বৃহস্পতিবার, ৩১ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Investing in UK prosperity: skills, infrastructure and innovation can ...

The latest GDP figures confirm that the UK economy has essentially been flat-lining for the five years since the financial crisis began. The UK?s inability to achieve sustainable growth is rooted in longer-term problems arising from a failure to invest, notably in skills, infrastructure and innovation. Timothy Besley?and?John Van Reenen, co-chairs of the London School of Economics Growth Commission, which publishes its final report today, propose an integrated set of solutions.

The outlook for the UK economy looks bleak even for a British winter with output depressed for a longer period than even during the Great Depression. The institutions of UK economic policy-making seem unable to steer the economy out of nearly five years of stagnation and into a sustainable recovery.?While the specific issues vary country-by-country, this theme resonates across the advanced world with output below potential and unemployment generally high. The spectre of Japan?s two ?lost decades? following an asset crash casts a shadow over much policy debate.

The LSE Growth Commission, which we have co-chaired, is a collaborative effort drawing on academic, business and policy-making expertise. Its aim has been to develop an evidence-based approach to policy over the long term. And the perspective also takes politics seriously, focusing on the structures that are needed to support growth policy beyond the next budget cycle, the next spending review and the next parliament.

The UK?s economic story

It is sometimes remarked that the British are the only people who indulge in Schadenfreude about themselves, revelling in stories of national decline. This is perhaps the inevitable legacy of being the first industrial nation. Although the UK has enjoyed significant improvements in material wellbeing for well over two centuries, UK GDP per capita was in relative decline compared with other leading countries, such as France, Germany and the US, from around 1870.

At first, the UK?s relative decline reflected an almost inevitable catch-up of other countries whose institutions created the right kind of investment climate. But by the late 1970s, as the UK had been comprehensively overtaken: US GDP per capita was about 40% higher than the UK?s and the major continental European countries were 10-15% ahead. The subsequent three decades, in contrast, saw the UK?s relative performance improve substantially so that by the eve of the crisis in 2007, UK GDP per capita had overtaken both France and Germany and reduced significantly the gap with the US. Figure 1 shows trends in UK GDP per capita since 1950. After falling behind for most of the post-war period, the UK had a better performance compared with other leading countries after the 1970s.

Figure 1: GDP per capita 1950-2011 (1980=100)

Notes: GDP is US$, constant prices, constant PPPs, base year 2011. For each country the series is set to one hundred in 1980, so the level of the line in any year indicates the cumulative growth rate (for example, a value of 110 in 2001 indicates that the series has grown by 10% between 1980 and 2001). The steeper the slope of the line, the faster growth has been over that period.

Source: Conference Board data, LSE Growth Commission

A range of important policy changes underpinned these economic gains (see, for example, Corry, Valero and Van Reenen, 2011; Card, Blundell and Freeman, 2004; OECD, 2012). These include increases in product market competition through the withdrawal of industrial subsidies, a movement to effective competition in many privatised sectors with independent regulators, a strengthening of competition policy and our membership of the European Union?s internal market.

There were also increases in labour market flexibility through improving job search for those on benefits, reducing replacement rates, increasing in-work benefits and restricting union power. The UK was open to foreign business and global talent: restrictions on foreign direct investment were eased in the 1980s and restrictions on immigration relaxed in the late 1990s. And there was a sustained expansion of the higher education system: the share of working age adults with a university degree rose from 5% in 1980 to 14% in 1996 and 31% in 2011, a faster increase than in France, Germany or the US.

In some policy areas, the UK has also led the way in seeking innovative institutional solutions, such as independent regulators, for designing and implementing policy more effectively. This created a better balance between political discretion, technocratic input and predictable rules. Strategic choices, rules and high-level objectives are set by government while independent bodies make decisions based on the criteria laid down by politicians and are held to account by parliament. This has mitigated the problems of political indecision and unpredictability that are important impediments to investment and growth.

In spite of these policy successes, a number of long-term investment failures have not been tackled. The most important of these are a failure to invest in mid-level skills, a failure to build adequate infrastructure ? particularly in transport and energy ? and a failure to provide a supportive environment for private investment and innovation. These problems have persisted due to the absence of a stable policy framework backed by a cross-party consensus in these areas.

Policy reforms for growth

The reforms that we propose are aimed at tackling these problems. First, for human capital, where the UK suffers from a stronger link between parental income and pupil performance than other countries, we propose:

  • Improving teacher quality through expanding the intake of teachers and engaging in more rigorous selection. This is because ex ante evaluation of teacher quality is hard, but ex post evaluation easier.
  • Creating a ?flexible ecology? by which we mean more autonomous primary and secondary schools, greater parental choice and easier growth for successful schools and their sponsors (for example, universities or educational networks).
  • Linking targets, inspections and rewards more effectively to hold schools to account for the outcomes of disadvantaged pupils.

We propose developing a new institutional architecture to address the poor quality of our national infrastructure. This would dramatically reduce the policy instability that arises from frequent changes in political personnel and priorities, particularly in transport and energy:

  • An Infrastructure Strategy Board to provide independent expert advice to parliament to guide strategic priorities.
  • An Infrastructure Planning Commission to support the implementation of those priorities with more powers to share the gains from infrastructure investment by more generously compensating those who stand to lose from new developments.
  • An Infrastructure Bank to facilitate the provision of finance, to bring in expertise and to work with the private sector to share, reduce and manage risk.

We propose improving the provision of finance for private investment and innovation through:

  • Increasing competition in retail banking.
  • Having the proposed Business Bank make young and innovative firms its top priority.
  • Encouraging a long-term investment perspective through regulatory changes (for example, over equity voting rights) and tax reforms (for example, reducing the bias towards debt finance through an ?allowance for corporate equity?).

Prosperity is strengthened when everyone has the capacity to participate effectively in the economy and the benefits of growth are widely shared. We propose reforming the way we measure and monitor changes in material wellbeing and its distribution, including regularly publishing median household income alongside the latest data on GDP.

Our core proposals can provide the stable policy framework that has long been lacking in the UK, one that will encourage long-term investment. By ensuring that difficult and contentious long-term decisions are based on the best available independent expertise, they would help to break the damaging cycle of institutional churn, political procrastination and policy instability.

The principle that policy should be evidence-based is now widely accepted, but often more in word than deed. Many of the areas where there are potential benefits to growth are largely untested. The benefits to long-term growth from properly conducted policy experiments in some areas could be significant while the costs of experimentation are modest. We therefore recommend creating an independent National Growth Council to review relevant evidence and to recommend growth-enhancing policy reforms that could be subject to rigorous evaluation.

Whether the LSE Growth Commission is successful in influencing the direction of policy remains to be seen. But we believe it offers a template for the engagement of academics in these important policy debates. The engagement with policy will not end with the report ? the aim now is to try to build the consensus around a manifesto for growth. The challenge has never been greater given the pressures that mature economies are facing from international competition and a myriad of changes in the world.

Note: This article gives the views of the?author, and not the position of the British Politics and Policy blog, nor of the London School of Economics.?Please read our?comments policy?before posting.

About the authors

Timothy Besley is Professor of Economics and Political Science?at the London School of Economics.

John Van Reenen?is Director of the Centre for Economic Performance and a Professor at the London School of Economics

You may also be interested in the following posts (automatically generated):

  1. The UK?s sustained growth between 1997 and 2008 was fuelled by the importance of skills and new technology. Rather than just austerity, the government should focus on building human capital and innovation to support long-term growth.
  2. Private financing for public infrastructure is here to stay despite ?PFIs? being consigned to history
  3. Restoring growth and confidence through resource-efficient innovation
  4. How to get prosperity with growth (green growth that is)

Source: http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/archives/30368

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After Super Bowl, many fans will suffer football withdrawal symptoms

Jan. 30, 2013 ? On Sunday night, after the final play of the Super Bowl, many fans will start experiencing withdrawal symptoms from not being able to watch football.

Loyola University Medical Center Dr. Angelos Halaris describes the effects this has on the brain, and offers tips on how fans can cope.

Halaris explains that when a person engages in a pleasurable activity, such as watching a football game, a neurotransmitter (brain chemical) called dopamine is released in a part of the brain called the nucleus accumbens.

When the pleasurable activity ends, the person is left with a feeling of depravation. It's similar to what a smoker feels when deprived of a cigarette -- except there's no quick fix like a cigarette for the football fan.

"When the football season is over and there's no other game on the schedule for months, you're stuck, so you go through withdrawal," Halaris said.

For hardcore fans, the feeling can be similar to post-holiday blues, Halaris said.

Halaris offers these tips for fans who suddenly have to face months without football:

-- Don't go cold turkey. Watch football on YouTube, or on recordings, in gradually diminishing amounts.

-- Share your feelings of withdrawal and letdown with a friend or spouse.

-- While it can be unpleasant, football withdrawal is not serious enough to require antidepressants or other medications. And do not self medicate with drugs or alcohol.

-- Most important, buck up. "You're just going to have to basically tough it out until football starts up again," Halaris said.

Halaris is a professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and medical director of Adult Psychiatry at Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Loyola University Health System, via Newswise.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/living_well/~3/Ofi-7J9QyMU/130130184033.htm

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Apple, OS X 10.8.3'?n yeni bir derlemesini yay?nlad?

Ge?ti?imiz g?nlerde iOS kullan?c?lar?n?n merakla bekledi?i 6.1 g?ncellemesini yay?nlayan Apple, OS X aya??nda ise 10.8.3'?n geli?tirmelerine h?z kesmeden son s?rat devam ediyor.

Ge?ti?imiz hafta 10.8.3'?n 12D58 numaral? derlemesini yay?nlamas?n?n ?zerinden 1 hafta ge?meden Apple, 10.8.3'?n yeni bir derlemesini yay?nlad?. 12D61 numaral? derlemede Apple, geli?tiricilerden AirPlay, AirPort, Game Center, grafik s?r?c?leri ve Safari'ye odaklan?lmas?n? isterken; Wi-Fi performans?nda ?nemli bir iyile?tirme yap?ld???n? not d??m??.

Source: http://www.donanimhaber.com/Apple_OS_X_1083un_yeni_bir_derlemesini_yayinladi-39484.htm

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সোমবার, ২৮ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Haiti looks to tourism as way forward

Still struggling to recover from the devastating 2010 earthquake, Haiti's prime minister declared it 'open for business.' Rather than depending on international aid, Haiti hopes to attract tourism and investments.

By Angela Charlton,?Associated Press / January 26, 2013

Clothing for sale hangs from ropes at a market in the Dominican Republic where Haitians sell their goods. Haiti is trying to capitalize on tourism as part of its recovery from the 2010 earthquake.

Melanie Stetson Freeman/The Christian Science Monitor

Enlarge

Haiti's prime minister says his country is hoping to attract high-end tourists and multinational investors ? instead of constant aid handouts ? so it can get on its feet after the devastating 2010 earthquake.

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Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe said Saturday he recognizes that's an ambitious dream for a country where 52 percent of the people live below the poverty line and where infrastructure is desperately lacking.

Still, he pushed that concept ? and a bid to build up Haiti's tourism industry ? in meetings with CEOs this week at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

"Haiti is open for business," Lamothe said in an interview with The Associated Press.

Haiti still has huge humanitarian needs and little more than half of the $5.3 billion in aid promised after the earthquake has been disbursed.

Lamothe, however, said "we are not going to depend on handouts indefinitely."

Yet humanitarian groups are unlikely to go away, for they have long provided basic services to Haitians because the government can barely do so.

Lamothe argued that his visit to Davos ? a pricey Alpine resort reserved for business and political leaders this week ? was a worthwhile venture that would bear fruit for his Caribbean country, such as an investment pledge from Heineken and new projects with Coca-Cola.

He said he wants people to think of Haiti not just as a place to set up a charity but as a place to set up a business, and argued that corporations "can do equal or better than any large country for small Haiti."

The prime minister called building up the tourism industry "a very high priority," noting that a five-star hotel was already under construction and that new tourist police would provide security for visitors in a country with a turbulent past.

Yet efforts to bring in foreign investors and tourists could prove a tough sell. Haiti is expected to hold legislative elections this year, and the run-up could be fraught with political agitation and protests.

The capital, Port-au-Prince, is also crowded, dirty and clogged with traffic.

Haiti is still clearing the last rubble from the 2010 quake, which killed about 316,000 people. Another 350,000 Haitians are still living in impromptu camps. The reconstruction effort has been slow due to political paralysis and the level of devastation.

Trenton Daniel in Port-au-Prince contributed to this report.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/UcEtX24cHog/Haiti-looks-to-tourism-as-way-forward

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রবিবার, ২৭ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

House budget chief: automatic spending cuts "going to happen"

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Automatic spending cuts postponed at the start of the year will go into effect as scheduled in March but "no one" is talking about allowing a U.S. government shutdown, the Republican House of Representatives Budget Committee chairman said on Sunday.

The automatic spending cuts had been delayed by two months as part of the deal to avoid the "fiscal cliff" of tax hikes and deep spending reductions - known as sequestration - that had loomed at the beginning of this month.

"I think the sequester is going to happen," Representative Paul Ryan, chairman of the House budget panel and the party's 2012 vice presidential nominee, told the NBC program "Meet The Press."

House Republicans, most of whom had strongly opposed any tax rate increases in the "fiscal cliff" debate, have now started to shift their focus away the issue of tax increases and toward the spending cuts.

"We think these sequesters will happen because the Democrats have opposed our efforts to replace those cuts with others and they've offered no alternative," Ryan said.

In the debate over how to get America's fiscal house in order, Democrats have argued for a combination of tax increases and public spending cuts. Republicans have favored spending cuts without higher taxes.

Some Republicans have called for delaying the planned spending cuts in defense while increasing cuts in other areas of the federal government. The Pentagon said on Friday it had begun laying off most of its 46,000 temporary and term employees and cutting maintenance on ships and aircraft in an effort to slow spending before nearly $50 billion in new cuts are due to go into effect on March 1.

Following a showdown over raising the U.S. debt ceiling in 2011, President Barack Obama and Congress agreed that $1.2 trillion in automatic cuts in domestic and military spending over 10 years would begin at the start of this year unless lawmakers took action to rein in spending. That was postponed until the beginning of March in the "fiscal cliff" deal.

Ryan said the automatic cuts would take place as scheduled because Democrats have not offered alternatives to Republican proposals for spending cuts.

STOP-GAP SPENDING

March 27 is the expiration date for a stop-gap government funding measure. If Congress does not authorize a new spending bill by that date, government agencies and programs would have to start shutting down. In such a scenario, military activities could be curtailed and federal employees put on unpaid leave.

While Republicans in the past have threatened similar shutdowns to press for spending cuts, the tactic could backfire. Republican-led government shutdowns in 1995 and 1996 met with strong public disapproval.

Ryan played down a potential fight with Democrats over the stop-gap spending measure.

"No one is talking about shutting the government down," Ryan said.

The House last Wednesday passed a Republican plan to allow the government to keep borrowing money through mid-May, clearing it for quick enactment after the top Senate Democrat and White House endorsed it.

The measure includes a measure requiring the House and Senate to pass a formal budget resolution by April 15. Under the provision, if either chamber fails to meet this deadline, lawmakers' pay would be suspended until they pass a budget.

The Democratic-controlled Senate is expected to pass it unchanged before sending it to the president.

Ryan also signaled little appetite for a renewed debate with Democrats on further tax increases after the "fiscal cliff" deal that included higher tax rates on the wealthiest Americans.

"We already offered that back in the 'fiscal cliff' negotiations," he said. "The president got his additional revenues. So that's behind us."

He said if Democrats keep raising taxes, it would weaken the likelihood Congress could accomplish "decent tax reform."

(Reporting by Margaret Chadbourn; Editing by Will Dunham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-house-budget-chief-automatic-spending-cuts-going-185521841--business.html

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Villanova Upsets Syracuse 75-71 In Overtime (VIDEO)

PHILADELPHIA ? Ryan Arcidiacono hit the tying 3-pointer with 2.2 seconds left in regulation, and James Bell hit consecutive 3s in overtime to send Villanova to its second win over a Top 5 team this week, 75-71 over No. 3 Syracuse on Saturday.

The Wildcats defeated No. 5 Louisville 73-64 on Tuesday and became the first unranked team to beat two Top 5 teams in the same season since Florida State in 2011-12, according to STATS LLC.

Arcidiacono's 3-point attempt to tie with about 25 seconds left in regulation was off the mark. Syracuse's Michael Carter-Williams missed the front end of a 1-and-1 and JayVaughn Pinkston of the Wildcats grabbed the rebound.

Bell missed a 3 and Mouphtaou Yarou grabbed the offensive rebound. Syracuse decided not to foul, giving Yarou time to kick it out to Arcidiacono. He let go a leaner from just beyond the 3-point line to tie the game at 61, force overtime and send the crowd into a frenzy.

With the Orange (18-2, 6-1 Big East) down two points in overtime, Brandon Triche made one free throw with 46.5 seconds left.

Bell followed with a layup to for a 71-68 lead and the Wildcats (13-7, 4-3) held on from the free throw line.

Philly's college fans came down with a case of court-storming fever this week after Villanova's win over Louisville and La Salle's 54-53 win the next night over No. 9 Butler. At the Wells Fargo Center, home of the NHL's Flyers, the fans made it a Philly hoops hat trick, rushing the court in celebration of one of the biggest regular-season weeks in Villanova history.

Florida State beat No.3 North Carolina and No. 4 Duke in its big week.

Darrun Hilliard scored 25 points and Yarou had 14 points and 16 rebounds for the Wildcats while Bell scored 13 points.

Triche led the Orange with 23 points and Carter-Williams scored 17 points. The Orange had an eight-game winning streak and both of their losses came to Philadelphia teams. They lost to Temple on Dec. 22.

The Orange clearly could have use James Southerland in the tight game. Southerland, second on the team in scoring at 13.6 points and the team leader with 33 3-pointers, was declared out indefinitely because of an eligibility matter involving academics that has yet to be resolved.

Jerami Grant, who played well in Southerland's absence, fouled out with 5:22 left and the Orange up one. His fifth foul was against Hilliard. Hilliard missed both from the line, the Orange stormed down in transition off the defensive board, and Triche hit a 3 for a 57-53 lead.

The Orange just could never put them away. They missed six of eight shots in overtime and were only 5 of 14 overall from 3-point range.

Grant's 3-pointer early in the second half gave the Orange their first lead of the game, 33-32.

The Wildcats gave all the students standing behind each basket and dressed in white an early reason to think they would be rushing again. They opened the game on a 10-0 run and stretched the lead to 25-13. But the fun didn't last long.

Triche, a 50 percent shooter on the season, hit Syracuse's first 3-pointer of the half to slice the lead to four. He tipped in a basket at the buzzer to cut the lead to 32-26.

Syracuse missed 10 of its first 14 shots and finished at 29 percent for the half.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/26/villanova-syracuse-overtime-video-upset_n_2558410.html

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শনিবার, ২৬ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Activists: Twin car bombs kill 8 in Syria's Golan

BEIRUT (AP) ? Activists say twin car bomb blasts in the town of Quneitra in the Syrian-controlled part of the Golan Heights have killed eight people.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said two cars packed with explosives blew up near a military intelligence building on Thursday, killing eight. Most of the dead were members of the Syrian military, the Observatory said Friday. The group relies on reports from activists on the ground.

Syrian government has not confirmed the attacks.

Nobody claimed responsibility for the blasts.

Car bombs and suicide attacks targeting Syrian troops and government institutions have been the hallmark of Islamic militants fighting in Syria alongside rebels trying to topple President Bashar Assad.

At least 60,000 people have been killed in the nearly 2-year-long conflict.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/activists-twin-car-bombs-kill-8-syrias-golan-094828535.html

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SPICY IP: Part I: Is decompilation of software legal under the Indian ...

In discussions with a few of my colleagues in software development related to mobile applications for Android, Windows, and iOS platforms, a question arose whether studying an existing application (already developed and available for a device) and using the existing application as a study tool is legal under the Indian Copyright Act? ?At first glance the relevant provision (Section 52) under the Indian Copyright Act prescribes that studying software is legal. ? ?
However, there are many practical issues that come up while analyzing the statute: As developers know, one cannot study software without first decompiling it.? Decompilation, ?inter-operability?, are words that are not defined in the Act.? Decompilation may be equated to reverse engineering of a product ? whether software or hardware. This post analyzes Section 52 of the statute and in particular sub-sections 52(ab) and (ac), and find whether reverse engineering / decompilation of software applications is legal. ?The answer to the question is not exactly clear ? For Indian, maybe it is ?- given ?the way in which other jurisdictions have applied the similar statutes.? This post is divided into two parts.? Part I deals with the background information as relates to the development of decompilation / reverse engineering laws in US and Europe. Part II deals with the application of these laws to the Indian context.? Long post follows. Because European law on copyright protection of computer programs is based on the counterpart American experience, American jurisprudence is discussed first. REVERSE ENGINEERING IN US: Under American law, until recently, there were no explicit provisions about decompilation or reverse engineering. The basic copyright law, that has been amended from time-to-time just provides fair use exceptions and courts are left free to interpret fair use. In 2010, the Library of Congress with the US Register of Copyrights, provided six additional classes, that would not be considered infringement. See link.? Relevant to the issue of reverse engineering are the classes: ?..(2) Computer programs that enable wireless telephone handsets to execute software applications, where circumvention is accomplished for the sole purpose of enabling interoperability of such applications, when they have been lawfully obtained, with computer programs on the telephone handset.

...Emphasis added.

Case law sets out guidelines about reverse engineering.? And it was under the provisions of section 107 (fair use) that reverse engineering was addressed.?

The first case to be taken up by US Courts on the issue of reverse engineering was: Sega Enterprises Ltd. v. Accolade, Inc.:?In Sega, Sega manufactured a video game console under a brand name Genesis. ?The console contained a lock-out device (microchip) which looked for a particular code sequence in a game cartridge. This code sequence was provided only on Sega manufactured cartridges and no other.? Cartridges manufactured by other manufacturer did not have this code sequence, and could not function with the Sega console.?

Accolado, a game maker, also provided games on cartridges.? To be able to use a game cartridge from Accolado with the Genesis console, Accolade disassembled the Genesis console and found the chip containing the code reader, and found out the specific code sequence which Sega put in their cartridges.? This made it possible for Accolade to manufacture cartridges compatible with the Genesis console. ?During the process of reverse engineering Accolado made several copies of Sega?s micro code and thereby infringing Sega?s copyright. Sega suited for this infringement of their copyright to the specific microcode system and Accolado claimed fair use. ?The District court in the Northern District of California found for Sega, that an infringement had taken place and it ?could not be seen as a fair use because of the commercial nature of the reverse engineering.? ?The Court of Appeal found otherwise and reversed the district court. ?Decompilation was an infringement of Sega?s copyright but was found to be fair use. The court stated that if "disassembly provides the only means of access to those elements of the code not protected by copyright and the copier has a legitimate reason for seeking such access" is a fair use of the copyrighted work. The court stated that reverse engineering is a fair use if the purpose is to achieve compatibility between an original (i.e. not copied from another) computer program, and a device for using this program. The second case taken up by US Courts about reverse engineering also involved video game consoles, and was Atari Games corp. v. Nintendo of America, Inc.? In Atari, the consoles were manufactured by Nintendo.? However, Nintendo also had a patent on the security lock-out device.? Atari had tried to reverse engineer the microchip but failed.? However, Atari obtained the information related to the microchip from the US Copyright Office (Library of Congress), claiming they needed this information in a litigation with Nintendo. Atari thereafter created a program that emulated the Nintendo lock-out microchip, and this made it possible for Atari?s game cartridges to be used on Nintendo consoles.? The district court specifically ruled that Atari had, when creating the compatible program used more than necessary to get compatibility.

Nintendo filed for copyright and patent infringement and was successful at the district court ? Atari?s claim for fair use was not accepted.? The Court of Appeal for the Federal Circuit (CAFC) came to the same conclusion and ruled, ?reverse engineering was fair use only when the original product had been purchased legally.?? Getting the information from the US Copyright Office on false grounds destroyed any possibility for Atari to successfully claim fair use. ?However, before these questions were tested the case was settled.

This case showed that copying a program to understand and copy unprotected underlying ideas would have been probably been alright if Atari had achieved information legally.? In a third case, in Vault Corp. v. Quaid Software Ltd., the court decided that a Louisiana Software License Enforcement Act clause permitting a copyright holder to prohibit software decompilation or disassembly was preempted by the Copyright Act, and was therefore unenforceable. REVERSE ENGINEERING IN Europe: In EU copyright protection of computer programs is an outcome of computer program Directive. ?See link. The concept of reverse engineering was not unique to EU law. Before it, Art. 15 of the EC semiconductor chip protection Directive permitted reverse engineering of the layout of a semiconductor microchip. ?This semiconductor related directive was similar to that of the US Semiconductor Chip Act of 1980 where provisions relating to decompilation were explicitly provided. The computer programs Directive (hereafter Directive) contains two different provisions relating access to interface information. Article 5(3) deals with reverse analysis techniques other than decompilation, (also known as black box method). ?Article 6 deals with decompilation methods themselves. ? Black Box Method (or passive monitoring method):

An engineer starting to develop a product with a particular standard may start work from published documentation about the interface information with that standard. ?Usually because source code is not published, and available documentation is often incomplete or out dated, it is necessary to conduct reverse analysis to ascertain the interface information required to provide an interoperable product.

Generally, this information may be learned from "black box" reverse engineering ?techniques. These techniques merely involve monitoring the activity of an existing product and are passive in nature ? i.e. there is no active monitoring of do not involve translation of the analyzed program?s object code into the original source code. ?Examples of information that may be obtained through black box techniques are test runs, line traces, storage data dumps and screen rendering. Article 5(3) of the Directive provides 3. The person having a right to use a copy of a computer program shall be entitled, without the authorisation of the right?holder, to observe, study or test the functioning of the program in order to determine the ideas and principles which underlie any element of the program if he does so while performing any of the acts of loading, displaying, running, transmitting or storing the program which he is entitled to do.? Emphasis added. There are multiple aspects to this article in the Directive: First the person invoking the Article must have a right to use a copy of a computer program.? Hence this is the first hurdle that is passed by legitimate software licensees or owners (no pirates please). Most developers who intend to develop interoperable products would be licensed users of the original product for which the new product is being developed.? As an example, consider various tools created by different third party developers for Adobe? Photoshop? software.?? All such developers are usually licensed users for the Photoshop? software.? Hence it is permissible for them to analyze a copy legitimately. Second, Article 5(3) permits a developer to observe study or test the functioning of the program. ?This is what a developer does when conducting black box analysis. Third and most importantly, Article 5(3) permits the developer to determine the "ideas and principles" underlying any element of the computer program. This includes determining interface specifications which being the rules and methods by which a program interacts with other products, constitutes "ideas and principles". Fourth, Article 5(3) permits the developer to observe, study and test the functioning of the program while "loading, displaying, running, transmitting or storing" the program. Finally, Article 5(3) provides that for the analysis to be allowed, one must be "entitled to do" the underlying operation involved. ?Accordingly, this is tied to the first part in the article, and is a second tier protection against use of this article illegitimately to expand permitted use of a program. In some cases techniques permitted by Article 5(3) do not yield enough interface information required. It then becomes necessary to decompile a program ?i.e. active monitoring is required. ?Article 6 of computer program Directive provides the required freedom for decompilation. Article 6 of the Directive: 1. The authorisation of the rightholder shall not be required where reproduction of the code and translation of its form within the meaning of points (a) and (b) of Article 4(1) are indispensable to obtain the information necessary to achieve the interoperability of an independently created computer program with other programs, provided that the following conditions are met: (a) those acts are performed by the licensee or by another person having a right to use a copy of a program, or on their behalf by a person authorised to do so; (b) the information necessary to achieve interoperability has not previously been readily available to the persons referred to in point (a); and (c) those acts are confined to the parts of the original program which are necessary in order to achieve interoperability. 2. The provisions of paragraph 1 shall not permit the information obtained through its application: (a) to be used for goals other than to achieve the interoper?ability of the independently created computer program; (b) to be given to others, except when necessary for the inter?operability of the independently created computer program; or (c) to be used for the development, production or marketing of a computer program substantially similar in its expression, or for any other act which infringes copyright. From Article 6, it seems that decompilation of a program may not be done solely to research its underlying ideas unrelated to interoperability and then implement those ideas in a program that competes with the decompiled program. The word indispensable has been used in Article 6.? This word suggests that it is not a mere wish but rather is required (grammatical construct: Air is required for breathing).? In practice, because decompilation requires great sophistication, time and expense and will not be conducted lightly: accordingly if a developer decompiles software then the reasons for decompilation would play a great role, most probably in the developer?s favor.? This then becomes an economic standard for indispensability.? * Hence the usage of reports, and the initial pilot study to confirm data theft ? are economically justified and decompilation is indispensable. Under Article 6(a), the act of decompilation is done by a legitimate user.? Compare this provision to the Atari case discussed above ? where Atari lost on both grounds and fair use exception under US law was not available to it. Under Article 6(b), necessary interface information must not have been previously been readily available to the developer. ?This provision should be interpreted according to the the economic hardship theory ? i.e. economically justified and indispensable. Under Article 6(c), decompilation must be confined to the parts of a program that are necessary to ensure interoperability. ??This seems to be a grey area: it is not entirely clear how only a specific part of a program can be decompiled, leaving the rest untouched.? In software, either a program is decompiled or not ? there are no mid-level choices available. In addition, software code is not written as a text book that has a page number to start and end with.? Software is written in parts ? where one part may invoke another and vice-versa.? Article 6, paragraph 2 limits the scope of Article 6 ? and accordingly limits what may be done with the decompilation.? The limitation is with regard to interoperability : information gained through decompilation may be used only to achieve the interoperability of the independently created program. Article 5(3) therefore, is very different from Article 6, and has no such restriction.

Article 6, paragraph (2)(c) provides that information obtained through decompilation may not be used for the development production or marketing of a computer program substantially similar in its expression, or for any other act which infringes copyright. * Here it may be argued that an employee is restricted from decompiling a program created for his employer?s purpose, AND cannot use a decompiled program to create a competing program as that of his employer.

Source: http://spicyipindia.blogspot.com/2013/01/part-i-is-decompilation-of-software.html

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Don't 'shoehorn' Britain into 'United States of Europe' says PM Cameron

The EU should be open, free, flexible and the UK will be part of it, says the British leader at this week's Davos forum. But?'I don't want a country called Europe,' he adds, as Tory back-benchers push the prime minister to call for a controversial referendum on British participation in the 27-nation union.

By Angela Charlton,?Associated Press / January 24, 2013

In this photo, German chancellor Angela Merkel talks with British Prime Minister David Cameron, during the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Thursday. Cameron wants nothing to do with a United States of Europe, an idea that's gaining currency as the countries that use the euro struggle to fix their debt crisis.

Jesco Denzel/Bundespresseamt/AP

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British Prime Minister David Cameron wants nothing to do with a United States of Europe, an idea that's gaining currency as the countries that use the euro struggle to fix their debt crisis.

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But what if it's a choice between a single country called Europe or a splintered continent?

Mr. Cameron is determined to avoid that scary scenario.

A day after he shook up Europe's political landscape by offering British citizens the prospect of a vote on whether to stay in the 27-country European Union, Cameron insisted Thursday he wants Britain to remain a part of the bloc but that more unification would not be the answer.

"To try and shoehorn countries into a centralized political union would be a great mistake, and Britain would not be a part of it," he said at the World Economic Forum in the Swiss resort of Davos.

In an interview with The Associated Press afterward, Cameron insisted said he wanted to make Europe "more open, competitive, flexible ? so that we can secure Britain's place within it." "I think it is eminently achievable," he said.

?Many in the EU, particularly among the 17 countries that use the euro, are on a drive for closer political unification, and that's raised particular concerns recently in Britain, which has often viewed the bloc through a business prism.

"If you mean that Europe has to be a political union, a country called Europe, then I disagree," said Cameron.

On Wednesday, Cameron put an end to months of speculation by revealing he intends to hold a referendum on Britain's membership of the EU, if he wins the next general election, expected in 2015. But many politicians in Europe think closer political ties are exactly what is needed to maintain continental unity in the face of a debt crisis that's laid bare fundamental flaws in the euro.

?The European Union, which last year won the Nobel Peace Prize, effectively started amid the rubble of World War II ? the motivation to avoid future wars. Some even think Europe's end-game has to be to resemble the United States of America.Countries would be so tied together in their economic and social fabric to make war inconceivable.

?After decades of bit-by-bit integration, the links are now so tight that many European leaders refuse to publicly acknowledge that a British exit is a possibility. Several accuse Cameron of putting the bloc at risk to deal with domestic political problems. His Conservative Party has a hardcore element that is highly skeptical of the EU, while an anti-EU party, the UK Independence Party, is gaining ground in the polls most notably at the expense of Cameron's Conservatives.

?Italian Premier Mario Monti said Britain should set aside ideology and look at its membership in the EU with "pragmatism, which should be a British attitude of mind."

?He argued that Britons, for all their hostility to EU regulations and bureaucracy, benefit so much from the single market that they would be scared to leave ? a ready access to markets and over half a billion people would be a gamble too far.

Most of British business appears to want to stay in the EU but out of the integrationist drive ? but the question is whether that can be achieved.

?"The vast majority of businesses across the UK want to stay in the single market, but on the basis of a revised relationship ... that promotes trade and competitiveness," said John Langworth of the British Chambers of Commerce.

?He was among 56 British business leaders who issued a public letter to the Times of London on Thursday complaining about demands from Brussels and calling for "a more competitive, flexible and prosperous European Union that would bring more jobs and growth for all member states."

Growth is certainly something that Europe is craving. The eurozone as a whole is in recession and figures Friday are expected to show the British economy, the EU's third-largest, halfway back to its third recession in four years.

Open Europe, a London-based think tank, says that 48 percent of the UK's goods and services exports are to the EU. The single market keeps down the cost for Britons of doing business with the EU as well as the price of goods imported from the EU for purchase by ordinary British citizens. Membership gives British citizens the right to live and work anywhere in the EU ? unlike citizens of other countries, who must seek complicated and often hard-to-get residency and work permits.

Mark Gray, a spokesman for the EU, said the bloc affects almost all aspects of the lives of Britons, from the quality of the water they swim in at beaches or in pools, to the quality of the orange juice they have for breakfast and the conditions in the offices where they work.

But many Britons ? like citizens elsewhere in the EU ? see the union as a faceless beast imposing rules and spending on needless things and threatening sovereignty.

?Britain's relations with Europe have been strained since the end of World War II. It did not join the European Steel and Coal Community, the forebear of what would later become the European Union, in 1951. Britain later realized there were benefits accruing from joining up with some of its wartime friends and foes, and joined the evolving European bloc in the 1970s. It has stood against many efforts to forge closer ties, notably the creation of the euro, but was at the forefront of the drive to create a single market.?

?Don Melvin in Brussels and Martin Benedyk in Davos, Switzerland, contributed to this report.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/e4AxuzyHujo/Don-t-shoehorn-Britain-into-United-States-of-Europe-says-PM-Cameron

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Cisco's Flirtation With Consumers Is Over, as Belkin Buys Linksys ...

cisco_linksys_gearLooking back, it?s hard to figure out what networking giant Cisco Systems ever wanted with consumer goods, anyway. But now the distraction of trying to sell stuff to consumers and not companies is gone.

Word just hit the wires that Belkin, the company behind numerous consumer accessory products like Web cams, power strips, cables, phone cases and such, just announced that it will buy Cisco?s consumer home networking unit, Linksys. Financial terms aren?t being disclosed, at least not by Belkin as yet, though the price may show up in a Cisco filing sooner or later. However, the company, which has an existing consumer networking business, says the deal will give it a 30 percent foothold in the retail home and small-business networking market, where competitors who come to mind include the likes of Netgear, Apple and D-Link.

The sale essentially completes the process that Cisco started in 2011 when it shut down Pure Digital, a high-profile consumer brand it acquired that was best known as the maker of the popular line of Flip Digital video cameras. Another consumer product to get the ax at Cisco in recent months: The Umi home video conferencing product.

Here?s Belkin?s announcement:

BELKIN ANNOUNCES INTENT TO ACQUIRE CISCO?S HOME NETWORKING BUSINESS UNIT

Acquisition to Bolster Belkin?s Position in the Home Networking Market, Building on the Strong Linksys Brand and Innovative Suite of Product and Software Solutions

Playa Vista, Calif. ? January 24, 2013 ? Belkin, a private company based in Playa Vista, Calif., with operations and sales in more than 100 countries, today announced that it has entered into an agreement to acquire Cisco?s Home Networking Business Unit, including its proven products, technology, well-known Linksys brand and talented employees. With global operations, Linksys? main office is located in Irvine, Calif.

?We?re very excited about this announcement,? said Chet Pipkin, CEO of Belkin. ?Our two organizations share many core beliefs ? we have similar beginnings and share a passion for meeting the real needs of our customers through the strengths of an entrepreneurial culture. Belkin?s ultimate goal is to be the global leader in the connected home and wireless networking space and this acquisition is an important step to realizing that vision.?

Belkin intends to maintain the Linksys brand and will offer support for Linksys products as part of this transaction. All valid warranties will be honored by Belkin for current and future Linksys products. After the transaction closes, Belkin will account for approximately 30 percent of the U.S. retail home and small business networking market.

?Linksys pioneered wireless connectivity capability around the globe, and has a strong brand renowned for its premium market position, the strength of its installed base and its proven dependability. Linksys users benefit from peace of mind in their home networking environment. At Belkin we have developed great insight into consumer needs, and the experiences, solutions and products we bring to the market, including our WeMo home automation platform, will help us to grow Linksys? market presence,? Pipkin said.

?Linksys is one of the leading home networking providers and has created a market-leading suite of products and services to meet customer needs,? said Hilton Romanski, VP Corporate Business Development, Cisco. ?While part of Cisco, Linksys has continuously innovated, while strengthening the brand and expanding its market leadership. As part of Cisco?s commitment to service providers, we are pleased about this strategic relationship with Belkin to build on Linksys? position of strength.?

?With complementary innovation and engineering strategies in the combined organization, Belkin will be able to create new opportunities for consumers, distribution partners and resellers, and will have the strongest retail presence in the U.S. networking marketplace. Belkin also will have access to a large installed base that will be able to upgrade their networking environment to take advantage of new technologies in the smartphone, tablet, notebook and home automation arenas,? Pipkin said. ?Additionally, Linksys will enhance Belkin?s capabilities to meet the needs of the service provider space and small business users.?

Belkin and Cisco intend to develop a strategic relationship on a variety of initiatives including retail distribution, strategic marketing and products for the service provider market. Having access to Cisco?s specialized software solutions across all of Belkin?s product lines will bring a more seamless user experience for customers. Merging the innovation capabilities of Linksys and Belkin provides a powerful platform from which to develop the next generation of home networking technology.

?At Belkin, we?re committed to enabling great experiences for users of today?s mobile and connected home technologies,? Pipkin said. ?The acquisition of Linksys and the combination of Belkin?s and Linksys? expertise and innovation will position us to meet the demands of today?s rapidly evolving advances in technology. We look forward to honoring the heritage of the Linksys brand and investing in the continuing evolution of its product portfolio. Together, we will provide a powerful, simple to use, and reliable wireless and networking platform for the markets we serve.?

Specific financial terms of the transaction are undisclosed. The transaction is subject to various standard closing conditions and is expected to close in March 2013.

Source: http://allthingsd.com/20130124/ciscos-flirtation-with-consumers-is-over-as-belkin-buys-linksys-unit/

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Microsoft's 2Q earnings dip despite Windows 8 lift

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ? Microsoft's latest quarterly earnings slipped, even as the world's largest software maker showed modest progress adjusting to a shift away from the personal computers that have been its financial foundation for decades.

The results announced Thursday are the first to include Windows 8. The program is a dramatic overhaul of the Microsoft Corp. operating system that powers most PCs. Windows 8 came out Oct. 26 with slightly more than two months left in Microsoft's fiscal second quarter.

Microsoft is counting on Windows 8 to help the company extend its franchise into tablet computers while still reaping revenue from a new breed of PCs. The redesigned software displays applications in a mosaic of interactive tiles instead of a staid menu. It can be controlled by touching on a display screen, as well as the traditional method of using a keyboard and a mouse.

Although sales of Windows 8 haven't been as impressive as investors hoped, revenue in Microsoft's Windows division climbed 24 percent from the previous year. That includes sales that had to be deferred from earlier quarters because the purchases were made before Windows 8's release.

When Windows 8 finally hit the market, Microsoft also unveiled its own tablet computer, Surface, as a showcase for the operating system. Microsoft didn't disclose Thursday how many Surface devices were sold in the October-December period.

"I don't think they want to provide that because it won't be impressive," technology analyst Patrick Moorhead said.

Analysts have estimated Microsoft sold 750,000 to 1 million of the Surface units during the quarter, far below the nearly 23 million iPads that Apple said it shipped during the same period.

Microsoft booked its Surface sales in the Window division, accounting for some of the gains from the previous year. The Redmond, Wash., company is trying to get the Surface into more hands by releasing the device in 14 more countries and coming out with a more sophisticated version that can handle all Microsoft programs. The new model, called Surface Pro, will debut Feb. 9. The one already out runs a streamlined version of Windows 8 called RT.

BGC Financial analyst Colin Gillis said he still has faith in Microsoft, saying the company "has multiple revenue streams that are still very nice businesses."

"I kind of like the Windows segment," he said, adding that the 24 percent growth was "a little stronger than expected."

But another Microsoft division that includes another big moneymaker ? the company's Office suite of software ? didn't fare as well. Revenue in the Office division declined 10 percent, a shortfall that may have spooked some investors. Analyst Josh Olson of Edward Jones believes many of Microsoft's corporate customers may have held off on buying Office because a new version of that program is scheduled to come out early this year.

Microsoft earned $6.4 billion, or 76 cents per share, during the final three months of the year. That was down 4 percent from $6.6 billion, or 78 cents per share, a year earlier.

The company's total revenue rose 3 percent from last year to $21.5 billion.

The earnings were a penny above the average estimate of analysts surveyed by FactSet, while the total revenue fell below analysts' projections by about $100 million.

Microsoft's stock shed 43 cents, or 1.6 percent, to $27.20 in Thursday's extended trading, after the release of results. The stock has remained stuck below its price before Windows 8 and Surface came out, signaling that investors aren't pleased with the products' performance so far.

"This is going to be a 'show-me' year for Microsoft, and there was nothing to really shout about in this quarter," Olson said. "So what we are seeing is sort of a shrug from investors."

Besides debuting Windows and Surface during the most recent quarter, Microsoft also released a new version of its operating phone for smartphones.

Moorhead called the Surface and the new software line-up the "keys to Microsoft's future."

If Microsoft's revamped software for tablets and smartphones catches on, it would help the company overcome a downturn in PC sales, which has reduced licensing revenue during the past year. Worldwide PC shipments fell 3.5 percent last year, marking the industry's first annual decline since 2001, according to the research firm Gartner Inc.

Despite Microsoft's high hopes and an elaborate marketing campaign, Windows 8 appears to have gotten off to a tepid start. Technology reviews have panned the software as too confusing and cumbersome to navigate, and none of the hundreds of devices running on Windows 8 emerged as a breakout hit during the holiday season.

A big chunk of Microsoft's Windows revenue in the holiday-season quarter came from sales that were made before the new operating system's release. Excluding revenue that had been deferred from previous quarter, Windows revenue increased 11 percent from the same period in 2011.

The Surface also hasn't been able to mount a significant challenge to Apple Inc.'s trend-setting iPad, Amazon.com Inc.'s Kindle Fire, Samsung Electronics Co.'s Galaxy or Google Inc.'s Nexus devices.

Reiterating information released earlier this month, Microsoft said it has licensed more than 60 million copies of Windows 8. That puts the redesigned system on the same early sales trajectory as its predecessor, Windows 7, after it came out in 2009. It's unclear how many of the devices that have licensed Windows 8 are still sitting on store shelves.

Gillis said Windows 8 is Microsoft's attempt to solve a disruption in the market that's taking place because of tablets.

"It's too early to declare it a success or a failure," he said.

"The sentiment on the PC market is just too negative," Gillis added, referring to the death knells that have been ringing through much of the technology industry during the past year. "Yes, there are disruptions going on but we still sell close to a million PCs a day."

___

AP Technology Writer Barbara Ortutay in New York contributed to this story.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/microsofts-2q-earnings-dip-despite-windows-8-lift-212026397--finance.html

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Cockroaches and Ladybugs: Catalonia: two languages... no problem!


Right now everyone argues about if we have a language problem in Catalonia. So occasionally we get to discuss whether or not we need special cinema laws to protect Catalan language, whether Catalan should be a requirement to work in universities or whether or not should have language immersion at schools.

But make no mistake; we do not have a language problem. If you go down the street, if you step on our schools, visiting classrooms, you quickly realize that if there is any conflict is not exactly the language. We drag a political problem and (nowadays) a problem with Spanish laws.

Immersion is the backbone of a school system that works and it is also the backbone of a society that if something has been characterized so far is integration. But immersion has become a problem when politicians have sought to take center stage.

Again, make no mistake, the immersion is nothing. It is a sign of normality. Spain does Spanish language immersion in schools. France teaches French in public schools. They do the same as we do. The point is that they needn?t to say ?immersion? because they have a national state behind. We do not. Not only we haven?t a state behind? We have one against us.

Today I would like to recommend you a very interesting article from one of the best Catalan University psycologists.?

Bilingualism is not a problem, is an advantage; plurinationalism and multilingualism are two key features of our modern society that help us to be more tolerant than other monolingual societies.



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"Catalonia?s education system is based on bilingual education. One of its objectives is that all pupils get a good knowledge of the two official languages, Catalan and Spanish. Wallace Lambert points out that, when a society wants bilingual people, the socially weakest language needs to prevail in school education. According to his principle, public schools in Catalonia organise mainly two programmes: a programme to maintain the family language aimed at the Catalan-speaking students, and a programme of starting linguistic immersion aimed at Spanish-speaking children. Both are supported by very positive social attitudes towards the Catalan language. However, the law guarantees families the choice to decide their children?s school language during the entire initiation to reading and writing learning (8 years old). In practical terms, there are some 10 Spanish-speaking families as an average number that decide to school their children in Spanish. In the following years, the Spanish language is a school subject, both for the maintenance programmes and linguistic immersion programmes. Nevertheless, especially in the linguistic immersion programme, Spanish has an important presence in the student's informal relations as well as in the relations students keep to solve academic problems in Catalan.?

Since 1990, there has been a systematic evaluation of bilingual education results in Catalonia. Regarding linguistic knowledge, there are no differences between Catalan-speaking and Spanish-speaking students in their knowledge of the Spanish language. In addition, there are no differences regarding the knowledge of the Spanish language between students from Catalan schools and those from the rest of Spain. The differences exist in relation to the knowledge of the Catalan language. At the end of obligatory schooling, as it happens in the rest of linguistic immersion programmes around the world, the Spanish-speaking students have less Catalan oral skills than Catalan-speaking students. However, there are no differences regarding the writing language skills. In fact, the Spanish-speaking students have Catalan writing skills on a level with those of Catalan-speaking students along the obligatory secondary education, after nine or more years of schooling (pre-school education and primary education). The 2009 PISA evaluation on reading comprehension placed Catalonia seven points above the OCDE average and 12 points above the Spanish average. Regarding the acquisition of knowledge and skill development of other areas such as mathematics, natural sciences or social sciences, there are no differences between the Catalan-speaking students and Spanish-speaking students.?

Since 2000, Catalonia has incorporated thousands and thousands of foreign students to the education system who already represent around 14% of the population. Certainly, these pupils with very different languages are schooled in a programme of linguistic submersion because, among other reasons, the education system is not designed to develop their languages. Therefore, already since the beginning of this century, there is an important movement of educational innovation around these new students under the name of ?new linguistic immersion?. It aims to eliminate the negative effects of obligatory schooling in a programme that does not contemplate the development of their own language. It is obvious that, among others, one of the characteristics of this movement consists of recognising all the languages, and their educative treatment independently of their knowledge by part of the teachers."

Dr. Jose Ignacio Vila Professor of Education Psychology at the Universitat de Girona (UdG) Published in Recerca i Acci?(Fundaci? Catalana per a la Recerca i la Innovaci?)?
http://www.recercaenaccio.cat/

Source: http://cockroachesladybugs.blogspot.com/2013/01/catalonia-two-languages-no-problem.html

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Video: Obama to Sign Off on Keystone XL Pipeline?

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/50568047/

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Backed By Y Combinator And Google Ventures, CircuitHub Aims To Be A One-Stop Shop For Electrical Part Info

419012_317697981624973_1401993484_nSay you're building a gadget. You'll probably need several widgets, gizmos and electronic thingymabobs. CircuitHub is now here to help. The startup launched today and is attempting to be the world's first free online, collaborative parts library. Best of all, it works seamlessly with popular design programs.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/lBIiyTrNwe0/

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Korean Couples App Between Raises $3 Million To Expand Into Japan And Other Markets

English_PhotoAlbumThere’s no shortage of apps out there to help couples communicate with each other, share messages and photos and whatever else. Here in the U.S., you’ve probably heard of Y Combinator-backed Pair, as well as Avocado and SimplyUs and maybe a few others. But one app you might not have heard of, Between, just closed a $3 million Series B round of funding, as it seeks to expand outside of its home market in Korea. Between is huge in Asia — and growing. The app has had a total of 2.35 million downloads, and touts more than 900,000 active users per month. Couples are also pretty active on the app, sending more than 360 million messages and sharing 4 million photos per month. About 90 percent of its users are in Asia, with 70 percent in its home market of Korea. The company estimates that one in five young couples use the app there. But it also sees a big opportunity in Japan, where about 10 percent of its users live. The company plans to use the funding to set up a Tokyo office. “This year, we are especially serious about the Japan market. Japan’s app market is big, and is growing fast (with rising smartphone penetration),” Jaeuk Park wrote in an email. He points to the rapidly expanding messaging market in Asia and high user retention rate in Japan, as reasons to be bullish on that market. The funding comes from Stonebridge Ventures, KTB Network, Capstone Partners, and SoftBank Ventures Korea. And it comes on top of a $1 million funding round that the company raised in November of 2011. In addition to the funding, Between has been working on increasing monetization on the app. It’s got paid premium features, like stickers, which take advantage of in-app purchasing. And around the holidays, it offered gift suggestions that users could purchase for their mates. You could probably see that model extended to other holidays and to user birthdays, anniversaries, and other events.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/lCRf7Q3msRY/

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As Roe v. Wade Turns 40, Foes Focus on State Capitols

President Obama?s reelection bid emphasized abortion rights more than any other presidential campaign in history, warning women that their reproductive freedom was at stake on Nov. 6.

But while Obama picked Supreme Court justices believed to support abortion rights and backed federal funding for Planned Parenthood, state legislatures quietly passed a record-setting number of restrictions over the past two years, according to the Guttmacher Institute.

As the Supreme Court?s Roe v. Wade decision turns 40 years old on Tuesday, the debate over abortion rages on in state capitals from Richmond to Phoenix.

?The front lines of defending those rights are really in the state capitols, while there?s a bit of a stalemate on reproductive issues at the federal level,? said Anna Scholl, director of ProgressVA, which opposed Virginia?s widely publicized new law requiring women seeking abortions to undergo ultrasound exams. ?The states are where the decisions that affect women, the soccer moms in the suburbs, are really happening.?

The burst of antiabortion legislation followed the 2010 election, when Republicans picked up roughly 675 legislative seats, the biggest gain by either party in decades. The GOP controlled 26 state legislatures, and in most of those states, the governor?s mansions, too. ?They really upped their numbers and hit the ground running,? said Democratic pollster Celinda Lake.

The Republican Party held onto its majority in most states in the 2012 election, offering abortion opponents no reason to slow down. But the success of President Obama and his allies in portraying Republican challenger Mitt Romney as an extremist who would ?turn back the clock? for women serves as a cautionary tale to the 36 governors who will face reelection in 2014.

?Voters in these states are concerned about schools and jobs, and a lot of governors will be walking a tightrope trying to moderate their image,? Lake said. ?They may decide to back off and not take the risk.?

That seems to be the posture of the Republican leadership in the Virginia Assembly, which faced a huge outcry over the ultrasound bill and new rules regulating abortion clinics last year. While a subcommittee last week declined to take up repeals of those laws, Family Foundation President Victoria Cobb said ?there will be nothing else.? ?

?We certainly would have liked to see the Legislature move forward in advancing the cause of life, but there?s no interest,? Cobb said. ?The sentiment is that we need to focus on other issues like education and transportation.?

Even if the Republican leadership sidesteps women?s health issues, there?s little doubt that abortion will shape the governor?s race in 2013, which will feature Democrat Terry McAuliffe, a former chairman of the national party, against Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, a leading abortion foe. Democrats are also expected to bring up the issue in Pennsylvania, where Republican Gov. Tom Corbett defended his support of an ultrasound bill saying, ?You just have to close your eyes.?

While the antiabortion bills passed in Virginia grabbed the biggest headlines in 2012, 18 states restricted access to abortion services last year, according to the Guttmacher Institute. Arizona led the charge with seven antiabortion bills, while Kansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, South Dakota, and Wisconsin each enacted at least three measures.

In a sign that NARAL Pro-Choice America may be taking a more aggressive stance, the national abortion-rights group recently announced that its new president will be Ilyse Hogue, a former leader of MoveOn.org, a liberal advocacy group known for in-your-face tactics. ?This is a critical moment to engage a new general of young people in the conversation about what choice means in a modern age,? Hogue said in a written statement.

Among adults younger than 30, only 44 percent know that Roe v. Wade legalized most abortions, a new Pew Research Center poll found. Mariah Humphrey, a 20-year-old student at George Mason University, said she didn?t know the name of the court decision ?but I know women had to fight for that right.?

She and two other friends were walking through campus Friday morning on their way to a party celebrating President Obama?s inauguration. ?I don?t have a personal connection to the issue of abortion, but I knew Mitt Romney was threatening that right and that was discomfiting that it might be taken away," she said. "It was a little scary.?

In the Pew poll, 63 percent said they do not want the Supreme Court to overturn Roe v. Wade, a level of support unchanged from surveys conducted 10 and 20 years ago. But the percentage of people who said abortion ?is not that important compared to other issues? is on the rise.

?It?s a challenge and an opportunity for women?s health advocates because a lot of women aren?t aware of how those rights can be chipped away until they are nonexistent,? Scholl said. ?We are looking to get back on offense because we?ve been really pushed back on our heels.?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/roe-v-wade-turns-40-foes-focus-state-060005470--politics.html

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Small businesses face tax certainty, political uncertainty

21 hrs.

Jeff Schneider recently had his busiest November and December ever, as the tax preparer?s small business clients clamored for information about how the fiscal cliff negotiations could impact their taxes.

?It was unbelievable,? said Schneider, who runs SFS Tax and Accounting in Port St. Lucie, Fla.

The last-minute deal to avert the fiscal cliff left clients at least knowing what their tax bills would look like.

But Schneider said he?s still hearing some gripes amid the continued political bickering over the debt ceiling, spending cuts and other issues. That?s despite the fact that some also are talking about expanding their businesses or opening new locations.

??When you talk to people they tell you face to face that the economy stinks, but they?re talking more politically than economically,? said Schneider, whose clients include doctors, dentists, a pawn shop and even an oxygen bar.

It?s no secret that Americans are fed up with all the political squabbles over taxes, spending and the federal debt load. For some small-business owners, the frustration is also tinged with fear: They?re worried that Congress?s inability to find common ground will hurt the economic recovery, and cut into their business.

Bill Dunkelberg, chief economist with the National Federation of Independent Businesses, said one in four businesses told the small business trade group in December that it was a bad time to expand because of political uncertainty. That?s despite other signs that the economy is slowly improving in areas like housing and employment.

He said many small businesses also reported that their top problems involved issues like uncertainty about government policy and health care costs.

?The things you think businesses should worry about were way down on the list,? he said. ?Government dominates the top part of the list.?

Taxes aren?t the only issue it says has the potential to hurt small businesses. The small business trade group has been a staunch opponent of President Barack Obama?s health care plan, the Affordable Care Act. The group was a lead plaintiff in the Supreme Court lawsuit that sought to halt the plan.

Dunkelberg said it?s too early to say whether concerns about political and government issues will ease in January, now that the fiscal cliff issues are resolved. Congress is still wrangling over other issues, such as the nation?s borrowing limit and possible federal spending cuts. Both could hurt small businesses owners who contract with the government or otherwise rely on government spending.

But some say that for many small business owners they work with, the fiscal cliff negotiations were the major potential distraction because it most directly impacted their taxes.

??When finally the compromise was struck, I think there was an overall sigh of relief that at least there was something that had happened,? said Kim Loewer, a tax practitioner who runs Loewer and Associates in Weyridge, Vt. ?The uncertainty had gone away.?

Now that many of the mom and pop shops he works with know what their tax liabilities are, Loewer said they are able to better plan for things like hiring and expansion.

?In general, Loewer said his clients ? who run the gamut from consultants to retailers ? are mostly reporting that business is going well.

?I don?t hear as much about where the economy is heading anymore,? he said. ?I think that right now, from my clients? point of view, we have seen an uptick in the economy (and) their businesses are doing better this year.?

Schneider, the tax preparer in Florida, said he is expanding the advertising and social media efforts for his own small accounting and bookkeeping business. That?s on the theory that spending more on marketing will draw in more clients even when the economy isn?t as strong.

He?s even called in his wife, an interior designer, to help fight the effects of the recession and weak economic recovery.

?I made her feng shui my office so I could get rid of the bad vibes,? he said.


Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/economywatch/small-businesses-face-tax-certainty-political-uncertainty-1B8035042

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