Marshall J. Brown, reporter and Second Amendment advocate

Feb. 28, 1936 Oct. 10, 2014

Marshall J. Brown, a former Buffalo Courier-Express reporter and advocate of the right to bear arms, died Friday at his 63-acre gentlemans farm in Colden after an extended battle with multiple system atrophy, a neurological disease. He was 78.

The native of the Bronx came from a newspaper family, with his father, Max, and two uncles, all editors at United Press International.

Marsh was a feisty, hard-nosed old-time newsman, like one of the characters youd see in an old movie like The Front Page, said Buffalo News reporter Dan Herbeck, who worked with Mr. Brown at Buffalo Police Headquarters in the late 1970s and early 1980s. He carried a gun when he was on the job, sometimes beat the police to crime scenes. On more than one occasion, he conducted his own investigations and helped the police solve crimes.

Herbeck said he will never forget the time he and Mr. Brown in 1982 both police reporters for Buffalos two competing newspapers decided to go out and have lunch together. They were walking toward a small diner when a waitress came running outside, spattered with blood and screaming, Help, he killed Ellie!

Marsh grabbed his gun out of the holster and we went running inside. This poor waitress was on the floor, bleeding to death, Herbeck recalled. A mental patient who had recently been released from a psychiatric center had jumped over the counter, grabbed a knife and began stabbing this poor woman. Then he ran out of the place. Marsh and I ran outside, looking for the guy, but he was long gone. The police came and we told them what happened.

Mr. Browns first newspaper job was at age 17 as a copyboy at the New York Herald Tribune. After earning a journalism degree at New York University, he joined the Lockport Union-Sun & Journal where he worked as a reporter, photographer and darkroom technician.

An avid outdoorsman, he also wrote a column called Bait n Bullets in Lockport.

In 1961 he joined the staff of the Courier-Express and covered a number of sensational cases, including the .22 caliber killer case and many organized crime murders. Mr. Brown won a number of awards from the Associated Press, but was most proud of his James Madison Award from the Second Amendment Foundation.

When the Courier folded in 1982, he went to South Africa for a month where he hunted big game. He also hunted in Mexico, Greece, Denmark and Canada. He held an Open Water Scuba Diver rating and dove in the Caribbean and the Red Sea. He was an ardent sailor and fisherman.,

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Marshall J. Brown, reporter and Second Amendment advocate

Professor Craig Smith Wins National Awards

Craig Smith, a California State University, Long Beach, communication studies professor and former presidential speechwriter, received two national awards Nov. 21.

The director of CSULBs Center for First Amendment Studies was honored at the National Communication Associations (NCA) 100th annual convention in Chicago.

Smith said he is now a third time recipient of the Robert ONeil Award for outstanding scholarship on First Amendment issues.

I wrote the award-winning paper with my centers research director professor Kevin Johnson, who was once a student of mine here, Smith said. So I am doubly proud of that award.

Smith also accepted the Gronbeck Award for his work in interpreting and addressing political communication issues. The award, Smith said, is the result of his latest book, Confessions of a Presidential Speechwriter, published last year in February by Michigan State University Press.

In his book, he describes the time spent as a speechwriter for President Gerald R. Ford and later for George H.W. Bush, Smith said. He said he recounted his history involving Freedom of Expression. According to his books overview, Smith wrote about meeting Robert Kennedy and Richard Nixon and advising Gov. Ronald Reagan. His book explores his time in Washington D.C., when he founded the Freedom of Expression Foundation and became its president.

The Gronbeck Award was named after Bruce Gronbeck, who died in September at 73 years old.

Gronbeck was a communications professor at the University of Iowa and was recognized as a scholar of rhetoric and media, according to the UI website. He received several awards including the Outstanding Mentor Award from the university as well as the NCA Mentor Award. He is responsible for mentoring 65 doctorate candidates at UI.

I knew Bruce for a long time since both of us were in political communication, Smith said. Bruce published a lot of articles and books on political communication, and I think thats why the National Communication Association decided to honor him by naming this particular award after him.

Smith said he recalled a Facebook post from Gronbeck on Sept. 9.

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Professor Craig Smith Wins National Awards

A Name Matters: Cryptocurrency Names and Ratings

It has been mentioned before that the success of an alternate cryptocurrency depends on 5 primary things:

But it was quite unexpected that the name of the coin does play the most important role over the long term, since its the only one thing from the five features, mentioned above, that cannot be changed, or significantly improved.

A Bitcointalk.org member using the moniker alt19 explained:

You can add an infrastructure, you can add innovative features to any coin, theoretically, but you cannot change the past, you cannot change the history that is in price logs and in a peoples memory.

So lets try to build a rating of the cryptocurrency names of real coins, based on various criteria:

This story is based on the ideas of Bitcointalk community members. If you would like to participate in the discussion, you will find the thread here: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=655461.0

Do you think the name of a coin matters? Whats your favorite name? Log in below using your favorite social network and weigh in on the discussion.

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A Name Matters: Cryptocurrency Names and Ratings

Cryptocurrency cruncher cranks prime number constellation

Top 5 reasons to deploy VMware with Tegile

Bitcoin mining, our own Simon Rockman wrote last January, is essentially a brute-force attack on the generating algorithm.

Bitcoin, and all the other alt-coins, is training a skillset for building password-cracking hardware that is both powerful and portable, he wrote.

It looks like cryptocurrencies are also helping to spot some useful prime numbers, according to the folks behind Riecoin.

Riecoin is a fork of Bitcoin and offers the chance for distributed or standalone mining. Participating in currency's gestation also has a by-product of highly-verified prime sextuplets. As the Riecoin folk note, there's a US$1million prize up for grabs for anyone who can prove The Riemann Hypothesis' suggestion that prime numbers occur in some sort of pattern.

As prime numbers are rather handy when encrypting data, there's some value in knowing more about them. Detail-oriented Reg readers will, by now, have noted that Riecoin and Riemann Hypothesis are rather similar: that's no accident, as the currency is named in homage to the mathematician.

Riecoin claims that its cluster of distributed coiners have, during November, twice broken the world record for creating a prime sextuplet, a collection of six prime numbers packed together as tightly as possible.

On November 17 the Riecoin swarm cranked out a sextuplet in 70 minutes. A week later, it beat that record and produced longer primes while doing so. There's more detail about Riecoin and the maths behind it in this FAQ.

Riecoin's also a cryptocurrency and is traded on several exchanges, at a value of about 0.0000175 bitcoin.

Beginner's guide to SSL certificates

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Cryptocurrency cruncher cranks prime number constellation

BBT Episode 22: Hashers Recap, NFC Bitcoin Wallet, KNC Titan Pt1, Feathercoin Neoscrypt – Video


BBT Episode 22: Hashers Recap, NFC Bitcoin Wallet, KNC Titan Pt1, Feathercoin Neoscrypt
BEST VIEWED IN 1080p HD (once post processing completed!) LOOK HERE TO JUMP SECTIONS In this episode the BBT takes you through a new format of post conferenc...

By: Bits Be Trippin #39;

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BBT Episode 22: Hashers Recap, NFC Bitcoin Wallet, KNC Titan Pt1, Feathercoin Neoscrypt - Video

‘Bitcoin as software’, the future of independent currencies and peer-to-peer lending Robin Crewe – Video


#39;Bitcoin as software #39;, the future of independent currencies and peer-to-peer lending Robin Crewe
Bitcoin is a fascinating piece of technology. Any technology person in banking has to be fascinated by Bitcoin, not just as a concept but also by the alleged founder in California and the entire...

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'Bitcoin as software', the future of independent currencies and peer-to-peer lending Robin Crewe - Video

Horie sees bitcoin as route to more security, less government

The failure earlier this year of Tokyo-based bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox may have stirred Japanese doubts about the credibility of the digital currency.

But despite its demise, many people worldwide view bitcoin technology as a world-changing innovation. Among them is Takafumi Horie, 42, former president of Internet firm Livedoor Co.

There have been many digital currencies and monetary services, including Suica, Rakuten Edy and Internet banking, but they are basically centralized and managed by certain companies or organizations.

Bitcoin, however, is not run by a company or the government, and participants can ensure, by monitoring, that transactions involving the currency are legitimate, Horie said.

In an interview with The Japan Times last month, Horie said it is impossible to predict whether bitcoin will become a mainstream currency because (Bitcoin) is like an enemy to nations.

Its global spread could undermine the authority of nations to issue currency, so (nations) would probably attempt to eliminate that system, he said.

Some nations have already taken precautions. China banned banks from handling bitcoin transactions and Russia announced in February that it was illegal to use bitcoin in the country.

But it is also true that bitcoin has the potential to reduce the role governments play in our lives, Horie said, noting that it eradicate government monitoring of online transactions, including contract information and voting records.

Horie discusses bitcoin innovations in the recently published book No Need for Nations Anymore (Mou Kokka wa Iranai), in which he talks to journalist Soichiro Tahara about the need for smaller government.

Bitcoin is a crypto-currency operated via peer-to-peer networks that are also used to run services like Skype and users computers are directly connected to each other instead of to a main server.

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Horie sees bitcoin as route to more security, less government

States differ on need for bitcoin oversight

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AUSTIN, Texas Michael Cargill teaches a concealed handguns safety class at his Austin firearms store while the online version of the business initiates FBI background checks on out-of-state buyers paying in bitcoin.

He says accepting the virtual currency has boosted sales by 50 percent.

There are two things we like in Texas: We like our financial freedom and we love our firearms, Cargill said. Then, gesturing toward a wall of guns inside Central Texas Gun Works, he continued, This is about people taking protection into their own hands. The same is true of bitcoin.

The gun store is among a growing number of businesses that have embraced bitcoin in Texas, which boasts one of the worlds largest bitcoin economies and where the nations first ATMs catering to the currency were installed this year. The growth has been facilitated by a state government that has largely shielded bitcoin from heavy regulation, establishing Texas as a vital testing ground for the burgeoning movement.

Its popularity has spawned a philosophical battle between supporters and other state and federal agencies seeking to regulate a system they say can too easily facilitate money laundering and illegal trafficking. The results could ultimately determine whether bitcoin changes the financial norms across the country.

In order to prevent money laundering, we need to have some points within the ecosystem where the financial intermediaries have some sense of who theyre dealing with, said Benjamin Lawsky, New Yorks financial services superintendent.

Created in 2009, bitcoin has gained traction as a way to buy and sell goods and services without using government-issued money. Businesses and individuals can also trade bitcoin for dollars and other currencies on an online exchange or by using certain bitcoin ATMs, avoiding third parties including banks.

In stark contrast to states such as Texas, New York is considering a licensing system that would require bitcoin operators to verify customers identities, maintain payment records and actively protect against cyber threats. Lawsky says it is naive to think that bitcoin will go mainstream while operating in its current ad-hoc fashion.

The warnings have done little to discourage the increasing use in Texas and other states that have not pushed for heavy regulations. Texas now boasts nine bitcoin ATMs the second most after California and has the worlds fourth largest bitcoin economy, according to the open-source website CoinMap, which bases its assessment on the number of businesses that accept bitcoin.

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States differ on need for bitcoin oversight

Comets sprint to finish

DANIELLE PARHIZKARAN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Hackensack running back Asante Dyer attempting to find room to run around the right side against Teaneck on Thursday. He had 117 yards on 25 carries.

HACKENSACK Coming off of a playoff loss and having to play five days later is never an easy deal. For Hackensack, it was an opportunity not only for redemption but for the seniors to complete the foundation they had started.

No one exemplified the Comet resolve more than Mike Sanchez. The captain has been the vocal leader and on Thanksgiving Day he was a leader by example, as well.

Sanchez had the big block on the opening touchdown drive before adding a safety-sack and a TD catch, all in the first eight minutes of the game. Hackensack fed off of his inspired play and easily dispatched Teaneck, 48-0.

The win allowed the Comets to complete a 9-2 campaign, one that coach Benjie Wimberly said was a special one.

"We were 5-5 and 6-4 the last two years and this year we won a playoff game and went 9-2," he said. "These seniors are the cinder block in the foundation for the resurgence of this program and it was a real nice way to end the season."

Hackensack took the opening kickoff and went down the field, with Justin Marin skirting the right side for the final 14 yards and a 6-0 lead. That edge became 8-0 two plays later, when Sanchez chased down the Teaneck quarterback for a safety.

The Comets then took the free kick and marched back to the end zone, this time with Sanchez taking a pass away from a defender for an 11-yard score.

"We were all disappointed [after the loss to Montclair], but we didn't let it stop us," Sanchez said. "We went right back to work and took it out on Teaneck."

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Comets sprint to finish

Workington Comets add third Danish rider to team

Published at 20:05, Thursday, 27 November 2014

Workington Comets have added a third Danish rider to their line-up for 2015.

Nicki Barrett

They have reached an agreement to sign 25-year-old Odense-born Nicki Barrett, who joined Peterborough Panthers midway through the summer and guested for the west Cumbrians last season.

Barrett has been loaned to Comets from parent club Berwick Bandits and joins on a 3.93 average, which means he will occupy one of the reserve spots.

He joins fellow countrymen Rene Bach and Kenneth Hansen in agreeing to ride at Derwent Park next year, as well as Australian Mason Campton who re-signed at the clubs end-of-season do.

Co-promoter and team manager Tony Jackson said: When he visited Derwent Park with the Panthers last season he proved to be very impressive at reserve and he clearly enjoyed the track.

However, there was some bad news for fans as it was also announced that last seasons number one Josh Grajczonek and popular reserve Simon Lambert wont be returning to the club.

The Comets management met with Grajczonek in October and he made it clear that while he wanted to come back to Workington in 2015, he needed to press on with his career and commit to riding in Poland, which meant until these deals were sorted he could not commit to Premier League racing.

The decision was made last night by the club to move on without Grajczonek.

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Workington Comets add third Danish rider to team

Tourism in Europe at record levels – ITB World Travel Trends Report

Foreign trips by Europeans at record levels increase in international arrivals in Europe further growth expected in 2015

Travel-hungry Europeans are defying local crises and political unrest, having undertaken record numbers of trips this year. Compared to last year, in 2014 the number of foreign trips rose by three per cent, reaching a new record. According to the ITB World Travel Trends Report, conducted by IPK International and commissioned by the world's leading travel trade show, destinations such as Greece, Spain and the UK profited from this boom. All signs point to growth in 2015 as well.

Europeans refused to be deterred from travelling this year. Despite Europe's weak economic growth and risks such as the crisis in Ukraine, conflicts in the Middle East and the outbreak of Ebola in West Africa Europeans travelled longer distances and more often. Compared to last year there was a three per cent rise in foreign trips, which on average were shorter. By contrast, spending per overnight grew by four per cent. Among Europeans the internet became an increasingly popular tool for making reservations. Bookings via this medium rose by seven per cent, while travel agency figures stagnated. During the first eight months of 2014 holiday trips grew by five per cent, with city breaks registering a major increase (10 per cent). By contrast, holidays in the snow and the countryside registered declines. Business travel increased by a mere one per cent. However, a new trend has emerged: at plus four pent, MICE travel has become increasingly popular, whereas conventional business trips fell by three per cent due to budget constraints.

This year, source markets reporting a substantial increase in foreign trips included Switzerland (plus seven per cent), Denmark and Poland (both six per cent each), as well as Sweden, Spain and the UK, (all plus five per cent). Spain aside, none of the most successful source markets belonged to the eurozone. Germany, Europe's largest source market, registered two per cent growth. At plus three and two per cent respectively, the Italian and French markets recovered despite their countries' weak economies. This year the Russian market declined by one per cent, which was due also to the numerous challenges it faced.

This year the number of trips undertaken in Europe, by far the largest market in terms of volume, grew by three per cent. In 2014 long-distance travel was even more popular with Europeans. Thus, during the first eight months of this year the number of trips to Asia increased by seven per cent, those to North America and the Caribbean by six per cent, and trips by Europeans to South America and the Pacific grew by five per cent. The number of trips to Africa also increased slightly. However, further developments must be awaited due to the Ebola outbreak in West Africa.

Europeans are confident as regards their travel plans for 2015. Overall, foreign trips undertaken by Europeans are expected to rise by three per cent, which could herald another year of solid growth. At plus seven per cent, the UK would appear to be among the fastest-growing source markets, along with those of Switzerland, Poland and Russia at an estimated four per cent each. Foreign trips undertaken by the German market are forecast to rise by two per cent.

Once again, Europe was a very popular travel destination and reported double-digit growth in visitors from China, India and the United Arab Emirates. This year, Europe was also very popular with travellers from the USA and Canada.

Overall, during the first eight months of this year the number of international tourist arrivals in Europe rose to 413 million, an increase of 4.2 per cent. Southern and Northern Europe both registered the highest growth rates, at plus seven per cent respectively. Countries ahead in the rankings included Greece, Spain, Turkey, Germany and the UK.

All the findings are based on information from papers held at the World Travel Monitor Forum in Pisa, which is sponsored by ITB Berlin. Every year the consultancy IPK International invites more than 50 tourism experts and researchers from around the world to present the latest statistics and trends in international tourism.

Other results of the January to August 2014 trend surveys conducted by IPK as well as the assessments of more than 50 tourism experts from over 20 countries and the core data of the World Travel Monitor will be published exclusively by ITB Berlin. Detailed information will be available in the ITB World Travel Trends Report in early December at http://www.itb-berlin.com. At the ITB Future Day of the ITB Berlin Convention Rolf Freitag, president of IPK International, will present the findings of the World Travel Monitor for the entire year, as well as the latest forecasts for 2015. The World Travel Monitor is based on the findings of representative interviews carried out with more than 500,000 people in over 60 global travel markets. It has been published regularly for more than 20 years and is recognised as the most widescale continuous survey examining global travel trends.

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Tourism in Europe at record levels - ITB World Travel Trends Report

How to: Syncing your computer & phone across platforms

The biggest news this year from Apples software department was the intertwining of its iOS 8 and OS X Yosemite Operating Systems using two features called Handoff and Continuity. They both take great advantage of Apples tightly-controlled software experience by letting the user seamlessly move between a Mac, an iPhone and iPad, picking up where you left off. Your text messages get synced with your computer and iPad, and you can take calls that come to your iPhone on the other two devices. Transferring files wirelessly between these three devices is a breeze...

Now it all sounds hunky dory if youre singing to Apples tunes. But statistically speaking, there are more chances of you owning a Windows computer and an Android smartphone. My daily drivers are a Mac and an Android phone. So, how do you un-complicate your life by making these different platforms sync? Well, it may not deliver a beautiful experience like Apple products working together are supposed to, but here are a few use cases and the required apps that Ive found very useful to get it done:

1) Phone Calls

Theres an app called HandsFree for Mac that basically makes your phone think of your computer as a bluetooth headset. Ive been using this app for the past few days and although it hasnt been an entirely hiccup-free experience, it has worked for the most part.

My phone latches onto the Macbook the moment the lid is up. So not only can you receive phone calls on your computer, but theres a tiny app that sits in the menu bar that lets you dial from the Mac too. You can also look up contacts from the Macs address book (a good reason to sync them with your Google account if you havent already). In my testing, people could hear me well, but I needed to bump up the volume on my end to be able to hear clearly. Also, theres a bit of delay in relaying the voice over. Still, I dont mind these niggles for the convenience of picking up calls on my computer, which I spend most of my waking day staring into.

If youre a Windows PC user, good news, you dont even need a separate app. Theres a tutorial on how to pair a Windows 7 PC with a phone so that you can make & receive calls. The steps are a little different for Windows 8, but looking at the video, it shouldnt be too hard to figure out.

2) SMS Syncing:

There are many apps that allow you to sync text messages from an Android phone to a computer. Of the lot, I liked MightyText because its a browser plugin that shoots notifications on your computer when you get a text message; mighty useful when, say, youre making online transactions requiring a One Time Password (OTP) sent over SMS. You can also reply to messages right from that notification. Another nifty feature is the phone battery level notificationsit notifies when your phone is running low on charge and also when the battery is fully charged. You can see your entire SMS conversations in a web app on the browser.Not the best experience, but it gets the job done.

3) Universal Copy-Paste:

This has to be the most brilliant cross-device syncing Ive ever come across: Pushbullet is an app known for easily pushing files from one to many of your devices. You can also use Pushbullet to get all your phone notifications appear on your computer by using theAndroid app, and Chrome and Firefoxbrowser plugin. But whats moreuniversal copy & paste lets you copy any portion of text from one device and simply paste it in the other. It works in any text field on any app of your Android phone and on any computer. Check out the video below.

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How to: Syncing your computer & phone across platforms