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DaNGeROuS KiLLeR

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  1. Hello, I think this is the problem Put there "Sharp" Good Luck
  2. The 2015 Hyundai Sonata midsize sedan is being recalled to fix a seatbelt buckle, according to NHTSA. | July 14, 2015 | Hyundai Motor Company Hyundai Motor America is recalling 128,804 2015 Hyundai Sonata midsize sedans to fix a problem with the front passenger seatbelt buckle, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. "The affected vehicles have a front passenger seatbelt whose buckle-latch assembly may prevent the front passenger from fastening the seatbelt," said NHTSA in its recall summary. "If the front passenger seatbelt cannot be latched, an occupant sitting in the front passenger seat has an increased risk of injury in the event of a crash." Hyundai told federal safety regulators there are no reports of injuries. The recall is based on warranty claims for seatbelt buckle replacements. The affected Sonatas were built from April 25, 2014 to December 4, 2014. Hyundai dealers will repair or replace the front passenger seatbelt buckle. The recall is expected to begin on August 21. Owners can contact Hyundai customer service at 1-855-671-3059. Edmunds says: Owners should wait for their official recall notice before scheduling a service appointment. But if you have an immediate concern, it's best to contact your dealer now.
  3. 1. A balanced diet Antle says eating too much of one thing or not enough of another can cause a lot of problems for people. Her advice? Have a good variety on your plate every time you eat. "Ideally, what we want to aim for, as a visual, when you look at your plate, you want to make sure half that plate is vegetables, a quarter is protein and a quarter is your starch." 2. Thirsty? Drink water Antle says to avoid sugary drinks and keep pop and coffee to a minimum. She also says flavoured water is no substitute for the real thing. "I think it's really important we get some good old fashioned water back into our systems. Ideally, 2 to 2.5 litres of water a day. The No. 1 trigger for daytime fatigue is lack of water. Dehydration can cause headaches, muscle cramps, things like that as well." 3. Avoid "free" products Antle recommends reducing fat-free, sugar-free and salt-free products. "A lot of times we think that those products are a lot healthier. If something is taken out of a product, something else is added back in. Sometimes with fat-free products there's excessive amounts of sodium added back in. "Sugar-free products are pretty trendy right now because everyone wants to avoid sugar. Typically, I try to avoid sugar-free products and 'no sugar' products as well, things like aspartame, sucralose and saccharin." Antle says recent studies show artificial sweeteners can actually increase the risk of developing Type 2 diabetes. 4. Eat well, eat Often Antle says we should be eating smaller meals every two to three hours throughout the day. "When we go outside the three-hour window of not eating, the body actually switches gears and goes into starvation mode. When we're in starvation mode, it can make us feel tired, lethargic, cranky, irritable, a bit of brain fog sets in. It can actually increase the appetite and actually increase sugar cravings and increase the appetite so it makes us overeat as well. 5. Check your source If you're going to make a lifestyle change, Antle says to educate yourself. "A lot of times we're following trends and fads it could be something that a celebrity put out. Double-check the credentials of the person who is actually delivering the message to you, because it could be something that I heard through the grapevine, it could be the push on the sale of a product." If you plan on getting moving in 2015, here's another disturbing fact that might motivate you even more: according to the Heart and Stroke Foundation, cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death among Canadian men and women. One-quarter of cardiovascular disease related deaths are the direct result of inactivity or lack of exercise. Mike Wahl is director of fitness at Definitions Gym in St. John's. Wahl has advice for sticking with an effective fitness plan. 6. Slow and steady wins the race Wahl says too many people push too hard, too fast when starting an exercise routine. "When you give somebody a program that is too intense for them, it actually puts their body under more stress than they need and they actually get a lack of return." Wahl says to start at a comfortable level and slowly work your way up over time 7. Maximize effort — use big muscles Too many people waste time when they're at the gym," explains Wahl. He says the idea is to do as much as you can in a short period of time and to do that, you should use large muscle groups. "When you are in there, don't stick to small muscle groups. You see people in there training their biceps and their arms and they spend a full hour doing that. "I would suggest why not train a full body type program where you're using big muscles like your legs and then you go and you do big muscles like your chest and your back and you do a variety, when your legs are tired you can then exercise another muscle while they're actively recovering." Wahl says larger muscles require more energy and so working them increases your metabolism to a greater degree. 8. Variety If you do the same exercises at the gym every time, your body will get overused. "Make sure you do a variety, that you use the machines one day, you try free weights another day, you use body weight another day. It keeps you more engaged and it's more entertaining because you're not doing the same thing, it's not as boring," says Wahl. 9. Fuel your body Eating before a workout is critical. Mike Wahl says if you don't fuel up, your body will actually use muscle mass as energy to get you through a workout. "When you lose muscle mass you lower your metabolism, that actually is counter active and you might actually gain weight." Eating after a workout is equally as important. "Protein repairs muscles so make sure that your breakfast or your next meal has a protein source." 10. Get advice To avoid injury, Mike Wahl suggests talking to an expert about a fitness program before you start. If keeping a positive outlook in 2015 is on your resolution list, there are many ways to exercise mental wellness and for good reason. The Canadian Mental Health Association says one in five Canadians will experience mental illness in their lifetime, eight per cent will experience a major depression. The CMHA offers lifestyle tips for improving mental health. Maureen Ennis says it was lifestyle change that helped her come out of a dark period. Ennis is a well-known singer/songwriter in Newfoundland and Labrador. Ennis also struggles with depression. 11. Eat well and exercise Exercise boosts energy and lowers anxiety. Maureen Ennis says she used to eat a lot of processed food and chose to eliminate it from her diet. As for exercise, she tries to walk for an hour everyday. "I don't have to go overboard but I feel really good at the end of that walk for a lot of reasons, I'm inspired. I think everybody needs to take an hour or two for themselves everyday. "It keeps my depression at bay." 12. Get enough sleep Sleeping well makes it easier to cope with stress, concentrate and think positively. Ennis says she used to be a night owl. She says changing her sleeping habit was a key part of coping with depression. "I realized I'm not getting any vitamin D. I sleep all day and I'm up all night and that was causing a big issue with my depression." 13. Connect with others The CMHA says it's important to reach out to people in our lives who support us, celebrate our successes and help us deal with our problems. Maureen Ennis says her sisters provide her with a lot of encouragement. "Sometimes, you know, just finding someone to talk to about a problem or talk it out and get some perspective on it is so important and just connecting with people sometimes just makes things feel not so heavy." 14. Volunteer Being involved in community groups can give you a sense of purpose and satisfaction that paid work cannot. Ennis says anytime she volunteers time to raise money for a worthy cause, the payoff is a huge boost in self-worth. "There's a sense of accomplishment and you feel proud of just making the world a little better. That alone, just getting outside those thoughts in your head that you're not worth something, you are. Everyone can offer something to someone else." 15. Share humour and laugh more Ennis says she thinks people often take themselves too seriously. She describes herself as a perfectionist, but has learned to relax. "You need to be able to brush off a mistake and know that you need to make mistakes to get better. We're not supposed to be perfect." I think everyone would agree perfection is a hard goal to reach, especially when it comes to healthy living. My hope for all of our cbc.ca/nl readers is that this list may help you along in making some improvements in 2015. Happy new year and be well.
  4. Iran's nuclear reactor in Arak, about 150 miles southwest of Tehran, will be redesigned to no longer produce two bombs worth of weapons-grade plutonium every year. A bipartisan group of nuclear and Middle East experts, including five of President Obama’s former senior advisers on Iran, wrote a public letter last month describing the emerging nuclear deal with Iran as weak. They called for a number of improvements, and described the strengthening as a bare-minimum requirement to win their support for the complicated accord. The letter was widely seen as laying down standards that, if unmet, could rally enough support in Congress to kill the deal. As unveiled Tuesday in Vienna, the accord runs to 109 pages of fine print, long lists and paragraph after paragraph of mind-numbing jargon. Even so, many of the new particulars bear on the perceived gaps raised in that letter and, more generally, on what critics and backers of the diplomacy have clashed over for months: whether the pact represents a formidable bar to Iran as a nuclear power or a muddle of half-measures and unwarranted concessions. “This explains why it took so long,” Daryl G. Kimball, the executive director of the Arms Control Association, a private group in Washington, said of the negotiation. “I rate this as one of the most complex agreements — if not the most complex — ever to deal with nuclear issues. It’s much stronger that we expected.” Robert J. Einhorn, a former State Department official now at the Brookings Institution and a signatory to the bipartisan letter, said the sheer weightiness of the formal deal spoke well for its long-term chances of success. “Analysts will be pleasantly surprised,” he said. “The more things are agreed to, the less opportunity there is for implementation difficulties later on.” The accord focuses on restricting Iran’s production of atomic fuel because making the fuel is much more difficult than designing a nuclear weapon. The makers of the Hiroshima bomb left the design untested because they were so confident of its powers. The bipartisan group called for “strict limits” on Iran’s research into better centrifuges. The tall machines spin incredibly fast to purify uranium, which can fuel reactors or atom bombs, depending on its level of enrichment. The issue flared up after Mr. Obama said in an April interview with National Public Radio that Iran could rush for a bomb with almost no warning during the final few years of the 15-year accord, depending on how quickly it mastered the technical nuances of advanced centrifuges. In the formal deal, a dozen paragraphs detail many restrictions on centrifuge research, including strict limits on numbers and types of Iranian machines, including the IR-2m, the IR-4, the IR-6 and the IR-8. Mr. Einhorn called the specificity a positive development. But David Albright, a centrifuge expert and the president of the Institute for Science and International Security, a Washington research group, said the accord should have pressed Iran much harder. “It’s a disappointing concession,” he said of its allowing limited work on advanced centrifuges. “It means Iran could have a tremendously short breakout time” after the last year of the accord. “Breakout” is considered the time that Iran, if so compelled, would need to enrich fuel to the purity needed for a bomb. The letter writers also urged assurances of great freedom for inspectors to monitor the accord as well as to investigate clues that Iran long ago had engaged in secret research on nuclear arms — what diplomats called “possible military dimensions.” Despite Tehran’s recent protestations, the accord laid out many details for enhanced monitoring, including to military sites, Mr. Einhorn said. “They get access anywhere they have suspicions,” he said. He also noted that the full accord featured a mechanism for resolving inspection disputes that would allow Iran to be overruled. The accord goes into many details on increased inspection measures, including the redoubling of the Iran corps of the International Atomic Energy Agency from about 50 to 150 inspectors. It also approves computer networks for accord surveillance and such advanced devices as electronic seals that instantly communicate their status. The standard rules of nuclear inspection let nations influence the means of surveillance, and Iran previously had selected relatively backward gear that often forced teams of inspectors into tedious jobs, as well as painfully long waits for results. Significantly, one of the first documents to emerge Tuesday in Vienna was an inspection pact signed by Yukiya Amano, the international energy agency’s director general, and Ali Akbar Salehi, the head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran. It described a “road map for the clarification of past and present outstanding issues.” The document laid out steps to address the military question, including technical meetings, measures and talks. It said a “separate arrangement” had been reached on Parchin — an Iranian military base from which inspectors have recently been barred. It is the site of suspected experimentation into nuclear arms. The inspection document pledged to have the military assessment completed by the end of the year. Outside experts such as Mr. Albright, in contrast, have warned that full resolution of the knotty issue could take years. One newly revealed inspection measure centers on Tehran’s plans for making plutonium — the other costly metal that can power atom bombs. Early in the negotiations, Iran agreed to redesign a half-built reactor complex ringed by antiaircraft guns, altering the facility known as Arak so it will no longer produce two bombs worth of weapons-grade plutonium every year. The concession, announced in April as part of the preliminary accord, quickly fell off the public radar, a measure, nuclear experts say, of its completeness and lack of ambiguity. “It’s a real success,” Frank N. von Hippel, a physicist who advised the Clinton White House and now teaches at Princeton, said in an interview. “The issue has been so thoroughly addressed that there’s nothing left to discuss.” The Arak redesign, if completed, has potential implications for Iran’s military ambitions. Designers of nuclear arms typically choose plutonium over uranium because it takes less of the dense metal to make a blast of equal size. Weapon designers prefer it especially for missile warheads. The low weight for high power means the projectiles can fly further and hit more distant targets. The final accord spells out in great detail how the Arak reactor is to be redesigned, and its old parts decommissioned. For instance, its old core “will be made
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  6. OneNote is the best Microsoft program you’re probably not using. If you’ve ignored the digital note-taking app because, well, it’s Microsoft, or because you thought “the last thing I need is more software,” then it’s time to reconsider. Microsoft has liberated its digital notebook from Office and put it just about everywhere: Mac, iOS, Android, Chrome, and of course Windows. Read on to discover everything you need to know to start creating a paperless life with OneNote. Who should use OneNote If you do a lot of notetaking, attend multiple meetings during the week, and collaborate with others on projects, then OneNote can keep that flood of info neat and tidy. All your notes—even words in pictures—are searchable inside OneNote, and they’re stored in the cloud and immediately accessible via the OneNote apps for any platform. Plenty of folks point to Evernote as the go-to note-taking app. Evernote does many things well, but I’ve found its best use is as a digital file cabinet for saving web clips, screenshots, receipts, or other random items you want to be able to search for later. (All tools OneNote also offers, it should be noted.) OneNote, on the other hand, is better as a productivity aide, with its focus on typing and hand-writing notes, audio recording and search tools, and smart integration with the rest of Office. Sign in to sync up all your notes. To get started, grab OneNote for your various devices and sign in using a free Microsoft account. You likely already have one if you use Outlook.com email, subscribe to Office 365, or have a Windows 8 device. If you need to create one, be sure to check out the introductory note, which has useful tips for newcomers. OneNote’s design and basics OneNote has a clearly delineated organizational structure that mimics physical note-taking, revolving around notebooks, tabs, and pages. OneNote has a good organizational structure that makes it easy to keep everything in its place. You can have multiple notebooks. Across the top of each notebook are tabs, each one representing what it calls a section. The sections hold the individual notes, which are listed down the right side. You can also nest a note under another note, which keeps related items organized or breaks up a long list. The structure works well for dividing up work tasks—I previously used it for lesson plans when I was a teacher. I could just touch the Lesson Plans tab and then find the proper week among the list of notes. There’s a default tab called QuickNotes. This is where new notes go. Using the Windows + N command sends a clipping of your screen to OneNote, or perhaps you’ve save an article with OneNote’s Chrome or Internet Explorer web clipping tool. You can share a notebook with others: Head to File > Share > Invite People in the notebook you wish to share. This Microsoft-created slide shows OneNote’s basic abilities. This link leads to a full beginner’s guide from Microsoft. (Click to enlarge.) Got it? Good. Now let’s explore the differences between the various versions of OneNote. Want the full OneNote? Get it on Windows While OneNote apps are all slick and supported on numerous platforms, the most full-featured version of Microsoft’s note-taking app is—naturally—found on Windows, where all once-premium features are now free in OneNote 2013. Likewise, OneNote’s closest physical companion is Microsoft’s own Surface Pro 3. You can click the top button on the tablet’s bundled digital stylus to wake the device, automatically fire up a new note, and start inking away. Users with touchscreen devices can write notes with a stylus or finger. An entire tab in OneNote’s Ribbon menu is devoted toward inking tools, including highlight, circle, or digitize options. For example, I’ve clipped map screenshots and used OneNote to draw specific instructions on them. OneNote has many different inking options. Other little tricks that set OneNote apart from the other tools in Office. For example, there’s a clever Ink to Math tool that lets you hand-write an equation, and OneNote will convert it to text. You can also record a lecture or meeting—throw it in a shared note for friends who slept through it. Another interesting feature is the ability to embed other Office files within OneNote. You could, for example, create a miniature Excel spreadsheet and edit it directly within OneNote. It’s probably not a use case you’ll need every day, but hey, it’s there if you need it. You can also quickly toggle between personal and enterprise accounts. OneNote will keep both synced up, yet separate. It’s pretty useful for grabbing something from your personal account while on a work machine. If you’re one of the few and proud rocking a Windows Phone, OneNote comes pre-installed. Windows Phone users can also grab the sublime Office Lens, OneNote’s sister app. Office Lens lets you take a picture of that whiteboard session, business card, or anything else and save it directly to OneNote. Text inside the pictures can even be automatically converted to editable Word or Powerpoint files. (The iOS and Windows Store OneNote apps have similar functionality baked into their camera capabilities.) A less robust version for Mac Earlier this year Microsoft released OneNote for Mac, bringing it to the OS X desktop for the first time. The interface is extremely similar to the Windows version's, but there are fewer tabs in the ribbon across the top—which unfortunately means fewer features. OneNote for Mac carries much of the look and feel over from the Windows version. The deeper integration with Office and the ability to sign in with multiple accounts, for instance, is found only on the Windows variant. IA web app for Chromebooks Yes, even Chromebooks can use OneNote via the service’s slick web interface. Just like with the Mac version, the web app isn’t as powerful as the desktop software, but it does a decent job. OneNote has a powerful web client. I’m most happy to see you have visibility of who’s signed in to a shared file. It’s great for knowing who is pulling their weight on a group project. There’s an “Open in OneNote” button if you’re using Windows or OS X, which lets you view the note in the desktop software instead of the web app. OneNote apps on iOS Now that the massive iPhone 6 Plus is available, OneNote may be the perfect app for writing notes on the run or scribbling quick sketches with your finger or a stylus. Like the Windows version, the iOS app connects to both consumer and enterprise accounts, so it’s perfect for capturing those important meeting notes and saving hilarious Buzzfeed listicles. With iOS 8 you can share directly into OneNote from other apps. Microsoft also built in support for the new Share extension for iOS 8. Use it to send items from Safari, email, or other apps right to OneNote. It’s even on Android Yes, Microsoft even supports OneNote on arch-rival Google’s Android platform. Draw, write, or type in notes on OneNote for Android. Microsoft took advantage of a key Android strength by creating numerous useful widgets. You can access a list of notes or open a specific command—like drawing or taking a picture—right from the Android home screen. Beyond mere smartphone support, OneNote has even embraced Android Wear, so you can take notes by shouting them into your smartwatch, if that’s your thing. Where OneNote needs to improve There’s still some growing room for OneNote, especially if it wants to be more competitive with Evernote. For one, it doesn’t format web clips very well. If you like to save articles for offline or later use, Evernote does it better. OneNote doesn’t have any options for stripping out ads or giving you a choice of where to save it, defaulting to the Quick Notes section. I’ve also found the Android app is still rather buggy. Pen input and moving between sections in particular feel a little janky. Evernote is by no means bug-free, but Microsoft needs to apply more polish if it wants to win over Android users. OneNote’s [CENSORED]ure OneNote has deep potential as a powerful, cross-platform tool if Microsoft can connect all the pieces. The surge of people migrating to phablets, tablets, and touchscreen laptops could only play to OneNote’s favor. But if Microsoft is truly to rule productivity, it needs OneNote to feel at home on every platform. That’s no small task, but Microsoft’s almost there—and it already rocks for everyday note-taking needs. Try it out!
  7. Samsung's Tizen operating system may still be a no-show in smartphones, but millions of consumers will soon use the software in their homes -- possibly without even knowing it. Starting this year, all of Samsung's new smart TVs will run Tizen, the operating system that's been under development for years at the South Korean electronics giant. The software simplifies the company's user interface compared to earlier Samsung smart TV operating systems, and it allows users to more easily connect their TV to nearby Samsung smartphones, tablets and smartwatches. Consumers will also be able to watch live broadcast TV on their mobile devices, anywhere on their home network, even when their TVs are turned off. By putting Tizen in its TVs, Samsung may be able to do something it's so far failed to accomplish with smartphones and smartwatches -- make Tizen mainstream. The software's rocky road to market underscores the difficulties of creating a new mobile platform -- even for a company as large and influential as Samsung. The company ultimately wants Tizen to be the "OS of everything." Until now, the only devices that ran Tizen were some of its digital cameras and a few of Samsung's smartwatches, including the latest Gear S watch. Along with TVs, the company is also working on Tizen-powered home appliances and cars. But none of those devices sell in the same volume as Samsung's TVs. It "might help them penetrate the home in an easier way than through the phone or wearables," said Carolina Milanesi, an analyst with Kantar Worldpanel. The Tizen-powered TV announcement is part of Samsung's news for the 2015 International Consumer Electronics Show taking place in Las Vegas this week. Tizen TVs won't be the only announcement at the company's press conference Monday, but they will play a major role in Samsung's strategy for the year. You can tune into CNET's live blog of the press conference here. Tizen started as Samsung's attempt to distance itself from Google in smartphones. It was also a way for Samsung to better control the user interface on its devices and make money from advertising and services such as apps. The company started talking about the software in early 2013, with promises to release a phone shortly thereafter. Two years after its first Tizen promises, no Tizen-powered phones have hit the market, and Samsung's latest plans to release low-end Tizen phones in India by the end of 2014 didn't happen as planned. It's unclear when the first Tizen smartphone will actually be available or who will want to buy it when it does reach the market. But Samsung has dominated the global TV market for nearly a decade, thanks to its sleek designs and advanced display technology. It outsells rivals such as Vizio, LG, Sony, Panasonic, Sharp and others. Roughly a third of TVs sold in the US come from Samsung, according to analysts, as do nearly half of all smart TVs. Samsung also sells more smartphones than any other rivals, but its position has been slipping. In the third quarter, the most recent data available, Samsung's share of the world's smartphone market dropped to 24 percent from 32 percent in the same period of the previous year, according to IDC. It also relies on Google Android OS for its software, which has limited what it can do with its phones. Smartphones have centered around two main operating systems -- Android and Apple's iOS -- but TV software has been more fragmented. Vendors such as Samsung have tended to use their own homegrown operating systems to power their smart TVs, often shunning Google TV. Most early smart TV operating systems have been criticized as complex, and any smart TV software that's easier to use - as Samsung says about Tizen - would be attractive. Introducing Tizen in TVs will be easier than releasing the software in phones. Unlike smartphones, consumers typically don't care what operating system runs their TVs, as long as they can watch their favorite shows and access the features they want. Switching to a Tizen-powered smart TV from another set won't be as drastic a change as moving from an Android phone with more than a million apps to a Tizen phone, which lacks po[CENSORED]r programs like Facebook and Google Maps. Still, Samsung's strong suit has never been software, and it's going up against Google, which last year reinvented its much-criticized Google TV software as Android TV. Google started selling its first streaming media device, the Nexus Player, in November, and other Android TVs from Sharp, Sony and others should hit the market this year. Meanwhile, LG bought the WebOS business from Hewlett-Packard in early 2013 and launched its first TVs running Palm's old mobile operating system last year. While Tizen-powered smart TVs should help make the OS mainstream, it may still take time. Consumers hold onto their televisions longer than their smartphones, in part because the technology doesn't advance so quickly. Price is also a factor; Samsung's 2014 smart TV lineup started at nearly $300 (which converts to about £196 or AU$370) for a low-end, 24-inch model. Samsung hasn't yet revealed pricing for its new lineup. Samsung also has no plans to update the software running its older TVs to Tizen, Joe Stinziano, executive vice president of Samsung Electronics America, told CNET. Samsung did such a thing for its smartwatches. Its first wearable, the Galaxy Gear, received an over-the-air update to change the watch from Android to Tizen in mid-2014. But there are a lot more Samsung smart TVs on the market than Galaxy Gears, making it a little more complicated. Stinziano said releasing an update to make its older smart TVs run Tizen won't work. "It is not possible as far as I know," he said. "We've been discussing that. Right now I don't believe we're going to be able to go back and combine those operating systems." There's no guarantee that Tizen-based TVs will succeed. But analysts like Milanesi believe they have a better chance than Tizen phones. After all, consumers wanting a Samsung television -- long considered among the highest quality products in the industry -- won't have a choice: All Samsung's 2015 smart TVs will run Tizen.
  8. The annual Electronic Entertainment Expo in Los Angeles is known for its over the top showcases and press events. Most of those are aimed at living room game consoles and the disc-based games that play on them, but for the past couple of years, PC gaming has been experiencing something of a renaissance at E3, as it's known. That's partly because the current generation of consoles, the Xbox One, PlayStation 4, and Wii U, have largely failed to become the must-have devices some of their predecessors were. Gaming computers have stepped in to fill that void, offering extreme flexibility, with games available from many sources (including budget-friendly digital download services like Steam and Gog.com), hardware configurations that run from under $500 to $5,000 or more, and -- even in mid-range PCs -- performance and graphics that the Xbox One and PS4 struggle to match. AMD makes a big playAMD, a maker of both processors and graphics cards, is making a major PC gaming push at E3 by putting on a separate event called The PC Gaming Show. Co-produced with the publication PC Gamer, the show will be held a few blocks from E3's Los Angeles Convention Center location at the Belasco Theater in downtown LA. The event is on Tuesday, June 16, and will feature PC game demos and developers, and potentially some new PC hardware from AMD. A G-Sync monitor (right) next to a standard one. Nvidia G-Sync comes to laptopsAMD's GPU rival, Nvidia, also has some new technology that will be found in several products at E3. G-Sync is a system for allowing graphics cards and computer monitors to talk to each other, making sure each new frame of animation is sent to the display only when needed, thus preventing an on-screen artifact known as tearing. On the desktop setups we've tested it on, the effect is impressive, making games look faster and smoother. Now it's coming to laptops, a move first announced at the Computex show in Taipei earlier this month. At E3, we'll get our first chance to see and demo some of these G-Sync laptops from boutique PC system builders up close. Steam Machines are finally here, almostSince late 2013 we've been hearing about a new PC-based gaming platform from Valve, the company behind the Steam online game store (as well as games such as Portal and Half-Life). The Steam Machine hardware/software combination, including a clever new controller, has been delayed several times, but Valve recently announced that some Steam Machines will be available as early as October. Dell's Alienware Alpha is being turned into a Steam Machine. One key partner, Dell, will have its Alienware Steam Machine at E3, and we look forward to trying it out. We've previously reviewed the Windows-based version of this machine, called the Alienware Alpha. A big year for PC gamesAside from the powerful hardware and extreme customization available from PC gaming hardware, the other major draw is massive library of playable games. PC ports of console hits, original games from indie developers, and decades worth of classic games are all available and dwarf the number of games available for consoles. As 2015 has so far been an anemic year for big console games, much of the attention has been PC-centric, such as the excellent PC versions of The Witcher 3 and Grand Theft Auto V. The upcoming sequel to XCOM: Enemy Unknown, an excellent strategy game, has recently been announced as a PC exclusive, and the show's most anticipated game, Bethesda's Fallout 4, will likely follow the lead of other ambitious open-world role-playing games and offer a better experience on PCs, including better graphics and customization, and tools for gamer-made add-on content. Virtual reality is almost a realityAnd lastly, let's not forget that many of the big players in these very early days of VR, including Oculus and HTC/Valve, are preparing launch products that not only require PCs, but very powerful PCs at that. We don't expect any additional new details from Oculus, following the company's revealing pre-E3 press conference, but the Oculus booth will likely be one of the more po[CENSORED]r ones at the show.
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  11. At least 10 people were killed in air strikes overnight in Yemen, relatives and medical sources said, as a Saudi-led coalition continued bombing the capital yesterday in violation of a temporary humanitarian truce. The United Nations-brokered pause in the fighting was meant to last a week to allow aid deliveries to the country’s 21 million people who have endured more than three months of bombing and civil war. A coalition of Arab states has been bombarding the Iranian-allied Houthi rebel movement – Yemen’s dominant force – since late March in a bid to reinstate President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, who has fled to Riyadh. A family of eight travelling in several vehicles were killed in an air strike on Saturday night in the central province of al-Baida, and two other civilians were killed in the southern city of Taiz. A witness said air strikes on the capital Sanaa resumed yesterday morning. The Houthi-run Saba news agency said 12 people, including two children, were killed in Saudi-led air strikes across the country. Saba said the air strikes also hit clinics linked to the military hospital in Sanaa as well as trucks carrying food supplies in southern Aden.
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