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Monthly Archives: March 2017
Churchill: For Marquis Dixon, freedom wasn’t lasting – Albany Times Union
Posted: March 9, 2017 at 3:11 am
Booking photo for Marquis Dixon of Albany.
Booking photo for Marquis Dixon of Albany.
Marquis Dixon (photo provided by family)
Marquis Dixon (photo provided by family)
Churchill: For Marquis Dixon, freedom wasn't lasting
Albany
Nobody should have thought it would be easy. Nobody should have assumed Marquis Dixon's transition to freedom would go perfectly.
And it hasn't.
Dixon was released from prison days after a state appeals court in October reduced his infamous nine-year sentence for a sneaker robbery to a maximum of three years. The teenager came home to Albany, returning to his family's McCarty Avenue home in the South End.
Trouble found him quickly.
In early December, Dixon, 19, was cited for violating parole and sent to Albany County jail before being transferred to Hale Creek Correctional, a medium-security prison that specializes in substance-abuse treatment.
He returned to Albany and conditional freedom in February, but was again cited for violating parole just weeks later on February 27. He has since been held in Albany County jail.
On Wednesday, I talked with his mom. Aisha Dixon was fully aware her son's troubles would unleash the I-told-you-sos as in, I told you that kid was no good.
But Aisha Dixon insisted he was guilty only, for both violations, of staying out past his 7 p.m. curfew. She said the teen has chafed at his parole restrictions finding it humiliating, she said, to apply for jobs or register for college while wearing a bulky ankle bracelet.
"He's still the good kid he always was," she said.
Good or not, Dixon could be looking at more prison time before he's finally released and free of parole. He has a preliminary hearing on his latest violation Thursday and a final hearing on March 21, according to Albany County Sheriff Craig Apple.
It's likely Dixon will be required to serve the remainder of his reduced sentence, less than three months. He should be free and clear by summer, if not much sooner.
Then what?
That's the big question. We can only offer support and pray that he'll find his way.
There's no doubt Dixon's recent struggles are deflating for those of us who championed his cause because we believed his sentence was too harsh for a 16-year-old accused of a sneaker robbery. We would have liked to hear that Dixon is happily thriving.
But it often does not work out that way when prisoners return to impoverished neighborhoods. Many ex-cons struggle to find work and meaning. And Dixon carries the extra weight of community expectations and a heightened profile.
That profile cuts both ways. The attention probably helped his appeal. But it also means that we can pick up the latest issue of The Alt, a weekly newspaper, and find District Attorney David Soares continuing to bury Dixon and those who advocated for him.
"This is the guy you want?" Soares told the paper. "This is the guy you want to put on your shoulders? There are so many other worthy people."
Soares, noting that Dixon was accused of having a gun when he robbed another teen of sneakers, accused supporters of "an abandonment of facts" and distorting "the truth to fit a narrative."
But here are the facts as stated in the appeals court ruling by Presiding Court Justice Karen Peters:
"The crime, although serious, did not cause physical injury to anyone and the defendant neither brandished the object or uttered any direct threats of violence," she wrote, adding that Dixon "had no prior criminal record or history of violence."
Peters and the court's other justices reduced Dixon's sentence because he should have been given a chance at youthful offender status. The failure to do so was a "grievous error," the justices said, and they subsequently granted it.
Regardless, there's little point in again rehashing the facts and controversies of Dixon's case. It's really water under the bridge.
But whether New York should treat 16- and 17-year-old defendants as adults remains a pressing question. Only two states North Carolina is the other continue to do so, and there's a big legislative push, now backed by Gov. Andrew Cuomo, for New York to join the civilized world and "Raise the Age."
Would Dixon's transition to freedom have been smoother if he had never been sent to an adult prison? We will never know.
But throwing teenagers in with hardened adult criminals certainly doesn't help their return to society. It all but guarantees they'll come to our streets and neighborhoods prepared only for a life of crime.
Guess what happens then?
cchurchill@timesunion.com 518-454-5442 @chris_churchill
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Churchill: For Marquis Dixon, freedom wasn't lasting - Albany Times Union
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#WeShowUp: Freedom-Minded Women Counter ‘Far Left’ Day Without a Woman Strike – Breitbart News
Posted: at 3:11 am
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Right2Speak says that while Wednesdays Day Without a Woman demonstration urges women to leave their jobs and stop their normal activities, its group will instead urge women to continue working, serving, giving, sharing, and loving their communities, their families, and their endeavors.
With disproportionate media attention going to the recent Womens March movement, there is a very important story that is not being told, Toni Anne Dashiell, the founder of Right2Speak, said, according to USA Today. This is the story of the women in America who have been cast to the side by the spectacle of the extreme far left. We believe all women have the right to speak, the right to participate and the right to express their values without being dismissed.
Freedom-minded women note the Day Without a Woman strike only includes liberal, women, since conservative women were barred from partnering with the original Womens anti-Trump March in January.
We dont feel like the voices on the far left represent all women, explains Ohio Right2Speak spokeswoman LeeAnn Johnson. We wont allow our voices to be drowned out. Instead, we will participate with grace and dignity. The heartland of America often gets ignored, and were standing up so that our voice is heard.
We are voices of reason and integrity, of both love and liberty, said Right2Speak member Robin Moore. I will fight not just for my voice to be heard, but for the voices of all women who are being marginalized by this far-left movement.
Right2Speak is posting its stories and photos on social media using hashtags #NotMyProtest and #WeShowUp.
Another group called The Network of Enlightened Women (NeW) is also not participating in the Day Without a Woman strike.
Karin Agness, founder and president of NeW, wrote in an op-ed for Forbes:
While organized under the banner of a broad Womens March to benefit all women, it is more accurately a progressive womens effort that excludes millions of women.
The Womens March movement is less about supporting all women and more about advocating for progressive policy positions on a wide variety of issues, from immigration to the environment. Pro-life women, for example, are not welcome. In January, the organizers of the Womens March revoked partnership with the New Wave Feminists because the group is pro-life.
Striking from the workplace and society on Wednesday wont advance women.
If participants in the Womens March are truly concerned about being behind in the workplace, they could take concrete actions that would immediately be more productive for women. Marchers could mentor junior female colleagues, giving career advice. They could ask to meet with a boss to discuss ways to take on more responsibility and in turn, earn more money. Or they could work an extra 30 minutes.
NeW will be using the hashtag #WorkingWoman on social media.
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#WeShowUp: Freedom-Minded Women Counter 'Far Left' Day Without a Woman Strike - Breitbart News
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Technology – Pogue’s Posts Blog – The New York Times
Posted: at 3:11 am
David Pogue, Times Technology Columnist, Leaves for Yahoo |
After writing about personal technology for The Times for 13 years, David Pogue will start a consumer technology Web site at Yahoo. Read more
How will people remember 2013? As the year of the government shutdown? The year the N.S.A. revealed that the enemy is us? The year Miley Cyrus absolutely, positively stopped playing an adorable child actress?
In consumer tech, we may remember this as the year Bluetooth speakers finally outnumbered insects on the earth. Every company and its brother has been cranking out compact, colorful, battery-powered wireless speakers.
And no wonder: these things really are awesome. Every time some company offers a new tablet, laptop or phone, you can bet that it has a better, sharper, brighter screen but what about the sound? Its stuck in 2004: tinny and weak. A Bluetooth speaker neatly remedies that enormous quality difference between audio and visual.
The Jawbone Jambox was one of the earliest hits. Its a sharp-edged rectangular box, $150, that comes in a choice of colors. It pumps out surprisingly loud, clear sound for its size, which is 6 by 1.6 by 2.8 inches.
Then came the Big Jambox, a shoebox-size $300 version with big enough sound for a backyard.
And now comes the Jambox Mini, at $180.
I love this thing. Its actually not all that mini; in fact, its about as long and tall as the original (6.1 by 2.3 inches) but it looks like someone sliced the original in half with a saber. Readmore
Back in March, T-Mobile burned every possible bridge it had with the other cellphone carriers. As I wrote then, it eliminated the two-year contract; you can now quit T-Mobile whenever you like.
It also became the first carrier to eliminate the infuriating 15-second recording of voicemail instructions every time you try to leave a message a waste of your time and your callers airtime.
And T-Mobile also ended the Great Cellphone Subsidy Con. Thats where you buy a $600 phone (like the iPhone) for $200, with the understanding that youll pay the cellphone company the rest over your two-year contract yet after youve repaid it, your monthly bill doesnt drop!
T-Mobile was basically prancing around, demonstrating that Emperors Verizon, Sprint and AT&T have no clothes.
I was pleasantly surprised shocked, really since those con games have been baked into the American cellphone carriers business plans for years. And we, the American sheep, just assumed that we had to accept them.
Apparently, lots of other people were pleasantly surprised, too. The company says that in the second quarter of 2013, it signed up 685,000 new customers more than Verizon, AT&T and Sprint combined.
Well, on Wednesday, T-Mobile did it again. It announced an even bigger shocker: Starting next month, it will eliminate the sky-high, nosebleed, ridiculous, usurious international roaming charges that have terrified and enraged overseas travelers for years. Readmore
If its October, that must mean the holiday buying season has begun and that means Amazon will offer a new color tablet.
Its the Kindle Fire HDX. It costs $230, and its terrific. The battery goes for about 11 hours, or 17 in a power-saving, reading-only mode. The stereo speakers sound great. The plastic case weighs less than the prior version and has narrower margins around the screen. Theres a mediocre camera on the front for video chatting (not on the back on the 7-inch model). The one big misfire was putting the power and volume keys on the back; youll spend the first week hitting the Off button by mistake while trying to turn it up the sound.
The X in HDX is a reference to the screens clarity. It packs in 323 tiny dots per inch, making it sharper than high definition, and making the iPad Minis 163 dots per inch look coarse.
The HDXs screen really is spectacular, if infuriatingly reflective. The trouble is, you can see the new sharpness only when youre looking at source material with resolution that high. The type in books and magazines looks razor-sharp, but most of the 150,000 TV shows and videos in Amazons catalog dont look any clearer. Movies are also the wrong shape for the screen; you see black bands above and below. Readmore
Well, that didnt take long. Only a couple of days after Apples iPhone 5s went on sale, somebody managed to fool its fingerprint sensor.
The headlines and blog comments were predictable and instantaneous: Oooooh, Apple blew it! The star feature of its new phone is worthless!
Ill admit it: I love that darned sensor. You unlock your phone dozens of times a day. Each time is a few seconds of tedium and looking down at it, over and over and over, to enter your password. Its a drag.
And then there are the 50 percent of iPhone users who dont even bother with a password. If youre among them, then your phone and your life are susceptible to snooping should you lose your phone, find it stolen or leave it on your desk while you get coffee.
On the iPhone 5s, you wake the phone by pressing the Home button and then just leave your finger on it for half a second, and boom: it unlocks.
But should we be concerned, then, that the hackers exploits render the fingerprint reader useless?
Not at all. For three giant reasons. Readmore
Updated to clarify how to access the Spotlight search screen.
The big Apple news this week might seem to be the new iPhones. But truth be told, the bigger news is iOS 7.
This is the free software update for iPhones (iPhone 4 and later), iPads (iPad 2 and later) and iPod Touches (fifth generation). Its a radical, huge redesign. Its master architect was Jonathan Ive, the Apple designer who has brought us astonishing hardware designs for many years; now, for the first time, hes been put in charge of a whole software universe.
The look of iOS 7 is sparse, white almost plain in spots. No more fake leather, fake woodgrain, fake green felt, fake yellow note paper. Its all blue Helvetica Neue against white.
The complete absence of graphic embellishments makes it especially utilitarian in both senses of the word. Thats good, because whatever button or function you need is easier to find; its bad, because, well, it can look a little boring.
Then again, the new look is primarily visible at the Home screen, where a jarringly different color palette greets you on the Apple app icons, and on the options screen. The rest of the time, youll be using your regular apps, many of which will look no different than before.
The look of iOS 7 may grab you or not. But once the fuss about the visuals dies down, something even more important comes into focus: the work thats been done on making iOS better. The longer you spend with the new OS, the more youre grateful for the fixing and de-annoyifying on display. Readmore
Technology and air travel have always gone hand in hand, and theyre only getting more intertwined. From security at the airport to the rules about using electronics in flight to the final resting place of the planes toilet contents, airplanes and tech are a constant source of conflict, passion and questions.
If youd like the answers, I highly recommend Patrick Smiths new book, Cockpit Confidential. Mr. Smith is a pilot and blogger; much of the books format and contents are on display at his Web site, AskThePilot.com, or in the archives of the Ask the Pilot column he wrote for Salon.com for years.
But as a frequent flyer, Id much rather have the book, which is a far more comprehensive book of questions and answers about airplanes, airports, airlines and the psychology of flying. Here are some excerpts factoids that every flier should know: Readmore
Tuesday morning, Apple caught up to its own rumor mill. It took the wraps off the two new iPhones that everyone had already predicted: the iPhone 5C and the iPhone 5S, which will be available on Sept. 20.
The 5C is the budget model. Its basically last years iPhone 5 but with a plastic body (lacquered for extra shininess!), available in five colors. It will be $100 with a two-year contract.
The more exciting new phone is the iPhone 5S. It looks almost identical to the iPhone 5, except that its available in black, white or a classy-looking coppery gold. Its priced the same as last years model, too: $200, $300 and $400 for the models with 16, 32 and 64 gigabytes of storage.
Inside, though, theres a new processor, which Apple says is twice as fast as before. Its also the cellphone worlds first 64-bit processor, according to the company, which is an especially attractive feature for game makers; it can load in new scenes five times faster than the previous chip. Readmore
Everybody loves to hate e-mail. It eats up too much time, its used improperly, its filled up with junk. Entire careers have been launched around the premise of getting your in-box to zero.
I dont agree. E-mail is the hub of life. Its correspondence, collaboration, ideas, news, warnings and congratulations. Its a to-do list, Rolodex and record of past projects. Sure, I try to keep the roar of junk mail to a minimum (I use a program called SpamSieve, and I never, ever enter my primary e-mail address into a form on the Web). But otherwise, e-mail is a pretty great medium.
Maybe, instead of killing it off, the world should be working on making it more useful. A new, free app for iPad and iPhone, bizarrely called PeeqPeeq, is a good start. Readmore
By now, perhaps youve heard: Microsoft just bought Nokias cellphone division for $7.2 billion.
When I mentioned the news last night on Twitter (Im @pogue), my followers were hilariously unimpressed:
Its all snarky but true. What on earth was Steve Ballmer, the departing Microsoft chief, thinking? What is the point of this deal? Readmore
When Im filming a TV series, like the shows I host for PBS, I have to fly a lot. Over the last four years, Ive honed the art of efficient air travel to a sparkling shine.
I could publish my accumulated wisdom in a small book and sell literally dozens of copies. But no: I selflessly offer them to you here, for free.
* Check in with the airline app. If you have your airlines free app on your phone, you can check in ahead of time, even the night before, and save yourself the worry of getting to the airport an hour before the flight.
At that point, the app can also display the bar code representing your boarding pass. No paper. Just set your phone face down on the little T.S.A. scanner, and youre through. Not all airlines have the bar code scanners, but the app will let you know ahead of time. Readmore
From todays mailbag:
Dear Mr. Pogue:
Three years ago, my husband suffered an accident and is now a quadriplegic. He can never be alone without a reliable fully voice-activated phone.
As you pointed out in your column this week, with Android, you have to swipe the screen to reach the mike button, and with the first iteration of Siri, you also had to push the home button all impossible for a quad to do. We bought a Blue Ant device a few years back, which worked nicely (sometimes) with his old HTC. When the phone was last updated, that was the end of a beautiful relationship. I spent hours with both Blue Ant and HTC, and both blamed the other and neither had a solution.
So what do you suggest?
While youre at it: The command to terminate a call doesnt exist yet. When your call goes into voice mail, you cant hang up by a voice command; you must physically terminate the call. We have discussed this problem with multiple brain trusts and no one has the solution yet.
My reply:
Unfortunately, Im afraid I havent done any research on this problem in particular. But the Moto X, as I mentioned in my review, is listening for voice commands all the time you dont have to touch it to start issuing commands.
Among the many Android apps, perhaps theres one that lets you hang up with a voice command?
Ill ask my blog readers. Maybe they know of some solutions!
Moments of Steven A. Ballmer from conferences, commercials and interviews over the years that he was Microsofts chief executive.
By now, youve probably heard: Steven A. Ballmer will soon be stepping down as chief executive of Microsoft.
Its supposedly a voluntary retirement, but that holds about as much credibility as a public officials leaving a job to spend more time with family. Microsoft has been flailing, and many prominent voices have been calling for Mr. Ballmer to step aside.
Many of the factors in his departure stock price, internal politics, shareholder pressure, public relations arent my area of expertise. Im a tech critic, a reviewer of products. But even from my particular angle of examination, Mr. Ballmers time as the head of Microsoft has been baffling. Readmore
I get lots and lots of e-mail. I reply to as much as I can but certain categories, Ill tell you right now, I cant answer. What should I buy? questions, Solve my technical problems questions or Endorse my book, app or product requests. I hope its obvious that theres no way I could answer all of those.
Im increasingly convinced, however, that there should be a consumer technology complaint columnist. Many of my correspondents write to complain about problems theyre having with some product, company or service, and theyd like me to shame the perpetrators by writing about them.
Here are the sorts of things people write about:
Q.
Ive been an enthusiastic user on my iPhone of CoPilot, a GPS navigation program. Recently I noticed that one of the modules for giving text directions would pop off, leaving me with just the map. I decided to re-download the app, now updated. I quickly found out that the new version would not work with my older iOS 5.1 operating system and required iOS 6.
I do not argue that they have a need to update their version in tandem with Apple. But to not support old-time users with the ability to re-install a previous version, is rude and a poor encouragement to brand loyalty.
A.
Alas, the rapid appearance of new versions is simply the cost of playing the software game. As Im fond of saying, buying a software program is more like paying membership dues than buying a vase and owning it. Unfortunately, that seems to be the way the world works. Readmore
A few weeks back, I wrote about special lenses that were developed to give doctors a clearer view of veins and vasculature, bruising, cyanosis, pallor, rashes, erythema, and other variations in blood O2 level, and concentration, especially in bright light.
But these lenses turned out to have an unintended side effect: they may cure red-green colorblindness.
Im severely red-green colorblind, so I was eager to try these $300 lenses. Turns out they didnt help me; the company said that my colorblindness is too severe. They have helped many others, though (their Amazon reviews makes that clear).
After my column appeared, I heard from another company that makes color-enhancing glasses this time, specifically for red-green colorblind folks. The companys called EnChroma, and the EnChroma Cx sunglasses are a heartbeat-skipping $600 a pair.
Our lenses are specifically designed to address color blindness, the company wrote to me, and utilize a 100+ layer dielectric coating we engineered for this precise purpose by keeping the physiology of the eyes of colorblind people in mind.
I asked to try out a pair. (You can, too: theres a 30-day money-back guarantee.) Readmore
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Leaks remind users of technology’s vulnerability – Press Herald
Posted: at 3:11 am
NEW YORK So, you use messaging apps like WhatsApp or Signal, or have smart TVs and PCs. Should you worry that the CIA is listening to your conversations?
The short answer is no. The long answer is maybe, though its still unlikely you need to be too concerned.
WikiLeaks revelations describing secret CIA hacking tools allegedly used to break into computers, mobile phones and even smart TVs could certainly have real-life implications for anyone using internet-connected technology. In particular, the WikiLeaks documents suggest the CIA has attempted to turn TVs into listening devices and to circumvent though not crack message apps that employ protective data scrambling.
But for people weary of a seemingly constant revelations of hacks, government spying and security worries, the news came as no surprise.
Todays leaks definitely concern me, but at this point I have accepted that security risks are an inherent part of our modern technology, Andrew Marshello, a soundboard operator from Queens, New York, said by email. Since that tech is so integrated into our society, its hard to take the reasonable step cutting out smart devices, messaging apps, etc. without sacrificing a part of social life.
While hes definitely worried about deeper implications of governmental hacking and surveillance, Marshello says he wont cut his iPhone or modern messaging apps out of his life. But he doesnt have a smart TV and doesnt plan to get one, he keeps his microphone unplugged and camera covered when hes not using his PC and he has voice recognition turned off on his phone.
Hes not alone. Last year, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg was photographed with his laptop camera and microphone covered with tape. Some online called him paranoid; others suggested he was just being smart.
WHY IT MATTERS
What everybody should be asking is whether any of this was shared with local law enforcement, said Scott Vernick, a partner at the law firm Fox Rothschild who focuses on data privacy and security. Meaning, whether the CIA shared any of the techniques with the FBI and with other domestic law enforcement agencies that could employ them domestically.
Ed Mierzwinski, consumer program director at consumer advocacy group U.S. PIRG, said the news should alert consumers to how vulnerable internet-connected devices are.
You shouldnt be too concerned about the CIA hacking you unless youre doing something illegal, he said. But this should be a wakeup call for the average consumer.
He recommended changing passwords on smart TVs, cameras and other connected devices as often as you change computer passwords. Whether its your refrigerator, smart lights you program from your phone or your baby monitor, the security systems in most internet of things products are actually dumb, not smart.
PRIVACY FATIGUE
At this point, I am so used to reading stories about accounts getting hacked that it is to be expected, Matt Holden, an editor and social media coordinator in Dallas, Texas, said via email. Holden worries about the safety of personal information like his social security number and financial details, but says hes less concerned about the security of his messaging apps.
So long as I conduct myself in a way that would mean I have nothing to hide, then Im not worried about the government taking a look, he said.
In a recent Pew survey , conducted in the spring of 2016 and released this January, 46 percent of respondents thought the government should be able to access encrypted communications when investigating crimes. Only 44 percent thought tech companies should be able to use encryption tools that are unbreakable by law enforcement. Younger people were more likely to support strong encryption, as were Democrats.
If theyre authentic, the leaked CIA documents frame one stark reality: It may be that no digital conversation, photo or other slice of life can be shielded from spies and other intruders prying into smartphones, computers or other devices connected to the internet.
Another reality: Many may not care.
People have fatigue in this area, especially when talking about data breaches, and to a degree, hacking, said Eva Velasquez, president of the Identity Theft Resource Center, who says its difficult to imagine what kind of abuses would force them to abandon their smartphones. People love their fun toys and devices, she said.
THE INTERNET OF SPYING THINGS
We dont know about the CIA role, but we do know anything with a chip in it that is connected to the internet is vulnerable to hacking, said Gartner security analyst Avivah Litan.
A hacking attack in October that disrupted Amazon and Netflix, for instance, originated on internet-connected devices such as home videocams.
Basically the internet of things is vulnerable and has been deployed without thinking of security first, Litan said. Anyone with reason to think someone might be spying on them should think twice about a connected car or a connected camera.
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Indiana schools superintendent awards technology grants – Sacramento Bee
Posted: at 3:11 am
Indiana schools superintendent awards technology grants Sacramento Bee The Indiana Department of Education has awarded grants to 32 school districts to help boost students' use of technology in the classroom. State schools Superintendent Jennifer McCormick announced Wednesday that $2.3 million will be distributed this ... |
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Indiana schools superintendent awards technology grants - Sacramento Bee
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Ellie Mae: Homebuyers prioritize technology, but still want personal interaction – HousingWire
Posted: at 3:11 am
Homebuyers of all ages are calling for an increase in technology in their home buying experience, but are not willing to let go of the personal touch loan officers bring, according to Ellie Maes 2017 Borrower Insights Survey.
The survey of homeowners and renters were announced at the annual Ellie Mae Experience conferencein Las Vegas. [HousingWire is live at the event, for more coverage, click here.]
It showed that the majority of homeowners, 57%, applied for and completed their most recent mortgage in person while 28% of homeowners applied for their most recent mortgage using both online and in-person interaction. Another 11% of homeowners completed their last mortgage completely online.
While Millennials are the most likely generation of homebuyers to begin their mortgage application online at 30%, they are not the only generation to do so. Of other generations, 28% of Gen Xers started their applications online followed by 20% of Baby Boomers.
Theres no question that technology is playing a larger role in the home buying experience, said Joe Tyrrell, Ellie Mae executive vice president of corporate strategy.
As we expected, many homeowners are seeking a faster and more streamlined experience, Tyrrell said. And its not just a millennial phenomenon; its homebuyers of all ages and both genders.
But when questioned further about specific improvements they would like to see, about 40% of homeowners said they would like a faster pace with fewer delays, and 20% answered they wanted a shorter, easier to understand application and 11% said they would like more communication with their lender throughout the process.
But whats even more telling is that homeowners still want a personal interaction with their lender, Tyrrell said. They want someone who can answer important questions, and make them feel confident that everything will be handled correctly and on time.
While 27% of millennials identified the speed of the process as the top area to improve their experience, surprisingly 23% cited more face-to-face interaction as the second-greatest opportunity for improvement, he said. By leveraging technology, lenders can provide a more high tech experience to simplify and speed the overall process, while still having the high-touch interactions when and where homebuyers want.
Using data from Ellie Mae, here is a chart that demonstrates what each generation wants most out of the homebuying experience.
Click to Enlarge
(Source: Ellie Mae)
Keep reading HousingWire to see more insights from Ellie Mae and what its unveiling at its conference this week in Las Vegas, or follow our own Sarah Wheeler.
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Karur Vysya Bank to leverage on technology – The Hindu
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The Hindu | Karur Vysya Bank to leverage on technology The Hindu Karur Vysya Bank, which has invested about 80 crore a year on technology for the last two years, will leverage on technology for its next phase of growth. Next five to seven years, will be exciting as we are investing heavily on technology, K ... |
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JCCs to Sessions: We’re ‘frustrated’ with progress on bomb threats – Jerusalem Post Israel News
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Donald Trump sits with Jeff Sessions at Trump Tower in Manhattan, New York. (photo credit:REUTERS)
Executives from 141 Jewish community centers signed a letter to Attorney General Jeff Sessions expressing frustration with efforts combating a rash of bomb threats.
The letter, sent Wednesday by the JCC Association of North America, the national organization of Jewish community centers, requested a meeting with Sessions and urged the Justice Department to do more to stop the threats.
It also praised local law enforcements response to the incidents and recognized President Donald Trumps condemnation of them.
Still, we are frustrated with the progress in resolving this situation, the letter said. We insist that all relevant federal agencies, including your own, apply all the resources available to identify and bring the perpetrator or perpetrators, who are trying to instill anxiety and fear in communities across the country, to justice.
More than 100 bomb threats have hit JCCs and other Jewish sites across the country since the beginning of the year. The latest wave, on Tuesday and Wednesday, targeted 20 JCCs, day schools and offices of the Anti-Defamation League.
The Department of Homeland Security has made its regional experts available to JCCs, and leaders of major Jewish groups met with FBI Director James Comey on March 3. Local JCC directors have repeatedly praised the response of area law enforcement.
Local law enforcement have represented a beacon of responsiveness and professionalism as our communities have endured dozens of anti-Semitic threats in past weeks, the letter said. We respectfully ask that federal agencies, including your own, do the same.
Authorities have yet to identify the person or people behind most of the threats. Juan Thompson, a St. Louis resident charged with making eight of the threats to avenge a former romantic partner, appears to have been a copycat.
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JCCs to Sessions: We're 'frustrated' with progress on bomb threats - Jerusalem Post Israel News
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Progress for Children with Equity in the Middle East and North … – ReliefWeb
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Children in the countries of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region1 have witnessed remarkable progress in development during the Millennium Development Goals (MDG) era. Starting from comparatively advanced levels, many countries made further progress in implementation of their childrens rights agenda since the beginning of the 21st century. However, progress has been uneven among countries as well as within countries. The uprisings, which started in 2011, and the on-going humanitarian conflicts affected significant numbers of people, including children and women, and caused stagnation or even reversal in what had been achieved until then in some MENA countries. The Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) agenda, adopted in 2015, sets new more ambitious targets globally and calls for nations to develop their own country-specific agendas for the post-2015 period based on achieved progress to date.
In the MENA region, there is no consolidated source of information presenting achievements and existing disparities in the implementation of childrens rights. This publication is a first attempt to consolidate available statistical evidence, for the period 1990 - 2015 which demonstrates progress and achievements of MENA countries in the realization of the rights of their children. But it is not merely about numbers and percentages, because behind any statistics are the lives and well-being of thousands or millions of children.
By focusing on MDG and SDG indicators relevant to children, the publication serves as a basis for assessing the achievement of the global MDG targets and for the setting of national SDG targets. Some additional variables, which can explain trends and most recent status vs-a-vs the targets, are also examined at a national or sub-national level where possible. Rather than presenting regional averages, this report uses data at the national and sub-national level. Inter-country and in certain instances intra-country comparisons, building upon available data, help identify disparities between countries as well as in-country inequalities, thus pointing to the most deprived children. There are emerging patterns revealed through some specific indicators, which would at times require further, more in-depth analysis to explain causes and identify possible ways to address gaps. Such evidence-substantiated knowledge can in turn serve as a good reference when setting national targets and designing tailored policies and programmes, focused on the most marginalized people including children.
This publication identifies some data gaps in a number of areas relevant to children, particularly in the context of the SDG agenda and its indicators framework. Therefore, the publication can serve to substantiate in-country dialogues and inform specific commitments to strengthen national statistical systems. This can be done through further expansion of both administrative and household-based data collection and analysis, filling in these gaps and ensuring production of data necessary to report on progress towards set national SDG-related targets.
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Watch live: ‘Slow and steady’ progress for April the Giraffe – wnep.com
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HARPURSVILLE, N.Y. Things continue to be slow and steady for April the giraffe as she progresses toward giving birth to a fourth calf, park officials said Wednesday.
April remains in great condition with no concerns from keepers or our vet team, officials with Animal Adventure Park said on Facebook. Activity in the belly remains very visible to the eye even through the web cam! Slow and steady mother nature has everything timed right. Keepers will be in shortly and any change will warrant an update!
The live camera feed was down for a time on Wednesday. Park officials said high winds caused problems with the feed.
The zoo has been streaming a view of the giraffes pen since February, and since then, hundreds of thousands of people have been tuningin to the live stream, waiting for the baby giraffe to be born.
Newswatch 16s Peggy Lee evenvisited the expectant mom.
The zoo has also launched a GoFundMe campaign to offset theannual care of the giraffes.
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