Thursday, March 8, 2012

In Ohio suburbs, a reluctant vote of confidence for Mitt Romney

The Ohio primary Tuesday could be a bellwether for the rest of the Republican primary campaign. If so, it gives a glimpse of who is supporting Mitt Romney ? and why they're not excited.?

In this quintessential American community, where church steeples and white picket fences neatly line the landscape, many Republicans say they're not choosing a presidential nominee based on candidates'?convictions or policy proposals. Instead, they say,?they'll vote for the candidate they feel is best suited to accomplish one task in November: topple President Obama.

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?Yeah, I voted for [Mitt] Romney,? sighs Roberta, a receptionist who gave only her first name. The decision tormented her for months, and she remained undecided even when entering the voting booth at the local high school Tuesday. ?My heart is really with [Rick] Santorum, but I really don?t think he can win [against Obama]. It?s a shame.?

The Ohio primary Tuesday is seen as a key bellwether in the race for the Republican presidential nomination, not so much because of its 66 delegates, but because Ohio is a microcosm for the rest of the country. What happens here could be predictive of how the race will play out going forward.

?Every part of the national economy is found here in some significant way: agriculture to industry to low tech to high tech, from rural to industrial to urban ? it?s all here,? says James Brock, an economist at Miami University?s Farmer School of Business in Oxford, Ohio.

Generally speaking, the northern half of the state swings for Democrats, while southern half leans Republican. But even within those broad strokes are other subdivisions that could determine how Tuesday's primary plays out.?

To Republican voters, Mr. Romney "plays better in suburban Ohio than rural Ohio, and vice versa for Santorum,? says Justin Vaughn, a political scientist at Cleveland State University.

Populism and social issues ? the hallmarks of Mr. Santorum?s campaign ? resonate with voters far afield of major cities, while the economy and job creation ? issues Romney hits hardest ? are tailored for urban areas and suburban communities surrounding them.

To Austin Morrow of Chagrin Falls, Santorum is the ?theoretical? best choice to beat Obama and Romney is the most ?realistic.?

?He?s been an entrepreneur and has created jobs. Ohio needs that,? Mr. Morrow says of Romney.

In Shaker Heights, a traditional stronghold for Democrats east of Cleveland, Muriel Weber says she would have voted for any of the Republican contenders, but worries that if Santorum ended up in a national campaign against Obama, ?all you?re going to hear for six months is birth control, abortion, and social issues.?

She worries that those will not be winning issues when the nation is struggling to recover from a recession.

She voted for Romney.

But John, a voter who declined to give his last name and also voted in Shaker Heights, says he decided at the last moment to send a message with his vote. Even though he knows Santorum won?t win, John voted for him anyway. He wants Romney to work harder to convince his fellow Republicans he understands middle-class hardships, especially the continuing foreclosure crisis.

?The sooner Romney locks this up, the sooner the dialogue ends, and I think it?s important that the dialogue continues, because I don?t think [Romney] gets it,? he says.?

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Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/dyPdoD-XGes/In-Ohio-suburbs-a-reluctant-vote-of-confidence-for-Mitt-Romney

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Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Los Angeles Times joins the crowd, erects pay wall for the news online

The Los Angeles Times will even charge its print subscribers a monthly fee to read news online. But will pay walls save ailing print newspapers or just guarantee their ultimate demise?

The Los Angeles Times on Monday joined a growing number of newspapers who are asking consumers to pay for what they have been getting for free: content on the website.

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After getting a one-month trial at 99 cents per week, a discount price, southern California news hounds will have to?pay either $1.99?(with a print subscription) or $3.99 weekly after?viewing 15 articles for free.

Two years ago, The Wall Street Journal was the only major newspaper with a digital?pay model. A year ago, The New York Times began charging online customers for access if they read more than 20 articles a month.

Momentum is building behind this source of revenue for ailing newspapers. Other individual newspapers such as The Boston Globe have jumped on the bandwagon, and the Gannett newspaper chain has just announced that it will put some 80 of its community newspapers around the country behind a pay wall by the end of 2012.

There are enormous financial pressures driving this experiment with pay walls, points out Mark Jurkowitz,?from the Pew Research Center?s Project for Excellence in Journalism.?A study released Monday?of some 13 companies that own?330 print dailies shows that for every seven?dollars lost in print advertising,?the newspapers are only picking?up a dollar in digital revenues.

But, he points out, it is far too early to assess the potential of the pay wall model to change this dire downward trend line.

?This is a nascent industry,? he says, ?and while more and more papers are experimenting with?different kinds of pay walls, we think it?s far too early to develop any?meaningful data on their effectiveness.?

Some analysts question whether print journalism has a future?with the upcoming generation of social-media-savvy users, accustomed to getting their digital news for free.

?The horse has left the barn on this one,? says Fordham University Professor Paul Levinson, author of ?New New Media.? The attempt to create premium pricing on the Internet will only hurt newspapers further, he says, because it flies in the face of the underlying mechanism of the Digital Age.
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?It inhibits connectivity,? he says, meaning that it slows down a user?s ability both to find an article in a search and then to share it with other people. Users who locate a premium-priced article through an online search would be asked to pay before accessing it. It is also more difficult to quickly share such content via Twitter or Facebook or any other social media.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/IRQknZk2Hlg/Los-Angeles-Times-joins-the-crowd-erects-pay-wall-for-the-news-online

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Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Dog survives 53 days in wild, reunited with owner

This Feb. 18, 2012 photo provided by Shannon Sustacha shows Barbara Bagley and her Shetland sheepdog Dooley after the two were reunited, east of Battle Mountain, Nev. Bagley says she never gave up hope that her dog would be found alive in the Nevada desert after the animal bolted from the scene of a crash that critically injured her and killed her husband. Dooley was tracked down after surviving 53 days in the wild on roadkill and scattered ranch water sources. (AP Photo/Shannon Sustacha)

This Feb. 18, 2012 photo provided by Shannon Sustacha shows Barbara Bagley and her Shetland sheepdog Dooley after the two were reunited, east of Battle Mountain, Nev. Bagley says she never gave up hope that her dog would be found alive in the Nevada desert after the animal bolted from the scene of a crash that critically injured her and killed her husband. Dooley was tracked down after surviving 53 days in the wild on roadkill and scattered ranch water sources. (AP Photo/Shannon Sustacha)

RENO, Nev. (AP) ? Barbara Bagley says she never gave up hope that her dog would be found alive in the Nevada desert after the animal bolted from the scene of a crash that critically injured her and killed her husband.

But the Salt Lake City woman endured plenty of frustration until her beloved 4-year-old Shetland sheepdog, Dooley, was tracked down Feb. 18 after surviving 53 days in the wild on roadkill and scattered ranch water sources.

"I would think about Dooley constantly," she said. "There were TV commercials with dogs that made me think about him and cry. He's just the sweetest dog."

The Dec. 27 single-vehicle accident on Interstate 80 near Battle Mountain, about 225 miles east of Reno, sent Bagley and her 55-year-old husband, Brad Vom Baur, to the hospital in critical condition. Their other sheltie, Delaney, was killed in the wreck. Dooley ran away and vanished.

Bagley, 48, suffered a concussion, broken ribs, a shattered wrist and two punctured lungs. As soon as she mustered up enough strength, she turned her attention to a search for her dog in the sprawling sage-covered plains and hills of northeastern Nevada.

Realizing what Dooley could mean for her recovery, dozens of Nevada volunteers responded to a Facebook plea for help in looking for him. But the search was canceled before it began after the Jan. 6 discovery of what appeared to be the dog's remains along the interstate. The same day, her husband died.

"It was a horrible day for me," Bagley recalled. "But something inside me told me Dooley was still alive out there. I wasn't 100 percent sure, but I didn't grieve for Dooley like I did for my husband and our other dog."

More than three weeks later, Bagley's spirits were buoyed after a woman reported spotting "a Lassie-type" dog near the accident scene. A subsequent search joined by Bagley turned up nothing, but a railroad crew spotted a dog matching the same description in mid-February in the same area about 15 miles east of Battle Mountain.

Further searches netted a positive identification of Dooley but frustration as well because the skittish dog kept fleeing from Bagley and other searchers. Finally, Shannon Sustacha of Lamoille, who was on horseback, and a Bagley friend driving a Jeep cornered Dooley only five miles from the crash scene. The friend managed to nab the sheltie and put him in the Jeep.

An ecstatic, tearful Bagley arrived at the scene a short time later.

"Barbara got next to us and said three times, 'You think he'll remember me?'" Sustacha said. "When Barbara opened the door and looked at him, she said, 'My beautiful boy, my beautiful boy, you're home.' Oh, boy, all of us cried. I knew his adventure in Nevada was over. I also knew he and Barbara could start healing together."

A short time later, an exhausted Dooley sat on his owner's lap in the Jeep and fell asleep. He later began following Bagley around.

"I was overjoyed that I was going to have him back in my life. I think he felt the same about me," she said.

During his ordeal, Dooley's weight dropped from 44 pounds to 20 pounds. He was once spotted devouring a dead coyote along the roadway. A long bird bone was pulled from his throat by a veterinarian.

Since then, the dog has gradually put on weight and resumed regular walks with his owner. While Bagley is still going through the grieving process over her husband's death and recovering from her injuries, Dooley's presence has picked up her spirits immensely.

"He's the physical and mental affection that I need to recover," she said. "I owe him so much for the hope I have now and the renewed faith I have in prayer. Dogs are so great because of their unconditional love."

Bagley, a phlebotomy supervisor at LDS Hospital in Salt Lake City, also thinks her husband had something to do with Dooley's safe return home.

"It's a message from my husband who was looking out for him," Bagley said. "It was a miracle that we got Dooley. He couldn't have survived much longer out there."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-03-04-Desert%20Car%20Crash-Dog/id-7353d56b7d3e456abeec3cefa2394416

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Olivia Wilde: How I Bounced Back From Divorce (omg!)

Olivia Wilde: How I Bounced Back From Divorce

Olivia Wilde's divorce from Tao Ruspoli was as low-profile as her eight-year marriage to the Italian filmmaker, with it only snagging headlines when the news broke and then it became a non-story as the separation dragged out.

Olivia's Oscar Attire - Love or Hate It?

Now, the actress is opening up about the experience in British GQ (via) -- and revealing that new boyfriend, Jason Sudeikis, might be the real love of her life.

"When you split with someone you love you think you?re the only person who has ever gone through it," she says in the March issue. "'Oh did you listen to the National on repeat and live on Marlboro Lights and chocolate for three months? Me too!' But I was lucky to have such a peaceful parting. It's never easy; it's f*cked up and I wouldn't recommend it. But there were no kids involved, so we could see it as this wonderful chapter. And anyway, you fall in love again. Oh God, to think that you only fall in love once in your entire life is such a depressing thought."

And while the Tron star doesn't come out and say "I Love Jason Sudeikis," they haven't gone to any great lengths to hide their relationship.

Olivia & Jason Go Public

In fact, Olivia goes on to shed a little light on why Jason might actually be perfect for her. "I wanted to be on Saturday Night Live since I was 10," she says. "My father took me to a live taping on my birthday. Chris Farley was still in the cast and at the after party he had a brownie-eating contest. It became, like, a very valuable, powerful moment in my childhood. Seeing the energy of SNL made me want to be a part of it."

And now she is ... sort of.


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Monday, March 5, 2012

The Inspiring Story of Billy Miske (Powerlineblog)

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Super Tuesday: In Ohio, a Crucial Test for Romney (Time.com)

Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

Supporters of Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney look on during a campaign rally at American Posts on Feb. 29, 2012 in Toledo, Ohio.

With 66 delegates at stake, Ohio is not the largest target on Super Tuesday, which will see 10 contests held on March 6. But it is the most important. There are no demographic or regional arguments to explain away a loss for Mitt Romney?no home-state advantages, no failures to reach the ballot. Its role in the general election gives Ohio symbolic weight with Republicans, and its Rust Belt-electorate will test the key lingering questions of the GOP primary: Can Rick Santorum build a coalition to defeat Romney outright in a major primary state, and is Romney really ready for a general-election fight with Barack Obama?

?Not only is Ohio demographically representative of the country at large, reflecting virtually every important group except Latinos,? writes Ohio State political science professor Paul Beck, ?it also combines a tradition of moderate Republicanism and recent Tea Party support.?

(MORE:?Campaign 2012, Where Old Media Is New Again)

Ohio Republicans populate two key areas: big-city suburbs, especially outside Cincinnati, and rural hamlets scattered across the southern stretch of the state. Romney won Michigan on the strength of his performance in Oakland County, outside Detroit, while Santorum failed to run up high enough margins of victory in conservative rural areas. In terms of culture and demographics, Ohio is similar, and the turnout of the state?s Evangelical social conservatives could be decisive.

A week out, polling showed Santorum pulling it off: he leads Romney by high single-digits or low double-digits, and his supporters say they?re more settled on their vote than Romney?s. The time frame for a turnaround is short. Romney overcame similar deficits in Michigan, but he had several weeks to do it. One potential upside for Romney is his money advantage, which enabled him to pour resources into Ohio while Santorum was stretching to keep Romney from doubling or tripling his investment in Michigan.

Adding to Ohio?s meaning is the fact that the other nine contests on Super Tuesday are likely to splinter between the candidates, offering few surprises.

(PHOTOS:?The Final Sprint in Michigan and Arizona)

The western caucuses could go almost any way. Romney won North Dakota and Alaska four years ago and has captured endorsements from governor Butch Otter and Senator Jim Risch in Mormon-rich Idaho. But the activist-heavy format is less suited to his campaign this time around, especially when he hasn?t had the chance to exploit his fundraising advantage through organizing.

Romney?s strengths are easy to spot: they?re in states on his home turf in the Northeast?and one where his primary foils are not on the ballot. He?s a shoo-in in his old gubernatorial stomping grounds of Massachusetts, which will assign 41 delegates proportionally. The same is likely true in Vermont, where Romney has a shot at all 17 delegates if he can clear 50% of the vote. Virginia, which will send 49 delegates to the convention and is an important general-election state, could have been a prime Super Tuesday battleground. But thanks to their campaigns? organizational deficits, neither Santorum nor Newt Gingrich made the ballot there, making it a Romney lay-up.

(PHOTOS:?Political Pictures of the Week, Feb. 18?24)

Meanwhile, Romney is vulnerable in the South.South Carolina handed him his first major defeat of 2012, and polling across the region has consistently showed him trailing a variety of comers for months. Scant polling in Tennessee (58 delegates), where early voting ended Tuesday, shows Santorum with a huge lead. Despite his collapsing numbers everywhere else, Newt Gingrich has retained a solid lead in Georgia, which will send 76 delegates to Tampa; even if Gingrich falters, Santorum is running second. There hasn?t been much polling in Oklahoma (which is not really the traditional South, but similarly conservative and voting on Tuesday), but Santorum leads by close to 20 points in the few surveys conducted. Its 43 delegates will be doled out proportionally, and with Gingrich in second, Romney doesn?t look likely to get much out of it.

Super Tuesday won?t end Romney?s Southern troubles either: Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana all vote later in March. Assuming its redistricting situation gets sorted out, Texas? huge cache of 155 delegates could complicate the race if it runs late into spring. But whether the primary campaign actually lasts that long may hinge on Ohio.

MORE: Election 2012: Can Anyone Stop Romney?

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Sunday, March 4, 2012

PlanGrid Builds A New Market For The iPad: The Construction Industry

Mark this up as one more crucial chapter in the much-thumbed book called ?The Consumerization of IT?: a new app has launched from a Y Combinator-backed startup that offers builders the ability to store, manage and view blueprints on and iPad tablet.

The unique selling point for PlanGrid, as the app is called, is that it promises to present building blueprints in a far more efficient way than they have been presented before.

But on a more general level, PlanGrid is a sign of how the iOS platform is maturing and attracting a new wave of developers who target specific enterprise verticals with solutions tailored to their business needs.

Ryan Sutton-Gee, one of the four co-founders and now CEO of Loupe, the company that makes the app, comes from a construction background himself and says the costs and frustrations of dealing with paper-based plans are what drove him to want to rethink how things were done.

The fact that his immediate world ? he is based in Silicon Valley and is a Stanford grad ? is so focused on Apple and apps made it a no-brainer that this would somehow figure in the solution.

And the other three co-founders fit neatly into what this app is bringing to the table: expertise in construction; visual design skills and cloud computing prowess. Tracy Young, the COO, also had worked in construction; while Ralph Gootee, the CTO, came from animation studio Pixar; and Kenny Stone, VP of engineering, had worked as a trading programmer. (It?s Stone who is now responsible for all the cloud-based storage and delivery of users? documents.)

How it works. PlanGrid is a cloud-based service that delivers blueprints as PDFs directly on the tablet; then people working in the field can use these instead of paper-based versions. When a modification needs to be made, that can be directly noted on the plan, in the app. That is subsequently updated into a new version. PlanGrid?s technology makes the rendering and scrolling of those blueprints significantly faster, too.

PlanGrid claims that because it is easy to send out and use updated blueprints, this can help reduce the need for rework and other fixes. Typically,?6% of rework is due to outdated blueprints, and in turn around 15% of construction costs are due to rework, which means 1% of total construction costs are due to the blueprint problem. Those are significant figures, considering that an average margin that a builder could expect to make is only between two percent and four percent.

PlanGrid also claims that at its most basic level this app could eliminate the heavy printing costs associated with those building projects: typically for every $1,000,000 in building costs, there are $3,500 of printing costs.

And in contrast to many consumer-focused startups, this one has a pricing model from the word go: users can choose from a low-page-count free version, or pay $19.99 or $49.99 per month for either 550 or 5,000 sheets.

Unlike some enterprise verticals, construction is not one that has a natural need for all employees to own laptops, smartphones and tablets. ?Whereas people in some businesses spend 10 hours in front of a computer, someone in the construction industry would spend one hour,? Sutton-Gee said.

That sounds like it would pose a challenge for the business ? why buy an app if you don?t even have the device to use it? But Sutton-Gee claims that in fact what the app has done in its early days of sales is drive more purchases of the iPad by those in the construction industry ? just so that they could use PlanGrid. ?We?re a big enough solution to the problem they are facing that they?re buying those tablets to use the app,? he says.

Looking ahead, Sutton-Gee says that the company has a lot more ideas for how to expand its construction services ? for example linking up the whole chain from architectural designs, to the technical drawings and the final blueprints that are used to actually construct a building. That, he says, could be a massive help when a company is trying to figure out where a building project has leaked money, gone over budget or fallen down altogether.

You can download the app here.


Source: http://techcrunch.com/2012/03/02/plangrid-builds-a-new-market-for-the-ipad-the-construction-industry/

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