Tuesday, May 14, 2013

No DNA links to other crimes for kidnap suspect

May 13 (Reuters) - Leading money winners on the 2013 PGATour on Monday (U.S. unless stated): 1. Tiger Woods $5,849,600 2. Brandt Snedeker $3,388,064 3. Kevin Streelman $2,572,989 4. Billy Horschel $2,567,891 5. Matt Kuchar $2,493,387 6. Phil Mickelson $2,220,280 7. Adam Scott (Australia) $2,207,683 8. D.A. Points $2,019,702 9. Steve Stricker $1,977,140 10. Graeme McDowell $1,910,654 11. Jason Day $1,802,797 12. Webb Simpson $1,759,015 13. Dustin Johnson $1,748,907 14. Hunter Mahan $1,682,939 15. Charles Howell III $1,561,988 16. Russell Henley $1,546,638 17. Martin Laird $1,531,950 18. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/no-dna-other-crimes-cleveland-suspect-190011499.html

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Monday, May 13, 2013

Egypt's Mubarak talks for 1st time since detention

CAIRO (AP) ? In his first comments to the media since he was detained more than two years ago, Egypt's ousted leader Hosni Mubarak said he is dismayed at the country's state of affairs and particularly the plight of the poor.

The 85-year old Mubarak said in remarks published Sunday in Al-Watan newspaper that it is also too early to judge his elected successor, Islamist President Mohammed Morsi, because he has a heavy burden to deal with. He also warned against a much-negotiated loan from the International Monetary Fund, saying it would make life harder for the poor in Egypt, where over 40 percent of the population lives on less than $2 a day.

The authenticity of the interview could not be immediately verified. Calls by The Associated Press to Mubarak's lawyer Farid ElDeeb went unanswered, but he was quoted as telling Ahram Online, the electronic version of the state-owned Al-Ahram, that the interview was a "fabrication."

Al-Watan's reporter, Mohammed el-Sheik, took photos of himself near and inside Mubarak's medical helicopter, without the ex-leader inside. El-Sheik said he conducted the interview after sneaking into a waiting area where Mubarak was held during his trial Saturday, apparently before the hearing began.

He also told the private ONTV station Sunday that he couldn't record the interview because he had to avoid Mubarak's tight security.

Mubarak has been a longtime nemesis of the Muslim Brotherhood, the Islamist group from which Morsi hails. In his comments to the privately owned Egyptian paper published Sunday, Mubarak appeared to be gloating, painting a picture of a nation that has unraveled following his 2011 ouster and portraying himself as a protector of the poor.

Mubarak stepped down in February 2011 in the face of a wave of popular protests whose main slogan was "Bread, Freedom and Social Justice." Protesters accused Mubarak of fostering a culture where power was centralized and police acted with impunity. They also believed Mubarak was grooming one of his sons to succeed him.

Mubarak's comments to Al-Watan also appeared to be addressing a growing segment of the population which has grown nostalgic for Mubarak's days amid continuing turmoil in the two years since his ouster. The country has been plagued by tenuous security and an enduring standoff between Morsi's Brotherhood and its Islamist allies and the largely secular opposition, which launched the 2011 revolt but failed to make political gains since.

Mubarak told the newspaper reporter he was "very, very sad" for impoverished Egyptians. He said he was also dismayed by the state of the economy, the industrial cities built during his nearly 30 years in office, and the country's lack of security.

The comments were Mubarak's first to be directly made to a reporter since his ouster, and his first public statements since his captivity. They came after a hearing in his retrial for his role in the killing over 800 protesters during the popular uprising. At the trial, Mubarak appeared in the dock on a hospital gurney, alongside his two sons. The trial was adjourned for June 8.

Mubarak was detained two years ago and put on trial on the same charges. He has since been hospitalized, sentenced to life in prison, had his sentence overturned and then granted a retrial.

The first Arab leader to be put on trial by his own people, Mubarak is also facing corruption charges in separate cases, where prosecutors are investigating his family wealth amid claims he amassed a massive fortune while in power. His two sons are also on trial on corruption charges.

In his comments, Mubarak also said he feared for the country's future and its poor should tough economic measures be imposed in order to acquire a $4.8 billion loan from the IMF. Egypt's economy took a hard hit over the last two years as foreign reserves dwindled, foreign investment sharply declined and tourists largely stayed away amid political turmoil.

Morsi's government would have to impose likely unpopular austerity measures as part of an economic reform program it is currently negotiating with the IMF. But talks have dragged on, while politics remain deeply polarized and consensus on managing the country's affairs is elusive.

Mubarak also said he is certain future generations will view his legacy fairly and that history will "exonerate" him.

Mubarak's last public comments were in April 2011, just before he was detained. At the time, Saudi-owned Al-Arabiya TV station aired a prerecorded audiotape by Mubarak, in which he emotionally denied he used his position to amass wealth.

Also on Sunday, Egypt's highest appeal court granted a Mubarak-era steel magnate a retrial in one of a number of cases he is facing. Ahmed Ezz, who has been handed a combined 54 years of prison sentences and fined billions of dollars, will be retried on charges of money laundering in which he previously received a seven-year prison sentence and fined nearly $3 billion.

Ezz has received the heaviest penalties yet in the slew of trials against former regime officials. Many of Mubarak's government ministers have either been freed, or are still on trial.

Some have entered into talks with Morsi's cash-strapped government.

On Sunday, Mubarak's former Trade Minister Rachid Mohammed Rachid was taken off an arrest list and his assets unfrozen by the attorney general.

Rachid, who was in Dubai during the 2011 uprising and has not returned, was sentenced to 15 years in prison and ordered to pay more than $200 million for approving production licenses to steel magnate Ezz without auctioning them publicly. In a separate case, Rachid was convicted of squandering public funds and sentenced in absentia to five years in prison and ordered to pay nearly $800,000.

It was not immediately clear how much Rachid paid to settle with the government.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypts-mubarak-talks-1st-time-since-detention-082430039.html

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Sunday, May 12, 2013

Clever Party Playlist App Anthm Evolves Into Jukio After Legal Woes ...

After a legal kerfuffle with the band Rush?s management company (no, seriously), the team at Anthm saw their social playlist app get unceremoniously booted from Apple?s App Store. So what?s a down-on-their-luck team of app creators to do? Why, give the app a bunch of new features, a mild facelift, and a new name ? Jukio ? before pushing it into the wild again.

In case you missed it back when it had a different name, Jukio is an iOS app that lets guests and partygoers choose exactly what they want to hear when the host just can?t be bothered. Setup is dead-simple ? one iDevice running Jukio gets hooked up to the sound system, while guests who have the app installed can make requests from a connected streaming music service like Rdio and vote up inspired suggestions to create a party playlist.

One of the neatest things about Jukio though is that you?re not limited to making suggestions at whatever shindig you?re currently attending. As always, half the fun comes from crashing other people?s remote, unprotected party rooms and cramming the playlist with inappropriate tunes. The beauty of the system is that other users can downvote other people?s choices, which unsurprisingly happened to me just about every time I suggested they listen to William Shatner?s stirring spoken word cover of She Blinded Me With Science. Philistines.

So what?s changed over the past year? For one, Jukio finally supports a service other than Rdio ? co-founder Ben Myers told us all the way back in February 2012 that the four-person team was working to expand that list of sources, and they announced via blog post the other day that Spotify support has finally been added to the proverbial mix. Throw in the ability for Jukio to run in the background (which I?m surprised didn?t make it into the app any sooner), and access to Rdio and Spotify?s Heavy Rotation sections for easier song selection, and you?ve got yourself a pretty neat party tool.

Sadly, some things haven?t changed since Anthm first hit the App Store all those months ago. The team hasn?t yet made good on their promise to bring Jukio to other platforms for instance, but that could change shortly. There?s still no word on an Android version of the app, but Myers says that a cross-platform HTML5 version is in the works, as is a ?Listen With? feature that will let users listen in on Jukio parties across the globe instead of just trolling them from afar.

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2013/05/11/jukio/

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One by one, homes in Calif. subdivision sinking

In this photo taken Monday, May 6, 2013 Robin and Scott Spivey walk past the wreckage of their Tudor-style dream home they had to abandon when the ground gave way causing it to drop 10 feet below the street in Lakeport, Calif. Officials believe that water that has bubbled to the surface is playing a role, in the collapse of the hillside subdivision that has forced the evacuation of 10 homes and the notice of imminent evacuation of another 10 in this upscale subdivision.(AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)

In this photo taken Monday, May 6, 2013 Robin and Scott Spivey walk past the wreckage of their Tudor-style dream home they had to abandon when the ground gave way causing it to drop 10 feet below the street in Lakeport, Calif. Officials believe that water that has bubbled to the surface is playing a role, in the collapse of the hillside subdivision that has forced the evacuation of 10 homes and the notice of imminent evacuation of another 10 in this upscale subdivision.(AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)

This photo taken Monday, May 6, 2013 shows the wreckage of the Tudor-style dream home of Robin and Scott Spivey who were forced to abandon after the ground gave way causing it to drop 10 feet below the street in Lakeport, Calif. Officials believe that water that has bubbled to the surface is playing a role, in the collapse of the hillside subdivision that has forced the evacuation of 10 homes and the notice of imminent evacuation of another 10 in this upscale subdivision.(AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)

In this photo taken Monday, May 6 2013, Randall Fitzgerald checks a fissure that has opened in a lot near his home in the Lakeside Heights subdivision in Lakeport, Calif. Fitzgerald, who bought his home a year ago, has seen several of his neighbors move away as the sinking ground threatens the collapse of their homes, and is concerned that he will have to leave as more fissures appear. Officials believe that water that has bubbled to the surface is playing a role, in the collapse of the hillside subdivision that has forced the evacuation of 10 homes and the notice of imminent evacuation of another 10 in this upscale subdivision.(AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)

In this photo taken Monday, May 6, 2013, the bedroom carpets hang from the home of Jagtar Singh, left, after the ground gave way in Lakeport, Calif. Shortly after Singh moved his wife, 4-year-old daughter and his parents the hill behind his home collapsed taking the underside of his home. Officials believe that water that has bubbled to the surface is playing a role, in the collapse of the hillside subdivision that has forced the evacuation of 10 homes and the notice of imminent evacuation of another 10 in this upscale subdivision.(AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)

In this photo taken Monday, May 6 2013, is a crack in the wall of the home of Jagtar Singh in Lakeport, Calif. Shortly after Singh moved his wife, 4-year-old daughter and his parents, the hill behind his home collapsed. Officials believe that water that has bubbled to the surface is playing a role, in the collapse of the hillside subdivision that has forced the evacuation of 10 homes and the notice of imminent evacuation of another 10 in this upscale subdivision.(AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)

(AP) ? Scott and Robin Spivey had a sinking feeling that something was wrong with their home when cracks began snaking across their walls in March.

The cracks soon turned into gaping fractures, and within two weeks their 600-square-foot garage broke from the house and the entire property ? manicured lawn and all ? dropped 10 feet below the street.

It wasn't long before the houses on both sides collapsed as the ground gave way in the Spivey's neighborhood in Lake County, about 100 miles north of San Francisco.

"We want to know what is going on here," said Scott Spivey, a former city building inspector who lived in his four-bedroom, Tudor-style dream home for 11 years.

Eight homes are now abandoned and 10 more are under notice of imminent evacuation as a hilltop with sweeping vistas of Clear Lake and the Mount Konocti volcano swallows the subdivision built 30 years ago.

The situation has become so bad that mail delivery was ended to keep carriers out of danger.

"It's a slow-motion disaster," said Randall Fitzgerald, a writer who bought his home in the Lakeside Heights project a year ago.

Unlike sinkholes of Florida that can gobble homes in an instant, this collapse in hilly volcanic country can move many feet on one day and just a fraction of an inch the next.

Officials believe water that has bubbled to the surface is playing a role in the destruction. But nobody can explain why suddenly there is plentiful water atop the hill in a county with groundwater shortages.

"That's the big question," said Scott De Leon, county public works director. "We have a dormant volcano, and I'm certain a lot of things that happen here (in Lake County) are a result of that, but we don't know about this."

Other development on similar soil in the county is stable, county officials said.

While some of the subdivision movement is occurring on shallow fill, De Leon said a geologist has warned that the ground could be compromised down to bedrock 25 feet below and that cracks recently appeared in roads well beyond the fill.

"Considering this is a low rainfall year and the fact it's letting go now after all of these years, and the magnitude that it's letting go, well it's pretty monumental," De Leon said.

County officials have inspected the original plans for the project and say it was developed by a reputable engineering firm then signed off on by the public works director at the time.

"I can only presume that they were checked prior to approval," De Leon said.

The sinkage has prompted county crews to redirect the subdivision's sewage 300 feet through an overland pipe as manholes in the 10-acre development collapsed.

Consultant Tom Ruppenthal found two small leaks in the county water system that he said weren't big enough to account for the amount of water that is flowing along infrastructure pipes and underground fissures, but they could be contributing to another source.

"It's very common for groundwater to shift its course," said Ruppenthal of Utility Services Associates in Seattle. "I think the groundwater has shifted."

If the county can't get the water and sewer service stabilized, De Leon said all 30 houses in the subdivision will have to be abandoned.

The owners of six damaged homes said they need help from the government.

The Lake County Board of Supervisors asked Gov. Jerry Brown to declare an emergency so funding might be available to stabilize utilities and determine the cause of the collapse. On May 6, state Sen. Noreen Evans, D-Santa Rosa, wrote a letter of support asking Brown for immediate action. The California Emergency Management Agency said Brown was still assessing the situation.

On Wednesday, the state sent a water resources engineer and a geologist to look at the problem. Sen. Dianne Feinstein sent a representative the next day.

Lake County, with farms, wineries and several Indian casinos, was shaped by earthquake fault movement and volcanic explosions that helped create the Coast Ranges of California. Clear Lake, popular for boating and fishing, is the largest fresh water lake wholly located in the state.

It is not unusual for groundwater in the region to make its way to the surface then subside. Many natural hot springs and geysers receded underground in the early 1900s and have since been tapped for geothermal power.

Homeowners now wonder whether fissures have opened below their hilltop, allowing water to seep to the surface. But they're so perplexed they also talk about the land being haunted and are considering asking the local Native American tribe if the hilltop was an ancient graveyard.

"Someone said it must be hexed," said Blanka Doren, a 72-year-old German immigrant who poured her life savings into the house she bought in 1999 so she could live on the rental income.

The home shares a wall with her neighbor, Jagtar Singh ? who had two days of notice to move his wife, 4-year-old daughter and his parents before the hill behind the back of his home collapsed ? taking the underside of his house and leaving the carpet dangling.

Doren is afraid that as Singh's house falls it will take hers with it. Already cracks have spread across her floors.

Damaged houses in the subdivision have been tagged for mandatory removal, but the hillside is so unstable it can't support the heavy equipment necessary to perform the job.

"This was our first home," said Singh, who noticed a problem in April when he could see light between the wall and floor of his bedroom. A geotechnical company offered no solutions.

"We didn't know it would be that major, but in one week we were gone," he said.

So far insurance companies have left the owners of the homes ? valued between $200,000 and $250,000, or twice the median price in the county ? dangling too. Subsidence is not covered, homeowners said. So until someone figures out whether something else is going on, they'll be in limbo.

"It's a tragedy, really," contractor Dean Pick said as he took photos for an insurance company. "I've never seen anything like it. At least that didn't have the Pacific Ocean eating away at it."

___

To reach Tracie Cone: www.twitter.com/TConeAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-05-11-California%20Sinking%20Subdivision/id-5082931b2f604e19a488ac64e3e5e767

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Spacewalkers set to troubleshoot space station's ammonia coolant leak

On Saturday NASA will try to fix the leak that released a stream of white frozen flakes into space. The crew on the International Space Station is not in danger and the space station is continuing to operate normally. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

By Miriam Kramer
Space.com?

Astronauts on the International Space Station are gearing up to perform an emergency spacewalk Saturday to hunt for an ammonia leak in the orbiting laboratory's cooling system.

NASA astronauts Tom Marshburn and Chris Cassidy are planning to spend more than six hours outside the station to find, and possibly repair, the ammonia coolant leak.

The spacewalk comes just two days after the six-man crew of the space station noticed frozen flakes from an ammonia leak on one of the eight winglike solar arrays responsible for supplying power to the station. Planning a space station spacewalk repair in such a short time frame is unprecedented, NASA officials said. [Infographic: How the Space Station's Cooling System Works]


It also comes just two days before Marshburn and two crewmates, station commander Chris Hadfield of Canada and Russian cosmonaut Roman Romanenko, are due to return home. Monday's departure will not be affected by the spacewalk, NASA officials said.

The space station crew is in no danger, and the pump has been turned off in order to slow the rate of the leak, mission managers said. The leak is on the space station's P6 truss, at the leftmost side of the outpost's football field-length main truss.

NASA's space station program manager, Mike Suffredini, said the spacewalk's "objective is to get a look at the leak."

Spacewalk repair on tap
A team of NASA officials gave the go-ahead late Friday for the spacewalk to begin at 8:15 a.m. ET Saturday. The plan calls for Cassidy and Marshburn to float outside of the station to inspect the leaking loop. Then they'll try to replace an ammonia coolant pump that station engineers suspect may be the source of the leak.

Marshburn and Cassidy have both conducted three spacewalks ? two of them together ? during their 2009 mission on the space shuttle Endeavour. This spacewalk is expected to take a little more than six hours. "The crew is very familiar in this area," Norm Knight, NASA chief flight director, said during a briefing on Friday. This type of repair, however, is unprecedented in the space station's history, he added.

Usually spacewalks are planned months in advance, but this is the first time a space station crew has been expected to do a spacewalk on such short notice, Knight said.

If this spacewalk doesn't correct the leak, the space station can still function using seven of its eight solar arrays, Suffredini said. However, managing the space station's power requirements over the long term would prove to be more challenging.

NASA says that a radiator leak on the power system of the International Space Station, 200 miles above Earth, is serious but not life-threatening. Engineers are working to re-route electronics to avoid the leak and as of now, there are no emergency plans to evacuate the crew of six, including two American astronauts.

Cooling system history
This wouldn't be the first spacewalk undertaken to repair a coolant leak.

Last year, NASA's Sunita Williams and Japanese spaceflier Akihiko Hoshide went a spacewalk to troubleshoot a leak in a coolant loop. That leak was in the same loop as the current leak, but engineers don't yet know if the two leaks are related.

Hadfield, Marshburn and Cassidy are part of the station's Expedition 35 crew, along with Russian cosmonauts Pavel Vinogradov, Alexander Misurkin and Romanenko. On May 28, three new crew members are expected to launch from Kazakhstan to join Vinogradov, Misurkin and Cassidy on the International Space Station. The spacewalk would not affect that schedule, NASA said.

Follow Miriam Kramer on?Twitter?and?Google+. Follow us on?Twitter, Facebook ?and?Google+. Original article on Space.com.

Copyright 2013 Space.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

This story was originally published on

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Seth Meyers to replace Jimmy Fallon late at night

NEW YORK (AP) ? Seth Meyers is moving from his "Weekend Update" desk to his own late night show on NBC.

The network said Sunday that the longtime "Saturday Night Live" cast member will replace Jimmy Fallon at the 12:35 a.m. "Late Night" show. Fallon will be moving up an hour as Jay Leno's replacement on the "Tonight" show.

Meyers' show will originate from New York's Rockefeller Center, just like Fallon's "Tonight" show. Meyers' premiere date has not been set.

Longtime "Saturday Night Live" producer Lorne Michaels will be the executive in charge of both shows.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/seth-meyers-replace-jimmy-fallon-night-183509736.html

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Sharp LC-60LE650U


The Sharp Aquos LC-60LE650U dispels the notion that buying an inexpensive big-screen HDTV means settling for a stingy feature set. For $1,499.99 (list) you get a well-designed 60-inch edge-lit LED TV with a 120Hz refresh rate, built-in Wi-Fi, and a very generous catalog of Web apps. Skewed color accuracy and narrow viewing angles are part of the deal, but this set still represents a good value for the price.

Design and Features
A nice looking HDTV, the LC-60LE650U uses thin (0.8-inch) glossy black top and side bezels and a 1-inch bottom bezel in a black textured finish. Below the bottom bezel is a thin panel containing remote and ambient light sensors and Sharp?s illuminated upside-down 'V' logo.

The cabinet is a little more than 3 inches thick, and weighs 55 pounds. It can be mounted on a wall or you can use the included black rectangular stand, which is sturdy but doesn't let you swivel the set.? Power, Volume Up/Down, Channel Up/Down, Menu, and Input buttons are mounted on the lower left side of the cabinet. A pair of front-facing 10-watt speakers sit below the screen; they're sufficiently loud and full-sounding, and deliver a decent virtual surround sound effect.

At the rear of the cabinet, facing left, are four HDMI ports, one USB port, and one 3.5mm audio output. Outward facing ports include a VGA port, one set of component A/V jacks, two sets of composite A/V jacks, and a 15-pin RS-232 serial port, while a secondary USB port, a LAN port, an antenna/cable connector, and two audio ports (digital-out and analog-in) all face downward.? The LC-60LE650U integrates 802.11n Wi-Fi.

The included 9.5-inch remote has 54 buttons and four arrow keys. None of the buttons are backlit, but there is a dedicated Netflix button along with a Smart Central button that opens a Favorites bar along the bottom of the screen that you can populate with frequently used apps. The bar also gives you access to a Web browser and popular video services like Netflix, Hulu Plus, CinemaNow, Vudu, and YouTube. It also includes music and social networking services like Pandora, Rhapsody, Flickr, Picasa, and Skype, along with hundreds of Vudu apps including a Facebook app. The set also supports mobile device integration, with both Android and iOS versions of Sharp's Sharp Beam app that lets you stream photos, videos, and music to the HDTV.

The LC-60LE650U offers seven AV modes (picture presets) including Standard, Movie, Game, User, Dynamic, Dynamic (fixed), and Auto. The Dynamic (fixed) setting restores everything to a factory default setting and cannot be tweaked, while Auto optimizes the picture according to ambient light and image signal.

Basic picture settings include Brightness, Contrast, Color, Tint, and Sharpness, and there are several advanced settings including C.M.S. (Color Management System) settings for Hue, Saturation, and Value. You can fine-tune the white point in the advanced Color Temperature menu, plus adjust gamma levels and enable or disable Film Mode and Noise Reduction options when needed.?

Performance
The LC60LE650's 1,920-by-1,080 panel delivers a generally good picture, but colors are a oversaturated out of the box. After basic dark room calibration, the CIE chromaticity chart below shows red and blue landing just outside their corresponding boxes (inside the box is ideal, according to CIE standards) while green is off by a significant margin. As a result, there is a slight green cast in highlight details; for example, in Piranha on Blu-ray, Elizabeth Shue's blond hair has a subtle green tinge to it. The hot greens aren't saturated to the point where they affect skin tones, however.

The panel produced a decent peak brightness reading of 333.89 cd/m2 and a middling black level reading of 0.0719 cd/m2, as measured with a Klien K-10A Colorimeter, SpectraCal's CalMAN 5 software, and images from the DisplayMate HDTV diagnostic tests. The corresponding contrast ratio of 4,643:1 is relatively low when compared to more expensive sets like Toshiba's 55L7200U (17,290:1) but is pretty much in line with, but brighter than, budget sets like Vizio's E601I-A3 (5,017:1).

Off-axis viewing could be better; greens shifted to a slight brownish-green when viewed from an extreme side angle (around 75 degrees from dead center) and the image lost some of its pop, but the picture is still watchable. In my tests, image detail was sharp with only a minor loss of shadow detail in Piranha's dark underwater scenes.

The LC-60LE650U used 146 watts of power with power saving disabled. In Standard power-saving mode it used 114 watts and maintained good luminance levels, while the Advanced power saving mode drew only 47 watts but made the picture way too dark. These numbers are comparable to the 60-inch LED Vizio E601I-A3 (118 watts), but pale in comparison to the 55-inch LED LG 55LM6700 (67 watts).?

Conclusion
All things considered, the Sharp Aquos LC-60LE650U is a good deal, just not a spectacular one. On the one hand you get a big 60-inch screen, lots of features, and a bright, sharp picture, all at an affordable price. On the other hand, out-of-the-box color accuracy is off and you can expect some color shifting when sitting off to the side. If you can part with another $250 or so, our Editors Choice midrange large-screen set, the Vizio M3D651SV gets you a bigger screen (65 inches), a much wider viewing angle, and a solid feature set, including passive 3D and four sets of glasses.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/tsViwmGeVBE/0,2817,2418541,00.asp

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