Saturday, November 10, 2012

After 3 bumpy years, Europe turns corner on crisis

FILE - In this June 29, 2012 file photo, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, center, speaks with European Central Bank President Mario Draghi, left, and Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti during a round table meeting at a EU Summit in Brussels. The worst of Europe?s financial crisis appears to be over. European leaders have taken steps to ease the panic that has plagued the region for three turbulent years. Much of the credit for easing Europe?s financial crisis goes to the European Central Bank, which has become more aggressive over the past year under the leadership of Mario Draghi. Merkel has also helped ease financial tensions across the region by speaking more forcefully about the need to hold the euro together. (AP Photo/Michel Euler, File)

FILE - In this June 29, 2012 file photo, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, center, speaks with European Central Bank President Mario Draghi, left, and Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti during a round table meeting at a EU Summit in Brussels. The worst of Europe?s financial crisis appears to be over. European leaders have taken steps to ease the panic that has plagued the region for three turbulent years. Much of the credit for easing Europe?s financial crisis goes to the European Central Bank, which has become more aggressive over the past year under the leadership of Mario Draghi. Merkel has also helped ease financial tensions across the region by speaking more forcefully about the need to hold the euro together. (AP Photo/Michel Euler, File)

FILE - In this June 16, 2011 file photo, Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel, right, welcomes the governor of the Banca d'Italia and candidate for the European Central Bank presidency Mario Draghi at the chancellery in Berlin. The worst of Europe?s financial crisis appears to be over. European leaders have taken steps to ease the panic that has plagued the region for three turbulent years. Much of the credit for easing Europe?s financial crisis goes to the European Central Bank, which has become more aggressive over the past year under the leadership of Mario Draghi. Merkel has also helped ease financial tensions across the region by speaking more forcefully about the need to hold the euro together. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber, File)

(AP) ? The worst of Europe's financial crisis appears to be over.

European leaders have taken steps to ease the panic that has plagued the region for three turbulent years. Financial markets are no longer in a state of emergency over Europe's high government debts and weak banks. And this gives politicians from the 17 countries that use the euro breathing room to fix their remaining problems.

Threats remain in Greece and Spain, and Europe's economy is forecast to get worse before it gets better. But an imminent breakup of the euro now seems unlikely, analysts say.

"We are probably well beyond the worst," says Holger Schmieding, chief economist at Berenberg Bank in London. He says occasional flare-ups in financial markets are likely, but "coming waves of turmoil will be less severe."

Evidence that Europe has turned a corner can be found in countries' falling borrowing costs, rising stock markets and a slow but steady stabilization of the region's banking system:

? The interest rates investors are demanding to lend to struggling countries such as Spain and Italy have plunged ? a sign that investors are less fearful about defaults. Spain's two-year bonds carry an interest rate, or yield, of just under 3 percent ? down from a July 24 peak of 6.6 percent. Italy's bond yields have dropped just as sharply.

? The Stoxx 50 index of leading European shares has surged 26 percent since June 1, while the euro has risen from $1.26 to $1.29 over the same period.

? After months of withdrawals, deposits are trickling back into Greek and Spanish banks, signaling that fears of their imminent financial collapse are abating. And U.S. money market mutual funds loaned 16 percent more to eurozone banks in September. That was the third straight monthly increase in short-term funding to European banks, and follows a 70 percent reduction since May 2011.

More proof the crisis is easing: Gatherings of European financial ministers no longer cause global stock and bond markets to gyrate with every sign of progress or a setback.

As financial-market panic recedes, euro leaders have more time to try to fix the flaws in their currency union. Among the challenges are reducing regulations and other costs for businesses in order to stimulate economic growth, and imposing more centralized authority over budgets to prevent countries from ever again spending beyond their means. That's important because a major cause of the crisis was Greece's overspending during the calm years after the euro's introduction in 1999, and Italy's failure to cut the high levels of debt it joined with. Other governments ? such as Spain and Ireland ? were saddled with debt piled up by banks and real estate developers during boom years.

Much of the credit for easing Europe's financial crisis goes to the European Central Bank, which has become more aggressive over the past year under the leadership of Mario Draghi.

The ECB said Sept. 6 that it was willing to buy unlimited amounts of government bonds issued by countries struggling to pay their debts. The ECB's pledge instantly lowered borrowing costs for Spain and Italy, which earlier in the year had faced the same kinds of financial pressures that forced Ireland, Greece and Spain to seek bailouts.

"Financial market confidence has visibly improved," Draghi said Thursday during a press conference.

The ECB's actions are reminiscent of some of the emergency steps the Federal Reserve took after the U.S. financial crisis struck in 2007. The Fed offered banks cheap loans, cut short-term interest rates to record lows and started buying bonds to ease long-term borrowing rates and boost the confidence of consumers and businesses.

The Fed couldn't prevent the United States from enduring its worst recession since the Great Depression. But its actions defused panic in the financial markets and helped restore the health of U.S. banks.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has helped ease financial tensions across the region by speaking more forcefully about the need to hold the euro together.

Merkel's support is critical because Germany, the eurozone's largest economy, has the most at stake financially in any bailouts. Merkel has backed the ECB's bond-buying plan and has made conciliatory statements toward Greece.

That has paved the way for the so-called troika of international lenders ? the ECB, the European Union and the International Monetary Fund ? to allow Greece more time to meet deficit-reduction targets. The Greek Parliament took a big step Wednesday toward securing its next batch of rescue loans from the troika by approving a new round of tax hikes and spending cuts.

Another key breakthrough in the financial crisis came in late June, when leaders meeting in Brussels took new steps to steady banks and governments. They agreed to ease up somewhat on austerity demands; to use bailout funds to buy government bonds and help ailing banks; and to create a single supervisor for all of Europe's banks.

Some analysts worry that as the financial pressure eases Europe's leaders could lose their recent momentum.

A breakup of the euro "is still possible," says Marie Diron, senior economic adviser to Ernst & Young. "I don't think we have removed the risk altogether."

Europe's leaders have big challenges left.

The most pressing is saving Greece. If the country was forced into a default and began printing its own currency, investors would assume other countries might go next and begin pulling their money out of those countries too, or demand higher returns to keep it there. The coming months could severely test Germany's new willingness to help. Despite two bailouts totaling ?240 billion ($311.3 billion) since 2010, Greece needs an estimated ?30 billion more from the other eurozone countries as its economy shrinks.

Berenberg's Schmieding thinks there's a 25 percent chance that Greece will leave the euro in the next six months, if its parliament balks at painful austerity measures and euro members are reluctant to provide more help. But he thinks a Greek departure would cause "only temporary damage." Other economists think it could break up the euro.

Another hotspot is Spain, the eurozone's fourth-largest economy. The country's debts are piling higher as its regional governments struggle and its economy shrinks. The ECB's offer two months ago to buy unlimited amounts of government bonds is a potential life-saver, but the country's Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy needs to formally request such aid. He has held off, apparently hoping the current market calm will last and he won't suffer the political humiliation of taking a bailout. Analysts say that if he waits too long Spain's borrowing costs could rise again to unsustainable levels and reignite broader fears in financial markets.

Banks are another problem. Weakened by massive losses on the government bonds they bought and real estate loans that aren't being repaid, banks across the eurozone have been propped up by governments that are themselves struggling financially. Even with the help, these banks have been forced to reduce lending, which has hurt Europe's economy.

A banking supervisor for all of Europe could provide some relief, by forcing crippled banks to merge with healthier ones. But it will be the second half of next year, at the earliest, before the supervisor is in place, banking analysts say. European leaders disagree over how much authority to give the supervisor and how to fund it.

Economic growth is what would ultimately end Europe's crisis. But robust growth remains far off. The European Union forecast Wednesday that the 17-nation eurozone economy would grow just 0.1 percent in 2013.

Privately, European officials say the ECB's bond-buying plan has afforded them a crucial window of opportunity ? a year, perhaps ? to resolve their biggest challenges.

Much depends, they say, on what gets accomplished in that time.

____

Melvin reported from Brussels. He can be reached at http://twitter.com/Don_Melvin

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-11-09-Europe-Less%20Panic/id-41beec12526447a392d1af5720e0e978

the walking dead the walking dead Walking Dead Season 3 vampire diaries miley cyrus

Friday, November 9, 2012

Top GOP lawmaker: 'Obamacare is law of the land'

'},"otherParams":{"t_e":1,".intl":"US"},"events":{"fetch":{lv:2,"sp":"2146372232","ps":"LREC,MON","npv":true,"bg":"#FFFFFF","em":escape('{"site-attribute":"_id=\'3a10b6f3-e958-3f6b-ac5c-5d0bdfe2f3d7\' sensitivity=\'0\' rs=\'lmsid:a0770000002GZ5iAAG\' ctype=\'fn_news;News\' ctopid=\'2053500;1996000;2054000;3989;1055500;1638500;2063500;1047000;9158489\' can_suppress_ugc=\'1\' content=\'no_expandable;ajax_cert_expandable;\' ADSSA"}'),"em_orig":escape('{"site-attribute":"_id=\'3a10b6f3-e958-3f6b-ac5c-5d0bdfe2f3d7\' sensitivity=\'0\' rs=\'lmsid:a0770000002GZ5iAAG\' ctype=\'fn_news;News\' ctopid=\'2053500;1996000;2054000;3989;1055500;1638500;2063500;1047000;9158489\' can_suppress_ugc=\'1\' content=\'no_expandable;ajax_cert_expandable;\' ADSSA"}')}}};var _createNodes=function(){var nIds=_conf.nodeIds;for(var i in nIds){var nId=nIds[i];var dId=_conf.destinationMap[nIds[i].replace("yom-","")];n=Y.one("#"+nId);if(n)var center=n.one("center");var node=Y.one("#"+dId);var nodeHTML;if(center && !node){nodeHTML=_conf.nodes[nId];center.insert(nodeHTML);};};};var _prepareNodes=function(){var nIds=_conf.nodeIds;for(var i in nIds){var nId=nIds[i];var dId=_conf.destinationMap[nIds[i].replace("yom-ad-","")];n=Y.one("#"+nId);if(n)var center=n.one("center");var node=Y.one("#"+dId);if(center && node){center.set("innerHTML","");center.insert(node);node.setStyle("display","block");};};};var _darla;var _config=function(){if(YAHOO.ads.darla){_darla = YAHOO.ads.darla;_createNodes();};};var _fetch=function(spaceid,adssa,ps){ if (typeof(ps)!='undefined') _conf.events.fetch.ps = ps;if(typeof spaceid != "undefined") _conf.events.fetch.sp=spaceid;adssa = (typeof adssa != "undefined" && adssa != null) ? escape(adssa.replace(/\"/g, "'")) : "";_conf.events.fetch.em=_conf.events.fetch.em_orig.replace("ADSSA", adssa);if(_darla){_prepareNodes();_darla.setConfig(_conf);_darla.event("fetch");};};Y.on("domready", function(){_config();});;var that={"fetch":_fetch,"getNodes":_conf.nodes,"getConf":_conf};return that;}();/* Backwards compatibility - Assigning the latest instance to the main fetch function */YUI.PhotoAdsDarla.fetch=YUI.PhotoAdsDarla.photoslightboxdarla.fetch; }); Y.later(10, this, function() {YAHOO.namespace('Media.Social').Lightbox = {}; }); Y.later(10, this, function() {Y.Media.Article.init(); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {new Y.Media.AuthorBadge(); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {new Y.Media.Branding(); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {Y.on("load", function () { YUI.namespace("Media.SocialButtons"); var instances = YUI.Media.SocialButtons.instances || [], globalConf = YAHOO.Media.SocialButtons.conf || {}, vplContainers = []; Y.all(".ymsb").each(function (node) { var id = node.get("id"), conf = YAHOO.Media.SocialButtons.configs[id], instance; if (conf) { instance = new Y.SocialButtons({ srcNode: node, config: Y.merge(globalConf, conf.config || {}), contentMetadata: conf.content || {}, tracking: conf.tracking || {} }); vplContainers.push( { selector: "#" + id, callback: function(node) { instance.render(); instance = conf = id = null; } }); if (conf.config && conf.config.dynamic) { instances.push(instance); } } }); Y.Global.Media.ViewportLoader.addContainers(vplContainers); YUI.Media.SocialButtons.instances = instances; }); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {if (!Y.Media) { return; } Y.Media.boba_lightbox_module_targets = Y.Media.boba_lightbox_module_targets || {}; Y.Media.boba_lightbox_module_configs = Y.Media.boba_lightbox_module_configs || {}; Y.Media.boba_lightbox_module_dataset = Y.Media.boba_lightbox_module_dataset || {}; Y.Media.boba_lightbox_module_whitelist = Y.Media.boba_lightbox_module_whitelist || {}; Y.Media.boba_lightbox_module_targets['lightboxb6b96860616d9c3a266a0cbc3d3d72e8'] = {"lightboxId":"d8c5cefb90ae45a0f23e4b2c9823ba69","pivotId":"241c21b2-2f79-3dfa-a97f-83fd9bfbe783"}; Y.Media.boba_lightbox_module_dataset['d8c5cefb90ae45a0f23e4b2c9823ba69'] = {"spaceid":"2146372232","total":1,"photoby":"Photo By","xhrtype":"slideshow","videoconf":{"autoplay":true,"continuousPlay":true,"mute":false,"volume":"1.00","lang":"en-US","site":"news","region":"US","jurisdiction":"US","YVAP":{"accountId":"145","playContext":"default"},"pageSpaceId":"2146372232","comscoreC4":"US News","comscoreC6":"","showEmbedCode":true,"showShareUrl":true,"expName":"MediaArticleRelatedLightbox","expType":"inline","apiEnv":"prod"},"slideshow_id":null,"slideshow_title":null,"slideshow_title_baked_html":null,"slideshow_desc":null,"slideshow_rev":null,"slideshow_plink_vita":null,"photos":[{"type":"image","url":"http:\/\/l1.yimg.com\/bt\/api\/res\/1.2\/xE3YG0hEhM9DH_lnq.NKTw--\/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9aW5zZXQ7aD0yODQ7cT03OTt3PTQ1MA--\/http:\/\/media.zenfs.com\/en_us\/News\/Reuters\/2012-11-09T065248Z_2_CBRE8A8004U00_RTROPTP_2_USA-CAMPAIGN.JPG","width":450,"height":284,"uuid":"241c21b2-2f79-3dfa-a97f-83fd9bfbe783","caption":"Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives John Boehner addresses the second session of the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Florida August 28, 2012. REUTERS\/Mike Segar","captionBakedHtml":"

Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives John Boehner addresses the second session of the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Florida August 28, 2012. REUTERS\/Mike Segar","date":"Fri, Nov 9, 2012 1:54 AM EST","credit":"Reuters","byline":"MIKE SEGAR","provider":"Reuters","photo_title":"Speaker of the House Boehner addresses the second session of the Republican National Convention in Tampa","pivot_alias_id":"speaker-house-boehner-addresses-second-session-republican-national-photo-000250159","plink":"\/photos\/speaker-house-boehner-addresses-second-session-republican-national-photo-000250159.html","plink_vita":"http:\/\/news.yahoo.com\/photos\/speaker-house-boehner-addresses-second-session-republican-national-photo-000250159.html","srchtrm":"Speaker of the House Boehner addresses the second session of the Republican National Convention in Tampa","revsp":"","rev":"41a41bc0-2a3a-11e2-a83e-2d09c202abf9","surl":"http:\/\/l2.yimg.com\/bt\/api\/res\/1.2\/x9ftYhYWK3UGyKlbYDSpvA--\/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9aW5zZXQ7aD01NjtxPTc5O3c9ODk-\/http:\/\/media.zenfs.com\/en_us\/News\/Reuters\/2012-11-09T065248Z_2_CBRE8A8004U00_RTROPTP_2_USA-CAMPAIGN.JPG","swidth":89,"sheight":56}]}; Y.Media.boba_lightbox_module_configs['d8c5cefb90ae45a0f23e4b2c9823ba69'] = {"spaceid":"2146372232","ult_pt":"story-lightbox","darla_id":"","images_total":0,"xhr_url":"\/_xhr\/related-article\/lightbox\/?id=3a10b6f3-e958-3f6b-ac5c-5d0bdfe2f3d7","xhr_count":20,"autoplay_if_first_item_is_video":true}; }); Y.later(10, this, function() {new Y.Media.RelatedArticle({count:"2",start:"1", mod_total:"10", total:"0", content_id:"3a10b6f3-e958-3f6b-ac5c-5d0bdfe2f3d7", spaceid:"2146372232", related_count:"-1" }); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {(function(d){ d.getElementsByTagName('head')[0].appendChild(d.createElement('script')).src='http://d.yimg.com/oq/js/csc_news-en-US-core.js'; })(document); }); Y.later(10, this, function() { if(!("Media" in YAHOO)){YAHOO.Media = {};} if(!("ugcrate" in YAHOO.Media)){YAHOO.Media.ugcrate = {};} if(!("Media" in Y)){Y.namespace("Media");} YAHOO.Media.ugcrate.ratings_1d2d981032b91ff8e93387fd7f933e43 = new Y.Media.UgcRate({"context_id":"4b73f06a-bc4d-4ef4-826d-338a8c9551c6","sCrumb":"","containerId":"yom-sentimentrate-1d2d981032b91ff8e93387fd7f933e43","rateDimensions":"d1","appLang":"en-US","sUltSId":"2146372232","sUltProperty":"news-en-US","sUltCampaign":"","sUltPlatform":"ugcwidgets","sUltIntl":"US","sUltLang":"en-US","selfPageUrl":"http:\/\/news.yahoo.com\/hospital-guidelines-not-linked-readmissions-study-222525325.html?_esi=1","artContentId":"2c87665b-c3c5-3892-a56b-7321f29b0d23","sUltQstnTxt":"Are Social Security and Medicare crucial to your retirement security?","artContentTitle":"Hospital guidelines not linked to readmissions: study","artContentDesc":"NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Procedural guidelines designed to ensure patients get quality care while in the hospital are also thought to reduce the chances a patient will need to be readmitted down the line, but a new study suggests there\\'s little connection between the two. \\\"The idea was, increasing the quality of care provided by these hospitals would improve the outcomes,\\\" said the report\\'s lead author Dr. Michaela S. Stefan, an academic hospitalist at Baystate Medical Center in Springfield, Mass. ...","sUltBucketId":"test1","sUltSection":"sentirating","sUltBeaconUrl":"","sUltRecordPageviews":"1","sUltBeaconEnable":"1","serviceUrl":"\/_xhr","publisherContextId":"","propertyId":"2fcd79b5-b3a3-333e-b98e-722536a6698f","configurationId":"435db9ee-c55e-3766-b20d-c8ad3ff889d1","graphId":"","labelLeft":"Not at all","labelRight":"Crucial","labelMiddle":"","itemimg":"http:\/\/l.yimg.com\/a\/i\/ww\/met\/yahoo_logo_us_061509.png","selfURI":"","aggregateRatingCount":"351749","aggregateReviewCount":"0","leftBlocksNum":"77532","rightBlocksNum":"274141","leftBlocksPerCent":"22","rightBlocksPerCent":"78","ugcrate_apihost":"api01-us.ugcl.yahoo.com:4080","publisher_id":"news-en-US","yca_cert":"yahoo.ugccloud.app.trusted_proxies","timeout_write":"5000","through_proxy":"false","optionStats":"{\"s1\":29870,\"s2\":9600,\"s3\":9155,\"s4\":13034,\"s5\":15873,\"s6\":274141,\"s7\":0,\"s8\":0,\"s9\":0,\"s10\":0}","l10N":"{\"FIRST_TO_READ\":\"You are first to read this. Share your feelings and start a conversation.\",\"SHARE_YOUR_FEELINGS\":\"You too can share your feelings and start a conversation!\",\"HOW_YOUR_FRIENDS_THINK\":\"Share your opinion with your friends.\",\"PRE_SHARE_MSG\":\"Your Facebook friends on Yahoo! can see how you responded. To share your response on Facebook, click on the Facebook share option.\",\"START_THE_CONVERSATION\":\"Share\",\"THANKS_FOR_SHARING\":\"Thanks!\",\"POLL_HEADER\":\"SOCIAL SENTIMENT\",\"SERVER_ERROR\":\"Oops there seems to be some error, please try again later\",\"LOADING\":\"Loading...\",\"SHARE_AFTER_COMMENT\":\"Your response has been shared on Facebook.\",\"UNDO\":\"Undo\",\"UNIT_PEOPLE\":\"People\",\"NUM_PEOPLE_DISAGREE\":\"disagree with your opinion.\",\"READ_MORE_TEXT\":\"Read what they have to say.\",\"SLIDER_THUMB_WORDING_BEFORE_VOTING\":\"WHAT DO YOU THINK?\",\"SLIDER_THUMB_WORDING_VERB_BEFORE_VOTING\":\"DRAG\",\"SLIDER_THUMB_WORDING_THANKS_VOTING\":\"Thanks for voting\",\"NUM_PEOPLE_ANSWERED\":\" 351,749 people have responded\",\"ONE_PERSON_ANSWERED\":\" 1 person has responded. Your response will be seen by your Facebook friends on Yahoo!\",\"TWO_PEOPLE_ANSWERED\":\" 2 people have responded. Your response will be seen by your Facebook friends on Yahoo!\",\"NUM_PEOPLE_ANSWERED_AND_SHARED\":\" 351,749 people have responded. Your response will be seen by your Facebook friends on Yahoo!\",\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s1\":29870,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s2\":9600,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s3\":9155,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s4\":13034,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s5\":15873,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s6\":274141,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s7\":0,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s8\":0,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s9\":0,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s10\":0}","fbconfig":"{\"message\":\"undefined\",\"name\":\"undefined\",\"link\":\"\",\"source\":\"\",\"picture\":\"http:\\\/\\\/l.yimg.com\\\/os\\\/152\\\/2012\\\/07\\\/12\\\/slidermedi-jpg_181904.jpg\",\"description\":\"There are quite a few things to consider when thinking about retirement.\",\"captionLeft\":\"undefined\",\"captionRight\":\"undefined\",\"app_id\":\"196660913708276\",\"redirect_uri\":\"\\\/_xhr\\\/ugcratefbredirect\\\/\"}","template_id":"LONG_SLIDER_SOUTH","obj_id":"ratings_1d2d981032b91ff8e93387fd7f933e43","opt_count":"6","opt_color1":"","opt_color2":"","template_html":"

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/top-republican-lawmaker-wont-try-kill-obamacare-again-000250705.html

best new artist 2012 grammys foo fighters nikki minaj grammys album of the year grammy red carpet

Video Games Interactive: Review: Skylanders Giants

Expensive cash in or family co-op at its best? Wesley Copeland gives us his thoughts on Skylanders: Giants.

Skylanders isn't just a game. Skylanders is everything adults remember from their childhoods. It's collecting your favourite figurines. It's taking them round a mate's house to show off. It's swapping with your friends. It's discussing characters in the playground. Skylanders isn't just a game, it's a kid's craze; a craze that can be shared with adults.

As a parent, gaming with the kids can often become troublesome. I want to play Gears of War; my kids can't. My kids want to play Ben 10; I'd rather stab myself in the eye with a fork. We live in a world where if a game isn't shipped with the prefix 'LEGO', then chances are, co-op gaming between parent and child goes straight out the window.

Skylanders: Spyro's Adventure solved this issue. I want to play Diablo; my kids want to play Spyro ? So let's do both at once!

One year on, we learn that Skylanders is back with Skylanders: Giants; a sequel to one of the greatest kid's games ever conceived. Is it a cash-in? Is it an excuse to ship more plastic into the homes of gamers? Can a full-sequel be made within such a short period of time?

To save you having to scroll down to the bottom, let's get this cleared up. Skylanders: Giants is ten times that game Spyro's Adventure was, and showcases the level of skill, dedication, and straight-up creativity that Toys for Bob house.


At its heart, Skylanders: Giants is a dungeon crawler for kids. It's a top-down isometric game with colourful characters and blinding tech to match. My first memory forged in Giants, and one that still stays with me a week later, is of the giant included in the starter pack, Tree-rex on the Poertal of Power. Upon connecting the new portal (a usb portal that Skylanders are placed on), I sit my new giant on top, ready to boot the game for the first time. When Tree-rex comes into to contact with the PoP, his eyes, plant-gun-hand, and base all illuminate like star in the night sky.

To the sceptics, this isn't anything special. To a parent, this is the moment you begin to anticipate how your kid is going to flip their lid when they get home form school.

The tech behind Skylanders: Giants still, even now, holds an element of magic ? or witchcraft, if I'm being honest. As kids, we took toys and brought them to life ourselves. We invent funny stories in our head. We take them on adventures. But at the end of the day, they're just lifeless plastic that our imagination brings to life. In Skylanders, you take the toy, place it on the portal of power, and it comes to life before your very eyes via the TV, ready for portal-masters to pick up a controller and take them out on a mission to save the world.

Being able to play with a toy outside the game and also inside the game, is why Skylanders was one of the largest grossing kid's toy-ranges of 2011.

There's an obvious similarity between Skylanders and Pokemon. Pokemon allows players to catch their favourite little monsters, raise them and care for them. For Pokemon though, you only had Pikachu in-game. To take Pikachu on an adventure in the real world, you'd need to shell-out for the plushie. In Skylanders however, the toy you buy from the toyshop is both.

That's where the real magic lies. Kids aren't playing as an avatar, as is the case for most other videogames. The hook here, is that they're portal masters. The toys they get, are theirs to control. They are armed with the portal of power and their Skylander toys, and it's up to them to save the world of Skylands form the evil Kaos. They bring them to life, and they use them to save a virtual world.

If that's not the staple of immersion, then I don't know what is.

One of the big questions raised when discussing Skylanders, when you remove all outside factors like immersion or the tech or the marketing, has to be: Is the game any good? If the game falls short, then no amount of outside factors could possibly compensate.

Once again, Skylanders has surprised me. This iteration improves and evolves the formula we saw a year ago in Spyro's Adventure.


Returning is the basic premise: Take a Skylander, level it up, buy upgrades, before choosing a specific path to take with regard to its attacks. This, like everything, has had a huge makeover. The new user interface is easier to understand and much more visually appealing. The little touches like extra flicks of light in graphics, or the stunningly-dynamic new portal transport movie takes Skylanders: Giants from being 'just another kids game' to a triple A videogame.

The most obvious new addition to the series comes in the form of Giants; over-sized Skylanders that only recently came back to life. Tree-rex specifically, leaves you with a godly-feeling; a feeling that you truly are a giant. His attacks are split in three: A charge attack, a ground-pound, and a laser barrage. He's slow, he's clunky, but his strength is unmeasurable. Interestingly, Tree-rex is exactly how I'd imagine playing as a Ent form Lord of the Rings would be.

Giants are super-powered. But despite this, they are indeed balanced. Yes, my Ent will destroy anything that gets in his way. Yes, instead of killing smaller enemies, he'll just punt or stamp on them. But he's slow, if he misses his move, he's open to mob attacks, and if you're playing on the newly-introduced 'nightmare mode', you're going to need to start thinking smart instead of Hulk-smashing everything in sight.


Joining the fray this time round, is a host of new features; my favourite of which being Skystones. The world is littered with folks looking to throw down some rocks in the name of victory. This mini-game works by each player taking it in turns to place down a stone on a six-by-six board. Each stone has between zero and four spikes on each of its four sides. The goal is to place a stone with spikes facing the opponent's stone. If you have more spikes that your opponent's stone, you take their stone. Those with the most stones when the board is full, wins.

It's simple. It's very straight-forwards. But once you start gaining new stones, it becomes more poker than snap. Just yesterday I was perusing the Skylanders in-game shop (located in the hub), when suddenly spot a stone with four spikes on ALL FOUR SIDES! Of course I do what any portal master should; I convince me eldest to buy it for me with no intention of paying him back...

One of the other new features that really exemplifies the brilliance of Giants is the arena 'Horde' mode. One of my biggest gripes with Spyro's Adventure is that there was more talking than action. To play a mission, you had to sit through cut-scene, upon cut-scene, upon cut-scene. It became tiresome real fast. This time round there's still lots of talking, but it's skipable and those of us who want to blast and smash everything to pieces, can. The arenas are a fun little sideshow where you can just aimlessly beat things to a pulp. Best of all, of course, is that the payout for completing said arenas, is massive.

Instead of having to spam that one level, or farm that one area for cash; arenas offer vast money for just beating-down wave after wave of enemies.

Sometimes when you're a giant, you just want to cause mass destruction and wreck stuff, and make money in the process. Whether it's measly chompers or boss fights, wrecking stuff (and hurtling boulders) never gets old.


Another area Toys for Bob have greatly improved is in the boss encounters. Remember those boring fights where something slides down the screen at you and you dodge it? They're still here, but not all the often. Instead, Toys for Bob have opted for unique boss battles, some of which leave you in tears of laughter. Most noticeably, one battle sees a boss rapping karaoke-style to one of the Spyro's Adventure theme tunes. It's even complete with a bit of dub-step thrown in for good measure.

What could be better than a dub-step/karaoke/rap robot?

In Closing

Skylanders: Giants is how it's done. Sequels should improve and never stagnate. Giants moves the series forwards while taking it to new heights. Toys for Bob demonstrate an understanding of what kids want and what adults with kids want. We don't want something with a name slapped on it, churned out in a few months. Why is it okay for some to lower standards when designing a game for children? Kid games deserve the same quality seen in adult titles. Toys for Bob 'get it'. Give kids and adults a great game, with cool characters, and futuristic tech, and you're on to a winner.

It's vivid, it's fun, and it doesn't even have LEGO in the title.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Position:?Editor-in-chief

Born in Cyrodiil but raised in Ferelden, more commonly know as England. Wesley Copeland is a passionate writer with more opinions than an ostrich.

Source: http://www.videogamesinteractive.com/2012/11/review-skylanders-giants.html

torrey smith oakland raiders Jessica Lange NFL scores week 3 kat dennings Steve Sabol Yom Kippur 2012

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Panel finalizes Fla. higher education proposals

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) ? More tuition flexibility linked to stronger accountability measures for Florida's state universities are among the final recommendations approved Tuesday by Gov. Rick Scott's higher education task force.

The panel also called for strengthening the Board of Governors, which oversees the 12 universities, by giving it more authority over budgeting and the hiring of the schools' presidents.

"There's about four or five really strong recommendations in here that can transform the system," said University of North Florida President John Delaney. "I think that is what the governor was after."

Delaney is among seven members of the Blue Ribbon Task Force on State Higher Education Reform who unanimously approved the recommendations. The panel had decided earlier that it would not advance any proposals that didn't have agreement from all seven.

The key proposals include allowing universities to charge different tuition rates according to the type of degree a student is seeking. The idea is to use lower tuition rates at least until the state's economy improves and unemployment drops below 7 percent to encourage students to enroll in programs that lead to high-wage, high-skill and high-demand jobs.

The panel also recommended that "preeminent universities" be allowed to charge higher rates. Members agreed that a school can be deemed preeminent regardless of its mission ? not just if it has a heavy focus on research.

Both types of differential tuition could be triggered if state funding is insufficient to achieve goals set according to accountability metrics for the system as well as individual schools.

"The task force is not recommending that tuition go up," Delaney said. "The task force is recommending that the universities be funded at a level necessary to succeed. Period."

Florida's tuition rates currently rank among the nation's lowest, and the state has cut university funding in recent years including $300 million this year, but Scott has vigorously opposed tuition increases. Earlier this year the governor vetoed a bill that would have permitted the state's top two research schools, the University of Florida and Florida State University, to exceed a current 15 percent cap on annual increases.

Task force chairman Dale Brill, president of the Florida Chamber of Commerce Foundation, questioned whether universities would have any incentive to hold rates down if they are freed of existing tuition constraints.

"The market," Delaney responded. "At some point the customers aren't going to pay it."

The panel says its recommendations are intertwined.

House Education Committee Chairman Bill Proctor, R-St. Augustine, said the Board of Governors cannot be expected to meet accountability requirements without stronger budgetary authority and a direct role in the selection and appointment of university presidents.

The latter would require a change in current law. It gives boards of trustees at each school the authority to hire presidents and says the Board of Governors "shall approve" those appointments.

Proctor compared that to a university president being unable to appoint his or her deans.

"You might as well play golf because you're not going to preside as president," Proctor said.

Scott and Brill are scheduled to appear before the Board of Governors on Wednesday in Sarasota to discuss the task force's proposals and the governor's ideas for higher education.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/panel-finalizes-fla-higher-education-proposals-153232431--finance.html

breaking dawn part 2 trailer mississippi state chris carpenter chris carpenter dick cheney hcg drops reason rally