Omarosa Manigault, the former Apprentice contestant known for stirring up high drama on the first season of the reality series, has become an official member of the president-elect's White House transition team, reports Politico. Since her reality TV debut in 2004, she's made appearances on talk shows and also returned to the Apprentice for its celebrity edition.
Omarosa started working with Trump's campaign in July as his director of African-American outreach, then earlier this month made headlines by claiming the campaign was keeping an enemies list
. "Let me just tell you, Mr. Trump has a long memory, and we're keeping a list," she said.
Does this mean we've reached Peak Trump?
The top Democrat on the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform is calling for an investigation into President-elect Donald Trump's potential conflicts of interest.
Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-Md.) on Monday urged lawmakers to review Trump's "financial entanglements" before he assumes office on Jan. 20, 2017, to ensure there are no conflicts of interest between the Trump White House and the Trump Organization.
"We have never had a president like Mr. Trump in terms of his vast financial entanglements and his widespread business interests around the globe," Cummings wrote in a letter to Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah), the committee's chairman.
"Moreover, we have not had a presidential candidate in modern times who has refused to disclose his tax returns to the American people," Cummings continued. "Mr. Trump's unprecedented secrecy and his extensive business dealings in foreign countries raise serious questions about how he intends to avoid conflicts of interest as president."
Following his stunning election victory last week, Trump said he would hand his business over to his children while he is in the White House. But critics point out they continue to advise Trump on politics.
"It is critical that we conduct this review as soon as possible to ensure that these questions are answered prior to Mr. Trump assuming office," Cummings wrote, saying the arrangement raises "serious questions."
"Now that Republicans control the White House and Congress, it is incumbent on you and other Republicans to conduct robust oversight over Mr. Trump - not for partisan reasons, but to ensure that our government operates effectively and efficiently and combats even the perception of corruption or abuse," he added.
Hillary Clinton will not be getting a pardon from President Obama.
And if Obama is to be kept to his word, neither will former CIA Director David Petraeus, convicted Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard, intelligence contractor Edward Snowden or Pvt. Chelsea Manning, all of whom were accused or convicted of mishandling classified information.
The reason is simple: None of them have applied to the Office of the Pardon Attorney for executive clemency.
bama specifically addressed “last-minute” presidential pardons at a news conference in August. “The process that I put in place is not going to vary depending on how close I get to the election,” he said in response to a question from USA TODAY. “So it's going to be reviewed by the pardon attorney, it will be reviewed by my White House counsel, and I'm going to, as best as I can, make these decisions based on the merits, as opposed to political considerations.”
White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest confirmed last week that Obama hasn’t changed that philosophy after the election. “I wouldn’t speculate at this point about what impact that may have on hypothetical pardon requests that he receives.  I'll just say that the guidance that President Obama shared with you is still operative.”        
Speculation about a Clinton pardon, already rampant before the election, only intensified after the election of rival Donald Trump as president. At one debate, Trump told Clinton it would be bad for her if he were elected "because you'd be in jail." Trump aides have refused to rule out a prosecution after Inauguration Day.
That posture could increase pressure on Obama to pardon Clinton, but there's no indication that she's sought a pardon — or that she would accept one if granted. While some pardons have historically been granted on the grounds of innocence, they're often perceived as a sign of guilt.
It's not necessary for someone to be charged or convicted of a crime to receive pardon. President Gerald Ford pardoned his predecessor, Richard Nixon, in 1974, although Nixon had not been charged or convicted of a crime. Nixon resigned in August 1974 after the House Judiciary Committee approved two articles of impeachment against him.
When Hillary Clinton told the 84 million people watching the presidential debate how Donald Trump disparaged Alicia Machado's weight and ethnicity during her tenure as Miss Universe, the former beauty queen, watching at home in Los Angeles, began to cry.
Then she began to tweet: first a message supporting Clinton, then a pledge to vote, complete with a picture of her smiling with her U.S. passport, bestowed when she became a citizen after leaving her native Venezuela.
Clinton's crisp recitation of the insults Trump lobbed at Machado was a breakout moment in Monday's lively debate. Machado, now an actress at age 39, has since emerged as Clinton's latest breakout political weapon: a walking embodiment of Trump's political vulnerabilities.
His crass nickname for Machado after her weight gain, "Miss Piggy," got immediate attention as alienating to women. Less noticed, but also potentially toxic, was his other nickname for her: "Miss Housekeeping," a dig at her ethnicity.
"It's a dignified job, but he said it in a way that was meant to insult me," Machado told the Los Angeles Times on Tuesday. "It really is a reflection of how he feels about Latinos."
By personifying Trump's crass interactions with Latinos and women, Machado could make an efficient appeal on Clinton's behalf to key voting groups.
The Clinton campaign is "trying to raise the decibel with its own base" of Latinos, said GOP strategist Mike Madrid, as well as "trying to peel off Republican women."
"There's no question that this is a two-fer," he said.
Machado, who has been campaigning for Clinton since June, said she was surprised to hear the Democratic nominee tell her story Monday night. Her self-professed shock belied the obvious groundwork laid by the Clinton team: a slickly produced campaign video was rolled out online within an hour, a well-timed interview and photo shoot with Cosmopolitan magazine landed by midday Tuesday.
The attention gave Machado ample chance to rehash her unhappy history with Trump.
Machado was crowned Miss Universe in 1996, the same year the real estate magnate purchased the pageant organization.
About eight months into her tenure, she approached Miss Universe officials about seeking help to lose weight. To her surprise, Trump got involved and convened a media scrum to watch Machado, then 20 years old, work out.
"When you win a beauty pageant," Trump told People magazine at the time, "people don't think you're going to go from 118 to 160 in less than a year, and you really have an obligation to stay in a perfect physical state."
Trump was unapologetic Tuesday about his comments on Machado's weight.
"She was the worst we ever had, the worst, the absolute worst. She was impossible," he said in a television interview. "She was the winner and she gained a massive amount of weight and it was a problem."
Machado said her weight gain was less extreme — closer to 20 pounds than 40. She said she felt Trump publicly pressured her to slim down as a publicity stunt to boost the pageant.
"It hurt me a great deal," she said.
Machado, who went on to star in Spanish-language soap operas in Venezuela, is used to working in an industry with exacting standards of female beauty.
The Spanish-language entertainment industry is especially guilty of the double standard that women face when it comes to their appearance, Machado said.
"I see it as violence against women," she said. "If a woman gains weight, it becomes a big issue. ... If a man does the same and gains weight, nothing is said."
In the 20 years since her Miss Universe tenure, Machado's life has at times resembled the telenovelas she starred in. In 1998 she was accused of being an accomplice to an attempted murder. A judge later said there was insufficient evidence to arrest her and ordered only her boyfriend's arrest. The judge later accused Machado of threatening his life.
She's posed twice for Playboy and six years ago launched a foundation that supports single mothers. She's also become an outspoken advocate to raise awareness of eating disorders, which she herself suffered from.
Machado moved to Los Angeles six months ago in hopes of jump-starting her English-language acting career.
Time hasn't softened her views on Trump. Machado often uses the hashtag #NaziRat to describe Trump on Twitter.
"I want people to know about his levels of racism," she said. "He's a misogynistic man. He considers women to be inferior to him. That is the reality."
Machado said Clinton campaign officials approached her in May or June after they read about her on Twitter.
She'd planned to vote for Clinton even before being approached. Clinton "is a great leader," she said. "I think she's very capable."
Machado vowed Tuesday that she would actively support Clinton until the end. How potent a cudgel she will be for the campaign remains to be seen.
Madrid, the GOP strategist, noted that other figures insulted by Trump — such as Khizr and Ghazala Khan, parents of a slain U.S. Army captain, and Serge Kovaleski, a disabled journalist for The New York Times — had not sunk the Republican nominee's campaign.
The Southern California city of Anaheim—already famous for Disneyland and a Medieval Times Dinner & Tournament venue—is set to grow exponentially as a tourist destination in the next few years, receiving $6 billion in investments by 2020.
According to a recent release from the city government, development will include the addition of a Stars Wars–themed section of Disneyland, four new luxury hotels, an expansion of the Anaheim Convention Center, plus new homes, stores, restaurants, offices, and hotels at the Platinum Triangle around Angel Stadium.
Some of the development already is in the works. This past July, the city passed all the necessary resolutions for three of the new luxury hotels: a 580-room property on South Harbor Boulevard, a 634-room behemoth on West Katella Avenue, and a(nother) 700-room hotel at Disneyland. Naming and design details have not been announced for any of these properties.
The three new hotels will join a previously approved, 466-room JW Marriott near Disneyland, a property that will likely begin construction in 2017. The quartet will bring nearly 2,380 new upscale rooms to the Anaheim Resort District overall.
In addition to the expansion sparked by the recent investments, other development work has been ongoing in the area. In 2015, the Anaheim Convention Center broke ground on an addition of 200,000 square feet of meeting space along Katella Avenue, across from the Disney theme parks. Just to the east of the Disneyland Resort, roughly $2.3 billion is being invested in the Platinum Triangle, 820 acres that include Angel Stadium, Honda Center, City National Grove of Anaheim and Anaheim Station, the region’s newest transit hub.
Already, across from Angel Stadium, work is underway on A-Town Metro, a mix of condominiums, apartments, shopping, dining, and park space. Next door, the approved Jefferson Stadium Park development calls for more than 1,000 apartments and nearly 10,000 square feet of retail directly across from the stadium.
Finally, although the proposed LT Platinum Center is still in the planning stages, this project stands to further transform the Platinum Triangle with 442,000 square feet of retail, 77,000 square feet of office space, 340 condos and apartments, and a 200-room hotel.
City officials hope this area eventually emerges as an exciting place to live, work, and play, similar to L.A. LIVE in downtown Los Angeles.
Sadly, expansion plans are, for the present, inching along at a snail’s pace. One issue that could snarl the process: traffic. None of the current plans for Anaheim appears to include major concessions for traffic abatement—an issue that is certain to become a problem as the city continues to grow.
Until then, however, we’ll just kick back, gnaw on a giant turkey leg from Medieval Times, and watch as the development takes shape.
As of July 2015, President Obama’s public approval rating was 44%, down significantly from his starting approval of 62%. To be fair, Obama still has around a year left in office, so his approval rating is far from final. But few presidents leave the White House more popular than when they entered.
So how does Obama stack up to the modern presidents when it comes to popularity?
Using data from Real Clear Politics and the Roper Center, InsideGov found the average approval ratings for the modern U.S. presidents (FDR onward). We also provide an overall breakdown of each president’s approval to gauge how public support shifted over time.
We’ll start with the least popular president and work our way to the most popular presidents in modern U.S. history.
*Note: We found the monthly approval ratings for each president and averaged them to get our final number. Job approval ratings for presidents were first introduced during FDR’s presidency
Kanye West is doubling (and tripling) down on his controversial "Famous" lyrics about Taylor Swift.
During a packed concert at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tennessee on Saturday, the rapper played the song three times, delivering the line, "I feel like me and Taylor might still have sex. Why? I made that b---- famous."
He even paused at one point to throw some extra shade at the pop star and critics that find the lyrics inappropriate.
"So many people told me, 'You've got to take that line out of the song. You got to play it safe,' but this is what rap music is," West said. "This is what art is. Saying how you feel. And this song is how I feel."
In a video shared on Twitter, some fans in the crowd can be heard chanting "F--- Taylor Swift" during West's monologue.
Swift's not the only person to get called out by West on his Saint Pablo tour. Earlier this month, the GRAMMY winner addressed comments made by his protégé, Kid Cudi, in which Cudi accused West and Drake for "talkin top 5" while "having 30 people write songs for them."
West initially responded by claiming he "birthed" Cudi and telling him "Don't ever mention 'Ye name" during a show in Tampa, Florida, but later had a change of heart while on stage in Houston, Texas.
"I just wanted to take this time out to say Kid Cudi is my brother and I hope he's doing well," West said.
Brad will not be attending the premiere of his upcoming film Voyage of Time, amid his ongoing divorce with Angelina Jolie.
The actor said he is skipping the Wednesday screening so he can remain "focused on his family.
"Terrence's Voyage of Time is an incredibly beautiful and unique experiential IMAX film for children and families chronicling the birth of time," he said in a statement to Access Hollywood. "I'm very grateful to be part of such a fascinating and educational project, but I’m currently focused on my family situation and don’t want to distract attention away from this extraordinary film, which I encourage everyone to see."
Jolie, 41, filed for divorce from Pitt, 52, in a Los Angeles court Sept. 19, stating that she separated from the Allied star on Sept. 15 – just one day after the couple and son Maddox, 15, were involved in an alleged altercation aboard their private plane.
The actress requested sole custody of their six children: Maddox, Pax, 12, Zahara, 11, Shiloh, 10, and 8-year-old twins Knox and Vivienne.
Two years ago, Brian Weinreich, the co-founder and head of product at Density, an Internet of Things (IoT) sensor startup, got so fed up of receiving spam emails from his business email account that he decided to teach a lesson to all future spammers who tried to contact him.
Weinreich considers spam to be as intrusive and unpleasant as people you don't know stalking you in order to sell you something, who won't stop pestering you even when you tell them you're not interested, so he decided to build a solution that would waste spammers' time in revenge.
"Back in early 2015, I decided I had enough. It became clear to me: it's my job to stop spam. That 'Spam' button on Gmail just didn't get me going anymore. There's no reward. I was seeking revenge.. and some comedic relief," Weinreich wrote in a blog post on Medium.
"I figured if I could eat up a spammers time, then they would have less time to perfect their new spamming technique."

Sp@m Looper

So he invented the Sp@m Looper, a bot whose primary function is to respond to spam emails with a series of open-ended questions that seem like they could be a real person's response to an email enquiry.
Unfortunately, the very first email you receive from any unique spammer will still go into your inbox, but once forwarded to sp@mlooper.com, the bot then takes action and continues to automatically respond to all emails from same spammer's email address until the spammer decides to stop sending you emails.
Weinreich developed the bot and put it to work on an email address he specifically created for a non-existent man named "John Turing", who is the founder and chief executive of a fictitious company called MLooper. He soon found that spammers were actually tricked into exchanging at least five emails with the bot before they realised that they weren't talking to a real person.

Bot managed to negotiate discounts

This continued even when he changed the script to insert random "hipster words" at the end of the emails, which made it even clearer that the emails weren't coming from a human being, and – at one point – the bot even managed to negotiate a good discount on some software a spammer was hawking.
"I think one of the most interesting findings I had was the fact that after the first month, I didn't have to feed the Looper anymore," wrote Weinreich. "People were just spamming it on their own. It was miraculous. It reminded me a lot of the Hydra  – the more people the Sp@m Looper responded to, the more spammers it attracted."
Weinreich has compiled some of the funny email exchanges for people to read on MLooper.com, and he has also made the code available on GitHub so that anyone can download it to run their own version or to improve on the bot to make it even more annoying, sorry, efficient.
President Barack Obama will convene his eighth and final Tribal Nations Conference on Monday and Tuesday, assembling leaders of more than 560 Native American tribes to discuss the environment and a range of other issues, even as one of the largest Native American protests in decades continues in North Dakota.
Thousands of Native Americans, along with environmentalists, are encamped on the North Dakota prairie to demonstrate against a $3.7 billion oil pipeline they say threatens the water supply and sacred sites of the Standing Rock Sioux.
Tribal leaders will be eager to hear at the conference from Obama. It was not clear if he would directly address the 1,100-mile (1,886-km) Dakota Access pipeline, being developed by Energy Transfer Partners LP. He is scheduled to speak at the conference near the White House on Monday afternoon.
He has not publicly commented on the pipeline since the Justice Department, Interior Department and the U.S. Army made a surprise move on Sept. 9 to temporarily block construction of the pipeline. At that time, the administration called for "a serious discussion" about how the tribes are consulted by the government in decisions on major infrastructure projects.
The uproar over the Dakota Access pipeline has sparked a resurgence in Native American activism.
After the conference, the Army, Interior and Justice will hold a listening session on the shortcomings of the present consultation process on Oct. 11 and formal tribal discussions in six regions of the country from Oct. 25 through Nov. 21.
The deadline for written input will be Nov. 30, the agencies announced.
On Thursday, Standing Rock Sioux Tribe Chairman Dave Archambault told a Democratic House of Representatives panel there was no "meaningful consultation" before permits were issued to bring the pipeline through his tribe's territory.
Archambault is scheduled to speak on Monday evening after the conference at a rally of pipeline opponents.
Obama, who will leave office in January, before he goes likely wants to fix the flawed consultation system and improve relations between the federal government and Native Americans.
“This year’s conference will continue to build upon the president’s commitment to strengthen the government-to-government relationship with Indian Country and to improve the lives of American Indians and Alaska Natives,” said a White House advisory on the summit.
Interior Secretary Sally Jewell, who chairs the White House Council on Native American Affairs, will also participate in tribal-led discussions on environment, infrastructure, economic development, health care and education.
The Justice Department announced Monday it's awarding more than $20 million for law enforcement agencies around the country to establish or enhance their use of body cameras, a move that comes after several fatal shootings of black men by police that have prompted widespread protests.
Attorney General Loretta Lynch announced the grant at the opening of a Justice Department summit in Little Rock focused on reducing violent crime. The department said the grants will be awarded are being awarded to 106 state, city, tribal and municipal law enforcement agencies.
"Of course, even as we strive to support local leaders and our law enforcement partners in their work to protect their communities, we are mindful — we know, we see every day — that effective public safety requires more than arrests and prosecutions," Lynch said. "Because It also requires winning, and keeping, the trust and the confidence of the citizens we serve."
Lynch didn't directly address the recent shootings of black suspects by police in Tulsa, Oklahoma, or Charlotte, North Carolina. The Tulsa district attorney's office last week charged Officer Betty Shelby with first-degree manslaughter in the death of Terence Crutcher. Police released aerial and dashboard video from the shooting, but did not have any body camera footage. Tulsa police officers don't have body cameras, although they were selected to receive a nearly $600,000 cash-match grant for them in 2015.
Charlotte police over the weekend released dashboard and body camera footage from the fatal shooting of Keith Lamont Scott. Neither that footage, nor cellphone video captured by Scott's wife, show conclusively whether Scott had a gun in his hand before he was shot as police have said. Lynch touted the grants as a way to promote cooperation between police and the community.
"There is no doubt that these are challenging times for law enforcement and communities alike," Lynch said. "Where the relationship of trust has frayed and frankly broken, we see the mistrust within the community; we also see the underlying fear within many of our friends and neighbors that when they are threatened by violence, they will have no one to call."
Lynch also announced the department is giving more than $33 million to 28 jurisdictions to help them inventory, test and track backlogged sexual assault kits.
A video claiming that users can add a headphone socket to the iPhone 7, which only has a Lightning port, by drilling into the bottom of their phone has been watched almost 10m times.
The prank video shows a man drilling a 3.5mm hole into the bottom left edge of the iPhone 7 held in a vice. It points to the row of small holes on the left side that replaced the headphone socket present on the iPhone 6S and claims that drilling into the second hole on the left reveals a hidden socket.
Once the hole has been drilled the video shows an iPhone 7 playing music, although the sound comes out of the speakers, not the white headphones now inserted in the DIY hole.
‘This video is for those who don’t want to get $159 wireless AirPods or have to insert your headphones into an adapter every time you listen to music’ says the caption of the video.
The video was produced by Sacramento, California-based Ukrainian YouTuber Taras Maksimuk who “specialises in smashing technology for your pleasure” according to his profile. Some of Maksimuk’s other videos include “what happens if you microwave an iPhone 7” and “can the iPhone 7 survive in liquid nitrogen for five minutes”.
In total Maksimuk has seven separate videos showing him destroying iPhone 7s, but that seemingly hasn’t stopped people drilling holes into the bottom of their new iPhones and causing irreparable damage.
The YouTube video’s comment section – normally a place filled with vitriol and despair for humanity – was full of people claiming to have performed the operation and destroying their iPhone 7 in the process, the sincerity of which is questionable.
Some Dude said: “WT*??? F**k you! My screen turned black the moment I started drilling and now I can’t even open it.”
“TECHRAX YOU PIECE OF S**T I DID THIS AND THE SOUND DOESN NOT WORK AT ALL,” said Artur.
Lukelaluke123 said: “ARE YOU KIDDING ME? I WAITD TILL MY DAD WAS SLEEP THEN I WENT TO THE GARAGE AND GOT HIS DIRLL AND DID THIS ND NOW MY IPHONE WONT NOT EVEN WORK!!!!! YOU ARE SUCH ASC*M BAG WHY WOULD YOU DO THIS IM GOING TO MAEK SURE YOURE UTUBE CHANNEL IS GETS SHUT DOWN.”
Not only will drilling a hole into the bottom of the iPhone 7 not reveal a hidden headphone socket, but it will also ruin the waterproofing of the smartphone, which requires the membranes covering the holes in the bottom of the phone to be undamaged.
Maksimuk’s video is the latest in a long run of pranks targeting gullible iPhone buyers. Pranksters managed to convince some users that the iOS 7 update magically made their iPhones waterproof in 2013, while some iPhone 6 users were tricked into microwaving their smartphones while seeking longer battery life. Both pranks only led to destroyed smartphones.
© WUSA-TV, Washington The National Park Service announced Monday the Washington Monument in Washington, D.C. would be closed indefinitely as officials work to modernize the elevator system












The Washington Monument has been shut down indefinitely as work to modernize the elevator continues, officials from the National Park Service service announced Monday.
"We have not been able to determine the causes of the ongoing reliability issues," the park service said in a statement on Facebook. "As a result, we have made the difficult decision not to reopen the Washington Monument until we can modernize the elevator control system."
The elevator that takes passengers to the top of the 555-foot marble obelisk has repeatedly broken down, trapping riders and forcing visitors to walk down dozens of flights of stairs.
Following a 2011 earthquake, the monument underwent three years of repairs before re-opening to visitors in 2014. But elevator issues continued.
The National Park service closed the monument last month to evaluate the causes of the frequent elevator breakdowns, but they have been unable to resolve the issue despite the month-long inspection.
The duration of the monument's closure will be announced "in the next couple of weeks," the park service said. 
Today, Mr. Caicedo is an assistant manager at a pizzeria in Gaithersburg, Md., with an annual salary of $40,000 and health benefits. And he is getting ready to move his wife and children out of his mother-in-law’s house and into their own place. Doubling up has been a lifesaver, Mr. Caicedo said, “but nobody just wants to move in with their in-laws.”
The Caicedos are among the 3.5 million Americans who were able to raise their chins above the poverty line last year, according to census data released this month. More than seven years after the recession ended, employers are
                                                                                    finally being compelled to reach deeper into the                                                                                        pools of untapped labor, creating more jobs,                                                                                            especially among retailers, restaurants and                                                                                                hotels, and paying higher wages to attract                                                                                        workers and meet new minimum wage requirements.

“It all came together at the same time,” said Diane Swonk, an independent business economist in Chicago. “Lots of employment and wages gains, particularly in the lowest-paying end of the jobs spectrum, combined with minimum-wage increases that started to hit some very large population areas.”
Poverty declined among every group. But African-Americans and Hispanics — who account for more than 45 percent of those below the poverty line of $24,300 for a family of four in most states — experienced the largest improvement.
Government programs — like Social Security, the earned-income tax credit and food stamps — have kept tens of millions from sinking into poverty year after year. But a main driver behind the impressive 1.2 percentage point decline in the poverty rate, the largest annual drop since 1999, was that the economy finally hit a tipping point after years of steady, if lukewarm, improvement.
Over all, 2.9 million more jobs were created from 2014 to 2015, helping millions of unemployed people cross over into the ranks of regular wage earners. Many part-time workers increased the number of hours on the job. Wages, adjusted for inflation, climbed.
“Another hidden benefit was lower prices at the pump,” Ms. Swonk said. “People who couldn’t afford the commute before could now afford to accept a minimum-wage job.”
There are different roads out of poverty, said Sheldon Danziger, president of the Russell Sage Foundation, a social science research institution, but today, one of the most promising is to “go somewhere where they raised the minimum wage.”
About 43 million Americans, more than 14 million of them children, are still officially classified as poor, and countless others up and down the income ladder remain worried about their families’ financial security. But the Census Bureau’s report found that 2015 was the first year since 2008, when the economic downturn began, that the poverty rate fell significantly and incomes for most American households rose.
“If you look under the hood of the census report,” Michael Strain, director of economic policy studies at the conservative research organization American Enterprise Institute, said, “you see more people are working, so fewer people are going to be in poverty.”
After a long period of rising inequality, Elise Gould, an economist at the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute in Washington, added, the benefits of the improving economy finally began to seep downward. Wage increases were “even stronger at the bottom than in the middle,” she said.
For those on the lower rungs of the income ladder, a step upward can be profound. For some, it means the difference between sleeping on a friend’s couch and having a home. For others, it is the change from getting shoes at Goodwill to buying a new pair at Target, or between not having the money to buy your daughter an ice cream cone to getting her a bicycle for her birthday.
The poverty rate fell in 23 states, with Vermont leading the way. The rest stayed flat; none got worse. And other evidence suggests the improvement has continued, if not as strongly, this year.
Mr. Caicedo, 32, initially found his job on Craigslist last summer, starting at $12 an hour. Recently, he was promoted to his salaried position and now drives a 2015 Nissan Pathfinder. His wife was able to leave her job at a clothing store and take care of their four children.
Michael Lastoria, who started the chain called & Pizza where Mr. Caicedo works, said: “We try to pay as close to a fair or living wage as possible,” roughly $2 an hour above the minimum with a steady full-time schedule and benefits. “We want people to have careers, not just jobs,” he said.
The availability of full-time jobs at a livable wage may be essential to move out of poverty but is not necessarily enough. Many poor people, saddled with a deficient education, inadequate health care and few marketable skills, find small setbacks can quickly set off a downward spiral. The lack of resources can prevent them from even reaching the starting gate: no computer to search job sites, no way to compensate for the bad impression a missing tooth can leave.
Many of those who made it had outsize determination, but also benefited from a government or nonprofit program that provided training, financial counseling, job hunting skills, safe havens and other services.
Cheyvonné Grayson, 29, grew up in South-Central Los Angeles, where he, at the age of 14, saw a friend gunned down. Since graduating from high school, Mr. Grayson has worked mostly as a day laborer. In 2014, he was paying $300 a month to sleep on someone’s couch and showing up at 6 a.m., morning after morning, at nonunion construction sites in the hopes of getting work.
Often the supervisors and workers spoke only Spanish, and it was hard to understand the orders and measurements. He remembered one foreman looking him up and down, skeptical that he could do the job.
“I had to prove this man wrong,” Mr. Grayson said.
At every site, he said he tried to pick up skills, carefully observing other workers, asking questions and later reinforcing the lessons by watching YouTube videos. Even so, the work was inconsistent and paid poorly, he said.
What made the difference, he said, was getting into the carpenters’ union — a feat he could not have achieved without the help of the Los Angeles Black Worker Center. “That was the door opener,” Mr. Grayson said.
He had to borrow a few hundred dollars for fees and tools, but his first apprenticeship as a carpenter started at $16.16 an hour. He quickly moved up to $20.20 an hour and is paid for his further training. He is now hanging doors for new dormitories at the University of Southern California.
For the first time in his life, he opened a bank account.
Seventeen hundred miles east, Christine Magee, a mother of four, joined an intensive self-sufficiency program administered by the Chicago Housing Authority and the Heartland Alliance after she fell into bankruptcy from racking up $22,000 in debt on a credit card. As a recipient of a federal housing voucher, Ms. Magee was eligible to enroll.
She set three goals after joining the program in 2014: buy a house, raise her dismal credit rating and get a better job that would provide for her retirement someday.
“She was really motivated,” said her counselor, Barbara Martinez. “Not everyone is.”
Ms. Magee’s husband has found only sporadic work. But she has moved from a health-technician job that paid $23,000 a year and left her family on Medicaid to one at a veterans hospital that pays more than $35,000 and provides health and educational benefits. The extra earnings automatically went into an escrow account.
A couple of weeks ago, she graduated from the program with more than $8,000 in savings — which she plans to use for a down payment on a home — and a bank letter confirming she qualifies for a mortgage.

Try. Not. To. Panic. After days of threatening online action, Justin Bieber has officially deactivated his Instagram account. (And just when he got a cute new puppy!)
Over the weekend, the Biebs told his followers that he would set his account to private if they continued to harass his new lady love, Sofia Richie. This prompted both widespread panic in the Belieber community and rather public shade from his exes, Selena Gomez andHailey Baldwin.
Shortly after the "Sorry" singer took down his account entirely, Gomez took to Snapchat to post an apology that appears to be related to the situation.
"What I said was selfish and pointless," she wrote.
It was widely reported that Gomez and Bieber had a heated back and forth in the comments of Instagram about Bieber's threat to make his account private. Though the comments were deleted, fans posted screengrabs.
"If you can't handle the hate then stop posting pictures of your girlfriend lol - it should be special between you two only," Gomez allegedly wrote. "Don't be mad at your fans. They love you."
According to the screengrabs, Bieber replied, "It's funny to see people that used me for attention and still trying to point the finger this way. Sad. All love. I'm not one for anyone receiving hate."
The famous exes then supposedly accused one another of cheating, with the Biebs saying that Gomez cheated with Gigi Hadid's current boyfriend, Zayn Malik.Welcom
Only time will tell if Bieber will return to Instagram, but is it too late now for Gomez to say sorry?
RELATED: Selena Gomez Seemingly Accuses Justin Bieber of Cheating Calls Out His Romance with Sofia Richie

 20: Bringing up the rear for the best-selling mobile phone of all time is the Samsung Galaxy S III. Released in 2012, it shipped with Android 4.04 Ice Cream Sandwich, and is widely hailed as being the first smartphone to kick off Samsung's domination of the market. It has sold more than 60 million units.

 19: The Motorola StarTAC is the oldest phone on the list, released in 1996, and is regarded as one of the first mobiles to truly enter the mainstream conscience, selling more than 60 million.


18: Apple's iPhone 4s, released in 2011, was the first iPhone to feature digital assistant Siri, and has sold more than 60 million units.



 17: In 17th place is the Nokia 5130. Way back in 2007, this music-playing phone sported a 2MP camera and shifted more than 65 million handsets.


 16: The iPhone 5 was Apple's first foray into creating larger handsets, boasting a 4-inch display up from predecessor the 4s' 3.5-inch screen. It was launched in 2012 with a production run of only 12 months. More than 70 million were sold.
15: The solid Nokia 6010 is the 16th entry in the list, clocking up sales of more than 75 million since its introduction in 2004.
 14: Samsung's wildly popular Galaxy S4 went on sale in 2013, and quickly became the company's fastest-selling smartphone. It sold a total of 80 million units before it was replaced by the Galaxy S5 the next year.
 13: Apple's best-selling iPhones to date, the 6 and 6 Plus models were released in 2014, and have sold more than 100 million handsets.
 12: The Nokia 1208 first went on sale in 2007, and featured an inbuilt torch and colour screen with a resolution of 96 x 98 pixels. More than 100 million were sold worldwide.
 11: The legendary and practically indestructable Nokia 3310 came into being back in 2000, and is noted for its great games, including Snake and Space Impact. It sold more than 126 million units.
 10: Motorola's highest entry in the top 20 was for the RAZR V3, which after selling more than 130 million handsets, is also the world's best-selling clamshell phone. It went on sale in 2004.
9: The basic but hardy Nokia 1600 was released in 2006, and has shifted 130 million + units. It was developed specifically for users in emerging markets including India and China.
 8: Another very basic Nokia, the 2600 did not have a camera or Bluetooth connectivity. It was released in 2004 and has sold more than 135 million units.
 7: The tough Samsung E1100 boasted a battery life of around 13 days on standby when it went on sale in 2009, and is 8th in the list, selling more than 150 million units in that time.
 6: The egg-shaped Nokia 6600 was incredibly popular despite its hefty £400 price tag back in 2003, and has clocked up sales of more than 150 million.
5: The Symbian-running Nokia 5230 has sold more than 150 million units despite its lack on Wi-Fi support. It went on sale in 2009.
 4: The Nokia 1200 was praised for its long battery life - more than 390 hours - and featured a fetching green backlight. It has sold more than 150 million units since its introduction in 2007.
 3: The classic Nokia 3210 is the third best-selling phone after generating sales of more than 150 million. It went on sale in 1999, and is fondly remembered as many people's first ever mobile phone.
 2: The low-end Nokia 1110 was released in 2005, and has narrowly been pipped to the post as the world's most popular show. Its inverted screen, featuring white text on a black background, boosted it to sales of more than 250 million.
1: The Nokia 1100 may not be as famous as the 3310, but it's the best-selling mobile phone the world has ever known, shifting more than 250 million. It went on sale in 2003, and has since been sadly discontinued. Nokia's one billionth phone sold was an 1100 in Nigeria in 2005. 

It’s an open secret that the Internet of Things (if we must call it so) is pretty terrible, whether in standards, ineroperability, or security. Good security, though, you don’t really expect in a smart light bulb or coffee maker. A smart front door lock, however, really shouldn’t be quite this easy to hack.
Two different presentations at DEF CON this year made it clear that there’s a long way to go before we should start trusting the average smart lock — or even the nice ones. This may surprise you, or you might have been saying it for years. At all events, these guys proved it with gusto.
Anthony Rose and Ben Ramsey, from Merculite Security, showed off a bit of lock hackingdone with less than $200 worth of off-the-shelf hardware. Some opened easier than others, but in the end 12 out of 16 yielded.
Locks from Quicklock, iBluLock, and Plantraco transmitted their passwords in plaintext, making them vulnerable to anyone with a Bluetooth sniffer. Others were tricked by the attacker simply replaying the same data they snatched out the air when a legit user unlocked the door. Another entered a failstate and opened by default when it received an encrypted string that was off by one byte.
Worth noting as well: doing a bit of wardriving, the two found plenty of locks identifying themselves as such, making it easy for an attacker to find devices to listen in on.
Pretty poor showing altogether, although a few resisted Rose and Ramsey’s attempts: the Noke and Masterlock smart padlocks survived, and a Kwikset Kevo did as well — until they opened it with a screwdriver. Okay, that’s cheating, but the point stands.
Perhaps most worryingly, only one of the 12 vendors the two contacted to inform them of these flaws responded — and even then, there was no plan to fix anything.
One that Merculite failed to crack was the August door lock, a rather more well known brand than the others (MasterLock notwithstanding). Fortunately, someone else had already made it their mission to break the thing wide open.
Jmaxxz’s entertaining, meme-filled presentation puts the lie to many of the claims set forth by August, and although it’s unlikely your average B&E artist is going to bother to circumvent certificate pinning and pawing through your logs, the security holes are real.
Many items that were too hard to get by ordinary hacking means like sniffers… could be found in plaintext in logs and the like. Jmaxxz is one of those hackers that doesn’t like to work any harder than he has to — and why should he?
Inside the August there were good practices and bad — and to the company’s credit, the hacker noted, they have been responsive and many of these holes are likely fixed. Still, it’s hard to believe that guests could ever award themselves extra lock permissions just by changing a string in the API calls from “user” to “superuser”!
For now, it seems, these locks are long on convenience and short on security. If you don’t mind having less-than-stellar security on your pool house or mother-in-law, this could be a nice way to keep your keychain light — but for the front door, you can do better.
Giant flocks of black birds circled the wreckage of an airliner that had struck an Alaska mountain two weeks earlier, killing all 111 aboard. In a small plane overhead, a young engineer directed his pilot to follow the same path the jet had taken toward the craggy terrain.
With seconds to spare, an alarm went off. Don Bateman’s plane climbed to safety, but he was frustrated. The electronic device he invented to warn pilots that they were about to hit the ground didn’t leave enough time to have prevented the large airliner from crashing.
“I was disappointed,” Bateman, now 84, recalled of the day in 1971 when he flew over the remains of Alaska Airlines Flight 1866, which had slammed into a fog-shrouded ridge. “We needed to do better.”
That’s exactly what Bateman and his small team of engineers at what is now Honeywell International Inc. did. The device presaged today’s mobile mapping applications, dramatically reduced what had been by far the worst class of air crashes and made Honeywell billions of dollars.
“I would give Don individual credit for having saved more lives than any other individual in the history of commercial aviation,” said Earl Weener, a member of the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board and former chief engineer for safety at Boeing Co.
Before retiring in June, Bateman and his band of colleagues dabbled in the world of Cold War espionage, hid the true cost of their endeavor from their corporate masters and endured skepticism from the very airlines whose planes were being lost. In spite of repeated changes in corporate ownership and the blunt-spoken Bateman’s occasional threats to quit, he worked on his mission to save lives with the same group for almost six decades, colleagues said.
Eventually Bateman’s Enhanced Ground Proximity Warning System became required in most commercial planes around the world, dramatically reducing accidents in which perfectly good aircraft with trained crews plowed into the ground or bodies of water, almost always in poor visibility.
In the 1960s and 1970s, there was an average of one such fatal accident per month, according to the AviationSafetyNetwork website. It was by far the largest cause of death in jetliner accidents.
Related video: Lessons from pilot who landed one of most damaged planes in history
Since the U.S. government began requiring an upgraded version of the device on all but the smallest aircraft starting in 2001, there hasn’t been a single such fatal crash on a U.S. commercial passenger plane equipped with it or competing devices. There have been a few overseas, often when pilots ignored or shut off the devices.
President Barack Obama awarded Bateman the National Medal of Technology and Innovation in 2011.
Bateman was always fascinated with airplane crashes. As an 8-year-old school boy in 1940 in Saskatoon, Canada, he and a friend sneaked out of class after two military planes collided and crashed nearby. As punishment, his teacher made him write a report on what happened.
“That was my introduction to aircraft accidents,” he said recently. The carnage he saw that day helped motivate him years later.
After taking a job with Boeing in Seattle, he joined a small aviation firm called United Control in 1958. Airplane accidents continued to fascinate him and he began “making little books” of notes on them. One type stood out.
In the arcane world of aviation terminology, these crashes were called Controlled Flight into Terrain, or CFIT. It was a vexing problem: Basic navigation should have kept pilots from crashing. But the cockpit navigation technology of that era wasn’t intuitive and it was too easy to get disoriented, especially at night or in bad weather.
“In my mind it became a big issue, even though there wasn’t much being done about it,” Bateman recalled.
In the 1960s, Bateman worked with Scandinavian Airlines System, now SAS AB, which had suffered a CFIT crash in Turkey in 1960, to invent a mechanism to warn pilots when they flew too low. It involved a new instrument on planes that used radio waves to determine a plane’s distance from the ground. It helped stem the accident rate and, after a series of crashes, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration required it starting in 1974.
But it was prone to false alarms and had a glaring weakness: It couldn’t look forward, so was of little use if a plane was flying toward steeply increasing ground, such as a mountain.
For years, Bateman tinkered with the device to improve it. He also consulted with NTSB investigators, poring over accident reports.
“He would come to me and say what do we know about this accident?” said Jim Ritter, director of the NTSB’s Office of Research and Engineering, who was a technician at the time. “The whole time, the gears were spinning and he was trying to make things safer.”
Bateman had been imagining a far better solution as early as his flight over the Alaska crash site. If he could create a database of all the world’s terrain, the device would see mountain tops and cliffs from miles away. But this was before personal computers and global-positioning services.
Even worse, much of the world’s topography was considered secret at the time, a vestige of the Cold War.
Then in 1991, in the chaos created by the breakup of the Soviet Union, the detailed maps it had created of the world starting in the 1920s were for sale -- if you knew where to buy them.
Bateman asked Frank Daly, the director of engineering at the Sundstrand Corp. division that had swallowed United Control, for his blessing to purchase the data from the U.S. government’s Cold War enemy.
“He thought I was crazy,” Bateman said.
They wound up sending one of his employees, Frank Brem, in search of maps in Russia and elsewhere. “There isn’t a terrain data store in downtown Moscow,” Daly recalled. “But he would go out and find the right people.”
A bigger problem than navigating the black market was the millions of dollars it was costing for the still unproven technology. “We probably weren’t as open with senior management about that process,” Daly said. He sometimes hid costs in other accounts.
By the early 1990s, Bateman had developed working prototypes of the new system. Now the company had to sell it.
For pilots and safety officers, it was a marvel. Ed Soliday, then director of safety at United Airlines, had been prodding Bateman to improve the warning device. One day in the early 1990s, Bateman called and said he thought he had what Soliday wanted.
“Once I flew the thing with Don, it was like an epiphany,” Soliday recalled. “I was sold. I thought if we could make it work, this was a huge breakthrough.”
If a plane was flying toward a mountain, a screen popped up automatically marking the high ground in yellow and red on a map. If pilots didn’t respond, it began a series of increasingly dire warnings. Once a collision became almost imminent, a mechanical voice implored, “Terrain, terrain. Pull up! Pull up!” Compared to the earlier system, it was almost fool proof.
But many of the more cost-conscious corporate chieftains at airlines weren’t convinced, according to Bateman and Daly.
A meeting at American Airlines was particularly grim. Daly was on the sales call at the airline’s headquarters with his then chief executive officer. Their host, a senior executive at the airline, was hostile.
“He was almost apoplectic and said, ‘We don’t want another box. We don’t want to have to replace the existing system,’ ” Daly said. “Here I am justifying spending tens or hundreds of millions of dollars and my boss has just been soundly beaten on the shoulders by the customer.”
Soliday had more success at United. The airline agreed to help Bateman’s team test it so it could be certified by the FAA, he said. Most other carriers balked. It took another high-profile fatal crash to change their minds.
As American Flight 965 neared Cali, Colombia, from Miami on the evening of Dec. 20, 1995, a pilot accidentally entered the wrong data into the plane’s flight computers. The crew didn’t notice as it began a slow left turn toward mountains lying invisible in the darkness.
The Boeing 757 was equipped with the earlier version of Bateman’s warning device and its mechanical voice began warning of “terrain.” But 13 seconds later, after the pilots added full throttle to climb as steeply as possible, it rammed into a ridge. All but four of the 163 people aboard died.
Within days the airline wanted the new device, which would have issued an alert far earlier and likely prevented the crash, Bateman and Daly said. First American and then United agreed to voluntarily install them. Other carriers followed. The FAA began requiring them in 2001.
In the end, the products spawned by Bateman’s device were a financial boon to Honeywell. There are 45,000 units on aircraft today, worth more than $4 billion at list prices, according to the company.
Both Bateman and Daly wonder whether the decades-long effort to develop and improve the warning system would be possible in today’s risk-averse corporate world.
“Today new projects need to be blessed by many people,” Daly said. “You need to have hard evidence. They just would not speculatively fund something like this, especially when we were being resisted by the aircraft manufacturers, the airlines.
“But Don’s faith, the genius of his team and a little support from the company -- and it 
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