Monday, December 5, 2011

Interest Check: The Colonists

Okay, so once upon a time I was in an RP that lasted for *years*. It was between a very small group of people but we stuck together and built characters and stories that none of us will ever forget. Since then I've been trying to recreate that magic on various RP sites but I've been failing badly. Sometimes it's been other people bailing on me, but sometimes the death of the RPs were all my fault. In any case I'm going to give it another shot...

So here's the basic idea behind the Colonists:

120 years ago what remained of the human race left Earth to inhabit a knew planet called Terrata. They left in waves, in huge space vessels called Carriers. The Alpha Carrier was the first to leave and thus will be the first to arrive. The people on the Alpha Carrier have very specific instructions of what to do, and how, in order to survive, establish proper civilization, and pave the way for the other humans coming behind them; this is called "The Plan" and the people on the Alpha Carrier regard it as a religion.

So you'll be playing one of the people trying to establish civilization, as instructed, despite various set backs. Once they land there are a lot of possibilities such as alien life on the planet, unpredictable weather patterns, or even magic if we decide to go in a fantasy direction. Of course there's the sudden but inevitable rebellion against The Plan which makes things all the more interesting.

If you interested post here or PM me. The idea is still young and open ended so there is a lot of opportunity to add to it. Suggestions or questions are always welcomed.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/gTGPRsC42T0/viewtopic.php

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CA-CANADA Summary (Reuters)

Canada sees U.S. approving Keystone pipeline

TORONTO (Reuters) ? Canada believes the United States will ultimately approve TransCanada's proposed Keystone XL pipeline, which Washington put on hold last month for more than a year, Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver said on Friday. Oliver said the project - which would carry crude from Alberta's oil sands to the Gulf of Mexico coast - still makes enormous economic sense for the United States.

Jobless rate unexpectedly rises in November

OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canada's economy unexpectedly lost jobs for a second straight month in November, raising concern that weakness in other countries may do lasting harm to an economy that has so far been surprisingly robust. Net job losses totaled 18,600 jobs in the month following a hefty 54,000 drop in October, Statistics Canada said on Friday, pointing to a poor economic performance in the final quarter of the year.

RIM caps dismal year with another profit warning

TORONTO (Reuters) - Research in Motion booked a huge charge to write down inventories of its underwhelming PlayBook tablet on Friday, capping a dismal year with a steep profit warning that sent its shares tumbling more than 8 percent. Waterloo, Ontario-based RIM, the company whose now ubiquitous BlackBerry created the concept of on-the-go email, said it now no longer expects to meet its full-year earnings forecast, due to weak sales, the PlayBook writedown and a charge related to a damaging service outage in October.

Natives to oppose West Coast oil pipelines

(Reuters) - Aboriginal groups in the Canadian Pacific province of British Columbia said on Thursday they had formed a united front to oppose all exports of crude oil from the Alberta tar sands through their territories. The declaration is another political blow to the Canadian energy sector and Canada's right-of-center Conservative government after Washington decided last month to delay approving a pipeline carrying oil sands crude to the Gulf Coast.

RBC PMI shows slower manufacturing growth

TORONTO (Reuters) - Canadian manufacturing growth slowed in November to the weakest level in four months as worsening global economic conditions took a toll on the domestic environment, data on Thursday showed. The RBC Canadian Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index came in at 53.31 in November, above the level of 50 that separates expansion from contraction.

TSX climbs on banks, Europe hopes

TORONTO (Reuters) - Toronto's main stock index was higher on Friday morning, on track to post its biggest weekly gain in more than two years, pushed up by strong bank earnings, encouraging U.S. jobs data and talk of more action to ease Europe's debt. Royal Bank of Canada was the most heavily weighted gainer, up 3.8 percent at C$48.80, after Canada's biggest lender reported a quarterly profit that beat expectations, helped by solid growth in mortgages and business loans, which overshadowed weak capital markets-related income.

Supreme Court to hear corn syrup price-fixing

(Reuters) - Canada's Supreme Court said on Thursday it will hear a case that alleges producers of high-fructose corn syrup, including U.S. agribusiness giants Cargill Inc and Archer Daniels Midland Co, conspired to fix the sweetener's price. The case involves efforts to set up a class action lawsuit. It was brought by Sun-Rype Products Ltd, a Canadian juice and fruit-snack company based in British Columbia, and by a consumer representing potential individual claimants.

GM Canada market share hits historical low, analyst

TORONTO (Reuters) - General Motors market share in Canada hit an historical low in November, an analyst said, as figures on Thursday showed its sales fell 14.2 percent. Ford Motor Co's Canadian sales also fell but it remained the top-selling brand in the country.

RIM, Nokia deny use of Carrier IQ software

TORONTO (Reuters) - Research In Motion does not install, nor authorize, its carrier partners to install "Carrier IQ" monitoring software on its BlackBerry smartphones, the company said on Thursday. RIM made the statement after a security researcher said the "Carrier IQ" application, which can monitor what device users are doing, has been installed on mobile devices from multiple vendors without the knowledge or consent of customers.

Maple says TMX deal could give OSC a pricing role

TORONTO (Reuters) - The Canadian consortium seeking to buy TMX Group, operator of the Toronto Stock Exchange, said on Thursday it could give regulators the right to supervise clearing and settlement prices in order to gain approval of the C$3.8 billion (C$3.76 billion) takeover deal. Under its TMX takeover proposal, the Maple Group consortium of Canadian financial services companies wants to also buy Canadian Depository for Securities (CDS), which clears and settles trades in Canada. This aspect of the deal has spurred fears of an unfair monopoly, and Maple said it is ready to compromise to get the deal done.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/energy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111202/wl_canada_nm/canada_summary

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Sunday, December 4, 2011

Lloyd Chapman: John Boehner Is a Bag of Hot Air

The House Speaker's staff posted a blog today (Dec. 1, 2011) titled, "Uncertainty Hampering Small Businesses, GOP Taking Action with Plan for Jobs," heavily criticizing the Obama administration for not taking small business concerns seriously.

Speaker Boehner is correct that President Obama is failing to support small businesses, but he and the GOP are merely using their jobs plan as a ruse to deregulate Fortune 1000 corporations.

Since taking office the president has completely ignored America's oldest and most cost-effective economic stimulus program, the Small Business Act. This existing federal law aims to stimulate the American economy by requiring that a minimum 23 percent of all federal contract dollars be awarded to small businesses. The Act defines a small business as being "independently owned," which excludes publicly traded corporations.

Yet every year, federal agencies fraudulently misreport their funding actions as contracts awarded to small businesses, when in reality, large corporations like Raytheon, Boeing, Lockheed Martin, AT&T, Italian defense giant Finmeccanica, Rolls-Royce and British Aerospace are the true recipients of the majority of federal small business contracts. More than a dozen federal investigations conducted since 2003 confirm this.

In recent weeks, mention of a federal bio-defense contract given to Siga Technologies, a company controlled by private equity mogul Ronald Perelman (a top Democratic donor), has sparked a scandal.

Republicans, who otherwise don't bother to point out contracting fraud, pounced on the $433 million sole-source contract from the Department of Health and Human Services that Siga received in May to make an experimental smallpox treatment, because Democratic donors may have benefited.

Before Siga received the contract, a small business complained about not being allowed to bid on the
smallpox drug contract, bringing attention to the fact that the government was about to give a small business contract worth as much as $2.8 billion to Siga Technologies, a publicly traded company.

According to the Los Angeles Times, the Small Business Administration agreed that Siga's affiliation with Ronald Perelman's holding company, MacAndrews & Forbes, disqualified Siga Technologies from the contract. Still, in the long run (having spent $800,000 on campaign donations and lobbying efforts since 2005) Siga received a $433 million contract to develop the smallpox vaccine without competition.

Siga Technologies threatened The Huffington Post with legal action in October 2010 for reporting that "Siga had named labor leader Andy Stern to its board and compensated him with stock options that would become dramatically more valuable if the company managed to win the contract it sought with HHS."

Siga won the bid one week after the offending Huffington Post article, although the contract was specifically required to be awarded to a small business.

The Los Angeles Times reported last month that "the Obama administration could have awarded the contract to Chimerix as the only eligible small-business applicant. Or it could have reopened the competition to companies of any size. Instead, the administration moved to block all companies -- except Siga -- from bidding on a second offering of the contract."

This flies in the face of American small business programs.

Discoveries such as these are irrefutable evidence that federal contracts with publicly traded companies shouldn't be counted as small business awards and that federal oversight is needed to prevent the highest paying lobbyists from holding a monopoly of the federal acquisitions budget.

And while the GOP is no doubt overjoyed about the potential damage the Siga scandal has inflicted on Obama's incumbency, very few members of Congress are willing to approve legislation that would end federal contracting fraud.

During his 2008 presidential campaign Barack Obama stated, "It is time to end the diversion of federal small business contracts to corporate giants." Since taking office, President Obama has failed to follow on that promise. As a result, during every day of his administration, hundreds of millions of dollars in federal small business contracts are illegally diverted to large businesses.

SBA Inspector General Peggy Gustafson testified before Congress in October, naming the issue of federal small business contracting abuse as a "top management challenge" facing the SBA for the seventh consecutive year.

Georgia Representative Hank Johnson introduced H.R. 3184, "The Fairness and Transparency in Contracting Act," to the House in October. Now under consideration by the House Small Business Committee and House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, H.R. 3184, "The Fairness and Transparency in Contracting Act," presents a straightforward solution to the decade-long existence of federal small business contracting abuse in the United States.

If passed, H.R. 3184 would prohibit publicly traded companies from receiving federal small business contract awards and therefore re-divert more than $100 billion in federal infrastructure spending to small businesses every year. The bill currently has 17 co-sponsors (all Democrats), although H.R. 3184 should have the full support of the House, Senate and Executive branch because it presents a simple, deficit-neutral solution for significant job creation that requires no new taxes and no new spending.

If Speaker Boehner and the GOP wanted to go above and beyond supporting small businesses, they would urge House Small Business Committee Chair Sam Graves to appear on national television daily, campaigning to stop federal small business contracting fraud by supporting H.R. 3184.

?

Follow Lloyd Chapman on Twitter: www.twitter.com/LloydChapman

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lloyd-chapman/john-boehner-is-a-bag-of-_b_1124328.html

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Samsung's two-faced SCH-W999 Android plays the dual core, dual SIM game

Remember Samsung's second-gen dual-screen Android clamshell we spotted about a month ago? Well, here it is at last: announced in partnership with China Telecom, this SCH-W999 flip phone packs two 3.5-inch 480 x 800 Super AMOLED panels back to back, along with a 1.2GHz dual-core Qualcomm MSM8660, Android 2.3 with TouchWiz, HyperSkin back cover (as featured on the Galaxy Nexus for grip plus anti-smear), five megapixel camera, Bluetooth 3.0, WiFi and WAPI (China's not-so-successful take on WiFi, basically).

Like many phones on China Telecom, the W999 comes with dual SIM slots and dual-mode connectivity (GSM and CDMA2000, with the latter offering EV-DO 3G), but with the additional support for penta-band radio for globetrotters. Want to nab one? We're looking at a 2012 launch, though there's no word on prices just yet -- well, just so you know, the predecessor W899 starts from ¥8990 ($1,410), so good luck with your garage sale. We got you some pictures from the China launch event after the break, courtesy of Samsung Mobile.

Continue reading Samsung's two-faced SCH-W999 Android plays the dual core, dual SIM game

Samsung's two-faced SCH-W999 Android plays the dual core, dual SIM game originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 03 Dec 2011 11:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/03/samsungs-two-faced-sch-w999-android-plays-the-dual-core-dual-s/

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Saturday, December 3, 2011

Helena Bonham Carter Talks 'Dark Shadows' Character

'She's an alcoholic psychiatrist, so I hadn't played that before,' actress tells MTV News.
By John Mitchell


Helena Bonham Carter
Photo: WireImage

We're still waiting for a teaser trailer for the hottest vampire movie that doesn't sparkle in the sun. Details about "Dark Shadows" have been scant, but one of the film's stars is finally talking about her role and what inspired director Tim Burton to take on the project.

At this week's BAFTA Britannia Awards, MTV News spoke to two-time Oscar nominee Helena Bonham Carter about "Shadows," her role in the film and what made her real-life love Burton want to director the vampire epic, which is set to hit theaters May 11, 2012. "I love 'Dark Shadows.' It's very original. It's uncategorizable," Bonham Carter said. "It's going to be impossible to sell, frankly, because it's just so ... it's a soap opera but it's very, very subtle.

It's a ghost story but then it's an unhappy vampire story. It's a mixture of so many different things and a real ensemble piece. And hopefully it will be funny."

Bonham Carter plays Dr. Julia Hoffman. In the late-'60s television soap opera on which the movie is based, Hoffman specialized in psychology and rare blood disorders and eventually tried to cure Barnabas Collins (played in the film by Burton regular Johnny Depp) of his vampirism by injecting him with a vaccine made of healthy plasma to counteract the destruction of his own blood cells by the vampire cells. (Got that?) Whether that's part of the film's plot remains to be seen, but Bonham Carter did have a colorful response for MTV News when asked about playing Hoffman.

"I did love playing her. I mean, she's an alcoholic psychiatrist, so I hadn't played that before," she said. "And she's got a secret. They all have secrets."

She also explained that "Shadows" has long been something of a passion project for Burton, with whom she has two children, because the quirky director was a huge fan of the TV show as a child. "This was a thing that he raced home to see when he was about age 10," she told MTV. "So it was returning to his childhood roots of what he loved watching."

The always outrageous actress was also pretty frank about her own feelings about the campy soap, saying, "It's actually a really bad, hilariously bad soap opera. And because it's so bad, [Burton] felt he had to make a hugely expensive movie."

Are you excited to see Helena Bonham Carter bring new life to quirky psychologist Julia Hoffman in the big-screen adaptation of "Dark Shadows"? Sound off in the comments below and tweet me at @JohnMitchell83 with your thoughts and suggestions for future columns!

Check out everything we've got on "Dark Shadows."

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1675295/dark-shadows-helena-bonham-carter.jhtml

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Court weighs trademark on Maker's Mark wax seal (AP)

LOUISVILLE, Ky. ? The dripping red wax seal atop a Maker's Mark bottle makes the bourbon stand out on shelves. Three federal judges are trying to decide whether the company can keep that distinction.

The U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati heard arguments Thursday over whether Maker's Mark can keep the trademark on the capper or if other liquor companies can use a similar seal.

Maker's Mark in 2010 won an order awarding it exclusive rights to the seal. Attorneys for London-based Diageo North America and Casa Cuervo of Mexico argued that wax seals have been used for centuries and Maker's Mark wasn't harmed by their use of it on a special bottle of tequila.

Maker's Mark attorneys said the company has a valid trademark on the wax seal.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111201/ap_on_re_us/us_wax_seal_battle

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Friday, December 2, 2011

Russell Brand: Happily Married & Thinking Babies With Katy Perry (omg!)

Russell Brand visits 'The Ellen DeGeneres Show,' Dec. 1, 2011 -- The Ellen DeGeneres Show

More than a year after his wedding to pop star Katy Perry, Russell Brand is starting to think about babies.

On Thursday, while sitting for an interview for Friday's "The Ellen DeGeneres Show," the British comedian and actor said he longs to hear the pitter-patter of little feet.

PLAY IT NOW: Katy Perry Stuns At ?The Smurfs? NYC Premiere

"Katy says you are going to try and start a family. Are you going to have a family?" Ellen asked.

"I would like one. I love those little babies in the beginning," Russell answered.

VIEW THE PHOTOS: Katy Perry & Russell Brand

"Yeah, that's how they start out," Ellen chimed in.

"They're so lovely in that bit. Me and Katy are godparents to two twin boys. They're called Sam and Donovan," Russell said of the 1-year-olds.

Russell went on to say he's made some observations about babies.

VIEW THE PHOTOS: ?California Gurl? Katy Perry

"At first they were boring. They were just essentially little fluid factories, generating fluids -- no regard for what I was wearing," he said. "Now, they are interesting. They smile and look at me and wonder... I'm just observing them like I'm a scientist."

"I can learn from them," Russell continued. "Me and Katy are their godparents, which means we're responsible for their spiritual growth. Should be interesting."

VIEW THE PHOTOS: The Brit Pack: Hot Shots Of Stars From The UK!

During his "Ellen" visit, Russell also hit back at the rumors he and Katy have split.

"There are always rumors aren't there? In the end you have to just not engage with Internet technology, which is difficult because [of] a lot of the nude women websites I quite enjoy," he said with a laugh. "But they've had to go. I've treated the whole Internet now like it's a wicked little liar. Yeah. I am really happily married."

Copyright 2011 by NBC Universal, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news_russell_brand_happily_married_thinking_babies_katy_perry015426713/43779145/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/russell-brand-happily-married-thinking-babies-katy-perry-015426713.html

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