saudi Arabia is seeking $6.8 billion in advanced missiles and other equipment in its latest military buying spree. Days later, Saudi officials snubbed a seat on the U.N. Security Council in a stunning protest mostly aimed at U.S. policies in the Middle East.

This role of being an eager customer and emboldened critic may come to define the new relationship between Saudi Arabia and its longtime ally: The kingdom warns it won't sit idly as Washington's views increasingly drift away from the Gulf state's priorities of keeping Iran and the West as far apart as possible and steadily supplying arms and aid to Syria's rebels.

The Saudi-U.S. alliance has been among the bedrock elements of Middle East affairs for decades, and even small fissures carry outsized significance in a region that is in huge flux amid the chaotic Arab Spring fallout, the Syrian civil war and the election in Iran of moderate-leaning President Hassan Rouhani.

But there is very little chance that Saudi Arabia and its Gulf partners will push their grievances against Washington far enough to risk any deep damage, knowing they need the U.S. as a source of protection, arms and international standing.

Still, the script of Saudi Arabia enjoying predictable U.S. support has been rewritten somewhat after a series of high-profile breaks, including America pulling back from possible military strikes against the forces of Syrian President Bashar Assad and last month's historic U.S. outreach to Iran, Saudi Arabia's regional rival.

"The Saudis and other Gulf states may complain loudly about turns in U.S. policy," said Mona Abass, a Bahrain-based political analyst. "But, at the end of the day, they know they need America and won't do anything too much to damage that relationship."

It leaves Saudi Arabia at an unfamiliar crossroads.

It has already made clear, through leaks and intermediaries, that collaboration with Washington could be scaled back in regional intelligence-sharing and strategic planning. This could potentially undercut U.S. monitoring of al-Qaida factions and others in Yemen, where Saudi spy networks are strong. It also could leave U.S. officials facing more challenges in Syria, where rebel factions count on support from Saudi Arabia, Qatar and others seeking to bring down Assad and his Iranian-backed government.

Saudi Arabia has the potential, meanwhile, to deal a huge blow to a proposed Syrian peace conference next month in Geneva. Any talks would ring hollow if Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states stayed away.

The Saudi ruling monarchy, however, knows it cannot chip too deeply into the foundations of its U.S. ties. These include intricate and established business networks built around oil and tens of billions of dollars in arms purchases from U.S. defense contractors in recent years, including more than 80 F-15 fighter jets and, last week, plans to buy more than 1,000 precision-guided missiles and bombs.

The enormous Saudi arsenal is built with one main objective: countering possible threats from Iran. The U.S. overtures to Tehran have dismayed Saudi leaders and their Gulf partners, who worry that nuclear talks could leave Iran with a scaled-down but mostly intact nuclear program under stricter U.N. monitoring.

Saudi Arabia was blindsided by the U.S. decision to put aside possible military strikes in favor of a plan to dismantle Assad's chemical weapons stockpile. It was seen as "wrecking" the designs of the Saudi intelligence chief, Prince Bandar bin Sultan, who is believed to be directing the flow of cash and arms to rebel factions, said Theodore Karasik, a security and political affairs analyst at the Dubai-based Institute for Near East and Gulf Military Analysis.

The strains with Washington are deepened by worries that Saudi support extends to radical Islamist groups that share the strict brand of Wahhabi Islam in the ultraconservative kingdom.

"Saudi Arabia will increasingly begin to test its regional goals without consulting and coordination with the U.S.," Karasik said. "This is pretty significant change."

In Washington, officials acknowledge the Saudi frustration. But they insist that broader U.S.-Saudi ties remain on a solid footing.

Neither country wants to allow Iran to obtain nuclear weapons, neither wants to see Assad remain in power, neither wants to see the situation in Egypt deteriorate further, and Saudi Arabia remains the top backer of an Arab-Israeli peace proposal that the Obama administration sees as critical to its Middle East objectives.

Secretary of State John Kerry met with Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal in Paris on Monday and maintained afterward that he detected no sign in their two-hour discussion over lunch that relations had been badly damaged.

"Saudi Arabia and the United States agree on a great deal here going forward," Kerry said Tuesday in London. "We work closely with Saudi Arabia on a range of regional, political, and security issues, including Syria, Iran, Middle East peace, Egypt.

"We're still working with them on those," he said, adding, however, that he was aware of strains. "We know that the Saudis were obviously disappointed that the strike (on Syria) didn't take place and have questions about some of the other things that may be happening in the region."

But Kerry stressed that the U.S. has an "obligation" to work through any differences it may have with the Saudis.

State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf flatly denied that there was any serious rupture in relations.

Kerry and Saud "have a warm friendship, and even during moments of disagreement have always found ways to have honest and open discussion," Harf said.

A key test for Saudi Arabia will be whether to stick with its unprecedented rejection of one of the non-permanent seats on the Security Council.

In Jordan, an Arab diplomat with firsthand access to Saudi and Gulf Arab politics, said Saudi Arabia used the U.N. snub to underscore its anger over U.S. policies, led by Syria.

The diplomat noted that Saudi Arabia has not formally advised the U.N. it was declining the seat.

"The Saudi leadership will retract and accept the seat. ... It's only a matter of time," he said, adding he was told that by top officials serving Saudi King Abdullah.

Saudi Arabia "is frustrated by U.S. policies," said the diplomat, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to reporters. "It hears the U.S. telling it one thing, then it sees Secretary Kerry meeting his Iranian counterpart in New York on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly, with both officials exchanging smiles and reciprocating in warm gestures toward each other and the other's country."

The diplomat added that much of internal Saudi grumbling over Washington is led by intelligence chief Prince Bandar, a longtime Saudi ambassador in the U.S.

Bandar "has advised his leadership and has been pushing it to take steps toward distancing Riyadh from Washington," the diplomat said.

Meanwhile, in a curious reordering of regional views, the outlook by Saudi Arabia and some Gulf partners increasingly overlap with Israel on U.S. overtures to Iran and attempts to settle the standoff over Tehran's nuclear program. Iran denies it seeks atomic weapons, but says it will not give up its capacity to make nuclear fuel.

"It's not just America's shift on Syria that is deeply upsetting the Saudis," said Fawaz A. Gerges, a Middle East affairs expert at the London School of Economics. "It's the corresponding shift in Washington's relations with Iran that Riyadh considers as nothing short of a rapprochement."

___

Associated Press writers Jamal Halaby in Amman, Jordan, and Barbara Surk in Cairo contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/test-saudis-far-push-ire-over-america-195629406.html
Tags: Kendrick Lamar   Washington Navy Yard   monday night football   Nexus 4   Mackenzie Rosman  

Is the U.S. confirming it spied on German chancellor?




FILE - The March 5, 2013 file photo shows German Chancellor Angela Merkel presenting a tap-proof mobile phone of Blackberry at a booth of Secusmart during the opening round tour of the world's largest computer expo CeBIT in Hannover. German Chancellor Angela Merkel complained to President Barack Obama on Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2013 after learning that U.S. intelligence may have targeted her mobile phone, and said that would be “a serious breach of trust” if confirmed, her government said. (AP Photo/dpa, Julian Stratenschulte)





Reimagine the old George Washington myth in which the future president, as a lad, is confronted with the famously hatcheted cherry tree and asked about his role in it. Now imagine that Washington’s answer had been, “I am not currently chopping down and will not chop down that cherry tree.”

You see the problem, right?

That’s essentially what’s happening in a deepening trans-Atlantic feud over alleged American spying on allied world leaders.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel complained to President Barack Obama that U.S. intelligence tapped her mobile phone, with her government publicly calling the alleged behavior “a serious breach of trust” if true.

Obama responded on Wednesday with a telephone call to Merkel. And here’s the interesting part of the White House readout of that conversation:

“The President assured the Chancellor that the United States is not monitoring and will not monitor the communications of Chancellor Merkel,” the statement said.

“Is not”? “Will not”? They're a far cry from “has never.”

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/is-the-us-confirming-it-spied-on-german%E2%80%99s-chancellor--190255925.html
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Eddie Cue announces new version of iLife apps for iOS and Mac

Eddie Cue announces new version of iLife apps for iOS and Mac

Apple SVP of Internet Software and Services has just announced brand new versions of the iLife software family, both for iOS and Mac. All of the iLife apps for iOS have been redesigned for iOS 7. iPhoto for iOS has added photo books, and it is now easier to view and share photos over the previous version. iMovie for iOS features new effects, better browsing, and Theater mode, which syncs movies created on one device across iCloud to all of your devices, including the Apple TV. GarageBand for iOS now supports recording up to 32 tracks at a time.

The iLife apps, both for iOS and Mac, are available for free, and the updates for existing users are available today.

Keep an eye on our ongoing event coverage today!


    






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