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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> Sony's beautiful new 5-inch Xperia Z is the company's flagship phone for
2013. It's got a 1080p display, quad-core processor and a sweet 13-megapixel
camera. And get this: it's waterproof.Sony                                                
                                You've heard the old saying, "Familiarity breeds contempt."
When it comes to technology, I'm not sure if contempt is the
right word. Perhaps it's better to say, "Familiarity breeds indifference."
Well, it's time to bring back some of the wonder. I've rounded
up seven amazing things you didn't know your smartphone could do."Did I
hear that right?" We've all had moments where we're sure we misheard
something someone said. Or someone said something hilarious and we wish
we had a recording.Well, now you can pull audio from the past.
No, I'm not saying your phone can time travel - yet.Heard for
iPhone is always recording using your smartphone's microphone. At any time,
you can save audio from up to 5 minutes in the past.Don't
miss your baby's first words or the name of that important client
again.Many people blame technology for their lack of sleep. Staring at a
screen confuses your brain about the time of day. Your phone buzzes
from incoming text messages and wakes you up throughout the night.Well,
technology can be a solution as well. Give Sleep Time for iPhone
and Android a shot.You start by placing it on your mattress before
you go to bed. The phone's accelerometer detects your movements during the
night and figures out your sleep patte
The emergency manager appointed to fix Detroits unprecedented financial
problems put the blame Sunday squarely on the city and defended his
decision to file for bankruptcy, saying he had no other choice despite
its impact on city pensioners.This is the only way, emergency manager Kevyn
Orr told Fox News Sunday. We were compelled to file for bankruptcy.Orr
steadfastly stuck to what he said was his appointed mission of getting
Detroit out from under $19 billion in debt, declining to speculate on
whether or if the federal government should bail out the city, once
the worldwide hub of auto manufacturing.He said his goal was to restructure
the debt, including roughly $3.5 million in underfunded pension liabilities,
and to get Detroit on its feet again by fall 2014.Orr, appointed
in March by Republican Gov. Rick Synder, also said he has appealed
a judges decision Friday that the bankruptcy violates Michigan's constitution,
which protects government employees pensions.He also said that his plan
would extend full payments only to pensioners for the next six months
and acknowledge the hardship it will cause.My mother is a pensioner, Orr
said.Still, he said Detroit dug this whole, in part by not addressing
its problems earlier.With a population of 1.8 million in the 1950s, Detroits
slow decline started with residents migrating to the suburbs in the 1960s
and was accelerated by automakers leaving Detroit, which diminished the
citys tax base and ma
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