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Thursday, August 15, 2013

Boston Bombing Victim’s Family Is Inspired by Injured Daughter

On the four-month anniversary of the Boston Marathon bombings on Thursday, the family of 8-year-old Martin Richard, who was killed, published an update on their Tumblr blog. They discussed the constant pain they feel over the loss of their son and described the inspiration they are drawing from their daughter, Jane, 7, who lost a leg in the blasts but has made remarkable progress with a prosthetic leg.

“When she is able to have it on, she struts around on it with great pride and a total sense of accomplishment. Her strength, balance and comfort with the leg improve every day,” Denise and Bill Richard, of Dorchester, Mass., said as they shared the first photo of their daughter. “Watching her dance with her new leg, which has her weight primarily on the other leg, is absolutely priceless.”

Denise Richard, who was also seriously injured in the bombings, is well known in the Irish dance community in Boston, and Jane took lessons in nearby Milton every Tuesday. The Irish dance community nationwide has rallied around the family.

At the time of the blasts, the two children and their mother were near the finish line in Boston’s Back Bay, waiting to cheer on their father and husband, who was running in the race.

Martin would have turned nine years old on June 9.

Here is the family’s full statement on Tumblr, which also mentions their son Henry:

Jane RichardCourtesy the Richard Family Jane Richard

Today marks four months since our family, and indeed our community, were savagely and cowardly attacked for reasons we remain at a loss to understand. While we have made progress with our physical injuries, the emotional pain seems every bit as new as it was four months ago.

An hour doesn’t go by that we don’t feel the agony of Martin’s death and the senseless way it came about. The pain is constant, and even the sweetest moments can become heartbreaking when we are struck by the realization that “Martin would have loved this…”

But it is not all heartbreak for our family, as we are making progress on this long, difficult and painful road forward. After three months in hospitals and hundreds of hours of physical therapy and other work at Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital, Jane was discharged a few weeks ago. That night was the first time any of us slept at home in our own beds since before the bombings. We left home together on April 15, and we were determined that none of us would sleep at home until all of us could do so. As so many things have been, returning home without Martin certainly made that important milestone bittersweet, but we know he was with us, as he is every moment of every day.

Jane continues to be an incredible source of inspiration â€" and exhaustion. The loss of her leg has not slowed her one bit, or deterred her in any way. As we knew she would, when we finally returned home, Jane walked into the house with the aid of her crutches, but under her own power. She has since received her prosthetic leg. And while she is getting more comfortable with it, she is also limited with how much she can wear it at any one time. When she is able to have it on, she struts around on it with great pride and a total sense of accomplishment. Her strength, balance and comfort with the leg improve every day. Watching her dance with her new leg, which has her weight primarily on the other leg, is absolutely priceless.

As for the rest of us, we are still dealing with our injuries and their impact on our lives. But we are also making progress, and just like Jane, we each endure the occasional setback here and there along the way.

Henry has continued to be strong, attentive and protective of all of us. He has also managed to be busy this summer, having attended a few cool overnight camps and occasionally sneaking away to spend time with close friends.

Throughout all that has happened, we have worked hard to maintain our bond as a family. With the love and support of family and friends, including those who were total strangers just four months ago, we feel like we are succeeding.



Could the Hyperloop Really Cost $6 Billion? Critics Say No

Elon Musk, a serial entrepreneur who was a co-founder of PayPal and the electric car company Tesla Motors, sent people in California into a tizzy on Monday when he released a white paper outlining a hypothetical high-speed transportation system called the Hyperloop.

There were a number of curious questions about the Hyperloop, which Mr. Musk’s white paper claims will be able to travel at up to 800 miles an hour and transport people from San Francisco to Los Angeles in 30 minutes. While physicists agree that technically, on paper, this is possible, economists seem to agree that technically, on paper, the price tag of $6 billion is impossible.

Richard White, a professor of American history at Stanford and author of “Railroaded: The Transcontinentals and the Making of Modern America,” said Mr. Musk’s project was “dramatically overblown and the price is drastically underestimated.” He said in an interview that Mr. Musk’s document outlining the price of the project was “just pie in the sky.”

Just how pie in the sky is it?

Alexis Madrigal, a senior editor at The Atlantic, points out that one reason California’s high-speed rail project has been projected to cost $68 billion is that “they have to acquire 1,100 different pieces of land.”

“Just Fresno to Bakersfield, a little over 100 miles, is supposed to cost $7 billion for high-speed rail,” he writes.

Although Mr. Musk has stated that he would save money on land parcels by setting up pylons for the Hyperloop along Interstate 5 in California, he isn’t taking into account the legal hurdles the currently planned, high-speed train had to go through just to acquire land.

As Brad Plumer of The Washington Post noted, one of the major factors for the California high-speed rail price’s ballooning to 10 times Mr. Musk’s projected price is that local communities along the train route demanded extra viaducts and tunnels. “Other towns, meanwhile, have insisted they not be bypassed even in cases where it would be cheaper to do so,” Mr. Plumer wrote.

The 400-mile Hyperloop would not be immune to these issues.

Putting aside the cost of construction, critics said the projected cost for people to use the Hyperloop was impossible, too.

Mr. Musk projected that the Hyperloop would be able to transport 840 people an hour, each paying $20 a ticket. But as Dan Sperling, founding director of the Institute of Transportation Studies at the University of California, Davis, said: “There’s no way the economics on that would ever work out.”

Mr. Sperling told Al Jazeera that when you factor in capital, labor and maintenance of the Hyperloop, the numbers, “even in the most outlandish visionary way, do not make any sense at all.”

“The whole technology is unproven,” he said. “I know he’s a brilliant guy, but it just doesn’t pencil out.”

Michael L. Anderson, an associate professor of agricultural and resource economics at the University of California, Berkeley, predicted that the cost of the entire project would be closer to $100 billion.

No one seems to be arguing whether it is possible, or even if Mr. Musk could technically build the Hyperloop â€" this is, after all, the man who created Tesla and SpaceX â€" experts seem to be focused on how he plans to build this invention, then operate it, at the costs he proposes.

“People laud him for creating Tesla,” said Mr. White of Stanford. “But let’s be realistic; he’s not Henry Ford creating the Model T. Musk is creating $60,000 to $100,000 electric cars for rich people.”



Video Shows Civilians Gunned Down in Cairo

Video uploaded to YouTube on Thursday showed a man being shot as he tried to help a wounded protester to safety the day before in Cairo.

As Egyptians continue to count the dead, one day after the military-installed government used deadly force to disperse protests, supporters of the deposed president, Mohamed Morsi, drew attention to video of civilians being cut down by gunfire during the assault on a sit-in near the Rabaa al-Adawiya mosque in Cairo.

One of the distressing clips, uploaded to YouTube on Thursday, showed a protester being shot as he tried to carry a wounded man to safety. A second, more graphic clip showed the shooting of a woman who appeared to have been recording video of the assault on the protesters. It is not clear from the footage if she was a participant in the protest or one of a number of journalists among the day’s casualties.

Video apparently recorded on Wednesday in Cairo showed a woman being shot as she photographed an assault on protesters by the security forces.

For rights workers and journalists, the process of piecing together a reliable account of exactly how hundreds of Egyptians were killed on Wednesday brought them to a makeshift morgue at the Iman mosque, to view bodies brought there after the nearby Rabaa mosque was torched. Our colleague Kareem Fahim, Heba Morayef of Human Rights Watch, and the journalists Tara Todras-Whitehill and Sharif Kouddous all reported from there that the process of identifying the dead was complicated by how badly burned many of the bodies were.

As Reuters reports, the official death toll of 525 released by Egypt’s health ministry on Thursday does not include more than 200 bodies at the mosque that have yet to be identified. One activist blogger who was present during the raid, Mohamed el-Zahaby, claimed that this might have been the reason that so many of the dead were incinerated. “They burned the dead bodies to not be recognized or get counted,” Mr. Zahaby wrote to The Lede in an Internet message.

Extremely graphic video published Wednesday by the newspaper El Watan, of the charred bodies of protesters killed during the raid on another sit-in, in Cairo’s Nahda Square, offered grim testimony to how difficult the process of identification would be.

Video of burned bodies published Wednesday by El Watan, an Egyptian news site.

Egyptian state television broadcast aerial footage of the Rabaa al-Adawiya protest camp in flames on Wednesday night, along with on-screen captions that blamed protesters from the Muslim Brotherhood for starting the fires.

Video broadcast on Egyptian state television on Wednesday showed fires burning in Rabaa al-Adaweya Square in Cairo’s Nasr City district.

While it is not clear how all of the fires started or spread, it is possible that some of the destruction could have been inadvertent. In video recorded on Wednesday by the Egyptian photographer Mosa’ab Elshamy during the assault on the Rabaa camp, Morsi supporters could be seen feeding fires, apparently to offer cover for rock-throwing and protection from tear gas.

Video recorded inside a protest camp in Cairo during an assault by the security forces on Wednesday by the Egyptian photographer Mosa’ab Elshamy.

A Human Rights Watch video report on the dispersal of the Rabaa protest, recorded on Wednesday as the battle for the protest site was still under way, showed some fire damage but illustrated that the area was still largely intact hours aftert eh beginnign of the assault.

A Human Rights Watch video report on the dispersal of an Islamist sit-in in Cairo on Wednesday.

A video report from Ahram Online, the state newspaper’s English-language site, gave a sense of the scale of destruction by the fires that swept through the protest camp and the Rabaa mosque.

An Ahram Online video report on fire damage to a protest camp and mosque in Cairo.

Late Thursday, the Washington Post correspondent Abigail Hauslohner reported that the authorities had raided the Iman mosque, and were seen removing the remains.



Multiple Wildfires Raging in Western States

Firefighters are battling wildfires across a number of Western states (via The Associated Press).

Hundreds of firefighters are battling large wildfires that have consumed more than 700,000 acres across several Western states, including blazes that have destroyed homes near mountain resort towns in Utah and Idaho, according to the National Interagency Fire Center.

The fire center has identified the so-called Elk complex fire in Boise National Forest in Idaho as its top priority. As The Idaho Statesman reports, the fire has burned more than 100,000 acres and destroyed 43 homes and 38 buildings in the Fall Creek area. It has also caused serious concerns about air quality.

In Utah, more than a dozen homes have been destroyed near the mountain resort town of Park City as firefighters struggled to contain the Rockport fire. A television station, KSL News in Idaho, posted videos of the blaze on its Instagram account.

The Park Record reports that the fire would cover about 1,940 acres and was 25 percent contained, as of Thursday morning.

Firefighters were able to contain five large fires in Oregon, Washington and Montana, with one new large fire reported in Oregon, officials said.



Multiple Wildfires Raging in Western States

Firefighters are battling wildfires across a number of Western states (via The Associated Press).

Hundreds of firefighters are battling large wildfires that have consumed more than 700,000 acres across several Western states, including blazes that have destroyed homes near mountain resort towns in Utah and Idaho, according to the National Interagency Fire Center.

The fire center has identified the so-called Elk complex fire in Boise National Forest in Idaho as its top priority. As The Idaho Statesman reports, the fire has burned more than 100,000 acres and destroyed 43 homes and 38 buildings in the Fall Creek area. It has also caused serious concerns about air quality.

In Utah, more than a dozen homes have been destroyed near the mountain resort town of Park City as firefighters struggled to contain the Rockport fire. A television station, KSL News in Idaho, posted videos of the blaze on its Instagram account.

The Park Record reports that the fire would cover about 1,940 acres and was 25 percent contained, as of Thursday morning.

Firefighters were able to contain five large fires in Oregon, Washington and Montana, with one new large fire reported in Oregon, officials said.



Hezbollah TV Video of Beirut Bomb Aftermath

Footage from Hezbollah’s Al Manar TV broadcast on Thursday after a deadly bombing in the southern suburbs of the Lebanese capital, Beirut.

The aftermath of a deadly bombing in a southern suburb of the Lebanese capital Beirut on Thursday was captured in video broadcast by the satellite channel run by Hezbollah, the militant movement and political party based in the area.

The Hezbollah station, Al Manar â€" meaning “The Beacon” in Arabic â€" also posted footage on its YouTube channel showing smoke and flames and a desperate scramble to evacuate the wounded.

The aftermath of an explosion in Beirut’s southern suburbs on Thursday from Al Manar.

Firefighters battled to extinguish a fire after an explosion in Beirut on Thursday.

Onlookers chanted as rescue workers evacuated the wounded and the dead from the scene of a bombing in Beirut on Thursday in a suburb of the Lebasnese capital that is a Hezbollah stronghold.

The death toll from the blast in the suburb of Ruwais was mounting. A short time after Lebanon’s state news agency reported that at least 14 people had been killed and 212 wounded, a security source told Reuters 20 had been killed. Lebanon’s Daily Star reported that the interior minister, Marwan Charbel, said that the blast was the result of a powerful car bomb.

Our colleague Ben Hubbard reports from Beirut, the explosion ripped apart a commercial street surrounded by tall apartment buildings in a part of the city that is a Hezbollah stronghold. Rescue workers used flashlights as they combed upper floors checking on residents, a number of whom were evacuated. The blast blew out the fronts of apartment buildings, known as a stronghold of the militant Hezbollah group.

Lebanese bloggers shared photographs of the bombed out street captured on phones by witnesses on social networks.

Ben Hubbard contributed reporting from Beirut.



Fearing Obsolescence, a Company Charts Its Reinvention

When a Web marketing and communications company discovered its hardware system was out-of-date, it set out on the giant â€" and ultimately successful â€" task of remaking the company.

Fearing Obsolescence, a Company Charts Its Reinvention

When a Web marketing and communications company discovered its hardware system was out-of-date, it set out on the giant â€" and ultimately successful â€" task of remaking the company.

Daily Report: Cisco to Cut 4,000 Jobs, Despite Rising Revenue

SAN FRANCISCO - Cisco Systems, the technology industry’s biggest maker of computer infrastructure equipment, said on Wednesday that it planned to cut 4,000 jobs, or roughly 5 percent of its work force, in an effort to trim costs and reorganize during what executives described as a “challenging” global economic climate, Jenna Wortham reports.

The cuts were announced even as Cisco, which sells networking software and services and videoconferencing systems, reported better-than-expected earnings in the fourth quarter of its fiscal year.

John Chambers, the company’s chief executive, said that despite the promising figures, the company still faced significant challenges in the coming months.

In a conference call on Wednesday with investors and analysts, he said Cisco needed to improve its ability to react quickly to market changes.

“We’ve got to take out middle-level management,” he said. “What I’m really after is not speed of decisions but speed of implementation.” He said the company’s performance had improved over the last year, but that “it’s just been slow.”

Cisco reported that earnings rose to $2.27 billion, or 42 cents a share, in the fourth quarter from $1.92 billion, or 36 cents a share, in the period a year earlier, while revenue rose 6 percent, to $12.42 billion, from $11.69 billion. Analysts had expected the company to report revenue of $12.41 billion. Sales in the United States were strong, but international sales were a concern.