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Friday, November 20, 2015

Apple Music (for Android)

An official Apple app on your Android device? Yes, it's true. With Apple Music for Android, Cupertino's first real Android app, Apple crosses enemy lines and opens up its new music streaming service to Google partisans. Apple Music for Android maintains most of the iOS original's good parts. However, the same flaws have carried over as well. Furthermore, without the support of the Apple ecosystem, Apple Music is less appealing on Android than on on Apple's mobile devices.
On iPhones and iPads with iOS 9 installed, Apple Music just takes over from the previous music app, but on Android it's a separate download. There's a generous 90-day free trial. After that, subscriptions start at $9.99 per month for individual listeners. Six-person family plans cost $14.99 per month. I was unable to set up new accounts on my test phones: the Moto X$99.99 at Amazon and the Nexus 5$169.99 at Groupon. The loading screen hung whenever I tried to enter a password. I had to create my profile on a Mac instead and then log in through a phone. I hope this annoying, protracted account creation process is fixed soon. Keep in mind that the service is technically still in beta.
For an in-depth analysis of Apple Music's features, such as its curated playlists, exclusive radio stations, and social network functionality, check out my full review of Apple Music for iPhone$9.99 at Apple Store. The experience on Android is largely the same. The music video for "Hotline Bling" by Drake just looked as good, and I didn't notice a drop in sound quality when listening to the Insane Clown Posse. But this also means many of my issues with the original Apple Music remain present in this version. There are still app-crashing bugs, the features are still more gimmicky than actually useful, and there are still holes in the admittedly impressive music library.
Apple Music for Android also can't leverage the Apple ecosystem the same way it can on iOS. Obviously there's no Siri or Apple Watch$699.99 at Apple Store support. Android Owners, unlike most iPhone owners, also won't already have a preexisting library of iTunes songs on their device for Apple Music to complement. If your connection is too poor to stream music, you better have some tracks downloaded for offline listening or you'll be out of luck. 
These new and old problems prevent the service from putting up much of a fight against our Editors' Choice Spotify$0.00 at Amazon.  But Apple's perfectionist spirit shines through. Apple Music on Android has some slight but appreciated interface and graphic design tweaks to make the app look less like an iOS app and more like other, popular Android apps. 
Play It AgainApple Music for iPhone has issues, but it's a fine and convenient built-in service for discovering new iTunes songs and listening to the ones you already have. But the download is a tougher sell on Android. While it features most of the same selling points, the ones that are missing make the weaknesses that much worse. We'll revisit this beta service to see how it develops. For now, if you want to subscribe to the best music streaming services, just stick with Spotify and Slacker$0.00 at iTunes Store.

Pope Expected to Address Climate Change During Kenya Visit


FILE - President Barack Obama leans over to talk to Pope Francis during a state arrival ceremony on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, Sept. 23, 2015.

During his September trip to the United States, Francis addressed climate change in speeches at the White House, as well as during a joint meeting of the U.S. Congress, and at the United Nations.
Visiting the White House, Pope Francis called for action.
“It seems clear to me also that climate change is a problem which can no longer be left to a future generation,” he said.
A priority
Achim Steiner, the executive director of the United Nations Environment Program, or UNEP, says he is pleased that the pope has made climate change a priority.
“In part, because he transcends and goes beyond the science and the economics and let’s say, the metrics of climate change, to say look, if we know that this is something that can happen, that is beginning to happen already, then we must act on it,” said Steiner.
A recent World Bank report said more than 100 million people could be pushed into poverty by 2030 due to the impact of climate change, with sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia the hardest hit. Steiner notes poverty is an issue many Africans know well.
“And it is 1 billion people who have contributed very little to the problem of global warming today but are on the front lines,” he said.
According to Steiner, richer nations can recover faster from natural disasters because of better infrastructure investments. Africa is more vulnerable because it has fewer institutional and financial resources to protect itself.
'Extreme weather event'
“For this continent, it is very difficult, whether it’s pastoral communities that will no longer be able to have their animals and livestock have access to pasture,” said Steiner. “Whether it is agriculture, that is rainfall dependent, whether it is the infrastructure that gets flooded away through just a 24-hour extreme weather event, these are the consequences that put a billion people and their development at risk.”
Twenty-two year old recent university graduate Samuel Gitau says he agrees that climate change is an important issue for Pope Francis to address during his Kenya visit.
“It’s good for nations and also for individuals to be cautious of what we are doing, our activities, in a manner to control those climatic changes,” said Gitau.
Pope Francis is scheduled to meet with officials at UNEP headquarters in Nairobi during his visit, just four days prior to the start of the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Paris.

State of emergency in Mali after deadly hotel attack

Malian security officials show a flag they said belonged to attackers in front of the Radisson hotel in Bamako [Joe Penney/Reuters]
Mali was under a state of emergency on Saturday after a brazen siege by gunmen at a five-star hotel killed 21 people in the heart of the capital, Bamako.
A breakaway al-Qaeda faction from the country's restive north claimed responsibility for the attack.
Three days of mourning were announced by President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita, who also clarified the death toll after Malian state television reported late Friday that 27 were dead, along with three attackers. 
"This evening, the death toll is heavy and terrible: 21 dead, two [assailants] amongst them, and seven wounded," Keita said.
The president cut short a trip to a regional summit in Chad in the wake of the attack.
Friday's assault on the Radisson Blu hotel was the latest in a series of deadly raids this year on high-profile targets in Mali, which has battled Islamist rebels based in its desert north for years.
The attack is a sharp setback for former colonial power France, which has stationed 3,500 troops in northern Mali to try to restore stability.
"There's a real sense of grief here - how could this have happened?" Al Jazeera's Nicolas Haque reported from outside the hotel on Saturday. "People here didn't expect such a brazen attack. It's one of the most secure areas in Bamako. It comes as a shock as the attackers literally walked into the hotel."
Malian, French and US security forces ended the siege after the gunmen stormed the hotel and took about 170 people hostage.
US special forces helped rescue at least six Americans, a military spokesman told reporters in Washington. Footage also showed French security forces at the scene, and witnesses saw UN troops.
President Barack Obama said on Saturday the United States was trying to account for all its citizens at the hotel as he denounced the assault.
"This barbarity only stiffens our resolve to meet these challenges," he said from a summit in Malaysia. "The United States will be relentless against those who target our citizens."
Gunmen shouting "Allahu Akbar", or "God is great", opened fire outside the hotel in the centre of the capital before rushing inside.
Al-Mourabitoun, an armed group that has had ties to al-Qaeda, claimed responsibility for the attack, saying it carried it out "in coordination with Imarat al-Sahra group and al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb [AQIM]".
The group, in a recording obtained by Al Jazeera, said it would only release the hostages it had taken when its members were freed from Bamako's prisons, and when what it called "aggression against the people of northern Mali" is stopped.
"About 10 gunmen arrived early in the morning and shot all the guards in front of the Radisson," business owner Garba Konate told Al Jazeera. 
Another witness said he helped a wounded guard to safety.
"I started hearing gunshots coming from the hotel," said Ibrahim, 28, who works at a cultural centre 40 metres away.
"Soon, after I saw one of the guards running out injured... The security guard told me the shooters were so quick that he doesn't even know how many came in.

Questions That Were Asked at Apple Job Interviews


Apple is known for being one of the most challenging and exciting places to work, so it’s not surprising to learn that getting a job there is no easy task.
Like Google and other big tech companies, Apple asks both technical questions based on your past work experience and some mind-boggling puzzles.
We combed through recent posts on Glassdoor to find some of the toughest interview questions candidates have been asked.
Some require solving tricky math problems, while others are simple but vague enough to keep you on your toes.
  1. “Explain to an 8 year old what a modem/router is and its functions.” — At-Home Advisor candidate
  2. “Who is your best friend?” — Family Room Specialist candidate
  3. “If you have 2 eggs, and you want to figure out what’s the highest floor from which you can drop the egg without breaking it, how would you do it? What’s the optimal solution?” — Software Engineer candidate
  4. “Describe an interesting problem and how you solved it.” — Software Engineer candidate
  5. “How many children are born every day?” — Global Supply Manager candidate
  6. “You have a 100 coins laying flat on a table, each with a head side and a tail side. 10 of them are heads up, 90 are tails up. You can’t feel, see or in any other way find out which side is up. Split the coins into two piles such that there are the same number of heads in each pile.” — Software Engineer candidate
  7. “Describe yourself, what excites you?” — Software Engineer candidate
  8. “If we hired you, what do you want to work on?” — Senior Software Engineer candidate
  9. “There are three boxes, one contains only apples, one contains only oranges, and one contains both apples and oranges. The boxes have been incorrectly labeled such that no label identifies the actual contents of the box it labels. Opening just one box, and without looking in the box, you take out one piece of fruit. By looking at the fruit, how can you immediately label all of the boxes correctly?” — Software QA Engineer candidate
  10. “Scenario: You’re dealing with an angry customer who was waiting for help for the past 20 minutes and is causing a commotion. She claims that she’ll just walk over to Best Buy or the Microsoft Store to get the computer she wants. Resolve this issue.” — Specialist candidate
  11. “How would you breakdown the cost of this pen?” — Global Supply Manager candidate
  12. “A man calls in and has an older computer that is essentially a brick. What do you do?” — Apple Care At-Home Consultant candidate
  13. “Are you smart?” — Build Engineer candidate
  14. “What are your failures, and how have you learned from them?” — Software Manager candidate
  15. “Have you ever disagreed with a manager’s decision, and how did you approach the disagreement? Give a specific example and explain how you rectified this disagreement, what the final outcome was, and how that individual would describe you today.” — Software Engineer candidate
  16. “You put a glass of water on a record turntable and begin slowly increasing the speed. What happens first — does the glass slide off, tip over, or does the water splash out?” — Mechanical Engineer candidate
  17. “Tell me something that you have done in your life which you are particularly proud of.” — Software Engineering Manager candidate
  18. “Why should we hire you?” — Senior Software Engineer candidate
  19. “Are you creative? What’s something creative that you can think of?” — Software Engineer candidate
  20. “Describe a humbling experience.” — Apple Retail Specialist candidate
  21. “What’s more important, fixing the customer’s problem or creating a good customer experience?” — Apple At Home Advisor candidate
  22. “Why did Apple change its name from Apple Computers Incorporated to Apple Inc.?” — Specialist candidate
  23. “You seem pretty positive, what types of things bring you down?” — Family Room Specialist candidate
  24. “Show me (role play) how you would show a customer you’re willing to help them by only using your voice.” — College At-Home Advisor candidate
  25. “What brings you here today?” — Software Engineer candidate
  26. “Given an iTunes type of app that pulls down lots of images that get stale over time, what strategy would you use to flush disused images over time?” — Software Engineer candidate
  27. “If you’re given a jar with a mix of fair and unfair coins, and you pull one out and flip it 3 times, and get the specific sequence heads heads tails, what are the chances that you pulled out a fair or an unfair coin?” — Lead Analyst candidate
  28. “What was your best day in the last 4 years? What was your worst?” — Engineering Project Manager candidate
  29. “When you walk in the Apple Store as a customer, what do you notice about the store/how do you feel when you first walk in?” — Specialist candidate
  30. “Why do you want to join Apple and what will you miss at your current work if Apple hired you?” — Software Engineer candidate
  31. “How would you test your favorite app?” — Software QA Engineer candidate
  32. “What would you want to do 5 years from now?” — Software Engineer candidate
  33. “How would you test a toaster?” — Software QA Engineer candidate

Police: Cousin of Paris Attacks Ringleader Didn't Blow Herself Up

The woman found dead after a police assault targeting the suspected ringleader of the Paris terror attacks didn't blow herself up with a suicide vest, according to a police source.
Prosecutors had previously said that 26-year-old Hasna Aitboulahcen, believed to be the cousin of alleged ringleader Abdelhamid Abaaoud, detonated an explosive vest during the early morning raid in Paris on Wednesday.
The police source said that was not the case and the suicide bomber was a man, not a woman.
Aitboulahcen was known as an alcohol-drinking "party girl" with a penchant for wearing American-style cowboy hats before converting to radicalism about six months ago, Greg Palkot reported on "Happening Now."
Palkot said that in addition to Aitboulahcen and Abaaoud, a third person was killed during the raid, a woman. Police, however, have not released her identity.


Dozens feared dead as hostage situation in Mali hotel

The deadly hostage situation at a hotel in Mali's capital city appeared to come to an end Friday, but the fate of dozens of guests and hotel workers was still unclear.
Local media reported there were no more hostages by Friday afternoon at the Radisson hotel in Bamako. 
A U.N. official told The Associated Press that initial reports from the field indicate that 27 people were killed in the attack. Al Qaeda-linked jihadists claimed responsibility for the siege. 
The official, speaking on condition of anonymity because the operation is still ongoing, said 12 bodies were found in the basement and 15 bodies were found on the second floor. The official stressed that the building had yet to be totally cleared.
Another U.N. official, U.N. Mali mission spokesman Olivier Salgado, said two extremists have been killed and that forces are going from room to room, checking for more casualties.
A Mali security ministry spokesman told Reuters that some of the attackers who are still alive have "dug in in the upper floors" of the building.
"They are alone with the Malian special forces who are trying to dislodge them," spokesman Amadou Sangho said.
Gunfire continued into the late afternoon and Malian army commander Modibo Nama Traore said operations were continuing. 
Traore told The Associated Press that at least one guest reported the attackers instructed him to recite verses from the Koran before he was allowed to leave the hotel.
At least five U.S. Defense Department personnel and one other American were freed, according to a defense official and a spokesman for U.S. Africa Command. A senior U.S. defense official told Fox News that the 22 Department of Defense and military personnel in Bamako at the time of the incident "have all been accounted for."
Traore said Malian special forces entered the hotel and freed hostages "floor by floor." Hours after the attacks began, local TV images showed heavily armed troops in what appeared to be a lobby area. Some U.S. military personnel in Bamako are assisting with the rescue efforts, a defense official told Fox News.
Traore said 10 gunmen stormed the hotel Friday morning shouting "Allahu Akbar," or "God is great," in Arabic before firing on the guards. A staffer at the hotel who gave his name as Tamba Diarra said over the phone that the attackers used grenades in the assault.
Al-Mourabitoun, a militant group based in northern Mali, said on Twitter that it was behind the attack, but the claim could not immediately be verified. The group is led by notorious one-eyed jihadist Mokhtar Belmokhtar, who gained recognition in 2013 for an attack on an Algerian gas plant that left 40 people dead, including three Americans.
A handful of jihadi groups, some linked to Al Qaeda, seized the northern half of Mali -- a former French colony -- in 2012 and were ousted from cities and towns by a French military intervention. 
The Brussels-based Rezidor Hotel group that operates the hotel said the assailants had initially "locked in" 140 guests and 30 employees.

Profile: Mokhtar Belmokhtar

Four months later, he was reported to have masterminded two suicide attacks in Niger, targeting a military base in Agadez and the French-run uranium mine in Arlit, killing at least 25 people.
He has been declared dead many times, the latest by a US air strike on 14 June in Libya, according to the country's authorities. However, Belmokhtar has survived previous announcements of his death. In March 2013, the Chadian army claimed to have killed him, only for him to resurface months later.
For years, the US government has been offering a reward of up to $5m (£3.3m) for information leading to his location.
"He is one of the best known warlords of the Sahara," Stephen Ellis, an academic at the African Studies Centre in Leiden in The Netherlands, says.
He became known as "Mr Marlboro" because of his role in cigarette-smuggling across the Sahel region to finance his jihad, which he has recently waged under the banner of the Signed-in-Blood Battalion. 
"Belmokhtar has been active in political, ideological and criminal circles in the Sahara for the past two decades," Jon Marks, an academic at the London-based think-tank Chatham House, told the BBC.