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Today’s Headlines  

News

Boy charged with murder
SANDUSKY -- A 15-year-old Imlay Township boy was charged Friday with open murder in the Aug. 15 stabbing death of a Croswell woman. More


Students from abroad score a taste of U.S.

Time for flu shots is now

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Sports

Volleyball: Vikings win own tourney
MARYSVILLE -- It's only one week into the new season, and already the Marysville High School volleyball team is showing the potential to compete for a state championship. More


Football: St. Clair stays late for overtime victory

ST. CLAIR 33, E. DETROIT 32

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Opinion

Theologian prized sense over inerrancy
Robert Bratcher was one of my heroes, and I didn't even know it. More


Gas prices go up, leave callers feeling hosed

More Opinion | Back to Top

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WJACTV.com Daily Forecast

WJACTV.com
WJACTV.com Daily Forecast
  Severe Weather Team Forecast
Mostly Cloudy
Today's Forecast
High: 65º F
Low:  50º F

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Saturday: Much cooler temperatures will make it feel like autumn, along with isolated showers and a gusty west wind.

L. Highlands:
Low to Mid 60s
E. Alleghenies:
Mid to Upper 60s
N. Alleghenies:
Mainly Low 60s

Sunday: We bring the sunshine back and warm temperatures up a bit.

L. Highlands:
Low 70s
E. Alleghenies:
Mid 70s
N. Alleghenies:
Upper 60s and Low 70s

Labor Day: Sunny skies will make for a nice unofficial end to summer.

L. Highlands:
Middle 70s
E. Alleghenies:
Near 80
N. Alleghenies:
Mid 70s

Discussion: Temperatures will be close to average for much of next week, perhaps a bit above on Tuesday. There's not much rain in the offing through midweek however.


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MY 511 Transit Update



MY 511 Transit Status for omsssignal
September 04, 2010 - 12:00 AM

Home to Work
(12th St. Oakland City Center)

24th St. Mission:  << No data available >>
Daly City:  << No data available >>
Dublin/Pleasanton:  << No data available >>
Fremont:  2, 22, 23 min
Millbrae:  << No data available >>
Montgomery:  << No data available >>
SF Airport:  << No data available >>
SF Airport then Millbrae:  <2, 21 min
Call 511 for ongoing updates.

Go to my home page.


ABC NewsMail - afternoon edition

ABC News

 

 Afternoon Edition. Sat 04 Sep 2010


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 Top StoriesMore Top Stories > 

Residents evacuated from quake-hit Christchurch
Authorities are evacuating residents from earthquake-hit Christchurch as New Zealand prime minister John Key visits the city to assess the damage.

Australian killed in NZ plane crash
Nine people, including one Australian, have been killed when a skydiving plane crashed and burst into flames at a popular New Zealand tourist spot.

Polls show support for Labor minority government
Two new opinion polls show the majority of voters want three key independent MPs to back Labor to form a minority government.

Victoria braces for more flooding
Heavy rainfall across Victoria has caused landslides, flash flooding and the evacuation of homes.

Wild weather continues to batter SA
Wild weather has continued to batter South Australia and left thousands of people without power.


 The DrumMore from The Drum > 

LolKatter

Political purgatory exposes the ugly election
This period of political purgatory has exposed some very unattractive elements of our system. Both parties were driven by the dirty little secret of the Charter of Budget Honesty: If you can avoid it for long enough, it doesn't matter in the end. It's only really in political purgatory - where in the absence of result the costings become a genuine grounds for judgment - that this bipartisan system of neglect breaks down.

Balance-bias battle of climate science coverage
In reporting the views of climate change deniers and doubters, the ABC has done the whole of science a disservice. When a minority doubts what to a majority is demonstrable fact, then the outcome is not balance but a distortion of reality. The ABC needs to look again at the editorial codes that have distorted the national discussion of climate change.

Saint Paul's Letter to the Electorates: Chapter 9
And in the tents of the leaders there were talks with those who were brought forth by the people but lacketh affiliation.

Turning the key on Father's Day
Father's Day approaches, but what does that really mean? Sadly these days it's all about targeted marketing and media hype.

Why the independents must support Tony Abbott
Abbott wisely got through the election campaign not only avoiding submitting his costings to Treasury but refusing to debate the PM on the matter of the economy.


 WorldMore World Stories > 

Residents evacuated from quake-hit Christchurch
Authorities are evacuating residents from earthquake-hit Christchurch as New Zealand prime minister John Key visits the city to assess the damage.

Australian killed in NZ plane crash
Nine people, including one Australian, have been killed when a skydiving plane crashed and burst into flames at a popular New Zealand tourist spot.

Man driven 'crazy' after death of pet cat
A Japanese man drove the wrong way down an expressway for 90 kilometres and broke through five police barricades because his cat had died, he told police.


 Science & TechnologyMore Science & Technology Stories > 

Crews free humpback caught in shark net
Marine rescue crews have freed a whale that was entangled in a shark net off the Gold Coast.

Uncontrolled fires destroy 'paradise of diversity'
Scientists say many native animal species in Northern Australia are "plunging towards extinction".

Screen technology 'rewiring' human brains
A neuroscientist says people's brains are being 'rewired' because of their exposure to screen technology.


 EnvironmentMore Environment Stories > 

Poisoned water raises long term health fears
Tasmanian health officials want more to do more testing on residents of a small north-east town, where the water supply has been tainted with high levels of arsenic, cadmium and lead.

Plan for travellers' body heat to warm homes
The warmth generated by human bodies in the Parisian metro will help heat a public housing project in the city centre, according to the French capital's largest owner of social housing.

BP oil spill bill tops $8 billion
Oil giant BP says the Gulf of Mexico oil spill has cost the British company $US8 billion ($8.79 billion) so far.



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snopes.com Update: 4 September 2010


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snopes.com: Update #483


Hello again from snopes, where we shed light on the wild tales you've heard! This e-mail gives information about new articles recently added to the snopes.com web site and provides pointers to older pieces about rumors and hoaxes still wandering into everyone's inboxes.

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  • Collection purportedly reproduces jokes about Democratic politicians by Don Rickles.
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  • Does Jerry Lewis keep a significant portion of the funds raised during the annual MDA Labor Day Telethon?

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ABC NewsMail - morning edition

ABC News

 

 Morning Edition. Sat 04 Sep 2010


You are receiving this email because you are subscribed to ABC NewsMail. If you would like to change your preferences, please enter your email address and click 'Login' here.

 Top StoriesMore Top Stories > 

Buildings damaged: there are reports of widespread damage, including the collapse of some buildings.

NZ declares state of emergency after quake
A state of emergency has been declared in Christchurch, New Zealand, after a large 7.0 magnitude earthquake rocked the country's second largest city this morning.

Scores dead after blast hits Pakistan rally
A blast has ripped through a rally in the Pakistani city of Quetta, killing at least 53 people and injuring at almost 200.

Boy mauled by Taronga Zoo sea lion
An 11-year-old boy is in hospital in a stable condition after being mauled by a sea lion at a Sydney zoo.

Pyne warns of Labor 'mongoose and cobra' coalition
Opposition Education Minister Chris Pyne says the three rural independents should support a Coalition-led government because they will have less in common with Labor.

Coalition pledges to prioritise detention security
The Northern Territory Country Liberals Senator Nigel Scullion says if the Coalition wins Federal Government it would immediately increase security at Darwin's detention centre.


 The DrumMore from The Drum > 

LolKatter

Political purgatory exposes the ugly election
This period of political purgatory has exposed some very unattractive elements of our system. Both parties were driven by the dirty little secret of the Charter of Budget Honesty: If you can avoid it for long enough, it doesn't matter in the end. It's only really in political purgatory - where in the absence of result the costings become a genuine grounds for judgment - that this bipartisan system of neglect breaks down.

Balance-bias battle of climate science coverage
In reporting the views of climate change deniers and doubters, the ABC has done the whole of science a disservice. When a minority doubts what to a majority is demonstrable fact, then the outcome is not balance but a distortion of reality. The ABC needs to look again at the editorial codes that have distorted the national discussion of climate change.

Saint Paul's Letter to the Electorates: Chapter 9
And in the tents of the leaders there were talks with those who were brought forth by the people but lacketh affiliation.

Turning the key on Father's Day
Father's Day approaches, but what does that really mean? Sadly these days it's all about targeted marketing and media hype.

Why the independents must support Tony Abbott
Abbott wisely got through the election campaign not only avoiding submitting his costings to Treasury but refusing to debate the PM on the matter of the economy.


 WorldMore World Stories > 

Sydney-born cleric calls for MP's beheading
A controversial Dutch MP says the reported call by an Australian-born Muslim cleric for him to be beheaded is "a very serious threat".

Plan for travellers' body heat to warm homes
The warmth generated by human bodies in the Parisian metro will help heat a public housing project in the city centre, according to the French capital's largest owner of social housing.

NZ declares state of emergency after quake
A state of emergency has been declared in Christchurch, New Zealand, after a large 7.0 magnitude earthquake rocked the country's second largest city this morning.


 Science & TechnologyMore Science & Technology Stories > 

Uncontrolled fires destroy 'paradise of diversity'
Scientists say many native animal species in Northern Australia are "plunging towards extinction".

Screen technology 'rewiring' human brains
A neuroscientist says people's brains are being 'rewired' because of their exposure to screen technology.

Eagle returns for wild time
A wedge tailed eagle has successfully been rehabilitated and released at a site in Tasmania's Southern Midlands.


 EnvironmentMore Environment Stories > 

Plan for travellers' body heat to warm homes
The warmth generated by human bodies in the Parisian metro will help heat a public housing project in the city centre, according to the French capital's largest owner of social housing.

BP oil spill bill tops $8 billion
Oil giant BP says the Gulf of Mexico oil spill has cost the British company $US8 billion ($8.79 billion) so far.

Fight may be over for Union Hall
Union Hall at Adelaide University is a step closer to being demolished.



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The Seeds of Apple's Cloud

By matt buchanan

The Seeds of Apple's Cloud

The Seeds of Apple's CloudApple has always sucked at the internet. With Ping and the new Apple TV, Apple sucks a little bit less at it. But Apple could be good at it.

Apple's finally starting to reward people for buying into the Apple ecosystem, but everything they're doing is only a half-step toward what it could be, should be doing. It launched two social networks, and showed us how it's going to wirelessly connect iOS devices with AirPlay. And with the rental-and-stream-only Apple TV, Apple's slowly starting backing away from downloads—or at least pay-to-own content. These are the first shuffling, awkward steps toward an Apple whose products are neatly tied together by a common thread—the internet.

Apple's strongest asset for building a unified, puffy cloud-based ecosystem is your iTunes ID. There are tens of millions of users like you, waiting to be the perfect identity glue for a whole suite of interconnected Apple services. As I've argued before, it'd make a lot of sense to unify iTunes IDs with (free) MobileMe accounts, creating one uber ID for every connected service that Apple has—much in the same way Facebook's sought to establish itself as your sole credible identity on the web.

But it's obvious now that's not how Apple's thinking. Apple effectively launched two separate social networks yesterday—Game Center for the iPhone and iPod touch, and Ping for iTunes—and while both of them tie into your iTunes ID, they're not connected by it. They're two distinct networks; your iTunes ID only lurks in the background. You have separate identities on each network, with Game Center letting you pick out a different nickname.

Even if there's a case to be made for keeping different sets of friends in each network—my gamer friends have terrible taste in music, while the music nerds suck at gaming—it's hard to see why Apple effectively forces you to be schizophrenic, iterating different versions of yourself across services run by a single company. It's two more networks, two more statuses, two more identities to maintain. And if you have a MobileMe account, that's a third. (Why isn't MobileMe free again? It would make this all so simple.) Even Google, notoriously allergic to the word "cohesive," has you maintain a single identity across all 10 bajillion of its products, from Google Talk to Tsunami.

Apple doesn't even approach the middle ground of letting Facebook or Twitter offer deep integration—although there was nominal Facebook Connect support that's since disappeared. Apple simply apes some of those social networks' tropes: following friends, celebrities, and brands; liking, commenting, and posting status updates. What, you're not having enough trouble keeping up with your other social networks?

It's awesome that Apple's trying to add another layer to iTunes, a social layer that could in fact add a lot of depth. Imagining the possibilities of a social, free-wheeling iTunes—especially if it was built more around a streaming model like LaLa—is kind of spine-tingling. But Ping is just too half-assed the way it is right now; the scope is too limited. I don't buy music from iTunes, and neither do most of my friends. So, even though I use iTunes everyday, because of its singular integration with the iTunes Store, Ping doesn't actually tie into the way I use music at all. That renders it slightly better than useless.

The iTunes Music Store itself is fundamentally unchanged, at least when it comes to music. It hasn't undergone the radical, LaLa-inspired reformation it needs to be modern, transforming it into a massive streaming music repository like Spotify, beaming music to any iOS device with an internet connection. (Could you imagine how amazing an iTunes re-oriented around streaming would be with Ping, in terms sharing music with your friends and discovering new stuff?) Nope, it's just the same old iTunes. Still just an app. Still just a fat vault of music, stuck on my hard drive like it's 2002.

On the other hand, iTunes in the context of Apple TV is vastly more interesting—in fact, Apple TV is by far the most enthralling thing Apple announced this week, a model for what Apple products should be more like. A palm-sized plastic box filled with little more than a cellphone-sized processor and a wireless card, the new Apple TV doesn't download movies or TV shows to own. You can't buy movies. You can only rent them. Or stream them via Netflix. (It should be noted that Apple opening up to another content service that's effectively a competitor is promising all by itself). It's a tiny shift on a single front, but a shift nonetheless, deeper into the techno-philosophical territory where you never "own" the content you pay for, where you only license or borrow it. The kind of territory that you'd be in with an iTunes music streaming service. It's hard to pronounce the download an endangered species, given that the one-click download is still a huge component of Ping, but a quick glance around the media landscape should spin your head in the right direction: Things are moving toward effervescent (if omnipresent) streams, not files.

Apple TV's integration with AirPlay and an upcoming, more powerful new Remote app soothes a lot of the anxiety about the inexplicable sense of disconnect between various Apple products. With AirPlay, you can wirelessly stream music, photos or video from any iOS device to Apple TV. Duh. Obvious. The new Remote app turns an iPhone or touch into the amazing multitouch remote control we've always wanted it to be. You can rent movies and TV shows, scan Netflix, browse your media collection, input text and do everything else you'd expect from a remote. Apple TV and iOS devices just go together, and it's a feeling you should get more often from owning tons of Apple products. Right now, buying an iPhone doesn't make owning a Mac orgasmic.

Now that the Touch is legitimately an iPhone 4 minus the phone—and the only iPod that matters—a combined, more deeply integrated MobileMe/iTunes that streams music to iOS devices, slurps up photos and videos to a free account and expands storage into the cloud with a built-in, Dropbox-like app makes even more sense. It would make the iPod touch an even better proposition. And it'd open the door to the kind of synchronicity between Apple products that would make it feel like you're wrapped in safe, puffy cushion all the time. The cloud would be the stuffing. That sense of being comfortably smothered is still not quite there. But it's a little cozier than it was last week.

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