Monday, 31 March 2014

I was okay kissing in front of my father: Varun Dhawan

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Actor Varun Dhawan has five kissing scenes in his forthcoming film, Main Tera Hero, directed by his father David Dhawan. Interestingly, the young actor
finds nothing wrong in locking lips onscreen "in the 21st century".

In the promos of the film, the Student Of The Year (2012) fame actor can be seen locking lips with his co- star Ileana D'Cruz. "I was okay kissing in front of my father," says Varun.

"It's an important part of the climax. There are five kisses in the film," he adds.

The 26-year-old further adds that "it's high time" people stop creating hype over a kiss in a film. "I think in today's day and age, in the 21st century,
it's fine. What's the big deal in it?" he asks.

"It is just a kiss. It is just an expression of love that the two characters are feeling at that time," he adds.
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Salman guides young composer!

Mumbai, March 19 -- Music composer Palash Muchhal is just 18 years old, and is already making good progress in his career. Apart from approaching producers with his compositions, he is also being guided by actor Salman Khan.

After composing the song 'Party toh banti hai' for Amitabh Bachchan's Bhoothnath Returns, the youngster is also working on a track for one of Salman's upcoming films.    
Palash, who is singer Palak Muchhal's younger brother, hails from Indore, moved to Mumbai to pursue a career in music. "He guides my sister Palak and now he is also guiding and advising me on the kind of work I should do. In fact, he was the first one I met after arriving in Mumbai. I make him listen to all the scratch compositions I have made, and he gives his opinion," says the composer.    

Although Palash was initially not interested in composing item songs, when Salman asked him to compose one for his next release, he gave it a try. "Actually, I would hate composing such songs, but he told me to give them a shot. He has asked me to not restrict myself from experimenting with any genre of music at this phase of my career. I have composed two item songs as of now and one of them will be in Salman sir's next," he says.
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Chinese site sports a page with an image of a fake, wafer-thin Mac Air desktop

Tomorrow is April Fool's Day, and that will likely come with a bombardment of hi-jinx and practical jokes from all over the tech world. That can range from fake leaked images of strange-looking gear, to phony announcements of non-existent products.

However, while the calender has yet to flip to April 1 here in the states, in China it has been April Fool's Day for a couple of hours now, and it appears as if Chinese website AppleUser has already gotten in on the fun.

The site's homepage currently includes an article about a slab-like, ultra thin Mac Air desktop, pictured above. Of course, we all know about Apple's ongoing quest to make super thin and portable computing gear, including the MacBook Air and iPad Air. With the Mac Air piece, AppleUser is cleverly attempting to apply an existing concept (Air-like devices) to a product line that already exists (Mac desktops). This approach to April Fools Day humor, as opposed to coming up with something completely outlandish like an iSubmarine, will likely fool some people into thinking that the Mac Air is real and on the way.

As if the image of the wafer-thing Mac Air wasn't enough, the fact that it's on top of what appears to be an authentic-looking Asian Apple page could also fool readers into thinking that Cupertino is about to announce a Frisbee-esque Mac desktop.

Feel free to file this one under the "strange-looking gear" category.

What do you think? What's the strangest tech prank you've ever seen on April Fool's Day? Sound off in the comments below.
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Honda’s traffic light information system turns cars into backseat drivers

Do you hate it when the light turns green, but the car in front of you refuses to move? Soon, your car might hate it, too.

Honda is testing a system that allows cars to communicate with traffic lights, which could improve the flow of traffic in big cities.

The prototype system combines vehicle position and speed data with information on the cycling of lights to advise drivers of the proper speed they need to make it through as many intersections as possible without stopping.

Conversely, the system can also alert a driver to an impending red light so he or she can slow down gradually, rather than braking abruptly. Like a similar system recently announced by Audi, it can also count down the seconds to a green light, giving the driver plenty of advance notice.

The technology is based on vehicle-to-vehicle communication (V2V), a form of wireless communication that allows cars to share information with each other and infrastructure.

V2V is already viewed by many as a way to make cars safer by providing drivers with more information about their surroundings, which why the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) is pushing for a V2V mandate.

Honda believes this technology could improve fuel efficiency and traffic flow in urban areas, but it would likely save a bit of aggravation as well.

The carmaker will test this concept on public roads in Utsunomiya City in Tochigi Prefecture, Japan. The test will involve up to 100 vehicles, on routes Honda says are typically used by commuters.

Engineers will analyze vehicle data to see if the system really does help drivers and, if it really does save fuel.

If the test proves successful, soon your car may become the ultimate backseat driver.
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Chromecast adds Vudu, Crackle to its growing list of apps, Seinfeld fans rejoice

The app floodgate promised by Chromecast's recent release of its SD kit to developers slid open another inch today, as the popular dongle added Vudu and Crackle to its slowly-but-steadily-growing family of apps.

Super fans of the Seinfeld brand are no doubt quite familiar with Crackle, which streams the latest show starring the world's most famous observational comedian, "Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee," along with reruns of "Seinfeld," and a host of other shows including "Jeopardy", "Damages," "The Shield," and movies like Taladega Nights, and The Rum Diaries.

In contrast, Vudu has a wide variety of movies and programming in its stable, including spanking new releases like The Wolf of Wall Street, and American Hustle as well as popular shows like Showtime's "Veep," available for purchase or rental for a fee that starts at a dollar, and moves up to around $8 per title. The service also offers access to redeem Ultra Violet content from the cloud by entering codes found in  Ultra Violet-equipped Blu-rays or DVDs.

Chromecast has been on the move lately, trying to keep up with its competitors in the streaming field such as Apple TV and Roku, both of which have a big head start on Google's dongle when it comes to apps, having cultivated their platforms for several years before the Chromecast premiered last summer.

Google has made aggressive strides to add partners in recent months, hoping to make its $35 streaming stick both the cheapest and most ubiquitous in the field. The tech giant held a "hackathon" conference in December last year to spark more development, later releasing Chromecast's full software development kit to programmers at large in hopes of spawning exponential growth. However, with less than two dozen or so mainstream apps, Chromecast has a long way to go to match up with Apple TV and Roku, the latter of which boasts a troop of apps numbering upwards of 1,200, including virtually every choice on the open market.

Adding another wrench in Google's quest for streaming domination is a forthcoming streaming device from Amazon, which is predicted to be revealed April 2nd at an invite-only event in NYC.

Still, Chromecast spread like wildfire when it hit Amazon's own shopping site last June, and its simple and intuitive "casting" method from mobile devices and computers has helped it become a major player in the streaming marketplace, and at a remarkable pace. The addition of Vudu is an especially big coupe for the dongle, providing a serious collection of available on-demand content for the Chromecast faithful. 

As apps continue to flow from an ocean of developers, the Chromecast seems to become more useful with each passing week. And every time it gets better, its competitors must prepare new and innovative ways to make a case for their devices, which only translates to a rapidly improving streaming video experience for all.
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Sony unleashes two sound bars and a sound platform, all loaded and priced to sell

Adding to the wealth of succinct home sound solutions now available in the marketplace, Sony unveiled three new pieces today that will be ready to ship in April, including the HT-CT770 and HT-CT370 sound bars, as well as a new sound platform, the HT-XT1 TV Sound System.

Sound bars

Sony's latest sound bars boast remarkably similar specs, outlining an impressive array of features for their price points, listed at a relatively modest $450 for the CT770, and $350 for the CT370. Stockpiled into each bar are a host of state-of-the art technologies, including 3 HDMI 2.0 inputs with 3D pass through, as well as compatibility with the highest 4K streaming protocols.

Other cutting-edge options for the new bars include ARC (audio return channel) HDMI output, high-def decoding for Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD, Bluetooth wireless streaming with built-in compatibility for Pandora and Spotify through Sony's proprietary streaming app, and 7 selectable virtual surround sound modes. In an intriguing new twist, each bar will also include a built-in gyro-sensor (ala newer iPhones) to sculpt the sound according to the device's position in your TV room.

As for the physical make-up of Sony's latest mini-home theaters, both bars are encased in a bass reflex shell that rises a meager two-inches high to create an ultra-low profile sound solution. Apart from HDMI connection, additional inputs for the bars include a digital optical input, and an analog RCA input.

So what separates these new bars to make it worth a $100 upgrade to the CT770? As far as Sony has disclosed, mainly the raw power supplied to each. The systems are both amplified by Sony's S-Master amplifier, with a claimed 330 watts being pushed to the CT770 and a lighter 300 watts of claimed power to the CT370. 120 watts are pushed to the CT770's down-firing wireless sub, while the CT370's smaller subwoofer gets only 100 watts. Additionally, the latter sub can be positioned both horizontally or vertically, offering a strangely compelling argument for picking up the cheaper of the two systems as far as straight up convenience is concerned.

Of course, a sound comparison may further reveal good reason to pony up the extra Benjamin for the big brother of the two.

HT-XT1 TV Sound System

We're still not quite sure how we feel about the sound platform genre. Packing a host of components into a succinct pad that fits directly under a TV is a great concept, but we've had a hard time finding an example that sounds on par with traditional systems for a reasonable price.

Sony's latest try is set at one of the lowest price points we've seen, coming in at $300. For that modest sum, the XT1 provides 170 watts of 2.1 channel sound, including dual active subs and an undisclosed number of partner drivers to handle the upper register. The unit is designed to handle TVs of up to 55-inches with 66 pounds of girth.

Impressively, the new unit boasts many of the same features as its sound bar compatriots, including three 2.0 HDMI inputs, Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD, Bluetooth connection, and control of the system via Sony's SongPal app. The unit also includes Sony's S-Force front virtual surround sound.

All of Sony's new toys will be available in April, and we'll likely be spending some time with the units in our evaluation lab, so stay tuned to find out if these new systems can match their impressive specs with first class performance.
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After 10 Years of Marriage, Gwyneth Paltrow and Chris Martin Made a Decision to Split Up

Famous film star Gwyneth Paltrow and English singer/songwriter Chris Martin are separating after 10 Years of happy marriage life. Paltrow publicized this news on her website, Goop, with a picture captioned "Conscious Uncoupling."

The joint announcement of the couple read, "It is with hearts full of sadness that we have decided to separate. We have been working hard for well over a year, some of it together, some of it separated, to see what might have been possible between us, and we have come to the conclusion that while we love each other very much we will remain separate."

The 41-year-old Oscar winnER Paltrow AND 37-year-old Coldplay musician Chris have 2 kids named 'Apple' and 'Moses', and in their touching, a bit inexplicably entitled, announcement cited 'Conscious Uncoupling', they came clean that both had expended much time struggling to save their matrimony.


They further explained that they are, nevertheless, and always will be a family, and that they are more faithful than they have ever been. They said that they are parents primarily, to 2 extremely brilliant children and they demand their solitude to be esteemed at this hard time of their lives. Paltrow said that she and her husband have always carried out their matters confidentially, and they are optimistic as they intentionally disengage and coparent, they can go on in the same way.

Just previous year, the "Iron Man" star has praised his hubby enthusiastically while giving an interview to a magazine. When she was asked about the greatest decision of her life, she said, "to marry my husband". And about a couple of months ago, she revealed to another media source that she and her husband were going through some difficult times in their relationship.

"It's hard being married. You go through great times, you go through terrible times. We're the same as any couple", she said during an interview. She also revealed that she had sought advice from her late dad in this regard.

The famous duo had met in October 2002. They dated for almost a year and then married in December 2003 in a covert formal event at the Santa Barbara courthouse. It happened so fast and secretive that even the family members and friends were not invited. After few days, the beautiful actress had declared that she was expecting her first baby with him, Apple, who was born in 2004.

What do you feel about their separation?
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Enjoy another Sneak-Peek into the “Dawn of the Planet of the Apes”

We are only a couple of months away from watching the battle between humans and apes in "Dawn of the Planet of the Apes", the sequel to Rupert Wyatt's amazingly much admired reboot "Rise of the Planet of the Apes". It is the one which both sci-fi and action filmgoers are restlessly awaiting and it has become most anticipated film of the YEar.

So, what are they doing now to make the sequel to meet the enhanced expectations of the fans? They haVe released some new pictures from the set where the actors are monkeying around wearing their motion-capture outfits. Not precisely what fans would term as super marketing, but at least main actor Andy Serkis (who is playing Caesar) also exposed a few more plot details. Thanks to his moving motion-capture performance as Caesar, the first film succeeded to impress the audiences with its convincing storyline, providing the sort of pertinent epic entertainment that few anticipated.


According to the plot details, this sequel shows the era after ten years when a lethal virus has annihilated most of the earth's inhabitants. In the meantime, Caesar along with his ilk have spent all these years preparing for the battle and increasing their own community, which has thrived on the fringes of San Francisco (even as the residents of that city have had particularly difficult time).

The unrecorded truce between remaining humans and the genetically modified apes has been spoiled. War is about to happen! So why is the leader of the apes – Caesar – being so welcoming with the characters played by "Zero Dark Thirty" star Jason Clarke and Keri Russell? Are they struggling to have another truce and make a deal? Is this sequel spoiled for the fans by now? Certainly not.

We can judge from the second picture that the apes has really resort to violence against humans and their intelligence has grown to such an extent that they can now use human made weapons including snipers and machine guns. Well, it that's the case, then it is pretty convincing to see how the human population gets annihilated and apes become dominant.

Andy's further details revolve around the back story instead of the actual storyline we will see, but it absolutely develops an isolated world that all fans are eager to watch, when the film turns cinemas into a battle zone on July 11. Perhaps by that time we will have chance to see another trailer.
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‘Fantastic Four’ star Michael Chiklis Joins the Cast of 'American Horror Story'

The cast and makers of the FX's American Horror Story came back to the PaleyFest stage and presented sneak-peeks from "Coven" and footage of season 4, with another particular declaration that Michael Chiklis has been casted in season 4. He is coming back to FX 6 Years aftER TV show "The Shield" ended its run, and will play the role of a German ex-Pat running one of the final freak shows in the country.

According to seVeral reports, season 4 will be set in Jupiter, Fla., in 1950, starring Jessica Lange as Fiona Goode. Other cast members are Sarah Paulson as Lana Winters, Evan Peters as Kit Walker, Angela Bassett as Marie Laveau, Frances Conroy as Myrtle Snow AND Kathy Bates -- who were also seen on Friday's board. They will play performers that have been set free by Fiona Goode. Denis O'Hare and Emma Roberts will most likely also come back to the show that reboots itself each season with a totally different tale and plot, and frequently includes the same cast of previous seasons.


AHS team kept chuckling as they thought back about Coven and their New Orleans experience, but didn't give away enough plot details. Chiklis will be playing the father of Kit Walker and ex-husband of Fiona Goode. Producer Ryan Murphy told that all the actors on the PaleyFest stage would appear in upcoming season.

"My heart was pounding like it is right now. It is a Freak Show, oh man!" Chiklis said after his casting was confirmed. Murphy further said that he had long pursued Chiklis to play a special role in American Horror Story and mentioned that there will be some other new cast members for Freak Show as well. The entire fourth season has been projected to be filmed in New Orleans and Florida. 

Previously, Chiklis appeared in two TV shows, CBS' Action Crime drama "Vegas" and ABC's comedy drama "No Ordinary Family", but unfortunately both shows had to be called off after only 1 season. His 7-season appearance in crime thriller "The Shield" was much admired by audience, and he got 2 Emmy nominations for best actor and won one for his outstanding performance. He also grabbed a Golden Globe award and was nominated for 3 times. When we talk about his film career, his biggest credit he is known for is his role as Ben Grimm in Marvel's comic based film Fantastic Four.

So, what are your views about his casting in American Horror Story season 4?
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Kyle Gallner Has Joined the Cast of Clint Eastwood’s American Sniper

Now, You really should brace yourselves for the upcoming war drama "AmERican Sniper" by one of the best directors of Hollywood, Clint Eastwood.

It seems that the casting process of the film is almost complete; howeVer, it is still under pre-production. Previously it was announced that the two times Oscar nominated star Bradley Cooper was confirmed to play the lead role in this film. Now, as per a number of media reports, Kyle Gallner has joined the cast of American Sniper, alongside Bradley Cooper.

Gallner is known for a number of horror as well as drama films including "A Nightmare on Elm Street", "The Haunting in Connecticut", "Jennifer's Body" AND "Red State". Other actors who have joined the cast of the film are Sienna Miller (known for Stardust, Casanova, G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra), Jake McDorman (known for "Live Free or Die Hard"), Luke Grimes (known for "Taken 2") and Cory Hardrict (Known for Battle Los Angeles, Warm Bodies and Gran Torino).


Jason Hall has been announced to pen the script for the Warner Bros.' war drama American Sniper. Bradley, besides playing the lead role, is also serving as the producer under his 22nd and Indiana label, together with Director Eastwood, Robert Lorenz ('Million Dollar Baby' and 'Mystic River'), and Peter Morgan (known for Frost/Nixon, Rush, The Last King of Scotland, and The Queen). The independent entertainment company, Village Roadshow Pictures, will co-produce and co-finance the film along with Warner Bros., whose vice president development and production, Jon Berg, will supervise the whole production process for the studio. The film production has been projected to be kicked off next month in Morocco.

Bradley will appear as much admired Navy SEAL Chris Kyle, who is recognized as one of the Best Snipers in American Military History and killed most terrorists with his snipers than anyone ever have. While Gallner's role may seem quite strange to some people, as he will live up to the character of Winston, an Arkansas inhabitant who gets the nickname "Goat" when his initial kill in Iraq is a wayward goat. Plot details have not been provided.

The film has already become much anticipated and is being considered one of the best upcoming films. Bradley Cooper has also been tapped for upcoming film "American Blood".

What are your views about American Sniper? Did you like the cast so far?
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Godzilla Footage Steals the Show at CinemaCon

Since the previous more than a decade, we have had to face the fact that the previous mega budget Godzilla movie, directed by Roland Emmerich in 1998, failed to meet the expectations of the fans, but this May, that streak will at last finish. Director Gareth Edwards, who suddenly started his career in Hollywood a few Years ago with the highly admired low budget sci-fi movie "Monsters", is at last bringing the cinema's iconic creature back. Everything we have watched regarding it until now has given us extreme optimisms for what he has made, togethER with the brand new footage that was presented at CinemaCon.

Film opens in plant with actress Juliette Binoche wearing a biohazard outfit to examine a breach, while the "Breaking Bad" star Bryan Cranston examining some images AND finding out something is badly erroneous. He struggles to assist Binoche, but fails. He reaches a lobby which is swiftly filling with a poisonous gas, and with tears in his eyes he shuts the door so as to save his life as well as lives of rest of people – most probably letting Binoche die.


After watching thrilling scenes in trailer – including speech of Joe (Bryan Cranston) regarding the reality being concealed from the people, "Inception" star Ken Watanabe telling the egotism of humans, and different scenes of obliteration. The next relatively long sequence started on the beach where a damsel was looking at the sea. Surprisingly, the waves become gigantic and terror spreads around as alarms go on. Then we watch a gigantic tsunami in between skyscrapers, with citizens getting frightened, running over vehicles and bawling. When the city is completely drowned under water, a man on top of a building fires flare, and exactly at that moment we see the chest of the Godzilla.

From there the footage includes some scenes that we have already watched in trailer, including the airplane jump. But, Godzilla was still not shown clearly – just like in all of the marketing content until now – but the last scene did include the Godzilla roaring behind a smoke cloud.

The footage for Godzilla didn't show any new thing as compared to other movies at CinemaCon, but it still is one of most anticipated films of the year. If it is able to successfully offer all the aspects that fans are expecting, it can turn out to be one of the highest grossing films ever.
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The First Trailer of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Has Been Launched

Childhood superhero icons are being introduced in theaters for the first time. Right from the beginning, the mega-budget film based on Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles was bogged down in disceptation. When it was declared that Michael Bay would be working as the producer, and most probablY these turtles would be aliens, the film production has been the topic of much controvERsy since then.

The debate is still going on with the launch of the first teaser trailer of the movie, directed by Jonathan Liebesman (who is known for Battle Los Angeles, Wrath of the Titans, AND The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning). The trailer shows initial look at the ninja turtles with Megan Fox starring as lead actress.

The trailer depicts that Ninja turtles are not aliens, but are genetically modified in a lab experiment, as the trailer opens with William Fichtner telling Fox that, "Heroes are not born. They are created. That's what your father and I were trying to do. Create heroes."

What are your views about that change to the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles' folklore? The origin of the TMNT has been restated and changed over the years, all the way through a range of comic books and cartoon remakes. One thing they all have normally is mutagen, the extraordinary chemical stuff that mutated usual turtles in ninja turtles; therefore, they are called Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. The precise specifications and structure of the mutagen has changed over the years. From time to time it just either makes them larger, or it provides them superpowers. It has always been the means for the Turtles' subsistence.


It seems that the whole story is filmed in New York City and the complete trailer also shows us more plot details on the crime that has infected the City. We see gun-hauling hooligans appearing from the sewers and bringing about turmoil in the city. Then we see two ninja turtles fighting with the criminals, and in the end, they happen to come across the Megan Fox on the roof of a building.

While Michael's movies are frequently disparaged for their story aspects, excessive explosions in action and exaggerated comedy, the fact is that the director's skill at staging outstanding action series is his greatest characteristic as a filmmaker. Maybe his experience on this specific subject of the movie could eventually make TMNT a more thrilling film, if nothing else.

The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles film is projected to be released in cinemas on August 8 this year. Has the trailer impressed you?
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Ready for an emotional Siri? Computer voices are learning how to sound scared or excited

Fujitsu has announced the development of speech synthesis technology that can tell you information in an appropriate tone, thereby doing away with the chore of determining what emotion to feel.  In case of emergencies, the technology will deliver messages in an alarming tone, which in turn will give you a clue that you should freak out. In less stressful conditions, the technology will convey messages according to your preference. According to a press release sent out by the company, messages can be conveyed through "voices that are perceived to be endearing, or distinctive voices for particular characters." No word yet if it can do an angry James Earl Jones voice. Our fingers are crossed.

"Current speech synthesis technology, widely employed in society, is able to read-out a variety of texts, but in a monotone voice," said Fujitsu. "For this reason, there is a need for synthesized speech to be able to convey spoken text to listeners in accordance with the given circumstances, making it easy to understand."

Speech synthesis technology is commonly used for broadcasting traffic conditions, disaster prevention announcements, museum audio guides, and car GPS systems. Existing speech synthesis tools use large volumes of pre-recorded speech waveforms. Fujitsu uses a different method, focusing instead on voice quality, intonation, and pauses. Aside from the ability to determine the appropriate tone, the technology also conveys messages in a clear voice despite noisy environments. There's no solid timeline for releasing the technology, but Fujitsu says practical applications could come by the end of 2014. 
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Scientists make breakthrough in development of two-way dolphin-to-English translator

It sounds crazy, but if recent research turns out to be legitimate, we might soon be able to talk to dolphins via a two-way dolphin-whistle-to-English translator.

Researchers have been trying to decode and understand the various clicks and whistles made by dolphins since the 1960s, but mid-way through last year, after decades of experimentation, they made a huge breakthrough. For the first time ever, scientists were able to instantly translate a dolphin whistle into its corresponding English word.

It happened back in August of 2013, when Denise Herzing, founder of the Wild Dolphin Project in Jupiter, Fla., was swimming in the Caribbean and listening to the dolphin pod she had been tracking for the past 25 years. Using a special listening/translation system called CHAT, Herzing suddenly head the word "sargassum" (a genus of seaweed) come through her headset.

The specific whistle for "sargassum" was actually a word that Herzing and her team had invented in dolphin-speak. Since the late '90s, they've been using artificial sounds that mimic real dolphin noises, and teaching them to the pod in hopes that they'll eventually adopt them and incorporate them into their own communications. When the whistle came out, it was picked up by a pair of hydrophones, recognized/translated instantaneously with CHAT ( short for Cetacean Hearing and Telemetry), and then spoken back to her in English.

In addition to listening for these kinds of invented whistles, Herzing and her team hope to figure out how to translate the natural communications of dolphins as well. The CHAT system (developed by Georgia Tech professor and Google Glass project lead Thad Starner) is designed with a pair of finely-tuned hydrophones that can pick up the full range of dolphin sounds — many of which are imperceptible to human ears. Once recorded, the software sifts through all the different whistles, and uses pattern discovery algorithms to pinpoint language features. It starts by labeling noises that deviate from an assumed average state, and then groups ones that are similar to one another –sets of clicks or whistles with a distinct sonic signature– until all potentially meaningful patterns are extracted.

The secret to success here is repetition. Over time, if dolphins are exchanging information using these noises, then their behavior wouldn't be completely random. There's likely to be some discoverable patterns that could be recorded, codified, and eventually translated. With the help of today's sophisticated information processing tools, figuring out those patterns is easier than ever. Starner's algorithms have already discovered eight distinct components from a sample of 73 whistles, and they've begun to match certain parts of those whistles to specific dolphin-to-dolphin interactions. The research is still coming along, but it's extremely promising, and could very well yield a working two-way dolphin-to-human translator in the next few years.
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Smartphone kill-switch tech could save consumers $2.5bn a year, research claims

While gluing it to your hand may be one surefire way to prevent your mobile phone being stolen, surely the most effective anti-theft strategy would be to make the device as unattractive as possible to potential thieves.

By this we don't mean putting a picture of Donald Trump on your home screen or smearing it in a foul-smelling substance. We're talking about the kill switch – technology that allows a stolen phone to be rendered useless from a remote location by the phone's owner or carrier.

Money saver?

If all handsets had the technology built in, the market for stolen phones would quickly evaporate, according to Creighton University statistics professor William Duckworth. And if that happened, US consumers could save themselves billions of dollars a year in replacing nabbed devices and spending out on pricey insurance policies.

In research published over the weekend, Duckworth estimates Americans spend around $500 million on replacing stolen handsets, and four times that on insurance when they purchase a new phone.

Duckworth's study, which involved a sample of 1200 handset owners, found that 99 percent of respondents were in favor of kill-switch technology and that more than 50 percent would buy cheaper insurance that excluded theft if they felt that more confident their phone was of less interest to thieves.

'Blocked by carriers'

San Francisco District Attorney George Gascon and New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman have long advocated the use of the anti-theft technology, but claim it's being blocked by carriers intent on putting "public safety before corporate profits."

When a carrier sells insurance to a new handset buyer – often through a company like Asurion – the carrier takes a cut of the sale. The top four carriers in the US reportedly raked in almost $8 billion through such sales in 2013.

Spare parts and hackers

Asurion's Bettie Colombo said in a statement that while the company isn't against the idea of incorporating kill switch technology into phones, "there is no solution that will totally eliminate the theft of smartphones as there are other values in the black market for the phones, such as parts."

Legislation aimed at forcing the implementation of the technology in newly sold phones is currently making its way through Congress, while several states are also looking at the idea of introducing their own laws.

At the end of last year, major US carriers stopped Samsung from including a kill switch in its handsets, citing – of all things – security concerns. The carriers – AT&T, Verizon, Sprint, T-Mobile, and US Cellular – said the technology could allow hackers to infiltrate the system and maliciously disable devices.

Apple launched a similar security system with iOS 7 last year. Activation Lock is designed to prevent others using the phone in the event of theft or loss and includes a feature that lets the owner erase all of its personal data from a remote location.

While it's not known if the feature has had any effect on lowering the iPhone's attractiveness in the eyes of thieves, Creighton, Gascon, and others clearly believe laws forcing all phones to include kill switch technology would not only reduce theft, but also save consumers money.
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This smart nano-tech patch knows when you need more drugs

Outside of smartwatches, wristbands, and smart eyewear, wearable technology is making waves in the medical community. For example, we've already heard about health-monitoring "tattoos," which can tell doctors about how your heart, muscles, or brain are functioning. The next evolutionary step could be similar smart patches, developed using nano technology, which not only deliver drugs into your system, but know when you've had enough or need a higher dose.

A study, carried out in South Korea and published by Nature Technology, outlines the development of "wearable bio-integrated systems," as an alternative to wearing bulkier hardware. These skin patches are not only less intrusive, but are also capable of delivering medicine to the wearer, and smart enough to know how much is needed.

The stretchable, rectangular patches measure around 2-inches in size, and have a nano-particle coating which monitors muscle activity. They're heat activated, and when the wearer's body temperature rises, so the drug delivery is increased. By using a system like this, patients would no longer need to wear potentially uncomfortable, or highly noticeable health monitoring devices, but more importantly there's no possibility of forgetting, or being unable, to take pills at the right time.

An example given in the paper is for sufferers of Parkinson's disease. Muscle tremors would be picked up by the patch, and thanks to an integrated memory system, it would know if a higher dose of corrective treatment was required. In the cases where body temperature doesn't change, but medicine is still needed, a built-in heater is activated to start the flow.

Speaking to The Verge, one of the engineers working on the project said that in the future, wireless components could be added to the patch. This would allow doctors to remotely diagnose patients based on telemetry gathered by the patch, then tell it to either increase or decrease drug dosage. All without a visit to the hospital or doctor's office. It's very exciting, but the technology is still in the early stages, and we shouldn't expect to see this type of wearable medical patch for at least another five years.
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Apple drags Samsung to court yet again, this time for $2 billion

Tech titans Apple and Samsung will face off once again in a California courtroom Monday as a fresh legal battle over patents gets under way — the latest round in a fight that has lasted for years and spanned the globe.

The new case follows another in 2012 in which Samsung was ordered to pay Apple around a billion dollars after it was found to have infringed a number of patents related to the Cupertino company's iPhone and iPad devices with products of its own.

'Recent' products

This week's legal proceedings focus on a bunch of more recent Samsung devices – including the Galaxy S3 and Galaxy Tab 2 – also accused by Apple of incorporating design features similar to those found on its own devices. We say recent, but of course these devices are old by tech standards, with the Korean electronics firm already prepping the launch of the latest iteration of its flagship smartphone, the Galaxy S5.

Speaking to California-based news publication Mercury News about the latest battle, Stanford University technology law professor Mark Lemley said the case highlighted the fact that "technology and the law move at very different speeds."

He added, "As a result, I think this trial, like the last one, will be about money – a lot of money by the standards of us ordinary mortals, but not nearly enough to make or break Apple or Samsung."


The slide-to-lock feature found on Samsung's smartphones is one of the patents Apple claims Samsung violated.
Apple's legal team claims five patents have been violated by Samsung, including those relating to the iDevice's Siri – Apple's voice-activated virtual assistant – and the slide-to-lock feature found on its mobile offerings. The presiding judge, Lucy Koh, has already ruled in Apple's favor regarding an auto-complete text patent, leaving the court to determine the level of damages Samsung should pay.

Copier or pioneer?

In court filings, Apple said it had "revolutionized the market in personal computing devices," while claiming that Samsung had "systematically copied Apple's innovative technology and products, features and designs, and has deluged markets with infringing devices."

Samsung's legal team, meanwhile, said the Korean company has "been a pioneer in the mobile device business sector since the inception of the mobile device industry," adding that "Apple has copied many of Samsung's innovations in its Apple iPhone, iPod, and iPad products."

Google

Interestingly, Google is expected to play a significant role in this latest trial. Samsung is calling on the Web giant as a witness in connection with the development of its Android mobile operating system, which powers Samsung devices at the center of the case. Many will recall how Apple's late co-founder and CEO Steve Jobs loathed Android, claiming it to be a rip-off of the iPhone's iOS operating system. 

In this latest dispute, Apple wants Samsung to pay a $40 royalty for each of its devices using software that the iPhone maker claims as its own. If Apple wins, Samsung could be ordered to pay somewhere in the region of $2 billion.

Apple boss Tim Cook and Samsung co-CEO JK Shin met face-to-face last month in a bid to hammer out a deal and prevent this latest case from coming to court, but no agreement was reached.
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BlackBerry reaffirms intent to launch BBM for Windows Phone as service hits 85m users

BlackBerry has reaffirmed its intent to launch its popular BBM messaging service on Windows Phone before July as the company seeks to focus more on the software as part of its long-term plan to rejuvenate the company.

We first heard about BlackBerry's plans to bring BBM to Windows Phone when Jeff Gadway, the mobile firm's head of product and brand marketing, announced the news on the BlackBerry blog in February.

While Gadway said it would land "in the coming months," boss John Chen said in a conference call with investors last week the app is expected to launch in the April-to-June time frame.

The CEO also announced the app now has 113 million registered users and 85 million monthly active users. A Windows Phone version is sure to help boost these figures, especially as the app is set to come pre-loaded on a number of Nokia devices in select markets.

BBM has long been a hit with users of BlackBerry handsets, with versions for iOS and Android rolled out in October last year. As Windows Phone's market share begins to push ahead of BlackBerry's in several markets around the world, it of course makes sense for the Canadian mobile company to get the app out there on all major competing platforms at the earliest possible opportunity, especially as it forms part of Chen's strategy to get BlackBerry back in the black in the next two years.

Monetization plans for BBM include ads in the form of sponsored channels to give brands the opportunity to connect directly with users, as well as sticker sales and a person-to-person money transfer service, currently undergoing trials in Indonesia.

BlackBerry's reputation for offering a secure communications service could help such a financial service to gain traction with users in a relatively short space of time.

David Proulx, BlackBerry's senior director of BBM business development, said as much in a recent interview, explaining, "Because we are by nature private and secure and reliable and regulator compliant, we are ideally suited to bring value in mobile money and financial services."

Despite reporting a 64-percent year-on-year fall in sales for the three-month period ending March 1, Chen said last week the company is still on track to turn a profit in 2016.

Besides focusing on BBM, BlackBerry's strategy also includes bolstering other enterprise-related services, cutting back its workforce, selling some of its real estate, and launching a number of new handsets.
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A $7 app lets your iPhone shoot video at higher resolutions, faster framerates

Have you ever wondered what lends film-based cinema movies and old TV shows a special look that is so different from digital video? The "secret" is in the frame rate, that is, the number of individual images that are shown each second. While consumer video devices sport frame rates of 25, 30, 50 or 60 frames per second (fps), the frame rate of film footage is typically only 24 fps. But now you can achieve that cinematic look when recording video on your iPhone, thanks to a new app called Ultrakam.

Besides recording at a frame rate of 24 fps, Ultrakam also raises the resolution of your video footage beyond Full HD, offering 2K high-definition video recording at a resolution of 2240 x 1672 pixels. Full HD video has a resolution of 1920 x 1080 pixels, so Ultrakam offers 70-percent higher resolution for even more details. On top of that, it even lets you record high-speed video at up to 120 fps when using an iPhone 5S, which can then be slowed down to create true slow-motion footage.

Ultrakam also has a time-lapse mode that lets you capture individual frames at intervals of 1 second or longer, and later replay them at full speed. And because it is aimed primarily at video enthusiasts who want to capture the best possible quality, it offers high-quality H.264 recording that will create files as large as 3GB per minute of video. There's a downside to this app, though: All the really awesome stuff only works on the iPhone 5S. While older models are supported, they can't make use of the highest quality settings.

For those really into videography and interested in all the technicals details (do 4:2:0 full color and 44.1 kHz linear PCM audio ring a bell?), there's a thorough description of all the features offered in Ultrakam's developer's website – head over and take a look. If not, it suffices to say that Ultrakam really pulls the last bit of quality out of your iPhone's video capabilities. The Ultrakam app is available on iTunes for $6.99.
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iPhone 6 Rumors and News: New concept pics and schematics that hint at large screen

Are you sitting comfortably? Good. This could take a while. The iPhone 5S is less than six months old, but rumors are gathering about its replacement, which should – if previous versions are anything to go by – be called the iPhone 6. Will it be bigger, or stay the same size? Will it have standout features? Will it be joined by an iPhone 6C, or the iWatch?

None of these questions and many more will be answered until Tim Cook takes the stage later this year, but we can't wait until June or September. We're just not that patient. So, we've collected all the latest gossip we've heard right here. We hope you enjoy.

Updated on 3-31-2014 by Jeffrey Van Camp: Leaked schematics further confirm that a larger iPhone is in the works and we uploaded a few new concept designs.

Surprise … it's probably named iPhone 6

How long can Apple keep adding an ever-increasing number to the name of its latest iPhone? It gave up with the iPad after two models, and decided to add the word Air to the most recent iteration, signifying how slim and light it had made the tablet. Depending on the specs and size of the next iPhone(s), we could also see an iPhone Air, iPhone 6C, or iPhone Mini.

Bigger screens and a second iPhone 6?

Apple has made the most of a 4-inch screen for two generations (years) now, and while it's perfectly acceptable – go on, admit it – there's no denying the industry is shifting towards smartphones with considerably larger displays. Juniper Research estimates that devices with 5+ inch screens will see sales of 120 million by 2018, considerably more than the 20 million in 2013. Surely Apple can't ignore the trend much longer?


Leaked iPhone 6 schematics
There are two main schools of thought at the moment. First, Apple will up the screen size to 4.7-inches and leave it at that, while others speculate we may get a 4.7-inch iPhone and a 5.7-inch iPhone/iPad hybrid. These supposed leaked schematics from Nowhereelse.fr also point to a larger screen.

According to Chinese analyst Sun Changxu, Apple may keep its current 1136 x 640 pixel Retina resolution on the 4.7-inch iPhone 6. This would see the pixel density fall to around 280ppi, way below the 326ppi seen on every iPhone since the iPhone 4. Crucially though, it would be above the iPad's pixel density. Apple bases its Retina status on viewing distance – 10-inches for the phone, 15 for the tablet – so a larger phone screen could add a few inches to the optimum viewing distance, and keep it within Apple's self-imposed parameters for 'Retina.'

Via his Twitter account, Sonny Dickson, who has previously leaked details about Apple hardware, says the screen of the iPhone 6 will have a pixel density of 389ppi. He calls the display "Ultra-Retina," but doesn't mention anything about the size or the exact resolution. Using a pixel density calculator, a screen measuring somewhere between 5.6-inches and 5.7-inches, with a 1080p resolution, could potentially produce 389ppi.


iPhone 6 three models concept by Federico Ciccarese
Alternatively, researchers from DisplaySearch in Taiwan indicate Apple will give the 4.7-inch screen iPhone 6 a 1280 x 720 pixel resolution, resulting in a 312ppi pixel density rating. As for the 5.7-inch hybrid, DisplaySearch says it may have 1920 x 1080 pixels, matching just about every 2013 high-end Android phone. Analyst Brian Marshall, who works for ISI, says we'll be getting two new iPhone models this year, one with a 4.7-inch display, and the other with 5.5-inches, although he doesn't mention the possible resolution of either.


iPhone 6 gold concept with glass back by Martin Hajek
An increase to 4.7 or 5.7-inches isn't universally agreed upon – not even close. Peter Misek says Apple will plump for 4.8-inches, while a Wall Street Journal reporter claimed Apple was busily testing hybrid iPhone/iPads with 6-inch screens. Long-time Apple rumor devotees will recall talk of the iPhone Math (or iPhone+, as it may have really been known), a monster-sized iPhone discussed before the announcement of the iPhone 5S.

It's worth considering that prototype iPhones probably exist with all these screen sizes and resolutions. Apple may have tested them all out at one time, or has made a few to throw us off track. Just because they exist though, doesn't mean they'll make it into production. It's unlikely we'll see three iPhone 6 models.

Sapphire screens galore!

Here's one of the crazier theories around. The next iPhone(s) could have a screen made of sapphire, which is far more durable than any glass on the market. It's not as implausible as you might think, either.

The new Arizona facility could produce between 103 and 116 million 5-inch sapphire screens per year.

Almost a year ago, GT Advanced, which now has a major contract with Apple, showed us how sapphire could make smartphone screens nearly indestructible. At the time, the company told us that if a large vendor used sapphire to scale, its price would get cheap enough to integrate into a major product like the iPhone 6. A $578 million contract with Apple is probably enough to do just that. Apple is creating a facility in Arizona to build these components.


Correspondence between Apple and the U.S. Foreign Trade Zone, revealed by 9to5Mac, shows Apple plans to put this facility into action during February, a timescale referred to as "aggressive" by an Apple executive. Sapphire is listed as one of the products manufactured by the plant. While it's not stated the sapphire will be used to make iPhone 6 screens, the document says "Project Cascade" will be using a, "High-tech manufacturing process to create a critical new sub-component of Apple Products to be used in the manufacture of consumer electronics."

After calculating the number of furnaces the GT Advanced Arizona facility purchased, 9to5Mac believes it could produce between 103 and 116 million 5-inch sapphire screens per year. If it purchases more machines, it could add another 84 – 94 million iPhone 6 screens to its output. 

There's no evidence the sapphire component is a iPhone 6 screen – Apple uses sapphire to cover the camera lens and the TouchID sensor on the iPhone 5S already – or even if it's destined for use on the next iPhone. Sapphire's incredible toughness would be equally as beneficial on a watch. Whether the sapphire is for a phone or a watch, the material can take many months to prepare, making an end of year release date, for whatever product it's going to end up on, most likely.

Curved screens and new sensors

A November Bloomberg report says that Apple is working on new iPhone 6 models that come with "curved glass" that bends downward at the edges and sensors that can detect different levels of pressure on the screen. The sensors would be able to better detect a light or heavy touch of the finger. That report also affirms the rumor that there will be two new iPhone 6 models, one at the 4.7-inch size and another at 5.5 inches.

Add solar charging to that indestructible screen

Then comes solar charging screens, which we saw demonstrated at CES this year. Though 3M and SunPartner told us that their screens wouldn't be ready until 2015, Matt Margolis of Seeking Alpha believes that this type of solar screen is being built in the Arizona facility. While he could be right, we're uncertain this innovation will appear on the iPhone 6, especially given the rumors of how thin it will be. There's little room for more screen layers in a 6mm phone.

No Home button? Liquidmetal?

There are some non-screen related rumors. We've got an old report which talks about the abolishment of the Home button. Instead, some believe that the new iPhone 6 will rely more on gesture controls to navigate around the OS. It sounds plausible, but Apple will have to find somewhere else to put its new fingerprint sensor, something which wasn't known when this aging report was published.

A Forbes article by Anthony Kosner suggests Apple's upcoming mobile payments platform will integrate a Touch ID fingerprint sensor into the entire screen of the next (big) iPhone, eliminating the need for a Home button. Again though, this will add yet another layer to the thickness of the screen, which diminishes speculation that this will be a super thin 6mm phone.

It's also possible the iPhone 6 will have the first liquidmetal chassis. This has been a long-standing rumor, and while Apple has filed many new patents related to the technology, it's still considered a challenging material with which to work.

Super slim 6mm body

Will the next iPhone be much slimmer than older models? That's a very good question, and one which fits in with the idea Apple may chose to name the next model the iPhone Air. The iPhone has never been a bloater, but rumors have spread the next generation may be much thinner than ever. Korean news source ETNews.com quotes sources from the Chinese IT media, who say Apple may shave 1.6mm off the iPhone 5S' thickness to make a 6mm iPhone 6.

A Chinese website published a picture of what it claimed was the iPhone 6's chassis. It looks both slim and large, but it could also be completely fake, or not related to the iPhone at all. Only time will tell on this one.

Following up his tweet regarding the pixel density of the iPhone 6′s screen, Sonny Dickson says the phone's chassis will be a mere 5.5mm thick, matching the current world's thinnest smartphone record holder, the Gionee Elife S5.5. 

Better camera and iOS 8

There are a few rumors regarding the introduction of 802.11ac Wi-Fi, which came to Mac computers recently, along with a 128GB storage capacity. The camera could get an upgrade to 13-megapixels, although not everyone agrees, with others indicating the existing 8-megapixel camera will see improvements. Analysts from Nomura Securities are saying that the iPhone 6 will have better image stabilization.

According to a recent report from MacRumors, sources familiar with Taiwan's industrial chain are suggesting that the next iPhone will have at least a 10-megapixel camera, but even more interesting is that it will have an aperture of f/1.8, an upgrade from the current f/2.2. The sources also claim Apple will replace the current hybrid IR filter with a resin lens filter made by JSR, a Japanese company known for resins used in imaging equipment with CMOS sensors; the resins are said to be lighter and thinner, and capture clearer images because of their ability to minimize color shifts.

The iPhone 6 will logically come with iOS 8 installed, and although nothing has been heard about it at this early stage, it'll be interesting to see where Apple takes its newly redesigned OS next.

Picturing the iPhone 6

There's a lot of information to take in regarding the possible specs, look, and configuration of the iPhone 6 already. To help visualize what the next iPhone may look like, concept videos are often produced. They're speculative, of course, but usually based on the most likely configuration presented by the rumors. Most recently, Techradar put together the video you see below, which shows a super slim iPhone with a bezel-less display, allowing Apple to squeeze a larger display onto a small body. 


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2 journalists kidnapped in Syria free

Kidnapped in Syria, finally freed

Two Spanish journalists held more than six months in Syria arrived home Sunday, Spain's El Mundo newspaper reported.


El Mundo staff correspondent Javier Espinosa and freelance photographer Ricardo Garcia Vilanova embraced family and friends during a joyous reunion on the tarmac of the Torrejon de Ardoz military airport in Madrid.

"We want to thank everyone who has worried about us and who has made it possible for us to return home, and as you can see, we are perfectly well," Espinosa told those gathered at the airport.

They were later met with a standing ovation and tears by colleagues in the El Mundo newsroom, according to the newspaper. "Thank you so much," Espinosa said. "I'm sorry for what we have made you go through."

El Mundo reported early Sunday that the men had been handed over to authorities in Turkey, and showed a picture of them together in apparent good health and spirits at the airport in Beirut. It did not go into detail about how they were freed.

The two journalists were kidnapped in September.

Garcia was traveling with Espinosa but not on assignment for El Mundo.

Espinosa, 49, and Garcia, 42, have made numerous trips to war-torn Syria, often together, and they organized their most recent visit together, foreign editor Ana Alonso earlier told CNN. Garcia has also worked with CNN's Nick Paton Walsh on a number of stories about Syria.

Espinosa was previously kidnapped while covering a conflict in Sierra Leone, and Garcia was kidnapped in 2012 in Syria for about 12 days, said Gervasio Sanchez, a Spanish veteran war photographer who knows both men.

The newspaper reported in December the men were kidnapped at the Tal Abyad checkpoint in Raqqa province, close to the Turkish border, as they prepared to leave Syria after two weeks of coverage.
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Kerry heads to Israel for Mideast peace talks

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry is traveling to Israel on Monday as part of the latest effort to forge a peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said.


Kerry is flying from Paris -- where he had discussed the Ukraine crisis with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov over the weekend -- into Tel Aviv, with possible meetings in Jerusalem and Ramallah over the next day, a senior State Department official said.

Kerry tried to restart the Israeli-Palestinian peace process eight months ago, aiming to get a deal leading to the two states coexisting peacefully.

So far, the process has included a series of meetings along with incremental steps intended to build trust, such as prisoner releases. However, Kerry's initial goal of an agreement by the end of April has morphed into a possible framework for further talks through the end of 2014.

Psaki said Kerry decided it would be productive to return to the region this week after consulting with a U.S. team that is negotiating with the Israelis and the Palestinians to end their decades-long conflict.

"Over the course of the last eight months, the Israelis and Palestinians have both made tough choices, and as we work with them to determine the next steps, it is important they remember that only peace will bring the Israeli and Palestinian people both the security and economic prosperity they all deserve," Psaki said.

Kerry's trip comes after President Barack Obama hosted Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas for separate White House talks earlier this month.

While both sides have signaled agreement with the concept of a two-state solution, in which Israel and an independent Palestinian nation would live side by side, they remain at odds over how to make that happen.

Areas of disagreement include borders, security issues, the status of Jerusalem, and the rights of Palestinians who left or fled their homes in what is now Israel.
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North, South Korea exchange fire

North, South Korea exchange fire at sea

A day after raising the possibility of further nuclear tests, North Korea has engaged in provocative live-fire exercises near the South Korean maritime border, leading to an exchange of fire between the neighbors.


The semiofficial South Korean news agency Yonhap reported Monday that the North had begun the drill just after noon. The South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff confirmed that some North Korean ordnance landed in South Korean waters and that the South responded with fire.

North Korea fired about 500 artillery shells into waters north of the Yellow Sea's so-called Northern Limit Line over a roughly three-hour period Monday afternoon, the Joint Chiefs told Yonhap. After about 100 shells fell south of the Northern Limit Line, South Korea responded by firing about 300 artillery shells into North Korean waters and dispatching fighter jets near the Northern Limit Line.

The Joint Chiefs said the North Korean offshore military exercise began about 12:15 p.m. Monday and said that "a part of North Korea's shelling reached South Korean side of the NLL and (South Korea) responded with K-9 self-propelled guns into the North Korean waters above NLL."

The statement is in line with Yonhap's report that the North fired "several" artillery shells, to which the South Korean military responded with self-propelled artillery fire. The South Korean K9 howitzers have a 24-mile (40-kilometer) range.

Although there was a lull, North Korean offshore firing seems to have resumed, with Yonhap quoting a resident of Baekryong Island, which is close to the Northern Limit Line.

"Some (North Korean) artillery fire landed in (the) southern part of Northern Limit Line but in the water," a South Korean Ministry of Defense spokesman said. "We counter-fired over the Northern Limit Line."

When asked what South Korea fired back at, the defense spokesman said, "We are not shooting at North Korea, just shooting into the sea."

The spokesman declined to say where South Korea is firing from and whether the exchange is still ongoing. The official also refused to confirm whether civilians are being evacuated or put into shelters on the front-line islands.

Warning fax
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MH370: Orange items not linked to missing jet

New floating objects lead to dead end

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia - Potential leads on the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 keep coming. So do the setbacks and frustrations.


Monday's search ended without finding anything significant, Australian officials said. Four orange objects spotted by search aircraft and earlier described as promising turned out be nothing more than old fishing gear, they said.

Underscoring the difficulty of the search, U.S. Navy officials loaded underwater locating gear aboard an Australian naval support vessel and set out to sea Monday evening, but won't be able to make use of the equipment until searchers narrow the search zone.

U.S. Navy Cmdr. William Marks told CNN's "State of the Union" that his team needs a conclusive piece of debris to narrow down the search area before deploying the equipment.

"We have to be careful not to send it in the wrong place," he said. "But we also wanted to get it out there as close as we can to what we believe is the right place."

The gear includes a pinger locator that's towed behind a ship and scans for the sound of the locator beacon attached to the plane's flight data recorder. Also on board is a remotely operated submersible that can look for wreckage on the ocean floor.

It will take the ship, the Ocean Shield, three days just to get to the search zone, leaving precious little time to locate the plane's flight data recorders before the batteries on its locator beacon run out. The batteries are designed to last 30 days; the plane has been missing 23 days.

Under favorable sea conditions, the pingers can be heard 2 nautical miles away. But high seas, background noise, wreckage or silt can all make pingers harder to detect.

In this case, searchers barely know where to look at all.

"We are searching a vast area of ocean, and we are working on quite limited information," Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott told reporters Monday. "Nevertheless, the best brains in the world are applying themselves to this task. ... If this mystery is solvable, we will solve it."

And he vowed to keep looking.

"The intensity of our search and the magnitude of our operations is increasing, not decreasing," he said.

Ten aircraft and 11 ships scouted more than 98,000 square miles (254,000 square kilometers) of Indian Ocean on Monday looking for the missing plane, Malaysia's acting Transportation Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said Monday.

Flight 370 vanished March 8 while flying from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.

A new Australian Joint Agency Coordination Center is being formed to synchronize search efforts among Australian agencies and other countries taking part in the search, Hishammuddin said.

And Malaysia will ask the United States about the possibility of deploying more military assets, he said.

New details on handoff

On Monday, Malaysia's Transport Ministry said the final voice transmission from the cockpit of Flight 370 was "Good night Malaysian three seven zero."

That's a departure from earlier language in which Malaysian authorities said the final transmission was "All right, goodnight."

The new language is routine and is not a sign of anything untoward occurring aboard the flight, said CNN aviation analyst Mary Schiavo.

CNN's Dana Ford, Mitra Mobasherat, Kyung Lah, Yuli Yang and Paula Hancocks contributed to this report. KJ Kwon reported from Kuala Lumpur; and Faith Karimi wrote from Atlanta.

But she said it does raise questions about how Malaysian officials have handled the investigation.

"Well, it speaks to credibility issues, unfortunately," she said.

Get up to speed

Relatives' demands

Family members of people on board Flight 370 have accused Malaysian officials of giving them confusing, conflicting information since the plane vanished more than three weeks ago.

On Monday, dozens of Chinese family members visited a Kuala Lumpur temple. They chanted, lit candles and meditated.

"Chinese are kindhearted people," said Jiang Hui, the families' designated representative. "But we can clearly distinguish between the good and evil. We will never forgive for covering the truth from us and the criminal who delayed the rescue mission."

Jiang asked Malaysia to apologize for announcing March 24 that the plane had crashed, despite the lack of any "direct evidence."

At the daily press briefing, Hishammuddin responded, saying Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak had not used the word "crash" or mentioned a lack of survivors in his announcement that the plane's flight had "ended" in the southern Indian Ocean.

And, he said, Malaysian authorities were not hiding anything by declining to release some details of the missing flight. Some details are part of ongoing investigations into what happened to the plane, he said.

"We are not hiding anything. We are just following the procedure that is being set." he said.

He described a meeting Saturday between Malaysian authorities and Flight 370 relatives as "the most difficult meeting I've ever attended."

"The families are heartbroken. For many, the strain of the past few weeks has been unbearable," he said.

He said Malaysia will hold a high-level briefing for families where experts will explain some of the data and methodology used to guide the search.

He also said authorities have discussed with the families what happens if they are unable to find debris from the missing plane. But he declined to discuss it with reporters Monday, saying "to be fair to the families, that is something I would not want to share with the public at the moment."

Beijing has also publicly slammed Malaysia's efforts to find the Boeing 777. Of the 239 people aboard the jetliner, 154 were Chinese. But Malaysia says it's done its best with what it has.

"History will judge us as a country that has been very responsible," Hishammuddin said.
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Husband vows to bring wife, MH370 crew, home

Flight attendant's husband speaks out

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysian - The children keep asking when their mother is coming home.


Lee Khim Fatt doesn't know what to tell them.

It's been more than three weeks since his wife, a flight attendant on Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, disappeared along with 238 others when the jet vanished mid-flight.

"I told them mummy's going to take a bit longer to come home this time, and I even promised them I'm going to bring her home," Lee says.

His eyes fill with tears as he explains his plight. It's a promise he's not sure he can keep.

"I really don't know where she is now," he says, "and now I am not sure whether I could bring her home."

Lee and his wife, Foong Wai Yueng, shared a happy life together, raising their 10-year-old daughter and 4-year-old son.

They met 20 years ago when she was just 19. He was her first boyfriend. Without her, Lee says he's lost his direction.

An 18-year Malaysia Airlines veteran, she loved to fly around the world.

The destinations were different, he says, but her returns home were always the same.

"Every time she came back, definitely she got something for the kids," he says. "This is what she loved to do."

Quest for answers

Dozens of anguished relatives Sunday demanded that Malaysian authorities provide them with evidence of the fate of their loved ones aboard the missing Boeing 777.

"We want evidence, we want truth and we want our family," they chanted at a news conference outside a Kuala Lumpur hotel.

While many of the passengers' families are staying together in hotels, Lee remains at his home waiting for information about the missing flight.

On Sunday, the search for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 turned up fresh potential clues as an Australian aircraft spotted four orange objects in the water. But investigators haven't yet confirmed whether the objects were from the airliner, which officials believe went down in the southern Indian Ocean.

Lee said he hears from Malaysia Airlines just once or twice a day, by phone or text message.

He's angry at how the airline has handled the ordeal. Even though his wife was part of the cabin crew, he says he gets more information from the media than the airline. He watches the near-daily press conferences on television.

"The airline management only call us or have some briefing with us, you know, and then they tell us the same thing again as what the press conference told," he complained.

His frustration has led in part to his decision to hire a Chicago-based law firm. They've filed a petition on his behalf, seeking records from Boeing and Malaysia Airlines.

Amid the confusion, Malaysia said it has done its best with what it has.

"History will judge us as a country that has been very responsible," Hishammuddin Hussein, Malaysia's acting transportation minister, said.

The waiting for the families has not been easy. Lee wants the truth about what happened to MH370. He wants something to tell his daughter, when she asks what happened to her mother. Most of all he wants his wife to come home.

"Of course I'm still hoping for god's miracles," he says.
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