Saturday, January 7, 2012

Android Market catching up to Apple in app numbers

Google

Screenshot of Android Market

By Athima Chansanchai

Choices are becoming more abundant in the Android Market, which has just hit 400,000 apps in the first flush of the new year.?

Distimo, a Netherlands-based company that tracks app store data, posted a blog entry that shows it reaching that milestone over New Year's weekend, with free apps as the majority of the active apps. The market began the year with about 150,000 apps, reaching 200,000 in April and 300,000 in August.

Distimo

The Apple App Store reached 400,000 in June, and now has more than 500,000 apps.

What Distimo research shows is consistent with the increased popularity of other Google products: While it may have started off a little slow, the Android Market has rapidly closed the gap with the App Store within the past year.

Sure, it's only natural given the proliferation of Android handsets and tablets out there (more than iOS devices) that there would also be a bigger demand as developers realized the potential market in the audience. The Android Market, after all, has recently reached another milestone: 10 billion downloads. It's crowded out there.?

But, as with downloads, handsets and tablets, Android is a system that picks up fast.

Overall, Distimo tracking showed it took the Android Market 31 months to reach the 200,000 apps point, while it only took Apple 22 months to do the same. But, after that it took fewer and fewer months for Android to cross each subsequent hundred-thousand mark.

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Check out Technolog on?Facebook, and on Twitter, follow?Athima Chansanchai, who is also trying to keep her head above water in the?Google+?stream.

Source: http://technolog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/04/9949679-android-market-catching-up-to-apple-in-app-numbers

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Friday, January 6, 2012

In Post-Gaddafi Libya, Freedom is Messy -- and Getting Messier (Time.com)

"I fear this looks like a civil war", one Libyan rebel commander from Misrata told the Associated Press, in the wake of a fierce firefight between rival militia factions using heavy weapons in broad daylight in Tripoli on Tuesday. Four fighters were reportedly killed and five wounded in the clash ignited by the attempts of a Misrata-based militia to free a comrade detained by the Tripoli Military Council on suspicion of theft. But such clashes have become increasingly common in the Libyan capital over the past two months, as rival militias stake out turf in the power vacuum caused by the collapse of the Gaddafi regime. And while leaders on both sides of Tuesday's clash were eventually able to broker a cease-fire, the deep fissures of tribe, region, ideology and sometimes even neighborhood that divide rival armed groups persist -- and there's no sign yet of the emergence of a central political authority with the military muscle to enforce its writ.

The residents and militias of Tripoli have been trying for months to persuade the Misrata and Zintan fighters who stormed the capital to topple the regime to go back to their home towns, but those fighters are staying put -- and are accused of harassing the locals. They see themselves as the ones who shouldered the greatest burden in the battle to drive out Gaddafi, and they are suspicious of edicts by the National Transitional Council (NTC), which they see as self-appointed interlopers from Benghazi (the NTC's recognition by the West and Arab governments as Libya's legitimate government notwithstanding). The fighters of Zintan and Misrata are in no hurry to subordinate themselves to a national army led by returned exiles and a government of which they're wary; nor are they willing to accept the authority of the Tripoli Military Council headed by the Islamist Abdel Hakim Belhadj, despite his endorsement by the NTC. Mindful of the political power that flows from being armed and organized, and determined to leverage that into a greater share of power and resources for the regions and towns they claim to represent, the regional militias are in no rush to give up their control of prized political real estate. They've ignored the Dec. 20 deadline to leave Tripoli. And, when NTC-backed armed groups tangle with them, as happened with the New Year's Eve arrest of some of their men, they're willing to fight. (See photos of Libya's new regime.)

"Freedom is messy", former U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld famously offered as an explanation for the chaos that beset Baghdad in the weeks that followed the ouster of Saddam Hussein. The difference, of course, is that in Iraq, the U.S. military had established a monopoly of force -- Rumsfeld was simply clinging to the hope that it wouldn't have to be used to stabilize post-Saddam Iraq, and could be brought home pronto. But Libya, as we know, was a different kind of operation -- an aproach hailed by U.S. and NATO officials as a new model of 'intervention-lite' in which Western powers and Arab allies could help indigenous populations oust odious dictators with minimal commitment of blood and treasure. While months of air strikes and a few hundred Qatari special forces troops on the ground proved to be enough to shatter Colonel Gaddafi's regime, it could not -- nor did it intend to -- fill the resultant security void. NATO and its partners simply recognized the Benghazi-based NTC and its allied armed formations as the legitimate authority, supplied it with aid and resources, and hoped for the best.

The problem, of course, was that the Libyan rebels were never an army; they were patchwork of small local militia units, deserters from the regular army, and a smattering of former exiles with military experience. Moreover, the recognition extended by foreign powers to the NTC was far in advance of the extent to which Libyans, even many of those in the forefront of the battle to oust Gaddafi, were willing to accept its lead. The fact that the rebel leadership had not established an alternative power center meant that the collapse of Gaddafi also meant an effective collapse of state authority. The challenge now facing the rebels is to build a new state on the ruins of the old, and the first order of state-building business is establishing a monopoly on military force within its borders. The NTC is struggling to meet that challenge. (See photos of Libyan citizens celebrating the news of Muammar Gaddafi's demise.)

Residents of the capital complain of being menaced by the militiamen from out of town. The situation is particularly grim for residents of towns and neighborhoods thought to have supported Gaddafi, which are routinely subject to abuse by fighters . The NTC may talk of "national reconciliation," but it has precious little control over fighters whose actions imperil that objective. Instead, the NTC is forced to accommodate them.

Even as tribal and regional schisms intensify the sometimes violent contest among the different militia formations, the alienation of communities that had supported Gaddafi's regime also creates fertile soil for an insurgency. There are certainly plenty of men of fighting age out there (many of them armed) who fought for the old regime. In some Tripoli neighborhoods, pro-Gaddafi graffiti still reportedly goes up nightly. And British officials warned late last month that a number of top al-Qaeda leaders have left Pakistan for Libya, looking to take advantage of the security vacuum to set up shop.

The security challenges would be more manageable if a political consensus existed on the terms for building a new democratic state in Libya, but that too remains elusive. The NTC has been beset with challenges over its less than transparent composition and process of selection -- in December it even faced a tent-city protest established outside its headquarters to demand that it disclose its membership and make public its decisions. The Misrata and Zintan militias don't trust the Benghazi rebel leadership, and they shamelessly use their military muscle to demand a greater share of the political pie -- for example, refusing to hand over high-value detainees, such as Gaddafi's son Saif al-Islam, until their political demands have been met. Last month, an umbrella group claiming to represent 70% of militia fighters demanded that the NTC granted them 40% of its seats. (Read "Why the Libyans Have Fallen Out of Love with Qatar.)

The conflict among the militia is inherently political: It's the form in which rival tribal and regional groupings are staking their claim to power and resources in the post-Gaddafi order. And it's far from clear how the formal political system being put in place to regulate such competition will ease tensions. Yet, the criteria by which the NTC selects its own members has not been made public. And the draft law setting rules for elections to be held in June that the Council released for discussion last Monday suggests that the promise of elections may not resolve the emerging schisms. The draft evades the highly-charged issue of districting, meaning that there's no clarity on how many seats in a new legislature will be allocated to each town and region, a decision that will shape the distribution of oil wealth in the new system. The draft law also plans to exclude as candidates those who hold positions in the current interim government and its local and military councils, officials of the former regime and those deemed to be late adopters of the revolutionary cause.

Thus the downside of intervention lite: It's a lot easier to take down a regime, as the U.S. learned in Iraq, than it is to establish a new order. And yet in Libya, the forces trying to establish that new order are far weaker, in security terms, than the U.S. had been in Iraq, even if some of their leaders -- most notably NTC President Mustafa Abul Jalil -- enjoy the advantage of a legitimacy never accorded to the U.S. in Iraq. Given the mounting threat of chaos, Jalil's authority may not be enough. Just as those Bush Administration Kool Aid merchants who insisted that most of the U.S. forces sent into Iraq could be brought home almost immediately suffered a nasty rebuke from reality, so might the advocates of Libya-style intervention-lite find themselves forced to reconsider their prescriptions in the months ahead.

See TIME's Top 10 Everything of 2011.

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View this article on Time.com

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Elizabeth Banks admits surrogacy was a ?big leap? of faith

The ’30 Rock’ star became a first-time mother to nine-month-old son Felix – who she raises with husband Max Handelman – thanks to a gestational surrogate and the couple are delighted with the results, despite finding the initial choice whether or not to go through the process anything but easy. Elizabeth told Lucky magazine: “It’s [...]

Source: http://www.celebritymound.com/elizabeth-banks-admits-surrogacy-was-a-big-leap-of-faith/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=elizabeth-banks-admits-surrogacy-was-a-big-leap-of-faith

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Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Anglicans have new US home in Catholic church - Yahoo! News : International

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Source: http://go.newsxs.com/en/6507553/938/450/rss

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Sony slashes Tablet S by $100, undercuts the iPad at $399

Hopefully you haven?t picked up Sony?s stylish Tablet S Android slate before the holidays, because it?s now a cool $100 cheaper.

Starting today, the Tablet S now starts at $399 for the 16 gigabyte model ($499 for the 32GB), undercutting Apple?s iPad 2 models by a full Benjamin. Sony is also throwing in five free PlayStation Classic titles, 180 days of its Music Unlimited service, as well as credits and free downloads from its Video Unlimited store.

The price cut, while significant, may be too little too late for Sony?s tablets ? especially when it seems to have been purposefully positioned after the holiday buying season. Reviews have found the Tablet S to be well-designed, but otherwise a fairly standard Android tablet. In a few months, Sony?s Tablet S (and dual-screen Tablet P) will have to contend with Apple?s iPad 3, as well as newer Android tablets running Android 4.0 ?Ice Cream Sandwich.? (The Tablet S will be upgraded to Ice Cream Sandwich at some point, according to Sony.)

The S is Sony?s 9.4-inch direct iPad competitor, which features a slightly curved design that resembles a rolled back magazine, and supposedly makes it easier to hold with one hand. It?s powered by a dual-core Tegra 2 CPU and offers a five-megapixel rear camera.

Via Engadget

Previous Story: Redbox announces its most-rented movie of?2011

Tags: Android, Ice Cream Sandwich, Tablet P, Tablet S, tablets

Companies: Apple, Google, Sony

Devindra Hardawar is VentureBeat's National Editor and lead mobile writer. He has been writing about technology since 2004, worked in IT support for several years, and studied philosophy at Amherst College. He now lives in Brooklyn, New York. You can reach him at devindra@venturebeat.com (all story pitches should also be sent to tips@venturebeat.com), and on Twitter at @Devindra.

Source: http://feeds.venturebeat.com/~r/Venturebeat/~3/2-B4zoUFzn4/

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Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Magnitude 7.0 quake hits Japan

TOKYO (AP) ? A strong earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 7.0 struck under the sea several hundred miles south of Japan on Sunday, shaking buildings in the capital, but officials said there was no danger of a tsunami.

The quake struck near the uninhabited island of Torishima in the Pacific Ocean, 370 miles south of Tokyo, and its epicenter was about 230 miles below the sea, the Meterological Agency said.

The agency said there was no danger of a tsunami.

Buildings in the Tokyo area shook but there were no immediate reports of damage or injuries. Express trains in northern and central Japan were suspended temporarily for safety checks but later resumed.

No abnormalities were reported at power plants in the region, including the crippled nuclear power plant hit by the March earthquake and tsunami, public broadcaster NHK reported.

Northeastern Japan was devastated by a massive earthquake and tsunami on March 11 that left nearly 20,000 people dead or missing. Japan, which lies along the Pacific "Ring of Fire," is one of the world's most seismically active countries.

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