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Friday, May 31, 2013

Tornadoes Tear Through Central Oklahoma

Twelve days after a tornado ravaged Moore, Okla., killing 24 people and leveling entire neighborhoods, residents scrambled for cover again on Friday night as another tornado struck their town and nearby Oklahoma City.

Once again, the National Weather Service issued an unusual “dangerous” tornado warning for the Oklahoma City area as multiple tornadoes carved paths of destruction from west to east across central Oklahoma, flipping cars, downing power lines and ripping off roofs.

KFOR-TV, the local NBC affiliate, was providing live online coverage Friday night.

The Oklahoma Highway Patrol told The Associated Press that a number of motorists were injured and numerous vehicles damaged, and that a few motorists appeared to be missing.

Sean Schofer, a storm chaser, posted this photo on Twitter of a Weather Channel vehicle damaged by the storm.

An evacuation was ordered for Will Rogers World Airport southwest of Oklahoma City, and those left behind as the tornado approached were directed to underground tunnels.

Power outages led to the cancellation of all flights in and out of the airport Friday night. Local news outlets reported that 65,000 customers were without power in central Oklahoma.

An NBC correspondent, Janet Shamlian, was among those in the airport tunnels. She later reported seeing debris, high waters and no power outside the airport.

In addition to the high winds, residents in and around Oklahoma City are dealing with flash flooding, according to Jim Cantore of the Weather Channel.



Dramatic Scenes From Houston Fire

Friday may have been the deadliest day in the history of the Houston Fire Department, officials said, with four firefighters killed while battling a five-alarm blaze that ripped through a large motel on the city’s busy Southwest Freeway. Five more firefighters were taken to area hospitals with injuries, but little information about their condition was available on Friday evening.

A cameraman for a local Fox affiliate in Houston captured dramatic footage of the fire and its aftermath from a helicopter flying above the scene on Friday afternoon. Towering flames leapt from the roof of the motel, the Southwest Inn, and dark smoke hung in the sky overhead. The front section of the building appeared to have collapsed.

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A Fox news affiliate in Houston captured dramatic footage of the fire and its aftermath.
An update posted to Vine, a social media video service, by a user who identified himself as Joshua Kyle Hoppe appeared to show the collapsed front of the Southwest Inn. The video appeared to have been taken from a car driving past the damaged building at some point after the fire was brought under control.

Speaking to The Associated Press, Janice Evans, a spokeswoman for Mayor Annise Parker, said she believed Friday to be the deadliest day in the fire department’s 116-year history.

“It’s a very sad day for the Houston Fire Department and the city of Houston as a whole,” Ms. Evans said.



Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Kremlin-Owned Network Hires Larry King

A YouTube trailer for Larry King’s new talk show on a Russian government satellite channel.

The Russian government’s satellite news network Russia Today, or RT, announced on Wednesday that it had hired Larry King to “host a mold-breaking political talk show” for its American channel.

A brief online trailer for the new show featuring Mr. King, 79, displayed a series of words associated with the host in the minds of his new employers â€" “critical thinker,” “hard-nosed,” “depth,” “intelligence,” and “suspenders” â€" that some of his critics might take issue with. (Readers who want to brush up on their Russian can view a copy of the trailer subtitled and dubbed into that language.)

Given that the Kremlin-owned network devotes considerable air time to critics of the American government, and finds fault with President Vladimir Putin’s rule about as often as Fox News produces exposés on the Republican Party, the hiring of the 79-year-old American prompted a stream of mocking comments from Russian skeptics and the foreign press corps in Moscow.

While the Irish editor of the Russian network’s Web site, Ivor Cotty, mocked the mockers, and said that he was enthused about the new hire, a business news blogger based in Moscow suggested that Mr. King’s record as an interviewer of Mr. Putin did not inspire confidence.

Indeed, during an interview in New York in late 2000, Mr. King did not get very much from Mr. Putin when he asked about an embarrassing episode, the sinking of the nuclear submarine Kursk that year, which had cost 118 crew members their lives.

Part of Larry King’s interview with President Vladimir Putin in 2000.

In fact, as Max Read recalled in a Gawker post on Mr. King’s post-modern defection, the host even said in an interview with RT in 2011 that he is something of a fan of Mr. Putin.

Larry King talking about Vladimir Putin in an interview with RT in 2011.

Asked in that interview how Mr. Putin had come to be one of the final guests on his CNN talk show in late 2010, Mr. King replied:

I got along with Mr. Putin very well. When I met him at the U.N. conference, some years ago, I didn’t know it was 10 years ago, I immediately had a good rapport with him. I liked him very much. And so we thought of who would be the best guests.

And, I don’t know if this is generally known, but he asked to come on. He said he watched the show almost all the time and he knew I was leaving and he’d like to come on. And then he invited me to come â€" I’m coming next May to Moscow to spend some time with him. I had a â€" hard to explain, I had an affinity with him. You try to get that with a lot of guests, but I really had it with him.

As I said to some friends of mine, Vladimir Putin, if he were American, would be a successful American politician. He has a quality, this has nothing to do with politics… They change a room. They have a certain magnetism. And he has ‘it,’ whatever ‘it’ is. He has ‘it.’

Later in the same interview with RT, Mr. King shared more on his first impressions of Mr. Putin, saying: “I liked him right away. The crew liked him…. I loved his answer when I asked him what happened with the submarine and he just said, ‘it sunk,’ but that wonderful pause he took. I find him engaging, I liked him right away. You know there’s certain people that come into your life that you like. I liked him.”

As my colleague Ellen Barry observed in a report on Mr. Putin’s 2010 appearance on one of the last episodes of “Larry King Live” on CNN: “Mr. King, whose program is carried on CNN’s channels around the world, has long had a reputation for softball questions. So Mr. Putin’s decision to appear on the program allowed his voice to be heard both in the United States and abroad while avoiding being challenged on contentious topics like his own grip on power and the limits on human rights and free speech in Russia.”

The new talk show, which is a collaboration with the producers of Mr. King’s current program for the online network Ora.tv (a site financed by Carlos Slim Helú, the Mexican billionaire who also owns a share of The New York Times) is not the host’s first work for RT. Last year he hosted a debate among third-party candidates for the American presidency that was broadcast on RT.

Although the Kremlin-owned network, which broadcasts in English, Spanish and Arabic, is promoted on the Russian foreign ministry’s Web site as a source of information, alongside other official channels, a detailed press release about the new show from Ora.tv made no mention of the network’s government sponsorship at all.

Margarita Simonyan, the young editor-in-chief of RT, gushed about hiring Mr. King on her Twitter feed on Wednesday, and accepted congratulations from the network’s fans.

Although the network aims to present the news from the Russian government’s perspective to viewers abroad, and so does not broadcast inside the country, here state television does similar work, the opposition activist and blogger Aleksei Navalny did retweet a series of jokes about Mr. King’s salary posted online by other bloggers. One of those jokes compared Mr. King’s salary from the Kremlin to the money paid to a series of fading soccer stars who have recently signed lucrative contracts to play for a professional team in the troubled Russian republic of Dagestan.

Robert Mackey also remixes the news on Twitter @robertmackey.

Follow Andrew Roth on Twitter @ARothmsk.



Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Candidate for Iran’s Presidency Defends Record as Nuclear Negotiator

The brief campaign ahead of next month’s presidential election in Iran might lack the passion of 2009, when rallies in support of opposition candidates set the stage for the mass protests that followed the vote, but one of the candidates injected some passion into the race on Monday when he showed a flash of anger anger during an interview on state television.

The candidate, Hassan Rouhani, is a moderate cleric who served as an Iranian nuclear negotiator during the presidency of the reformist Mohammad Khatami. When he was challenged on his record during that period by the state television interviewer, Hassan Abedini, Mr. Rouhani reacted with indignation.

An excerpt from an interview with Hassan Rouhani, a presidential candidate, broadcast on Iranian state television on Monday.

An interview excerpt posted on a YouTube channel set up in support of Mr. Rouhani’s campaign shows that the candidate first accused the host of lying â€" by suggesting that Iran’s nuclear program had been suspended as a result of his work â€" and then criticized the state-run television channel, Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting, or IRIB, more broadly.

As the blogger Arash Karami explained in a detailed post on the interview, Mr. Rouhani said that his work from 2003 to 2005 was “during the era of Bush, when crazy neocons had attacked Afghanistan, occupied Iraq and everyone said that Iran is next.”

When Mr. Abedini said that Iran’s nuclear work had halted as a result of the negotiations the candidate took part in, Mr. Rouhani interrupted to say: “What you said is a lie, you know it’s a lie. This talk is what ignorant people say, you are versed in this.” He added: “Maybe the person speaking to you in your earpiece doesn’t know, but you know.”

After he was pressed further by the host, Mr. Rouhani said, according to Mr. Karami’s translation: “We suspended the program? We completed the program. This is unethical behavior of the IRIB that has gotten into you. And the person who is speaking into your earpiece, this unethical behavior has gotten into him too.”

The clash came in the context of Mr. Rouhani’s effort to defeat a more prominent candidate, Saeed Jalili, Iran’s current nuclear negotiator who has made his hardline stance a centerpiece of his campaign.

In a series of messages posted on Twitter after the interview was broadcast, Mr. Jalili’s campaign pursued the argument that three agreements struck during Mr. Rouhani’s period in charge, which were mentioned by Mr. Abedini, did effectively force Iran to suspend its nuclear program.

Later in the interview, Mr. Rouhani â€" whose campaign is supported by Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, a former president who was barred from running this year â€" pressed his attack on the broadcaster further, saying (in Mr. Karami’s translation):

I wish there were justice at IRIB. I wish there were constructive criticism, which we would be thankful for. But if someone is attacked and accused on IRIB, for them not to have to call the head of the IRIB and see if he has permission to go on or not. It would be good if someone was attacked one night and the next morning they would be invited and have the opportunity to speak too. Many prominent figures, many people who have been lashed with a whip in the Shah’s government, many people who were close to Ayatollah Khomeini, have been insulted on IRIB. Unfortunately, IRIB has not acted justly.

Mr. Abedini, tell the head of your organization that those who have been insulted once in a while, and sometimes some have been insulted a lot, give them time, allow them to defend themselves. It won’t hurt. Don’t waste the capital of the revolution.

A Twitter feed in support of Mr. Rouhani’s campaign explained that the candidate was referring to Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s fierce attacks on leaders of the opposition during the last election campaign.

As my colleague Robert Worth reported from Tehran in 2009, during an extraordinary televised debate on the eve of the last election Mr. Ahmadinejad accused Mr. Rafsanjani of stealing billions of dollars of state money and called him ‘the main puppet master’ behind the campaign against him.

Monday’s interview was one of a series of generally bland discussions on state television with each of the eight candidates approved to run. Press TV, Iran’s state-run, English-language satellite channel, ignored the contentious portion of Mr. Rouhani’s interview, choosing to highlight instead his dry remarks on the management of Iran’s economy.

A video excerpt from the Iranian presidential candidate Hassan Rouhani’s interview on state television posted online by Press TV, a government-owned satellite channel.

Robert Mackey also remixes the news on Twitter @robertmackey.



Witnesses Describe Killings in Syria to BBC

As my colleagues Anne Barnard and Hania Mourtada reported earlier this month, residents, opposition activists and human rights monitors in Syria said that hundreds of civilians were killed by forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad in two Sunni Muslim enclaves in the largely Alawite and Christian province of Tartus.

On Tuesday, the BBC broadcast interviews with women who said they had witnessed atrocities in the village of Bayda and the nearby city of Baniyas in a video report from Syria by the correspondent Ian Pannell.

The claims of massacres in the region come two years after unrest there was first documented in video posted online, showing a brutal security crackdown by pro-Assad fighters on the men of Bayda and protests outside the town by its women.

One section of Mr. Pannell’s report, about 70 seconds in, features video said to have been recorded by a member of a pro-Assad militia after the massacre this month in Bayda’s main square. The blood-stained square will be familiar to readers who were following the conflict two years ago, when another leaked clip, shot from almost the exact same vantage point, showed pro-Assad fighters kicking and standing on the bodies of the town’s men, who were forced to lie face down on the ground with their hands bound behind their backs.

Video, said to show a security crackdown in the Syrian town of Bayda in April, 2011, was posted online by opposition activists that month.

Robert Mackey also remixes the news on Twitter @robertmackey.



Discuss Rape and Justice in Pakistan With Reporters From The Times and ‘Frontline’

Readers of The Lede are invited to join a discussion of the issues raised by the documentary “Outlawed in Pakistan,” to be broadcast Tuesday night on PBS. The film, part of the “Frontline” series, follows the case of Kainat Soomro, a young woman who accused four men of gang-raping her when she was just 13 years old.

As the film aims to show, Ms. Soomro’s long battle for justice illustrated how dangerous speaking out about rape can be in Pakistan, where the legal system and tribal customs forced her family to uproot their lives and endure threats.

On Wednesday at 2 p.m. Eastern time, The New York Times’s Islamabad bureau chief, Declan Walsh, will discuss “Outlawed in Pakistan” with the directors of the film, Habiba Nosheen and Hilke Schellmann. Submit your questions ahead of time using the form below and return here to follow the conversation once it begins.



Newborn Rescued From Sewer Pipe in China Reportedly in Good Condition

Video broadcast repeatedly on Chinese state television in recent days showed the intense rescue of a newborn who spent his first few hours on Earth trapped in a sewer pipe directly beneath the toilet where his mother had unexpectedly given birth.

Video broadcast on Chinese state television showed the rescue of a newborn from a sewer pipe in the Zhejiang Province city of Jinhua on Saturday.

The images, which circulated widely on Chinese social networks, showed that rescuers in Jinhua, who could see a tiny foot beneath the toilet when they arrived on Saturday, sawed off the section of pipe the baby was trapped in and brought it to a nearby hospital, where they worked with doctors to cut him loose.

Three days after the baby was extracted from the pipe, a search for the infant’s parents ended as a woman who was on the scene during the entire rescue admitted to the police that she was the boy’s mother, the state-run Zhejiang News reported.

A police officer told Britain’s Sky News on Tuesday that the boy was healthy enough to be discharged from the hospital. The unnamed police source also told the broadcaster that the mother, who had hidden her pregnancy, was the first to call for help, alerting her landlord to “weird noises” from the toilet. The landlord then spotted the child and called the authorities.

Before the mother came forward, CNN reported, the police in Jinhua had posted a message on the Chinese social network Sina Weibo reading: “Mom, come back! The baby is resilient and alive. Please show up, Mom. This is your own baby and he should return to your warm embrace soon.”

Comments directed and the infant’s mother and father by other Weibo users were less kind, Reuters reports. “The parents who did this have hearts even filthier than that sewage pipe,” one user wrote.

Robert Mackey also remixes the news on Twitter @robertmackey.



Newborn Rescued From Sewer Pipe in China Reportedly in Good Condition

Video broadcast repeatedly on Chinese state television in recent days showed the intense rescue of a newborn who spent his first few hours on Earth trapped in a sewer pipe directly beneath the toilet where his mother had unexpectedly given birth.

Video broadcast on Chinese state television showed the rescue of a newborn from a sewer pipe in the Zhejiang Province city of Jinhua on Saturday.

The images, which circulated widely on Chinese social networks, showed that rescuers in Jinhua, who could see a tiny foot beneath the toilet when they arrived on Saturday, sawed off the section of pipe the baby was trapped in and brought it to a nearby hospital, where they worked with doctors to cut him loose.

Three days after the baby was extracted from the pipe, a search for the infant’s parents ended as a woman who was on the scene during the entire rescue admitted to the police that she was the boy’s mother, the state-run Zhejiang News reported.

A police officer told Britain’s Sky News on Tuesday that the boy was healthy enough to be discharged from the hospital. The unnamed police source also told the broadcaster that the mother, who had hidden her pregnancy, was the first to call for help, alerting her landlord to “weird noises” from the toilet. The landlord then spotted the child and called the authorities.

Before the mother came forward, CNN reported, the police in Jinhua had posted a message on the Chinese social network Sina Weibo reading: “Mom, come back! The baby is resilient and alive. Please show up, Mom. This is your own baby and he should return to your warm embrace soon.”

Comments directed and the infant’s mother and father by other Weibo users were less kind, Reuters reports. “The parents who did this have hearts even filthier than that sewage pipe,” one user wrote.

Robert Mackey also remixes the news on Twitter @robertmackey.



Monday, May 27, 2013

Vintage Apple-1 Sells for Record $671,400

Apple's stock price may be well down from its peaks last year, but the market for the company's oldest computers continues to set records.

An Apple-1 computer, made in 1976, sold for a record $671,400 on Saturday at an auction in Germany, including all fees and taxes, said Uwe Breker, the German auctioneer.

That surpassed the $640,000 record for an Apple-1, set last November at a sale at the same auction house in Cologne, Germany, Auction Team Breker. The fall 2012 sale was a sharp rise from the previous record price for an Apple-1 of $374,500, set in June 2012 at Sotheby's in New York.

The high prices paid for the machines seem to be explained by the combination of scarcity, a fascination with the early history of the computer age, and the mystique of Apple and its founders, Steven P. Jobs and Stephen G. Wozniak. And some irrational exuberance in the prices, for a machine that can do very little and originally sold for $666 (about $2,700 in current dollars).

“This really confirms the value of Apple-1's,” Mr.Breker said in an interview on Saturday.

The buyer, Mr. Breker said, was a wealthy entrepreneur from the Far East, who wishes to remain anonymous.

Part of the allure of the earliest Apple machines, Mr. Breker said, is not what they are, but what they represent. “It is a superb symbol of the American dream,” he said. “You have two college dropouts from California who pursued an idea and a dream, and that dream becomes one of the most admired, successful and valuable companies in the world.”

The anonymous buyer, who can afford to spend more than $670,000 on an old computer, seems to have enjoyed some version of the entrepreneurial dream come true, as well.

In an e-mail last week, and a later telephone interview, Mr. Breker said the original owner of the Apple-1 on sale was Fred Hatfield, a former major league baseball player in the 1950s, who died in 1998. I included that account in an article published on Friday.

Early Saturday morning, I received an e-mail from another Fred Hatfield, a retired electrical engineer living in New Orleans, saying he was the original owner of the Apple-1 that was auctioned on Saturday. Mr. Hatfield attached an image of a letter, dated Jan, 18, 1978 and addressed to him, signed by Mr. Jobs.

Mr. Hatfield had complained about the lack of software for the Apple-1, also commonly known as Apple I, and Apple had a trade-in program for Apple-1's. The letter offered to exchange an Apple II computer for the older machine, and to send a check for $400 as a further incentive.

When I called Mr. Breker on Saturday, I asked where he got his information that the original owner was Fred Hatfield, the ballplayer. Mr. Breker said he recalled that he was told that by Mike Willegal, who maintains an online registry of Apple-1's. Mr. Willegal said on Saturday that he did not recall saying Fred Hatfield, the Apple-1 owner, was the former professional baseball player.

In any case, Mr. Hatfield in New Orleans said he held onto his Apple-1 until earlier this year. Then, a young man from Texas in the software business, whom Mr. Hatfield would not identify, inquired. They negotiated a price - $40,000.

The Apple-1, Mr. Hatfield said, was not then in working condition. The buyer apparently put in some new chips and wiring, since it was a working model when it sold on Saturday. After picking up the machine, Mr. Hatfield said, the young man flew off to California to get the machine signed by Mr. Wozniak, who designed the Apple-1. That also enhanced its value presumably.

Told the of sale price, Mr. Hatfield said, “My God.” Then, he added, “Best to him. He's the one who fixed it up and figured the best way to sell it for all that money. Evidently, he's very good at this.”

Mr. Hatfield, 84, gives historic tours of New Orleans, his hometown. Not surprisingly, he's a jazz fan. He said he planned to use his proceeds to pay for some good dinners and nights of music on Frenchmen Street.

“I figure I might as well enjoy the money I got from that old machine,” he said.



Disruptions: At Odds Over Privacy Challenges of Wearable Computing

Perhaps the best way to predict how society will react to so-called wearable computing devices is to read the Dr. Seuss children's story “The Butter Battle Book.”

The book, which was published in 1984, is about two cultures at odds. On one side are the Zooks, who eat their bread with the buttered side down. In opposition are the Yooks, who eat their bread with the buttered side up. As the story progresses, their different views lead to an arms race and potentially an all-out war.

Well, the Zooks and the Yooks may have nothing on wearable computing fans, who are starting to sport devices that can record everything going on around them with a wink or subtle click, and the people who promise to confront violently anyone wearing one of these devices.

I've experienced both sides of this debate with Google's Internet-connected glasses, Google Glass. Last year, after Google unveiled its wearable computer, I had a brief opportunity to test it and was awe-struck by the potential of this technology.

A few months later, at a work-related party, I saw several people wearing Glass, their cameras hovering above their eyes as we talked. I was startled by how much Glass invades people's privacy, leaving them two choices: stare at a camera that is constantly staring back at them, or leave the room.

This is not just a Google issue. Other gadgets have plenty of privacy-invading potential. Memoto, a tiny, automatic camera that looks like a pin you can wear on a shirt, can snap two photos a minute and later upload it to an online service. The makers of the device boast that it comes with one year of free storage and call it “a searchable and shareable photographic memory.”

Apple is also working on wearable computing products, filing numerous patents for a “heads-up display” and camera. The company is also expected to release an iWatch later this year. And several other start-ups in Silicon Valley are building products that are designed to capture photos of people's lives.

But what about people who don't want to be recorded? Don't they get a say?

Deal with it, wearable computer advocates say. “When you're in public, you're in public. What happens in public, is the very definition of it,” said Jeff Jarvis, the author of the book “Public Parts” and a journalism professor at the City University of New York. “I don't want you telling me that I can't take pictures in public without your permission.”

Mr. Jarvis said we've been through a similar ruckus about cameras in public before, in the 1890s when Kodak cameras started to appear in parks and on city streets.

The New York Times addressed people's concerns at the time in an article in August 1899, about a group of camera users, the so-called Kodak fiends, who snapped pictures of women with their new cameras.

“About the cottage colony there is a decided rebellion against the promiscuous use of photographing machines,” The Times wrote from Newport, R.I. “Threats are being made against any one who continues to use cameras as freely.” In another article, a woman pulled a knife on a man who tried to take her picture, “demolishing” the camera before going on her way.

This all sounds a bit like the Yooks and Zooks battling over their buttered bread.

Society eventually adapted to these cameras, but not without some struggle, a few broken cameras and lots of court battles. Today we live in a world with more than a billion smartphones with built-in cameras. But, there is a difference between a cellphone and a wearable computer; the former goes in your pocket or purse, the latter hangs on your body.

“Most people are not talking about privacy here, they are talking about social appropriateness,” said Thad Starner, who is the director of the Contextual Computing Group at the Georgia Institute of Technology and a technical adviser to the Google Glass team. He said he believed most people are respectful and would not use their wearable computers inappropriately.

Mr. Starner has been experimenting with different types of wearable computers for over 20 years, and he said that although some people are initially skeptical of the computer above his eye, they soon feel comfortable around the device, and him. “Within two weeks people start to ignore it,” he said. Over the years, his wearable computers have become less obtrusive, going from bulky, very visible contraptions, to today's sleeker Google Glass.

Mr. Starner said privacy protections would have to be built into these computers. “The way Glass is designed, it has a transparent display so everyone can see what you're doing.” He also said that in deference to social expectations, he puts his wearable glasses around his neck, rather than on his head, when he enters private places like a restroom.

But not everyone is so thoughtful, as I learned this month at the Google I/O developer conference when people lurked around every corner, including the bathroom, wearing their glasses that could take a picture with a wink.

By the end of “The Butter Battle Book,” the arms race has escalated to a point at which both sides have developed bombs that can destroy the world. As two old men, a Yook and a Zook, debate what to do next, the story ends with one saying: “We'll just have to be patient. We'll see, we'll see.”

E-mail: bilton@nytimes.com



Saturday, May 25, 2013

British Attack Suspect Followed Fringe Preacher Once Considered a Laughingstock

As my colleagues John F. Burns and Alan Cowell report, one of the two knife-wielding assailants who killed an off-duty soldier in London on Wednesday, who then calmly spoke to witnesses while waiting for the police to arrive, has been identified as Michael Adebolajo, a Briton of Nigerian heritage who converted to Islam about a decade ago.

Two former leaders of al-Muhajiroun, an extremist group with a small following that was banned in Britain after terrorist attacks in London in 2005, told reporters on Thursday that the suspect was part of their circle.

The BBC discovered footage of Mr. Adebolajo standing behind Anjem Choudary, a British co-founder of the group and its successor organizations, at an Islamist protest in London in 2007.

In another part of the video, Mr. Adebolajo, who was reportedly raised as a devout Christian by his Nigerian immigrant parents, is seen holding a sign that deplores Britain's “Crusade Against Muslims.” Mr. Choudary told Reuters that Mr. Adebolajo “used to attend a few demonstrations and activities that we used to have in the past,” but that he “would not consider him to be a member of the organization.”

Sheik Omar Bakri Mohammed, a Syrian-born cleric who led al-Muhajiroun until he was expelled from Britain, said in an interview from Lebanon with The Independent that he recalled meeting Mr. Adebolajo. “I knew him as Michael when he came to the meetings, and then he converted and he became known as Abdullah,” he said. “I hear he then started calling himself Mujahid. He asked questions about religion; he was curious. He had first started coming when there was a lot of anger about the Iraq war and the war on terror. Whether I influenced him or not, I do not know. But he was a quiet boy, so something must have happened.”

Sheik Omar also suggested that the killing was not an act of terrorism or a crime according to his interpretation of Islamic law. “Under Islam, this can be justified,” he told The Independent. “He was not targeting civilians. He was taking on a military man in an operation.”

The cleric also told The Guardian that the suspect had attended al-Muhajiroun events at a community center and mosque in Woolwich, where Wednesday's deadly attack was carried out near a military barracks.

Jon Ronson, a British journalist who made a documentary about Sheik Omar's quixotic campaign to bring Britain under Shariah law in 1996, reminded readers on Thursday that he had looked more closely at al-Muhajiroun in a second film made after the terrorist attacks in London on July 7, 2005, “The Tottenham Ayatollah Revisited.”

“The Tottenham Ayatollah Revisited,” Jon Ronson's second documentary about Sheik Omar Bakri Mohammed, broadcast in 2005.

In an essay for The Guardian in 2005, Mr. Ronson argued that Britain might ultimately regret expelling the occasionally buffoonish Sheik Omar, given that his outlandish sermons acted as a powerful magnet for the most extreme young men in his community. “Without Omar clowning around on stage,” he said, “how is Scotland Yard going to monitor the less clownish people who sit in his audience?”

In the introduction to his book “Them: Adventures With Extremists,” Mr. Ronson wrote that Sheik Omar had mixed feelings about how the documentaries had portrayed him as a bumbling, somewhat comic figure making the exaggerated claim that he was Osama bin Laden's “man in London”:

I telephoned Omar on the evening of his arrest. I expected to find him in a defiant mood. But he seemed a little scared. “This is so terrible,” he said. “The police say they may deport me. Why are people linking me to bin Laden? I do not know the man. I have never met him. Why do people say I am bin Laden's man in London?”

“Because you have been calling yourself bin Laden's man in London for years,” I said.

“Oh Jon,” said Omar. “I need you more than ever now. You know I am harmless, don't you? You always said I was laughable, didn't you? Oh Jon. Why don't people believe I am just a harmless clown?”

“I have never thought you were a harmless clown,” I said.

I telephoned Omar a a few weeks later. I asked him if I could follow him around some more, now that a conclusion to his story seemed imminent. His response was startling to me. “You portray me as a fool,” he said. “I will not let you anywhere near me ever again. You hate the Muslims.”

As Mary Fitzgerald, a foreign correspondent for The Irish Times, reported on Twitter, Sheik Omar is now based in Lebanon, where he is fighting terrorist charges and taking part in televised debates on the conflict in Syria.

According to Ms. Fitzgerald, the cleric once told her that his group tended to attract young men who felt themselves to be “caught between cultures and identities” in multicultural Britain.

Mr. Adebolajo, the son of Nigerian immigrants, would seem to fit that description. As The Lede noted on Wednesday, at one point in his statement justifying the killing, as Mr. Adebolajo implored the British citizens in front of him to get their leaders to remove their troops from “our lands,” he seemed to stumble a bit as he used words that betrayed a certain confusion about which community he belonged to, saying: “Tell them to bring our troops back, so we can - so you can all live in peace.”

This post has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: May 24, 2013

An earlier version of this post misspelled the name of the extremist group with which Michael Adebolajo was associated. It is al-Muhajiroun, not al-Muhijaroun.



NOAA Predicts Extremely Active Hurricane Season


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Gerry Bell, lead seasonal hurricane forecaster for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, warns that the 2013 Atlantic hurricane season is expected to be highly active.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration issued its 2013 Atlantic hurricane outlook on Thursday, with a warning that the United States could be hit by up to six major hurricanes this year. The seasonal average is three.

Oceanic and atmospheric conditions in the Atlantic basin are expected to create stronger and more hurricanes, setting the stage for an “above normal and extremely active” season, said Gerry Bell, lead seasonal hurricane forecaster for NOAA's Climate Prediction Center, who explained the underlying reasons in a NOAA video.

“These conditions include weaker wind shear, warmer Atlantic waters and conducive winds patterns coming from Africa,” Mr. Bell said.

Specifically, Mr. Bell predicted that 13 to 20 named storms would form in the Atlantic this year, compared with the usual 12.

Of those, seven to 11 storms could become hurricanes, with wind speeds of at least 74 miles per hour, a range that is well above the seasonal average of six.

And three to six of those storms could become major hurricanes with winds of up to 111 miles per hour, compared with the seasonal average of three.

NOAA cited three climate factors that are expected to come together to produce an active or extremely active 2013 hurricane season:

A continuation of the atmospheric climate pattern, which includes a strong west African monsoon, that is responsible for the ongoing era of high activity for Atlantic hurricanes that began in 1995; warmer-than-average water temperatures in the tropical Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea; and El Niño is not expected to develop and suppress hurricane formation.

These predictions are similar to those outlined this month by researchers from Penn State University's Earth System Science Center, as well as AccuWeather and other forecasters.

“With the devastation of Sandy fresh in our minds and another active season predicted, everyone at NOAA is committed to providing life-saving forecasts in the face of these storms and ensuring that Americans are prepared and ready ahead of time,” said Kathryn D. Sullivan, the acting NOAA administrator.

A satellite image of Hurricane Sandy on Oct. 28, 2012, from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.NASA, via Getty Images A satellite image of Hurricane Sandy on Oct. 28, 2012, from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Last week, NOAA made public its assessment of its own performance during Hurricane Sandy, which which killed more than 100 people and caused more than $50 billion in estimated damages.

Over all, NOAA concluded that it “performed well in forecasting the impacts of this extremely large storm.” It noted, for example, that it issued warnings well in advance about the potential for dangerous winds and storm surge inundation of four to eight feet above ground level for the New Jersey, New York and Connecticut coastlines.

But the agency acknowledged that it needed to do a better job of communicating its forecasts - particularly the storm surge forecasts - to emergency managers and the public.

Officials in Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg's administration said they did not evacuate nursing homes and disabled residents from low-lying areas of New York City in the days leading up to the storm because of their understanding of the storm surge forecasts.

“The highest priority need identified by NOAA/NWS customers and constituents is for improved high-resolution storm surge forecasting and communication,” the report said, referring to NOAA and the National Weather Service. “In particular, there is a crucial need for storm surge graphical inundation guidance.”

The report added that “79 percent of coastal residents surveyed in March 2013 said the impact of Sandy's surge in their area was ‘more than they expected.' ”



In Video, Survivor Describes Bridge Collapse North of Seattle

Last Updated, 4:12 p.m. Dan Sligh and his wife were on their way to a camping trip for Memorial Day weekend on Interstate 5, north of Seattle, when they saw a truck that was carrying an oversized load strike the side of the bridge they were driving on.

The next thing they knew, they were plunging into the Skagit River's icy waters. “Things happened so fast, it was like a Hollywood movie unfolding in front of you, live, up close and personal,” Mr. Sligh, 47, told a reporter for KING-TV, Channel 5, in Seattle.

As my colleague, Kirk Johnson reported, Mr. Sligh, his wife and another person traveling on Interstate 5 on the bridge near Mount Vernon, Wash., were rescued and did not suffer life-threatening injuries.

“I felt the water rushing in to midbelly,” Mr. Sligh said. “I put the truck in park - emergency break. I kept asking my wife if she is O.K. I noticed that my shoulder was pretty well dislocated. I couldn't reach to get my seat belt off. I crawled underneath the collapsed overhead of the truck. She was out cold.”

He managed to pull his wife over to the driver's side and hold her head above water as he stood on the outside rail of his truck until help arrived.

Peter Mongillo, a photographer for KOMO-TV News, was at the scene and shared this photo on Twitter.

It could take weeks for the bridge spanning Washington State's major north-south artery to be repaired, according to The Seattle Times.

A bridge on Interstate 5 north of Seattle after the bridge collapsed Thursday night, sending two vehicles into the water.The New York Times A bridge on Interstate 5 north of Seattle after the bridge collapsed Thursday night, sending two vehicles into the water.

As Mr. Johnson reported, the “ripple effects of the collapse could be huge â€" for commuters, freight haulers, neighborhoods around the bridge on detour routes and politicians in Olympia, Washington's capital, who have been loudly and publicly wrestling over the hundreds of millions of dollars in state money needed to replace another aging bridge over the Columbia River that separates Oregon and Washington further south on the Interstate 5 corridor.”

The bridge collapse raised new questions about the state of the nation's infrastructure. On Washington State's list of structurally deficient bridges, it was deemed “functionally obsolete.”

At a news conference, Gov. Jay Inslee and other officials discussed the bridge collapse and what steps needed to be taken before the bridge is repaired.


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Gov. Jay Inslee and state transportation officials discuss the bridge collapse on Interstate 5.


For Hackers, China Is a Land of Opportunity

Hackers Find China Is Land of Opportunity

Gilles Sabrie for The New York Times

A booth for a British company's products at a law enforcement trade show in Beijing. Chinese companies there boasted of their ability to hack into and monitor computers and cellphones.

BEIJING - Name a target anywhere in China, an official at a state-owned company boasted recently, and his crack staff will break into that person's computer, download the contents of the hard drive, record the keystrokes and monitor cellphone communications, too.

Pitches like that, from a salesman for Nanjing Xhunter Software, were not uncommon at a crowded trade show this month that brought together Chinese law enforcement officials and entrepreneurs eager to win government contracts for police equipment and services.

“We can physically locate anyone who spreads a rumor on the Internet,” said the salesman, whose company's services include monitoring online postings and pinpointing who has been saying what about whom.

The culture of hacking in China is not confined to top-secret military compounds where hackers carry out orders to pilfer data from foreign governments and corporations. Hacking thrives across official, corporate and criminal worlds. Whether it is used to break into private networks, track online dissent back to its source or steal trade secrets, hacking is openly discussed and even promoted at trade shows, inside university classrooms and on Internet forums.

The Ministry of Education and Chinese universities, for instance, join companies in sponsoring hacking competitions that army talent scouts attend, though “the standards can be mediocre,” said a cybersecurity expert who works for a government institute and handed out awards at a 2010 competition.

Corporations employ freelance hackers to spy on competitors. In an interview, a former hacker confirmed recent official news reports that one of China's largest makers of construction equipment had committed cyberespionage against a rival.

One force behind the spread of hacking is the government's insistence on maintaining surveillance over anyone deemed suspicious. So local police departments contract with companies like Xhunter to monitor and suppress dissent, industry insiders say.

Ai Weiwei, the dissident artist, said he had received three messages from Google around 2009 saying his e-mail account had been compromised, an increasingly common occurrence in China among people deemed subversive. When the police detained him in 2011, he said, they seized 200 pieces of computer equipment and other electronic hardware.

“They're so interested in computers,” Mr. Ai said. “Every time anyone is arrested or checked, the first thing they grab is the computer.”

There is criminal hacking, too. Keyboard jockeys break into online gaming programs and credit card databases to collect personal information. As in other countries, the police here have expressed growing concern.

Some hackers see crime as more lucrative than legitimate work, but opportunities for skilled hackers to earn generous salaries abound, given the growing number of cybersecurity companies providing network defense services to the government, state-owned enterprises and private companies.

“I have personally provided services to the People's Liberation Army, the Ministry of Public Security and the Ministry of State Security,” said a prominent former hacker who used the alias V8 Brother for this interview because he feared scrutiny by foreign governments. He said he had done the work as a contractor and described it as defensive, but declined to give details.

And “if you are a government employee, there could be secret projects or secret missions,” the hacker said.

But government jobs are usually not well paying or prestigious, and most skilled hackers prefer working for security companies that have cyberdefense contracts, as V8 Brother does, he and others in the industry say.

Self-trained, the hacker teamed up with China's patriotic “red hackers” more than a decade ago. Then he began working for cybersecurity companies and was recently making $100,000 a year, he said.

Jonathan Ansfield contributed reporting, and Mia Li contributed research.

A version of this article appeared in print on May 23, 2013, on page A1 of the New York edition with the headline: Hackers Find China Is Land Of Opportunity.

Battle Over ‘GIF\' Pronunciation Erupts

It has been called “The Great Schism of the 21st Century” and “The Most Absurd Religious War in Geek History.”

The debate over how to pronounce GIF, which stands for Graphics Interchange Format, re-emerged this week when Steve Wilhite, the inventor of the widely used Web illustration, declared it should be pronounced “jif,” like the brand of peanut butter, rather than with a hard G sound.

He made the statement first in an interview with The New York Times, then in an acceptance speech at the annual Webby Awards on Tuesday, where he received a lifetime achievement award.

Mr. Wilhite incited a debate that generated 17,000 posts on Twitter, 50 news articles and plenty of tongue-in-cheek outrage.

“You can have my hard ‘G' when you pry it from my cold, dead hands,” Tracy Rotton, a Web developer from Washington, D.C., wrote on Twitter.

“Nannernannernanner,” wrote one person on Twitter.

“Pffffffffffffff,”
posted another.

So what is going on? Elizabeth Pyatt, a linguist at Penn State University, has a theory: Cultures typically associate a “standard” pronunciation as a marker of status. Mispronouncing a word - even a technical term - can cause feelings of shame and inadequacy. If people believe there is a logical basis for their pronunciation, they are not apt to give it up.

In the case of the GIF, there is logic to saying it with the hard G used to pronounce “graphic.”

Mr. Wilhite created the file format in 1987 when he was working as a programmer for CompuServe, the nation's first major online service. The company wanted to display color weather maps, but existing image technologies took up too much bandwidth for slow dial-up connections. Mr. Wilhite thought he could help.

“I saw the format I wanted in my head and then I started programming,” he said in an e-mail. Mr. Wilhite primarily uses e-mail to communicate now, after suffering a stroke in 2000.

The first image he created was a picture of an airplane. Today, GIFs are commonly used for short animations on the Web.

Tuesday night, Mr. Wilhite was greeted onstage at the Webby Awards by David Karp, the 26-year-old founder of Tumblr who this week sold his company to Yahoo for $1.1 billion.

The Webby Awards, a 17-year-old annual event where more than 60 awards are given for everything from online journalism to design, has a timesaving tradition: All acceptance speeches must be five words or less.

Mr. Wilhite displayed his five-word speech on a screen above the stage: “It's Pronounced ‘JIF' not ‘GIF.'” The audience roared with approval, and it appeared as though the question was settled.

Not so. Those who had been pronouncing GIF with a hard G were shocked, or as one blog headline put it, “Flabber-jasted.” Mr. Wilhite was attacked as a “soft-g zealot,” and dissenters said his decree made as much sense as calling graphics “jraphics.”

White House staff members also weighed in on Twitter to remind the country that the Obama administration had already ruled on the subject, in a chart released on April 26, which explained the administration's Tumblr strategy and highlighting GIFs, noting the hard G pronunciation.

The “JIF” camp, meanwhile, was giddy with feelings of righteousness.

The uproar was a boon for a certain peanut butter brand. The J. M. Smucker Company, which owns Jif, quickly produced an animation that merged their product with a pronunciation guide and posted it online. One Twitter user asked, “how much does Jif love Steve Wilhite today?”

“We're nuts about him today,” the bread spread responded in a gentle attempt to turn the conversation toward nut butters. They swiftly produced an animated GIF to lend visual support to their cause.

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2013/05/22/technology/22JIF/22JIF-popup.gif

“We're nuts about him today,” the bread spread responded.

Among such vivid enthusiasm, there were of course those who found the debate tedious, a rehashing of a decades-old debate. In the same vein, a certain category of computer user found the occasion as a chance to tout their Internet bona fides.

 

The editor of the Oxford English Dictionary was noncommittal, writing on a tech blog that the dictionary accepts both pronunciations.

Ms. Pyatt of Penn State believes that the debate is not likely to be settled anytime soon.

“Language change isn't always easily controlled,” she said, “I suspect if most people are now saying GIF I think that pronunciation is probably going to be the one that survives. It may not be fair to the person who created it, but that's just how language and community works.”



Whitman Says H.P. Is ‘Not Mortgaging the Future\'

5:06 p.m. | Updated Coming off a quarterly earnings report that pleased investors even as revenues fell, Hewlett-Packard's chief executive, Meg Whitman, declared Thursday that “we feel good about where we are.”

In an interview with David Faber and Jim Cramer of CNBC, Ms. Whitman was asked whether the company had a strategy of “shrinking to profitability,” given its continuing decline in revenues. “We are investing a lot in our business,” she said. “We are not mortgaging the future.”

“We are embarked on a five-year turnaround journey, we're about 18 months into that journey, and I think we're right where we thought we would be, in fact probably a little ahead of schedule,” said Ms. Whitman, the longtime eBay chief who took over at H.P. 21 months ago.

As Quentin Hardy reported in The New York Times on Thursday, analysts are far from certain that H.P. can make the transition from its traditional businesses to a field increasingly dominated by cloud computing and mobile devices. And Ms. Whitman acknowledged the challenge.

“We are growing businesses that power the new style of I.T.; we've got declining businesses that powered the old style of I.T.,” she told CNBC. “So we're in that knothole that one has to get through.”

In the most recent quarter, the company's net income fell 32 percent, and revenue was down 10 percent. But its earnings per share exceeded expectations, and H.P.'s stock gained 17 percent in Thursday's trading.

While the company does not expect growth this year, Ms. Whitman said, “we do believe growth is possible in 2014, probably not in every business, but we hope over all.”

She said that printing was a bright spot, asserting that H.P. was “innovating around the business model,” including offering higher-cost printers but lower-cost ink in developing countries, and developing a subscription model for ink in the United States market.

And she reaffirmed that H.P. was not considering spinning off any of its businesses, a move considered under her predecessor, Léo Apotheker. “We believe that keeping H.P. together is the right thing to do,” she said.



Tax Protest in Britain Focuses on Google

In Britain, the debate over tax-reduction strategies employed by American technology giants is taking a populist turn.

While a United States Senate panel scrutinizes Apple's use of Ireland as a tax shelter, attention in Britain has focused on Google, which employs a similar system.

A group of drama students plans to take to the streets of London on Friday to promote what it calls a “Google Free Day.”

The goal, the students say, is to protest what they see as Google's minimal contribution to the British treasury. In 2011 the company paid about $10 million in taxes in Britain, where it recorded more than $4 billion in sales. The protest is also intended to highlight Internet users' growing dependence on Google's online services, ranging from its search engine to Google Maps to YouTube.

“The tax issue is kind of a case in point,” said Adam Taylor, a graduate student at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama. “This is what happens when you have all these services going through one organization.”

To make their case in a creative way, Mr. Taylor and a group of about 15 other students plan a campaign that blends high- and low-tech elements.

On Friday, he said, the students will encourage Internet users to send search queries through Twitter, where they have set up the hashtag #askmum for the occasion. They will then take these questions out onto the streets of the London neighborhood of Camden, where they will ask pedestrians for answers.

“We're calling it a proxy search engine,” Mr. Taylor said. “It might be a bit slower than the 0.6 seconds that it takes on Google. Maybe two or three minutes.”



Yahoo\'s Design Chief to Depart

Tim Parsey, the senior vice president of user experience design at Yahoo, is leaving the company, he said in an interview Thursday.

Mr. Parsey said he was hired last year to help infuse a culture of design at the company. “The type of role I feel I'm better at is when I'm able to lead a transition of design at a company, and that job is done at Yahoo,” he said. “I'm very proud of that.”

A Yahoo spokeswoman confirmed that Friday would be Mr. Parsey's last day but declined to comment further.

Over the last several months, under the leadership of Marissa Mayer, Yahoo's chief executive, the company has started to redesign several of its flagship sites including the Yahoo home page, Yahoo Mail and Flickr, its photo-sharing Web site. But many of those updates have been publicly lambasted.

John C. Dvorak, a writer for PC Magazine, criticized Yahoo's new home page in February. ”The face-lift yields an extremely cluttered interface that befits the need for the cramped ugliness that you find on many Asian sites,” he wrote.

After Yahoo redesigned Flickr this week, a blog post explaining the changes quickly generated more than 20,000 responses users who said they disliked the redesign. Hundreds of people begged the company: “Change it back!”

While at Google, Ms. Mayer was involved in the company's design and branding and drove the development of Google's brightly colored interface. Since her departure, Google has redesigned its brands, creating a flatter and cleaner look and feel on its home page, Gmail and Google Plus.

On Mr. Parsey's LinkedIn page he notes that his job at Yahoo involved weaving together a consistent user experience across the entire company and managing more than 200 designers and researchers.

In an interview last year with the Economic Times of India, Mr. Parsey voiced frustrations with the company's approach to design. “Most of it in the past years was about people developing brands and imposing it on people,” he told the newspaper regarding Yahoo's numerous sites. “I'm building a culture of design that is rational, emotional and meaningful.”

Mr. Parsey's departure was first reported by AllThingsD.



Daily Report: An Early Apple Computer for More Than $100,000

The astronomical run-up in the price of the original Apple-1 machines - made in 1976 and priced at $666.66 (about $2,700 in current dollars) - is a story of the economics of scarcity and techno-fetishism, magnified by the mystique surrounding Apple and its founders, as the company has become one of the largest, most profitable corporations in the world, Steve Lohr reports in The New York Times.

In November, an Apple-1, also commonly known as the Apple I, sold for $640,000 at an auction in Germany. That sale surpassed the previous record of $374,500 set only five months earlier at Sotheby's in New York. The next test of the Apple-1 market will come on Saturday, at the same auction house in Cologne, Germany, where the record sale took place in November.

Even the auctioneer, Uwe Breker, expressed some surprise at the price reached last fall. For this week's auction, the reserve price - the minimum sale price - is $116,000, and Mr. Breker conservatively estimated the likely range of $260,000 to $400,000. “But we will see,” he said.

The auction market for the vintage machines, experts say, is thin and uncertain. For example, a nonworking Apple-1 failed to attract its reserve price of just over $75,000 at an auction last year in London. The record-setting auctions last year were of working originals, as is the Apple-1 going under the gavel on Saturday.

The sky-high prices suggest irrational exuberance. But technology historians say there is a rational appeal to possessing an Apple-1. “It is Apple's creation story, the physical artifact that traces this incredible success to its origins,” said Dag Spicer, a senior curator at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, Calif.



Laurene Powell Jobs and Anonymous Giving in Silicon Valley

In Silicon Valley, people get very rich, very fast, often when they are very young. As a result, they are often criticized for not giving away enough of that money.

There are signs that is changing, as people like Mark Zuckerberg become more philanthropic. But many in tech are still in their 20s, and say they are working long days running companies and trying to improve the world with their products, and will be able to focus on philanthropy later in life.

There is another story line, though, one brought to light by the tale of Laurene Powell Jobs. She is the widow of Steve Jobs, one of the tech titans who received the most criticism for a lack of philanthropy. Yet for more than two decades, his family has been giving away money - anonymously.

“We're really careful about amplifying the great work of others in every way that we can, and we don't like attaching our names to things,” Ms. Powell Jobs said in an interview for a profile that Peter Lattman and I wrote in The New York Times last week.

One of the main ways she is able to do that is because of the way she has structured her organization, Emerson Collective. It is an LLC, like a small business, instead of a tax-exempt 501(c)(3), like a charitable organization or foundation. That means that Emerson can make grants, for-profit investments and political donations - and does not have to publicly report its donations as a foundation does.

That strategy is becoming more common, as people seek flexibility, freedom and anonymity in their investments, said Laura Arrillaga-Andreessen, who teaches philanthropy at Stanford, runs her own philanthropy and is a close friend of Ms. Powell Jobs.

“The beauty of having an LLC in today's world is No. 1, you have the ability to act and react as nimbly as need be to create change, and you have the ability to invest politically, in the for-profit sector and the nonprofit sector simultaneously,” she said.

“And the reality is,” she added, “we are now seeing a blurring of the lines between the sectors in a way that was not even discussed 10 years ago. The way that we are going to solve social problems is by working with multiple different types of investing.”

Ms. Powell Jobs said that Emerson did not need the tax structure of a foundation, and that “doing things anonymously and being nimble and flexible and responsive are all things we value on our team.”

One of those things is College Track, the college prep organization that Ms. Powell Jobs co-founded in 1997.

“I've always appreciated that being the wife of Steve Jobs, she could have played that as much as possible, but she doesn't,” said Marshall Lott, who has worked at College Track since the beginning and is now chief advocate of college completion. “This is what she's always been passionate about. As much as he had his work, this is her work.”

On a recent Monday afternoon, College Track students hooked arms in a giant circle as tutors talked about sessions like preparing for finals and managing stress. They were in the rough Bayview neighborhood of San Francisco in a new, colorful building, which used to be an abandoned auto shop. Light streamed in the classrooms, named after colleges.

“It's like my second house,” said Chris Seruge, 17, who comes each day for tutoring and will apply to college next year with the help of College Track. “Without it, I'd be struggling.”

Though Ms. Powell Jobs is a major financial supporter of the organization, as well as chairwoman of the board, she does not disclose how much she gives. But there is evidence of other contributions related to the Jobs family. Each year, Pixar, which Mr. Jobs helped start, hosts a screening of a film to benefit College Track. This year, tickets are $1,000 to see “Monsters University.” (The Apple laptops the students use, though, were purchased, not donated.)

And College Track's supporters include a who's who in tech: Sergey Brin, co-founder of Google; Marissa Mayer, chief executive of Yahoo; Ron Conway, the angel investor; and Marc Benioff, founder of Salesforce.com.

“Laurene is a private person, they are a humble family, and they have certainly been generous,” said Ted Mitchell, chief executive of NewSchools Venture Fund, where Ms. Powell Jobs serves on the board. “And I think that the fact that they've not needed to splash their name around speaks quite highly to their intense focus on the work.”



How Vintage Apple Computers Used to Sell

Original Apple-1 computers are now sold at professional auctions and can command hundreds of thousands of dollars, as I wrote about in an article published Thursday on the Web and in Friday's paper.

But the old computers have been sold more informally for years, at far more modest prices. The story behind the 1997 sale of an Apple-1, which now resides at the Computer History Museum, shows how the market used to work, when the transactions were simpler but more personal.

The buyer was a young New York entrepreneur “with a nerd's love of technology,” in his words. The seller was a single mother at the time, living in Oregon, who used the proceeds to “pay off debts and keep me and my kids afloat,” she recalled.

Ian Lynch Smith bought the Apple-1, also commonly known as the Apple I, for $10,000. He had been writing games for Apple's Macintosh computer since shortly after he graduated from Vassar College. His company in Brooklyn, Freeverse, had made some progress, and he stretched a bit to make the purchase. Mr. Lynch, now 42, comes from family of antique dealers, and his mother, Patricia, encouraged him, saying the scarce machine (an estimated 175 to 200 Apple-1's were produced) would prove to be a good investment in the long run.

Mr. Smith showed off his Apple-1 at the Freeverse booth at the Macworld conference in New York in 1998. Later, he loaned it indefinitely to the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, Calif. “It's better cared for, and serves a real educational mission,” he said.

The seller, Janet Keim, bought the Apple-1 at a fund-raising auction for KMUN, a public radio station in Astoria, Ore. Ms. Keim said she was later told that the machine was donated for the auction by a member of the Homebrew Computer Club, where Apple's founders, Steven P. Jobs and Stephen G. Wozniak, first showed off the Apple-1.

In a telephone interview on Thursday, Ms. Keim said she did not recall the name of the former Homebrew member, who long ago moved away.

A friend posted a picture and short description of the Apple-1 on a Web site. And Ms. Keim did some research and found out if she wanted to sell the machine, it would be far more valuable if it was authenticated as an original Apple-1.

So Ms.Keim put the computer in her car, and drove down to San Francisco, where The Computer Museum of Boston, had an office, and was making a permanent move to Silicon Valley (and renamed The Computer History Museum). Dag Spicer, a computer historian, did the authentication, and acted as a kind of go-between in the sale from Ms. Keim to Mr. Smith.

One thing Ms. Keim apparently declined to mention at the time was how much she paid for the Apple-1 a year earlier, in 1996, at a radio fund-raiser. She paid $90, she said on Thursday.

Told of the price in an e-mail, Mr. Spicer replied, “I didn't know about the $90 - holy cow!”

Then again, Mr. Spicer noted, “Ian got a great deal too in light of today's prices.”

At the public-radio auction in 1996, a friend told Ms. Keim that the Apple-1 might be valuable. She knew nothing about computers, or the Apple history, she said. Ms. Keim said she was working three part-time jobs at the time, was in debt and had to borrow money to raise the $90 for the purchase.

Ms. Keim's laughs when discussing today's sky-high prices for Apple-1's. She betrays no second thoughts about having sold it years ago, a deal that gave her a financial lifeline at the time.

“It was good for me and good for the machine,” said Ms. Keim, who is an operator of a napkin-making machine in a Georgia-Pacific plant.

“That computer went to someone who really understood what it meant and could really appreciate it,” she said

Mr. Smith's company, Freeverse, which made popular games for the iPhone and iPad, was sold to a competitor, Ngmoco, in 2010. Mr. Smith said he recently started a new venture, Secondverse. He will not disclose its product plans, other than to say it will make software that runs on Apple's iOS operating system for iPhones and iPads.

Given today's prices, is Mr. Smith's Apple-1 for sale? He certainly has no current plan to put it on the market. In an e-mail, Mr. Smith said he has always thought of the vintage machine “more like a rainy day investment that I enjoy owning, so it's not really for sale.”

“Maybe,” he added, “my kids can donate it to the museum and claim a tax break on any estate taxes at some point in the future.”