Monday, March 11, 2013

More winter weather left in March?

CLEVELAND - Mother Nature can be a tease. We should easily see high temperatures this weekend rise up into the middle 50s. That will be warm enough for the crocuses to bloom and the Eastern Bluebirds to start looking for nesting sites.

For us, it's an opportunity to stretch our winter-weary wings and grease up the bike, or put on the hiking shoes.

But, it's still March, the month where winter wanes and spring sprouts. Often times the two seasons battle it out, and this year will be no exception.

After our mild weekend, computer forecasts suggest winter will try and pay a few more visits to the Buckeye State.

A strong cold front will bring rain to the region Sunday night and throughout parts of Monday. Behind that front, colder, below-normal temperatures return to Northern Ohio for the week.

Average high temperatures this time of year should be in the lower and middle 40s. We'll likely see temperatures in the 30s for most of next week. Though snow chances are small, I can't rule out a little bit of snow on the back side of the cold front early Tuesday morning.

After that, the next snow threat will arrive closer to Thursday, as an Alberta clipper is expected to bring another round of snow to the area.

Most of the time, clipper snows are limited to 1-3 inches areawide. Behind that snowy system, northwest winds blowing across Lakes Erie and Huron will likely result in some scattered lake effect snow on Friday, with highs only expected to reach up into the lower 30s.

Temperatures look to stay below normal for much of the time through at least March 21, the first day of spring. Another storm system will likely bring more cold precipitation to the area around that time, so don't put away the winter coats just yet.

Copyright 2013 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Source: http://www.newsnet5.com/dpp/weather/weather_news/more-winter-weather-left-in-march

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Launch Center Pro Adds Even More App Shortcuts for Faster Messaging and Sharing

Launch Center Pro Adds Even More App Shortcuts for Faster Messaging and SharingLaunch Center Pro Adds Even More App Shortcuts for Faster Messaging and Sharing iOS: Previously mentioned Launch Center Pro offers speedy shortcuts for specific apps, like composing a new text to a friend of your choice or creating a new note with Clipboard data. The latest update brings a ton of new features, including messaging actions, better text expansion support, photo tweeting, and more.

Launch Center Pro centers around the Action Composer, or the tool you use to create little single-tap shortcuts to carry out tasks quickly. It's now reorganized so components are easier to find. This update also offers full clipboard integration, so you can use text in the clipboard to carry out a variety of actions. Despite Apple's limitations on third-party developers, Launch Center Pro continues to offer one of the more creative ways to work around them and offer a faster way to get things done on your iDevice.

Launch Center Pro ($3) | iTunes App Store via MacRumors

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/yBJyeq1giV8/launch-center-pro-adds-even-more-app-shortcuts-for-faster-messaging-and-sharing

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Friday, March 8, 2013

Oz the Great and Powerful

China Girl, voiced by Joey King and Oz, played by James Franco. Depending on the role, James Franco can be a slyly charismatic screen-stealer or a wet sock of the first order. His performance as the feckless magician Oscar?nicknamed Oz?firmly belongs in the wet-sock category.

Photog courtesy of Disney Enterprises, Inc.

After you watch Oz the Great and Powerful come back and listen to Dana and Forrrest Wickman discuss the movie in this Spoiler Special by clicking the play button below. You can also download the podcast.

Making a prequel to The Wizard of Oz is, on its face, such a radical act of folly that the idea is perversely exciting. How do you reshape and transform a work so iconically familiar and universally beloved that it?s become part of the world?s cinematic unconscious? Surely no director would attempt such a doomed project unless he or she had a powerful individual vision. And Sam Raimi, with his past as a cult comic-horror filmmaker turned creator of the massively successful, critically praised Spider-Man franchise, seemed like the kind of director who might be capable of bringing that kind of personal vision even to a special-effects-heavy 3-D Disney production like Oz the Great and Powerful.

So it?s with sadness that I report that Oz the Great and Powerful is pretty much just what my most pessimistic self feared it might be: A visually over-crammed, emotionally empty mega-spectacle on the model of Tim Burton?s Alice in Wonderland. OK, this isn?t an atrocity on the level of Burton?s Alice?the 3-D is much crisper and less headache-inducing, the production design abounds in visually clever touches, and the (often excellent) actors are given at least a little time to speak their lines in between digitized battles. But Oz the Great and Powerful feels depressingly custom-made to capture the market share of Alice, which became a worldwide smash despite its aggressive charmlessness.

I should stipulate that Oz the Great and Powerful isn?t, strictly speaking, a prequel to The Wizard of Oz. As a Disney release, the film was forbidden from using imagery or dialogue that draws too heavily on the 1939 Victor Fleming film, which is now owned by Warner Brothers: No Dorothy, no ruby slippers, they were even required to use a different shade of green for the Wicked Witch?s makeup. Instead, Disney promised to draw its material principally from the series of Oz books by L. Frank Baum. But Raimi and his team find work-arounds for these restrictions that will no doubt make Warner Brothers? lawyers gnash their teeth. The black-and-white-to-color shift early on, the look of the twister in the tornado scene, the layout of the poppy field at the foot of the Emerald City, all appear to take their cue from the original film (only occasionally?mostly in details of the costume design?does this movie?s look seem designed to evoke the wonderful Oz book illustrations by W.W. Denslow). At one point, a slightly-less-verdant Wicked Witch caresses an ingenue?s cheek and murmurs, ?I?ll get you, my pretty ? one.?

Audiences could care less about the struggles between Warner Brothers and Disney over the soul of Oz?all we want from Oz the Great and Powerful is a story about the mysterious land near (over? under? within?) Kansas that will justify our presence in the movie theater, and that?s something this scattered blockbuster never quite provides. For one thing, the character at its center?a two-bit carnival magician named Oscar Diggs, played with a strangely incongruous sourness by James Franco?never emerges into relief. A rootless, self-serving womanizer as the film begins, he retains those characteristics for nearly its entire running time before abruptly and inexplicably transforming into a generous, self-sacrificing romantic hero.

Depending on the role, James Franco can be a slyly charismatic screen-stealer (Freaks and Geeks, Pineapple Express, Howl) or a wet sock of the first order (Flyboys, Spider-Man 3, co-hosting the Oscars). His performance as the feckless magician Oscar?nicknamed Oz?firmly belongs in the wet-sock category. Franco can?t be blamed for a screenplay that seems to conspire against audiences? emotional investment in the character?young Oz?s lack of moral and intellectual engagement with the fantastical new world he encounters makes him, essentially, a dull-as-dirt protagonist. But I can imagine other actors?Leonardo DiCaprio and Matt Damon come to mind?who might have done more with the slippery but ultimately bighearted trickster at the center of this story.

Or maybe not, given how much of his time Oz spends interacting with digitally created characters. The companions who join him on his trip down the yellow brick road include a flying monkey in a bellhop?s suit, voiced by Zach Braff, and a tiny girl made entirely of china, voiced by Joey King. To say that this crew is less vibrant than the one that accompanied Dorothy down the same thoroughfare is to understate the case significantly: It?s hard to imagine a more irritating pair of co-adventurers. The monkey, who?s sworn fealty to Oz for having saved his life, is so gratingly servile you start wishing the Wicked Witch?s own airborne primates (in this version, winged baboons) would repurpose him as a snack. And the little china girl, while cunningly animated, seems to have been imported from the L. Frank Baum universe mainly as a sentimental catalyst for Oz?s too-late conversion to nice guy.

After a rogue twister spirits Oz from the black-and-white carnival fairground to the candy-colored hyper-reality of the land that, confusingly, already bears his name (here envisioned as a psychedelic swirl of gargantuan flowers, swarming butterflies, and whimsical rock formations), he is eventually conducted to the Emerald City by the na?ve young witch Theodora (Mila Kunis), who promptly falls in love with him. Her scheming sister Evanora (an icily gorgeous Rachel Weisz), citing an ancient prophecy about a wizard destined to save Oz, sends him on an errand to kill the witch of the North, Glinda (Michelle Williams). But Glinda?s self-evident goodness (the flowing white gown, the radiant smile, the locomotion via pale-pink bubble) stays Oz?s hand, and the two form an (eventually romantic) alliance to wrest power back from the wicked Evanora. Meanwhile, Theodora?s all-consuming jealousy?aided by her sister?s spells?conspires to turn her lovely skin from Kunis? natural olive to a shade of sub-Margaret-Hamilton green.

The next time I watch The Wizard of Oz?which, given the fact I have a 7-year-old daughter, will probably be within a matter of days?I may briefly flash back on the memory Oz the Great and Powerful, perhaps amusing myself with the notion that Billie Burke?s burbling Glinda and Frank Morgan?s crotchety Oz are old flames awkwardly crossing paths again in their middle age. But the towering masterpiece that is The Wizard of Oz will soon absorb this small insult. There?s a moment when that little china girl, furious at Oz?s refusal to take her seriously as a witch-slayer, kicks him in the shin with her tiny porcelain foot. ?That didn?t hurt,? he informs her gently before continuing on his way. That?s the relationship of The Wizard of Oz to its not-quite-prequel in a nutshell.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=bb304b4a1b851bee3b2219bcaa9dc685

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Wednesday, March 6, 2013

The Nintendo medal: Do drone pilots deserve honors?

The Pentagon's newest military honor, symbolized by a two-inch bronze medallion, has sparked fierce debate over the nation's growing corps of drone pilots and cyberwarriors and how to commend their service, which happens far from an actual battlefield.

The Distinguished Warfare Medal, approved by Defense Secretary Leon Panetta last month, is the military's first new combat-related medal in nearly 70 years. It is intended to recognize extraordinary contributions to combat operations by a service member from afar and will rank as the eighth highest individual award behind the Medal of Honor.

But placement of the new medal in ahead of the Bronze Star and Purple Heart, which are given for valor in the line of fire, has created significant stir.

Critics have panned it as the "Chair-borne Medal," "the Nintendo Medal," "Distant Warfare Medal" and "the Purple Buttocks," alluding to fact that computer-based warriors do their work from a chair, among other names.

Top veterans groups and a rare bipartisan alliance on Capitol Hill are intensely lobbying the Pentagon and President Obama to downgrade the award.

"We are supportive of recognizing and rewarding such extraordinary service, but in the absence of the service member exposing him or herself to imminent mortal danger, we cannot support the DWM taking precedence above the Bronze Star and Purple Heart," a bipartisan group of 48 lawmakers wrote new Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel on Monday.

"Possibility of death or grievous bodily harm" are key factors that should elevate recipients of those awards above others who didn't face those risks, the group wrote.

The letter was penned by 34 Republicans and 14 Democrats, including Republican Reps. Joe Wilson of South Carolina and Darrell Isa of California and Democratic Reps. Tammy Duckworth of Illinois and Susan Davis of California.

Officials with the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars said they have already been pressing the administration to downgrade the award, saying that bestowing a higher-ranked medal to service members who fought from "behind a desk" is disrespectful to those serving in harm's way.

So far the administration has shown no sign of backing down.

Last month, in one of his final public events before retiring, Secretary Panetta hailed creation of the new medal as a reflection of an evolution in modern warfare and of the growing importance of the drones and cyberwarfare strategies.

"The medal provides distinct, department-wide recognition for the extraordinary achievements that directly impact on combat operations, but that do not involve acts of valor or physical risk that combat entails," Panetta said.

"I've always felt - having seen the great work that they do, day in and day out - that those who performed in an outstanding manner should be recognized," he said. "Unfortunately, medals that they otherwise might be eligible for simply did not recognize that kind of contribution."

A White House official declined to comment on the criticism. Obama, who has significantly increased drone warfare during his administration, on Tuesday awarded two purple hearts to wounded service members at Walter Reed military medical center in Washington.

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nintendo-medal-military-award-drone-111006056.html

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