Showing posts with label Wall Street. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wall Street. Show all posts

Apple iPhone SE - Small Package, Big Performance

Those trying to "downsize" from the too-big-to-fit-into-my-pocket smartphone market might want to require a tough verify Apple's new iPhone SE.
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Apple's new iPhone SE.

The phone offers lots of constant options found in its larger counterparts, all wrapped in a very smaller package.

The device is lightweight and compact. It well fits into your hand. although solely four inches, it's still powerful.

The SE utilizes the A9 chip, constant one found within the iPhone 6s with a 64-bit design. Apple's latest iOS9 software is additionally enclosed.


Users can notice the membrane show found on nearly each recent Apple product and a 12-megapixel camera for prime quality photos and 4K video. 4K is touted to be fourfold the resolution of 1080HP video.

The membrane show will act sort of a flash for Facetime and illuminate photos in low lightweight and in the dark.

Apple says the phone is crafted from bead-basted Al with matte-chamfered edges. it's a Siri activation feature wherever you do not ought to develop the phone to use it.

Signing up for the iCloud pic library permits one to store all photos and videos. they'll be altered and updated on all devices.

Security is featured with the bit ID. Like different Apple merchandise you'll use your fingerprint to unlock the device.

Business users can appreciate a quicker thanks to transfer apps than that on the iPhone 5s. This includes up to a hundred and fifty Mbps over LTE and up to 433 Mbps over Wi-Fi.

The phone supports voice LTE and Wi-Fi for higher quality band calls. If you have got associate Apple watch you'll keep connected with Bluetooth technology.

A number of apps area unit on the device. Messages can allow you to send texts with photos, videos, and links. Facetime provides video calls to different iPhones, iPads, and Macs.

The Apple Pay app is used at taking part stores and restaurants.

Pricing is that the lowest ever for associate iPhone. Models begin at simply $399 for a sixteen GB model. sixty four GB can add another $100.

Colors embrace house gray, silver, gold and rose gold.

While the iPhone SE isn't being touted as associate Apple breakthrough device, the iPhone seven is definitely next in line for that and will get on the shelves within the fall, it will serve a purpose for people who don't would like a bigger read to scan documents or don't mind the shortage of a number of bells and whistles found on the larger devices.


At a cheaper price, in a very a lot of transportable size, the iPhone SE could also be the right selection for anyone WHO needs to carry a vicinity of the Apple scheme right within the palm of their hand.
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Wall Street protesters inspired by Arab Spring movement

By Michael Saba, CNN
AdBusters and other online activitsts, including hacker collective Anonymous, call for a Saturday march on Wall Street.
AdBusters and other online activitsts, including hacker collective Anonymous, call for a Saturday march on Wall Street.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Internet activists have taken to Twitter, other sites to "Occupy Wall Street" on Saturday
  • Organizer says digital uprisings in places like Egypt and Iran are an inspiration
  • The hacktivist group Anonymous urged its supporters to participate in the sit-in

(CNN) -- It worked in Cairo's Tahrir Square. Now, taking their cue from social-media fueled uprisings in places like Egypt and Iran, a band of online activists hopes it will work on Wall Street.

Kalle Lasn, co-founder of the counterculture magazine AdBusters, has taken to Twitter and other websites to help organize a campaign encouraging tens of thousands of Americans to hold a nonviolent sit-in Saturday in Lower Manhattan, the heart of the U.S. financial district.

This past spring and summer saw a massive groundswell of populist demonstrations against authoritarian regimes in North Africa and the Middle East -- the Arab Spring of 2011.

In Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Bahrain and Syria, protesters took to the streets and occupied public spaces to protest stagnant economies, lack of freedom of expression and regimes that seemed more concerned with consolidating power than addressing the needs of the people.

Each of these revolutions began differently, but they all were organized and fueled by tech-savvy social media users, particularly on Facebook and Twitter. Lasn now wants to use the Internet for a protest in the United States.

"There's a very visceral anger against the financial community," Lasn said. "Many people feel that these people who are financial fraudsters, who basically got away with it, have yet to be brought to justice... It seems like we the people now have to congregate on Wall Street and other financial districts around the world and force the global economic system to move in a better, more just direction."

Adbusters' protest campaign -- with the hashtag #occupywallstreet -- began in July with the launch of a simple campaign website calling for a march through the streets of Lower Manhattan and a sit-in at the New York Stock Exchange, just as demonstrators did in Tunis' November 7 Square and Cairo's Tahrir Square.

The campaign got a sizable boost in August from the hacktivist group Anonymous, which released a short video urging its supporters to participate in the sit-in.

Since then, the movement has seen the addition of planned protests in other countries, including Japan, Israel, Canada and a half-dozen European nations.

The aim of #occupywallstreet is to draw 20,000 protestors to New York's financial district, although Lasn hopes for as many as 90,000.

"In Tunisia and in Egypt, the Internet was used to organize surprising numbers of people to get out into the streets and start a radical, democratic movement for regime change," Lasn said. "Of course, the situation here in America and many European countries is quite different. We're not living under a torturous dictatorship, for one.

"Nonetheless, there's a feeling that the global financial system, the heart of which is in the U.S., in New York, that this system is somehow having its way with us," he said. "There's a feeling that we need a revolution in the way that our economy is run, the way that Washington is run."

This isn't, Lasn stresses, an excuse for rioting and looting like the world recently witnessed in the United Kingdom. It's a call for radical change, but in the tradition of nonviolent protesters like Mahatma Gandhi, he says. If protests turn violent, he fears the message will be lost.

"What we are hoping for is to have a very large number of people turn up in Lower Manhattan and start walking toward Wall Street peacefully, signs in hand," Lasn said. "If we have peaceful assemblies and debates about what our demands to President Obama should be, then bit by bit we can create a situation that will rival what happened in Egypt."

"That would be a wonderful, energizing and positive moment to feel like we the people are in charge," he said.

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