Friday, April 25, 2014

In robot summit, Obama bows to and plays soccer with ASIMO


 
Curious, Obama asked Mamoru Mohri, chief executive director of Miraikan, whether the robot was remote controlled. Yes, Mohri replied, but the robot can act autonomously, too.
Obama also witnessed demonstrations by other robots, including one designed by Japanese technicians and partially financed by the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency that was developed to help with disaster response.
"I have to say the robots were a little scary," he said afterward. "They were too life-like."
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After holding a news conference with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, Obama met with the three relatives of two Japanese citizens who were abducted by North Korea.
At the news conference, Obama said the United States stood with Japan in seeking to resolve such North Korean kidnappings and in a statement issued after the session with relatives, the White House said Obama was "moved by their tragic experiences."
Later, the relatives said Obama, as father of two daughters, showed empathy over the kidnapping of their loved ones. He said he would do his utmost to resolve the problem, possibly by adopting a U.N. Security Council resolution to pressure the North.
As father of two teenage daughters, Obama seemed particularly empathetic to Sakie Yokota, 78, whose daughter Megumi was kidnapped by North Korean agents 37 years ago when she was only 13. Yokota said Obama carefully looked at the pictures she brought and seemed to understand the pain of waiting such a long time.
"President Obama said it's not just another political or human rights issue. He said he cannot tolerate this problem as a human being and a father," Yokota told reporters after the meeting. "He reassured us that he would give us a firm support to resolve the problem."
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Of prayer cards and archers.
Obama visited the Meiji Shrine that commemorates Emperor Meiji, who died in 1912, and his wife Empress Shoken. The shrine has been something of a regular stop for visiting U.S. dignitaries.
Then Secretary of State Hillary Clinton went to the shrine in 2009 and Vice President Joe Biden stopped there in 2011. President George W. Bush visited in 2002.
Like Bush, Obama was treated to a demonstration of yabusame, or horseback archery, where archers in traditional dress ride past a reviewing stand at a gallop while shooting arrows at a target. Obama watched
Moments earlier, Obama had toured the shrine with priests and then written on a prayer card. After hanging it with numerous other cards, a priest removed it, apparently out of fear that someone would take it.
"My only question is," Obama said to the priest, "will my wish still work if you take it?"


http://www.aol.com/article/2014/04/24/in-robot-summit-obama-bows-to-and-plays-soccer-with-asimo/20875231/?ncid=web

Caroline Kennedy backs Hillary Clinton for 2016

 
 
NEW YORK, UNITED STATES: US First Lady and New York Democratic senate candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton (R) chats with Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg (L) at a New York Women for Hillary event in New York 17 October 2000. Clinton will continue campaigning with Caroline Kennedy 17 October 2000 and join US Senator Ted Kennedy (D-MA) for an event in Buffalo, New York. (FILM) AFP PHOTO/Doug KANTER (Photo credit should read DOUG KANTER/AFP/Getty Images)


(Reuters) - Caroline Kennedy, the current U.S. ambassador to Japan, says she would support Hillary Clinton if the former secretary of state seeks the presidency in 2016, and she hopes Clinton decides to run. Kennedy and her late uncle, former Senator Ted Kennedy, endorsed President Barack Obama in 2008 rather than Clinton, a significant move in that closely contested campaign.
Kennedy said in series of media interviews aired on Thursday that she hopes Clinton will seek to run as the Democratic presidential nominee in 2016. Kennedy told ABC News she would support Clinton's candidacy "if she runs."
Speaking in a separate interview with NBC News, Kennedy said she thought Clinton would be a "great" choice, the network's correspondent Chuck Todd said.
Kennedy's comments came as Obama visited Japan as part of his four-nation tour of Asia.
Based in Tokyo, Kennedy is far from the politics of Washington. But she is still closely watched as the daughter of a former president and a prominent member of one of America's most famous political clans, though some critics have questioned the Kennedy family's remaining influence.
Clinton has remained mum on declaring her candidacy even as supporters start to line up and raise campaign funds.
Clinton's daughter Chelsea last week announced her pregnancy, which also drew speculation about Clinton's future and whether she would run.
"I know it sounds like a cliché, but two years is a really long time in politics," Kennedy told ABC. "I'm sure she's looking forward to being a grandmother, I know she's got to decide soon. So, so you know I hope so."
As for her own political ambitions, Kennedy said she is not planning to run for office. "I doubt that I would ever run in the United States," she told NBC.
NEW YORK, UNITED STATES: US First Lady and New York Democratic senate candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton (R) chats with Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg (L) at a New York Women for Hillary event in New York 17 October 2000. Clinton will continue campaigning with Caroline Kennedy 17 October 2000 and join US Senator Ted Kennedy (D-MA) for an event in Buffalo, New York. (FILM) AFP PHOTO/Doug KANTER (Photo credit should read DOUG KANTER/AFP/Getty Images)