Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Thomson Reuters investigates foreign exchange client

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Why the Supreme Court Isn?t a Dog?s Best Friend

Was6099170 Thomas, a member of the U.S. Customs and Border Protection K-9 team, can detect banned foods and pets. Today, the Supreme Court heard argument about turning police dogs loose to sniff people?s homes and trucks.

Photograph by Paul J. Richards/AFP/Getty Images.

Confession: Stranded at home by Sandy, I couldn?t make it to the Supreme Court for argument this morning. So I?m going by the transcripts to divine how the justices feel about turning police dogs loose to sniff people?s homes and trucks. (Turning them loose constitutionally speaking, I mean?literally speaking, the dogs are on leashes.) Dear Dogs: I?m sorry to report that praise was not raining down on you today. Some justices wonder how well you are trained and most of them do not want you on the front porch.

Gregory Garre represented the state of Florida, which wants dogs to be able to sniff away without police handlers bothering to get a warrant first. (That?s what?s at stake here?whether the cops need warrants, not whether they can use dogs.) Garre played his best cards first: The three earlier cases ?in which this Court has held that a dog sniff is not a search? and ?has emphasized that a drug detection dog reveals only the presence of contraband, and that no one has a legitimate expectation of privacy in that.? But Justice Anthony Kennedy barked. ?I mean, that just can?t be a proposition that we can accept across the board,? he said. Oh dear?maybe those three previous cases aren?t so valuable after all.

Garre tried to rally, but Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg hit him with the prospect of police bringing dogs to sniff door to door throughout a ?neighborhood that?s known to be a drug dealing neighborhood.? This is not a hypothetical: It?s the plan of police in Virginia and North Dakota to patrol public housing. Garre says, yes, the police can use dogs to sweep a neighborhood, just like they ?could go door to door and knock on the doors and hope that they will find out evidence of wrongdoing that way.?

Now it?s Justice Antonin Scalia?s turn to nip. To him it seems ?crucial? that Franky, the dog in one of today?s two cases, was led onto the porch of defendant Joelis Jardines, where he then sat down by the front door to signal?correctly?the smell of marijuana inside. Scalia says Franky?s handler ?went onto the portion of the house as to which there is privacy? and ?used a means of discerning what was in the house that should not have been available.? Garre counters that cops and their dogs are like salesmen, Girl Scouts selling cookies, or (Happy Halloween!) trick-or-treaters. They have ?implied consent? to come up to your door. Ginsburg isn?t going for it. Neither is Justice Sonia Sotomayor.? When Garre tries to stick with his Franky-salesman analogy, she says, ?So we?re going to treat it like a human being now? You?re invited to knock on my door because you?re a dog??

When Scalia steps back in, it is not to save Garre. He suggests that a sniffing dog is like a pair of binoculars?a tool that allows the police to uncover something they otherwise wouldn?t. Scalia decidedly does not think the cops can look in your windows with binoculars without a search warrant. Even Garre concedes this, though he thinks it?s OK for the cops to look in the window without binoculars (or a warrant). This is where he loses Justice Stephen Breyer. ?Now, why is that unconstitutional?? he asks about the officer who is peering into your windows from the front step. ?Because it?s very unusual that someone would do that, and the homeowner would resent it.? Just as the homeowner would resent a big dog like Franky sitting on his porch for up to 15 minutes, Breyer suggests?the length of time he thinks Jardines had to put up with Franky. Now it is really not looking good for the dogs: No one speaks up for letting them onto the porch at all, much less sniffing at the door.

Integral to Scalia's view on this point is the word curtilage. SAT alert: It means the area surrounding a house that?s used for daily domestic activities. The problem for Franky, and for his handler, is that they intruded onto Jardines? curtilage. ?He?s going there to search,? Scalia says of the officer, ?and he shouldn?t be on the curtilage to search.? In case there?s any question about whether Scalia will come down against Florida and warrantless dog sniffing of houses, Justice Elena Kagan quotes his decision in Kyllo v. United States. That?s the 2001 ruling in which the court said that the police need a search warrant to use thermal-imaging technology to detect marijuana growing inside a home. Kagan wants to know how Franky differs from a thermal-imaging device. Garre answers, ?Franky?s nose is not technology.? OK, Kagan continues, what ?if we invented some kind of little machine called a, you know, smell-o-matic.? Garre clings to his claim that Franky is all-natural. ?So your basic distinction,? Kagan presses, is ?that we should not understand Franky as a kind of a sense-enhancing law enforcement technology, but we should think of him just like a guy?? Garre says yes, but he gets no help from the court. ?He?s not augmenting what a human being can do,? Sotomayor says of Franky. ?He?s substituting what a human being can do.?

Nicole A. Saharsky of the solicitor general?s office gives Florida an assist from the Obama administration. She says Jardines conceded in the lower court ?there was no reasonable expectation of privacy on the porch.? In fact, Franky and his handler are apparently just like trick-or-treaters. Ginsburg worries again about police taking dogs door-to-door at will, and Saharsky counters ?there are restraints on police resources.? There?s the potential for community hostility.? She sees no role for the court to play here?grumpy neighbors will take care of themselves. Breyer and Ginsburg are not mollified. Roberts uses his questions to draw out the point that Franky didn?t actually sit down and sniff for 15 minutes?the whole operation of coming up to the door and sniffing and then going back to the police car maybe took 10 minutes. Is the idea that the court?s decision should turn on five minutes one way or the other?

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=27dd8652d21ad63ec57026b0e2a55bc8

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Dubai: Week 35 - Notes by Nectar

What a busy week! I had my usual work and gym sessions but it was pretty busy otherwise as well.

On Sunday afternoon, Mum and I decided to go out for lunch. We ended up at the Cheesecake Factory - I really enjoyed their herb-crusted salmon the last time we went and I wanted it again! We shared the spinach and cheese dip as a starter and then I got my salmon. Mum ordered the Caesar salad - and even though she ordered the starter portion she had trouble finishing it. The portions are huge there! We skipped dessert though - we were both very full.

That night my cousin invited me to her book group as a one-off. She had asked me when I moved to Dubai whether I wanted to join them but I declined. She had told me they weren't a serious group and I wasn't sure it was for me. Anyway, the reason I went on Sunday was because they were discussing The Boy in the Striped Pajamas and I'd already read it a few years ago for my book group in London. I told her to let me know when she finished it so we could talk about it - so she invited me to join them. It's a fantastic book - if you haven't read it, I suggest you do so. It's a quick read and even though I?read it in 2 days, I haven't been able to forget it.?

I knew all the girls at book group already, apart from one. There was wine and appetisers followed by a full dinner. We discussed the book from time to time, and there was also more discussion about schools, Diwali, and 50 Shades of Grey. I think the trouble with meeting for the entire evening is that it's easy to digress and come back to the book (several times). I much prefer book groups where you meet for an hour or so, discuss the book, and hang around at the end if you want to. I didn't get home until midnight.?

Monday was uneventful.

On Tuesday night I had dinner at Spectrum at the Fairmont with two of my cousins. It was quite crowded. We skipped the starters and ordered main courses only: black pepper beef, Thai green chicken curry, pad thai. We didn't have dessert either. After dinner I rushed home to collect a parcel and then went back to the Fairmont to meet a friend who was leaving for London that night. We had a drink at Bridges, the sports bar at the Fairmont. I was home by midnight.

I didn't sleep very well on Tuesday night and was quite tired on Wednesday. It was a long weekend here in Dubai, due to the Eid holidays. Thursday and Sunday were both holidays.

I stayed in on Wednesday night - I was in bed by 11 and passed out by midnight.

I was home for most of Thursday. That night a friend invited me to someone's house party in Marina. It was a fun evening - but you would think I'd have learned by now not to mix my drinks. At about 2am, six of us headed to Amika at the H Hotel for more drinks and dancing. We left when they closed and I got home after 3.30am.?

I was up earlyish on Friday but then went back to sleep as my eyes were burning! I eventually got out of bed at 1pm. All I wanted was houmous - it's my new favourite hangover food.

Mum had some errands to run so I went to Mercato with her at about 5pm. After that we walked over to Choithram's to pick up a couple of things for her trip to Jamaica and waited for a cab on the main road. There were none. We waited 20 minutes and then decided we'd start walking. Mum suggested going back to Mercato and waiting for a cab there but I'd seen the queue for taxis when we left and it would have been even longer an hour later.?

We ended up walking home. It took about 40 minutes which is fine, but it was hot. We were sweaty and my hair looked like a nest. We got home just after 7pm, I got ready to see Enrique and then left a bit before 8pm.

At midnight after the concert, my friend insisted I go to a house party in Rashidiya with her. I wasn't even dressed for a party - I was in jeans and a top. Plus, I was tired after walking home and standing throughout the concert. She told me that the guy whose house it was worked in the restaurant industry and there would be good food there. That worked. I'd barely eaten anything all day and I told her I'd go for one drink only.

Well, that's not what happened. We got there, I sat at their bar and was spoiled rotten by flowing champagne and dim sum, and a fun group of people. Guests included: a sommelier at a top Dubai restaurant, a chef at another top Dubai restaurant, an Emirates pilot, and several other interesting people who were very welcoming.?

I got home at 5.30am. What a night!

Saturday was painful. I'd only slept 3 hours and we were meeting my cousins for lunch at the Dubai Mall. The mall was a zoo - we ended up having lunch at PF Chang, outdoors. It was quite nice but I could barely string a sentence together and just wanted to be left in my zombie-like state. When I got home I got back into bed and tried to nap.

That night my cousin and I had dinner at Spectrum (yes, again). We ordered a bottle of wine - I couldn't believe I was going to drink again after the two nights I'd had. We had the hot mezze platter to start and shared a chicken biryani for our main course. I was home by midnight.?

I love my life.

For more updates, click here.?

Source: http://notesbynectar.com/dubai-week-35

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Tuesday, October 30, 2012

BUnow ? Bloomsburg ? Presidential Election and Immigration Policy

Despite the roots of America descending from a multitude of countries around the world, immigration remains a heated issue among the American public and politicians.

Presidential candidates Mitt Romney and Barack Obama have contrasting views on immigration, which could alone dramatically sway many voters, including Bloomsburg University students, in their choice of candidate.

Romney advocates legal immigration reforms for skilled workers and for families waiting to be reunited.? By attracting higher skilled immigrants, he says that the economic potential of America will be maximized.

He welcomes legal immigration into the nation but supports a more hardline position on unauthorized immigration. Romney said he opposes amnesty because it encourages illegal immigration and gives illegal immigrants an advantage over immigrants who follow policy guidelines.

In particular, Romney?s political views concerning immigration have not resonated well with Latino voters.

Bloomsburg University student, Abby Snyder, said she can understand some of the points Romney makes, but is unsure that she agrees with his entire stance on the issue.

?It can be difficult for Americans to compete for jobs with lower-wage immigrants in blue collar jobs,? she said. ?I think that allowing higher skilled immigrant workers into America could be an effective way to boost the economy.?

However, she disagrees with mass deportation and thinks a smarter solution for immigration reform should be considered.

?Immigrants who are a part of our community and follow all American laws should be able to become a United States citizen more easily,? she said. ?It seems immigrants are forced to jump through too many hoops and obstacles to live legally in the U.S.?

The Obama administration recently made changes to the immigration policy back in June that benefits illegal immigrants, according to The New York Times.

Under Obama?s altered immigration policy, the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, applicants must prove that they entered the United States prior to the age of 16, that they have been in the country since June 2007, meet certain academic or military qualifications, and have not been convicted of a felony or significant misdemeanors, along with other specific criteria.

If the qualifications are met, young undocumented immigrants will not be deported. The policy closely resembles the DREAM Act.

Polling from ImpreMedia and Latino Decisions found that 85% of Latino voters across the political spectrum supported the DREAM Act in February 2011.

A junior education major at Bloomsburg University, Katie Partridge, offers her opinion.

?America is a nation that was built from immigrants,? she said. ?It?s wrong of politicians to make the process of U.S. citizenship so difficult for immigrant families.?

Overall, Americans? views of immigration have grown more positive in the last decade. A Gallup inquiry found that most Americans, including majorities of non-Hispanic whites, African Americans , and Hispanics said that immigration is ?a good thing for this country today.?

42% of Americans said in a June 2012 Gallup poll that immigration should be kept at its present level, with only 35% stating that it should be decreased.

Comparatively, the same poll conducted 7 years prior in 2005, found that 51% of Americans felt that immigration should be decreased.

Additionally, a second Gallup poll in June 2012 concluded that 66% of Americans felt that immigration is good for the country today. The same percentage said that immigrants should be allowed to remain in the country and eventually gain citizenship after paying back taxes, learning English, and passing a background check.

The views expressed in the polls seem also to correctly reflect the thoughts of many Bloomsburg University students.

?Immigration policies need to be updated and changed,? Katie Partridge said. ?I don?t agree with every aspect of either candidate?s plans, but I think Obama is more pro-active in regards to the immigration issue. It?s a noteworthy difference.?

?

Source: http://bunow.com/37288-presidential-election-and-immigration-policy

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GDF Suez: Two Gas Turbine Units ... - LNG World News

GDF Suez Two Gas Turbine Units Commissioned

LNG player GDF SUEZ of France said that Senoko Energy in Singapore has begun commercial operation of two combined cycle gas turbine units, each with a capacity of 430MW.

The two new units are part of Senoko Energy?s Repowering Project, announced in 2008, which aims to convert two thirty-year old oil-fired units into technologically advanced and efficient combined cycle units, reducing Senoko Energy?s carbon emission by more than a million tonnes a year.

Senoko Energy is the largest power generation company in Singapore, operating a 3,300MW portfolio and providing around 25% of the country?s electricity needs. Electricity demand growth in Singapore has averaged 4% per annum over the past 10 years. Through its 30% ownership in Senoko Energy, GDF SUEZ has a strong position in this market.

In Asia, GDF SUEZ also has operations in Thailand, Singapore, Pakistan, Indonesia and Laos. It has nearly 11GW of power generation capacity in operation and under construction.


LNG World News Staff, October 29, 2012; Image: GDF Suez

Source: http://www.lngworldnews.com/gdf-suez-two-gas-turbine-units-commissioned-singapore/

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Holiday gadgets: Microsoft phones, Google gadgets

NEW YORK (AP) ? Microsoft launched its new Windows phone system and Google unveiled new devices under its Nexus brand. Both part of an effort to grab more of consumers' holiday-shopping dollars.

Last week, Microsoft started selling its Windows 8 operating system and Surface tablet computer. Apple announced new iPads and Mac computers. Samsung launched a giant smartphone.

Barnes & Noble Inc. will start shipping new Nook devices Thursday, while Apple's new iPads, including a smaller one, will be out Friday. A larger version of Amazon.com Inc.'s Kindle Fire comes out later in the month.

These are some of the gadgets to expect for the holidays:

? APPLE DEVICES

Apple has done well selling its full-sized tablet computer, which has a screen that measures nearly 10 inches diagonally. But companies such as Amazon.com Inc. and Google Inc. have made inroads selling tablets with smaller, 7-inch screens and lower price tags.

To maintain its dominance, Apple will start shipping the iPad Mini on Friday, though new orders through Apple's website will take longer because initial supplies had sold out. It will have a 7.9-inch screen, making it slightly larger than those smaller rivals but about two-thirds the size of a regular iPad.

The iPad Mini starts at $329, well above the $159 starting price for Amazon.com Inc.'s Kindle Fire and $199 for Google Inc.'s Nexus 7. Both have 7-inch screens. The Mini will be just $70 cheaper than the 2011 iPad 2, which is still available.

Apple will make a version of the iPad Mini that can access cellular networks from AT&T, Verizon and Sprint. That version will start at $459, compared with $629 for the full-sized cellular model.

Apple is also refreshing its full-sized iPad, giving it a faster processor and faster Wi-Fi capabilities.

Meanwhile, Apple has unveiled a 13-inch version of a MacBook Pro with sharper, "Retina" display, complementing the 15-inch version unveiled in June. Apple also updated its iMac line.

Last month, Apple began selling its iPhone 5. The new phone is bigger, but thinner than previous models and works with faster cellular networks known as 4G.

? PHONE RIVAL

Apple's leading rival, Samsung Electronics Co., came out with a new version of its flagship phone, the Galaxy S III, months ago. But Samsung is known for releasing products throughout the year, each targeted at a different base of consumers.

For those who like to work with a stylus, the Galaxy Note II smartphone came out last week. T-Mobile, Sprint and U.S. Cellular are selling it now. Verizon and AT&T are taking advance orders for shipments in the coming weeks.

The Note comes on the heels of Samsung's campaign touting its Galaxy S III phone as its "next big thing." The Note is even bigger, with a 5.5 inch screen, compared with the S III's 4.8 inches and the iPhone 5's 4 inches, all measured diagonally.

The Note runs the latest version of Google's Android system, Jelly Bean.

Google, meanwhile, announced a small update to Jelly Bean and said it will be included with its Nexus 4 smartphone out next month.

? TABLET RIVALS

Amazon's 7-inch Kindle Fire is one of the smaller tablets with decent sales. Last month, it started shipping an updated version with a faster processor, more memory and longer battery life. It also cut the price to $159, from $199, making it far cheaper than the iPad, which starts at $399.

Amazon is also releasing higher-end models under the Kindle Fire HD line. A 7-inch one goes for $199 and an 8.9-inch one for $299. There's also a $499 model that can use the 4G cellular networks that phone companies have been building. A data plan will cost an extra $50 a year. The smaller HD model is already available, while the larger ones will be available Nov. 20.

Barnes and Noble Inc. is also updating its Nook tablets. The new Nook HD will come in two sizes, one at 7 inches (starting at $199) and one at 9 inches (starting at $269). They will be out Thursday.

In addition to the new HD screen and a lighter body, Barnes & Noble is increasing the services the Nook offers. It's adding a video purchase and rental service, allowing users to maintain different profiles and making it easier to browse titles in its book and magazine stores.

Google, meanwhile, is introducing a 10-inch Nexus tablet starting at $399, $100 less than comparable versions of the latest iPads. It is doubling the storage capacity of existing 7-inch models and introducing a version capable of accessing cellular networks. The new Nexus 7 is available now, while the other devices are coming Nov. 13.

? CALLING ON WINDOWS

Microsoft Corp. released a new version of the Windows operating system on Friday, one that's designed to work on both traditional computers and tablet devices. Desktops, laptops and tablet computers with Windows 8 started going on sale Friday.

Microsoft also released its own tablet computer, the Surface. It's new territory for Microsoft, which typically leaves it to others to make devices using its software. Now, it will be competing against its partners.

One model will run on the same type of lower-energy chips used in the iPad. It will start at $499, also like the newest, full-sized iPads. A keyboard cover will cost another $100. Sales started Friday.

A heavier, more expensive version will run on Intel chips and be capable of running standard Windows applications. Microsoft hasn't announced the date or price for that yet.

A new version of the Windows Phone system is coming out this fall as well. Once-dominant phone maker Nokia Corp. has been struggling in the shadow of Apple and Android, and it's counting on the new Windows system for a revival. Nokia, Samsung and HTC are launching eight Windows Phone 8 smartphones combined by year's end, starting this weekend overseas and later in November in the U.S.

? NEW BLACKBERRYS

A year ago, Research In Motion Ltd. disclosed that it was working on a next-generation phone system for the BlackBerry, which now looks ancient next to the iPhone and Android devices. It was supposed to be out in time for this year's holiday season. That won't happen.

In June, RIM pushed the release of BlackBerry 10 devices into early next year, saying it wasn't ready. That means RIM will not only compete with the new iPhone and Android devices out this fall, but it will also have to contend with the new Windows devices.

? PLAYING GAMES

Nintendo's new Wii U game machine will go on sale in the U.S. on Nov. 18. A basic, white model will cost $300. A deluxe black version for another $50 comes with an extra game and more accessories. The GamePad touch-screen controller for it will offer new ways to play.

In "New Super Mario Bros. U.," for example, players holding the old Wii controllers control Mario, Luigi and other characters. The person with the GamePad can help them along by using a stylus to create stepping stones for the characters or stun enemies.

Players can also turn off the TV entirely and play on the GamePad.

Nintendo Co. has been trying to drum up excitement for the Wii U, the first major gaming console to launch since 2006.

The company also announced new entertainment features for the console. Called Nintendo TVii, the service collects all the ways users have to watch movies, TV shows and sports. This includes pay-TV accounts along with services such as Hulu and Netflix. The GamePad works as a fancy remote controller and will let viewers comment on what they are watching.

TVii will be available Nov. 18 as well, at no extra cost.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/holiday-gadgets-microsoft-phones-google-gadgets-230550264.html

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Should schools close during bad flu outbreaks?

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Now, researchers say, the big questions include, When is it best to close schools? And what are the downsides? The study, reported in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases, looked at what happened in two Texas communities during the H1N1 \\\"swine\\\" flu epidemic of 2009. 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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/schools-close-during-bad-flu-outbreaks-174320972.html

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Monday, October 29, 2012

Giants are using Tigers' formula

That game is starting pitching, and the Giants' Vogelsong has been the best

OPINION

By Tony DeMarco

NBCSports.com contributor

updated 3:13 a.m. ET Oct. 28, 2012

Tony DeMarco

DETROIT - The Detroit Tigers brought their superstar ace and microscopic postseason rotation ERA into this World Series.

But the San Francisco Giants are on the verge of their second championship in three Octobers by beating the Tigers at their own game.

Game 3 was Ryan Vogelsong's turn, and it ended exactly the same way as Game 2 ? a 2-0 shutout.

You've probably heard more about the other members of the Giants rotation than Vogelsong ? not to mention the starter they've turned into a stealth setup man. But this postseason is turning into Vogelsong's personal coming-out party.

In a well-traveled career, the 35-year-old right-hander was a Giants fifth-round draft choice in 1998, then was sent away in 2001 in a deal for starter Jason Schmidt. He surfaced with the Pirates for parts of four seasons, went through arm surgery, played a few seasons with two different Japanese League teams, then passed through the Phillies and Angels organizations before landing with the Giants in 2011 as a non-roster invitee.

"And the rest is history,'' Giants general manager Brian Sabean said.

Such as leading the NL in ERA for a while this season and landing on the NL All-Star team. And now you'll find Vogelsong in the postseason record book, too.

In 24.2 postseason innings over four starts, Vogelsong's ERA is 1.09. The last time anybody went lower in a postseason was Orel Hershiser in 1987 (1.05 ERA in 42.2 innings).

With 5 2/3 scoreless ? albeit testy ? innings on Saturday, Vogelsong ducked under the mark of another postseason legend ? Curt Schilling's 1.13 ERA with the 2001 Arizona Diamondbacks.

Vogelsong has allowed one or fewer runs in all four of his postseason starts (and his last seven, dating back to the regular season). The only other pitchers to do that in one postseason are Schilling, Burt Hooton (1981) and John ?Blue Moon? Odom (1972).

But Vogelsong only added on to what Barry Zito and Madison Bumgarner did in the first two games. The trio has allowed only one earned run in 18.1 innings, with each coming away with a victory. You have to go back 75 years for the last time that happened ? by the 1937 New York Yankees trio of Lefty Gomez, Red Ruffing and Monte Pearson.

This was Vogelsong's most troublesome of his four playoff outings, as he put nine runners on, but then pitched well in traffic.

"I didn't think my stuff was as good as in my NLCS start,'' Vogelsong said. "I really just tried to hit Buster's glove as many times as I could. When the guys are playing defense behind you, it encourages you to just put the ball in play.''

And when you've been where Vogelsong has been in his career, it makes a game's tougher moments a little easier to get through. Double-play ground balls got him out of two-on, one-out jams in the first and third innings, but that was minor compared with facing Miguel Cabrera with two outs and the bases loaded in the fifth.

"Right now, he's the best hitter in the game,'' Vogelsong said. "I just tried to make pitches there. It's a lot easier facing him with two outs. I made a good pitch, and he popped it up. This is my first World Series. I've been waiting for this since I was 5 years old, and I wasn't going to go down without a fight, that's for sure.''

Cabrera's popout continued the trend of Giants pitchers? mastering the Tigers' top hitters. Cabrera is 2 for 9 with an RBI in this series. After an 0-for-4, two-strikeout game, Prince Fielder is 1 for 10 and has hit into two double plays.

The Giants aren't the first team to attempt to attack Cabrera by pounding him inside, even off the plate inside. But they've succeeded at it best. Fielder's struggles are deeper, as he has impatiently expanded his strike zone.

"They're great hitters,'' Sabean said. "I certainly understand why with (Justin) Verlander and those two guys, they'd be the favorites in this series. But the game is funny. You still have to compete inning to inning, and we're winning a lot of innings.

"We were ready for this series because of the two teams we played (in the NL playoffs ? the Nationals and Cardinals). Those are two pretty good offensive teams. I hate to use the phrase 'battle-tested' because we're not in the military. But our guys were ready to pitch the way they have needed to pitch, the way they still need to pitch.''

? 2012 NBC Sports.com? Reprints

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Giants are using Tigers' formula

DeMarco: San Francisco is on the verge of its second title in three years by beating Detroit at its own game ? great starting pitching.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/49584568/ns/sports-baseball/

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Long distance relationship


I have been in a relationship for seven months now. Four of those months we have been long distance, I am now in Indonesia and she is still in China. We have an amazing relationship when we are together but when we're apart I am the problem. I worry excessively. Not that she will be unfaithful or anything like that. I trust her. We have known each other for four years and been friends who grew closer for two of those years. Each of us was secretly falling in love with the other but neither of us had the nerve to outright tell each other how we felt.

It built to a head and we finally ended up getting together. For the first time in my life someone loved me for who I really am. All my other relationships, including three marriages, were all built on me not being myself but being who I thought the other person would love. I would say what I thought I should, do what I thought I should and in the end grew more and more resentful poisoning the relationships because I thought deep down I was broken and unlikeable or loveable because of childhood issues.

All that is different with her.

But when we're apart I am overly sensitive and worried that she is irritated or bothered or angry with me over little things. She says she isnt and that I apologise or adjacent apologise too much. I think I am worried about being abandoned over something that would never be an issue when we are with each other.

I need help.

How do I relax and trust that she loves me and nothing will change that? What do I do when I start to worry and obsess that something might be bothering her? It never is but I keep doing it. I dont want this to be the thing that causes problems, worrying that there are problems when there arent any.

Source: http://www.loveforum.net/threads/72105-Long-distance-relationship

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Rockets land 'foundational' player in James Harden

HOUSTON (AP) ? Now that they've landed James Harden, the Houston Rockets have grander aspirations in mind.

Rockets general manager Daryl Morey officially introduced Harden on Monday, calling him a "foundational" player for the team's ultimate goal of returning to title contention. Harden, last season's Sixth Man of the Year, joined Houston in a stunning trade with Oklahoma City on Saturday night.

"James Harden is a player we can build around, and continue to improve the team around his skills," Morey said. "He's an elite offensive player, a complete player. He can pass, shoot, attack the basket. Even though he's a gold medalist, an Olympian and made the Finals, I still think he's an underrated player. He's absolutely someone who, when they see him step into the role of a star for the Houston Rockets, people are going to realize just how good he is."

The Rockets traded shooting guard Kevin Martin and first-round draft pick Jeremy Lamb to Oklahoma City, along with future draft picks.

Coupled with Jeremy Lin, Morey is hoping that Houston's new high-profile backcourt and the salary cap space created by the deal will attract another star to Houston in the near future.

The Rockets have overhauled their roster since finishing 34-32 last season and missing the playoffs for the third straight year. Houston added Lin and center Omer Asik to join Chandler Parsons and Patrick Patterson in the projected starting lineup.

"Now our job is to add another significant player or have one of our young guys develop into an All-Star-caliber player," Morey said. "You probably need two to really be a championship contender. We're not there yet, but we've got multiple young players who can take that step forward."

Harden was finalizing a long-term contract with Houston on Monday. He says he'll be ready to play when the Rockets open the regular season in Detroit on Wednesday.

"I'm excited to be here," Harden said. "The organization has done a great job, they've made me feel welcome. I think we have something special here. We're young, but those guys want to work and get better, so we want things days at a time."

Not long after news of the trade leaked out, Harden heard from Thunder stars Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook, who were also his teammates on the Olympic team. The Rockets visit Oklahoma City on Nov. 28.

"I actually talked to Kevin (Sunday) night. He's still in shock," Harden said. "It's a business, it happens that way. We had something special there. It didn't work out. In a business, you've got to move on. We're still going to be brothers."

Morey acknowledged he was "shocked" that Harden was available, and said the deal came together within a few days last week. The Rockets have been trying to land a first-tier star for years, failing in an aggressive bid to sign Dwight Howard over the summer.

The Rockets were close to getting Pau Gasol before last season in a proposed deal that also would have sent All-Star guard Chris Paul to the Lakers. But NBA Commissioner David Stern, acting on behalf of the league-owned New Orleans Hornets, vetoed the deal that would have brought Lamar Odom to the Hornets, along with Luis Scola, Martin, Goran Dragic and a first-round pick.

"A GM in 1950 would say to win the title, you've got to have an All-Star player," Morey said. "We feel like we have one now, and frankly, we want more than one. But you've got to get one first, and we're going to move forward from there."

Harden says he'll wear the same No. 13 in Houston that he wore in Oklahoma City.

"It's a new journey for me," Harden said. "It's a new growth for me, to do something special, being one of the focal points of this offense. It's a great opportunity."

Morey expects Harden to start Houston's regular-season opener, a decision ultimately up to coach Kevin McHale. Harden said he's ready to play, even though he was practicing with his new team for the first time on Monday afternoon.

"I mesh with anyone," Harden said. "It shouldn't take that much time, especially with our offense and our strategies aren't too difficult. I'm a very fast learner, so it shouldn't take too long."

Later Monday, the Rockets waived forwards Jon Brockman and JaJuan Johnson, guards Gary Forbes and Shaun Livingston and guard/forward Lazar Hayward, who was acquired along with Harden from Oklahoma City.

McHale and Morey said before training camp began that the objective this season was making the playoffs. That remains the same, although with Harden on board, it seems much more reachable.

"We're going to be much better this year, and we've upped our playoff odds," Morey said. "Our goal isn't to stop there. We're looking to be a championship contender, and that's going to require focusing on the future, at least a little bit longer."

Harden started only seven games in three seasons in Oklahoma City, as he developed into an indispensable reserve. Morey, like McHale, expects Harden to make a seamless transition into a featured role with the Rockets.

"He's had plenty of minutes and we've studied him, believe me," Morey said. "I don't see it as an issue at all."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rockets-land-foundational-player-james-harden-221004482--spt.html

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Killeen Texas Photography - Holiday mini sessions | Close to Home ...

Holiday mini sessions are so much fun! We had a great time out at Central Texas College in Killeen, Texas. Families came from all over to have their holiday photos taken with Close to Home Photography, and I couldn?t have been more honored or thrilled! I was able to capture so much love on mini session days and these families did so great! There are lots of treats at my mini sessions, so a little bribing went a long way in getting some of these cheeky smiles. Here are just a few of my favorites from the day.

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Source: http://closetohomephotography.net/?p=1669

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Sunday, October 28, 2012

Six new cases reported in meningitis outbreak

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Apple, Samsung, Google and the smartphone patent wars ...

First published online by Charles Arthur.

Following Eric Schmidt?s remark to Kara Swisher in October that he wouldn?t comment on the smartphone patent wars because he ?doesn?t understand all the details?, we?d like to be of service.

Yes, Eric Schmidt is far smarter than me, and probably than anyone reading this piece (unless your name is Larry or Sergey and your surname is Page or Brin), but we find that if you break these things down into small pieces, it?s easy enough. So here is your comprehensive guide to understanding what?s behind the smartphone patent wars. (Note: contains pictures of kittens. Well, one picture.)

The legal details in this article were checked by Darren Smyth, patent and design attorney and partner at IP law firm EIP. He is not, however, responsible for any errors in it.

What is a patent?
Are all patents the same?
What?s a ?trade dress? or ?registered design? patent?
What?s ?patent infringement??
How do you defend yourself from patent infringement claims?
What are software patents?
Can you be sued over software?
What are ?standards-essential? patents (SEPs)?
What is FRAND?
How much is a standards-essential patent worth?
What?s patent exhaustion?
Can standards patents holders sue or injunct others?
When should you not use SEPs in lawsuits?
What would be antitrust with SEPs?
SEPs in court: why not?
Are SEPs different from non-SEPs?
Why do ?registered designs? matter?
Why are there so many patent battles?
Why can?t one court decide them?
Will they carry on?
What can I do about the patent battles?

What is a patent?

Yes, let?s start here. A patent is a government-granted monopoly to an invention. It?s bestowed on the inventor who files for it with the relevant patent office. As Patent Baristas put it: ?Patent applicants must show that the invention is new and non-obvious and applicants must describe the invention such that a person in the industry would know how to make and use the invention.?

Let?s unpack that. To qualify as a patent, something must be

a) novel ? so a patent application can be disqualified by ?prior art? showing the same concept portrayed elsewhere at or before the application

b) non-obvious ? the test being that someone in the field in which it?s filed, at the time at which it is filed, wouldn?t see it as a direct extension of what exists (so adding an extension to a paint roller is ?obvious?, but you might find a ?non-obvious? way to attach that extension to the existing roller) ? this is exactly the same as the idea of an ?inventive step?

c) feasible ? so you can?t patent a perpetual motion machine or something else that, say, breaches the Second Law of Thermodynamics.

Are all patents the same?

Nope. Although they?re all awarded by patent offices, they cover different things and have different applicabilities. Here we?ll deal with four kinds: software patents, functional patents, ?standards-essential? patents, and ?trade dress? patents.

What?s a ?trade dress? patent?

Software patents are mostly code, but have some physical outcome;
functional patents can cover anything, from vacuum cleaner parts to software to gigantic trucks to processes for identifying genes;
?standards-essential? patents are, well, essential to standards;
registered designs (confusingly called design patents or ?trade dress? patents in the US) cover how a product looks and its aesthetic appearance

What?s ?patent infringement??

Producing something that has the same features or performs the same function in a way that?s covered by the patent that?s already been granted.

Example: take Apple?s ?slide to unlock? system for the iPhone, which has been patented in the US and Europe. (Ignore for a moment the question of whether it should have been awarded. Just accept that it has.) If you produced a phone interface that looked and functioned exactly the same, you could expect Apple to come after you. But if you produced a touch interface with a thin line along which you slide a ball to unlock the screen, you could expect that that too would be judged ?infringing?. That?s why HTC and Motorola changed the interface of their Android phones in Germany: a court there reckoned that their interfaces infringed Apple?s patent. (We?ll explain why it was Motorola and HTC, not Google, which was sued in a minute.)

However, if you can find a way to get the same outcome but by a different route (ie, avoiding the existing patent?s ?inventive step?) then you aren?t infringing. But often that has to be decided in a court, either by a judge or jury ? an expensive outcome that?s generally to be avoided.

To show infringement in registered designs, you?d have to show that the infringing object looked very similar to the registered one.

How do you defend yourself from patent infringement claims?

Assuming you can?t do it in a friendly way (which if someone is claiming you?re using their patent, you probably can?t), your options are: ? invalidate the patent by showing that there is prior art
? invalidate the patent by showing that it shouldn?t have been awarded because it fails one of the three ?tests? ? where ?obviousness? is a common line of attack
? show that what you do is different from the patent.
? show that you?ve already paid to use the patent through some existing licensing agreement; in this case the principle of ?patent exhaustion? comes into play, which boils down to ?you shouldn?t have to pay twice to use the same thing?.

One point: if the claim is over ?standards essential? patents (SEPs), only the last of these is an effective defence There is another defence in ?standards essential? patent (SEP) claims, which is that the amount being demanded is unreasonable. This is only a defence in SEP-related cases; in any other situation, a patent owner can charge what the hell they like. They can even refuse to license a patent and demand the withdrawal of infringing products via a court injunction. (Apple does this a lot. So does Microsoft. And not to forget Motorola. And HTC.)

Cases over patent infringement will often end up in court, which both sides will (or should) know is generally like going blindfold into a casino with all your money and credit cards stuffed in your pockets. You might come out even richer, or with less than nothing.

What are software patents, and how can they possibly be valid?

Strictly speaking, in Europe, you can?t patent software as such, but you can patent software that achieves a technical effect. The precise rules differ from country to country, and the rules in the USA are more lenient than in Europe.t.

The ?software patents? that the US Patents and Trademarks Office (USPTO) grants are for the implementation of something through software. So in the US, Amazon?s (controversial) 1-Click patent on its store is granted on the combination of a piece of code which implements easy ordering by user interaction, plus some manipulation of what the site already knows about you, plus the fact that you have to interact with the code. It?s a ?business process?, and in the US Amazon has that patent. (Apple, for example, licenses it from Amazon for the iTunes Music and App Store in the US.)

There?s a key difference here between the US and Europe. Amazon has repeatedly tried to patent 1-Click in Euope. But it has been rebuffed just as repeatedly because 1-Click doesn?t satisfy the European standard for patentability, which is that to be patentable, a piece of software has to cause some physical manifestation. (This difference is why Apple has been able to patent slide-to-unlock to some ? though not universal ? effect in Europe: the slide-to-unlock system has the physical effect of allowing you to interact usefully with the rest of the screen with your fingers or whatever.)

So you can?t be sued for software? Then how can all these lawsuits be going on?

You can?t be sued for the fact that some code exists, but once you embody it in something ? a smartphone, say, or a tablet ? and make it do something, you might be infringing on the invention that is embodied by another piece of code.

Thus Apple has sued HTC and Motorola over ?slide-to-unlock? implementations on their phones. But it hasn?t sued Google, because Google only wrote the code. It was up to HTC and Motorola to figure out whether their implementations infringed Apple?s patent. (This isn?t easy.)

Note, by the way, that nobody is suggesting that HTC or Motorola (or Google) stole Apple?s code from the iPhone and implemented it. It would be shocking if the actual program looked anything like the same. But it?s the implementation ? what it enables and how it enables it (in this case, sliding a finger along a displayed track on a multi-touch screen in order to enable the rest of the screen) ? that infringes.

This is why, for example, modern versions of Android?s unlock system let you pull a lock icon in pretty much any direction. There?s no line to even hint about how you should drag the lock ? only a target to show where to aim for. That cleverly lies outside the patented ?slide-to-unlock? functionality.

This stuff is boring.

Come on, Mr Schmidt, give it your best! Lots of people don?t get past this point, which means they miss out on the really important bits, of standards-essential and ?registered design? (aka trade dress) patents.

What are ?standards-essential? patents, then?

They?re patents that are essential to a standard. That might sound tautologous, but it?s key to understanding many of the fights that are going on.

A standard such as Wi-Fi (802.11a,b,g,n?) or GSM or GPRS or 3G/UMTS or 4G/LTE consists of lots of interlocking pieces of code. Take Wi-Fi, which involves things like frequencies of transmission, data encoding, frame rates, SSID transmission, channels, naming methods, and hundreds of other software engineering elements put together in a lattice that has to be robust enough that it will work when implemented by multiple vendors in a wide range of conditions.

You don?t want Wi-Fi compatibility to be like operating systems, where Android programs won?t run on Windows because they?re essentially part of competing ecosystems; you want any device that is certified as Wi-Fi compatible to be able to communicate with any other device with the same certification.

That means standards. But how do you standardise something like that? Through long, arduous negotiation, that?s how. Be grateful you?re not part of the committee with that task (unless you are, in which case we salute you). Frequencies and tolerances for frequency variability are agreed. Data transmission formats are agreed. And so on.

Part of the input into these discussions is the patents that will be used to implement them. Imagine that you?re working on a standard where you want to have a circuit whose output will vary by no more than 5kHz over five seconds. Turns out, someone on the standards committee works for a company that has written a generator that will do just that. It?s patented, of course. But you need that patent so you can have the standard you?re working on.

Rival bids will probably come in from other members ? and then the haggling will start too over how important the patent is in the overall scheme of things. By the time the (exhausted) members of the committee have finished their job, they?ll have a collection of specifications, and patented processes, which uniquely identify the standard they?ve been working on. So Wi-Fi embodies a ton of patents, often for boring things like making sure that chips output a signal within two given frequencies. As patents go, they might not be particularly thrilling; it may be perfectly feasible to get the same result without infringing the patent.

But if you do that, you won?t be adhering to the standard. By not using the patents essential to the standard, you?re putting yourself outside the standard. This is why companies like Microsoft (which has lots of smart programmers) and Apple use really quite old software for systems like 802.11b: they have to, to comply with the standard.

Do all the processes in a standard have to be patented? No; but in implementing new commercial standards, it?s a lot easier to get companies to agree to take part if they feel they?ll get financial benefit from it. Otherwise they might as well go and build their own, new, proprietary standard.

What?s FRAND?

So: you have a new standard, and it comes with a series of patents. As part of the standards approval process run in Europe by the ETSI (European Telecommunications Standards Institute), the holders of those patents agree that they will license them to anyone who wants to implement the standard on a ?fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory? (FRAND) basis. In the US it?s often known just as RAND ? the ?fair? element isn?t thought to add anything special to the description.

?Non-discriminatory? means that you?ll license it to anyone ? Microsoft, Apple, Joe Bloggs ? who asks to license it. This is very important: if someone offers to license your standards-essential patent to meet the standard, you?re required to license it. Refusing to do so is frowned on by the US government, the European Commission, ETSI, and possibly your mother.

How much is a SEP worth? It?s a ?standard?, so it must be valuable, right?

?Reasonable? is becoming the sticking point for many court cases. How much should you be able to charge for holding a standards-essential patent?

What?s clear is that if you charge too much, you?ll put people off using it. Here?s an example from recent history: two companies, X and Y, managed to get standards built around their competing communications technologies. Company X?s technology was much faster and, at a time when PCs were pretty feeble, didn?t tax the CPU much. Company Y?s technology was slower, and chewed up a lot of CPU time when being used.

However Company X tried to charge a substantial amount for the use of its patents ? far more than Company Y. That, allied to other factors (particularly the relative sizes of X and Y) meant that Company X?s standard didn?t thrive, and eventually it was left as almost the lone user.

(X was Apple, with FireWire; Y was Intel, with USB.)

The question of ?how much should an SEP be worth?? is ticklish. In one sense, an SEP is a lottery ticket: suddenly everyone has to license your patent, which does nothing more than (say) count clock cycles on a quartz chip, if they want this whizzy new Wi-Fi wireless technology! You control the world! You can demand any price you want!

Oh, wait. Apple and Firewire. Right. Not any price. Then again, if you?re providing something that is going to be part of a mobile phone communications standard, you?re going to have millions and millions of licensors.

So how do you value a patent such as this Samsung one, described as ?Apparatus and method for generating scrambling code in UMTS mobile communication system?? (By the way, looking at it, you?d think it is pretty much a piece of code ? software ? described in words. Yet it can be patented, because in reality it is a patentable idea that just happens to be implemented in practice using software.)

The argument put forward by Judge Richard Posner in the US, in dismissing a case brought by Apple (which didn?t have an SEP in the case) and Motorola (which did), was that the way to calculate the value of an SEP is to ask: how much was it worth the day before it was nominated a standard? (Or alternatively, how much would it be worth if it hadn?t become part of a standard?)

On that basis, you?d have to say that for many SEPs, the answer is: not much. Any decent coder can write a program that will monitor the output of a quartz chip and use modern feedback systems to control the variability ? hell, they might even do it better than the one in the standard. Similarly for the scrambling code patent above. This argument applies all over the patents used in a standard: though collectively they?re crucial, on their own each might be trivial. It?s like building a very large club from hundreds of twigs.

Here for example is the IEEE?s list for the 802.11 standard, which covers multiple wireless standards. If you look at the first letter linked from the list (which involves more than 100 companies, including Apple, Samsung, Fujitsu, Nokia, RIM and Microsoft among many others), it asks the patent holder to agree that ?the technology will be made available at minimal cost to all who seek to use it for compliance with an incorporated standard?.

So even though it?s true to say ? as Google does ? that a smartphone embodies thousands of patents, that doesn?t mean that the ownership or use of many of those patents is necessarily in dispute. For those used in standards, their application is pretty straightforward, and the patent holder is required to agree to provide it without challenge.

What?s patent exhaustion?

If Company B licenses Company A?s patent, and includes it in a product that Company C then includes in its own product, then Company A (the patent owner) can?t chase Company C for a patent licence. Its claim to the rights is ?exhausted?. This is one defence that Apple used in the Samsung-Apple trial over some standards-essential patents owned by Samsung. Samsung said that Apple hadn?t licensed the patents. Apple said it had a contract with Intel to buy chips which had licensed Samsung?s patents, which meant the claim was exhausted. The jury accepted that argument.

Why would it be bad to sue someone for not paying for the use of SEPs, or to injunct them from selling things which used SEPs?

It wouldn?t be bad, and it?s perfectly legal to do seek an injunction, once other avenues have been tried and failed. (That second part is important.) The convention however is that you don?t seek an injunction if a company is willing to pay. Then the problem comes down to one of how much should be paid. And it?s that point ? the ?how much?? ? which has seen the real disputes.

For example, you could argue that Nokia kicked off the ?smartphone patent wars? when it sued Apple in 2009, claiming Apple was using a number of its SEPs without paying royalties. Apple denied it, but in June 2011 eventually coughed up hundreds of millions of euros in back payments. Nokia however never sought to injunct Apple from selling the iPhone. It just let the sales ? and future royalties ? mount up. The price seems to have been a few euros per handset sold.

By contrast Motorola, which holds SEPs that are part of the H.264 MPEG-4 video decoding standard, has been demanding 2.5% of the retail price of Microsoft hardware such as Xboxes, and other devices ? such as PCs ? that use Microsoft software which uses H.264. On the ?bundle of twigs? premise, it?s hard to see how that price is reasonable. It certainly doesn?t sound like ?minimal cost?.

Samsung, meanwhile, used SEPs to fight back against Apple, which was suing it in Europe over non-SEPs ? that is, patents which Apple is claiming to itself and hasn?t made part of a standard.

And what?s wrong with that?

Using SEPs like that in effect looks like bullying. In particular, seeking an injunction before you offer FRAND licensing terms is the highwayman?s method and breaches the standards agreement.

Apple has argued that Samsung did that in Europe, and Microsoft that Motorola did it in the US, and both those SEP-holders are being investigated for antitrust abuse ? by the European Commission?s competition arm, and the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC).

Why might that be antitrust abuse?

Because SEPs constitute a sort of automatic monopoly: as said earlier, if you want to meet a standard, you have to use them. And denying a company the opportunity to use them on the same terms as other companies means you?re using the monopoly to wield market power. That?s abuse. Neither the EC nor the FTC has announced whether they think Samsung or Motorola has acted in breach of any acts.

Why shouldn?t someone who owns SEPs use them in a court fight against someone who doesn?t, and is suing for alleged infringement of their patents?

They can, but SEPs have to be licensed, whereas non-essential patents don?t. That puts the SEP-holder at a disadvantage in legal terms; their benefit comes from the payments they?re guaranteed. By contrast, non-SEPs don?t have to be licensed. So the SEP-holder might end up with just the standard payment, and no licence to the other side?s patents. It?s tough ? but that?s the payback from patents.

So SEPs are really different from non-SEPs?

They?re all patents. What?s different is the licensing obligation. SEPs aren?t intrinsically more valuable than non-SEPs. In fact, non-SEPS can often get bigger prices, per licence, than SEPs.

This is really long.

Sorry, Mr Schmidt. Here?s some pictures of kittens.

OK. Enough of standards. Let?s move on. Why do ?registered designs? matter?

?Registered designs? or ?design patents? cover, roughly, ?what something looks like? rather than what it does; form, not function. They are different from regular ?patents?, but they are a form of intellectual property, and do cover tangible things, and as they have been important in the smartphone wars, it seems good to talk about them here . Really, as this piece on Groklaw points out, it?s really a part of trademark law:

Trade Dress is not really a ?subset? of trademark law. It is trademark law. Lanham Act Section 43 allows protection against any use of a mark or device that might confuse as to origin of goods or sponsorship. Trade dress is that device, so if the trade dress causes confusion, then it will generally be actionable. But the story doesn?t end there. You must have distinctiveness.

Apple has argued in US and English courts that its iPhone and iPad designs have registered designs, specifically for elements including its rounded corners. That is, it argues that, for example, the rounded corners ? at a particular radius ? are visually distinctive features that were unusual when they first introduced them.

Why are there so many patent battles? It seems like they?re always in the news

There are so many because the smartphone business is really valuable. Getting a few points of share or installed base is very valuable. Winning court battles hinders rivals.

Plus Steve Jobs felt very strongly about the patents that Apple did have on the iPhone ? and probably knew that Apple would really need them, because it was the entrant in the phone market, setting itself against a number of gigantic incumbents then including Microsoft, RIM and Nokia, as well as the existing players such as LG, Sony Ericsson and Motorola (the latter having pretty much created the mobile phone market).

Jobs had already been burned badly by Creative Labs ? which sued Apple in 2005 for its use of hierarchical menus on the iPod, something on which Creative Labs had filed a patent application in January 2001, when the iPod was barely a gleam in Apple?s eye. (The iPod was launched in October 2001.)

He then saw Android?s use of techniques such as pinch-and-zoom, and double-tap to expand, as infringements of implementations Apple had patented (or filed for). And so he first approached Eric Schmidt to try to settle it ? without effect ? and then began launching lawsuits, starting with HTC and then moving on to Motorola and Samsung. (Motorola sued Apple first, though it may have been a case of getting its retaliation in first.)

Is there a single court that will decide all this, so we can say that it?s all finally finished?

Sadly, no. The main battlegrounds are the courts in the United Kingdom, regional courts in Germany, the International Trade Commission (ITC) in the US, federal courts in the US, and appeals courts in the US. None is definitive (though some are more senior than others) and the deliberations and decisions of one aren?t necessarily binding on another. What the ITC decides doesn?t affect what a US appeals court decides, and it?s risky to think that anything one says will influence another.

So we should expect these patent battles to just carry on?

Perhaps. There have been reports that Google has been making overtures to Apple for some sort of peace, although its acquisition of Motorola Mobility ? which was meant to give it a big patents warchest ? doesn?t seem to have worked out quite as straightforwardly as expected. If Apple wants this to go on, it could do. But there are some signs that doing so is hurting its public reputation, while heightening that of the companies it sues: in Australia, for example, many people had no idea that Samsung had a tablet offering until they began hearing news reports about Apple seeking to ban it. And the billion-dollar win in the US over Samsung may have brought the Korean company to the attention of people who didn?t previously know of it as a worthy rival in the smartphone space.

That?s depressing. What can I do to make these companies stop doing this?

Sadly, this is like being an ancient Greek; they imagined there were multiple gods who were often at war with each other, leaving mere mortals as spectators. That?s the situation we find ourselves in.

Source: http://thelonggoodread.com/2012/10/28/apple-samsung-google-and-the-smartphone-patent-wars-everything-you-need-to-know/

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