quarta-feira, 24 de julho de 2013

Corpo de turista morta após ataque de tubarão em Recife será sepultado

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hKdGIazl2b8
Bruna morreu no final da noite de ontem após um ataque de tubarão registrado no início da tarde em Boa Viagem.  (Foto: Arquivo Pessoal/Reprodução)
Bruna morreu no final da noite de ontem após um ataque de tubarão registrado no início da tarde em Boa Viagem.
Será sepultado no município de Escada, zona da Mata Sul de Pernambuco, o corpo da turista Bruna Gobbi, de 18 anos, morta no final da noite de ontem após um ataque de tubarão registrado no início da tarde em Boa Viagem. Familiares da vítima aguardam, no Instituto de Medicina Legal (IML), a liberação do corpo, que está sendo necropsiado. 

Os parentes que estão no local, um tio e os esposos de duas tias, ainda não sabem o horário do enterro, que pode ser realizado na tarde desta terça-feira ou na manhã de quarta. O município de Escada foi escolhido por ser a terra natal da avó materna de Bruna. A mãe, em estado de choque, permanece na casa de familiares. O pai, está em São Paulo, onde a família mora.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hKdGIazl2b8


Esta manhã, enquanto organizavam a cerimônia fúnebre em uma funerária no bairro de Santo Amaro, os familiares adiantaram que vão entrar na justiça contra o Estado. No entanto, eles ainda não sabem precisar o tipo de ação e quando a medida será tomada.


Bruna foi a 24ª pessoa morta por ataque de tubarão em Pernambuco desde 1992. A paulista, que passava férias no Recife, tomava banho de mar acompanhada de uma prima, por volta das 13h, quando o animal a atacou. Ela foi resgatada e levada à UPA da Imbiribeira, onde recebeu os primeiros socorros, e depois ao Hospital da Restauração. No HR, chegou a ter parte da perna amputada em uma cirurgia, mas não resistiu e morreu por volta das 23h50, segundo a assessoria do hospital.

Perto do local do acidente, placas sinalizavam para a proibição do banho de mar por conta do risco de ataques de tubarão. Um ambulante local também disse ter presenciado o momento em que as duas jovens foram alertadas por um bombeiro para não entrarem no mar. 

Imagens mostram momento do ataque

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hKdGIazl2b8

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Prince William and Kate name new baby George Alexander Louis

(Reuters) - Prince William and Kate have named their new-born baby boy George Alexander Louis, William's office said on Wednesday.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BZOaUaB7WvA
The baby, third in line to the British throne, will be known as His Royal Highness Prince George of Cambridge, Kensington Palace said in a statement.
George has been the name of six British kings. The last, George VI, was the father of Queen Elizabeth and reigned from 1936 to 1952.
George Alexander Louis was born on Monday, prompting an international media frenzy as well as celebratory gun salutes and the illumination of London landmarks in blue.
William and Kate were on Wednesday visiting Kate's parents, Michael and Carole, in Bucklebury, southern England.

(Reporting By Costas Pitas; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BZOaUaB7WvA

Sprint finally brings 4G LTE to New York -- sort of

The Sprint EVO 4G LTE was one of its flagship phones for its new network. Some New Yorkers will be able access that speedier connection starting July 30.
(Credit: CNET)
Sprint is finally bringing its speedy LTE service to New York City -- but not everyone in the Big Apple will get it.
The company will officially announce that the New York boroughs of Brooklyn and Bronx will be fully connected to LTE by July 30, CNET has learned.
Unfortunately, the rest of New York -- Manhattan, Queens, and Staten Island -- is still left hanging. Sprint hasn't said when the rest of the city would get lit up, only saying the network would grow "in the coming months."
Sprint's rollout is indicative of the complexities of building out a new network in a large city, particularly one as densely packed as New York. Company executives note that there are pockets of 4G LTE coverage throughout New York, but it isn't wide enough to formally announce that the entire city is lit up.
Sprint announced in September that New York would be one of 100 cities to get 4G LTE, at the time also offering only the coming months as a target. Nearly a year later, and part of the network is up and running.
 To find out why Sprint is taking so long with its 4G LTE roll out, read this.
Sprint also pushed forward on its project to connect New York subway stations with a cellular connection. The company has committed to connecting all 277 underground stations and will start with 36 stations in the Chelsea and midtown districts of Manhattan in early 2014.

AT&T and T-Mobile were the first to offer a cellular connection in select underground subway stations, and Verizon and Sprint recently signed on with Transit Wireless to also provide service there.

New video again shows off supposed plastic Apple iPhone case

Apple's iPhone remains the top-selling handset in the world, but a new video seems to support the notion that the Cupertino company is not resting on its laurels and may be close to releasing a plastic-backed version of the iPhone to address lower-cost markets.

The case shown in the new video is virtually identical to previously leaked images that also purported to show a plastic iPhone body. The video, posted by YouTube user DetroitBORG, shows a partially completed case without the necessary cutouts for volume and mute buttons or a SIM card tray. 

The video creator also makes it a point to show the plastic iPhone case alongside Apple's last plastic iPhone, the iPhone 3GS. The device appears best described as the intersection of the 3GS with the current iPod touch


Should the previously leaked images and this video prove accurate, the lower-cost iPhone will be slightly thicker and wider than the current iPhone 5, with a 4-inch, presumably Retina display. Both the previous images and the new video point out that the lower-end model will likely come in an array of color options, and a number of different colors could also be an option on the higher-end model

The plastic-backed iPhone would represent an attempt by Apple to reach into the lower-end market for smartphones. Industry consensus points to an apparent slowing in the high-end of the smartphone segment, with much of the growth in the industry now occurring in developing markets. Apple CEO Tim Cook, though, sounded less convinced speaking yesterday during the company's quarterly conference call.

"I don't subscribe to [the notion that] the higher end of the smartphone market has hit its peak," Cook said. The Apple chief declined to comment on any possible lower cost devices or the possibility that Apple would begin accepting trade-ins in its stores in order to boost supplies to sell in developing markets.

Wall Street encouraged by Apple's strong iPhone sales & positive guidance, still awaiting new products

Market watchers were impressed by the results for Apple's June quarter, as iPhone sales came in higher than expectations and guidance for the September quarter was positive. But investors are still pinning their hopes on Apple's anticipated next-generation iPhones and iPads to be blockbuster hits.
Chart

Chart by Dan Frommer, via TechCrunch.

Following Apple's quarterly results on Tuesday, analysts offered their mostly positive responses to the fact that the company sold a June quarterly record 31.2 million iPhones. Here, AppleInsider offers a rundown of their reactions.

Morgan Stanley



Apple's guidance for the September quarter projects gross margin of between 36 and 37 percent, which was a surprise to analyst Katy Huberty. She, like many others, expects new products to debut in the quarter, and product transitions usually negatively affect margins.

"We believe more favorable component pricing (NAND, HDD, LCD) and improved iPhone mix are tailwinds that help offset currency volatility and product transition costs in the September quarter," she wrote.

As for the stronger-than-expected iPhone results, she noted that Apple's 20 percent year-over-year growth came in spite of a channel inventory reduction. In addition, the U.S., Japan, and the U.K. all grew iPhone sales north of 50 percent.

The weak spot for Apple's June quarter was the iPad, which saw its first-ever sales decline. Huberty expects that demand will return when the company debuts a fifth-generation iPad in the near future.

Campus

JP Morgan



Apple's June quarter results were "not too bad," analyst Mark Moskowitz said. He expects the stock price to react favorably due to strong iPhone sales and a gross margin outlook that's better than many investors anticipated.

Issues for the company, according to Moskowitz, are a slowdown in China, and soft iPad sales. But he expects near-term growth from anticipated iPhone launches in September and a new iPad mini in October.

"In such a case, we think any temporary pressure on gross margin related to new products is likely deferred to (the December quarter)," he said. "This dynamic could pressure gross margin, but we think that the offset is higher revenue growth."

A key question for Moskowitz is whether Apple will stagger its new product launches this fall. He cited shortages seen by Apple last year that potentially cost the company "customer conversions."

iProducts

Needham & Company



Apple's fourth fiscal quarter guidance suggests to analyst Charlie Wolf that Apple might introduce a next-generation "iPhone 5S" before the end of the quarter. But for now, he said the story for Apple among investors is, "What have you done for me lately?"Can Apple innovate at the same pace without Steve Jobs? Analyst Charlie Wolf believes the answer is forthcoming.

"After a whirlwind of new product introductions in the fall of 2012, Apple has been virtually silent on the product introduction front for nine months," he said. "That should change beginning in September/October with the launch of the next-generation iPhone and iPad."

While he sees updates to Apple's best-selling products on the horizon, Wolf does not anticipate that the company will introduce products in new categories this year. Rumors have suggested Apple is working on both wearable technology, such as a so-called "iWatch," as well as a full-fledged television set.

"These initiatives suggest that Apple should once again be able to enter new product categories in 2014, although it is difficult to imagine that they will be the revenue producers that the iPhone and iPad have turned out to be," he said.

For now, the risk for Apple is whether the company can continue to innovate at the same pace without legendary co-founder Steve Jobs at the helm.

"We are approaching a point when an answer might be forthcoming," he said.

Piper Jaffray



Analyst Gene Munster is encouraged by iPhone demand, which he believes was pushed higher by a price cut on the iPhone 4 in emerging markets. That pushed iPhone sales 18 percent higher than expected, but also led to a 5 percent decline quarter over quarter in the iPhone lineup's average selling price.Apple is weathering its current "transitional quarters" well, Gene Munster believes, but anticipation is growing for the company's next big thing.

Following Tuesday's results, Munster admitted that the iPhone franchise is in better shape than he previously believed. He estimates that average selling prices on the iPhone 5 and iPhone 4S were unchanged, while price cuts on the iPhone 4 in emerging markets likely made the low-end handset's average selling price drop 15 percent.

Apple currently finds itself in "transitional quarters," he said. But that's anticipated to change over the next six quarters, when he sees a range of new products debuting, beginning with a cheaper, plastic iPhone model this fall.

Munster has been a longtime vocal proponent for an Apple television, and he continues to believe that the company will introduce such a product late this year. He expects Apple will also unveil an "iWatch" in 2014.

Wells Fargo



With Apple admitting that new products will launch in the fall, and analyst Maynard Um expecting a late September iPhone launch, he views Friday, Sept. 27 as a likely date for a new product to debut. Fall officially runs from Sept. 22 to Dec. 21.

"We find it curious that flattish revenue guidance implies there may not be any greater pause ahead of the new iPhone this year than there was last year, despite Apple effectively previewing a launch timeframe — particularly interesting given the lowering of iPhone channel inventory, presumably to manage the transition and limit price protection," he said.

Potential reasons for this may have been strong demand in July, or greater confidence for a bigger initial launch in late September.

As for the iPad, shipments were down 14 percent year over year, but when adjusting for reductions in channel inventory, the true drop-off was just 3 percent. Um believes iPad sales were likely soft in the U.S. and Europe, as Apple highlighted double-digit growth in China, Japan, Canada, Russia, Latin America, the Middle East, and India.

Cube

Deutsche Bank



Chris Whitmore viewed Apple's June quarter as a mixed bag: He was encouraged by iPhone sales, margins, and earnings per share upside, but views declining iPhone average selling prices, soft iPad and Mac sales, and slowdown in China as negatives for the company.

For investors, he believes there will be "no clarity until new products arrive," as he noted that Apple refused to say whether or not the September quarter would include a significant product transition.

"In fact, the better-than-expected margin guidance gives rise to concerns that the new iPhones could come either at the very end of the September quarter (and have no material impact in September) or is pushed to the December quarter," he said.

RBC Capital Markets



Apple's June quarter was better than analyst Amit Daryanani feared it might be, but he believes the focus will remain on Apple's product cycle and anticipated updates to the iPhone and iPad lineup. He also believes investors will keep an eye on Apple's long-term gross margins.

Daryanani believes Apple's guidance for the next quarter implies that an "iPhone 5S" will go on sale in either the second or third week of September.

He also noted that Apple's "blended" average selling price for the iPhone was at $581, representing a 17 percent quarter-over-quarter decline. That suggests to him that sales of the legacy iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S were more robust when compared to the iPhone 5.

ISI Group



Analyst Brian Marshall believes Apple has an "urgent need" for an iPhone with a larger display. But while the "iPhone 5S" is expected to have the same 4-inch display as the iPhone 5, he believes the "extreme makeover" of iOS 7 may satisfy loyal Apple fans, giving them "enough reason to wait for a larger-display iPhone model."

He expects that an iPhone with a screen size at about 5 inches could be a catalyst for the company over the next 3 to 9 months. He also anticipated a new iPad mini, and potential new product category announcements, such as a television or smart watch.

JMP Securities



Longtime Apple bear Alex Gauna viewed the company's June quarter as "an encouraging step in the right direction after the disappointment last quarter." However, he said the results were not strong enough to convince him that Apple is "out of the competitive and gross margin squeeze woods yet."

JMP Securities has maintained its "market perform" rating for AAPL stock. Gauna said he's hoping to see "better visibility or confidence in new earnings growth drivers" before he's willing to view Apple as a good buy for investors.

New Nexus 7 spec leaked

Summary: Google is expected to unveils the new Nexus 7 tomorrow, but thanks to leaks we know in advance what will make this new Android tablet tick.
While Google hasn't officially unveiled its new Android-powered Nexus 7 tablet yet, information on the hardware has already leaked onto the web.
The information comes via the Android enthusiast site Android Police, and the details suggest that the new tablet is on par, or perhaps a little faster, than the Nexus 4.
Here's what the new Nexus 7 brings to the table:
  • Android 4.3 Jelly Bean
  • A 7-inch 1920x1200 retina-display screen with a pixel density of 320 PPI
  • Snapdragon S4 Pro quad-core processor clocked at 1.5GHz (same as the Nexus 4)
  • 2GB of RAM (same as the Nexus 4)
  • Adreno 320 GPU
  • NFC support
(Source: Android Police)
This spec is pretty much in line with both what I expected and what rumors had suggested the hardware configuration would be.
Performance in benchmarks suggests that the new Nexus 7 is significantly faster than the old Nexus 7 (for example, the new Nexus 7 scoring 7,188 in 3DMark's Ice Storm Extreme test, compared to 1,877 for the old Nexus 7), but displaying comparable performance to the Nexus 4.
The increased performance should allow app to run faster and for the UI to feel smoother and more fluid.
One annoying fault that remains is audio latency. This is common to Android devices and is usually in the region of 80-90 milliseconds. Tests carried out by Android Police suggest that with the Nexus 7 this has been cut to 40 milliseconds, but should ideally be as low as 10 milliseconds.
Google is expected to unveil the new Nexus 7 tomorrow (July 25).

Sisi calls for mass protests in Egypt to confront ‘terrorism’

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fGE3zVFbRew

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Egypt’s top army officer on Wednesday called for mass street protests to give him a mandate to confront terrorism three weeks after he removed the elected president.
General Abdel-Fattah el Sisi asked Egyptians to take to public squares across the country on Friday in support of a military crackdown on what he described as terrorism.

Thousands of supporters of Mohamed Morsi have held daily demonstrations demanding the president’s restoration in protests that have sometimes led to violent clashes.
“Egyptians must take to the streets on Friday to give me the mandate to face violence and terrorism,” said the general in a speech at an armed forces event.
Wearing dark sunglasses and full military regalia, he added: “Egyptians must take to the squares to show the whole world that they are still represented. Friday is the day we, the army, the people and the police, will unite.”
Mr Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood group immediately lashed out at the general. “Your threats will not prevent millions from taking to the streets” in support of Morsi, Essam El-Erian wrote on Twitter. “When a leader loses a battle he takes his decisions with honour. But sadly you haven’t fought a battle before and you are always sitting in your office receiving reports and weaving plots.”
The army officer’s foray into mass politics followed a bomb explosion early on Wednesday morning at a security headquarters north of Cairo. The blast killed one police conscript and injured 27 officers and civilians, adding a new dimension to the violence that has shaken Egypt since the overthrow of the country’s elected Islamist president three weeks ago.
The explosion at the main security directorate in the Nile Delta provincial capital of Mansoura damaged police vehicles and shattered windows, the state-owned Ahram newspaper website reported. Interim president Adli Mansour’s spokesman, Ahmed El-Muslimani, described it as a “terrorist attack”.
It came five days after supporters of the deposed president claimed security forces in Mansoura killed two women and a teenage girl at a demonstration, raising the prospect of tit-for-tat killings that could cloud the country’s return to democratic governance.
The bombing could also mark a second instance of a spread to Egypt’s mainland of the type of violence prevalent in the Sinai peninsula, where Islamist militants frequently attack security forces. Another bomb hit a police station in the Suez Canal city of Ismailia at the weekend.
Mr Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood denied any involvement in the Mansoura bombing. It warned in a statement on the group’s website of “an apparent plan by security and intelligence agencies to plot violent attacks to terrorise citizens and then attempt to link these incidents to the peaceful protesters”.
But the Brotherhood has conceded it has little control over some elements within the pro-Morsi camp, which includes a variety of Islamist parties and groups as well as individuals opposed to the July 3 coup.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fGE3zVFbRew

The unrest following the popularly backed military overthrow of Mr Morsi’s government shows little sign of abating. For the second morning in a row, alleged plainclothes enforcers with possible ties to the official security forces attacked pro-Morsi demonstrators on Wednesday, killing two and bringing the total of those killed in street clashes in and around Cairo over the last two days to 11.
Clashes between Morsi supporters, security forces and Morsi opponents have led to scores of deaths, mostly of Morsi supporters, in the wake of the president’s overthrow. Mr Mansour’s government called for a round of reconciliation talks between the country’s political camps on Wednesday.
But with Mr Morsi and much of the Brotherhood’s senior leaders under military detention and violence persisting, few expect the dialogue to bear fruit. The Brotherhood has already said it won’t attend, according to Al Jazeera television, and even the country’s second-largest Islamist group, the Nour party, under pressure from its rank-and-file for initially endorsing the coup, has yet to confirm it will attend.
In his speech, Gen Sisi said he considered himself under the authority of the interim government and remained committed to upholding a road map towards democratic elections even as he appeared to expand his mandate. In recent days, his aides have repeatedly quashed rumours that he was considering running for president.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fGE3zVFbRew