Sunday, November 11, 2012

VirnetX Files New Lawsuit Against Apple | VirnetX

Posted on 09. Nov, 2012 by admin in Press Releases

ZEPHYR COVE, Nevada.,? November 9, 2012 ? VirnetX? Holding Corporation (NYSE MKT: VHC), an Internet security software and technology company, today announced that on November 6, 2012, ?it filed a complaint against Apple Inc., in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, Tyler Division. The complaint includes allegations of willful patent infringement regarding four patents owned by VirnetX, U.S. Patent Nos. 6,502,135, 7,418,504, 7,921,211 and 7,490,151. In its complaint, VirnetX seeks both damages and injunctive relief. The accused products include the iPhone 5, iPod Touch 5th Generation, iPad 4th Generation, iPad mini, and the latest Macintosh computers. Due to their release dates, these products were not included in the previous lawsuit that concluded with a Jury verdict on November 6, 2012.

?

About VirnetX

VirnetX Holding Corporation is an Internet security software and technology company with patented technology for secure communications including 4G LTE security. ?The Company?s software and technology solutions, including its secure domain name registry and GABRIEL Connection Technology?, are designed to facilitate secure communications and to create a secure environment for real-time communication applications such as instant messaging, VoIP, smart phones, eReaders and video conferencing. ?The Company?s patent portfolio includes 20 U.S. and 26 international patents and over 100 pending applications. ?For more information, please visit www.virnetx.com.

?

Contact:
Greg Wood
VirnetX Holding Corporation
775.548.1785
greg_wood@virnetx.com

VirnetX and GABRIEL Connection Technology are trademarks of VirnetX Holding Corporation. Other company and product names may be trademarks of their respective owners.

Source: http://virnetx.com/virnetx-files-new-lawsuit-against-apple/

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ARM chief tosses Moore's Law out with the trash, says efficiency rules all

ARM chief kicks Moore's Law to the curb, says efficiency rules all

ARM CEO Warren East already has a tendency to be more than a bit outspoken on the future of computing, and he just escalated the war of words with an assault on the industry's sacred cow: Moore's Law. After some prompting by MIT Technology Review during a chat, East argued that power efficiency is "actually what matters," whether it's a phone or a server farm. Making ever more complex and power-hungry processors to obey Moore's Law just limits how many chips you can fit in a given space, he said. Not that the executive is about to accept Intel's position that ARM isn't meant for performance, as he saw the architecture scaling to high speeds whenever there was a large enough power supply to back it up. East's talk is a bit long on theory and short on practice as of today -- a Samsung Chromebook isn't going to make Gordon Moore have second thoughts -- but it's food for thought in an era where ARM is growing fast, and even Microsoft isn't convinced that speed rules everything.

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ARM chief tosses Moore's Law out with the trash, says efficiency rules all originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Nov 2012 20:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/11/09/arm-chief-tosses-moores-law-out-with-the-trash-favors-efficiency/

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Saturday, November 10, 2012

Large Tree Falls In Front Of Stockton Home ? CBS Sacramento

A large tree lays in the front yard of home on Wagner Heights Court in Stockton on Friday, Nov. 9, 2012. (submitted photo)

A large tree lays in the front yard of home on Wagner Heights Court in Stockton on Friday, Nov. 9, 2012. (submitted photo)

STOCKTON (CBS13) ? A large tree fell victim to the rain and wind of Thursday?s night storm in Stockton.
The large tree fell on Wagner Heights Court in Stockton.

The owners of the home where the tree fell could hear a loud crash, but luckily for them, the tree crashed toward the street.

The family usually parks a car in the same spot where the tree fell but didn?t have the car parked there Thursday night.

?If it would of went the other way it would of been very bad because my family was in the kitchen and it could of crushed them,? homeowner Matthew Valladares said.

He said insurance will cover the cleanup.

Source: http://sacramento.cbslocal.com/2012/11/09/large-tree-falls-in-front-of-stockton-home/

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Israel minister: Iran slowed down enrichment push

FILE - In this March 5, 2012 file photo, President Barack Obama meets with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington. President Barack Obama's re-election leaves Israel's prime minister in a bind. Benjamin Netanyahu has clashed with Obama and was widely seen as backing challenger Mitt Romney. In coming months, however, Netanyahu will need American support as the Palestinians seek upgraded U.N. recognition and the world grapples with Iran's nuclear program.(AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)

FILE - In this March 5, 2012 file photo, President Barack Obama meets with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington. President Barack Obama's re-election leaves Israel's prime minister in a bind. Benjamin Netanyahu has clashed with Obama and was widely seen as backing challenger Mitt Romney. In coming months, however, Netanyahu will need American support as the Palestinians seek upgraded U.N. recognition and the world grapples with Iran's nuclear program.(AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)

(AP) ? Israel's defense minister has said that Iran has slowed the timetable for enriching enough uranium to build nuclear weapons, implying that Israel would have more time to decide whether to strike Iran's enrichment facilities.

"They essentially delayed their arrival at the red line by eight months," said Ehud Barak, adding it was not clear why Iran stepped back.

Barak's time frame is in line with one Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made in September when he spoke at the U.N. General Assembly. There, Netanyahu said the world has until next summer at the latest to stop Iran before it can build a nuclear bomb.

The West suspects Iran may be aiming toward production of nuclear weapons. Iran denies that, insisting that its program is for peaceful purposes.

Israel sees Iran's nuclear program as an existential threat, citing Iranian denials of the Holocaust, its calls for Israel's destruction, its development of missiles capable of striking the Jewish state and its support for anti-Israel militant groups.

Barak's comments, made during an interview late Thursday on Israeli Channel 2 TV, appeared to be based on an August report by the U.N.'s nuclear watchdog. It said that Iran has converted much of its higher-level enriched uranium into a powder for a medical research reactor that is difficult to reprocess for weapons production.

In the interview, Barak said Iran has not reached a "red line" on uranium enrichment, referring to Netanyahu's speech, where he explained that Israel could not tolerate waiting until Iran progressed most of the way to the uranium enrichment needed to make an atomic bomb.

The International Atomic Energy Agency report from August said Iran turned much of the uranium that was enriched to the higher, 20-percent levels into reactor fuel plates that are difficult to retool into warhead material.

As a result, it is still far short of the amount of more highly enriched uranium it would need to progress to weapons-grade levels.

"I don't know why they did it. I don't know if it was because of the deterrence that was connected to our statements and positions," Barak said. "Maybe it comes from other considerations but that allowed for the delay until the spring or summer."

Barak's statements contrasted with a report on the same TV station this week that said Israel was on the brink of an attack against Iran in the past. The report said that Netanyahu and Barak ordered the military to go on high alert for a looming attack on Iran's nuclear program two years ago. They backed off following strong objections from senior security officials, the report said.

The IAEA report also noted Iran has moved more of its uranium enrichment activities into fortified bunkers deep underground where they are impervious to air attack.

The international community has focused its efforts on diplomatic maneuvers to deter Iran from pursuing its nuclear program. U.S. lawmakers are working on a set of new and unprecedented sanctions that could prevent the Islamic republic from doing business with most of the world until it agrees to international constraints on its nuclear program.

Barak said Thursday he doubted that negotiations meant to persuade Iran to halt its nuclear program would be effective.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-11-09-ML-Israel-Iran/id-d1c7cbb63a714de791bd4d87628794a3

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How Slow Money Financing Helps Food Businesses Grow ...


? Bett Wilson Foley/Slow Money NC

I once proposed the idea of Slow Business as a means to reclaim our lives. That meme never really took off, but Slow Money, on the other hand, has. A movement that facilitates direct loans between private individuals and sustainable food operations, Slow Money is becoming a powerful driver for grassroots business activism.

I recently had the opportunity to talk to Carol Peppe Hewitt, a founder of the vibrant Slow Money movement here in North Carolina, as well as some of the business owners who have borrowed through Slow Money NC.

?When you run a small business for years, it?s like you see a snapshot of what is going on with the wider economy.?

That?s how Carol Peppe Hewitt describes her entry point into Slow Money.

She had been running a successful artisan pottery business with her husband Mark for decades, and observed how hard it was for small businesses to access affordable credit. This was particularly true within the local food movement ? where farmers, small processors and producers were unable to get loans to start up or expand their business.

Consumers Become Investors
At the same time, Carol noticed a desire among local food devotees ? the customers at farmers? markets, restaurants and food co-ops ? to do more to expand the movement. Hewitt again:

?I just can?t eat enough local food to create the kind of change I wish to see," they'd say "Surely there are other ways to help??


? Bett Wilson Foley/Slow Money NC

The threads began to come together when Woody Tasch ? the founder, chairman and president of Slow Money ? came to talk at a local community college to an audience of about 30 people.

The Power of Money

?Woody described a concept that was simple and yet revolutionary. He talked about reclaiming the power of our money. Taking it out of the stock market and instead facilitating small, peer-to-peer loans at affordable rates. Putting money into businesses that provide real world benefits for our communities.?

The talk ignited intense discussion in the audience. Several attendees formulated plans to to get a Slow Money chapter started in NC.

?Many of us had already made personal loans to businesses we believed in. It seemed like the logical next step to formalize this approach so that we could empower others to do the same.?

Not long after, Slow Money NC was born, making its first $2000 loan to Lynette Driver ? a local baker looking to buy a mixer ? and a second loan of around $6000 to fund the expansion of Angelina?s Kitchen ? a Greek restaurant in Pittsboro serving local, sustainable food.

Building and Maintaining Fertility
The focus that the Slow Money movement has on local food and sustainable agriculture is no accident. There is a direct lineage to the Slow Food movement after all. As Hewitt explains:

?Slow Money is a natural next step for many Slow Food supporters. It is explicitly about building and maintaining the fertility of our soils. They say that mankind owes its existence to six inches of topsoil and the fact that it rains. It seems like that might be something worth investing in.?

Meeting Practical Needs
While the movement undoubtedly has ideological and ecological underpinnings ? its focus remains on the real world needs of small food related businesses. From encouraging sustained, predictable and long-term loans to ensuring that rates remain affordable (the typical loan rate is between 2-5%), Slow Money advocates argue that it has to be about more than just securing alternative sources of money ? but rather rethinking the entire process and terms of how it is leant.


? Tamashii Sushi and Spoons

Mark Scharaga is the founder and owner of Tamashii Sushi and Spoons Restaurant in Wilmington ? which describes itself as the first and only sustainable sushi restaurant in the Southeast. Scharaga used a Slow Money loan to finance a state-of-the-art water filtration system as an alternative to bottled water for his customers.

He came across Slow Money after a loan officer at his local bank referred him to the group. While the concept may be new, he suggests, it is in many ways a return to an older model of finance.

?The lenders are driven by a belief and a trust in the people they are supporting. It?s not about your credit rating, but about the mission and vision of your business. What you are trying to achieve.?

Banks Don't Understand Farming
The willingness of lenders to understand the real needs of the business is something that has also proved invaluable to Casey Lance of Transylvania County, who together with her husband Mike expanded Calee?s Coop Farm from a hobby chicken farm into a full time operation with 500 chickens and 15 hogs.

?Banks just don?t lend to small farmers. They don?t understand us. They can?t provide terms that work for our business model. It?s just not a good fit.?


? Jessica Nolan

Hassle-Free Lending and Borrowing
After a group of Slow Money advocates came to speak at the local Tailgate Market committee, Casey and Mike decided to explore Slow Money as a source of financing an additional coop. Casey explains that the whole experience was positive:

?The process couldn?t have been simpler. The lenders were customers of ours. They came and visited the farm ? took a look at our plans. And then we met up again to sign some paperwork. All the red tape took just half an hour to complete.?

The relatively informal process and low overheads are central to the Slow Money model. For reasons both legal and practical, all loans are explicitly a private arrangement between friends, family and community members who know each other. Slow Money merely acts as a matchmaker and an advisor ? providing a framework that ensures the loans work for everybody. And early success seems to be generating additional interest from other potential borrowers.

Interestingly, the financial benefits are not simply a one way street. While investors may not get the kind of interest rates charged by traditional banks, they still yield competitive interest rates with, so far at least, a good track record of repayment. As Hewitt explains:

?These loans tend to perform very well. From the borrowers perspective, this lender is someone you know who has put their faith and their personal resources into helping you realize your dream. Even when they are in a pinch, more often than not, a borrower will pay this loan first, over other expenses. Of the $580k+ that we have loaned to date, only $5k is considerably behind in making payments.?

Small Loans Yield Big Dividends
Quantifying the impact of a group like Slow Money NC is always tough. At the time of going to press, there were a total of 24 loans completed and over $581,000 lent. But that big monetary figure obscures the real value of the approach,says Hewitt.

?The cumulative amount we?ve lent is a little deceptive. Over $400,000 of that was a single loan aimed at refinancing our local co-op grocery store in Chatham County. Most of our other loans are for a few thousand dollars. A beehive here. A mixer there. Believe it or not, these small amounts can make all the difference.?

And Hewitt may be onto something here. There is evidence from other farm-focused loan programs that there are substantive knock on benefits from relatively small investments.

Local Food As Economic Stimulus
In 2011, for example, a report by UNCG researchers into the Rural Advancement Foundation International?s (RAFI) Tobacco Communities Reinvestment Fund suggested that a small-scale loan program ? with loan amounts averaging around $10,000 ? could yield substantial economic returns. RAFI explained the numbers in a blog post as follows:

Each of our grants created an average of 11 new jobs within one year.
For every one dollar awarded to a farmer, they traced $205 new dollars of economic activity in the state within one year.
In total, the program awarded $3.6 million in three years to 367 farmers, created 4,100 new jobs, and had an economic impact of more than $733 million.

It's not just farms themselves that have the power acting as economic multipliers for small investments. Small, local food businesses of all types can have the same ripple effect across the communities they operate in. At least, that's the hope of Kathryn Beattie of Leading Green Distributing in Black Mountain, who is in the process of applying for a Slow Money loan to insulate and refrigerate a new biodiesel-powered van. Kathryn, whose business serves between 12 and 40 farms by delivering their produce to local markets, hopes that a relatively small loan will make a big difference to the impact they can have:

"We're probably talking in the region of $8,000 to $12,000 that we need. It really doesn't take a lot of money to lift companies like ours to the next level."

Transcending Politics
Anyone who has watched an episode of Portlandia will know that the local food movement is often perceived as a liberal, elite concern. But Hewitt argues that this is a misconception. Slow Money, she suggests, can act as a forum for transcending traditional cultural and political divides.


"We held an event at Market, a restauraunt in Raleigh, the other week. Folks came from all over the surrounding community. I have no idea what their political leanings were. It just doesn?t come up. They came because there was talk of a coop grocery store opening in their community, and they had an interest in seeing it succeed."


? Bett Wilson Foley/Slow Money NC

Growing The Movement

What comes next for Slow Money remains to be seen ? but Hewitt seems sure that the concept will continue to grow.

?Check back in with me before you publish. The number of loans and amount we?ve lent will almost certainly be out of date ? we?re making new loans all the time.?

On a national scale, the Slow Money movement has set a goal of encouraging 1 million people to invest just 1% of their wealth in local food and farming enterprises in the next decade. Whether or not they succeed remains to be seen, but Hewitt seems determined to do her part to make it happen.

In fact, she has a book coming out in the Spring aimed at spreading the movement to other regions. She describes her vision for Financing Our Foodshed: Growing Local Food with Slow Money (available for pre-order now) as being a little like ?young adult reading? for advocates of localization:

?I want someone to pick this up in Wisconsin, or wherever, and think ? This is simple. I can do this here too."

If the Slow Money movement in NC continues to enjoy the success it has so far, then the chances are that other states won?t be far behind.

A version of this article originally appeared on the website of the NC Sustainability Center - a resource for success stories and analysis of sustainability initiatives in North Carolina.

Source: http://www.treehugger.com/economics/how-slow-money-financing-helps-food-businesses-grow.html

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Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Homeschooling, Autism, & "Stuff" : Teens Drive Smart


In the whirlwind of high school marching band season and homeschooling siblings, we parents forced an opportunity upon our eldest child recently. Teens Drive Smart offers a driving experience for teen drivers that combines sit-down classroom time with real-life driving experiences in a controlled environment. If you are in the United States, go to http://www.teensdrivesmart.com/ and get yourself on the email list to be notified of the schedule for 2013.? Teens Drive Smart has a facebook page and twitter page as well. The audience was polled at the beginning of the session and we learned that none of the students came to the event voluntarily.? All of the parents made the kids go.? ;)?? I still got a few looks from my kid that indicated that she was not happy to be there - until she got into a car.

Hard for mom to watch: the pavement was flooded and the kids were taught how to navigate skidding *in a BMW*.? The students got a second opportunity to drive a BMW during another driving portion of the program. (People on the highway beside us were stopping to watch this.)

A course of cones to navigate on golf carts gave students the ability to see the wheels and how a turn from the steering wheel affects what the back wheels do. The course was designed to be quite tight and we saw quite a few cones taken out. During this part of the course, we learned proper steering wheel techniques (something new to me!) and the kids were asked to navigate the course once while texting, something that was both hilarious and sobering, all at the same time. Not only did they knock over cones, but they ran the stop signs on the course as well.

The kids had a session that taught them about the car, the engine, how to change the oil, how to check tire pressure, how to properly adjust a seat for driving.

The four hour experience was positive, well-organized, the instructors were upbeat and enthusiastic. I met a number of parents who were back with a younger child, having completed a similar program with an older child in past years. I learned something new about steering and we parents were reminded to be good role models for our kids while driving.

The kids left with lots of swag that included a jump drive that contains video of them in the cars, a t-shirt and cap, a lanyard, a water bottle, and a car kit that includes jumper cables and gloves but (oddly) no tire pressure gauge.

I wasn't asked to blog about our experience. I'm simply a mom who wants to pass along to you what was a super opportunity for us.? Participate at your own risk (you'll have to sign waivers upon check-in).? All of the rules and information are available on the Teens Drive Smart web site.

Source: http://notnewtoautism.blogspot.com/2012/11/teens-drive-smart.html

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Daredevils illegally snap photos of ballots

Jason Whitely of Dallas posted a photo of his ballot on Instagram. (Jason Whitely)

Like they do with their breakfasts, pets and children on any other day, thousands of voters took to Instagram on Election Day to post photos of their ballots. But unlike your filtered pet pictures, photographing your ballot and sharing it with others is likely illegal.

According to the Citizen Media Law Project, which has been documenting the 2012 vote, the laws vary by state. In New York, for example, anyone who "keeps any memorandum of anything occurring within the booth; or directly or indirectly, reveals to another the name of any candidate voted for by such voter; or shows his ballot after it is prepared for voting, to any person so as to reveal the contents" is guilty of a misdemeanor.

But Florida, Kentucky, Nevada, Texas and West Virginia "expressly prohibit the use of photographic and recording equipment inside polling places."

Dallas TV news reporter Jason Whitely was among the daredevils to snap and share his ballot, but he quipped on Instagram, "If I'm not reporting at 10:00p tonight, you'll know they came to get me!"

In Wisconsin, posting photos of completed ballots on Facebook or Twitter constitutes election fraud and is a Class I felony.

But in other states, such as Wyoming, there are no laws against documenting your ballot.

"Virtually all of these laws are older laws that predate the current technology," Jeffrey Hermes, author of the Citizen Media Law Project's guide, told ProPublica. "[But] it is easy to imagine situations in which the thoughtless posting of a marked ballot on Facebook could result in negative consequences."

Nonetheless, a lot of people are doing just that. According to the Pew Internet & American Life Project, 22 percent of registered voters said they would let others know how they voted on social networking sites such as Facebook or Twitter.

And according to All Things Digital, a search for "#vote" in Instagram's Explore tab turned up more than 460,000 photo results on Tuesday morning.

A search for the same term returned more than 600,000 results on Tuesday afternoon.

Click here for a state-by-state list of rules in handy chart form.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/instagram-ballot-photos-illegal-205936379--election.html

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