Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Childhood economic status affects substance use among young adults

Childhood economic status affects substance use among young adults [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 30-Jul-2013
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Contact: Sarah Avery
sarah.avery@duke.edu
919-660-1306
Duke University Medical Center

DURHAM, N.C. Children who grow up in poverty are more likely than wealthier children to smoke cigarettes, but they are less likely to binge drink and are no more prone to use marijuana, according to researchers at Duke Medicine.

The researchers also found that economic strains in early life including family worries about paying bills or needing to sell possessions for cash independently erode a child's self-control, regardless of strong parenting in adolescence. Lack of self-control often leads to substance use.

The findings, appearing July 30, 2013, in the Journal of Pediatric Psychology, debunk common assumptions about who abuses substances, and provide a basis for better approaches to prevent young people from falling into drug and alcohol addiction.

"Poverty during childhood not only appears to affect child development, but can have lasting effects on the types of health choices made during adolescence and early adulthood, especially as it relates to cigarette smoking," said senior author Bernard Fuemmeler, Ph.D., MPH, MS, associate professor in Community and Family Medicine at Duke University School of Medicine. "Economic strains may shape an individual's capacity for self-control by diminishing opportunities for self-regulation, or affecting important brain structures."

Fuemmeler and colleagues at Duke set out to examine the direct effect of childhood economic strains on smoking, binge drinking, and marijuana use in young adults. They also sought to determine how financial difficulties impact self-control, and how positive parenting might mitigate the tendency to use drugs and alcohol.

The group analyzed data from 1,285 children and caregivers included in a representative sample of U.S. families studied from 1986-2009. Economic status was measured by annual family income, plus a survey with questions about economic problems such as difficulty paying bills or postponing medical care. Additional information was gathered to gauge childhood self-control and parental interactions.

Among the study participants who were transitioning to adulthood, young people who lived in poverty as children were far more likely to become regular cigarette smokers than children who grew up in wealthier households. The impoverished children also scored low on self-control measures.

"Poor self-control may be a product of limited learning resources and opportunities for developing appropriate behaviors," Fuemmeler said.

Binge drinking, however, was much more common among the wealthier young people. And surprisingly, those who had good self-control as children were more likely to engage in heavy episodic drinking as young adults.

Neither wealth nor poverty appeared to influence marijuana use, although positive parenting did reduce the use of this drug. Parents who were nurturing and accepting, in fact, diminished the likelihood of young people using any of the substances.

The researchers also found no correlation between economic hardship and poor parenting a contradiction to some other studies.

"We suspected we'd find a relationship between parenting and economic problems the idea that economic strains may cause parents to have less capacity to deal with their children, but that relationship wasn't there," Fuemmeler said. "That means it's not necessarily poverty that affects the parenting strategy, but poverty that affects the children's self-control."

Fuemmeler said the findings are important given the increase in U.S. children living in poverty. The U.S. Census Bureau reported 22 percent of children lived in poverty in 2010, compared to 18 percent in 2000.

"Continued work is needed to better understand how economic strains may influence the development of self-control, as well as to identify other potential mediators between economic strains and substance use outcomes," Fuemmeler said.

###

In addition to Fuemmeler, study authors include Chien-Ti Lee, Joseph McClernon, Scott H. Kollins and Kevin Prybol.

The National Institutes of Health (RO1 DA030487), the National Cancer Institute (K07CA124905) and the National Institute on Drug Abuse (K24DA023464) funded the study.


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Childhood economic status affects substance use among young adults [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 30-Jul-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Sarah Avery
sarah.avery@duke.edu
919-660-1306
Duke University Medical Center

DURHAM, N.C. Children who grow up in poverty are more likely than wealthier children to smoke cigarettes, but they are less likely to binge drink and are no more prone to use marijuana, according to researchers at Duke Medicine.

The researchers also found that economic strains in early life including family worries about paying bills or needing to sell possessions for cash independently erode a child's self-control, regardless of strong parenting in adolescence. Lack of self-control often leads to substance use.

The findings, appearing July 30, 2013, in the Journal of Pediatric Psychology, debunk common assumptions about who abuses substances, and provide a basis for better approaches to prevent young people from falling into drug and alcohol addiction.

"Poverty during childhood not only appears to affect child development, but can have lasting effects on the types of health choices made during adolescence and early adulthood, especially as it relates to cigarette smoking," said senior author Bernard Fuemmeler, Ph.D., MPH, MS, associate professor in Community and Family Medicine at Duke University School of Medicine. "Economic strains may shape an individual's capacity for self-control by diminishing opportunities for self-regulation, or affecting important brain structures."

Fuemmeler and colleagues at Duke set out to examine the direct effect of childhood economic strains on smoking, binge drinking, and marijuana use in young adults. They also sought to determine how financial difficulties impact self-control, and how positive parenting might mitigate the tendency to use drugs and alcohol.

The group analyzed data from 1,285 children and caregivers included in a representative sample of U.S. families studied from 1986-2009. Economic status was measured by annual family income, plus a survey with questions about economic problems such as difficulty paying bills or postponing medical care. Additional information was gathered to gauge childhood self-control and parental interactions.

Among the study participants who were transitioning to adulthood, young people who lived in poverty as children were far more likely to become regular cigarette smokers than children who grew up in wealthier households. The impoverished children also scored low on self-control measures.

"Poor self-control may be a product of limited learning resources and opportunities for developing appropriate behaviors," Fuemmeler said.

Binge drinking, however, was much more common among the wealthier young people. And surprisingly, those who had good self-control as children were more likely to engage in heavy episodic drinking as young adults.

Neither wealth nor poverty appeared to influence marijuana use, although positive parenting did reduce the use of this drug. Parents who were nurturing and accepting, in fact, diminished the likelihood of young people using any of the substances.

The researchers also found no correlation between economic hardship and poor parenting a contradiction to some other studies.

"We suspected we'd find a relationship between parenting and economic problems the idea that economic strains may cause parents to have less capacity to deal with their children, but that relationship wasn't there," Fuemmeler said. "That means it's not necessarily poverty that affects the parenting strategy, but poverty that affects the children's self-control."

Fuemmeler said the findings are important given the increase in U.S. children living in poverty. The U.S. Census Bureau reported 22 percent of children lived in poverty in 2010, compared to 18 percent in 2000.

"Continued work is needed to better understand how economic strains may influence the development of self-control, as well as to identify other potential mediators between economic strains and substance use outcomes," Fuemmeler said.

###

In addition to Fuemmeler, study authors include Chien-Ti Lee, Joseph McClernon, Scott H. Kollins and Kevin Prybol.

The National Institutes of Health (RO1 DA030487), the National Cancer Institute (K07CA124905) and the National Institute on Drug Abuse (K24DA023464) funded the study.


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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-07/dumc-ces072613.php

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Five reasons I dropped my iPhone 5 for a Nokia Lumia 1020

Nokia-Lumia-1020
(Image: Nokia)

I've been testing out the Nokia Lumia 1020 for over a week and last night I made the decision to sell my iPhone 5, cancel my Verizon account, switch to AT&T, and return my Nokia Lumia 925 to T-Mobile. There are five main reasons I made this move and understand these decisions were made to meet MY smartphone needs.

Earlier this year I had accounts on three networks so that I could better test out smartphones and write about my experiences. I am blessed to have a job where I get to play with the latest mobile gear before making informed purchase decisions, but I found that three lines were just too much and one line always sat idle. Last night I put my Verizon account on hold (with the intent to cancel later) and signed up for a new AT&T account with a yellow Lumia 1020 purchase.

    1. The camera: The Nokia Lumia 1020 is an exciting device and every reviewer has confirmed there is no modern smartphone that can match the camera experience of the device. I also own a Nokia 808 PureView and while that may take better photos (this is arguable), the camera capture and editing software on the Lumia 1020 can't be beat. With the 1020, there truly is no need to carry a point and shoot and my memories will no longer lack details where other smartphone shots have left me with regrets.
    2. Nokia extras: In addition to the amazing camera on the Nokia Lumia 1020, Nokia impresses with its ability to bring extras to Windows Phone, including the glance utility that lets you double tap to wake the device up and see the time when the display is off, HERE Maps suite, camera lenses and utilities, advanced touch screen display, and more. Nokia is definitely pushing Windows Phone forward, much like HTC did with Windows Mobile back in the day.
    3. Music: I have always said that the Zune HD and Windows Phone devices sounded incredible and both Nokia and Microsoft help make the Windows Phone music experience the best. For just $4/month you can get unlimited streaming and downloadable music with Nokia Music+ and for $10/month you can get music via the Xbox Music service. The next thing I am looking to see from Nokia is great integrated stereo speakers.
    4. Wireless and standard microUSB charging: The Lumia 1020 doesn't have wireless charging in the device itself, but a shell is available to provide the capability. It refreshing to have wireless charging support and I find myself looking for this in all my devices now. I also like that Nokia, and most every other smartphone manufacturer, use standard microUSB for charging. I often found myself without a charging cable for the iPhone 5, but no longer have to worry about that.
    5. Metro user interface: Frankly, I am bored with iOS and the funny thing is that is exactly why the AT&T rep last night said she owns a Galaxy S4 even though she found the iPhone to be more dependable. I am a fan of the Windows Phone experience and Live Tiles. Windows Phone is approaching its 3rd birthday and the experience hasn't changed much either, but it is still fresher to me and I find it works better for my needs than iOS.

Windows Phone 8 is increasing in market share and when I compare the apps I use daily there are just a couple missing. I do enjoy the metro UI and consistency in the apps though and for the couple I still want, I can get the data through the browser. I am blessed to write about smartphones here and get the opportunity to test out a lot of them. I am keeping my HTC One on T-Mobile and still think that is the best smartphone I have ever used, but I also want a great Windows Phone device.

The Lumia 1020 isn't perfect, but as I wrote before it appears that Windows Phone is holding back Nokia more than their inability to continue pushing the limits. There is a dual-core processor in high end Lumias and no support for 1080p displays, but these are current Windows Phone 8 limitations and not Nokia limitations. I look forward to future versions of Windows Phone and Nokia Lumia products and it seems that Microsoft and Nokia are generating excitement with devices like the Lumia 1020.

Other considerations

I was considering keeping my iPhone 5 on Verizon to see what came in iOS 7 while keeping the Lumia 925 and HTC One for T-Mobile and that probably would have been the sensible thing to do. However, where is the fun in that?

I think the Nokia Lumia 925 is the best piece of Nokia hardware produced running Windows Phone, but the 16GB internal storage is tough to deal with on a phone that captures great photos. It is likely we will see a Lumia 1020 successor later this year or early next year with a higher resolution display, quad-core processor, and other improvements, but I wanted this camera experience now and will make future purchase decisions when we see future devices.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zdnetaustralia-news/~3/dKu5vVWM3co/

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Lilbits (7-29-2013): Android 4.3 speeds up the original Nexus 7

Liliputing writes, When the original Google Nexus 7 hit the streets a year ago, it offered crazy good specs for a low price. It was probably the most powerful tablet you could buy for $200. But users started to notice that performance degraded over time, especially after upgrading the OS from Android 4.1 to Android 4.2. Now that users are starting to get over-the-air updates to Android 4.3, it seems like performance is improving. You can probably thank the addition of fstrim garbage collection, but whatever the reason, the good news is that Google seems to be breathing new life into last year?s tablet with?

Continue reading Lilbits (7-29-2013): Android 4.3 speeds up the original Nexus 7 at Liliputing

Source: http://mobilitybeat.com/liliputing/124782/lilbits-7-29-2013-android-43-speeds-up-the-original-nexus-7/

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Tuesday, July 30, 2013

'Puss in Boots' Writer -- I'm NOT a Creepy Pervert ... World Market ...

'Puss in Boots' Writer
I'm NOT a Creepy Perv ...
World Market 'Violated' Me

Exclusive Details

0729_brian_lynch_worldmarket
The screenwriter behind family friendly movies like "Hop" and "Puss in Boots" says he was publicly "violated" in front of his 10-year-old niece when employees at an L.A. furniture store accused him of leering at women ... then kicked him out -- and now he wants an apology.

40-year-old Brian Lynch blasted his side of the story on Twitter ... claiming he was visiting World Market in Sherman Oaks on Sunday with his sister and her 10-year-old adopted daughter when it all went down. (FYI, Brian's niece is Korean-American.)

Brian said he was following his sister and niece around the store when his sister went off to look at something, leaving him alone with his niece. At that point, Brian says a store employee approached and said they'd received complaints he was following women and creeping them out.

He says he was then asked to leave immediately.

Brian protested, insisting he was just shopping with family, but since a crowd had already begun to gather around the heated exchange, he ultimately left ... with his niece.

Now, Brian tells TMZ, he wants a public apology from World Market for the public humiliation, acknowledging its narrow-minded employees jumped to horrible conclusions about him for no reason.

A rep for World Market tells TMZ ... they're speaking to Brian and "taking steps to fully understand what occurred."

Get TMZ Breaking News alerts to your inbox

Source: http://www.tmz.com/2013/07/29/puss-in-boots-screenwriter-brian-lynch-world-market-pervert-accused/

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Police: $53 million in jewels stolen in Cannes

PARIS (AP) -- A staggering 40 million euro ($53 million) worth of diamonds and other jewels was stolen Sunday from the Carlton Intercontinental Hotel in Cannes, in one of Europe's biggest jewelry heists in recent years, police said. One expert noted the crime follows recent jail escapes by members of the notorious "Pink Panther" jewel thief gang.

The hotel in the sweltering French Riviera was hosting a temporary jewelry exhibit over the summer from the prestigious Leviev diamond house, which is owned by Israeli billionaire Lev Leviev.

A police spokesman said the theft took place around noon, but he could not confirm local media reports that the robber was a single gunman who stuffed a suitcase with the gems before making a swift exit. The spokesman spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the matter on the record.

The luxury Carlton hotel is situated on the exclusive Promenade de la Croisette that stretches a mile and a half along the French Riviera, and is thronged by the rich and famous throughout the year. The hotel's position provides not only a beautiful view of the sea but also an easy getaway for potential jewel thieves along the long stretch of road.

"It's a huge theft. Anytime you talk about a heist with many millions of dollars it turns heads and feeds the imagination," said Jonathan Sazonoff, U.S. editor for the Museum Security Network website and an authority on high-value crime.

He said the likelihood of recovering the stolen diamonds and jewels is slim, because the thieves can easily sell them on. "The fear is, if you're dealing with high-quality minerals, it's hard to get them back," Sazonoff said. "They can be broken up and so they can be easily smuggled and sold."

The valuable gems were supposed to be on public display until the end of August. It was not immediately clear how many pieces were stolen.

Several police officers were placed in front of the Carlton exhibition room ? near a Cartier diamond boutique ? to prevent the dozens of journalists and photographers from getting a look at the scene of the crime.

Hotel officials would not comment, and attempts to get comments from Leviev or his company were not immediately successful.

Europe has been struck by several brazen jewelry thefts in recent years, some of which have involved tens of millions of dollars in treasure.

On Feb. 18 in Belgium, some $50 million worth of diamonds were stolen. In that heist, robbers targeted stones from the global diamond center of Antwerp that had been loaded on a plane headed to Zurich. Authorities have since detained dozens of people and recovered much of the items stolen in that operation.

Five years ago, in December 2008, armed robbers wearing women's wigs and clothing made off with diamond rings, gem-studded bracelets and other jewelry said then to be worth $108 million from a Harry Winston boutique in Paris.

Also in 2008 ? in February of that year ? in a scene reminiscent of the movie "The Italian Job," masked thieves drilled a tunnel into a Damiani jewelry company showroom in Milan, Italy. They tied up the staff with plastic cable and sticky tape, then made off with gold, diamonds and rubies worth some $20 million. The robbers had been digging for several weeks from a building under construction next door.

Cannes appears to be a favorite target this year ? in May it was struck by other two highly publicized jewelry heists during the Cannes Film Festival.

In the first theft, robbers stole about $1 million worth of jewels after ripping a safe from the wall of a hotel room. In the second, thieves outsmarted 80 security guards in an exclusive hotel and grabbed a De Grisogono necklace that creators said is worth 2 million euros ($2.6 million).

Sazonoff said it is normal for robbers to gravitate to a place like Cannes, whose glimmering harbor and glamorous film festival attract the world's rich and famous. "Why do thieves target Cannes? It's simple ... On the Cote d'Azur, it's where the monied people flow," he said.

Sazonoff also said police would likely probe whether Sunday's heist is linked to recent jail escapes by alleged members of the Pink Panther jewel thief gang.

On Thursday, gang member Milan Poparic escaped his Swiss prison after accomplices rammed a gate and overpowered guards with bursts from their AK-47s, police said.

Police say the Pink Panther network's members are prime suspects in a series of daring thefts. According to Interpol, the group has targeted luxury watch and jewelry stores in Europe, the Middle East, Asia and the United States, netting more than ?330 million (?285m) since 1999.

Poparic is the third member of the Pink Panthers to escape from a Swiss prison in as many months, according to Vaud police.

"The brazen drama of it is their style... The possibility of the reemergence of the Pink Panther gang is very troubling and taken seriously by law enforcement worldwide," Sazonoff said. "The theft of high value diamonds is exactly what they do, so it's not a great leap to assume they are on the warpath again. They are a crime wave waiting to happen."

___

Thomas Adamson can be followed at Twitter.com/ThomasAdamsonAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/police-53-million-jewels-stolen-133207329.html

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YES. NEXT QUESTION? Does President Obama consider Republicans a greater threat than the Muslim Bro?

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He should - cause as far he's concerned, I am. From his perspective, if they get their wishes it just kills a few peasants, I dream of toppling his regime and putting him and his cronies in prison. 38 minutes ago ? id="loggedin"> id="notloggedin"> Like (0) Like (0)

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Before, there either was or seemed to be an existential threat from militant expansionist and virulently anti- Great Satan jihadis.

Now, a few years and wars later, there either is or seems to be a constitutional threat from our own google-facebook-government at every level:

Eye scans of grade-schoolers, student rfid tags, bundling of coercive and intrusive Obamacare and IRS registration information, the new CFPB's tracking of all financial transactions, domestic drones, phone and car location tracking, facial and body recognition capable cams in stores and on streets, high resolution satellite pix, TSA body/ luggage/ car/ truck and bus searches, the Federal push to mandate black boxes in all cars, and so much more, in addition to the vacuuming up and storage of all electronic transmissions.

To protect whom from whom, we'd like to know (and Orwell knew.)

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And here's another right winger, Andrew McCarthy: talking about the NSA and 4th amendment and how it's NOT a program that spies on all Americans:

"Telephone record information (e.g., the numbers dialed and duration of calls) is not and has never been protected by the Fourth Amendment. The Supreme Court held as much in its 1979 Smith v. Maryland decision. Understand: the phone record information at issue here is very different from the content of telephone conversations. Because the latter involve higher privacy expectations, they are heavily regulated under not only the Fourth Amendment but both Title III of the federal penal code and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). Under these laws, the government is not permitted to access communications content absent court authorization based on probable cause either that a crime has been committed or that the surveillance target is an agent of a foreign power (such as a terrorist organization or a hostile government).

?By gathering massive amounts of telephone traffic information, the government is able to establish phone call patterns, which is vital for mapping terrorist organizations. Without this, you cannot have preventive, intelligence-based counterterrorism ? i.e., counterterrorism whose goals are to identify terror cells before they strike and to stop atrocities from happening. To be sure, Congress could deny the government this kind of information by statute. If lawmakers did that, however, we would be in a September 10 counterterrorism paradigm ? i.e., rather than prioritize prevention, we would be contenting ourselves to investigate and prosecute only after attacks have occurred and Americans have been killed."

http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/350331/phone-record-gathering-story-blown-out-proportion-andrew-c-mccarthy

For the Rand Paul's of the world, it doesn't matter if the Supremes already ruled that this type of info gathering isn't a violation. But for republicans who aren't quite as prone to hyperbole, and dont want to fall in lockstep with the same liberal wackos who were making the same exact argument when Bush was in charge, be careful not to throw the baby out with the bathwater.
Yes Obama is untrustworthy, and yes he has targeted tea partiers. And yes, more oversight might be needed to allay some fears of this program. But lets not throw away a valuable program to deal with a legitmate threat because of the hyperbole of the Glenn Greenwalds and Ran Pauls of the world.
After all, Obama will only be in office for three more years. Yet, if the war on terror will continue we will continue to need to monitor their communications.

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"Is not life the most important of civil liberties? These intelligence programs are trashed without any curiosity as to whether they?ve prevented any attacks and saved any lives. The hostile responses are largely knee-jerk and lack any kind of context. The arguments are abstract and descend into fear-mongering. While I?m all for philosophical debates, how about a little more reality when it comes to fighting and winning this war?a real war against a horrific enemy."
-Mark Levin (no left winger, for sure) talking about the knee jerk reaction of the left towards Bushs's spying. It was 1984 all over again, it was Bush implementing a police state. We needed to have V For Vendetta put out as a movie by the left to decry the Anti Bushism police state that the state in that movie was a stand in for, where all the populace became Guy Fawkes and overthrew the govt because it was that evil.
And now the libertarians are doing the exact same thing.
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Do tea partiers or Republicans consider Obama a greater threat than the Muslim Brotherhood, or Al Qaeda?
Might explain the attempt to defund the NSA and the constant suggestion that the NSA is spying on all Americans.
Many of these folks were noticeably silent when Bush started the NSA surveillance program. And were even pissed that the Times leaked it.
Suddenly though the right is with Glenn Greenwald? WTF?
Suddenly Edward Snowden is MLK and Thoreau?
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The only people Obama likes to kill, or have killed, or just let be killed are America people. 2 hours ago ? id="loggedin"> id="notloggedin"> Like (0) Like (0)

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A silly question. If Obama considered Republicans a threat in the least, his security wouldn't have been so brazen about excluding these students from a campus-wide event.

Also, he's been pretty open about his affinity for Muslim brotherhoods and nations of Islam.

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Low-cost iPhone and its plastic rear cover mentioned in report on Apple supplier

Apple iPhone 4S rear

Rumblings of a low-cost, plastic iPhone have been popping up fairly frequently throughout 2013, and today the rumored device is making headlines once again. The difference between this latest report and most others, though, is that rather than being based on statements from some anonymous sources, this latest intel comes to us from the non-profit organization China Labor Watch.

While conducting a report (PDF link) on the working conditions at Apple supplier Pegatron, China Labor Watch sent several undercover investigators to look into claims of poor working conditions at three factories. Buried inside its findings are mentions of the unannounced plastic iPhone. For example, CLW says that Pegatron is responsible for assembling the "iPhone 4, iPhone 4s, iPhone 5, and low-priced plastic iPhones."

Later on in its report, CLW details one investigator's time spent helping to assemble the device. The agent describes the job as requiring them to "paste protective film on the iPhone?s plastic back cover to prevent it from being scratched on assembly lines." The investigator goes on to say that this product "will soon be released on the market by Apple" and that, because the phone "has not yet been put into mass production," speed wasn't a priority while pasting the protective film onto the plastic iPhone's back.

Previous rumors have suggested that Apple's low-cost iPhone could sport a 4-inch Retina display similar to the iPhone 5, but with a plastic rear shell that would make the device more affordable than its aluminum and glass-clad sibling. It's expected that Apple is planning to use the budget iPhone to help it gain more traction in developing nations. While Apple does currently sell older iPhone models for affordable prices, a new low-cost handset could allow it to sell a cheaper device that retains features that it wants to be more widely-adopted, like the 4-inch display and Lightning connector.?The budget iPhone is rumored to be launching later in 2013.

Via The Next Web, China Labor Watch (PDF)


Source: http://feeds.phonedog.com/~r/phonedog_cellphoneblog/~3/0ge5rILLqO4/

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