Furyk one ahead after nine holes at U.S. Open - Reuters
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Three contenders ... RSS reader apps - The Border Mail
YOU probably don't have time to visit all of your favourite sites and services every day. Thankfully RSS, or Really Simple Syndication, can bring them all to you. Many websites include an RSS feed, usually indicated by an orange and white icon. By clicking on the icon and subscribing to the RSS feed you can be automatically notified when new content is posted.
To subscribe to an RSS feed you'll need an RSS reader, which acts a little like an email client. You'll find basic RSS readers built into many web browsers and email clients. But if you're looking for extra bells and whistles, you'll find stand-alone RSS applications for desktops, smartphones and tablets, along with online RSS readers that run in a browser. Google Reader is an impressive online RSS reader and some RSS apps rely on Google Reader for managing your RSS subscriptions. If you regularly jump between desktop and mobile devices, you might find the browser-based Google Reader is best for you.
People often use RSS to keep track of when new blog posts, news stories, podcasts or video clips are published. Often the RSS feed only contains a snippet and a link to the original webpage. But RSS isn't just for news junkies. It can also let you subscribe to everything from television guides, weather forecasts and news bulletins to daily shopping deals and auction results.
In the past few years services such as Facebook and Twitter have started to usurp the role of RSS. But while social media services rise and fall, RSS is a universal standard that can't be controlled, censored or shut down. Another benefit is that you don't need to create an account or hand over your details to subscribe to an RSS feed, so you're not inundated with advertising and spam.
RSS readers were initially simple, text-based affairs that looked like email inboxes. But the rise of touchscreen tablets has spawned a new generation of slick RSS readers that look more like newspapers and draw on a range of news sources. Some RSS readers can also tap into your social media feeds, displaying them alongside your RSS feeds. Today we're looking at three slick RSS readers designed for Apple and Android gadgets.
Flipboard
iPhone, iPad - free
flipboard.com
Reviewer's rating: 4.5/5
Flipboard draws news from a wide range of sources, but it also lets you tap into your Facebook, Twitter and Google Reader RSS feeds. Flipboard mimics the look of a newspaper, with editable sections such as news, sport and technology. You can change the publications from which they draw stories. Each section presents on a newspaper-style layout that mixes stories from different publications. You can swipe to turn pages, tap on a story to read it and then swipe to jump straight to the next story. The layout makes it easy to skim stories from a range of feeds. You can send stories to Facebook, Twitter or email. You can also save them to ''read it later'' services such as Instapaper, Pocket and Readability, but you can't access your saved lists from Flipboard.
MobileRSS
iPhone, iPad - free ($2.99 Pro removes ads)
mobilerssapp.com
Reviewer's rating: 4/5
Lacking a fancy interface, MobileRSS is purely an RSS reader that is entirely dependent on Google Reader. The two-column display lists your feeds on the left. On the right are the six most recent stories in the selected feed and you can swipe down to see more. When reading a story you can swipe across directly to the next item. MobileRSS doesn't contain a categorised library of high-profile RSS feeds, although Google Reader does. You can send stories to a range of services, including Facebook, Twitter, Delicious, Pocket, Instapaper and Evernote, but you can't import feeds from social media or ''read it later'' services. Similar to Pulse, MobileRSS is better suited to people who want to scroll through a few important feeds rather than browse a wide range of news sources.
Pulse
iPhone, iPad, Android - free
pulse.me
Reviewer's rating: 3/5
Pulse presents your RSS feeds in rows, displaying four stories a feed. You can swipe across to see more stories or down to see more feeds. When reading a story you can swipe to jump to the next story. Pulse lets you add RSS feeds from its library as well social media feeds such as Facebook, Twitter, Google Reader, Reddit and Digg. You can save stories to services such as Instapaper, Pocket (formerly Read it Later) and Evernote. Strangely you can't save to Readability but you can read stories you've saved to Readability by other means. Pulse is great if you want to scroll through a few important feeds but if you're looking to browse a wide range of news sources for interesting stories then Flipboard might be more appealing to you.
GLOBAL MARKETS-Euro, shares jump in relief rally after Greek vote - Reuters UK
* Euro hits 1-month high around $1.2748
* MSCI Asia ex-Japan up 1.7 pct, Nikkei up 1.8 pct
* U.S. crude up 1 pct to $84.90 a barrel
* Gold down 0.3 pct, Treasury 10-yr yields rise to 1.65 pct
SINGAPORE, June 18 (Reuters) - The euro jumped to a one-month high and Asian shares rose nearly 2 percent on Monday after Greece's election delivered a slim parliamentary majority to pro-bailout parties, a result seen as crucial to European leaders' efforts to hold the euro together.
U.S. stock index futures and riskier commodities such as crude oil and copper also rose, while gold fell after a rally last week, when investors had looked to bullion as a safe haven amid fears the election could trigger financial turmoil.
But analysts cautioned there were still plenty of hurdles ahead and the initial positive market reaction could prove to be short-lived.
"The question is whether there will be a sustained rebound as there's still so many things to sort out - the euro zone's fiscal problems and Spanish banks," said Masayuki Doshida, senior market analyst at Rakuten Securities in Tokyo.
Parties in Greece that broadly support the 130 billion euro EU/IMF bailout will begin forging a government on Monday. The parties, New Democracy and PASOK, would have a parliamentary majority.
Financial markets had feared a victory for SYRIZA, the radical leftists opposed to the austerity package of job, wage and pension cuts that are a condition of the bailout, without which Greece would be bankrupt.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia Pacific shares outside Japan rose 1.7 percent and Tokyo's Nikkei share average jumped 1.8 percent. U.S. S&P 500 futures were trading around 0.4 percent higher.
"It's a temporary rally but we're seeing broad gains because the global situation has changed now that the prospect of a 'Drachmageddon' has disappeared," said Fumiyuki Nakanishi, general manager of investment and research at SMBC Friend Securities in Tokyo.
The euro was up around 0.4 percent at about $1.2685, having climbed as far as $1.2748, its highest level in a month. The U.S. dollar index eased 0.2 percent.
U.S. crude rose 1 percent to around $84.90 a barrel, Brent crude gained nearly $1 to above $98.50 and copper was 0.6 percent higher around $7,556 a tonne.
Safe-haven assets retreated, with gold down 0.3 percent around $1,623 an ounce and benchmark U.S. Treasury 10-year yields rising to around 1.65 percent from about 1.58 percent in last U.S. trade on Friday.
CRISIS NOT OVER
As well as cheering investors, the Greek election result should also come as a relief for world leaders who are due to kick off a G20 meeting in Mexico on Monday.
A statement from the Group of Seven major industrialised nations said it was in "all our interests" for Greece to remain in the euro zone while respecting its international bailout commitments.
But amid the relief, investors' focus was already returning to the many unresolved elements of Europe's deep-seated debt crisis, not to mention concerns over a faltering U.S. recovery and China's transition to a lower growth trajectory.
"We are back to guessing whether or not we will see a growth pact and eurobonds," said Westpac Bank foreign exchange strategists Robert Rennie and Sean Callow in a note. "We are back to guessing when China will come up with a fiscal package to help stabilise a sharply slowing Chinese economy."
Greece's economy remains in deep crisis after five years of recession, Spain has been pushed into seeking 100 billion euros from Europe to rescue its banks and Italy's poor growth prospects and high debt have put it in the bond markets' sights.
After reaching a euro-era high above 7 percent on Thursday, Spain's 10-year bond yield eased 6 basis points from its closing level to 6.90 percent on Friday, while Italian yields fell 15 bps to 6.01 percent.
"Short-covering is well and good but will long-term investors decide that the crisis is over and move back into peripheral countries' debt, or equities? We fear that is highly unlikely," said Sebastian Galy, strategist at Societe Generale in New York.
Galy said more political and structural change was needed to shore up the euro zone's financial system, and a growth plan was urgently required as well.
"The bottom line is that Europe still needs to agree on something that smells and feels a lot more like joint funding than anything that has been suggested so far." (Additional reporting by Ian Chua in Sydney and Sophie Knight in Tokyo; Editing by Neil Fullick)
ForeignPolicy.com's RSS Feeds - Foreign Policy
RSS, which stands for "really simple syndication," is a fast and convenient way of keeping track of the latest and greatest news and views from your favorite Web sites.
Here's how it works: You set up an "RSS reader" (also known as an "aggregator") on your computer and then pick the sites you read regularly -- e.g. www.foreignpolicy.com. Most sites have an RSS feed that displays headlines and a short blurb that explains what the article is about, or in many cases, the full text of the article or blog post in question.
If you already have an RSS reader installed (or if you use on online tool such as Bloglines or Google Reader), simply start the software and add one or more of the feed addresses below:
Featured content (a digest of the day's best items from ForeignPolicy.com):
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/issue/featured_content.php
Flash Points (running highlights from ForeignPolicy.com's blogs):
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/issue/flash_points.php
Other feeds:
Foreign Policy's main feed (magazine articles and Web exclusives):
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/node/feed
twitter/FP_magazine: Follow us on Twitter:
http://twitter.com/FP_magazine
Passport: A blog by the editors of Foreign Policy
http://blog.foreignpolicy.com/node/feed
The AfPak Channel: A special project of Foreign Policy and the New America Foundation
http://afpak.foreignpolicy.com/node/feed (blog)
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/taxonomy/term/655/0/feed (articles)
The Middle East Channel: A special project of Foreign Policy, the New America Foundation, and the Project on Middle East Political Science
http://mideast.foreignpolicy.com/node/feed (blog)
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/taxonomy/term/32/all/feed (articles)
Turtle Bay: Reporting from inside the United Nations
http://turtlebay.foreignpolicy.com/node/feed
Daniel W. Drezner: Global politics, economics, and pop culture
http://drezner.foreignpolicy.com/node/feed
Marc Lynch: Abu Aardvark's Middle East blog
http://lynch.foreignpolicy.com/node/feed
The Best Defense: Tom Ricks's daily take on national security
http://ricks.foreignpolicy.com/node/feed
David J. Rothkopf: How the world is really run
http://rothkopf.foreignpolicy.com/node/feed
Stephen M. Walt: A realist in an ideological age
http://walt.foreignpolicy.com/node/feed
The Cable: Reporting inside the foreign policy machine
http://thecable.foreignpolicy.com/node/feed
Madam Secretary: An obsessive blog about Hillary Clinton
http://hillary.foreignpolicy.com/node/feed
Net Effect: How technology shapes the world
http://neteffect.foreignpolicy.com/node/feed
Shadow Government: Notes from the loyal opposition
http://shadow.foreignpolicy.com/node/feed
The Call: Political futures from Ian Bremmer and Eurasia Group
http://eurasia.foreignpolicy.com/node/feed
Note: RSS feeds are also available for any given topic on ForeignPolicy.com, such as the United Nations, politics, or Iran. To find out if FP has a topic page on a given subject, type http://www.foreignpolicy.com/category/topic/[the subject] in your browser, e.g. http://www.foreignpolicy.com/category/topic/india.="fp_red">
China May home prices fall, pace of declines picks up - Reuters
BEIJING |
BEIJING (Reuters) - Average home prices in China's 70 major cities fell 1.5 percent in May from a year earlier, Reuters calculations based on official data published on Monday showed, and the pace of decline picked up in major cities such as Shanghai.
It was the third straight monthly decline on a year-on-year basis since the government imposed strict curbs on property speculation more than two years ago, with the price decline deepening from a fall of 1.2 percent in April.
In month-on-month terms, home prices fell 0.1 percent, the eighth straight decline since the Reuters weighted index was launched in January 2011.
The National Bureau of Statistics said new home prices fell 1.2 percent in Beijing in May from a year earlier and were down 1.6 percent in Shanghai.
Month-on-month, they remained unchanged in Beijing and were down 0.1 percent in Shanghai.
Many Chinese buyers worry about a rebound in property prices as the government loosens monetary policy to spur a slowing economy, although Beijing has retained its administrative curbs on the real estate market, local media reported on Monday.
"It seems home prices and tightening policies have reached their bottom so quite a few home buyers are starting to panic again," the People's Daily, the mouthpiece of China's ruling Communist Party, said in an analytical report. This is reminiscent of 2009 when prices doubled in several months after Beijing rolled out a 4 trillion yuan ($628.43 billion) stimulus package, the newspaper said.
China has relaxed monetary and fiscal policies after a more than two-year long tightening campaign to cool the country's red-hot property market as the euro zone debt crisis hit global financial markets and braked domestic growth.
The central bank cut interest rates on June 7, the first such move in more than three years, after it lowered banks' reserve requirement ratio three times since November.
"Although these measures are not aimed at salvaging the property market, they are a shot in the arm for the cash-strapped real estate market," the People's Daily added.
Meanwhile, many Chinese cities have relaxed policies, although the central government has maintained its curbs against speculators.
These measures have changed market sentiment and property sales have shown signs of a recovery since March.
The semi-official China Securities Journal reported on Monday that transactions of new and existing homes combined rose 46.5 percent in Beijing in the first half of June as compared with the same period last year, citing data from the local housing bureau website.
The newspaper also cited local consultancy Home Link as saying that 21 of the 76 new property projects that hit the market so far this year saw a rise in transaction prices.
However, high inventories will cap any quick rebound in home prices in the near term, it cited Home Link analyst Chen Xue as saying.
Vanke 000002.SZ, China's largest developer by sales, said earlier this month it would take about 11 months to sell down unsold stocks in key cities such as Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen.
The company's sales rose 19 percent in May from the previous month to 10.72 billion yuan ($1.68 billion), reversing a decline in April.
($1 = 6.3651 Chinese yuan)
(Reporting by Langi Chiang and Kevin Yao; Editing by Jacqueline Wong & Kim Coghill)
Modi needs to review style of working: RSS mouthpiece - in.news.yahoo.com
New Delhi, June 2 (IANS) In an apparent disapproval by the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) of Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi's style of working, an article in the organisation's mouthpiece has indicated that the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has several prime ministerial candidates.
It also disapproved of Modi's reported insistence on resignation of Sanjay Joshi from the BJP's national executive last week.
The article, which figures in the latest issue of Panchjanaya, said it was being felt that Modi needed to do a rethink about organisational capabilities.
"It seems Narendra Modi needs to review his style of working and organisational ability," it said.
The article assumes significance because its author Devendra Swaroop is a former editor of Panchjanaya and has access to views of the RSS insiders.
"The role of Narendra Modi in the Sanjay Joshi episode at BJP's national executive meeting in Mumbai is worth considering...why despite having faith in the Sangh, Modi could not control his unhappiness towards a fellow RSS functionary is a mystery. He made Joshi's presence a prestige issue and allowed the media to attack the BJP and the Sangh," the article said.
It also attacked Modi over media reports about Joshi changing his travel plans and boarding a plane instead of going by train after the Mumbai meeting as the train would have touched places in Gujarat.
"It allowed opponents of the BJP to speak against Modi," it said.
Modi apparently insisted that he would attend the conclave only if his bete noire Joshi resigned from the party's national executive and the party bowed to his demand.
In a dig at Modi's prime ministerial ambitions, it said that the BJP had several chief ministers and central leaders who were capable of being its prime ministerial candidates. But it said that the decision should be taken by the the parliamentary party after the party won the Lok Sabha election.
The article in the RSS mouthpiece slamming Modi's action at the BJP executive close to veteran BJP leader L.K. Advani launching an attack on party president Nitin Gadkari, saying "the mood within the party is not upbeat".
Advani said in his blog that people were angry with the Congress-led government but they were upset with the BJP too.


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