Sunday, May 6, 2012

How Small Businesses Should Be Using Direct Mail Marketing ...

?

By Johann Williamson

Direct mail marketing is still a very powerful engine of small business growth. Even the rise of the internet has not displaced it, a fact which may be surprising to many, as it has been predicted time and again that the various electronic media would supplant traditional forms of communication, most particularly print.

The only place where this has proven to be true is in the music industry, where digital downloads have taken the place of older media. But of course music is exceptional, because it is an end in itself. Nobody is going to download hundreds of ads and listen to them or watch them for enjoyment.

And this brings us to a fact of life which all marketers, particularly in the broadcast media, must understand and accept: people avoid ads and marketing messages whenever they can, and they must be tempted in some manner in order to get them to pay attention.

Getting people to pay attention to broadcast or print media ads is several orders of magnitude more difficult than getting them to listen to music they enjoy. This is because obstacles have to be overcome. Some ways that these obstacles are overcome are

by placing the ads in the middle of shows or sporting events which people want to watch, or

in newspapers or magazines they like to read, or

by making the ads entertaining in and of themselves.

In other words, using entertainment to sell products through advertising is like the song, ?A spoonful of sugar makes the medicine go down.?

And so why use direct mail? Direct mail is very different from broadcast media.

Here are some ways to look at the difference:

Whereas broadcast media hopes to draw people in by the use of entertainment, direct mail goes after the people who are believed to be good potential customers.

Broadcast media constantly strives to find new ways to entertain.
Direct mail constantly strives to identify real customers.

Broadcast media strives to be as broad in its message as possible.
Direct mail campaigns try to be as targeted as possible.

Broadcast media is, in a sense, blind. It throws out its message and hopes that someone will be moved to act. Direct mail campaigns try to be as clear-eyed as possible.

Broadcast media ads cost the same amount of money whether one thousand people see the ad or one hundred thousand people see it. With direct mail, each person you mail to costs you a set amount of money.

Direct mail has sharp vision: it uses such tools as analysis of customer buying habits in order to narrow down its focus to the best possible customers and to speak directly to them. Broadcast media targets everybody the same way and hopes for the best.

And so when you think in terms of direct mail, you have to take a different approach than the broadcast advertisers do. Obviously you have to have printed marketing materials which are well-designed and they can be enjoyable to read. However, the focus of a direct mail campaign needs always to be figuring out who your real customers are. If you are willing and able to do the homework, direct mail marketing can be the most cost-effective form of advertising there is.

The author, who is associated with Conquest Graphics, is a nationally recognized expert on all aspects of printing, print marketing, the internet and social media. Contact Conquest today for a discussion about how a direct mail campaign can help you grow your business.

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Watch These Real-Time Skaters Ride a Time-Lapse World [Video]

It's an amazing effect. Filmmaker Russell Houghten combines stop-motion and real-time video in Open Horizons, and not just in alternating sequences. He actually mashes them into the same scene, the same shot, at the same time. I have no idea how he did it but I want to see more. [F-Stoppers via PetaPixel] More »


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Soccer player defects from Cuba, requests asylum in US

Soccer player defects: A Cuban national soccer player disappeared while his team was playing in an Olympic soccer tournament in Tennessee.

Yosmel De Armas is a Cuban soccer player who has defected in order to seek asylum in the United States. While in Nashville, Tennessee last month for an Olympic qualifying soccer tournament, the Cuban midfielder was absent from his national team's final game against Canada, although he played on Saturday?s 4-0 loss to El Salvador.?

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When asked why the player skipped the game, the Cuban national coach said De Armas was sick and remained at the team's hotel. However, when the team left Nashville, the promising soccer player did not accompany his teammates on their return trip to the island nation.

Although US officials refused to comment about the player?s whereabouts, it was reported that De Armas was last seen in Miami.?

"We're preparing an asylum application to file with the Department of Homeland Security," attorney Alex Solomiany said, according to Reuters.?

The Miami-based lawyer, who?described his client as "nervous," said De Armas is "alone here"?and that he was on his way to Miami at the time of the game, contrary to the coach's allegations.

A rising number of Cuban athlete defections are explained by several factors: the continuous financial hardship the populace faces in Cuba, the plethora of defection precedents that make the process look easy, and the luring prospects of a better life, all coalesce to urge young athletes to follow this path.?

"This is another case of a Cuban sportsman trying to get a decent life, to try to take control of his own career," Omar Lopez told Reuters.? Lopez is general director of the Cuban American National Foundation, a Miami-based organization of Cuban exiles who seek political change on the island.

Four years ago, seven members of the Cuban under-23 national soccer team also sought political asylum after competing against its US counterpart in Tampa, Florida.?

"Of course, my heart will be in Cuba with my family, but I want to have the freedom to better my life, to play professional soccer, to be the best I can be, and for that we had to make this sacrifice," Yenier Bermudez told the Miami Herald, according to ESPN.

Since the 2002 CONCACAF (Confederation of North, Central America, and Caribbean Association Football) tournament in Los Angeles, a total of 15 Cuban soccer players abandoned their teams and requested political asylum in the United States.

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Friday, May 4, 2012

Don't believe the headlines. Wind farms do not cause 'global' warming.

A recent study published in Nature Climate Change suggests that large wind farms could be pulling down hot air at night, raising the average temperature of the local region. The results of the study, however, have been widely misconstrued in the news media.?

All energy technologies have nuances and drawbacks. New research published in Nature Climate Change found that wind farms are no exception.

Skip to next paragraph

Specifically, the study found that large tracts of wind turbines in remote areas of Texas appear to be increasing local surface temperatures. The results of this study have been misconstrued by certain media outlets as ironic evidence that a supposedly "green" technology is contributing to global warming, despite the lack of any supporting evidence.

Here are the facts: The team of researchers, led by SUNY Albany environmental scientist Liming Zhou, analyzed surface temperature data of Texan wind farms ? the data courtesy of NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites. Zhou and his colleagues found that the immediate surroundings of the wind farms rose an average of 0.72 degrees Celsius between 2003 and 2011. The effect was most prominent at night. Some of the team has speculated that this localized warming trend could be an effect of the turbines pulling down warm air from higher altitudes at night, when the air above the land would otherwise be cooler.

In a recent University at Albany press release, Zhou warned that "the estimated warming trends only apply to the study region and to the study period, and thus should not be interpolated linearly into other regions (e.g., globally) or over longer periods (e.g., for another 20 years)," he said. "For a given wind farm, once there are no new wind turbines added, the warming effect may reach a stable level."

Yet exaggerated interpolation seems to be stock-in-trade for many of the media outlets covering this story. Take, for example, FOX News' headline: Wind farms are warming the Earth, or that of Forbes: Wind Farms Cause Global Warming! or that of the Inquistr's: Wind Farms May Contribute to Global Warming, or that of Newser: Latest Global Warming Culprit: Wind Farms.?It should be noted that nearly all of these stories contradict their own headlines by?explaining?that the observed effect was local.

This new study doesn't necessarily illustrate a causal link between wind turbines and localized warming, let alone temperature change on a global scale. The authors of the Nature paper were the first to admit that further science is needed to determine that exact nature of this link.

If it were true that the spinning blades of wind turbines increased the overall temperature of the planet, as opposed to simply redistributing thermal energy,?we would have to rewrite some basic laws of physics, particularly the?2nd law of thermodynamics.?This is an important distinction from the burning of fossil fuels, which produces gas that increases how much of the sun's energy the Earth retains. In this respect, this process contributes to a globally warming climate because the source of energy (the sun) is apart from the system that is warmed (the Earth.)

Rather than inform the public's perception on climate change, exaggerated coverage of this study has merely justified the common distrust scientists have for journalists.

The reality is that any alternative energy source is going to present problems. Over the past two years, there has been scientific investigation of whether wind turbines can affect the health of proximal residents, though the legitimacy of "Wind Turbine Syndrome", as it was called, was widely questioned. Natural gas has its problems with fracking, nuclear energy with radiation, and even solar cells with electronic waste. This recent study was merely exploring a similar issue in wind energy, but only so that we might effectively deal with it.

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iControlPad Bluetooth Gaming Controller for Smartphones and Tablets

Gaming on smartphones and tablets is increasingly popular, but the proliferation of stick-on joysticks would indicate that people miss the tactile feed back of a physical controller.? The iControlPad goes beyond a simple stick-on joystick and adds a full controller to your smartphone.? The controller has “dual analogue nubs, digital D-Pad, 6 face buttons and [...]

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Cameron Diaz Cried After Getting Her Hair Cut Short

Cameron Diaz surprised fans when she stepped out with her super-short bob hairstyle last December, but the truth is that she was just as shocked as everyone else by the new 'do.

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Strassel: The 'Crucify Them' Presidency (WSJ)

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Khloe Kardashian & Lamar Odom Headed for the Olympics?

Khloe Kardashian and Lamar Odom have just left Dallas, but they may soon be packing their bags for a new destination: the 2012 Summer Olympics in London. Khloe, 27, tells People that her NBA hubby is vying for a spot on the U.S. Olympic basketball team.

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Thursday, May 3, 2012

Alas, an iPad Speaker Dock That Isn't Totally Awkward-Looking [Daily Desired]

The iPad's built-in speakers aren't exactly mindblowing, so if you find yourself using it mostly as a stand-in for your TV, Beoplay's new A3 dock is a gorgeous solution to its sound woes—even if it costs more than the tablet itself. More »


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Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Koss Striva Wireless Earphones

From Koss, the Striva?offers an ultra compact WiFi earpiece solution. Using WiFi (not Bluetooth), the earpieces can be used to stream internet radio stations directly to the headphones, using the Content Access Point (CAP) stream from you smartphone, tablet or MP3 player.? Or you can use them as standard headphones by plugging them into any [...]

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'Star Trek' Quiz Stumps Benedict Cumberbatch ... Maybe

Is the 'Star Trek 2' villain messing with us? Cumberbatch plays dumb when asked some pretty simple 'Trek' trivia.
By Kara Warner, with reporting by Josh Horowitz


Benedict Cumberbatch

Of all the plot points to ponder about the upcoming "Star Trek" sequel, the element on many people's minds pertains to new addition Benedict Cumberbatch and which villain he's playing.

That subject is a closely guarded secret, of course, so in an effort to approach the "Trek 2" topic with the busy and talented British actor when he stopped by our MTV Newsroom recently, we gave him a little "Star Trek" quiz to see how much insider info he's picked up during shooting so far. As it turns out, he's got some homework to do — that, or he's really good at messing with us.

In all honesty, our "Trek" questions were not too difficult. For example, when we asked if he knew what a Klingon was, Cumberbatch claimed he did not. "What do they look like?" he asked, seeming genuinely interested to hear the answer.

When we showed him the famous split-fingered Vulcan salute made famous by Spock, he offered a creative interpretation of what the salute actually means. "Uh, I've sprained my fingers and both of them have splints," he said. "Or they're webbed and I don't want you to see it," which he followed by quoting "Mork & Mindy," the popular '80s sitcom that made a star of Robin Williams. "Nanu, nanu," he said with a grin.

"You're in the 'Mork & Mindy' movie?" we asked. "Congratulations!"

"Yeah. I'm playing Mork and Mindy," Cumberbatch joked.

Unsurprisingly, he also claimed to not know anything about the SS Botany Bay, which was the famous Trek villain Khan's ship. The cagey actor explained that he prefers to approach all his roles with as little insider information as possible.

"I think it's best to, like a lot of acting you do, you have to start from a knowledge base of zero in order to have every experience that you're portraying again and again and again feel like fresh," he said. "So I purposefully made no attempt to learn anything about anything."

Somehow we think the charming, clever man was having a bit of fun with us and is just trying to hide his inner "Trek" nerd for a while longer. He has told us previously that he's had a great time on set thus far.

"It's a real privilege to be on that set. There's a patter and a kind of knowledge of who they're playing and the other main characters, which I'm learning a lot from. It's just good fun. It's great to work with Chris [Pine]. He's very professional. So is Zach [Quinto], who I've been working a lot with; I adore him, he's a brilliant, brilliant guy.

Check out everything we've got on "Star Trek 2."

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.

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96% The Kid with a Bike

Cyril: Dad! I'm here.Given that the month of March was packed with an unusual amount of high budget, blockbuster films, I figured I would balance things out with a couple of independent/arthouse features as well. One of these was The Kid with a Bike, a Belgian film from the Dardenne brothers (Jean-Pierre and Luc). This film follows a young boy dealing with being abandoned by his father and attempting to forge new relationships with other potential role models and caretakers. The film is very naturalistic, a key type of style when it comes to the Dardenne's work, as it plays out as more character-driven, as opposed to story-driven and plays around a lot with ambiguity, despite straddling a somewhat familiar path. With that in mind, the film is very good, well-acted, and filled with moments that evoke emotion as well as thoughts based around developing more of an understanding for one's self, rather than letting the film tell you what to think.read the whole review at thecodeiszeek.com

April 2, 2012

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Remembering the workers: Workers' Memorial Day, 2012 | My legal ...

With Workers? Memorial Day in mind, partner Marcus Weatherby ? in?a considered piece for Employment Law magazine?- looks critically at the Government?s current misguided attack on ?excessive health and safety provision?.

?Help, master, help! Here?s a fish hangs in the net,?like a poor man?s right in the law.??(Pericles, 2.1.153), Fisherman

In Shakespeare?s time the working man was unlikely to ever have access to the machinery of the law, however wronged he might have been. All of us like to think that those days have gone, and that one of the basic pillars of our legal system is that the law is accessible to all, not just those who have the right connections or can afford it.

Workers? Memorial Day on 28th April was an opportunity to highlight the preventable nature of most workplace accidents and ill health, and to promote safety campaigns and union organisation in the fight for improvements in workplace safety. Workers? Memorial Day was started by the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) in 1984, but has become accepted as the focal point for remembrance on the calendar internationally. To mark it in the UK, a series of demonstrations were held throughout the country.

A total of 171 people were killed at work in Great Britain last year, compared to 147 deaths during 2009/10. More than 24,700 workers also suffered a major injury. In the year 2010/2011, statistics from HSE show around 26.4 million working days were lost in total ? 22.1 million due to work-related illness and 4.4 million due to workplace injuries. (http://www.hse.gov.uk/statistics/dayslost.htm.)

This year?s memorial day came at a time of great change. The coalition government is changing the legislative framework protecting workers. The funding and working practices of the watchdog of health and safety. The way that workplace injuries are reported. And even the system of compensation that injured workers use to enforce their rights against negligent employers .

The Government believes that there is an excessive health and safety culture in the UK, which is an albatross around the neck of British businesses, and which strangles profit and innovation.

To investigate this, the Government commissioned a specialist in risk management ? a Professor Lofstedt ? to report on putting ?the common sense back into health and safety?. His conclusions largely supported the status quo, his general observation on health and safety being that ?the problem lies less with the regulations themselves, and more with the way they are interpreted and applied.?

Since preparing the report, Professor Lofstedt has expressed concern about the extent to which his report is being ?misused? for political purposes. He has emphasised that it did not call for significant changes to regulatory policy, or recognise the ?compensation culture? that government ministers regularly condemn.

Notwithstanding this, the report has been used as an endorsement of the government programme of reforms aimed at ?reclaiming the reputation of health and safety.?

The Government proposes the abolition of large numbers of health and safety regulations. Its intention is that health and safety regulations will be reduced by a third ? rising to over a half ? over the next three years. The current consultation on this reduction ends on the 4/7/2012.

The watchdog of health and safety, the HSE, has also been ?restructured?. The HSE is facing reductions in its government funding by 35% for the period to 2015. Since 2012 the HSE now runs a telephone service for reporting fatal and major injuries only ? with all other reports having to be done online. Which, as many of those workers affected by accidents were making reports in writing or by phone, will mean fewer accident reports are made. Inspections are to be focused on those industries deemed to be ?key major hazard industries? aimed at reducing the number of proactive inspections by 11,000 a year.

Changes to the Reporting of Injuries, Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations (RIDDOR), brought on 6 April 2012, mean that the over-three-day injury reporting requirement has changed. The trigger point has increased from over three days? to over seven days? incapacitation (not counting the day on which the accident happened). We should therefore expect a reduction in the number of accidents reported. The HSE estimates there will, as a result, be 30,000 fewer reports a year.

At such a time it is relevant to ask:

1.)? Does current legislation safeguard people at work ?

Yes. The EU statistical authority, Eurostat, reveals that the fatal injury rate for Great Britain is consistently one of the lowest in Europe, and has been the lowest amongst the five largest EU countries for a six-year period.

The Lofstedt report itself states that health and safety regulations are broadly accepted to have been an important contributory factor in safer workplaces with the evidence showing that legislation is the primary driver for organisations to initiate changes to improve management of health and safety.

2.)? Is it too expensive ?

Unsurprisingly, it seems that it is accidents and ill health that cost businesses, and not a preoccupation with health and safety. The Institution of Occupational Safety and Health says work-related accidents and ill health cost businesses nearly ?8 billion a year, with absenteeism, low productivity and legal bills among the ?financial hits?.

There is no objective evidence of the financial effect of red tape, although there are estimates. The British Chamber of Commerce argues that the current raft of health and safety regulations ?distracts businesses from driving economic growth and creating employment.? However, the idea that business battles against a tide of risk assessment forms every year is not one that the evidence seems to support. The vast majority of employers are more than capable of following the easy-to-understand advice available from the Health and Safety Executive on how to do them. Over time, the assessments have become well established and familiar. It is worth looking at what the HSE states employers are broadly required to do [see HSE ?5 steps to risk assessment 6/11?]:

  • Ascertain the dangers.
  • Determine who can be harmed at work and how this would happen.
  • Evaluate what can be done to counter it.
  • Record the precautions as part of the policy and implement.
  • Carry out a review.

Onerous?

3.)? If safeguards go wrong, how will the state support them?

Currently, where people have a serious accident at work, there is at least a safety net provided by the welfare benefits system to soften the impact of the financial changes caused. However, major changes to welfare entitlement in the now-approved Welfare Reform Act will affect the benefit entitlement of workers should injury prevent them from continuing in employment. People who have to take prolonged time off work will be negatively affected by the plans to replace Disability Living Allowance with Personal Independence Payment. By changes to Employment and Support Allowance. And will get less help from the Universal Credit during the first six months of their illness than they would get at present.

4.)? If employers break the law and workers are injured can they seek redress and how?

Currently there is a system of compensation which is based on the principle that the unsuccessful party will be ordered to pay the costs of the successful party. If a claim is proven, the wrong-doer pays the legal costs of their negligence. If it is not, then the claimant pays the employer?s costs of defending the claim. In other words, only if a worker was injured because of the negligence of their employer does the employer have to pay the legal costs and compensation of a civil action.

Within the current system, protection is in place for employers to prevent any excessive costs of litigation. Employers can, for example, prevent escalating costs by making a reasonable offer to the injured party. And, at the end of a case, can get the costs assessed by a judge, who will not allow the claimant to recover costs which have been unreasonably incurred, or are unreasonable in amount.

However under the LASPO bill changing this (now awaiting royal assent) the Government has undermined this principle by shifting the balance of legal payments on to claimants. So that they will have to surrender up to 25 per cent of their damages to cover costs, even when their former employer is found liable for their injury.

Worryingly for employers, under the bill there will seemingly be no way of recovering their costs of defending even the unsuccessful cases, unless they can show the claimant is either fraudulent or a millionaire. In which case there will be little to discourage litigants in person from ?chancing their arm? with a claim.

5.) If employers routinely break the law is there any censure or penalty?

With the cuts being made to the HSE, pro-active assessments of workplaces is going to be less likely. So bad employers will seemingly have less to fear from criminal prosecutions. The reduction in the number of accidents reported will no doubt suggest that an improvement in health and safety has occurred. The reality will be that health and safety will have been relegated below profit.

Government approval of the idea that that health and safety assessment has been getting in the way of business is the wrong message to be sending out a time when businesses are cutting back to deal with the financial effects of the recession. A recent survey of 600 heath and safety professionals found that the economic climate has already taken its toll on the safety sector. With 41% seeing their budget cut this year, and nearly half (45%) claiming that their company ?did not see health and safety as business critical? during a recession.

The fact is that if health and safety for employees suffers, then so too do the profits of healthy businesses. Health and safety is neglected at the peril of all.

There are two million people in the UK who have an illness or injury caused by their work ? the vast majority of which could have been prevented had their employer had taken the correct safety precautions. Never before has the slogan for Workers Memorial Day ?Remember the dead ? fight for the living? been more appropriate.

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Make an impact with Masonic tattoos

There are many ideas for Masonic tattoos whether you are a member of the Freemasons and wish your tattoo to represent this is simply because you are fascinated by the imagery from some of these beautiful symbols. If you come under the latter category, one of the most outstanding symbols which also makes a huge impact as a body art design is the ?unfinished pyramid? topped by the ?all seeing eye? design. This can be found in the Great Seal of the United States as seen on the reverse of the dollar bill and is widely regarded as a Masonic symbol but unfortunately this is in fact a myth! However it does make a very impressive tattoo and its symbolism is very much open to individual interpretation.

30 April 2012 | Media Arts Entertainment

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Tuesday, May 1, 2012

BumpWatch: Melissa Joan Hart?s Birthday Brunch Belly

"Some of my girlfriends took me out for a little birthday brunch," the Melissa & Joey star, 36, Tweeted Monday, sharing a photo of herself wearing a tiara and showing off her baby belly.

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Around the Web?

Get your Monday started with a read of our afternoon links: New study shows pacifiers may encourage breast-feeding ? Today Moms A toddler’s behavior can provide clues about addictive behavior in adulthood ? TIME ESSAY: Why I don’t brag about my kids ? HuffPost Parents How to do Pilates while pregnant ? Just the Facts, [...]

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Lil Boosie Murder Trial: Jury Selection Begins

Rapper is accused of first-degree murder in a 2009 shooting.
By Rob Markman


Lil Boosie
Photo: MTV2

Seven hundred potential jurors have been summoned to a Baton Rouge, Louisiana, court and 12 will be selected to decide the fate of underground rap star Lil Boosie.

The jury selection for Boosie's murder trial began Monday (April 30), and rather than the normal 500 Baton Rouge residents who are summoned for jury duty each week, an extra 200 have been called for the high-profile case, WAFB News is reporting.

Boosie (real name: Torrence Hatch) is facing a first-degree murder charge for the 2009 shooting of Terry Boyd. Prosecutors are alleging that the rapper ordered the hit on Boyd from behind bars, but through it all, Boosie has maintained his innocence and pleaded not guilty to all charges in June 2010.

At the urging of the prosecution, the judge is allowing the MC's lyrics to be brought up in trial claiming that specific words in his songs equal intent. The defense attorneys are, of course, refuting such claims.

Though it has been widely reported, the death penalty is not on the table if the rapper is found guilty, according to WAFB.

The murder trial is just another bullet point in the rapper's list of legal troubles. In November 2011, Boosie Bad Azz pleaded guilty to three counts of conspiring to smuggle drugs into Louisiana's Dixon Correctional Center and Angola State Penitentiary and was sentenced to eight years behind bars.

During an interview from behind bars in May 2011, the Trill Entertainment rapper told XXL magazine he was being unfairly targeted by the justice system. "[I'm here] 'cause of the songs I made, before I was indicted, about the police in Baton Rouge and what's going on here," he said. "There's a lot with our record label that the system don't like. ... They took my hard drive out of my house after I got arrested. I have albums for days in there. They still haven't returned it. They've had it for damn near a year now. I need that music."

Lil Boosie first rose to prominence with his 2006 debut album Bad Azz and scored his biggest hit in 2008 when he was featured on Lil Webbie's 2008 #1 Billboard rap single "Independent."

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Monday, April 30, 2012

Triggertrap: nine ways to activate your DSLR with an iOS device, choose one

triggertrap-remote-activated-dslr-iOS-app

When we first heard about the Kickstarter-funded Triggertrap, it was a nice but nichey lab instrument of a device that could fire your DSLR with diverse stimuli, like lights or ringing phones. It wasn't the first photo-tripping idea we'd seen, but at least it could be had for a fair sum ($75.00) and be used out of the box. But now, by connecting that tech to an app and charging $19.98 for both the software and hardware, Triggertrap might open up remote snapping to a lot more folks.

Running off any iPhone, iPad or iPod using iOS 5, the app uses a dongle which can be connected by cable or infrared to most DSLRs or advanced compacts. From there, you'll be able to use all of your iDevice's sensors as triggers, from motion through to facial recognition and even GPS. The app doesn't just fire the shutter, either -- it also gives you control over the focus and flash. And if you don't have a separate camera, the iPhone's built-in cam can be used instead -- which would save you from buying the $9.99 dongle, if you have the necessary accoutrements. So if you've been wondering how to get those hard-to-shoot images, or have more nefarious ideas, check the videos after the break.

Continue reading Triggertrap: nine ways to activate your DSLR with an iOS device, choose one

Triggertrap: nine ways to activate your DSLR with an iOS device, choose one originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 30 Apr 2012 13:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Video: Kim Il-Sung's 100th bday (Americablog)

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Sunday, April 29, 2012

Is this RIM's BlackBerry 10 development device?

Image

You know the drill -- grab yourself a spoonful of Morton's and get ready for another supposed leak of a gadget. This time around, you're looking at what's claimed as being one of Research In Motion's BlackBerry 10 "Development Alpha" devices that'll be handed out during next week's BlackBerry Jam -- just like the company promised a month ago. Images of the device first surfaced over at CrackBerry's forums and, as the site points out, the touchscreen candy bar seems to share its design DNA with the PlayBook. Keeping in mind that it's likely to remain a testing device for devs, don't bank on it ever hitting store shelves. That said, we're now curious how pivotal a role RIM's famous tactile keyboards will play on its next-generation phones -- if any. Head over to the source links below if you'd like to catch more photos from Mr. Blurrycam and extra information in the meantime.

Is this RIM's BlackBerry 10 development device? originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 28 Apr 2012 21:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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How to Pretend to Be Someone's Friend on Facebook [User Manual]

Most of the people you're friends with on Facebook aren't your friends—you know that. But decorum forces you to keep them in your virtual stable! Here's how to block them out of your life in a socially healthy way they'll never even know about. More »


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