Sunday, January 12, 2014

By Breakingnews

The rise of mobile weekends

In the news business, weekends have always been a bit of an afterthought. But in the world of mobile, Saturdays and Sundays are taking on new significance.

Take this last Sunday as an example: Breaking News broke all-time mobile records without an earth-shattering story.  There was plenty of news: frigid weather across most of the US, the Aspen plane crash, the Manhattan high-rise fire and the NFL playoffs, but typically record traffic is driven by a major and unexpected breaking news event.

We set new single-day records for visits, shares and “whoas” — the cold weather story was whoa’d the most, followed by the plane crash — with thousands of users personalizing our iOS app by muting and alerting stories. (Learn more about our new app.)
We’ve seen the mobile weekend trend intensify over the last few months. Both FT.com and The Guardian have documented the effect, and news organizations are beginning to notice that mobile traffic is surpassing the desktop on weekends first, weekdays second.  As more people shift news consumption to mobile, they’re taking the news with them as they navigate their weekends, either out and about on smartphones or lounging around on a tablet.
For news organizations that traditionally allocate more coverage resources on Monday through Friday, the mobile weekend is sparking some rethinking about how to best schedule editors and reporters.  The same goes for evenings and nights, which also attract a spike in mobile usage.
As mobile shows no signs of slowing down, this will be a fascinating year to watch.
(Post by @corybe)
By Breakingnews

Users complain after Twitter sends out a @breakingnews notification

Twitter has been testing a news alert service, and as we experienced firsthand today, many users aren’t happy about it.

As NASA’s Maven rocket launched toward Mars, we published a breaking news update.  A few minutes later without our knowledge, Twitter resent our @breakingnews tweet as a notification to an unknown number of users as part of the ongoing test.  Within moments, we began receiving complaints blaming @breakingnews for notifying them without permission.

By abcnews

Iran Nuclear Deal Will Finally Kick In

Jan 12, 2014 4:46pm
WASHINGTON — The sixth-month nuclear deal announced in November is finally ready to go into effect, Secretary of State John Kerry announced today.
For months, U.S. and Iranian technical negotiators have been hammering out what, exactly, each side is obligated to do over the six-month agreement. Negotiations in Geneva broke off in mid-December.
But the U.S. and Iran finally do have a deal: The six-month interim agreement will kick in on Jan. 20, Kerry announced today, after the under-secretary for political affairs — the U.S. official in brokering this deal — traveled to Geneva and met with Iranian and EU counterparts on Thursday, apparently laying the groundwork for the six-month clock to at last begin ticking.
“While implementation is an important step, the next phase poses a far greater challenge: negotiating a comprehensive agreement that resolves outstanding concerns about the peaceful nature of Iran’s nuclear program,” Kerry said in a written statement released to reporters.
Senior U.S. officials said Iran has agreed to allow International Atomic Energy Agency inspectors daily access at two of its major power plants, and the technical talks focused on what IAEA inspectors will be looking for when they visit and what information Iran will supply them.
On Jan. 20, Iran will no longer enrich Uranium to 20 percent and will dilute its entire stockpile over the course of the six-month deal and IAEA monitors will have access to Iran’s centrifuges and the workshops where they’re made, a senior U.S. official told reporters today on a conference call.
The IAEA will report at the beginning of Jan. 20 that Iran has not met its international nuclear obligations, and after that, the IAEA will report monthly on Iran’s progress toward compliance with the terms of the interim deal.
In exchange, Iran will get about $7 billion over the course of the deal.
Once the IAEA confirms that Iran is following the terms of the deal, the U.S. will lift sanctions on Iranian petrochemical-product exports (but not its oil sales), its automotive industry, embargoes on aviation equipment and inspection services, and it will stop seeking to reduce Iran’s oil sales to the countries that still purchase it at reduced levels.
The U.S. will also unfreeze $4.2 billion in blocked Iranian oil money in banks around the world, and dole that money out in installments over the course of the six months. In all, Iran will have gotten about $7 billion from those two measures combined.
Congress, meanwhile, continues to consider new sanctions, legislation President Obama has threatened to veto, and senior U.S. officials reiterated on a conference call today that the president would indeed block any bill imposing new sanctions on Iran during the six months.
In the Senate, more than 50 lawmakers have signed onto a bill that would implement new sanctions if Iran fails to comply with the deal or if no larger agreement comes of it.
The Nov. 24 agreement bars the U.S. from imposing any new sanctions during the six months of the deal, but not after it. Iran, however, has said that even a delayed or conditioned sanctions law would nullify the whole deal. The State Department, which has lobbied aggressively against any sanctions bill, has said it agrees.

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