Saturday, August 10, 2013

California wildfire destroys at least 10 homes

BEAUMONT, Calif. (AP) ? A rapidly spreading wildfire chewed through a rugged Southern California mountain range on Thursday, destroying at least 10 homes, threatening more than 500 other residences and forcing some 1,800 people to flee.

Five people were injured, while more than 1,000 firefighters, 13 helicopters and six air tankers battled the flames as they pushed eastward along the San Jacinto Mountains, a desert range 90 miles east of Los Angeles, Cal Fire Riverside Chief John R. Hawkins said.

A man near the origin of the fire suffered serious burns, Hawkins said. Four firefighters were also injured, including two who suffered heat exhaustion. Officials did not have details to release on the other two.

At least 10 homes have been destroyed and Hawkins said that number would likely triple as authorities make their way into the charred areas to assess the damage.

Hawkins said the wind-fed fire that sparked at 2:05 p.m. Wednesday is one of the "most rapidly spreading, dangerous fires that I've seen" in his 50 years as a firefighter.

The fire was estimated at nearly 22 square miles Thursday, with 20 percent containment, but it was growing, causing concern that the direction could change in the area, which is known as a wind tunnel.

"The conditions at the front right now are very dangerous," Hawkins said.

Authorities still have not determined what caused the fire.

Evacuation orders were issued in five towns. Flames were marching toward the hardscrabble town of Cabazon, where hundreds scrambled to leave in the pre-dawn hours Thursday as the mountain ridge behind their homes glowed red.

Many returned after sunrise to pack up more belongings and watch the flickering line of fire snaking along the brown, scrubby mountains.

Linda Walls, 62, sat with her family in lawn chairs and watched fire crews scrambling to douse the flames marching toward her modest home less than a quarter mile away. An American flag flapped in the gusty wind that kicked up the fire. She wiped her brow, feeling the scorching heat.

Gray and pink-tinted clouds billowed across the otherwise crystal blue sky. Neighbors could be heard coughing as they filled the beds of pickup trucks with motocross bikes, boxes of clothing, toys and packaged food.

"It seems to be taking off now," she said as sirens whirred by. "All you see are the firemen inside the blaze."

At the end of her street, a group of ostriches paced in their cages as the hill above them burned. A firefighter rushing by said they would do what they can to protect them. Nearby another pen was filled with goats.

In the nearby town of Banning, Lili Arroyo, 83, left with only her pet cockatiel, Tootsie, in its cage and a bag of important papers from her home, which was rebuilt after being destroyed in a 2006 wildfire.

"The smoke was so bad you couldn't see," said Arroyo, who lives in the town of Banning. "There were embers and ash coming down all over the sky. The smoke was really thick. I was starting not to be able to breathe."

Evacuation orders covered an RV resort called the Silent Valley Club, the rural communities of Poppet Flats, Twin Pines, Edna Valley and Vista Grande, portions of the city of Cabazon along Interstate 10, and a camping area known as Black Mountain.

A veteran of many evacuations, Dana Wright, 43, wiped away a tear as she entered a shelter at a Beaumont school and went with her family to watch TV news. She had no idea whether her Poppet Flats home of 11 years had survived. Friends said a nearby home had burned.

She and her husband hoped to find a way back up into the mountains. "I just want to look to see if we have a house," she said.

Most of Southern California's severe wildfires are associated with Santa Ana winds caused by high pressure over the West that sends a clockwise flow of air rushing down into the region.

This week's fire, however, was being fanned by a counter-clockwise flow around a low pressure area over northwest California.

It was the second major wildfire in the San Jacinto Mountains this summer. A blaze that erupted in mid-July spread over 43 square miles on peaks above Palm Springs, burned seven homes and forced 6,000 people out of Idyllwild and neighboring towns.

The latest fire also burned in the footprint of the notorious Esperanza Fire, a 2006, wind-driven inferno that overran a U.S. Forest Service engine crew. All five crew members died. A man was convicted of setting the fire and sentenced to death.

After touring the area, U.S. Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., who lives in Riverside County, said 165,000 acres have burned in California this year and climate change is setting conditions for more disastrous blazes, while budget cuts are limiting resources to fight them.

"Unless we take action, things are only going to get worse," she said.

A different blaze, a 60-acre wildfire, near Wrightwood in the San Gabriel Mountains forced evacuations of about 75 homes in several mountain communities Thursday afternoon.

The fire broke out around noon, and firefighters struggled to beat back flames in steep terrain. Homes along several winding mountain roads were being evacuated. It was unclear how many homes or residents are affected.

Wrightwood is a mountain community popular with skiers located about 40 miles northeast of downtown Los Angeles.

___

Associated Press writer John Antczak in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/california-wildfire-destroys-least-10-homes-235139477.html

dishonored april 18 delonte west vanessa williams nicklas backstrom discovery shuttle allure

Thursday, August 8, 2013

A glimpse of the future: The display is the computer | VentureBeat

As a fundamental innovation, the touchscreen display has moved far beyond the smartphone and wormed its way into tablets, notebook computers, and the emerging category of wearable computers. And its reach will only grow greater as displays become more flexible and accurate, according to bunch of speakers at NPD DisplaySearch?s Emerging Display Technologies event today in San Jose, Calif.

Wearable displays

DisplaySearch

Wearable displays

The display is the computer. That?s a memorable twist on an old saying from tech guru Scott McNealy, who declared ?the network is the computer.? But Shane Wall, chief strategy and technology officer in the mobility group at Hewlett-Packard and a keynote speaker at the event, said that the new twist on the saying is becoming true. Increasingly, the value in the computer is captured in the display, he said. And increasingly, that value will be manifested in mobile devices.

?In order to make the computing real, we had to make fundamental changes in the input and the output of a computer,? Wall said. ?It?s a common saying, and it is becoming more true everyday, that the display is the computer.?

?The mobile phone and the tablet are a tiny part of what will be a huge revolution where computing will be carried on your body, embedded in your body, worn on your body, and embedded in your car, ? Wall said. ?This is a very big economic trend.?

As Microsoft was preparing its touch-oriented Windows 8 operating system, Intel did a global survey of hundreds of people and their feelings about touch. Almost 80 percent said that they wanted to interact with a computer via a touchscreen, rather than a keyboard or mouse, said Matt King, senior engineering manager at Intel.

The proliferation of touchscreens started in 2007 with the iPhone and took a big leap with th

Shane Wall of HP

Dean Takahashi

Shane Wall of HP

e iPad in 2010. Intel and Microsoft have now fully jumped on the touch bandwagon with Windows 8 PCs. By the end of this year, about 18 percent of new laptops will be touch-enabled. By the end of 2015, the percentage will be 40 percent. Smaller displays for devices like the iPad Mini (5 inches to 7 inches) are also becoming more popular as a category. But one of the categories where touchscreens are needed is in the 14-inch and up size, said Paul Semenza, senior vice president and analyst at NPD DisplaySearch.

Displays are also getting bigger. Sweden?s FlatFrog has customers who are in production on 32-inch display that use its optical multitouch technology, said Ola Wassvik, chief technology officer at FlatFrog.

Richard Shim, a senior analyst at NPD DisplaySearch, said that laptop shipments peaked above 200 million units in 2011, and they declined in 2012. They are expected to hit about 182 million units, down from an earlier forecast of 199 million units earlier this year. By contrast, the tablet shipment forecast was bumped up from 256 million units to 280 million units. So 2013 is the first year when tablet sales will outnumber laptop sales. And by the end of 2014, tablet sales are expected to be double the number of notebook computer sales.

?The tablet space is where the battle is,? Shim said.

Lu-Fong Chua, product line manager for Gorilla Glass (the sturdy glass that protects touchscreens) at Corning, said that device categories are blurring as laptops, tablets, and smartphones morph and all share the same types of touchscreen surfaces. Laptops were used primarily for content creation, such as productivity apps, while tablets were considered content consumption devices. But as tablets grow up and laptops morph into 2-in-1 tablet/laptop models, the roles are changing.

Chua said demographics are changing. Young people love touch interfaces.

?I?m sure you?ve seen the videos of a baby holding a magazine and trying to swipe it to change its image,? he said.

Beyond the realm of smartphones, tablets and laptops is the category of wearables such as Google Glass.

?We?ll see displays on contact lenses,? Wall said. ?It?s still early. It will be many years before we see the light of day on that. But we have some fundamental proofs on that already.?

Wearable tech

Canatu

Wearable tech

Wall at HP said that interaction is going to change, with touch being only one of many ways to input data into a computer. You?ll be able to use gestures to communicate with devices. Cameras could be input systems. You could, for instance, visit a foreign country and point a camera at street signs. The camera app will translate the signs so you can understand them.

?It?s a land grab for what body part we can get,? Wall said. ?Things are becoming much more personal, with a display embedded on the body. ?

The only hold up in the technological race is the slow-motion progress on battery development.

?Moore?s Law doesn?t apply to batteries,? said Bob Senior, director of sales at Canatu, a maker of display technology.

Wall said, ?The key piece, this cog, the display, will be very important in the overall economy. The investor returns for touchscreen companies have been disproportionate for the companies that have made them.?

Source: http://venturebeat.com/2013/08/07/a-glimpse-of-the-future-the-display-is-the-computer/

anchorman sequel safety not guaranteed lifehouse al gore la dodgers lawrence o donnell magic johnson

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Times Union Center bidding on three NCAA Division I tournaments

Donna Abbott-Vlahos

The Times Union Center has hosted NCAA men?s basketball and wrestling championship tournaments in various years since the arena opened in 1990, but never women?s basketball or women?s volleyball.

The Times Union Center could host up to three NCAA Division I championship tournaments starting in 2015 -- games that would not require expanding the sports arena at an estimated cost of $6 million to $11 million.

The arena?s general manager, Bob Belber, said bids will be submitted to the NCAA to host regional championship tournaments for women?s basketball, women?s volleyball, and men?s ice hockey from 2015 to 2018.

Belber is working with the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference and Siena College on the women?s basketball and volleyball bids. The Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and Union College are teaming up with the arena on the hockey bid.

The bids are due Sept. 16. The NCAA will announce the winning sites in December.

The games, if awarded, are expected to draw thousands of fans to the county-owned arena for two-day tournaments in March and December of those years, and help fill local bars, restaurants and hotels.

?The reality is if you bring in, for example, the regional women?s basketball tournament my guess is we?ll probably have close to 65 to 70 percent of the people who attend the event come from outside this market, and fill every hotel in a 50-mile radius,? Belber said.

The Times Union Center last hosted an NCAA Division I tournament in 2010, when the men?s ice hockey East Regional was played there.

The arena has also hosted NCAA men?s basketball and wrestling championship tournaments in various years since the arena opened in 1990, but never women?s basketball or women?s volleyball.

?These championships that we?re bidding on we feel can bring in huge crowds,? Belber said. ?We can generate not just enough to cover expenses but to provide the NCAA with the net revenues they?re looking for.?

DeMasi covers real estate, construction, retail and hospitality.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/vertical_13/~3/2p_CfgiPhPM/times-union-center-bidding-on-three.html

rex ryan Louisville football Fidelity Charlie Strong Calendar 2013 john boehner HGTV Dream Home 2013