Monday, May 26, 2014

Door to Door Transportation Virginia | Carnival's CEO Explains the Cruise Industry's Biggest Problem

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By: David
source:www.businessweek.com
Posted By: www.courtesytransportationmd.com

About 21.7 million people are expected to take a cruise this year, with Americans making up more than half the industry’s passenger count. But highly public “voyage disruptions”–the industry term for a nightmare cruise that garners nonstop cable TV coverage–and the reality of a mature market have cruise lines struggling to stoke new demand in the world’s largest market. Almost 52 percent of cruisers hail from the U.S., according to the Cruise Lines International Association, the industry’s trade group. The next largest cruise market, the U.K. and Ireland, supplies only 8 percent of passengers.

A big problem for cruise lines is that many people who’ve never been on a cruise vacation assume they won’t like it. Common remarks you hear from non-cruisers:

• The ships are too crowded, with long lines everywhere.
• Cruises are full of morbidly obese people.
• Do we really need more buffets in the world?
• Cruise ships are floating cesspools and pollute the environment.
• Cruises are for old people.
• Cruises are full of obnoxious teenagers.
• Who wants to be stuck on a boat for a week?

The industry is confronting “a harder core of people who have negative preconceived notions of what cruising is,” Carnival (CCL) Chief Executive Officer Arnold Donald said Thursday on a conference call with reporters.

“It’s clear to me that as an industry we have not done a good enough job effectively communicating to the public … to those who don’t know what cruising is,” Donald said. “It’s not just 3,000 people at a buffet line and super crowding.” This is one reason that cruise lines are seeing torrid growth in China, Australia, and New Zealand, which are virgin territories for the industry. Consumers there tend not to have notions of what a cruise is or should be. Moreover, the cruise industry still isn’t sure what kind of market the millennials will represent. Some of them have cruised with their parents, but many others are turned off by the notion of a passive vacation on board a ship.

In North America and Europe, “we just haven’t effectively conveyed” the cruise experience, Donald said. “And also we haven’t effectively conveyed the value of what cruising is compared to land vacations.” The people who do that best are satisfied customers, Donald said. “Getting a neighbor or a relative saying, ‘Look, it’s not what you think it is—and you’re coming with us the next time.’ And there’s nothing more powerful than that.”

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Source:www.businessweek.com/articles/carnivals



Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Door to Door Transportation Virginia | IPhone bug leaves emails vulnerable

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By:Daniel
Source:cnn.com
Posted By: www.courtesytransportationmd.com

Apple says it encrypts email attachments you receive on your iPhone or iPad -- but it doesn't, according to a security researcher.

German security expert Andreas Kurtz has discovered that anyone in possession of your Apple device might be able to access files sent to you via email, even if your phone is locked with a passcode.

 It's a major security flaw, but it's worse for people with older iPhones and iPads. It's less bad for folks with newer ones.

Since the release of the iOS 4 software in 2010, Apple has assured customers that files are guarded with an added layer of security. When you lock your phone, the email attachments in your phone are supposed to be individually locked too. Here's why: Even if hackers manage to grab your phone, hook it up to a computer and bypass the passcode that locks your entire device, they still aren't supposed to be able to read the files. Email attachment files are a jumbled mess of letters and numbers unless you unlock the whole phone.

But that's not actually happening, Kurtz found. The files aren't encrypted that way. He was able to plug an iPhone 4 into a computer, go around the passcode and see those files.

 There are several methods available to hackers allowing them to access an iPhone's files even when it is locked and protected with a passcode. In theory, those files should be encrypted -- appearing as a jumbled mess of numbers and letters. But Kurtz found that email attachments aren't, in fact, encrypted. Kurtz was able to access email attachments on a locked iPhone 4 -- just by plugging it into a computer and using some passcode-bypassing software.

Importantly, that method won't work on newer devices, because they don't allow computers to access raw files. But the software flaw is still present on new devices, such as the iPhone 5S and iPad 2. That means that if hackers figure out how to reach those files, they'll find them unencrypted.

Kurtz, the co-founder of NESO Security Labs in Heilbronn, Germany, tested for the flaw in an iPhone 4, iPhone 5s and iPad 2. He first reported the findings on his personal blog on April 23.

Kurtz said he reached out to Apple and the company told him it was already aware of the problem. But when the company issued a software update to iOS 7.1.1 and did not include a fix, Kurtz posted his findings.

"Considering the long time iOS 7 is available by now and the sensitivity of email attachments many enterprises share on their devices, I expected a near-term patch," he wrote.

Apple (AAPL, Fortune 500) told CNN it plans to issue a fix in a future software update, but the company would not say when that would happen.

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Source: money.cnn.com/technology/security

Friday, May 2, 2014

Limo Service Baltimore MD | Microsoft includes XP users in Internet Explorer fix

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By: kevin
Source:bbc.com
Posted by: www.courtesytransportationmd.com
Microsoft has said users of its Windows XP operating system will also get the security update it has issued to fix a flaw in the Internet Explorer browser.

It issued the update on Thursday to fix a bug that let hackers gain access and user rights to computers.

Microsoft ended support for Windows XP earlier this month, ceasing to issue bug fixes or security updates for it.

But the firm said it decided to make an exception as the flaw was discovered just days after the support ended.

"Even though Windows XP is no longer supported by Microsoft and is past the time we normally provide security updates, we've decided to provide an update for all versions of Windows XP," Adrienne Hall, general manager of Trustworthy Computing at Microsoft, said in a blog post.

"We made this exception based on the proximity to the end of support for Windows XP."

The flaw was reported earlier this week and there had been uncertainty over whether XP users would get the update when it was released.
'Tested and ready'

The flaw affected Internet Explorer (IE) versions 6 to 11 and Microsoft said it was aware of "limited, targeted attacks" to exploit it.

According to NetMarket Share, the IE versions account for more than 50% of the global web browser market.

Microsoft said that hackers could exploit the flaw by hosting a "specially crafted website" designed to exploit the vulnerability.

If users visited the website, hackers could use it to gain access to their computer and get the same rights as the machine's user.

However, hackers would have needed to convince users to view and interact with the website, and would have had "no way to force users" to view the content otherwise.

On Thursday, Microsoft said its security update fixed the flaw.

"This update is fully tested and ready for release for all affected versions of the browser," the firm said.

"The majority of customers have automatic updates enabled and will not need to take any action because protections will be downloaded and installed automatically."

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Source:www.bbc.com/news/technology

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Wedding Transportation Maryland | Facebook boss wants women to act to create 'equal world'

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By: James
Source: bbc.com
Posted by: www.courtesytransportationmd.com


Facebook's highest-ranked woman has said women need to take action to create a more equal world.

Sheryl Sandberg, chief operating officer of the social network site, said women should hold half of the important positions in business.

"If you're thinking about doing something, ask yourself what you would do if you weren't afraid and then do it," she told the BBC.

Ms Sandberg became the first woman on Facebook's board in June 2012.

Last year, she wrote Lean In, a book advising women on how to make progress in the workplace.

"It's really important that since women make up half of the population, women start having half the seats at tables where the decisions are made and that's not where we are today," Ms Sandberg added.

She said women could make "unbelievably effective" business and government leaders, as well as entrepreneurs.

Talking about the wider challenges facing Facebook, Ms Sandberg said the world was going through a "huge technological shift".

"We are in the middle of the fastest adoption of disruptive technology the world has ever seen and that is the mobile phone," she added.
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Source: www.bbc.com/news/business

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Door to Door Transportation Virginia | In search for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, two new signals buoy hope

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By: chris
Source:cnn.com
Posted by:  www.courtesytransportationmd.com/

(CNN) -- In a sea of uncertainty, two bits of good news emerged Wednesday.

Searchers picked up fresh signals that officials hope came from locator beacons attached to the so-called black boxes in the tail of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, which disappeared more than a month ago while carrying 239 people from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.

The Australian ship Ocean Shield first picked up two sets of underwater pulses Saturday. It heard nothing more until Tuesday, when it reacquired the signals twice. The four signals were within 17 miles of one another.

"I believe we are searching in the right area, but we need to visually identify wreckage before we can confirm with certainty that this is the final resting place of MH370," said retired Air Chief Marshal Angus Houston, who's coordinating the Australian operation.

The second piece of good news? Authorities analyzed the signals picked up over the weekend and concluded that they probably came from specific electronic equipment rather than from marine life, which can make similar sounds.

"They believe the signals to be consistent with the specification and description of a flight data recorder," Houston said. "I'm now optimistic that we will find the aircraft or what's left of the aircraft in the not too distant future."


Signals getting weaker

Thursday is Day 34 in the search for Flight 370, which went missing March 8. Authorities are pinning their hopes of finding it on the pings.

Time is of the essence: The batteries powering the flight recorders' locator beacons are certified to emit high-pitched signals for 30 days after they get wet.

"The signals are getting weaker," Houston said, "which means we're either moving away from the search area or the pinger batteries are dying."

• The first signal, at 4:45 p.m. Perth time on Saturday, lasted two hours and 20 minutes, he said;

• the second, at 9:27 p.m. Saturday, lasted 13 minutes;

• the third signal was picked up Tuesday at 4:27 p.m. and lasted five minutes and 32 seconds;

• the fourth, at 10:17 p.m. Tuesday, was seven minutes long.

"It's certainly encouraging that more signals have been detected," Pentagon spokesman Adm. John Kirby told CNN. "There is still much work to do, however."

Four reasons to believe; six reasons to doubt

Scouring the ocean for debris

Though plenty of debris has been found, none of it has been linked to the plane, and so the search goes on.

Thursday's effort is set to include up to 10 military planes, four civil aircraft and 13 ships.

Three of them -- the Ocean Shield to the north, and the British HMS Echo and Chinese Haixun 01 to the south -- were focusing underwater.


All told, everyone involved will be scouring a 22,400-square-mile (58,000-square-kilometer) zone centered about 1,400 miles northwest of Perth.

That's roughly the size of West Virginia.

But Thursday's search area is about three quarters of the size of the area teams combed the day before and far smaller than what it was a few weeks ago.

"I think we have got a much clearer picture around the areas that we need to concentrate on," Kevin McEvoy, a New Zealand air force commodore involved in the effort, told CNN's Erin Burnett from Auckland.

Authorities reduced that area after analyzing satellite data and concluding that Flight 370 set off from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, toward Beijing, turned back over the Malay Peninsula, then ended up in the southern Indian Ocean.

Why? The answer may reside in the information stored inside the cockpit voice recorder and the flight data recorder.


The ocean to contend with

Hopes were initially raised when a Chinese ship detected pulses last Friday and Saturday that may have been from the plane.

According to McEvoy, "the main focus" now centers on the site of Ocean Shield's discovery. The ship used more advanced detection gear than that aboard the Chinese vessel, whose find was about 375 miles away, leading Houston to believe they are separate signals.

Beyond the dwindling battery life, the ocean also presents challenges: The Ocean Shield signals were in water about 2.6 miles deep, meaning any number of things could literally impede or otherwise disrupt the pulses.

To limit further roiling of the waters, officials are limiting sea traffic in the area. That's one reason that there's no rush to put drones in the water to take photos.

Another reason: Drones are painfully slow. The Ocean Shield towing a pinger locator can search six times the area than can a drone equipped with sonar, Houston said.

"The better the Ocean Shield can define the area, the easier it will be for the autonomous underwater vehicle to subsequently search for aircraft wreckage," he said.

A painstaking process

The more pulses investigators detect, the more they will be able to zero in on the locator beacons, which emit signals for 5 miles in all directions, said Mary Schiavo, a former inspector general for the U.S. Department of Transportation.

Once they lose the signals, authorities will start the painstaking process of using side-scanning sonar to search the ocean floor.

Somewhat 'befuddling'

The absence of wreckage near the detected signals leaves some skeptical, worried that the Chinese and Australian ships' finds could mean more false leads in an investigation that's been full of them.

Acknowledging "a very high-speed vertical impact" could explain the lack of aircraft debris, CNN aviation analyst Miles O'Brien said. He said there's reason to be cautious.

"It's either the most extraordinary event, or those pings weren't real," he said. "It's somewhat befuddling."

In Beijing on a 10-day trip to the Asia-Pacific region, U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel appeared to be hopeful but restrained. "There has been some new evidence here that maybe these new and emerging sounds may lead to something, but it's important we don't lift anyone's hopes -- the families of these passengers -- in an unfair way," he told CNN's Jim Sciutto in an exclusive interview.

Sarah Bajc, the partner of American passenger Philip Wood, told Burnett that she isn't sure about anything.

"All of us pretty well agree that, until there's the bulk of the plane, the bulk of the bodies discovered, and a black box intact, we won't believe that it's final evidence," Bajc said Wednesday from Beijing. "I don't think the authorities have given us much confidence of their investigative skills so far."

The lack of clarity makes it hard to "grieve properly and ... move on," she said.

"I want to fight to find him, in whatever form that ends up being," said Bajc, who is coordinating with other passengers' kin to press for answers. "And I think most of the families feel the same way."

Until he gets answers, Steve Wang, whose mother was on the plane, is clinging to hope while trying to hold himself together. "We're just going through so many kinds of emotion," he said of his position and those of other relatives of passengers. "Desperate, sad and helpless -- something like that. Everything."

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Source: edition.cnn.com/2014/04/09/world/asia/malaysia-airlines-plane

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Maryland Town Car Service | Facebook buys virtual reality headset start-up for $2bn

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By: Matt
Source:bbc.com
Posted by: www.courtesytransportationmd.com

Facebook has announced it will buy Oculus VR, a Californian company which specialises in virtual reality products, for around $2bn (£1.2bn).

The start-up's flagship product, the Oculus Rift, is a goggle-like "immersive" headset for video gaming.

It was developed with funds raised through crowdfunding site Kickstarter, and subsequent investment.

Facebook's boss, Mark Zuckerberg, said Oculus' technologies could "change the way we work, play and communicate".

Investors appeared sceptical, however, with Facebook shares in New York down 6% by lunchtime.

The Oculus Rift has yet to be released, but more than 75,000 orders for development kits have already been placed, according to the social media giant.

In a statement released on Tuesday, Facebook said it plans to expand the use of Oculus technologies to include "communications, media and entertainment, education and other areas".

Oculus' crowdfunding campaign raised $2.4m (£1.5m), 10 times the amount originally sought.

It subsequently received a further $75m from investors.

The Rift headset was widely heralded at the CES technology show in Las Vegas in January, where Sony also announced a rival product.

The deal includes $400m in cash and just over 23 million Facebook shares, valued at $1.6bn.

Oculus employees will also receive an additional $300m if the company achieves certain targets.

Commenting on the deal, Mr Zuckerberg said: "Mobile is the platform of today, and now we're also getting ready for the platforms of tomorrow."

'Shame on you'

It is the latest purchase for Facebook, which last month spent $19bn on mobile messaging platform WhatsApp.

A number of Oculus VR's Kickstarter backers took to the original funding page to express discomfort at the move, but some rallied around the decision.

"Shame on you Palmer, shame on you," wrote user Xod, referring to Palmer Luckey, Oculus VR's founder.

"Facebook is smart, they saw the future, just like the rest of us here, and bought it for two billion. They got a bargain," wrote backer Jeff McMorris.

Games developers were also split about the Oculus VR move.
Markus "Notch" Persson, creator of popular online game Minecraft, said he had cancelled an Oculus deal.

"We were in talks about maybe bringing a version of Minecraft to Oculus," he tweeted. "I just cancelled that deal. Facebook creeps me out."

John Carmack, Oculus VR's chief technology officer, said that Facebook's financial muscle would allow adequate resources for the company.

"For the record, I am coding right now, just like I was last week," Doom co-creator Mr Carmack said. "I expect the FB deal will avoid several embarrassing scaling crisis for VR."

Facebook's share value fell more than 2% in early trading on Wednesday.

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Source:bbc.com/news/business

Thursday, March 20, 2014

Wedding Limo Washington DC | WhatsApp founder Jan Koum denies 'careless' reports

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By:Kevin
Source:bbc.com
Posted By: www.courtesytransportationmd.com 

WhatsApp founder Jan Koum has spoken out against "careless and inaccurate" reports about possible changes to the messaging app's privacy policies.

In a blog post, Mr Koum sought to reassure users that Facebook's $19bn (£11bn) purchase of the firm would not change core principles.

"Respect for your privacy is coded into our DNA," he wrote.

The post comes in the wake of complaints to US regulators by privacy advocates about Facebook's purchase.

Mr Koum referenced his childhood in Ukraine in the 1980s, and wrote that "the fact that we couldn't speak freely without the fear that our communications would be monitored by KGB is in part why we moved to the United States when I was a teenager".

He said he would not have allowed the firm to be acquired by Facebook if it meant changing core WhatsApp policies like not asking for users' names, email addresses or birthdays. He said he would not allow user data to be used for advertising.

"Speculation to the contrary isn't just baseless and unfounded, it's irresponsible," he added.

"It has the effect of scaring people into thinking we're suddenly collecting all kinds of new data. That's just not true."
Privacy concerns

WhatsApp currently makes money by selling a $0.99 subscription to users.

Mr Koum previously railed against advertising in a 2012 blog post.

But privacy advocates have asked US regulators to block the purchase, arguing that Facebook has a long history of promising not to use user data for advertising purposes, only to do just that.

In a filing with the Federal Trade Commission, two privacy groups - the Electronic Privacy Information Center and the Center for Digital Democracy - argued that WhatsApp users provided the firm with personal data under the assumption it would not be shared.

"Users provided detailed personal information to the company including private text to close friends. Facebook routinely makes use of user information for advertising purposes and has made clear that it intends to incorporate the data of WhatsApp users into the user profiling business model," wrote the groups.

"The proposed acquisition will therefore violate WhatsApp users' understanding of their exposure to online advertising and constitutes an unfair and deceptive trade practice, subject to investigation by the Federal Trade Commission."

The FTC has not yet said whether it will open an investigation.

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Source:www.bbc.com/news/technology