Sunday, March 31, 2013

Hotel Near Dolphin Mall - This Year, More Taxpayers Are Waiting To File Their Returns

Source - http://www.kansascity.com/
By - MARK DAVIS
Category - Hotel Near Dolphin Mall
Posted By - Inn and Suites In West Miami

Hotel Near Dolphin Mall
More Americans than usual have waited until the last two weeks to send their tax returns to the Internal Revenue Service. The latest IRS data showed there were about 4.5 million more taxpayers still waiting to file as of March 22 than was the case on that day last year.

Plus, the IRS expects about 2 million more returns this year than last.

Even catching up some ground with late-night number crunching during April’s home stretch probably will still leave several million filers staring at the deadline.

“Everybody’s got to file eventually,” said Mark Steber, chief tax officer for Jackson Hewitt Tax Service Inc. “This year’s like no year we’ve ever seen.”

You can blame the tax season’s delayed start for this year’s filer-packed finish. Congress rewrote so many tax laws at the last minute — to avoid the fiscal cliff — that the IRS was forced to start accepting tax returns two weeks later than normal.

Heck, Kansas City even can blame the snow for the large number of taxpayers who still need to file.

“Our delays were compounded by the weather around here,” said Maggie Doedtman, program director for KC Cash Coalition, which works with the United Way to provide free tax preparation services to area residents.

More than 80 million taxpayers have filed returns as of March 22. While that’s the vast majority, that’s still down 5.2 percent from the same time a year earlier, the IRS said. For those who haven’t filed, nearly every tax professional offers the same advice. File. No matter what.

“We have two weeks left. By all means, use (your time to get organized whether you’re a do-it-yourselfer or you go into a tax office,” said Jackie Perlman, principal tax research analyst for the Tax Institute at H&R Block.

File, because you probably are due a refund. About three out of every four filers are. This year, the average refund at this stage is $2,827, down 1.2 percent from this time a year ago.

Refunds seem to be running later than usual this year too, said Bret Willoughby of Tax911.com Inc. in Olathe. The company, which moved here from Wisconsin last summer, specializes in taxes for Americans living overseas.

Willoughby said that a few years ago clients were getting their refunds less than a week after filing electronically.

Refunds do take longer, acknowledged Michael Devine, an IRS spokesman in St. Louis. Those checks now have to pass through a number of tests before heading out the door.

“We’re being more careful to catch tax fraud,” he said.

The promise at IRS is 21 days for your refund.

File, experts say, even if you don’t have all the papers you need from others. For example, some mutual funds and other investment companies have been late sending out 1099 forms that taxpayers need to report gains.

“With a phone call, you may not get the document but you can get the amount,” said Steber at Jackson Hewitt.

File, say tax professionals, even if you owe money but can’t pay what you still owe. The IRS penalties for failing to file are 10 times bigger than the penalties for paying too little.

Skip the April 15 deadline and Uncle Sam will add 5 percent to your unpaid tax amount every month you are late. Pay too little and the underpayment penalty is 0.5 percent each month until you make up the shortfall.

Besides, the IRS will let you work out a payment plan if you have a financial hardship. Use the online payment agreement at www.irs.gov or include IRS Form 9465-FS Installment Agreement Request with your tax return.

File, experts say, even if you can’t get your tax return finished in time. Send in Form 4868 to get an automatic six-month extension of time to file.

Note, the extension gives you more time to file. You still have to pay by April 15 any taxes you owe.

So how can you tell how much you owe if you haven’t done your taxes yet?

“You make a reasonable effort” to get the amount right, Block’s Perlman said. In other words, it’s an estimate.

There are a couple of safeguards for filers who don’t figure it out by April 15 and file an extension.

The IRS will waive its underpayment penalty if what you have paid in — from withholdings, estimated payments and any last-minute check to Uncle Sam — equals at least 90 percent of what your 2012 taxes end up totaling. That’s the total 2012 tax bill, not what you still owe on April 15.

If what you still owe come April 15 turns out to be less than $1,000, you also are safe from an underpayment penalty. But if you don’t file, that big penalty for failing to file still hits.

Another safeguard against the underpayment penalty is that you’ve paid in at least as much as your 2011 taxes had totaled.

File either your taxes or an extension by midnight April 15, because the tax season is ending on schedule even if it started late.

Neither the IRS nor Congress is offering to move the deadline.

“It’s not even being discussed,” Steber said.

Friday, March 29, 2013

Hotel Close To FIU - Japan Suffers Decline In Factory Output

Source - http://www.ft.com/
By - Jonathan Soble
Category - Hotel Close To FIU
Posted By - Inn and Suites In West Miami

Hotel Close To FIU
The challenge facing Japan’s new leadership in escaping from economic stagnation and deflation was underscored on Friday as data showed further declines in consumer prices and an unexpected contraction in factory output.

Haruhiko Kuroda, the new governor of the Bank of Japan, could struggle to reach his goal of generating 2 per cent inflation in two years, analysts said, after the government data indicated core consumer prices fell 0.3 per cent in February compared with a year earlier.

It was the fourth consecutive decline in core CPI, which excludes prices of fresh food. The fall came in spite of a more than 15 per cent fall in the value of the yen, which has pushed up prices for many items sourced outside Japan, from gasoline to package holidays.

“We believe the BoJ’s 2 per cent target is still a long way off,” said Chiwoong Lee, an analyst at Goldman Sachs, adding that it would take time before the impact of the weaker yen was felt on prices in general, rather than merely imports.

Mr Kuroda will lead his first BoJ policy-setting meeting next week following his appointment by Shinzo Abe, the prime minister, who was elected in December on a pledge to revive an economy that has managed to grow only about 0.5 per cent a year on average since the mid-1990s.

The BoJ’s board is expected to agree to pump more money into the economy by expanding its purchases of government bonds and other assets. Market expectations are high: the yield on 20-year bonds dropped to its lowest in 10 years this week after Mr Kuroda repeated a pledge to consider buying longer-dated debt.

In Februay, increased import costs were more than offset by large declines in prices for flatscreen televisions and other home electronics – a category that is under price pressure worldwide due to changes in technology and manufacturing processes that are beyond the BoJ’s control.

TV prices in Japan fell 29 per cent in February compared with the same month a year earlier.

The central bank’s ultimate aim is not simply to raise prices but to spur corresponding increases in corporate investment and wages. But the decline in industrial production in February was a reminder of the entrenched defensive mood at many companies: output was down 0.1 per cent, against analysts’ average forecast of a 2.6 per cent rise.

Masamichi Adachi, an analyst at JPMorgan, said the result suggested economic growth in the first quarter could be less buoyant than expected. Analysts believe Japan emerged from its fifth recession in 15 years in the quarter.

Mr Adachi said JPMorgan would review its estimate of 3 per cent annualised growth after the government releases its latest monthly survey of private consumption next week, but that “the risk clearly skews to the downside”.

Still, he said he believed the economic recovery would continue as the effect of BoJ easing, government stimulus spending and reviving overseas demand for Japanese goods became fully apparent beginning in the second quarter.

The industrial production data highlighted the challenge of turning the rise in optimism that has accompanied Mr Abe’s moves to fix Japan’s malaise into progress in the real economy. Factory managers who responded to the previous month’s survey had said they believed February output would soar by 5.3 per cent.

This time around, they predicted rises of 1 per cent in March and 0.6 per cent in April.

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Holiday In West Miami - Mobile Ads To Push Twitter Ad Revenue Near $1 Billion In 2014: Report

Source - http://ibnlive.in.com
By - Press Release
Category - Holiday In West Miami
Posted By - Inn and Suites In West Miami

Holiday In West Miami
Twitter will generate nearly $1 billion in ad revenue next year due to a surge in mobile advertising on its Web microblogging service, according to a report released on Wednesday.

Mobile ads will account for roughly half of Twitter's advertising revenue this year and will make up more than 60 per cent of the company's ad revenue by 2015 according to research firm eMarketer.

The increasing popularity of Twitter's mobile ads - introduced in March 2012 - caused eMarketer to raise its 2014 ad revenue estimates for Twitter to $950 million, versus its previous estimate of roughly $800 million. Twitters' ad revenue this year will total $582.8 million, according to the report, roughly double what it was in 2012.

Twitter, which allows people to share 140-character messages on its online service, is privately held and does not disclose financial results.

With more than 200 million monthly active users, Twitter is among the Web's most popular social networking services, along with Facebook Inc, and is expected by analysts to float shares to the public within two years.

As consumers increasingly access the Web on smartphones, mobile ads have become increasingly important to the businesses of Web companies such as Facebook and Google Inc. Facebook said in January that its mobile ad revenue doubled from the third quarter to the fourth quarter, representing roughly 23 percent of its $1.33 billion in fourth-quarter ad revenue.

"Twitter has ultimately benefited from the increased focus on mobile by competitors like Google and Facebook, which have both expanded their own mobile ad offerings and worked to convince advertisers to shift dollars to mobile devices," eMarketer said on Wednesday.

eMarketer said its revenue forecasts are based on analysis of reports that track media buying trends, Twitter usage data and interviews with executives at advertising agencies, online publishers and others.

Port Of Miami Hotels - 2015 Audi A3 entry-level luxury sedan announced, will hit showrooms in 2014

Source - http://www.slashgear.com/
By - Brittany Hillen
Category - Port Of Miami Hotels
Posted By - Inn and Suites In West Miami

Port Of Miami Hotels
Audi has announced the upcoming 2015 A3 sedan, stating that the vehicle will hit showrooms in Q1 of 2014, offering entry-level luxury features with a variety of powertrain options wrapped up in a sleek-yet-reserved body style. While no pricing information has been given on this third-generation A3, we’ve got a rundown of its specs, as well as a gallery, after the break.

The 2015 Audi A3 will have MMI technology, which is a first in the A-segment. In addition, it will also feature support for 4G LTE and will offer Audi’s drive select. Standard features include Bluetooth, leather upholstery, a panoramic sunroof, pre-sense basic, and rain-sensing windshield wipers. On top of this is Bang & Olufesen audio, and implementation of NVIDIA’s Tegra for 3D graphics. Finally, there’s also the Audi Phone Box, which increases mobile coverage via an antenna on the back of the vehicle.

Technology aside, the 2015 A3 series offers four engine options: 170 horsepower 1.8 TFSI, 150 horsepower 2.0 TDI diesel, and low/high output 2.0 TSFI with horsepower specs being offered “closer to launch.” Regardless of which engine is selected, the A3 will feature a 6-speed S tronic transmission. A new feature being offered is the ability to adjust shift points, steering effort, and throttle response via four settings: Auto, Individual, Comfort, and Dynamic.

Inside, this entry-level luxury interior offers a wrap-around dash design, which Audi refers to as the vehicle’s defining element. Interior lighting includes cool white LEDs that surrounds door panels, cupholders, the center console, and more. Audi America’s President Scott Keogh said: “The Audi A3 will set the new benchmark among entry-level luxury sedans. This A3 line-up redefines the standards of its class in dynamics, efficiency, technology, craftsmanship and performance.”

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Budget Miami Hotels - Apple Buys Indoor Mapper WifiSLAM

Source - http://www.gmanetwork.com/
By - Simon Sharwood
Category - Budget Miami Hotels
Posted By - Inn and Suites In West Miami
Budget Miami Hotels
Apple has acquired mapping company WiFiSLAM, in a move one hopes can only improve the quality of its inaccurate and oft-derided maps service.

Terms of the acquisition have not been disclosed, by the sum of $US20m is getting plenty of airtime. So is the acquired company's ability to help Apple create indoor maps, as an AngelList profile of the company (wifislam.com doesn't work at the time of writing) says its technology can do the following:

    “Allow your smartphone to pinpoint its location (and the location of your friends) in real-time to 2.5m accuracy using only ambient WiFi signals that are already present in buildings. We are building the next generation of location-based mobile apps that, for the first time, engage with users at the scale that personal interaction actually takes place. Applications range from step-by-step indoor navigation, to product-level retail customer engagement, to proximity-based social networking.”

All of which sounds like it has the potential to add indoor maps to Apple's app, which will mean it's on par with Google. Either that or WiFiSLAM may turn Apple into a monster that assists retailers to track your every step through a store so that some kind of misnamed Big Data rig can figure out that you visit the [insert the gender you're not] underwear section of a nearby department store and then post an embarrassing suggestion for a new purchase to Facebook.

$20m is back-of-the-sofa money for Apple, but almost certainly a sum causing a fair bit of whooping down WiFiSLAM way, as the company seems to be in startup mode. It's now in “what on earth happens when you're acquired by Apple” mode.

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Family Hotels In Miami - Negative Side Of WBC Harms Dodgers

Source - http://www.sfgate.com/
By - Bruce Jenkins
Category - Family Hotels In Miami
Posted By - Inn and Suites In West Miami

Family Hotels In Miami
The Dodgers got some bad news Thursday on Hanley Ramirez, and they weren't the only ones who took a hit. This doesn't speak well for the World Baseball Classic's future, either.

It's not that the tournament's existence is in doubt; MLB officials confirmed last weekend that it's definitely set for March 2017. But the selection process of the U.S. team, among others, has always been compromised by the fear of players getting hurt.

Look what front-office executives, managers and agents have in their portfolio now: Mark Teixeira, injured wrist during WBC batting practice. David Wright, a candidate for the Mets' disabled list with a rib-cage injury. And now Ramirez, merely the key to the Dodgers' season, is out some eight weeks as he recovers from thumb surgery.

And that's only what we know at the moment. It's entirely possible that a pitcher or two will have been worked too hard, too early, for the sake of his country.

The Dodgers already faced a potential crisis at shortstop if Ramirez, whose defensive skills have eroded in recent years, couldn't handle the position. Now it's up to Luis Cruz (moving from third base), Dee Gordon or Justin Sellers, said to be the best of them defensively but optioned to the minor leagues Tuesday due to minor injuries.

To put it another way: If Cruz is the shortstop, Juan Uribe could see some time at third base. The same Uribe who, after leaving the Giants, signed a three-year deal with L.A. and immediately went into the statistical tank.

The Dodgers are just a mess, period. Don't believe their PR propaganda suggesting Zack Greinke's elbow soreness is "no big deal." It's a huge deal. Carl Crawford still isn't fully recovered from Tommy John surgery, and Matt Kemp (shoulder surgery) may not have his A-1 power swing until mid-season.

Perhaps it all comes together for the free-spending Hollywoodites. Then again, come September, perhaps we'll hear that Ramirez's injury "screwed up our whole season." Exactly what the WBC does not want to hear.

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Hotel Near Miami Beach - New Glasses-Free 3-D Is Like A Hologram In Your Pocket

Source - http://www.nbcnews.com/
By - Devin Coldewey
Category - Hotel Near Miami Beach
Posted By - Inn and Suites In West Miami

Hotel Near Miami Beach
3-D TV might not have caught on as much as display makers hoped it would, but part of that has to be due to the uncomfortable, silly-looking glasses one always has to wear. Glasses-free 3-D seems to be the future, and research at HP is a huge leap beyond existing systems like the Nintendo 3DS.

In order to see in 3-D, each of our eyes must see a slightly different image. Usually they get different views by virtue of one being a few inches from the other. But when viewing a TV, they see the same thing on the screen — unless the screen sends a different image to each eye.
This can be done by blocking out images going to the "wrong" eye, which is what 3-D glasses do, or by having the display itself angle every other row of pixels ever so slightly so that they align with either the left or right eye — you may have experienced this on the most common glasses-free display out there, Nintendo's 3DS handheld game console.

But displays like the 3DS's have a small "sweet spot" where the 3-D effect works, and there is only one "view" of the content — moving your head doesn't change the perspective. Research at HP, led by David Fattal, has resulted in a far superior method that may eventually provide not only more sweet spots, but the ability to show content from dozens of angles.

It works by causing each pixel of an image to be sent in in several different directions, and with sophisticated control over the "diffraction grating" that does this, the image sent straight out can be different from the one sent a few degrees to the left or right. A little fine tuning allows for them to send different images to where they expect each eye will be as well.

The result is a display that can send different images in different directions, and if those images are different views on the same object, viewers see a 3-D picture, one that changes with their point of view. Up to 64 different angles could be shown with current technology, theoretically.

The wide field of view and relatively low power requirements of the display make it perfect for something like mobile phones — and unlike the display in the 3DS, it doesn't result in a darker final image than a traditional 2-D display would show.

But don't expect to see it in the next iPhone or Galaxy S. There are some tradeoffs.
For one thing, instead of processing and showing just one image, the device would now have to keep track of dozens — a major increase in processing power, RAM, and battery power would be necessary. It also wouldn't have the "Retina" resolution so many mobile users are used to.

It's still a promising technology, both for 3-D displays and other methods it may enable. Fattal et al.'s paper, "A multi-directional backlight for a wide-angle, glasses-free three-dimensional display," appeared Wednesday in the journal Nature.

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Attractions In West Miami - Microsoft Whistleblower Allegations Highlight Global Corruption Risks

Source - http://www.forbes.com/
By - Alexandra Wrage
Category - Attractions In West Miami
Posted By - Inn and Suites In West Miami

Attractions In West Miami
It’s what makes it difficult for compliance officers to sleep at night. You’re going about your day when the phone rings; on the other end of the line is an attorney from the Department of Justice (DOJ) telling you that they’ve received an anonymous tip of bribes paid by a distributor in Europe to a foreign government official. Now what?

That scenario recently turned into a reality for Microsoft Corporation, which is under investigation by the DOJ and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for bribes allegedly made on the company’s behalf to officials in Italy, Romania and China. The investigations were made public yesterday in an article by the Wall Street Journal. Microsoft now faces what an increasing number of other multinationals are dealing with in their interactions with foreign third parties: potential liability under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA). The Microsoft story is indicative of the compliance times in which we live; companies must manage large networks of long distance business partnerships while remaining alert to credible whistleblower “chatter” in their ranks. They must exhaustively investigate all credible claims of wrongdoing, often at extraordinary expense and with considerable disruption.

Increase in Whistleblower Actions

As reported by the Wall Street Journal, the Chinese bribery allegations against Microsoft were brought to the attention of the DOJ and SEC by an anonymous whistleblower. This won’t surprise those in the compliance community. A year ago, the Dodd-Frank whistleblower provisions went into effect, promising tipsters as much as 30% of any monetary sanction the agency ultimately recovers. Since then, whistleblower allegations have increased sharply, with the SEC receiving over 100 credible tips from whistleblowers in 2012 alone. In response, companies are redoubling efforts to strengthen their internal disclosure programs in order to try to deal with potential problems before employees choose to take them to outside authorities.

FCPA Liability from Third Parties

The Microsoft investigation highlights the liability companies may face when doing business with third parties overseas. Under the FCPA, companies may be liable for bribes paid on their behalf by foreign intermediaries even if the company is not aware of the bribe. For a large multinational like Microsoft, which has offices in more than 100 countries, this can mean keeping tabs on thousands of business partners all across the globe. “In a community of 98,000 people and 640,000 partners,” writes Microsoft Vice President and Deputy General Counsel John Frank in a response to the investigation posted on Microsoft’s website, “it isn’t possible to say there will never be wrongdoing.” This summarizes the challenges and the reality for most companies doing business abroad.

Best Efforts Not Always Enough

The Microsoft investigation reveals the unvarnished truth that, despite best efforts, bribes are a constant risk in business. Microsoft appears to have instituted a robust anti-bribery compliance program. Microsoft’s Standards of Business Conduct, for example, explicitly states Microsoft’s strict policy against bribes:

“Microsoft prohibits corruption of government officials and the payments of bribes or kickbacks of any kind, whether in dealings with public officials or individuals in the private sector. Microsoft is committed to observing the standards of conduct set forth in the United States Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and the applicable anti-corruption and anti-money laundering laws of the countries in which we operate.”

Perhaps of even greater importance, Microsoft also requires all outside vendors to read and comply with the Microsoft Vendor Code of Conduct, which also prohibits incentives such as kickbacks or bribes.

Microsoft has made significant efforts to encourage internal reporting. Not only are employees and partners who have concerns about compliance or Microsoft business practices allowed to report their concerns to Microsoft’s Office of Legal Compliance, but so too are customers and others outside the company. These compliance practices are specifically designed to prevent the need for outside investigation by the DOJ that Microsoft now faces.

All of this should not be discouraging to companies worried about complying with anti-bribery laws. Strong compliance programs, even those that fail to prevent all forms of bribery, do provide protection from liability. “[A] company’s failure to prevent every single violation does not necessarily mean that a particular company’s compliance program was not generally effective,” write the DOJ and SEC in their recently published Resource Guide to the FCPA. “[The] DOJ and SEC…do not hold companies to a standard of perfection,” the Guide continues. This may not be enough to guarantee corporate compliance officers a full night’s rest, but it should provide some comfort.

Hotels In West Miami - Tiger Woods, Lindsey Vonn Confirm They Are Dating

Source - http://www.newsday.com/
By - FRANK LOVECE
Category - Hotels In West Miami
Posted By - Inn and Suites In West Miami

Hotels In West Miami
Tiger Woods and alpine ski racer Lindsey Vonn went public with their relationship Monday, ending several weeks of speculation.

"I guess it wasn't a well-kept secret but yes, I am dating Tiger Woods," Vonn, 28, tweeted one minute before Woods posted his own announcement. "Our relationship evolved from a friendship into something more over these past few months and it has made me very happy. I don't plan on addressing this further as I would like to keep that part of my life between us, my family and close friends."

Woods, 37, wrote, "Something nice that's happened off the course was meeting Lindsey Vonn. Lindsey and I have been friends for some time, but over the last few months we have become very close and are now dating. We thank you for your support and for respecting our privacy. We want to continue our relationship, privately, as an ordinary couple and continue to compete as athletes."

Rumors of a relationship began last month, following Vonn's serious ski accident in Austria on Feb. 5 and her flying home days later on Woods' private jet.

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Miami Hotel Meeting Space - Apple Seen Raising Dividend More Than 50% to $16 Billion

Source -        http://www.bloomberg.com/
By -              Karl Baker & Adam Satariano
Category -    Miami Hotel Meeting Space
Posted By -  Inn and Suites In West Miami

Miami Hotel Meeting Space
Apple Inc. (AAPL) is poised to boost its dividend by more than a half, according to analysts surveyed by Bloomberg, providing investors hit by a share slump with one of the highest yields in the U.S. technology industry.

Apple will probably lift its quarterly dividend 56 percent to $4.14 a share, for an annual payout of $15.7 billion, according to the average estimate from six analysts. The resulting yield of 3.7 percent would be higher than 86 percent of the companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index paying dividends. Apple could fund a payout with existing cash flow without using profit from overseas, which can be subject to extra taxes, said Gene Munster, an analyst at Piper Jaffray Cos.

Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook, who a year ago this month reinstated a dividend and announced a $10 billion buyback, faces mounting pressure to take bolder steps to pay out more of Apple’s $137.1 billion in cash and investments. Investors including David Einhorn’s Greenlight Capital Inc. are pushing for more money as growth slows and competition from rivals such as Samsung Electronics Co. (005930) intensifies.

“The accumulation of cash has become excessive,” Brian White, an analyst at New York-based Topeka Capital Markets Inc., said in an interview. He rates the shares a buy, with an $888 price target. “It doesn’t matter which bearish scenario you forecast, they’re never going to need this much cash.”

Apple shares rose 2.6 percent to $443.66 at the close on March 15. The stock has declined 37 percent from a peak on Sept. 19, compared with a 6.8 percent gain for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index in the same period.

Returning Cash
Many companies announce dividend changes once a year, fueling speculation about Cook’s plans as Apple approaches the anniversary of last year’s announcement, which came on March 19. The CEO reinstated dividends after a 17-year hiatus, breaking with a pattern set by co-founder Steve Jobs, who sought to preserve capital.

Dividend predictions from analysts surveyed by Bloomberg range from $3.31 to $5.30 a share.
Apple has said it’s in active discussions over how to manage the cash, and considering buybacks or a higher dividend among other options. Steve Dowling, a spokesman for Cupertino, California-based Apple, declined to comment on the company’s plans for the dividend or repurchase program.

Apple may add about $40 billion to $42 billion to its cash balance this year, according to Laurence Balter, an analyst at Oracle Investment Research who rates Apple a buy. Apple will generate about $15 billion of that in the U.S., he estimates, meaning it could pay that out in dividends without incurring taxes from bringing cash back from overseas.
 
Value Decline
“There has been almost a $300 billion decline in value of this company,” Balter, based in Fox Island, Washington, said in an interview. “Any CEO at the helm of any U.S. or international company that sat at their desk idly while this happened would be shown the door.”

Balter estimates Apple could spend $10 billion in a one- time payout, while boosting the quarterly dividend to $3.31 a share. Apple generated $42.6 billion in free cash flow in fiscal 2012, a 28 percent increase from a year earlier, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Einhorn’s Greenlight, which says it holds more than 1.3 million Apple shares, is urging Apple to issue high-yielding preferred stock to carve out more cash for investors. Greenlight successfully sued to block a vote at Apple’s shareholder meeting last month that would have required the company to seek investors’ approval for creating preferred stock.
 

Friday, March 15, 2013

Hotel Near Dolphin Mall - European Leaders Stick To Austerity Course

Source - http://www.nytimes.com/
By - JAMES KANTER and ANDREW HIGGINS
Category - Hotel Near Dolphin Mall
Posted By - Inn and Suites In West Miami

HotelNearDolphinMall
 Jeered by angry protesters demanding an end to austerity and shaken by a resounding rejection of their economic strategy from Italian voters, European leaders gathered for an economic summit meeting Thursday amid few signs that the bloc’s policies were healing the twin blights of rising unemployment and recession.

Instead of bowing to a rising anti-austerity tide, however, leaders seemed determined to stay the course, insisting that only budget cuts and other measures to restore financial stability could return the continent to economic growth and create jobs.

Speaking as thousands of protesters gathered just out of earshot in a nearby Brussels park, Herman Van Rompuy, the president of the European Council, the body that organizes the leaders’ summit meetings, emphasized “green shoots” of recovery and said growth was returning, albeit slowly.

Officials of the European Union have repeatedly predicted a return to growth, only to be disappointed by data showing rising unemployment and continuing recession in the euro area.

The economy of the 17-member euro zone is expected to shrink for a second consecutive year in 2013, and growth for the whole of the 27-nation European Union is forecast to be about 0.1 percent. Unemployment in Spain and Greece, the hardest-hit countries, has soared above 25 percent.

Mr. Van Rompuy acknowledged “social distress” and said the success of anti-austerity and anti-establishment parties in the recent Italian elections was something that the leaders needed to consider. But he insisted that the departing Italian prime minister, Mario Monti, who was roundly defeated in the elections last month, had done “an excellent job” and that Italy and the European Union should “stick to the same general direction of the last 12 months.”

Italy is effectively without a functioning government after the Five Star Movement, led by Beppe Grillo, a comedian turned activist, made stunning gains in both houses of Parliament in the elections. Five Star has rejected an appeal by the Democratic Party to work together to lead the country. Without an alliance, the Italian government could limp along for as long as a year, political analysts say, before a likely collapse would force new elections.

The Brussels meeting is meant to focus on the tougher budgetary oversight agreed upon over the last two years to combat the kinds of extreme debt and deficit problems in many countries that nearly brought down the euro currency union. Leaders were also expected to endorse a strategy that should give France, Spain and Portugal more time to meet their deficit-reduction goals, on condition that they stick to a path of cutting debt.

Protesters, even if they were aware of such concessions, were clearly unconvinced.

“All they do is cut, but we need jobs,” said Michael Mercier, a worker at a Belgian prison for juveniles who took part in an anti-austerity rally organized by trade union groups in Parc du Cinquantenaire, near the site of the summit meeting and the headquarters of the European Commission, the bloc’s executive arm.

“This is all the fault of the E.U.,” said Mr. Mercier, who added that the way the bloc was run mixed “too many different things in the same big pot, and this causes problems for everyone.”

One group of demonstrators managed to enter an annex of the European Union’s principal economic policy-making arm, the European Commission’s Directorate General for Economic and Financial Affairs, and staged a protest meeting in the cafeteria.

“We occupied their building to denounce the misery they are imposing on millions of Europeans,” said Michel Vanderopoulos, a spokesman for the group, which organized the protest, called “For a European Spring.” He said those who took part came from Belgium, Germany, Italy and Denmark.

The annex houses some of the officials who form part of the “troika” of international lenders detested by many people in countries like Greece and Portugal for its role in demanding painful belt-tightening in exchange for bailouts.

A spokesman for the commission said the protest lasted about 15 minutes and did not involve any violent confrontations. “The Belgian police arrived on scene, and the protesters left of their own accord,” the spokesman said.

At the meeting, the increasingly acrimonious dispute over austerity pitted those who favor budget discipline — the European authorities and leaders of countries like Germany and Finland — against countries like France and Spain and groups like trade unions, which favor more government spending to promote growth.

The cracks were visible at the same news conference where Mr. Van Rompuy spoke, after a “social summit” of European officials, business groups and trade unions ahead of the main meeting.

“The doubt about the benefit of the European Union is showing more and more,” said Bernadette Ségol, the general secretary of the European Trade Union Confederation. “The burden is being put on the people. Unemployment is up and up and up every month. When is the growth going to come? What are we going to do to get it?”

Ms. Ségol called for the political will to increase investment and halt the focus on reducing deficits. She implored the leaders gathering in Brussels to recall that “we are dealing with people; they have feelings, and they also have the right to vote, and this is something that maybe cannot be explained in tables or figures.”

The dour forecasts have served to sharpen the debate over whether the emphasis on austerity has generated a painful cycle in which government cuts sap tax revenues and consumer demand, worsening an already bleak outlook.

The concern about growth and jobs is also prompting a return to calls for Germany, with its strong economy, to do a good deal more to help its struggling neighbors.

That is a topic that Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, has sought to avoid before national elections in September and amid continued concerns among voters that financial support for the euro area from German taxpayers could badly dent the nation’s resurgent prosperity.

Arriving at the meeting, Ms. Merkel sought to emphasize the efforts the European Union had already made to fight joblessness.

“We have decided on a growth pact in the summer of last year, and now this growth pact has to be filled with life,” Ms. Merkel said. “The money is there, but it has to reach the people, so the young people in Europe get jobs and we still do everything to become competitive and grow.”

Guntram B. Wolff, the deputy director of Bruegel, a research organization, wrote this week that it was critical to support efforts like programs to create jobs for youth. But in addition, he said, “Germany will have to play a role” to stimulate demand in the region and enable other members of the euro area, like Spain, to benefit from export-led growth.

“The euro area’s recession has deepened significantly according to all available indicators,” Mr. Wolff warned. “Urgent action is needed to prevent that the recession turns into an outright depression.”

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Hotel Close To FIU - Southern California Home Prices, Sales Increase

Source - http://www.dailynews.com/
By - Gregory J. Wilcox
Category - Hotel Close To FIU
Posted By - Inn and Suites In West Miami

Hotel Close To FIU
Southland home prices increased 20.9 percent in February from a year earlier and sales hit a six-year high for the month as buying activity perked up in the mid- to high-end markets and absentee purchases hit a record level, a research firm said Wednesday.

Last month the median home price in the six county region increased to $320,000 from $264,750 in February 2012, according to La Jolla-based DataQuick.

The median price made double-digit percentage gains in all areas.

"Most every gauge shows prices are up significantly over the past year, even after adjusting for changes in the types of homes selling," DataQuick President John Walsh said in a statement. "But to keep today's price levels in context, consider that last month's median sale price was still around 37 percent below its early 2007 peak of $505,000, and it was about where the median was back in mid 2003."

Sales increased 1 percent to 15,945 properties from 15,780 a year earlier. Sales slipped 0.7 percent from January, a typical seasonal trend. On average, sales have increased 0.7 percent between January and February dating back to 1988, when DataQuick began compiling its database.

DataQuick's statistics include new and previously owned houses and condominiums.

"This marginal increase in sales is a really positive sign," said Robert Kleinhenz, Chief Economist at the Kyser Center for Economic Research at the Los Angeles County Economic Development Corp.

"Last year was a transition year and I think this is the year when are going to see some real improvement. I think the proof in the pudding will be the March numbers when we kick off the selling season."

Scant inventory continued to hold back sales and drove a decline in the Inland Empire, according to Dataquick.

The company said that in February:

• In Los Angeles County the median price increased 17.1 percent to $3550,000 from $299,000 a year earlier. Sales rose 4.2 percent to 5,481 from 5,261.

• In San Bernardino County sales fell 5.9 percent to 1,959 from 2,082. The median price jumped 18.2 percent to $175,000 from $148,000.

• In Riverside County sales also fell 5.9 percent, dipping to 2,833 from 3,011. And the price rose 18.1 percent $228,000 from $193,000 a year ago.

With the supply of distressed properties diminishing buyers are migrating up the price ladder.

Last month sales in the move-up sector - properties priced between $300,000 and $800,000, a range that would include many making their first move to a nicer home - rose 33.4 percent from the prior year.

The number of homes selling for $500,000 or more jumped 54 percent and those sales of $800,000 and up rose 62.7 percent.

Absentee buyers, mostly investors and some second-home purchasers, accounted for a record 31.4 percent of the Southland home purchases last month, DataQuick said, which was up from 29.9 percent a year earlier.

Flipping, taking a quick profit on a recent purchase, also increased.

Last month 6.9 percent of the homes sold had previously changed owners in the prior six months, up from 3.7 percent a year earlier.

Hotels Near Marlins Park - Blackberry Scores Its Biggest Order Ever: 1 Million Phones

Source - http://www.slashgear.com/
By - Brittany Hillen

Hotels Near Marlins Park
Blackberry just achieved a new milestone, receiving a record order of 1 million handsets from one of its partners. This is the largest order it has ever received, and is a boon for the company that has put a lot of effort into revamping itself after a string of bad luck. Not surprisingly, the company’s shares took a big jump after the announcement.

The only information supplied provided is that the order came from an established partner, but Blackberry declined specifying what it means by such a statement or who that partner is. In addition to carriers, Blackberry supplies devices for both corporations and governments agencies, although the number that use its handsets declined dramatically in 2012.

Said Blackberry’s Executive Vice President of Global Sales Rick Costanzo, “An order for 1 million devices is a tremendous vote of confidence in BlackBerry 10. Consumers are ready for a new user experience, and BlackBerry 10 delivers. With strong partner support, coupled with this truly re-invented new platform, we have a powerful recipe for success.”

Bloomberg, which is reporting on the story, reached out to the major carriers – Verizon, AT&T, and Sprint – none of which offered a statement about whether they were involved in the transaction. While the latter two declined commenting, Verizon hasn’t yet given a comment either way. The announcement resulted in an 8.2-percent jump in shares.

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Holiday In West Miami - Apple's iPad To Fall Behind Android As Tablet War Grows

Source - http://www.cnbc.com/
By - Press Release
Category - Holiday In West Miami
Posted By - Inn and Suites In West Miami

Holiday In West Miami
Shipments of tablets running Google's Android will overtake the iPad this year for the first time, research house IDC predicted on Tuesday, as Apple cedes more mobile market share to hard-charging rivals around the globe.

A growing variety of smaller and cheaper Android tablets from Google to Amazon will catch on this year with more consumers and chip away at Apple's dominance since the first iPad launched in 2010, International Data Corp said.

iPad and iPhone shipments are expected to keep growing at enviable rates, but arch-rival Samsung and others have hurt Apple with a combination of savvy marketing, greater variety and rapid technology adoption.

On Thursday, Samsung takes the wraps off the fourth generation of its flagship Galaxy, the smartphone that helped the South Korean giant knock the iPhone off its top ranking for part of last year.

A growing perception that the company co-founded by Steve Jobs may be losing its competitive edge has weighed on its shares, which have lost more than a third of their value since hitting a high in September.

iPhone Could Go Way of BlackBerry?

In the latest criticism from Wall Street, Jefferies analyst Peter Misek on Tuesday compared Apple to Blackberry saying the iPhone is now on the defensive against Samsung's devices.

"Historically when handset makers fall out of favor (e.g., the Razr, Blackberry, HTC) they fall faster/further than expected," Misek said.

Now, IDC says Apple may begin losing some its lead on tablets as well, though it remains the top seller among manufacturers.

iPad shipments are expected to account for 46 percent of the tablet market in 2013, down from 51 percent last year, IDC said. Devices running Android are expected to grow their market share to 49 percent this year from 42 percent last year.

Google's Nexus 7 tablet and Amazon's Kindle, which uses its own customization of Android, made major inroads with consumers last year. In November, Apple launched its own foray into smaller-sized tablets with the iPad mini.

"One in every two tablets shipped this quarter was below 8 inches in screen size. And in terms of shipments, we expect smaller tablets to continue growing in 2013 and beyond," IDC said in a press release.

Apple Revs Growth Slows

Last month, Hewlett-Packard announced the launch of the Slate 7 tablet powered by Android, a centerpiece of that company's effort to expand from the shrinking personal market into mobile.

Apple is expected to grow its revenue by $26 billion in its fiscal year ending in September, just over half of the $48 billion increase in revenue it saw the year before, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

A group of suppliers that depend on Apple for more than half of their business saw its sales slump 31 percent in February compared to January, according to Topeka Capital Markets analyst Brian White, who does not identify the companies in the group.

Shares of Cirrus Logic, which gets three quarters of its revenue from selling audio chips to Apple, have fallen 23 percent this year, including a 2.89 percent drop on Tuesday.

Many component suppliers to Apple, like Qualcomm and Toshiba, also do significant business with Android device manufacturers.

"The open ecosystem at Android has allowed there to be more suppliers. As a chip guy, I always want to have as many irons in the fire as possible because the ride at the top tends to only last five years," said RBC analyst Doug Freedman.

Underscoring the increasing opportunity in mobile for Apple and its competitors, IDC also raised its 2013 tablet shipment forecast to 190.9 million units, up from its previous forecast of 172.4 million units.

In the smartphone market, which reached 545 million units shipped last year, Apple has already fallen behind Samsung.

Samsung is likely to sell 290 million smartphones this year, up 35 percent from 2012, according to Strategy Analytics. Apple's smartphone sales are projected to reach 180 million this year, up 33 percent.

IDC said tablets running Microsoft's Windows 8 platform would grow their market share from 1 percent last year to 7.4 percent in 2017.

Tablets running the Windows RT operating system, which is not compatible with older software that runs on Windows, will see their market share stay below 3 percent through 2017, IDC said.

"Consumers aren't buying Windows RT's value proposition, and long term we think Microsoft and its partners would be better served by focusing their attention on improving Windows 8," IDC said.

Monday, March 11, 2013

Port Of Miami Hotels - Think Before You Click The 'Like' Button On Facebook

Source - http://ibnlive.in.com/
By - Press Release

Port Of Miami Hotels
Clicking those friendly blue "like" buttons strewn across the Web may be doing more than marking you as a fan of Coca-Cola or Lady Gaga.

It could out you as gay. It might reveal how you vote. It might even suggest that you're an unmarried introvert with a high IQ and a weakness for nicotine.

That's the conclusion of a study published Monday in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Researchers reported analysing the likes of more than 58,000 American Facebook users to make guesses about their personalities and behaviour, and even whether they drank, smoked, or did drugs.

Cambridge University researcher David Stillwell, one of the study's authors, said the results may come as a surprise.

"Your likes may be saying more about you than you realise," he said.
Facebook launched its like button in 2009, and the small thumbs-up symbol has since become ubiquitous on the social network and common across the rest of the Web as well. Facebook said last year that roughly 2.7 billion new likes pour out onto the Internet every day - endorsing everything from pop stars to soda pop. That means an ever-expanding pool of data available to marketers, managers, and just about anyone else interested in users' inner lives, especially those who aren't careful about their privacy settings.

Stillwell and his colleagues scooped up a bucketful of that data in the way that many advertisers do - through apps. Millions of Facebook users have surveyed their own personal traits using applications including a program called myPersonality. Stillwell, as owner of the app, has received revenue from it, but declined to say how much.

His study zeroed in on the 58,466 US test takers who had also volunteered access to their likes.
When researchers crunched the "like" data and compared their results to answers given in the personality test, patterns emerged in nearly every direction. Since the study involved people who volunteered access to their data, it's unclear if the trends would apply to all Facebook users.

The study found that Facebook likes were linked to sexual orientation, gender, age, ethnicity, IQ, religion, politics and cigarette, drug, or alcohol use. The likes also mapped to relationship status, number of Facebook friends, as well as half a dozen different personality traits.

Some likes were more revealing than others. Researchers could correctly distinguish between users who identified themselves as black or white 95 percent of the time. That success rate dropped to a still impressive 88 percent when trying to guess whether a male user was homosexual, and to 85 percent when telling Democrats from Republicans. Identifying drug users was far trickier - researchers got that right only 65 per cent of the time, a result scientists generally describe as poor. Predicting whether a user was respectively a child of divorce was even dicier. With a 60 per cent success rate, researchers were doing just slightly better than random guesses.

The linkages ranged from the self-evident to the surreal. Men who liked TV song-and-dance sensation "Glee" were more likely to be gay. Men who liked professional wrestling were more likely to be straight. Drinking game aficionados were generally more outgoing than, say, fans of fantasy novelist Terry Pratchett. People who preferred pop diva Jennifer Lopez usually gathered more Facebook friends than those who favored the heavy metal sound of Iron Maiden.

Among the more poignant insights was the apparent preoccupation of children of divorce with relationship issues. For example, those who expressed support for statements such as "Never Apologize For What You Feel It's Like Saying Sorry For Being Real" or "I'm The Type Of Girl Who Can Be So Hurt But Still Look At You & Smile" were slightly more likely to have seen their parents split before their 21st birthday.

Some of the patterns were difficult to understand: The link between curly fries and high IQ scores was particularly baffling.

Jennifer Golbeck, a University of Maryland computer scientist who wasn't involved in the study but has done similar work, endorsed its methodology, calling it smart and straightforward and describing its results as "awesome."

But she warned of what the work showed about privacy on Facebook.
"You may not want people to know your sexual orientation or may not want people to know about your drug use," she said. "Even if you think you're keeping your information private, we can learn a lot about you."
Facebook said the study fell in line with years of research and was not particularly surprising.

"The prediction of personal attributes based on publicly accessible information, such as ZIP codes, choice of profession, or even preferred music, has been explored in the past," Facebook's Frederic Wolens said in a written statement.

Wolens said that Facebook users could change the privacy settings on their likes to put them beyond the reach of researchers, advertisers or nearly anyone else. But he declined to say how many users did so.

For the unknown number of users whose preferences are public, Stillwell had this advice: Look before you like.

The like button is "quite a seductive thing," he said. "It's all around the Web, it's all around Facebook. And it's so easy."

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Budget Miami Hotels - Public Transportation Hits 10.5B Rides In 2012

Source - http://www.usatoday.com/
By - Larry Copeland
Category - Budget Miami Hotels
Posted By - Inn and Suites In West Miami

Budget Miami Hotels
Ridership on buses, subways and other modes of public transportation in the USA rose 1.5% to 10.5 billion trips last year, the highest annual total since 2008, according to a new report.

Although Superstorm Sandy and its aftermath slowed ridership on some of the nation's largest transit systems, at least 16 systems reported record ridership numbers in 2012, says the American Public Transportation Association.

"When Sandy hit, and the snowstorm that followed it, an estimated 74 million (transit) trips were lost, and yet we still had the second-highest ridership since 1957," said APTA president and CEO Michael Melaniphy.

Melaniphy says the increase in transit ridership was driven, at least partly, by high gas prices, the volatility of those prices and the nation's changing demographics.

"In the last 18 months or so, we've seen prices be very volatile," he says. "When you think about the impact of that on your budget, when you can't count on your transportation costs being consistent day over day, week over week, that's really hard on the budget."

A 2012 report by the National Conference of State Legislatures said that "affordability likely plays a role" in the growth of transit, noting "estimates are that an individual can save more than $10,000 a year by riding public transit instead of driving."

That report also noted the growing popularity of public transportation, especially among Baby Boomers, empty-nesters and Millennials, who total about 150 million people.

"We expect we're going to continue to have good ridership," Melaniphy says. "More than 80% of transit systems have cut services, raised fares or considered it. Think about what ridership numbers would look like if they didn't have to cut back."

He says public transportation "is really part of the overall transportation system" that gives people choices for trips.

Melaniphy notes that in 2012, there were 62 local tax elections on transportation funding proposals that had at least a significant transit component; 49 of them passed.

"We're seeing record transit ridership on systems all over the country, in the Midwest, the East, the South, the North and the West," he says.

Among them:

In Michigan, the Ann Arbor Transportation Authority (TheRide) saw a 6.6% increase in ridership to a record 6.6 million trips in 2012, spokesman Don Kline says. "We have the transit-dependent riders, but we also have the choice riders," he says. "We really play into the national trends, with young people ditching their cars."

The 34-year-old system, which operates mainly in Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti, saw ridership numbers spike last year when gas prices hit $4 a gallon, Kline says.

In Washington state, ridership on Sound Transit soared 12% last year to just over 28 million — a record in the agency's 14-year history, spokesman Bruce Gray says.

"Ridership growth over the past several years has a lot to do with the recession trailing off, finally, and more people using our trains and buses to get to and from work," he says. "If you add more jobs and higher gas prices, that equals higher ridership on all of our services."

Friday, March 8, 2013

Family Hotels In Miami - Facebook Shows Off New Home Page Design, Including Bigger Pictures

Source - http://www.nytimes.com/
By - SOMINI SENGUPTA
Category - Family Hotels In Miami
Posted By - Inn and Suites In West Miami
Family Hotels In Miami
Hoping to tame the blizzard of information that has turned off many users and discouraged some advertisers, Facebook on Thursday unveiled a major makeover of the home page that greets users when they log into the site. 

 The new design of the Facebook News Feed presents bigger photos and links, including for advertisements, and lets users see specialized streams focused on topics like music and posts by close friends.

The changes are designed to address the company’s two most vital challenges: how to hold on to users at a time of competing, specialized social networks and how to draw more advertising dollars to please Wall Street.

Mark Zuckerberg, the company’s co-founder and chief executive, said at a news conference that he wanted Facebook to be “the best personalized newspaper in the world.” And like a newspaper editor, he wants the “front page” of Facebook to be more engaging — in particular on the smaller screens of mobile devices.

The topic-specific News Feeds could well persuade users to spend more time scrolling through various streams of content. And the redesign will offer bigger real estate for advertisers, including more opportunities for brands to feature bigger pictures, which marketers say are more persuasive than words.

Facebook’s proprietary algorithms, which try to guess what every user will want to see, will continue to filter the items that show up on each person’s main News Feed. And users will be able to drill down into specific topics they are interested in, akin to the sections of a newspaper.

For instance, they can switch over to specialized feeds that are focused on just the music they are interested in, or they can scroll through a feed that consists of posts from the pages of products and people they follow — a bit like Twitter. If they want to see everything that their friends have posted, they can choose to do that, too; those posts will rush down in chronological order, without any filtering by Facebook’s robots.

Facebook introduced the new design to some users of the Web version of its service on Thursday, and will extend it to all Web users and to mobile apps in coming weeks.

It’s unclear how users will react to the changes; in the past, major design changes have often been greeted by complaints, at least initially.

Investors seemed to welcome the new look. Shares of Facebook rose 4.1 percent on Tuesday, to $28.58. But the company’s stock price remains substantially lower than its $38 initial public offering price last May.

Facebook is clearly hoping the new format will encourage users to stay longer on the site. At the news conference to announce the changes, officials offered examples of content they hoped would be compelling: photos of a cousin’s babies on one area of the page, Justin Timberlake concert news on another, a list of stories your friends liked on National Public Radio on still another.

“The best personalized newspaper should have a broad diversity of content,” Mr. Zuckerberg said. “The most important stuff is going to be on the front page,” he went on. “Then people have a chance to dig in.”

The announcement met with swift praise from the advertising industry. In addition to bigger ad formats, the redesign’s specialized content streams could keep users glued to the site longer, marketers said.

“This will result in more time spent over all on the Facebook News Feed — and of course, increase engagement with content and ads,” said Hussein Fazal, chief executive of AdParlor, which buys advertisements on Facebook on behalf of several brands.

Facebook executives suggested that there would be no immediate changes to the number of advertisements that appear on the News Feed.

Julie Zhou, the company’s design chief, said only that ads would be more visual. “Everything across the board is going to get this richer, more immersive design,” Ms. Zhou said.

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Hotel Near Miami Beach - UK To Give Afghanistan £10m To Fund Mining Programme

Source - http://www.bbc.co.uk/
By - Press Release
Category - Hotel Near Miami Beach
Posted By - Inn and Suites In West Miami

Hotel Near Miami Beach
Estimates of what lies underground in Afghanistan range from $1-3tn worth of gold, gems, iron ore, and oil and gas. 

David Cameron announced the three-year funding to support the Afghan Ministry of Mines at an event at Downing Street.

There have been claims that the award of mining contracts after the fall of the Taliban was affected by corruption. 

The award of a 30-year contract to a Chinese consortium to exploit the Aynak copper mine in Logar province came under particular criticism. 

Details of the 2007 deal with China Metallurgical Group Corporation have still not been made public, fuelling rumours of bribery and kick-backs.

The World Bank has appealed for future Afghan mining concessions to be better regulated and more transparent, and Britain's new support is aimed at improving that process. 

Prosperity and growth
The announcement came as Mr Cameron hosted dozens of UK investors and mining contractors at Downing Street.

He said the UK had already played "a huge and honourable role" in stabilising Afghanistan, but that the country needed "prosperity, growth, jobs, investment and wealth".

British mining companies welcomed the announcement.
BBC international development correspondent David Loyn said the companies have called for a level playing field to compete. Improving Afghan technical competence, and ensuring a transparent process, should help to secure that. 

But he said the huge investment already made by companies from China and India reduces the opportunity for others. 

Sadat Naderi, a prominent Kabul businessman, who has links with the British company Afghan Gold and Minerals, said that it is not too late. He admitted that there had previously been corruption, but there was a desire in Afghanistan to make the country secure for foreign investment. 

The Afghan Minister of Mines, Wahidullah Shahrani, who has been in his post for three years, has criticised the way things were done in the past. 

He welcomed the new support, saying what Afghanistan needed was "sustainable development for its people in the long term."

Our correspondent said that if security improved, there will be a new rush to exploit Afghan mining opportunities. 

He said Afghanistan would not want to repeat the experience of many other post-conflict countries, particularly in Africa, where large resources proved to be a curse.

Monday, March 4, 2013

Attractions In West Miami - 'Uncool' Facebook Losing Its 'Teen Appeal'

Source - http://zeenews.india.com/
By - Press Release
Category - Attractions In West Miami
Posted By - Inn and Suites In West Miami

Attractions In West Miami
Washington: Facebook is losing its 'younger users' to other products and services because the social networking giant is no more 'cool'. 

For Facebook teens are often an accurate barometer for what's cool and what's next, and recent rumblings seem to indicate teens are moving on. 

According to the Verge, teens have turned to sites like Tumblr and apps like Snapchat and Instagram to communicate. 

Some data suggests that Tumblr may have already eclipsed Facebook as the most popular social network among 13-25 year-olds. 

The report pointed out that at eralier it was cool to expose details about yourself, like what movies you like, what you're doing right now, and who you're in a relationship with. 

But now, at some point, adding these details, like hundreds of photos from a recent vacation and status updates about your new job amounted to bragging . 

What was once cool was now uncool, the report said. 

Maybe the burden of constantly constructing immaculate digital profiles of ourselves is tiring, it added. 

According to the report, the day of the overshare may have passed, and bragging online isn't as fun as it used to be.