Tuesday, 5 November 2013

Make-A-Wish to turn San Francisco into Gotham for Batkid

Gotham City
San Francisco is going all Gotham City for a day to make a wish come true.
(Credit: Picky Wallpapers)
Miles as Batkid
Miles is ready to take on the role of Batkid.
(Credit: Make-A-Wish Greater Bay Area)
On November 15, a darkness will encroach like the fog upon San Francisco. The City by the Bay will shed its usual image and become Gotham City, the fabled metropolis of Batman lore. An evil force will descend, attempting to wreak havoc on its citizens. But the forces of villainy will not prevail. Never fear, Batkid will be there.
The role of Batkid is set to be taken by Miles, a 5-year-old boy battling leukemia. The Make-A-Wish Foundation of the Greater Bay Area is making hiswish to become a superhero come true.
Miles will begin the same way as many superheroes, with a training session. An adult Batman will take Miles under his wing and teach him the ropes of saving lives.
Armed with his powerful new skills, Batkid will rescue a woman from the Hyde Street cable cartracks, eat lunch at Burger Bar, and come to the aid of the chief of police in the startling case of a missing mascot.
After catching the supervillain Mr. P, Batkid will be honored by the mayor at City Hall with a key to the city. It will take the work of hundreds of volunteers to make this wish happen, and the citizens of San Francisco are being called upon to join the crew.
Make-A-Wish has released a schedule of times and places where people can join to make Miles' wish a reality. You can cheer him on as he rescues a damsel in distress in the morning, or even watch the kidnapping of Giants' mascot Lou Seal in Union Square in the early afternoon. The foundation is asking witnesses to cheer Batkid on and capture the events on film.
Miles gets his inspiration for his real-life battle from superheroes, but his parents were still surprised when he asked to become Batkid for his wish. Considering his bravery against cancer, he should knock the role out of the park.

Top five: Europe's perfect January signings

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5. Barcelona - Mats Hummels

With Carles Puyol in the twilight of his career, he'll need replacing and Mats Hummels has been linked with the role.

A €35m bid has been touted but nothing has been agreed.

With Bayern Munich throwing the gauntlet down last year in the Champions League, Barcelona need to strengthen to challenge in Europe's premier competition.

Hummels is the perfect place to start.


4. Arsenal - Diego Costa

Arsenal are still looking for a replacement for Robin van Persie who famously left for Manchester United in the summer of 2012.

Olivier Giroud is doing a fine job but he can't play every game for the Gunners and Nicklas Bendtner is in no shape to lead the line.

Arsenal have been linked with a mega money move for Costa and South American star will plug a gaping hole in Arsene Wenger's side.


3. Manchester City - Eliaquim Mangala

With Vincent Kompany again struggling for fitness, Javi Garcia has been asked to fill in at the back, but he is no replacement for the City skipper.

A commanding centre-back is required to fill in the gap when Kompany is absent and Eliaquim Mangala can be that man.

With a £42m release clause, the young Frenchman is unlikely to come cheap but the 22-year-old would represent a long term investment and may even succeed Kompany as captain in the future.

If City want their title charge to succeed, they need a defender.


2.Chelsea - Robert Lewandowski

the Bundesliga outfit are reportedly willing to accept a £7m fee from a Premier League club in January in order to make sure he doesn't sign for rivals Bayern Munich.

With three faltering strikers in Fernando Torres, Demba Ba and Samuel Eto'o, Jose Mourinho needs to sign a top class forward to compliment a top-class midfield.

Lewandowski will take some convincing to join Chelsea, but if any one can The Special One can.

The Polish international would represent a significant swoop and may give Chelsea the edge in the title race.


1. Manchester United - Marco Reus

Manchester United are crying out for a young, creative midfielder and David Moyes desperately needs a marquee signing to prove he can cut it at Old Trafford.

Not only would Reus prove to be an excellent acquisition, it would take the pressure of Moyes and Ed Woodward, who suffered several set-backs in a poorly executed summer transfer window.

First Google, now Microsoft, taps Texas for wind energy

Tech companies are showing their green side in purchase deals for wind energy.
(Credit: Daniel Terdiman/CNET)
Microsoft intends to source energy from a planned wind farm that will go up at a site about 70 miles northwest of Fort Worth, Texas, the company announced today.
The wind farm, some 55 wind turbines in all, is expected to become operational by 2015. The deal also marks Microsoft's first long-term power purchase agreement for wind energy.
"By purchasing wind, we will reduce the overall amount of emissions associated with operating Microsoft facilities in this region and hopefully spur additional investment in renewable energy in Texas," the company said in a release.
Microsoft said that the upcoming wind farm will be on the same electric grid that powers its existing data center in San Antonio.
Coincidentally or not, Microsoft's announcement follows Google's recent deal to source energy from a wind farm outside of Amarillo, Texas.

Why so slow on Office for iPad, Microsoft?

Office for iPhone
Don't get your hopes up: This is Office for the iPhone.
(Credit: Screenshot by Jason Parker/CNET)
Two years ago this month, a report on The Daily claimed that Microsoft had built a version of Office for the iPad and was demonstrating it privately. Ever since, folks have been on the hunt for the elusive Office for iPad.
A month ago, Microsoft execs basically confirmed that Office for iPad exists, but said that it wouldn't be released until after Microsoft delivers its own, touch-first set of core Office apps, which I've been calling "Gemini."
Along with other Microsoft watchers, I've been wondering whether Microsoft was simply sitting on Office for iPad, delaying it to give its own Surface tablets a leg up. A year ago, Microsoft's ARM-based Surface RT shipped with Office RT bundled for free, and this October, the ARM-based Surface 2 shipped with Office RT plus Outlook RT, bundled for free.
But now that Apple's cut to zero the price of iWork (not the original, mind you, but a less feature-rich version), what's Microsoft waiting for?
After digging a bit, I've heard from my sources that Microsoft's "delay" in releasing both its own "Gemini" apps, as well as touch-centric versions for the iPad and Android tablets may be about a new and evolving product strategy as much as (if not more than) about internal politics.
And no, it's not Microsoft execs telling me this to save face. I haven't been able to get the Softies to talk about Gemini or Office for iPad, in spite of repeated requests. 
Revisiting the 'Gemini' waves
As I've blogged before, Microsoft's original "Gemini" plan wasn't just about the development of touch-centric versions of Microsoft's core Office apps. Gemini also was about bringing Office to platforms beyond Windows.
Gemini, as originally conceived, consisted of a series of waves. I'd heard the Metro-Style/Windows Store versions of the core Office apps -- Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote -- were supposed to be part of Gemini Wave 1, according to the original plan. Microsoft execs, for their part, have said a touch-first/Metro-Style version of PowerPoint that was demonstrated publicly at Build this year was always supposed to debut in 2014.
One of my sources told me that the apps I've been calling Gemini are referred to internally as WinRT apps. This makes sense, given that these apps, unlike the current Word, Excel and PowerPoint that run on Microsoft's Surface devices, are not Win32/desktop apps. The WinRT apps are going to be Metro-Style/Windows Store apps. (OneNote already exists as both a desktop app and a Metro-Style app.)
Office apps weren't initially designed in a way that made them easy to port from Win32 to other operating sytems, as cross-platform support wasn't part of Microsoft's goal for Office from the get-go. They also weren't built for touch devices; they were built to work best in a desktop/mouse/keyboard world. Yes, Microsoft has developed a suite of Office Mobile apps that work on touch-first iPhone,Android and Windows Phone devices. But these Office Mobile apps don't share the same core as the current desktop Office suite.
To get the core Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote apps to work natively on touch platforms, Microsoft is basically having to start almost from scratch. The Office team is having to redo the UI to include an updated ribbon model. They've had to rethink what a touch-first (as opposed to afterthought "touch mode") interaction experience should be. These days, Office apps need to be able to work on devices with screens of all sizes, from phones, to laptops, to desktops, to servers, to Perceptive Pixel displays.
There are more new development requirements. These WinRT apps, along with their non-Windows siblings, also need to be designed to take advantage of the cloud, since the new default is to save files to the cloud. And they need to insure that document formatting isn't lost when moving between/across different Windows- and non-Windows environments.
The WinRT apps won't replace entirely the desktop versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote, I hear. Desktop versions will remain for the foreseeable future for those who want all the Office bells and whistles as well as the adjunct Office apps like Publisher, Visio, etc. (I do hear InfoPath is one of those apps that won't be carried forward, although Microsoft officials aren't saying this publicly.) But WinRT apps will become the focal point, and their newly designed UI and core will be the basis for Office on all other Windows and non-Windows platforms, including phones, tablets and the Web.
I do strongly believe there is a version of Office for iPad out there. I've talked to individuals who say they've seen it. But it sounds from my sources like Microsoft's thinking and development strategy may have evolved on the Office front since 2011 when company reps began shopping around and showing off Office on the iPad.
I'll be interested to see if the Metro-Style WinRT suite of apps that Microsoft is building, and which might debut by late spring/summer 2014, includes the Reader and Remix apps that Microsoft execs supposedly demonstrated at the company meeting in September, alongside the core Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote. 

Windows Phone gains momentum, overtakes iOS in Italy

(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)
Microsoft's Windows Phone is starting to gain popularity in Europe.
Windows Phone now accounts for 10 percent of smartphone sales in Europe's five biggest markets, research firm Kantar Worldpanel ComTech said Monday. Windows Phone has performed so well in Italy that it's now more popular in that country than Apple's iOS.
"Windows Phone, driven almost entirely by Nokia sales, continues to make rapid progress in Europe and has also shown signs of growth in emerging markets such as Latin America," Kantar said.
Despite the improvements, Windows Phone is still a long ways behind Android. According to Kantar, Android owns 71.9 percent of Europe's mobile market, up 4.2 percentage points compared with last year.
Looking beyond Europe, Kantar reported that Android now holds 81.1 percent of China's smartphone market.

Could this iPhone Air concept take flight?

Federico Ciccarese iPhone Air concept
Would an iPhone Air suck all the remaining air out of the room?
(Credit: Ciccarese Design)
In the world of industrial design for mobile hardware, there are few names that can compete with the likes of Apple and Jony Ive, but Italian designer Federico Ciccarese has no qualms mocking up his own visions of what he'd like to see the Cupertino cabal make next.
Ciccarese's iWatch concepts have probably been the most intriguing smartwatch designs I've seen anywhere (real or imagined), and his latest effort shows how Apple could unify its "Air" product lines in a way that could really take flight -- by adding an "iPhone Air" to the mix.

Ciccarese doesn't provide any details on what might be found inside an iPhone Air, but presumably it would be the lightest and thinnest yet.With light-as-air notebooks and now the iPad Air in the Apple family, there's reason to believe that fanbois would also line up for an iPhone Air, although Tim Cook and friends would certainly give the iPhone 5S and 5C a few more months to sell.
Check out the close-up below and let us know in the comments if you think he's onto something.
Federico Ciccarese iPhone Air concept

Fueling crisis: Delay in LNG import causes $2 billion loss annually

Pakistan is committed to the IP gas pipeline, said Petroleum Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi. PHOTO: FILE
ISLAMABAD: 
Saying that gas import is a solution to the energy crisis, Petroleum Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi has claimed that the country is bearing an annual loss of $2 billion because of delay in import of liquefied natural gas (LNG).
“No one is ready to take a decision on LNG import projects due to courts and media,” he said.
Speaking at a seminar held by the All Pakistan CNG Association here on Monday, Abbasi said the government had planned to import two billion cubic feet of gas per day (bcfd) in the next three years to tackle the energy shortages.
He assured CNG businesses that the government would offer incentives to them to promote the fuel in the country.
“We are focusing on LNG imports, Iran-Pakistan (IP) and Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India (TAPI) gas pipeline projects to overcome the energy crisis,” he said and declared Iranian gas was cheaper than LNG.
Pointing to a report prepared by an institute that termed the IP gas pipeline a cause of economic crisis for Pakistan, he said “loyalty of such people who filed the report is questionable.”
Gas import from Turkmenistan under the TAPI pipeline would be cheaper worth $1 billion than the Iranian gas, he said. However, “Pakistan is committed to the IP gas pipeline.”
Talking about the CNG crisis, he acknowledged that CNG benefitted the country and half of the vehicles were running on this fuel.
“The only solution to the woes of CNG industry is imported gas,” he declared, saying LNG import could address energy shortages in Pakistan and the government would unveil incentives for promoting the CNG business.
All Pakistan CNG Association Chairman Ghiyas Abdullah Paracha announced that they were ready to import LNG to resolve the CNG crisis. “CNG is an alternative to 3.5 billion litres of petrol and high speed diesel,” he said.
According to Paracha, the CNG price had gone up Rs4 per kg following a hike in power tariff. However, the Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority (Ogra) refused to allow recovery of the price increase from the CNG consumers.
He pointed out that the CNG industry had invested Rs450 billion so far, but it was facing financial crisis due to “wrong policies of the past government”. He stressed that uninterrupted gas supply should be ensured to the CNG sector through LNG imports.
“CNG stations may receive gas for the entire week with the help of 400 million cubic feet of LNG per day,” Paracha said, suggesting that LNG import should be exempted from taxes to make it feasible for the consumers