Saturday, June 22, 2013

Sutton Studio Womens Kimono Wrap Cardigan Sweater Petite (Petite Medium, Taupe)



Sutton Studio Womens Kimono Wrap Cardigan Sweater Petite (Petite Medium, Taupe)
  • Kimono style sleeves
  • Rib knit trim
  • Wrap style cardigan
  • Fabric belt included
  • Textured wave pattern

Wool blend wrap cardigan features kimono style sleeves, fabric belt, rib knit trim, and textured wave pattern.

Source: Sutton Studio Womens Kimono Wrap Cardigan Sweater Online Store



Monday, June 17, 2013

G by GUESS Jepsen Striped V-Neck Sweater, JET BLACK/CLOUDY HEATHER (SMALL)



G by GUESS Jepsen Striped V-Neck Sweater, JET BLACK/CLOUDY HEATHER (SMALL)
  • ribbed
  • striped pattern
  • Women's sweater
  • long sleeves
  • v-neck

A perfect piece with year 'round wearing power, this striped ribbed sweater is a sexy take on the typical knit. Pair it with faded skinnies and wear-now booties for a fall look that rocks. Ribbed sweater. V-neck. Long sleeves. Allover stripes 71% Rayon, 29% Nylon Hand wash Women's > Sweaters

Source: G by GUESS Jepsen Striped V-Neck Sweater, JET Online Store



Saturday, June 15, 2013

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

E3 2013: Day One Wrap Up - IGN



Day one of E3 2013 has finished, and quite a few announcements were made. Here's all the biggest announcements in one handy location.

Microsoft

Xbox One is coming to shops this November, and will cost the princely sum of $499/�429/'��499. Xbox One preorders are now available.

E3 is about all about games. And encouragingly, it turned out that Microsoft actually had some. In fact, it has loads of them. It had exclusive bombastic shooters like Titanfall and Ryse: Son of Rome:

...quiet indie games and sprawling open-world RPGs:

...some familiar faces, like MGS V and Killer Instinct:

...games for kids, like Project Spark and Minecraft Xbox One Edition:

...obligatory zombies and racing games:

And games that will also be TV shows:

And there was nary a mention of American Football, Skype, or Windows 8 to be found.

Microsoft's new partnership with EA was strengthened with the announcement that Battlefield 4 DLC will be coming to Xbox One first, and some stunning new footage of the game was shown off:

Oh yeah, there's also a new Halo:

Sony

Sony started its press conference by revealing the design of the PlayStation 4 (it's a lovely homage to the PS2 from the future) and ended by revealing the attractive, and very competitive, price of its new console.

PlayStation 4 is coming to shops this Holiday season, and will cost the princely sum of $399, �349, 399 Euros.�The�PS4 is now available for preorder�as well.

Probably the biggest win for Sony today was the announcement that PlayStation 4 will�support�used games. If you bought the game, you own the game '� that was the clear message out today's conference.

Also, a single PlayStation Plus memberships would cover PS3, Vita, and PS4. It is worth noting, though, that to play multiplayer games online on Sony's next console you will have to subscribe to PlayStation Plus.

Sony also promising that coming sometime in 2014 would be an extensive catalogue of PS3 games that would be accessible in the cloud. The service promises "amazing gameplay" that is "fast and responsive".

We saw the first gameplay footage for Destiny, and Sony announced that PS4 would receive exclusive content for Bungie's new game:

And there was even room for some new games, too.�Sony Santa Monica showed off The Order 1886, and there was an impressive showcase of cool Indie games:

EA

EA used its conference to focus exclusively on the next-generation of consoles, showing 11 titles for Xbox One and PlayStation 4.

Unexpectedly, there was a new family-friendly, third-person shooter in the form of Plants vs. Zombies: Garden Warfare '� a charming parody of recent shooters featuring all the familiar flora from the original game and some new ones too. It's even using the cutting-edge Frostbite 3 engine used by Battlefield 4.

EA recently acquired the Star Wars license, and since that announcement was made rumours have clogged the internet '� which studio is working on what?

EA used the stage to confirm just one Star Wars, but it's pretty much the one that everyone wanted: Battlefront made by DICE using Frostbite 3. Check out the announcement trailer below '��it looks like we're heading back to Hoth.

There was of course a closer look at its new suite of sports titles, with added focus on FIFA 14 and the publisher's new UFC title:

Commander mode also returns to Battlefield 4, allowing even the most casual of tablet players to get involve with huge online multiplayer matches. Check out how it actually works in the demo below with IGN commentary:

And EA ended its conference with some great fan service, giving the people what they've demanded for years: Mirror's Edge 2.

Ubisoft

Ubisoft's conference was a tad quieter this year, though it did start with a guitar solo to launch Rocksmith 2014, which will let you jam using a range of instruments:

With regards to next-gen, Ubisoft showed off Assassin's Creed IV and Watch dogs, two titles that will straddle console generations current and future. But Ubisoft also had some next-gen titles to reveal, too, starting with the obligatory racing game. The Crew is an ambitious open-world racing game, taking you to the streets of New York City to South Beach. It looks a bit like Burnout crossed with an MMO.

The signs of a transmedia revolution (games and TV shows dovetailing on a weekly basis) was also continued by Ubisoft who announced Rabbids Invasion, an exclusive kids title for Xbox One that will also be an animated show for Nickelodeon.

One of the most successful Xbox Live titles also went next-gen with the announcement of Trials Fusion. It will also be coming to mobile in the shape of Trials Frontier.

And remembering how well it's 'One More Thing' reveal of Watchdogs worked at last year's conference, Ubisoft debuted a new Tom Clancy title called The Division. It's an expansive online RPG. Watch gameplay footage with IGN commentary below:

Daniel is IGN's UK Staff Writer. You can be part of the world's most embarrassing cult by following him on�IGN�and�Twitter.

Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNHcD4AvkKrRw3M4mdxVTCWd_vH2CQ&url=http://www.ign.com/articles/2013/06/11/e3-2013-day-one-wrap-up



Monday, June 10, 2013

New Fashion Cute Bolero Shrug Top SC31006 (Large)



New Fashion Cute Bolero Shrug Top SC31006 (Large)
  • Show off Main Attraction with Open Front
  • Looks Great Over Any Dress or Top
  • Lightweight Crop Shrug
  • Fits right below & on sides of bust
  • Make of high quality Brown Viscose/Spandex

Source: New Fashion Cute Bolero Shrug Top SC31006 (Large) Online Store



G by GUESS Cynthia Vest, DARK WASH (MEDIUM)



G by GUESS Cynthia Vest, DARK WASH (MEDIUM)
  • front button closures
  • logo-embossed buttons
  • contrast stitching
  • denim vest
  • Womens outerwear

In a dark wash with a formfitting silhouette, our latest vest keeps casual looks boho-chic and adds a flirtatious flair to night-out ensembles. The sexy stretch denim makes this essential for curve-hugging style, 'round the clock. Denim vest Contrast stitching. Logo plate at back hem. Logo-embossed buttons. Front button closures 98% Cotton, 2% Spandex Machine wash Women's > Vests

Source: G by GUESS Cynthia Vest, DARK WASH (MEDIUM) Online Store



Sunday, June 9, 2013

NSA seeks criminal probe of program leaker - CBS News



After a pair of mass online and phone surveillance programs were revealed in two stunning reports, the National Security Agency has decided to go after whoever revealed them.

Play Video

Understanding what the NSA leaks mean

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Journalist: No valid claim NSA leaks will harm national security

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NSA data-gathering: Overkill or necessary tool?

A Director of National Intelligence official confirmed to CBS News correspondent Major Garrett that the highly secretive NSA has asked the Justice Department to investigate the leak. Reuters described the formal request as a "crimes report."

The Obama administration has shown a pattern of aggressively going after leakers of highly sensitive information that it does not itself leak, even going so far as to investigate the journalists reporting on them.

The first of the two leaks were reported in the Washington Post and Britain's Guardian newspaper. They claimed to have information on a program collecting the telephone records of millions of U.S. customers of Verizon under a top secret court order.

The order was granted by the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court on April 25 and was good until July 19, the Guardian said. The order requires Verizon, one of the nation's largest telecommunications companies, on an "ongoing, daily basis" to give the NSA information on all telephone calls in its systems, both within the U.S. and between the U.S. and other countries.

The second leak involved a top-secret arm of the controversial Stellar Wind program set up in the wake of 9/11 is allowing the National Security Agency and the FBI to tap directly into the central servers of nine major Internet companies to extract audio, video, photos, emails and documents that let analysts track an individual's communication.

The program, called PRISM, was established in 2007, according to The Washington Post, which broke the story Thursday evening. It culls metadata from Microsoft, Yahoo, Google, Facebook, PalTalk, AOL, Skype, YouTube and Apple and will soon include Dropbox.

Apple denied any involvement with the program. Google and Facebook also denied providing direct access to their servers and said they disclose user data only after careful scrutiny and in accordance with the law.

The nation's top intelligence official pushed back Saturday against the "myths" surrounding the disclosure of two classified government surveillance programs, saying the government cannot gather data on Americans' phone use and foreigners' Internet use without the permission of a specialized court, and that all three branches of government rigorously oversee the programs in question.

The two explosive stories this week were "reckless disclosures of intelligence community measures used to keep Americans safe," Director of National Intelligence James Clapper said in a statement.

"Our ability to discuss these activities is limited by our need to protect intelligence sources and methods," Clapper said. "However, there are significant misimpressions that have resulted from the recent articles."

The DNI released a fact sheet (PDF) that he hoped would "dispel some of the myths and add necessary context to what has been published."

Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNFvBSezYB_8VdYPddMqSQO_B_qO8g&url=http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-250_162-57588385/nsa-seeks-criminal-probe-of-program-leaker/