Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Samsung\'s Biggest Phone, or Smallest Tablet

If you are the kind of person who likes to pore over a good owner's manual (or in this case, owner's Web page) you will love the Samsung Galaxy Note II.

The basic operation of the phone is as easy to grasp as with any Android phone, but the Note II is so loaded with trick features that you'll be using only a fraction of what it can do unless you spend a goodly amount of time reading how to operate it.

First, the basics. The most obvious feature of the Note II is its size. At nearly 6 inches by 3 inches by 1 ⁄ 3 inch, it is larger than the common phone, and smaller than a minitablet. Call it a tablette.

Thanks to the sizable Amoled screen, video looks particularly good, and even people not used to typing on a glass keyboard will quickly get the hang of it.

The processor is a 1.6-gigahertz quad core, whose ample processing power helps keep those big-screen videos smooth. It comes with two gigabytes of internal memory and can take an additional 64-gi gabyte MicroSD card.

The phone runs on Android's 4.1 Jelly Bean operating system, which of course means it syncs nicely with Google's suite of products, like contacts, Gmail, Google's maps and the like.

One thing that sets the phone apart is its stylus. It's not just a pointer; it has a button that allows you to do graphic editing as you would with a Wacom pen and tablet. Of course it also lets you write notes by hand, make illustrations and annotate PowerPoint documents.

It has both NFC and Wi-Fi direct, which means files can be shared with nearby phones, and purchases may be made from the phone at some special cash registers.

That just scratches the surface. The feature list is deep, but it comes with a steep learning curve. The phone can be set so that tapping it or holding it a certain way activates a command; there is a setting for one-handed operation; and customized vibrations can be created to let you know who is calling even when the ringer i s shut off.

To learn all of the tricks, prepare to cozy up with the Note II microsite; a printed user guide would be the size of an encyclopedia. Your contract will probably run out before you learn to use all of the features.

The Note II is $300 from AT&T, Verizon or Sprint and $370 from T-Mobile, with a two-year contract.



Tip of the Week: Sunrise, Sunset - at a Glance

As the year winds down, sunset arrives earlier in the day. If you want to see just when darkness will fall next, just type the word “sunset” and your current ZIP code into the search box on the Google or Yahoo home page and hit the Enter key to see the time of the next sunset displayed at the top of the results page. Typing “sunrise” brings up the time of the next day's first light. If your browser is set to use your computer or mobile device's location data, you do not even need to include your ZIP code in the search box because the search engine already knows where you are.

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Top U.S. General Is Ensnared in Petraeus Inquiry

The New York Times's Eric Schmitt and Elisabeth Bumiller reported on the widening Petraeus scandal that threatens to tarnish the reputation of Gen. John R. Allen, the top American commander in Afghanistan. The general is under investigation for what the Pentagon called “inappropriate communication” with Jill Kelley, the woman who was seen by Paula Broadwell, Mr. Petraeus's lover, as a rival for his attentions and whose complaint to the F.B.I. set off the inquiry.

“Associates of General Allen said Tuesday that the e-mails were innocuous. Some of them used terms of endearment, but not in a flirtatious way,” they wrote.

A senior Defense Department official told Ms. Bumiller that General Allen had denied having an extramarital affair with Ms. Kelley, and Jay Carney, the White House spokesman, said in a news conference on Tuesday that President Obama still “ha s faith” in the general.

At the request of Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta, General Allen's nomination to be the supreme allied commander in Europe has been delayed until the outcome of the investigation.

The New York Times's Scott Shane wrote about the “hazards of the Web as record-keeper.”

“The events of the last few days have shown how law enforcement investigators who plunge into the private territories of cyberspace looking for one thing can find something else altogether, with astonishingly destructive results,” Mr. Shane wrote.



Possible Score for Syrian Rebels: Pictures Show Advanced Missile Systems

Rebels opposed to President Bashar al-Assad who have lamented for much of this year the difficulties of fighting the Syrian Air Force have displayed two new weapons that could alter their antiaircraft campaign. In photographs recently posted online, two fighters were shown holding modern variants of heat-seeking, shoulder-fired antiaircraft missiles.

The Brown Moses blog, which has been carefully following videos that have circulated from the Syrian conflict, put up a post a short while ago detailing what the blogger, Eliot Higgins, described initially as SA-14 and SA-24 antiaircraft missiles.

Matt Schroeder, an analyst following missile proliferation at the Federation of American Scientists, was almost certain that the SA-24 description was correct, but he questioned the first call, saying that the system identified as an SA-14 actually appears to be an SA-16. (Mr. Higgins has since updated his post to label the first missile as an SA-16.) The importance of th ese finds is the same either way, because rebel acquisition of any such new-generation missile, be they SA-14s, SA-16s, SA-18s or SA-24s, would be a significant upgrade. Previously, rebels have been seen only with SA-7s, an earlier, much less capable variant in the former Soviet Union's suite of portable heat-seekers.

It has long been known that the Syrian military possessed more than SA-7s, and proliferation experts and security analysts have worried over the potential risks to commercial aviation if these missiles slipped from state hands. So this development, the apparent capture of complete SA-16 and SA-24 systems, will bear watching. If these weapons are turned toward Syrian military aircraft, then supporters of the uprising will have reason to hail them, and Syrian military pilots will have new grounds for worry on their next sorties. But if these are sold - and weapons of this sort are often said to fetch four- and five-figure dollar sums on black markets - and fired at commercial aircraft, then the consequences and regional security implications of the war in Syria will have become much worse.

This is especially true if the second missile really is an SA-24, one of the world's most modern heat-seeking missiles and the subject of quite a scare this year in Libya, as we wrote about on At War in May.

It is too soon to know how this ends. But for now, one of the pictures freshly circulating from Syria is an apparent new marker in the missile proliferation. As Mr. Schroeder notes, “As far as I know, this is the first SA-24 Manpads ever photographed outside of state control.”

Follow C.J. Chivers on Facebook, on Twitter at @cjchivers or on his personal blog, cjchivers.com, where many posts from At War are supplemented with more photographs and further information.



Finding Home Again After Deployment

I've been an Army wife for nearly a decade, but when I add up the days I've lived with my soldier, the days between the deployments and other military trips, the total is only about four years. Most of those days must be patched together into a crazy quilt of weeks and months, with off-day celebrations for the missed holidays and birthdays.

Mine, like most military marriages, bears little resemblance to the yellow-ribbons-apple-pies-and-passionate-kisses people like to imagine for us. It's comical, really, the things people assume. My husband and I are not flag-waving patriots, and there is nothing in either of our backgrounds to better qualify us to handle the missing years and awkward reunions. And, though we have developed some systems for dealing with the myriad issues, by no means do we “have this down by now,” as people are fond of projecting.

I'm not complaining. This is the life my husband and I chose, and neither of us regret our decisions to serve . We love each other with an intense yet nuanced love - the kind of connection achieved only after a couple has endured something awful together. In many ways, the difficulties caused by distance, separation and tragedy have made our lives richer, and we each walk tall in the knowledge of all that we have overcome. In fact, it is often when he is home, and not when he is gone, that we face our biggest challenges.

Reintegration is a military term that means “Hello, Stranger. Let's cohabit and raise these kids.” It's like those early months of a new marriage, that tedious time of relationship-defining, the he-never-picks-up-his-socks/she-spends-every-Saturday-watching-”Real-Housewives-of-Dubuque” period. That awful phase of adjustment is every day in the life of many military couples. We rarely get past the negotiating point because we aren't together long enough to slip into routine.

Instead, each time we try to live together again, we are stared down by t he reality that, in each other's absence, we have each changed and our life together has changed. As my husband once explained it to me: “Imagine you spent a year daydreaming about taking a nap on your couch. You thought about it every day while you were deployed. And then you get home and the couch is gone. It's been replaced by two chairs. They're nice chairs, comfy chairs, but they're not your couch - and you really just want your couch back.”

And that's just the furniture. Four-foot-tall children are now four and a half feet tall. Babies are toddlers. Teenagers are adults. Pets have died. Friends and family members have died. Life has moved on, and no one knows how to reconcile what “was” with what “is.”

Here's the rub - after a decade of war there are guides, Web sites, pamphlets, briefings and books to help military families deal with deployments. There is more advice than anyone wants or needs on how to fill the long months of a deployment and how to tackle the problems created when one adult is gone and the other has to become two people. What we need is advice on how to make two people into a couple again.

Post-deployment reintegration barely merits a mention in most of these resources, and usually then only with a throwaway sentence that admonishes us to “give it time” and to “expect difficulty.” But how long, and how much difficulty? No one tells us that, and no one tells us what we can do to make it better.

The most constructive collection of reintegration ideas I've seen was penned by an author who admitted to me that she doesn't really know much about the military. Gretchen Rubin's new book, “Happier at Home,” picks up where her best seller “The Happiness Project” left off and features practical ideas to help families draw closer - something desperately needed in a military community where divorce is now as common as camouflage.

Ideas such as kissing every morning and every night, greeting every family member as they come home and bidding each goodbye when they leave and planning weekly one-on-one adventures - both for parents and for spouses without children - weren't conceived by Ms. Rubin to be a primer on military reintegration, but I've found them to be remarkably effective. The overarching point, I suppose, is simply to make an concerted effort to be kind, considerate and close.

The military is notoriously slow to change, and family efforts tend to be a low priority. It took many years of deployments before the resources to help families caught up to the needs. Now, with the wars winding down, it's time for reintegration efforts to become the major focus for military family support. Unfortunately, all of this is happening just as the Department of Defense is having to slash budgets for everything - leaving many military marriages likely to become just another casualty of war.

And so those of us fighting for our home fronts wi ll continue to fumble toward couplehood, tripping over the everyday issues that we know we ought to have mastered by now. We are stunted in marriage, slowed in our relationship growth because of all the time we've spent growing apart. Often as not, instead of our wedding bands' symbolizing unity, they are like Venn diagrams, or worse, concentric circles as impenetrable as force fields. For a decade, we've done this apart-together-apart dance, a constant pushing and pulling, clinging to each other and then shoving the other away - and we don't know what to do now that the music has changed.


Rebekah Sanderlin writes a blog called Operation Marriage and is on the National Advisory Board for Blue Star Families. She lives with her husband and three children in Niceville, Fla.



For Tablet Users Who Crave Pen and Paper

The Sky smartpen from Livescribe captures handwritten notes and audio, which are then accessible on computers and mobile devices.The Sky smartpen from Livescribe captures handwritten notes and audio, which are then accessible on computers and mobile devices.

Anyone who has tried to take notes on a tablet knows how tricky it can be. Your choices are often limited to hunting and pecking on a digital keyboard or fiddling with a clunky stylus.

Seeking to cater to fans of ink and paper, Livescribe has created the Sky smartpen, a writing tool with a tiny computer inside that records notes written on special microdot paper. The notes are then sent wirelessly to a personal account in the cloud through a partnership with Evernote, the digital a rchive service.

The pen has up to eight gigabytes of memory, which translates into thousands of pages of words, pictures and diagrams. It also records audio during the note-taking session, which can be beneficial for meetings and lectures. Users can play back precise moments of the audio by touching the pen to the corresponding spot in the handwritten notes.

Sky includes 500 megabytes of free storage through Evernote. Once in the cloud, the notes and audio are accessible on any computer, or any iOS or Android mobile device.

The pen comes with an extra ink cartridge, two easy-to-lose caps, a notebook of microdot paper and a micro USB cable for charging. The Sky pen and accessories, including extra notebooks, are available online at Amazon.com and Livescribe's Web site, as well as at retailers like Staples and Best Buy.

I tested the four-gigabyte Sky pen, which costs $200, and found it easy to set up and use. Instead of buttons, the pen's functions are listed in the notebook; just touch the pen to the command you want.

The pen, although chunky, felt comfortable in my hand when I was writing or doodling. And syncing through Wi-Fi to my Evernote account was effortless. I was able to see the notes quickly on my iPad and iPhone; however, I could not open the Livescribe player on my PC at work to play the audio.

Livescribe is working to iron out a few wrinkles, but the Sky smartpen could end up bridging the gap between paper and tablet.



LED Cases Call Attention to Your Calls

If having overly loud phone conversations in public places is not getting you enough of the attention you crave, you might consider the OMG iPhone case from Sillybrandz. It has LEDs that illuminate the case when the phone is used.

The $30 case itself is made of clear plastic. It snaps on snugly and offers good basic protection against dings. An additional LED module plugs into the 30-pin connector.

When the phone is in use, in taking or making a call or even listening to music, the two white center LEDs pulse and two colored LEDs cycle between shades of red, green, blue, purple and orange. The LEDs cast a light behind a translucent graphic on the case for a backlit effect.

The LEDs draw power from the phone, so that will accelerate battery drain, the company says, but only by about 5 percent, because LEDs require little energy. You can slow the drain by using a shut-off switch on the module. The case comes with a USB cord that lets you recharge the phone, but not sync it, without removing the LED module.

While the display is pretty neat looking, it is not quite as impressive as it appears in the promotional video. The LEDs are visible as dots through the cover, which detracts from the effect. You can hold a thumb where the lights show through to mask them; then it looks suitably impressive.

If you doubt the attention-getting ability of the case, keep in mind that it is the brainchild of Adrienne Maloof, of “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” fame. You know how reality TV stars feel about attention.



Q&A: Preparing Data for Disasters

Q.

What disaster-proof backup options are out there besides backing up to a cloud server? I'd prefer to keep my personal files closer to home.

A.

Disasters come in many forms, including flood, fire and hard-drive failure, but you have many options for keeping files backed up locally. If you have a huge archive of photos, documents, music, videos and other important digital content, making a copy of your computer's hard drive with cloning or imaging software (available in places that offer utility programs) is one place to start.

Once you have a copy of the drive's contents on an external hard drive or set of DVDs, storing it in a water- and fireproof chest or safe-deposit box helps protect it from the elements.

Some hard drives themselves are built to withstand hazards like water, fire and long drops. Companies with drives that can better survive disasters include ioSafe and SentrySafe (available at office -supply sites or Amazon.com).



When a Spouse Is Posted Abroad

Military duty in particular - but also other professions that require people to travel a lot or work away from home for long periods of time- can put serious strains on marriages and family life. If you or your spouse is in such a role, how do you make your family life work?

Monday, November 12, 2012

Study Finds Amputating Damaged Limbs Improves Quality of Life

For some time, there has been anecdotal evidence that troops who had severe nerve, muscle or bone damage to an arm or a leg were better off undergoing amputations than trying to keep the limb. Now there is hard data that seems to confirm that suspicion.

In a study called Metals, for Military Extremity Trauma Amputation or Limb Salvage, researchers surveyed amputees and troops who had retained a badly injured limb. Using various scales to quantify quality of life â€" including job retention, marital status, athletic activity and mental health - the researchers concluded that outcomes were better for people who had amputations.

“Uniformly, amputees were doing better,” said Dr. James R. Ficke, the chairman of the department of orthopedics and rehabilitation at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio. The paper has been accepted for publication in a medical journal, the Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery.

Improvements in prosthetic legs and, more recentl y, arms are a major reason for the results. Service members can obtain legs not just for walking, but also for running, biking and swimming. And though upper limb prostheses are more complex and harder to master, recent advances have made them more lifelike than ever before.

But Dr. Ficke, an Army colonel, said the study suffered from one major shortcoming: it was conducted before the military began formal rehabilitation programs for limb salvage â€" as it is known - at its major centers for treating amputees: Brooke, Walter Reed National Military Medical Center and the Naval Medical Center in San Diego.

The program, now three years old, has brought more state-of-the-art treatment to salvaging limbs via improved nerve, vascular and plastic surgery. Just as important, it has also included more intensive rehabilitation, built around a team concept in which amputees already proficient with their prostheses work with beginners.

Ryan Blanck, left, a prosthetist at the Center for the Intrepid at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio.Bryce Harper for The New York Times Ryan Blanck, left, a prosthetist at the Center for the Intrepid at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio.

At the same time, the military has developed new technology to help troops who retain injured legs. One device was developed in San Antonio by Ryan Blanck, a prosthetist at the Center for the Intrepid at Brooke. Known as the Intrepid Dynamic Exoskeletal Orthosis, or IDEO, the device is a brace with a footplate and carbon fiber rods running along the calf.

Light and springy, the IDEO helps people with badly damaged legs run and jump again, sometimes literally overnight. Mr. Blanck, a master designer of prosthe tic devices for amputees, says he came up with the design when a single service member with a badly injured leg asked for something to help him run again.

“He just wanted to be able to enjoy life,” Mr. Blanck said.

The result was a device that is now the rage among the small but growing population of troops who are trying to keep severely damaged legs. Many are Special Operations troops who are driven to return to their units and deploy again. By Mr. Blanck's count, he has fit 300 troops for the devices, and nearly half of the users have been able to return to duty. More than 60 have deployed since, most of those to combat duty.

A next step will be to license IDEO and other new prosthetic technology pioneered at Brooke and other military medical centers to the private sector.

“War is not good for anyone,” Dr. Ficke said. “But what we cannot afford to lose are the lessons from this conflict that we can apply to our civilian trauma victims.”

The desire to help troops keep their limbs was born partly out of numbers: about 1,500 troops have lost a major limb in Iraq or Afghanistan, the vast majority of those cases involving an arm or a foot. But there have been about 15,000 troops who could have benefited from the limb salvage program, Dr. Ficke said.

The program was also born out of repeatedly seeing troops ask to have injured legs removed because they were seeing amputees doing more physical activities with prosthetic legs.

“It was common in this clinic to see patients who would say: ‘I don't want this leg anymore. I want it off,' ” Dr. Ficke said. “And when they did that, we didn't have an answer for them.”

Dr. Ficke said there was nothing intrinsically superior to retaining a damaged limb over having an prosthesis. But once the deed is done, there is no turning back. So he said it was important for troops not to feel that they would automatically be better off with an amputat ion.

“We're born with two feet, two hands,” he said. “There's a lot to be said for integrity of your body.”

The rising quality of prostheses has meant that more amputees can return to active military duty, or at least active lives. But there are benefits to salvaging limbs, Dr. Ficke said. For instance, people who have lost one leg may be better off trying to retain the other one â€" even if it is badly injured - because the amount of energy needed to walk with two prosthetic legs is significantly higher than with just one.

Moreover, prostheses need regular maintenance and eventually must be replaced. And perhaps most important, Dr. Ficke said, they do not provide sensation, which is a major psychological factor for many people.

“That's a clincher for most people,” he said. “With a prosthesis, you don't have a connection with your environment.”

James Dao is an editor of At War. Contact him via his Times Topi cs page. You can follow him on Twitter at @jimdao.



A Lie That\'s Good for Password Security

The other day, for some inexplicable reason, a Web site that uses responses to personal questions as password protection stopped accepting one of my answers. “It just doesn't seem to like this word anymore,” the tech assist told me.

But how many different ways can you answer a question like, “What was the first car you owned?” Obviously, I couldn't change the first car I owned (unless my current car is a time-traveling DeLorean).

But she made a brilliant point. Since the Web site doesn't know if my answer is correct, I could put in anything. In fact, she pointed out, a good security tip is to answer incorrectly.

Her reasoning was this: With so much information out there online, people can pretty easily find things like your mother's maiden name, your pet's name, your high school mascot and so forth - all of which are common security questions.

But wait - wouldn't it be hard to recall the correct passwords if they had nothing to do with the p rompts?

Not necessarily, she said. She gave an example of one gentleman who answered every question with his favorite flavor. So if a site asked him for his mother's maiden name, he would enter something like “Butterscotch.”  Favorite pet? Butterscotch. Elementary school he attended? Butterscotch.

It makes passwords easy to remember and hard to break. Of course, there is one glaring defect. If someone does get your password, that person has access to every Web site you use.

I know this is no substitute for a really strong password like one you would get from a random password generator, but realistically, how many of those jumbles can you remember? And as we know, writing them down is a bad practice.

So while a non sequitur as an answer may not be the ultimate defense, for many it would improve on what they have.



Q&A: Filtering Videos on YouTube

Q.

Is there a way to block inappropriate videos from YouTube search results?

A.

You can avoid or block certain types of videos from the site through a variety of measures. These include built-in filters and third-party software.

YouTube has a Safety Mode that filters out what the site refers to as “potentially objectionable material” when you search or browse for videos. To turn on Safety Mode, scroll down to the very bottom of any YouTube page to the menus for Language, Location and Safety. Next to Safety, click the Off button to see the option to click the On button and click Save.

YouTube should now filter the videos it displays when you use the site. Comments on videos are also hidden from view or censored to have certain words filtered out.

If you have a YouTube account and are logged into it, you can fix the controls to keep Safety Mode activated: click the box next to “Lock safety mode o n this browser” in the Safety Mode settings. Locking Safety Mode keeps the setting active, even if you log out of your YouTube account.

While Safety Mode can help block quite a bit of content, it may not catch everything on YouTube that might offend. Its safety rankings are generated by YouTube users who flag videos that are considered objectionable, as well as by YouTube's own internal filters.

If you find YouTube's Safety Mode is not strong enough to catch everything you do not wish to see, third-party filtering software like SafeEyes or Net Nanny costs more - but does more. These programs can cost at least $40 or so, but allow a wider range of filtering and content-blocking beyond YouTube.

Other tools include the Google SafeSearch filter and browser add-on filters. Settings like Content Advisor on Internet Explorer can also help block certain types of materials. Check your preferred browser and search engine for what is available.



Sunday, November 11, 2012

Did Vietnam Change the Way We Welcome Veterans Home?

Commentary: A Soldier Writes

Today's generation of veterans return home to perhaps the most pro-veteran environment in decades. Many large companies actively recruit and employ veterans, and the Post-9/11 G.I. Bill provides benefits for higher education and vocational training to help veterans make the transition. Organizations such as the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, Veterans of Foreign Wars and American Legion are entirely focused on veteran issues, and many other nonprofit organizations are assisting veterans in their transition to the civilian life.

Part of the motivation for this all-out effort may be guilt, as veterans have done what the vast majority of Americans did not want to do. But a more likely reason for the positive reception is that Americans feel embarrassed and guilty for how Vietnam veterans were treated when they returned home.

The coverage of Vietnam veterans in the history books, news media and movies almost unwaveringly emphasizes not only the fighting overseas and callous decisions by government leaders, but also the divisions on American soil. They portray the returning Vietnam veteran as an isolated individual who had only a fragile connection to the rest of American society.

Today's military still lives in the shadow of the Vietnam War. The issues we confront today are legacies from Vietnam: how to successfully recruit and manage an all-volunteer force, wage counterinsurgency versus conventional warfare, mitigate collateral damage and civilian casualties, and the military's relationship with the rest of American society.

The Vietnam War casts an equally large shadow over American society. The Vietnam War exposed underlying racial issues, whether the elite had to serve, the role of the media, and distrust toward government.

In my own interaction with vet erans of different eras, I have found Vietnam veterans to always be the most understanding and sympathetic of the issues that younger veterans experience. These feelings are present on the national stage as well. Many of the biggest proponent of veterans' issues have been Vietnam-era veterans: Eric Shinseki, former Army chief of staff, currently serves as secretary of veterans affairs; Senator Jim Webb of Virginia, a former Marine Corps officer and secretary of the Navy, and a major proponent behind the Post-9/11 G.I. Bill; and Senator John McCain of Arizona, a former Navy pilot who was a prisoner of war in Vietnam.

This Veterans Day, most communities will focus their celebration on the recent veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan. But it would be a travesty if there were not a full acknowledgment and appreciation of Vietnam-era veterans. Today's veterans would face a much more challenging transition to civilian life without their experiences then or their efforts to help n ew veterans today.

Tim Hsia is pursuing a J.D./M.B.A. at Stanford. He is currently in the Army Reserves as an R.O.T.C. instructor at Santa Clara University, which offers training for Stanford cadets. The views expressed in this blog are those of the author and do not reflect the official policy or position of the Department of the Army, Department of Defense or the United States government.



Friday, November 9, 2012

Q&A: Removing a Firefox Add-on

Q.

How do you get rid of an add-on in Firefox? I installed something that I think is slowing down my browsing and I want to uninstall it now.

A.

Add-ons and extensions can bring all sorts of new features to your browser window like weather radar, soccer scores and playback controls for your music software. Too many add-ons - or ones that cause conflicts - can make the browser crash or run more slowly. In Firefox, you can disable an add-on to see if it was the root of the slowness problem, or remove it completely.

To do so, go to the Firefox tab in the browser window and select Tools; in some versions of Firefox, just go to the Tools menu. In the Tools menu, select Add-ons. On the Add-ons Manager tab, select Extensions.

When you have found the name of the extension you want to disable or completely uninstall, select it in the list and click the Disable or Remove button. Firefox generally offers to restart i tself after you disable or remove any software. Restart the browser and see if it runs any faster without the add-on. Mozilla has information about removing plugins and troubleshooting issues with Firefox here.



Days of Horror and Grief: Reporting the Panjwai Massacre

Taimoor Shah has been a reporter and interpreter for The New York Times in Kabul and southern Afghanistan for more than 10 years, covering some of the most dangerous corners of the war. In March, he was one of the first to see the victims of an American soldier's rampage through an Afghan village in the Panjwai district of Kandahar, where 16 civilians were killed. This week, the soldier accused in those killings, Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, began his journey through the military justice system.

Taimoor's reporting that day was dedicated and professional, vital to what would become one of the most important ongoing stories of the year. But as with many stories we ask our reporters and photographers to cover, it was also personally wrenching - the human cost of the war for Afghan civilians has seldom been as clearly shown as in Panjwai. When he came to the United States recently for a fellowship with the Study of the United States Institutes for Scholars, Taimoor was move d to write about the experience and the people he had talked to. The article below is adapted from that essay.

- Douglas Schorzman, assistant foreign editor

In the years I have been a reporter, I have seen the aftermath of suicide bombings, the victims of beheadings - many terrible things. But the scene in Panjwai district in March, when villagers brought their dead in trucks to a military base after an American soldier had stalked through their town and shot them, was so horrible, I can never forget it.

There was a little girl, around 6 or 7 years old, shot in the head during the night but who still looked as if she was just sleeping. Another two boys were shot and burned. That little girl reminded me of my daughter, and the boys of my son, and I thought I would go crazy, be unable to speak, if this had happened to my family. But these people still spoke to me and explained the event. I thought that these people were very strong, that despite all the ir terrible difficulties and their mourning, they managed to speak to somebody and seek justice.

Early that morning I had received a call from a number I did not recognize. The man on the other end asked whether I was a journalist for The Times, and after I said so he told me he was calling from Zangabad, a village in Panjwai. During the night, he said, an American soldier had gotten into a nearby house and killed at least four people, including women and children, and wounded many others.

He told me the soldier had been alone, but I couldn't believe it at first. I thought it must have been a military night raid, which we sometimes hear about if they end up with civilian casualties. So I did what I usually do when we hear about night raids that go bad: calling police officials, calling government officials, calling tribal elders.

Over the course of many calls, I started finding confirmation that something really had happened in Panjwai, but either there wer e few details or the ones I heard were hard to believe without further proof - one elder told me that 20 people had been killed. Often, people report very high numbers, but when we look into it more, it turns out they are not really that high. I still couldn't be sure.

I called Hajji Agha Lalai, a distinguished elder and acting chairman of the Kandahar Provincial Council who is from the Panjwai area. With his help, I joined a convoy of vehicles from the governor's office that was going to Panjwai to investigate.

When we approached to Panjwai district center, I spotted Asadullah Khalid, the national minister for border and tribal affairs, as he was talking with Agha Lalai and some other tribal elders from Panjwai. From them, I heard that there were worries about the numbers of casualties, that the toll might even be higher than we had heard.

The tribal elders were receiving calls from the villages and the elders seemed to be in a panic. I kept hearing them s ay, “No, no, don't bring them to the city.”

Later, I found out the villagers were trying to bring their dead to Kandahar city, but that the tribal elders and the minister had advised the villagers against it. They feared the anger would be so great, it could set Kandahar on fire and it would be a catastrophe. So the tribal elders and minister suggested to the villagers that they would come to them, to the village and see the dead bodies there.

We drove from Panjwai district center toward Zangabad, but it was a slow trip. Half of the road was paved and half wasn't. The minutes in the car were very scary because on dirt roads it is easy to bury improvised explosive devices. I saw craters where bombs had exploded, and I was afraid of a bomb going off.

When we reached Camp Belambi, a joint Afghan-American base where the shooter apparently had come from, I saw several hundred people gathered out front. Afghan Army soldiers were cordoning off the base and imm ediately hustled us inside. I saw Afghan soldiers on top of the roof, in the street, and the situation seemed hazardous. The villagers were very angry, yelling things at the soldiers.

The base was located right between several villages, and had American Special Operations troops and regular soldiers as well as Afghan forces. While I was there, though, I never saw a single American soldier. But after a while, I saw helicopters arrive, and was told they had brought a NATO commander from elsewhere.

Things were very tense, and some of the Afghan soldiers said they thought the villagers were going to attack them. The tribal elders and the minister and some Afghan Army commanders decided to bring in some of the tribal elders from the crowd outside the base and talk to them about what they wanted and listen to what they had to say. The idea was approved by the minister, so some 25 elders and white-bearded men, including some members of the victims' families, were let in after being thoroughly checked for weapons.

The villagers were upset, and demanded that the shooter or shooters be punished. The tribal elders and minister tried to pacify them and said: “Speak to us and we will listen - whatever you people want, we can do for you.”

The first person who spoke was Abdul Samad, a 60-year-old farmer who said he had lost 11 family members. He was so shocked by what had happened, he could not speak clearly - he was lost. The way he put it, it sounded as if his wife, four younger daughters, and four young sons were among those dead. Only later did it became clear that he was talking about the deaths of his brother's immediate family members.

Abdul Samad was angry and distraught that the killer had even burned the bodies. That is one of the deepest crimes in our religion and culture, because the body is sacred and it must be washed and prepared for burial, and you cannot do that properly with a burned body. He demanded justic e immediately, wanted the shooter to be executed before they buried their dead.

The villagers insisted that the action was carried out intentionally, that it wasn't a mistake, but murder. The minister and tribal elders kept promising them that justice would be done, and then someone got on a telephone and called President Karzai, and the president spoke to Abdul Samad, also promising justice.

I wanted to talk to more family members of the victims, but it wasn't easy to reach them. I was able to talk to several villagers at the base but not to the victims' families.

We journalists were kept inside the base, and the Afghan soldiers would not let us go outside. I managed to leave the base from a rear door, but when I saw there were crowds outside the base, I did not feel safe. Then luckily I found a man from the village who knew me and I told him that I needed a favor and I asked him to introduce me to the villagers and explain that I was a journalist.

I saw there were trucks parked right in front of the base, and when I asked about them, the villagers told me that was where the bodies were. I asked the villagers if I could see them, and they showed me.

I checked one by one and counted all the dead bodies. The total was 16, including women and children. Some of the bodies were burned, and at least five of the children had gunshot wounds in their heads.

For the follow-up stories, it was difficult to find the families on the phone, and I decided to travel again to the area. I decided that the best way to meet people was to go to attend the condolence ceremony, the traditional ritual to express sympathies to families who have lost relatives.

This visit was an effort to find the families whose relatives had been killed and hear their misery directly from them. Senior government officials were also there, including two of President Karzai's family members, gathering at a mosque less than 50 meters from the hous e where 11 from the same family had been killed. More horror would come that day - toward the end of the ceremony, we all came under attack by militants on motorcycles, and there was heavy gunfire in which one Afghan soldier was killed.

But earlier, as people came together, the mosque quickly became crowded and more people sat on the ground outside. It was very quiet, and many people seemed not sure what to say because such a horrible thing had happened. I talked to people to get them to point out which of the people in the mosque were members of the victims' families.

I went and sat next to one man who had who lost relatives, and then people brought another family member, and he sat next to me. And then a third family member came. The family members were so desperate and they were so angry, at both the American and Afghan governments.

At the beginning, it was hard to start asking questions. So I did what I always do in such terrible circumstances: I introd uced myself as a journalist working for The New York Times and prayed with them for their lost relatives. And I explained, “We will let the world know what has happened to you.”

It was very hard to manage such g rief, very hard to do reporting because people are talking and not making sense sometimes. You have to listen, you have to listen until each person stops, and then very politely ask your questions. You have to be like a member of their family.

One of the people with me was the brother of Abdul Samad, Muhammad Wazir, who had lost nearly his entire immediate family. Only one of Mr. Wazir's children survived - a young son, just 4 - and he held the boy close while he talked to me.

The boy had been crying all the time since the shooting and asking where were his mother, his sisters and brothers. “I am carrying him with me all the time, holding on to him. I have to bring him to the mosque today because nobody is left to take care of him,” Mr. Wazi r said.

This was so heartbreaking for me, and the boy was so sweet.



Thursday, November 8, 2012

Q&A: The Many Flavors of Android

Q.

What is the difference between the software running on the Amazon Kindle and the Google Nexus 7? They're both Android tablets, right?

A.

Amazon's Kindle Fire line of tablets and Google's Nexus 7 model are both considered to be Android tablets, but the Kindle Fire uses a customized version of the system. Unlike Apple's tightly controlled iOS mobile operating system, the Android software, which is made by Google, has been adapted for use by many hardware manufacturers for their own phones and tablets.

Amazon's version of Android is focused on easy navigation for the content on the Kindle and getting to features like Amazon Prime Instant Video and other content from the massive online store. The Kindle's version of Android does not run as many apps as Google's Nexus 7 with its unmodified Android system, but it supports the common ones: Twitter, Facebook, Pandora, Angry Birds and other popular pastimes. (While i t is possible to manually install Android apps from other sources on the Kindle, many people just stick with the apps available for download right on the device.)

The Google Nexus 7 is geared more to app lovers and people who like to tinker with tablets; a larger Nexus 10 is also available. Google's tablets tend to get Android updates first and can run a huge amount of apps from the Google Play store, so if you are less interested in entertainment and more into apps, the Nexus 7 may be a better fit.



Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Dirty Tricks of Government Forces: Where Deception and Deadliness Meet Inside a Gun

High-explosive booby-trapped ammunition has been use in wars and guerrilla conflicts for decades. When used, the sabotaged ammunition can kill or maim. (To view a short history of the weapon by Bob Gravett, a private explosive-ordnance disposal technician, click here.)Courtesy of Bob Gravett High-explosive booby-trapped ammunition has been use in wars and guerrilla conflicts for decades. When used, the sabotaged ammunition can kill or maim. (To view a short history of the weapon by Bob Gravett, a private explosive-ordnance disposal technician, click here.)

When out on patrols in Afghanistan, Western soldiers often uncover ammunition caches used by the region's many fighting groups. And when on the archip elago of outposts from which they work, these same soldiers routinely have access to weapons carried by the Taliban, including Kalashnikov assault rifles, PK machine guns, rocket-propelled-grenade launchers and 82-millimeter mortars. But soldiers and Marines have been told for years not to combine these two naturally paired items - captured ammunition with captured arms - for training or other uses, even though practice with the most common weapons in Afghanistan could reasonably be seen as a valuable part of preparing for the war's daily work. Western forces are also discouraged from collecting ammunition in the field and passing it on to the Afghan Army and police forces, who often carry weapons that could use it.

Does this make sense? It depends on what a soldier knows, or is told by officers and nearby explosive-ordnance disposal techs.

The reason for these general prohibitions is rooted in a tactic shrouded in secrecy: The United States has been seeding batt lefields with improvised exploding ammunition, part of a large-scale project intended to undermine the Taliban that can have grisly unintended effects. Such ammunition was introduced by the United States to Afghanistan with hopes that it would explode inside the weapons of its foes. But ammunition tends to move fluidly through and around conflict zones. And once loose, booby-trapped ammunition does not distinguish between a weapon held by a Talib, a weapon held by an American soldier or a weapon held by anyone else. This is why those cautions are issued, circulating across the country beside their slow-brewed cousins from a parallel disinformation campaign - the cannily promoted stories (which do have elements of truth, considering) that the Taliban's ammunition supply is unreliable and therefore dangerous.

Such tactics have been widely used by the Pentagon and Central Intelligence Agency in both Afghanistan and Iraq, just as they were used by a previous generation of American soldiers and intelligence operatives in Vietnam, according to many people involved in the distribution of the spiked ordnance.

Recently, The New York Times documented the tactic's appearance this year in the war in Syria, where the ammunition supply of antigovernment fighters has been salted with similar booby traps. Rebels describe an effort run by the Syrian government that assembles rifle and machine-gun cartridges in which the standard propellant has been replaced with a high-explosive powder that detonates when a shooter tries to fire a weapon, shattering the rifle or machine gun and often wounding the shooter. These rounds are then mixed with clean ammunition and channeled into black markets or left behind at government positions when the army withdraws. The rebels also described booby-trapped mortar rounds and rocket-propelled grenade projectiles.

Midd le Eastern wars are not neat, and borders are not firm. And so there is the persistent wrinkle to this kind of tactic, which American officers and veterans of Special Operations units acknowledge. Some of the booby-trapped ordnance now in Syria might be the legacy of American seedings in Iraq, from where smugglers and arms dealers are moving large amounts of ammunition and weapons to the latest fight. The effects of these programs are, in the end, all but impossible to contain.

In the process of reporting out that article, The Times and At War accumulated more information than could fit in it. The article generated considerable e-mail flow, so today, in the interest of sharing more information for readers and follow-on researchers, this blog will provide a fuller sketch.

Please keep in mind that this is necessarily a sketch. Though booby-trapped ammunition has a rich and extensive history, the practice is controversial, its legality is questionable and government s have rarely disclosed information about the doings of their ordnance-modification shops or their programs intended to pass their lethal products into others' hands. This means that the available records are spotty. Many details are gathered in the field.

Improvised Exploding Ammunition: A Short History

First things first: Ammunition booby-trapping is not solely an American or Syrian affair. The practice of spiking rifle cartridges and leaving them about spans the 20th century, and has involved many militaries. One source credibly describes (if in passing) British efforts to salt the rifle ammunition supplies of the Irish Republican Army in the Black and Tan War, circa 1920. Various references describe British intelligence and military forces' repeating the tactic in many wars since.

Nicholas Marsh, a research fellow at the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, compiled a list of books referring to the practice, including in Malaya, the Philippines, Burma, North Africa, Kenya and elsewhere. He added a caveat: His search for references had been in English, which could lead to a bias in the list toward American or British actions. Another reader wrote to say that the Soviet Union long engaged in similar projects, dating from at least the 1920s, in its campaign to suppress an Islamic uprising in Central Asia. Careful reviews of the literature might find doctored-ordnance seedings in any number of other times or places, including against terrorists, guerrilla organizations or drug rings in South or Central America, or the Tamil Tigers or Maoist rebels in South Asia, to name a few conflicts where much of the public discourse and history is not in English.

Certainly empires and superpowers were not sole practitioners of this form of lethal deception. Bob Gravett, a private explosive-ordnance disposal tech, documented the practice in the Balkans in the 1990s, along with exploding rifle magazines and hand grenades in whic h standard fuzes with a few-second delay had been replaced by fuzes that exploded instantaneously when a grenade's fly-off lever was released. Mr. Gravett is an artist as well as a bomb disposal tech. His poster, linked at the top of this post, provides a view of some of the methods behind doctoring cartridges. And the poster below presents a record of the exploding magazine booby trap, which disposal techs say has history of use in other conflicts, including the Soviet Union's long war in in Afghanistan.

A detailed view of a booby-trapped AK-47 magazine. (For an enlarged view, click here.)Courtesy of Bob Gravett A detailed view of a booby-trapped AK-47 magazine. (For an enlarged view, click here.)

When the United States first started such programs is not immediately clear. American Rifleman, a publication of the National Rifle Association, published an article in 2008 describing Project Eldest Son, a doctored-ammunition program run by the Pentagon and Central Intelligence Agency in Vietnam. The article credited Col. John Singlaub with prodding to life that particular chapter in the spiked-ammunition story. An excerpt is below:

At Camp Chinen, Okinawa, Singlaub watched a CIA technician load a sabotaged 7.62×39 mm cartridge into a bench-mounted AK rifle.

“It completely blew up the receiver and the bolt was projected backwards,” Singlaub observed, “I would imagine into the head of the firer.”

After that success began a month of tedious bullet pulling to manually disassemble thousands of 7.62 mm cartridges, made more difficult because Chinese ammo had a tough lacquer seal where the bullet seated into the case. In this process, some bu llets suffered tiny scrapes, but when reloaded these marks seated out of sight below the case mouth. Rounds were inspected to ensure they showed no signs of tampering.

When the job was done, 11,565 AK rounds had been sabotaged, along with 556 rounds for the Communist Bloc's heavy 12.7 mm machine gun, a major anti-helicopter weapon.

Several memoirs by American veterans of the war in Vietnam shared similar details. John Steinbeck, who covered the war for Newsweek in 1966 and 1967, came across the practice as well. He wrote of it more than 45 years ago in a cagily sourced letter in which he discussed the tactic's effects (“heads were terribly torn, in some cases practically blown off”) and said he had seen weapons damaged by the doctored rounds. Mr. Steinbeck appeared to approve. “Carefully done, it would be almost impossible to detect the doctored round except by firing it, in which case your knowledge would go with your head,” he wrote. He a dded that the military would not confirm the practice and gave him “the fish-eye treatment” when he inquired about it.

That is not much different from the situation today, although the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq have produced a large enough pool of veterans that more candor about these programs is available now than what Mr. Steinbeck could turn up during his travels in Vietnam. Veterans and officers interviewed recently also said that the programs were of large enough scale, and of such duration, that the insurgents have long been aware of them.

Spiked Ammunition: More Discriminate vs. Less Discriminate

One element of these programs is worth an update on the writings from Vietnam, which tended to emphasize booby-trapped rifle or machinegun rounds. In many areas where the American military has operated for long periods, booby-trapping has taken a larger and more potent form: improvised exploding mortar rounds.

An American officer who served tours with Special Operations forces in Iraq and Afghanistan said that by far most of the doctored ammunition he saw distributed involved high-explosive 120-millemeter and 82-millimeter mortar rounds. These were altered so that instead of exploding upon striking the ground or on a timed fuze after traveling through the air they would explode in a mortar tube as fired, thus destroying the entire mortar system â€" tube, bipod, baseplate, sight and man.

This sort of booby trap, he said, was by its nature narrowly targeted, because unlike doctored rifle ammunition, which might readily pass into the possession of a homeowner keeping a firearm for self-defense or a farmer carrying a rifle for hunting or pest control, mortar rounds do not have an obvious civilian use. Put another way, there is no regular and ordinary reason for a person to drop a high-explosive mortar round into a mortar tube, short of training for or waging war. The same applies, he said, to rocket-propelled grenade pr ojectiles, which were not likely to be fired by a shepherd against a nuisance dog.

“I didn't see any immorality here,” the officer said of the distributions. (He noted that spiked rifle cartridges had a greater likelihood of harming someone other than those targeted. )

The officer's account forms a curious and counterintuitive analysis: booby-trapped mortar rounds, in his view, would be a case of a more powerful weapon also being more discriminate.

That is not to say that such tactics do not involve risk, including the danger that such a round could find its way back to a government's supply line, or the supply line of a proxy. And this risk, when the worst was realized, would almost certainly be lethal. It might also endanger American or other Western forces working side by side with proxy forces.

How these risks should be scaled is hard to say. The Pentagon turned down a request to discuss its booby-trapped ammunition programs, so it remains pub licly unknown how (or even whether) it assesses such risks or how many Western, Afghan or Iraqi troops have been wounded inadvertently by spiked ammunition that found its way to government units.

But whatever these risks, they have clearly been deemed tolerable by the Pentagon, perhaps because the Americans in the field know what senior commanders and public relations officers don't often acknowledge: that government forces in Iraq and Afghanistan, owing to disorganization and a low level of training, barely use their indirect fire weapons, and that ammunition flows tend to leak from the Iraqi and Afghan governments toward insurgents, not the other way round. Moreover, any time an antigovernment mortar crew that might have had a long career lobbing high-explosive rounds at Western outposts was killed in this way, the calculus, on balance, might have seemed sound. It is impossible to say so one way or the other, however, without data or considerably more detail.

T he officer also said that the effort to distribute doctored mortar rounds (and, to a lesser extent, projectiles for RPG-7s) were so active that some of the legacy stock has likely crossed into Syria, where Syria is running its own improvised exploding ammunition project, too.

The Origins of Syria's Spiked Rounds

In Syria, the program appears to be extensive, judging from the fact that rebels consistently reported that doctored rounds appeared in many places at once, and through multiple supply sources.

And this leads to questions of safety: How to contain the tactic's effects? At War photographed one headstamp on a 7.62x39mm cartridge â€" the standard ammunition for Kalashnikov assault rifles - in which a fine-grain orange powder with white crystals had replaced the standard rifle propellant.

A photograph of the headstamp is below.

C. J. Chivers/The New York Times

The provenance of the original cartridge is uncertain. Nic R. Jenzen-Jones, an analyst in Australia who covers infantry arms and small-caliber ammunition, said the cartridge's markings suggested manufacture by one of two nations with a hand in the war.

7.62×39 cartridges with this '6 6' headstamp composition, and similar '7 7' headstamps, have been variously attributed to both Iran and Syria. The font, style of stamping, and case composition are all consistent with cartridges from either country. The red primer annulus makes me lean towards Iran, but this example could quite easily have come from either country.

Although with time that headstamp's origin can probably be worked out, matching it to a particular factory would not fully settle questions of who t ampered with these rounds. This is because booby-trapped ammunition is not necessarily produced inside an ammunition plant. If the limited unclassified history of such programs is a guide, then factory production is not the norm. Rounds tend to get doctored downstream. Cartridges turning up in Syria may have been altered elsewhere after initial production, by a team that tapped out the bullet, removed the propellant and replaced it with a high explosive, and then reseated the bullet and passed the rounds along. (Syrian rebels who said that defected army officers had warned them of the booby-trapped cartridges did not point to a particular production site.)

For the reasons above, while it is handy for rebels (and anyone else) to recognize as suspect cartridges bearing the headstamp shown at the top of this section, culling cartridges marked in this fashion would be a safeguard with limits. Whoever is doctoring the cartridges in Syria can readily acquire rounds with dif ferent headstamps and modify them in future batches.

Further, while the immediate objective of doctored ammunition can be to weaken an enemy's combat power by destroying weapons and killing or wounding combatants, many such programs also have a psychological component. They aim to sow suspicion of ammunition supply sources, or distrust in the quality of rebel weapons. It would not be a surprise, therefore, to discover at some point cartridges like the specimen shown below repacked with explosives. That cartridge, manufactured in Ukraine, would be a natural candidate for a booby trap with a secondary purpose, because its stamping matches production lots of Kalashnikov rounds apparently provided to the rebels by Saudi Arabia.

It is also wise to remember that while the body of evidence surrounding the exploding cartridges in Syria bear the indicators of a formal ammunition-spiking program organized at a large scale, there are less formal methods by which booby-trapp ed rounds come into existence and find a place on the battlefield. One common example is when a unit or any small group of combatants decides to make booby traps independently of larger decisions by a government or an army. Mr. Gravett noted that crude cartridge-spiking was technically simple. A soldier needs nothing more than basic tools, a few cartridges and a grenade with a powdered high-explosive fill - and then a circumstance ideal for the tactic to work. “All someone needs to say is, ‘Well, we're about to be leaving this place, so let's leave behind something for the visitors,'” he said.

This kind of local (and officially unsanctioned) spiking can further confuse efforts at tracing or identification, and is another reason that while culling cartridges like the cartridge shown at the top of this section would be a sound step toward safety and self-preservation for anyone around firearms in Syria, it would hardly serve as a guarantee that the rest of the amm unition should be trusted. Such is the legacy of this brand of booby-trap programs: they leave a long trail of justifiable uncertainties, or even fearâ€"just as they are intended to do.

Follow C.J. Chivers on Facebook, on Twitter at @cjchivers or on his personal blog, cjchivers.com, where many posts from At War are supplemented with more photographs and further information.



An Audio Dock That Joins Macintosh and McIntosh

The McAire uses Airplay to connect Apple products to a high quality, high cost audio dock. The McAire uses Airplay to connect Apple products to a high quality, high cost audio dock.

While Apple, maker of the Macintosh computer, has reveled in bringing us the new, the audio company McIntosh has gloried in electronics that keep to the tried and true. But the two worlds have collided with a McIntosh audio dock called the McAire, which incorporates Apple's wireless AirPlay system.

AirPlay allows the McAire to connect wirelessly to any Apple product sharing the same Wi-Fi network. Devices can also be connected to the dock by USB cable.

Like most McIntosh equipment, the McAire has considerable heft - 31 pounds of it. That consists of a 25-watt amp, two 4-inch woofers, two 2-Inch midrange speakers and two ¾-inch tweeters.

The unit features the distinctive old-school McIntosh styling, with a black gloss faceplate housing two blue VU meters and showing the brand name in glowing green.

The McAire connects to your Wi-Fi using an i-device for setup. I used an iPhone and it was the simplest AirPlay connection I've tried yet.

The sound quality was very good, which can be a bit of a problem: It was good enough that the flaws in the more compressed recordings were easy to hear.

The McAire can serve to add a wireless network to your existing stereo. It has analog audio outputs that can go into a receiver or pre-amplifier using either RCA cables or balanced outputs.

But as McIntosh aficionados are used to hearing, it's going to cost you. The McAire lists for $3,000.



Better iPhone Photos With Klyp and LEDs

The Manfrotto Klyp case gives your iPhone a mount for LED lights and a tripod. The Manfrotto Klyp case gives your iPhone a mount for LED lights and a tripod.

If one LED light for your phone camera is good, are 24 better?

If you are serious about taking photos with your iPhone, then perhaps so. Manfrotto, the camera accessories manufacturer, has produced a new iPhone case for the iPhone 4 and 4S that lets you snap on auxiliary LED lights and a tripod.

The Klyp case, as it's called, is a pretty standard slip-on case with a rubbery “soft touch” exterior and feltlike, scratch-free liner.

The stars of the system are the lighting arrays, either a 12-LED light suitable for close-up photos and macro shots, or a 24-LED lamp that can comfortably light head-and-shoulders shots.

The LED arrays are a huge improvement over the single-LED flash built into the iPhone. The built-in flash has a tendency to overlight photos harshly and leave your subjects with glowing red eyes, which, while Halloween-appropriate, isn't so great the rest of the year.

The 24-LED array has a dimmer switch to adjust how much light it puts out. The quality of the light is neutral, but it might benefit from a diffuser, which, in a pinch, you could probably make from tissue paper.

Using the 24-LED ML240 mounted on the clip case made portraits more flattering, but they would have been better still if the light could have been aimed a little more precisely. A fully articulated mount would take care of that.

The best use of the light didn't require the $35 Klyp case at all. Holding the ML240 at arm's length and at an angle to subjects produced more flattering illumination and more interest ing shadows than when it was on the case.

The case can be useful in that it allows you to connect one of the LED arrays and a tripod at the same time. It has three quick-release slots that the lights and tripod mount click into, so it's easy to adjust.

The Klyp is available as just the case or in four bundled kits, each with different lights and accessories. Prices range from $80 for the case and smaller light to $130 for the case, larger light and pocket-size tripod.

The lights are also available without the clip case, priced from $60 for the smallest to $95 for the larger. There are two even larger lights sold separately as well - three versions of a 36-LED array and an 84-LED model.



Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Q&A: Photos from Camera to iPad

Q.

I want to load photos directly from my camera to my iPad, but I hear the Camera Connector device sold by Apple only fits SD cards and not Compact Flash. Is there another way to copy images directly from the camera?

A.

One model of Apple's iPad Camera Connector adapter is indeed designed to fit the smaller Secure Digital format used by most point-and-shoot cameras. However, the company also sells an adapter with a USB port on one end - for connecting the camera's own USB cable to the iPad to copy photos from the memory card to the tablet.

Most of Apple's camera adapters cost $29, including the iPad Camera Connection Kit (which has both the SD card and USB adapter) for the first three generations of the iPad and the Lighting to USB Camera Adapter for the new fourth-generation iPad and iPad Mini.

If you have an older iPad with the bigger Dock Connector jack on the bottom, you can also find third-party adap ters that fit Compact Flash cards, like the M.I.C. CF Card Reader or those sold at Photojojo.com.



Dead Phone Battery? Just Burn Something

After Hurricane Sandy knocked out power in the Northeast, a New York start-up came up with a good publicity stunt: Light a fire so people could charge their dead cellphones.

BioLite, a 15-person company based in Brooklyn, sells a $130 camp stove that doubles as a power source. You light a fire inside a metal fuel chamber, where a thermoelectric generator converts the heat into electricity to run a fan. The fan blows air into the fire to oxygenate it and create a clean burn. The generator also powers a USB port for charging phones and other electronics.

Erica Rosen, director of marketing at BioLite, said company employees set up a table with the stoves in spots like Washington Square Park in Lower Manhattan, where m any people were still without power. They offered hot drinks to people as they gathered around the stoves to charge their dead phones. The stoves got plenty of attention from passers-by, including the police, who ordered BioLite to stop.

“It was going really well until the cops showed up, and we packed up and made our way back,” Ms. Rosen said. “I can sympathize with them - we're in a disaster emergency, and here come a group of people with literally a table that's on fire.”

Founded by two designers, Jonathan Cedar and Alec Drummond, BioLite received $1.8 million in financing in December from the foundation led by Clayton Christensen, author of “The Innovator's Dilemma.” It sells the stoves in 70 countries with the goal of popularizing a cheaper, cleaner approach for the three billion people around the world who cook on open fires. The company declined to say how many stoves it had sold, but said sales were in the tens of thousands.

It's a bit of an unusual start-up in a time when many entrepreneurs are trying to strike it rich with the next great app for smartphones. “Software is great at making life efficient, but many of life's most basic needs are still served by physical objects,” Mr. Cedar said.



Tip of the Week: An Introduction to Windows 8

Microsoft's just-released Windows 8 operating system has a much different user interface than previous versions of Windows, which may have some people nervous about the learning curve. To help new computer owners see the Windows 8 system in action or give shoppers some idea of what to expect whenever they do upgrade, Microsoft has posted several introductory guides on its site. These guides explain what has changed in Windows 8 and how to do basic tasks on the new system; they can be found here.

Q&A: Animating Your Own GIF

Q.

In an earlier post you said: “In case you want to give GIF-animating a try, several sites and programs available around the Web have tutorials or software to convert regular video clips (or a collection of images) into animated GIF files.” How exactly do I do it?

A.

An animated GIF is a special image file created from multiple frames that appear to be moving in a constant loop. You can make them from your own photos with photo-editing software on your computer, a smartphone app or a Web site that converts your uploaded pictures.

Before you decide how you want to make your animated GIF file, you should select the images to use for the project, like a sequence of pictures of a puppy jumping around. All the images used should be sized to the same dimensions.

The fewer pictures used, the faster and choppier the animation will be in the final GIF file. Some basic animated GIF files just use four images. For more fluid, video-like motion, use more images in the sequence.

Recent versions of Adobe Photoshop Elements, a popular photo-editing program designed for home users, can make animated GIFs in about five steps using the Layers feature of the program. Adobe's site has instructions here.
The open-source GIMP photo-editing software can also make animated GIF files.

Several Web sites let you upload your photos or video clips for automatic animated-GIF conversion. Some of these include Gifninja, Gickr, MakeaGIF and Picasion.

If you want to convert a few frames of a video clip from YouTube, you can find step-by-step tutorials online that explain how to create an animated GIF with Adobe Photoshop. Another tutorial has steps using free software for Windows. If you want to make your GIF animations on the go, search your mobile app store for suitable software; Gifboom is one such mobile app with iOS and Android versions available.



Monday, November 5, 2012

A Key Addition to Phones Lacking Keyboards

Some phone shoppers bemoan the steady disappearance of physical keyboards. But having one means your phone will be heavier and fatter than most. Plus there's the possibility of suffering “BlackBerry shame.”

But you aren't necessarily stuck with the small selection of keyboard phones. The electronics maker Favi makes a portable Bluetooth keyboard with a touchpad that can add a complete set of physical keys to a phone.

Billed as the “Favi Mini Bluetooth Keyboard with Touchpad Mouse Plus Laser Pointer,” the keyboard will connect to any Bluetooth device. To accommodate the full keyboard and the touch screen, the $80 device is a bit larger than the average mobile phone. It easily fits into a pocket, but not perhaps a t the same time as your phone.

They keyboard has keys that are specific to Android, like Back, Home and Menu keys, and also keys that you won't find on common phone keyboards, like audio and video controls. Although the keyboard works with an iPhone, some of the functions didn't, including the touchpad.

Pairing was easy. There is a clearly marked Bluetooth button that you tap to connect with other devices.

The company claims a battery life of about a week in use, 30 days in standby. The keyboard can be found online and in Staples stores.

Typing was relatively simple on the slightly crowned keys, although I prefer keys with a little grip to them â€" these are hard plastic. The touchpad has a tap-to-enter feature, which wasn't always reliable, but usually worked. And of course, as the mouthful of a name indicates, there is a laser pointer built in, for presentations and amusing your cat.



A Blog That Kept Time in Afghanistan and Iraq Plans to Shut Down

Voices

Four years ago, I began a blog on the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq called CORKSPHERE. I started it because as a military veteran I felt the wars were not getting the attention they deserved from the mainstream news media. Soon, I expect to end it.

I was drafted in 1951 and trained as a combat engineer. During the Korean War - “The Forgotten War” - I served stateside, handling classified documents, but my company shipped out to Korea and suffered heavy casualties. After I received an honorable discharge on Aug. 5, 1953, I moved to Los Angeles and enrolled at UCLA, majoring in journalism.

Over the years, I was a picture editor at CBS television, an account executive for a public relations firm in Hollywood and then the head of my own firm in Chicago. I even wrote a gossip column and an opinion column for a chain of newspapers in suburban Chicago. I'm 83 years old and live in the same home on Chicago's Far Southwest Side we have lived in for 50 years.

But I have always remained interested in veterans' issues. And so when the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq began, I vowed that I would not allow them to turn into “forgotten wars,” and that I would do everything possible to bring the conflicts into the homes of the American public through a blog of my own.

My goal initially was to bring to readers the very latest videos and articles on what was happening in Iraq and Afghanistan. I used a number of Web sites, including YouTube, Yahoo, Iraq Today, Al Jazeera and videos that were sent to me by military personnel serving in the combat theaters. It was tedious at first because I didn't have the contacts needed to provide information on a daily basis from the war zones.

However, as days stretched into months and months into years, the blog became very popular, mostly with military families and ve terans, and at its peak it was pulling in over 3,000 page views a day.

The blog passed one million hits over a year ago. But something was happening: both the news media and the American public were suffering from “war fatigue.” Interest in the blog was waning.

Blog viewership dropped to under 200 hits a day, and even though I was posting fresh material on Facebook and Twitter, it became more and more obvious to me that the American public was no longer very interested in a conflict that, in the case of the Afghan war, had entered its 12th year.

I'm a realist and I'm fully aware that after so many years it is hard for people to continue to care deeply about a conflict that doesn't seem to have any end goal or sense of mission. So a few weeks ago, I decided I would stop the blog after the election. (I'm leaving the door open just a bit to a last-minute change of heart.) If I do stop posting, however, I intend to keep it on the Internet as a historical r eference for anyone interested in the Iraq and Afghan wars.

There have been many gratifying moments. One involved a woman who wrote me after I had posted a video of a firefight in Afghanistan that included her son. She said that she had not heard from him in weeks and that she was thrilled to be able to see him in the video. She went on to tell me what a wonderful job I was doing for all the military families who felt as she did, that the media had let them down in its coverage of the Afghan war.

Another time, I received a comment from an American journalist who was staying at a hotel in Baghdad. I had posted a news report and video about how the fortified “green zone” was under mortar fire. The reporter wondered if I had more information on the attack because he was hunkered down in the hotel and couldn't go outside. Unfortunately, I was unable to help him, other than to let him know that there were no American casualties.

Despite those many gratef ul readers, it is hard for me not to feel dismayed about the lack of interest and coverage of the end of the Iraq war, and much of the war in Afghanistan. Even in a heated presidential campaign, there has been virtually no discussion of the raging Afghan conflict.

Iraq is still going through a very rough transition and there are an increasing number of suicide attacks and roadside bombings aimed at the Iraqi people by any number of militant groups who are in opposition to the present Iraq government.

Afghanistan could and possibly will slip back into Taliban control when the United States pulls its forces out in 2014. But I believe we have done our best to train the Afghan National Army and now it is time for the Afghan people to solve their own problems and provide security for their people.

I just wish we were discussing those developments more as a nation.

Bill Corcoran, a retired public relations executive who lives near Chicago, was a combat engi neer in the United States Army. He received an honorable discharge as a corporal.



An Almost-Sure Winner: The Ranks of House Service Veterans

Regardless of what happens in the presidential election on Tuesday, more veterans are likely to be elected to the House of Representatives, according to a new analysis by George Washington University's Graduate School of Political Management.

The report by the school's Center for Second Service concludes that, barring a major surprise on Tuesday, there will be a net gain of as many as eight veterans in the House. The Senate, however, seems almost certain to have fewer veterans.

A gain of even just one veteran in the House would reverse a 40-year trend in which the number has dropped in every election except one since 1971, said Seth Lynn, a Marine Corps veteran who is the center's director.

There are 92 veterans in the House and 26 in the Senate, the lowest number in a century or more, Mr. Lynn said.

Mr. Lynn said the analysis was drawn from the number of veterans nominated by the two major parties and then determining through various sources, inclu ding The New York Times, whether they were running in closely contested, heavily Democratic or heavily Republican districts.

The researchers found that 189 veterans were running from the two parties, about the same as in every other Congressional election since 2002. A larger number are Republicans: 120, compared with 69 Democrats. In 2006, the two parties nominated roughly equal numbers of veterans in House races.

Unless there is a tidal wave of support for Democrats running in heavily Republican districts, which is not predicted by polls, 92 to 100 veterans are expected to win, with a strong likelihood that the number will be more than 92, he said.

“I'm fairly confident we'll see more veterans in the House after the election than we do now,” Mr. Lynn said.

One reason for the anticipated increase, Mr. Lynn said, is that the Republicans nominated many veterans to run in safe districts. That was less often the case in past elections, and was less o ften the case this year among Democrats.

Mr. Lynn found that only 15 percent of the Democratic veterans who were challenging incumbents this year were running in what he considered winnable districts. That was half the percentage of Republican challengers running in such races.

The center is a new venture created by the university and Mr. Lynn, the founder of a nonprofit group called Veterans Campaign, to train veterans to become involved in politics through lectures, courses and fellowships.

James Dao is an editor of At War. Contact him via his Times Topics page. You can follow him on Twitter at @jimdao.



Q&A: Declining a Kindle\'s Special Offers

Q.

How do I turn off the ads on my Kindle e-reader?

A.

If you purchased a Kindle labeled “With Special Offers,” you bought a model that was discounted because of the advertisements shown on the reader's screen saver and along the bottom of the home screen. If you want to remove the ads, you can do so - but Amazon requires you to make up the price difference (usually $15 to $30, depending on the model) between what you paid for a “Special Offers” Kindle and the same model that was more expensive, but ad-free.

To turn off the ads (or as Amazon calls it, “unsubscribe from special offers”), log onto the Manage Your Kindle page with your Amazon user name and password. In the Manage Your Devices area, find your Kindle model and click the plus (+) icon to show additional details. In the Special Offers area, click Edit and follow along to turn off the ads. You should see how much the bill will be for turning off the advertisements.

When you have adjusted your Kindle preferences online, connect the e-reader to your wireless network so it can update itself. Amazon will then send you an e-mail notification to confirm that you have opted out and paid for it.



Friday, November 2, 2012

App Smart Extra: More Movie Times

This week's App Smart column was about apps that can help you find your way to the right movie theater to see the film you want to see at a time you want to see it.

The Flixster app. The Flixster app.

Luckily there are a huge number of different apps that say they can help you find where to see a movie. One of the most popular is the Flixster app, free on both iOS and Android. Like its rival Fandango it tries to do almost everything to help you decide which movie to see and then to get you to a theater. This app can also sell you tickets to see movies at participating theaters, and packs in review data from Rotten Tomatoes. As a couple of bonus features it also lets you manage your Netflix queue and there's an option to stream and download some full-length movies to your device.

Despite Flixster's complex functionality, this app somehow still manages to preserve a relatively simple design. The app has also been regularly updated to keep it running smoothly and showing relevant dataâ€"most recently just a few weeks ago.

Also worth remembering is the fact that Apple is one of the better places online to find new movie trailers, and that for some time now Apple has offered the chance to find movie showtimes and theater info via its trailers Web page. Since this page is accessible by smartphone web browser it may be just as useful as a dedicated movie showtimes app. Plus it comes with Apple's clear and simple design.

The Landmark Theaters app. The Landmark Theaters app.

You can also search the app stores for an app that matches your favorite movie theater company, as many of these maintain their own apps. Landmark, which shows a lot of indie films, has its own free app. Some of these companies are also country-specific, and may be the best place to find local data when touring. Visiting Great Britain., for example, you could check out the Odeon app (free on iTunes), which even includes times for this brand's famous Leicester Square cinema. UCI's free iOS app would probably serve you well if you're in Italy, and so on.

Extra Quick Call

With the arrival of its new operating system Windows 8, Microsoft has updated its free Smartglass app with a list of new features. The app's designed to work as a second screen companion to your Xbox 360, showing data on your games and TV shows and also letting you control your Xbox. The app is one of the earliest Windows 8 apps out there.



Q&A: Putting the iPad on the Big Screen

Q.

Is there a way to show iBooks pages on my iPad on an HDTV screen? If so, what would I need to do it?

A.

You can display the pages of an iBook currently on the iPad's screen on the television with the built-in “video-mirroring” technology in the iPad 2 and current Retina display models. In addition to books, you can mirror apps, games, movies or whatever else your iPad is showing at the moment.

Depending on your setup, you can mirror the iPad's screen with an HDMI cable and an adapter (like Apple's Digital AV Adapter) that connects the tablet to the TV. In addition to a model that fits the older 30-pin Dock Connector ports on older iPads, Apple's digital adapter is also available in a version that fits the Lightning port connector on the new iPad Mini and fourth-generation iPad model.

If you prefer to do it without wires instead, you can stream the mirrored image over a wireless network and through a n Apple TV (second-generation or later) connected to the television. This approach requires buying one of Apple's $99 set-top boxes and having a home network that uses the 802.11a, 802.11g or 802.11n standard if you do not have these in place already.

If you opt to connect the iPad to the TV with the HDMI cable and adapter, use the television remote control to switch the TV to display the input from the iPad's screen. Once you open an iBook on the iPad, the image should be mirrored on the TV.

If you choose the Apple TV and wireless method, switch the TV's input display to the Apple TV. Open the iBook you want to show. Double-click the iPad's home button to show the row of recently used apps and swipe from left to right until you see the AirPlay icon. Tap it to open the menu, where you can select the Apple TV as the display screen and tap the Video Mirroring button to On. Apple has illustrated instructions for video-mirroring the iPad screen with AirPlay here.



Thursday, November 1, 2012

Receiving Ashes Before Confronting Afghanistan\'s Dust

Commentary: A Soldier Writes

It was Ash Wednesday, Feb. 22, 2012; I would be leaving early the next morning.

That night, I stepped out into a brisk New York City evening and set off for the 6 train. I needed a break; the packing list from Fort Hood, the mobilization station for my National Guard unit, was starting to blur into the separate one published by my unit, and I was trying to parse the necessities from the “we told you so” items that would be needed only in a dire emergency.

The mental work of buying sheets and pillows (a substitution for a three-layer sleeping bag that took up more space than it was worth for a logistics officer like myself) built up; a long walk to the East Harlem Target to buy detergent and sunscreen had the feel of my own personal Gethsemane. I was reaching a point of exhaustion. I would take what I could f it, and my wife would have to mail me the rest once I hit the ground in Kandahar in April.

The day had been bright and clear, the weather unseasonably warm; the night cooled the neighborhood off, but not unpleasantly so. I descended underground and paid my fare; I was heading only two stops to 96th Street, but the predictable stop-and-go of the subway, its hiss and whoosh of recycled air and its pleasantly automated voices (ones that know no anticipation) calmed me. The doors opened at 96th, and I climbed back out into the night and headed through the doors of St. Francis de Sales Church.

St. Francis greeted me at the door, his hand held up in a sign of grace, his solemn eyes looking beyond me. Mary and Joseph gazed beatifically down the length of the church, parents either cosmically accepting of their son's grim fate, or simply unaware. Dozens of people gathered in the aisles, stumbled over strangers to get to saved seats and scolded children as they contorted every which way to get comfortable. The observant stood side by side with the relapsed (at least for the night). I edged in behind the last pew, comfortably anonymous, and breathed deeply the smell of incense as I watched the priest prepare for the service.

Although I was more of a cultural Catholic than an observant one, I knew I was beginning my time in the Wilderness. I had come to characterize my deployment this way: it came at the tail end of a war that few regarded with interest anymore, a war that became more violent as we sought harder to stabilize it. Afghanistan was alive to me, a seething mass of humanity that sought to bleed us where it could not rend us. If I struggled with it, and outlasted it, I thought that I might lose a piece of myself, but that perhaps I would gain something in the process, something that would go deep and hold fast when the winds of life howled.

I did not know yet that there would be days of surprising grace, nor that one of t hose days would come in Kuwait when, my resolve sapped by exhaustion, heat, and anxiety for the war I was headed toward, I would gather courage from following my brother-in-law, a fellow officer in my unit, onto the plane to Kandahar. That the plea for forgiveness in the Our Father would one day be words whispered longingly to the dead and to those still living, to the soldiers we had lost and the ones we still sought desperately to protect. And that the words of the nunc dimittis would take on a deeper urgency as our time grew short, a request to simply go in peace.

And, that we would be drawing toward Bethlehem as we shook off the desert and prepared to return to our civilian lives, to confront worlds gone strange to us, where once we knew them well.

The service drew to a close after we received our ashes. It was time to return to my bags and their weight. Although I did not know it as I soon would, Kandahar would be ashes and dust - and, from that, rebirth.

John Bilby is a New Jersey National Guard soldier currently deployed to Kandahar Airfield, Afghanistan, as a battalion transportation officer. He was born and raised in Belmar, N.J., and is a resident of New York City, where he is enrolled in a teacher preparation program at the City University of New York. He has been in the National Guard for six years and is scheduled to redeploy stateside in January 2013.



Tip of the Week: Gmail in Many Languages

While hardware keyboards can be frustrating when trying to communicate by e-mail with people around the world, Google's new collection of Input Tools for its Gmail service helps expand the options for typing in different languages and non-Western character sets. These Input Tools include on-screen virtual keyboards designed for languages like Korean, Hebrew and Arabic, as well as a transliteration feature that converts typed letters used for English words into the same phonetic sounds produced by another chosen alphabet. Google also provides an Input Method Editor that converts keystrokes on a Western/Latin-character keyboard into characters used by the Chinese and Japanese languages.

To use the Input Tools with Gmail, you need to turn them on in the Settings area. Log into your Gmail account on the Web, click the gear-shaped icon on the right side and select Settings.

On the Settings screen, click the General tab and under Language, click on “Show advanced o ptions.” Turn on the checkbox next to “Enable input tools” and select the languages you wish to add. Click the OK button and then click the Save Changes button on the Gmail Settings page.

Once the Input Tools have been added, they appear as menu options under the keyboard icon on the top right side of the Gmail window. Google has further instructions for using Input Tools with Gmail here.



Headphones That Blend Fashion and Performance

The Crossfade M-100 headphones from V-Moda are built with a steel frame, and a hinged mechanism allows them to fold up for easy storage.The Crossfade M-100 headphones from V-Moda are built with a steel frame, and a hinged mechanism allows them to fold up for easy storage.

V-Moda, the audio company started by Val Kolton, a professional musician, has always made gear â€" headphones, earphones and amplifiers â€" that's durable and fashionable. Its latest offering, the Crossfade M-100 headphones, is no exception.

The M-100 is built with a steel frame and a strong, flexible headband that can bend flat. The over-the-ear memory foam cushions are comfortable even after several hours of use. And the exterior of the cups feature interc hangeable metal shields that can be customized in a variety of colors and engraved with a name or logo.

The headphones come with two Kevlar-reinforced cables, one with a microphone for making phone calls and the other with an extra connector for sharing your music. And a hinged mechanism allows the headphones to fold up for easy storage in a sturdy “exoskeleton” case.

But all that attention to design doesn't mean much if the sound isn't good. And the sound here is excellent. I noticed new depths and subtleties while listening to albums I've had for years. I felt wrapped in the music, even at low volumes, and I never felt the need to turn up the volume to get a better listening experience.

The M-100 is not noise-cancelling, but its ergonomic design helps isolate noise, immersing you in music (this feature is especially beneficial in cacophonous environments, like on the subway). When I tried the headphones for phone calls, however, I found it disconcerti ng to hear my voice echoing in my head, and eventually I had to take the headphones off.

At $300, the Crossfade M-100 headphones are priced to compete on the high end of the market.