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They’re alive, but how will they live?

May 11th, 2013 No comments

(CNN) — The world will never fully know the unspeakable tortures they endured. But they survived.

Elizabeth Smart was kidnapped from her bedroom at 14, declared a child bride by her captor and sexually assaulted for nine months. Jaycee Dugard, 11, was snatched from a roadside and held for 18 years, eventually bearing two babies fathered by her rapist kidnapper. Taken at 11, Shawn Hornbeck was sexually abused by his abductor for four years before police freed him.

This week in Cleveland, three new names were added to that list of young abduction survivors. After a decade in captivity, Amanda Berry, Georgina “Gina” DeJesus and Michelle Knight now face a challenging journey toward recovery.

Related: Profiles of Berry, DeJesus and Knight

Amanda Berry vanished a few blocks from her Cleveland home on April 21, 2003. She was 16. On Monday, May 6, she was found with two other missing women blocks from where she disappeared. Click through to see more miraculous stories of lost children who were found months or even years later.Amanda Berry vanished a few blocks from her Cleveland home on April 21, 2003. She was 16. On Monday, May 6, she was found with two other missing women blocks from where she disappeared. Click through to see more miraculous stories of lost children who were found months or even years later.

Georgina Gina DeJesus was found on May 6 with Amanda Berry and Michelle Knight in Cleveland. DeJesus was last seen in the Ohio city on April 2, 2004, on her way home from school. She was 14 when she went missing.Georgina “Gina” DeJesus was found on May 6 with Amanda Berry and Michelle Knight in Cleveland. DeJesus was last seen in the Ohio city on April 2, 2004, on her way home from school. She was 14 when she went missing.

Michelle Knight was the third of the three women who escaped from a captor's house in Cleveland on May 6. She was last seen on August 22, 2002, when she was 21.Michelle Knight was the third of the three women who escaped from a captor’s house in Cleveland on May 6. She was last seen on August 22, 2002, when she was 21.

On June 5, 2002, when Elizabeth Smart was 14, she was abducted from her bed, raped and held captive for nine months by Brian David Mitchell. On May 25, 2011, Mitchell was sentenced to life in prison.On June 5, 2002, when Elizabeth Smart was 14, she was abducted from her bed, raped and held captive for nine months by Brian David Mitchell. On May 25, 2011, Mitchell was sentenced to life in prison.

Natascha Kampusch, an Austrian woman, was held prisoner in a basement for eight years from the time she was 10. Her abductor, Wolfgang Priklopil, beat her up to 200 times a week, manacled her to him as they slept and forced her to walk around half-naked as a domestic slave after kidnapping her in 1998. Kampusch escaped in August 2006. Priklopil committed suicide shortly thereafter.Natascha Kampusch, an Austrian woman, was held prisoner in a basement for eight years from the time she was 10. Her abductor, Wolfgang Priklopil, beat her up to 200 times a week, manacled her to him as they slept and forced her to walk around half-naked as a domestic slave after kidnapping her in 1998. Kampusch escaped in August 2006. Priklopil committed suicide shortly thereafter.

Eleven-year-old Jaycee Lee Dugard was abducted in 1991 from outside her home in South Lake Tahoe, California. She was held by Phillip and Nancy Garrido in a hidden compound of sheds along with the two daughters to whom she subsequently gave birth. Dugard and her daughters were found in 2009.Eleven-year-old Jaycee Lee Dugard was abducted in 1991 from outside her home in South Lake Tahoe, California. She was held by Phillip and Nancy Garrido in a hidden compound of sheds along with the two daughters to whom she subsequently gave birth. Dugard and her daughters were found in 2009.

Shawn Damian Hornbeck spent more than four years with Michael Devlin, passing as his captor's son in the St. Louis suburb of Kirkwood, Missouri. Shawn was 15 when he was found in 2007 and reunited with his family. Shawn Damian Hornbeck spent more than four years with Michael Devlin, passing as his captor’s son in the St. Louis suburb of Kirkwood, Missouri. Shawn was 15 when he was found in 2007 and reunited with his family.

Elisabeth Fritzl was imprisoned and raped by her father, Josef Fritzl, for 24 years. Fritzl lured his daughter into the basement in 1984 when she was 18 years old. She had seven of his children. She was released at age 42 after her ill 19-year-old daughter was taken to the hospital and police called the family in for abuse suspicions. In 2009 Josef Fritzl was sentenced to life in prison. Elisabeth Fritzl was imprisoned and raped by her father, Josef Fritzl, for 24 years. Fritzl lured his daughter into the basement in 1984 when she was 18 years old. She had seven of his children. She was released at age 42 after her ill 19-year-old daughter was taken to the hospital and police called the family in for abuse suspicions. In 2009 Josef Fritzl was sentenced to life in prison.

Carlina White was abducted in 1987 from a Harlem hospital room. She learned her real identity 23 years later after finding her case online. She contacted the police after finding a baby picture that looked like her baby pictures on a missing children website. She was reconnected with her birth mother in 2011. White said she'd never felt like she belonged to the family who raised her.Carlina White was abducted in 1987 from a Harlem hospital room. She learned her real identity 23 years later after finding her case online. She contacted the police after finding a baby picture that looked like her baby pictures on a missing children website. She was reconnected with her birth mother in 2011. White said she’d never felt like she belonged to the family who raised her.

Steve Carter also discovered he was a missing person after an online search. He had been adopted at age 4 from an orphanage in Honolulu. At 35 years old, he heard about White's case and clicked on Missingkids.com and found an age progression photo of himself as an infant. It came to light that biological father, Mark Barnes, reported him missing more than three decades ago after his mother, Charlotte Moriarty, took him for a walk and didn't return.Steve Carter also discovered he was a missing person after an online search. He had been adopted at age 4 from an orphanage in Honolulu. At 35 years old, he heard about White’s case and clicked on Missingkids.com and found an age progression photo of himself as an infant. It came to light that biological father, Mark Barnes, reported him missing more than three decades ago after his mother, Charlotte Moriarty, took him for a walk and didn’t return.


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Missing children who were foundMissing children who were found


When kidnapped become brainwashed


Kidnapping survivors search for ‘normal’


Kidnapped teen leaves ‘CSI’ clues


How to heal after a kidnapping

What can they learn from the paths followed by Smart, Dugard, Hornbeck and others that led them from darkness to brighter lives?

The resiliency of these survivors is nothing short of remarkable. Smart, now 25, is married. She formed a foundation to battle child abuse and travels the country as a public speaker. Nearly four years after regaining her freedom, Dugard, 33, heads her own group aimed at helping victims like herself. She wrote a book about her ordeal and has learned to ride horseback. Hornbeck, 21, works full-time and wants to finish his education.

Opinion: A survivor’s letter to Amanda, Gina, and Michelle

Experts credit much of their recovery to access to important health care resources and strong family support.

There’s another factor: faith. These survivors likely were more confident that they would re-emerge into a safe world.

“Some of these people have had a considerable amount of faith, and they’ve entered into a community that has been very accepting and welcoming,” said Dr. Wynn Schwartz, a Harvard Medical School psychologist.

Also: time. Smart, Dugard and Hornbeck initially walled themselves off from pesky news reporters, says Dr. Bonny Forrest, a San Diego-based psychologist and attorney. Being “very selective about their interviews allowed them to avoid having to immediately relive and retell” their traumatic experiences. It “allowed them to decompress or let go of their stress in a time period that was appropriate for them.”

But for every survivor of childhood abduction, there are countless cases with endings that will never be known.

According to the FBI, more than half of all missing persons cases in the United States involve children.

Specifically, of all 87,217 active missing persons cases in 2012, the FBI says 47,366 missing people were 20 or younger. That’s 54.3%. Although many are runaways and don’t wish to be found, an unknown number might have been abducted.

At a glance: Missing persons in the U.S.

For young abductees, experts say, survival is a rare thing.

Here are some of their inspiring stories:

Smart: ‘I was marked’

It was late at night inside the bedroom of 14-year-old Elizabeth Smart. A drifter named Brian David Mitchell climbed through a window of her Salt Lake City, Utah, home and put a knife to her throat. He forced her to walk to a nearby campsite, where Mitchell and his wife, Wanda Barzee, “sealed” Smart to him in a brief ceremony and raped her. The couple forced Smart to wander with them from town to town, often keeping her tethered to trees.


Smart endorses child safety program

Nine months after her abduction, police stopped Mitchell, Barzee and Smart as they left a Walmart in Sandy, Utah, just five miles from her family’s home. Smart’s life as a captive was finally over.

“I felt that because of what he had done to me, I was marked,” Smart later testified at Mitchell’s trial. “I wasn’t the same. My personal value had dropped. I was nothing. Another person could never love me.”

Related: Elizabeth Smart: What ifs and near misses

Smart’s fears proved to be unfounded as she leaned on her faith and her family. And this past week, she offered to share what she learned during her recovery with the Cleveland victims.

“Nothing that has happened to them will ever diminish their value,” Smart told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer on Tuesday. “It should never hold them back from doing what they want to do.”

Smart reminded them to “take as much time as they need” to recover before going public with the details of their ordeals.  “And if they decide never to share their stories, that would be OK, too.”

Her remarkable recovery has included co-authoring a Justice Department pamphlet about how to survive abduction. Smart works as a contributor for a national TV news network and she runs a foundation aimed at protecting children from predators.

Last year, Smart married Scotsman Matthew Gilmour, whom she met while they performed missionary work in France for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Dugard focuses on hope

In 1991, Jaycee Dugard was a carefree tween walking toward a school bus stop in South Lake Tahoe, California. But when Phillip and Nancy Garrido drove by looking for a victim, 11-year-old Jaycee’s life changed forever.

A picture of Jaycee Dugard before she was kidnapped sits framed in her stepfather's home.

For the next 18 years, Jaycee became a captive at a hidden compound in Antioch, California. Not allowed to say her own name and raped repeatedly, she bore two daughters fathered by Garrido.

“There’sa switch that I had to shut off,” she told ABC News’ Diane Sawyer. “Just went someplace else.” In her book, “A Stolen Life,” Dugard wrote that she survived each day by concentrating on her children and the hope of seeing her mother again.

Her captivity ended in 2009 after two police officers at the University of California, Berkeley, met Garrido and the two daughters and noticed “there was just something about the girls that wasn’t right.” Suspicions after that meeting eventually led to the Garridos’ arrest and freedom for Dugard and her little girls.

“You can endure tough situations and survive,” she wrote in her book. “Not just survive, but be okay even on the inside, too. I’m not sure how I did endure all that I did. … I’m beginning to think that I have secretly known all along.”

Related: Dugard reacts to Cleveland abductions


Dugard: Amazing time to talk about hope

And it was her support network that was key to her recovery. “With the help of my mom and my family, and especially my therapist I have come to realize I can now do things for myself,” Dugard wrote. “I can make my own decisions and not worry about if it’s not what someone else wants.”

Coincidentally, on Tuesday as the Cleveland survivors were tasting their first hours of freedom, Dugard was scheduled to speak at an award ceremony. “What an amazing time to be talking about hope,” she told the audience, “with everything that’s happening.”

Hornbeck: Respect and faith

During an interview this past week with the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Shawn Hornbeck sported two fresh tattoos on his forearms. One says “respect” and the the other “faith.”

Shawn Hornbeck as he was pictured on a missing person poster from 2002.

They’re the bywords of a 21-year-old who’s been through hell and lived to tell about it.

When he was 11, Hornbeck was kidnapped while riding his bike near his Kirkwood, Missouri, home. For the next four years, he was held captive and sexually abused by a pizzeria manager Michael Devlin. Folks believed him when Devlin presented Shawn as his son.

On December 1, 2005, someone identifying himself as Shawn Devlin of Kirkwood posted a message on a Web site that Shawn’s parents had set up, www.shawnhornbeck.com. It read, “how long are you planing (sic) to look for your son?” Later that day, the same person apparently posted a new message apologizing for the previous one and asking whether it would be OK to write a poem for Shawn Hornbeck.

Two police officers who frequented the pizzeria where Devlin worked ran into him, as he was taking out trash from his apartment, the officers said.


Hornbeck’s advice on life after kidnapping

They asked him about his white truck, which was similar to a vehicle investigators were seeking in the kidnapping of another missing boy, Ben Ownby. Police were disturbed by Devlin’s demeanor, and they alerted the FBI. When investigators returned to Devlin’s apartment, they find not only Shawn, but Ben as well.

More than seven years has passed since Hornbeck regained his freedom.

“My life right now is actually pretty normal,” he told the Post-Dispatch. He’s living with his parents in Richwoods, Missouri, and working a full-time factory job. He’s waiting for the right time to return to college and finish a degree in criminal law. He calls the survival of the Cleveland victims a “miracle.”

Speaking out to offer them support through the media “makes me feel better as a person,” Hornbeck told the paper. He said he wants to “help as much as I can.”

The hardest part of their recovery, Hornbeck said, will be reconnecting. “They’re going to be scared to go out in public for a while.”

“They just gotta know that their family is going to be there for them and there’s nothing to be afraid of.”

Patricia Hearst: ‘In a way, you’ve given up’

Arguably the most infamous abduction of the 1970s targeted newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst. Hearst was a 19-year-old student at UC Berkeley in 1974 when she was kidnapped from her apartment, imprisoned in a closet, sexually assaulted and forced to participate in a bank robbery. She was held for 84 weeks before she and her captors — revolutionaries who called themselves the Symbionese Liberation Army — were arrested by the FBI.

Kidnapped heiress Patricia Hearst, pictured here in 1970, has gone on to act in several Hollywood films.

Related: Hearst talks about life after kidnapping

Hearst was tried, convicted and served 22 months of a 35-year original prison sentence that was commuted by President Jimmy Carter. President Bill Clinton pardoned her in 2001. After prison, Hearst married, had two children, acted in several Hollywood films and won an award with her French bulldog at the 2008 Westminster Dog Show. Now 59, she uses her married name, Patricia Hearst Shaw.

As a captive, “You have been so abused and so robbed of your free will and so frightened that you come to a point that you believe any lie that your abductor has told you,” Hearst told CNN’s Larry King in 2003. “You don’t feel safe. You think that either you will be killed if you reach out for help, or you believe your family will be killed.”

“You’ve, in a way, given up, you’ve absorbed the new identity they’ve given you. You’re surviving — you’re not even doing that — you’re just living while everything else is going on around you,” she said.

She didn’t really feel free, Hearst said, until she faced her abductors in court. Then she “knew for sure that they could never, ever hurt me again.”

Carlina White: Snatched as an infant

Some of the nation’s youngest kidnapping victims may not even realize their dark pasts.

Carlina White, kidnapped from a hospital in 1987, reunited with her family 23 years later.

Before 2011, Atlanta resident Carlina Renae White had no idea that a woman posing as a nurse abducted her at a hospital in New York’s Harlem neighborhood when she was just 3 weeks old. White had always had a nagging feeling that she was raised by a family to which she did not belong, said Ernie Allen from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.

White grew suspicious when the woman who raised her could not provide her with a birth certificate. She found her own baby picture on the national center’s website and eventually learned the truth. There was a DNA test, and White reconnected with her biological family in an emotional reunion in January 2011. “I never gave up hope,” White’s grandmother, Elizabeth White, told WABC. “It is like she has been around us all her life. She wasn’t a stranger. She fit right in.”

Related: Snatched after birth, woman reunites with family

Steve Carter was inspired by Carlina White's story, and learned he, too, was an abduction victim.

White’s surprise lead to a similar discovery by Philadelphia software salesman Steve Carter. Carter, who’s in his mid-30s, was adopted at age 4 from an orphanage in Honolulu. White’s story inspired him to check www.missingkids.com, where he was shocked to find his own face in a photo staring back at him. He contacted the Honolulu Police Department and later underwent a DNA test.

Police determined that three decades earlier, Carter’s biological mother, Charlotte Moriarty, took him for a walk and didn’t return. His biological father Mark Barnes filed a missing persons report.

Carter says he believes Moriarty put him in the Hawaiian orphanage and told authorities his name was Tenzin Amea. CNN could not independently confirm that account.

Related: Adopted man learns sad truth about his childhood

Now Carter knows his birth name: Marx Panama Moriarty Barnes.

It was, as Carter put it, “a happy ending to a story that usually isn’t a happy ending.”

Austrian horrors

Two of the most heinous child abductions in recent years took place in Austria.

 Natascha Kampusch pictured in 2011, just before her 23rd birthday.

In 1998, 10-year-old Natascha Kampusch was abducted while walking to school. Her 2010 autobiography “3,096 Days” describes the relationship she fostered with her abductor Wolfgang Priklopil. Kampusch wrote how she endured Priklopil’s bizarre routines to save her own life.

The book, which was serialized in the UK’s Daily Mail newspaper, details how Kampusch was locked inside a “hermetically sealed” concrete jail.

She wrote about being beaten as many as 200 times a week — until she heard her own spine “snap.”

She recalls how she was manacled to Priklopil while they slept together in his bed.

Kampusch escaped in August 2006 when she was 18. In 2010, she was reportedly living in Vienna. Priklopil, 44, an engineer, committed suicide shortly after Kampusch’s escape.

In the years after her escape, Kampusch became a media personality, appearing on television shows around the world. She worked for a while as a television presenter in Austria in 2007.

Full story: Kampusch details life as ‘domestic slave’

Two years after Kampusch’s escape, the world learned about the fate of Austrian teen captive Elisabeth Fritzl.

In 1984, her own father, Josef Fritzl, threw Elisabeth — then 18 — into a specially designed cellar, said prosecutors. He told other family members Elisabeth had run away to join a cult.

Elisabeth Fritzl's father locked her in the family basement for 24 years.

Josef Fritzl kept his daughter locked in the basement for the next 24 years, authorities believe, repeatedly sexually assaulting her. During that time, he fathered Elisabeth’s seven children.

Fritzl’s dungeon remained secret until April 2008, when Elisabeth’s 19-year-old daughter, Kerstin, became seriously ill and was taken to a hospital. Hospital staff became suspicious and alerted police, who then discovered the cellar.

At a 2009 trial, jurors found Josef Fritzl guilty of rape and imprisonment and sentenced him to life in prison.

Full story: Fritzl jailed for life

Elisabeth Fritzl and her children were given new identities by the state. They also received a pension and and a home in an undisclosed location in rural Austria, according to a report in The Sun.

Katie Beers: Foster family ‘instrumental’

Katie Beers was only 9 in 1992 when neighbor John Esposito kidnapped her and locked her in his Long Island, New York, dungeon.


Katie Beers reacts to Cleveland escape

Esposito imprisoned Beers there for 17 days, sexually assaulting her repeatedly. She was chained by the neck in a locked wooden box suspended above the ground. A television in the corner provided the only distraction and the only light. Her only meals were junk food. Her captor broke down, and she was rescued.

Now a 30-year-old married mother of two living in rural Pennsylvania, Beers reveals details of her ordeal in her autobiography, “Buried Memories: Katie Beers’ Story.”

Beers describes the life of abuse she led before her kidnapping.

“My childhood consisted of enslavement by my godmother and my godmother’s husband,” she told CNN’s Soledad O’Brien. “Not only that,” she continues, “but also sexual abuse by my godmother’s husband; verbal, physical and emotional abuse by both my godmother herself and her husband; and neglect by my mother.”

After her rescue, Beers lived with a foster family, who she says was “instrumental” to her recovery.

“Personally, what my foster parents did for me was they kept me secluded and kept me out of the public eye for so long, and that gave me the ability to recover,” Beers told New York radio station 1010 WINS.

Now that the trauma is behind them, should the three Cleveland survivors look back?

It depends on their personality.

Some, such as Beers, will refuse to speak of it again. “I try not to think about it,” she said. “There’s no point in thinking about the past. I’ve gone through therapy. I’ve said my piece.”

“I tend to believe as a therapist that this is less helpful,” said Bonnie Forrest.

Instead, “you have to come to believe that it wasn’t your fault and that you made the best choices at the time to survive — no matter what that took,” she said. “Survival is something to be proud of — proud that you have those resources — and you go on.”

For Smart, being happy offers the best punishment for her abductor.

“By dwelling on the past and holding on to the pain and the hurt that you’ve had to go through, that’s only allowing him to steal more of your life away from you and he doesn’t deserve that.”

There’s no looking back. She’s facing forward, pointed toward the rest of her life.

CNN’s Ann O’Neill, Nina Melendez, Thair Shaikh, Diana Magnay, Frederik Pleitgen, Sabrina Kahn and Stephanie Elam contributed to this report.


Article source: http://edition.cnn.com/2013/05/11/justice/other-kidnapping-survivors/index.html?eref=edition

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How do child abductees recover?

May 11th, 2013 No comments


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a href='http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/04/02/ohio.missing.girls/index.html'Amanda Berry/a vanished a few blocks from her Cleveland home on April 21, 2003. She was 16. On Monday, May 6, a href='http://www.cnn.com/2013/05/06/us/ohio-missing-women-found/index.html'she was found /awith two other missing women blocks from where she disappeared. Click through to see more miraculous stories of lost children who were found months or even years later.Amanda Berry vanished a few blocks from her Cleveland home on April 21, 2003. She was 16. On Monday, May 6, she was found with two other missing women blocks from where she disappeared. Click through to see more miraculous stories of lost children who were found months or even years later.

a href='http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/04/02/ohio.missing.girls/index.html'Georgina Gina DeJesus/a was found on May 6 with Amanda Berry and Michelle Knight in Cleveland. DeJesus was last seen in the Ohio city on April 2, 2004, on her way home from school. She was 14 when she went missing.Georgina “Gina” DeJesus was found on May 6 with Amanda Berry and Michelle Knight in Cleveland. DeJesus was last seen in the Ohio city on April 2, 2004, on her way home from school. She was 14 when she went missing.

a href='http://www.cnn.com/2013/05/07/us/ohio-rescued-women-bios/index.html'Michelle Knight/a was thea href='http://www.cnn.com/2013/05/08/us/ohio-rescued-women-timeline/index.html' third of the three women who escaped/a from a captor's house in Cleveland on May 6. She was last seen on August 22, 2002, when she was 21.Michelle Knight was the third of the three women who escaped from a captor’s house in Cleveland on May 6. She was last seen on August 22, 2002, when she was 21.

On June 5, 2002, when a href='http://www.cnn.com/2011/CRIME/05/25/utah.smart.sentencing/index.html'Elizabeth Smart/a was 14, she was abducted from her bed, raped and held captive for nine months by Brian David Mitchell. On May 25, 2011, Mitchell was sentenced to life in prison.On June 5, 2002, when Elizabeth Smart was 14, she was abducted from her bed, raped and held captive for nine months by Brian David Mitchell. On May 25, 2011, Mitchell was sentenced to life in prison.

a href='http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/europe/09/06/austria.natascha.kampusch.autobiography/index.html'Natascha Kampusch/a, an Austrian woman, was held prisoner in a basement for eight years from the time she was 10. Her abductor, Wolfgang Priklopil, beat her up to 200 times a week, manacled her to him as they slept and forced her to walk around half-naked as a domestic slave after kidnapping her in 1998. Kampusch escaped in August 2006. Priklopil committed suicide shortly thereafter.Natascha Kampusch, an Austrian woman, was held prisoner in a basement for eight years from the time she was 10. Her abductor, Wolfgang Priklopil, beat her up to 200 times a week, manacled her to him as they slept and forced her to walk around half-naked as a domestic slave after kidnapping her in 1998. Kampusch escaped in August 2006. Priklopil committed suicide shortly thereafter.

Eleven-year-old a href='http://www.cnn.com/2011/09/22/justice/california-dugard-government-lawsuit/index.html'Jaycee Lee Dugard/a was abducted in 1991 from outside her home in South Lake Tahoe, California. She was held by Phillip and Nancy Garrido in a hidden compound of sheds along with the two daughters to whom she subsequently gave birth. Dugard and her daughters were found in 2009.Eleven-year-old Jaycee Lee Dugard was abducted in 1991 from outside her home in South Lake Tahoe, California. She was held by Phillip and Nancy Garrido in a hidden compound of sheds along with the two daughters to whom she subsequently gave birth. Dugard and her daughters were found in 2009.

a href='http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/01/15/missouri.boys/index.html'Shawn Damian Hornbeck /aspent more than four years with Michael Devlin, passing as his captor's son in the St. Louis suburb of Kirkwood, Missouri. Shawn was 15 when he was found in 2007 and reunited with his family. Shawn Damian Hornbeck spent more than four years with Michael Devlin, passing as his captor’s son in the St. Louis suburb of Kirkwood, Missouri. Shawn was 15 when he was found in 2007 and reunited with his family.

a href='http://topics.cnn.com/topics/elisabeth_fritzl' target='_blank'Elisabeth Fritzl/a was imprisoned and raped by her father, Josef Fritzl, for 24 years. Fritzl lured his daughter into the basement in 1984 when she was 18 years old. She had seven of his children. She was released at age 42 after her ill 19-year-old daughter was taken to the hospital and police called the family in for abuse suspicions. In 2009 Josef Fritzla href='http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/europe/03/19/austria.incest.trial.fritzl/index.html#cnnSTCText' was sentenced to life in prison. /aElisabeth Fritzl was imprisoned and raped by her father, Josef Fritzl, for 24 years. Fritzl lured his daughter into the basement in 1984 when she was 18 years old. She had seven of his children. She was released at age 42 after her ill 19-year-old daughter was taken to the hospital and police called the family in for abuse suspicions. In 2009 Josef Fritzl was sentenced to life in prison.

a href='http://www.cnn.com/2011/CRIME/01/20/new.york.missing.reunion/index.html' target='_blank'Carlina White/a was abducted in 1987 from a Harlem hospital room. She learned her real identity 23 years later after finding her case online. She contacted the police after finding a baby picture that looked like her baby pictures on a missing children website. She was reconnected with her birth mother in 2011. White said she'd never felt like she belonged to the family who raised her.Carlina White was abducted in 1987 from a Harlem hospital room. She learned her real identity 23 years later after finding her case online. She contacted the police after finding a baby picture that looked like her baby pictures on a missing children website. She was reconnected with her birth mother in 2011. White said she’d never felt like she belonged to the family who raised her.

a href='http://www.cnn.com/2012/04/26/us/pennsylvania-missing-mystery' target='_blank'Steve Carter/a also discovered he was a missing person after an online search. He had been adopted at age 4 from an orphanage in Honolulu. At 35 years old, he heard about White's case and clicked on Missingkids.com and found an age progression photo of himself as an infant. It came to light that biological father, Mark Barnes, reported him missing more than three decades ago after his mother, Charlotte Moriarty, took him for a walk and didn't return.Steve Carter also discovered he was a missing person after an online search. He had been adopted at age 4 from an orphanage in Honolulu. At 35 years old, he heard about White’s case and clicked on Missingkids.com and found an age progression photo of himself as an infant. It came to light that biological father, Mark Barnes, reported him missing more than three decades ago after his mother, Charlotte Moriarty, took him for a walk and didn’t return.


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(CNN) — The world will never fully know the unspeakable tortures they endured. But they survived.

Elizabeth Smart was kidnapped from her bedroom at 14, declared a child bride by her captor and sexually assaulted for nine months. Jaycee Dugard, 11, was snatched from a roadside and held for 18 years, eventually bearing two babies fathered by her rapist kidnapper. Taken at 11, Shawn Hornbeck was sexually abused by his abductor for four years before police freed him.

This week in Cleveland, three new names were added to that list of young abduction survivors. After a decade in captivity, Amanda Berry, Georgina “Gina” DeJesus and Michelle Knight now face a challenging journey toward recovery.

Related: Profiles of Berry, DeJesus and Knight


When kidnapped become brainwashed


Kidnapping survivors search for ‘normal’


Kidnapped teen leaves ‘CSI’ clues


How to heal after a kidnapping

What can they learn from the paths followed by Smart, Dugard, Hornbeck and others that led them from darkness to brighter lives?

The resiliency of these survivors is nothing short of remarkable. Smart, now 25, is married. She formed a foundation to battle child abuse and travels the country as a public speaker. Nearly four years after regaining her freedom, Dugard, 33, heads her own group aimed at helping victims like herself. She wrote a book about her ordeal and has learned to ride horseback. Hornbeck, 21, works full-time and wants to finish his education.

Opinion: A survivor’s letter to Amanda, Gina, and Michelle

Experts credit much of their recovery to access to important health care resources and strong family support.

There’s another factor: faith. These survivors likely were more confident that they would re-emerge into a safe world.

“Some of these people have had a considerable amount of faith, and they’ve entered into a community that has been very accepting and welcoming,” said Dr. Wynn Schwartz, a Harvard Medical School psychologist.

Also: time. Smart, Dugard and Hornbeck initially walled themselves off from pesky news reporters, says Dr. Bonny Forrest, a San Diego-based psychologist and attorney. Being “very selective about their interviews allowed them to avoid having to immediately relive and retell” their traumatic experiences. It “allowed them to decompress or let go of their stress in a time period that was appropriate for them.”

But for every survivor of childhood abduction, there are countless cases with endings that will never be known.

According to the FBI, more than half of all missing persons cases in the United States involve children.

Specifically, of all 87,217 active missing persons cases in 2012, the FBI says 47,366 missing people were 20 or younger. That’s 54.3%. Although many are runaways and don’t wish to be found, an unknown number might have been abducted.

At a glance: Missing persons in the U.S.

For young abductees, experts say, survival is a rare thing.

Here are some of their inspiring stories:

Smart: ‘I was marked’

It was late at night inside the bedroom of 14-year-old Elizabeth Smart. A drifter named Brian David Mitchell climbed through a window of her Salt Lake City, Utah, home and put a knife to her throat. He forced her to walk to a nearby campsite, where Mitchell and his wife, Wanda Barzee, “sealed” Smart to him in a brief ceremony and raped her. The couple forced Smart to wander with them from town to town, often keeping her tethered to trees.


Elizabeth Smart: ‘Take it day by day’


Smart endorses child safety program

Nine months after her abduction, police stopped Mitchell, Barzee and Smart as they left a Walmart in Sandy, Utah, just five miles from her family’s home. Smart’s life as a captive was finally over.

“I felt that because of what he had done to me, I was marked,” Smart later testified at Mitchell’s trial. “I wasn’t the same. My personal value had dropped. I was nothing. Another person could never love me.”

Related: Elizabeth Smart: What ifs and near misses

Smart’s fears proved to be unfounded as she leaned on her faith and her family. And this past week, she offered to share what she learned during her recovery with the Cleveland victims.

“Nothing that has happened to them will ever diminish their value,” Smart told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer on Tuesday. “It should never hold them back from doing what they want to do.”

Smart reminded them to “take as much time as they need” to recover before going public with the details of their ordeals.  “And if they decide never to share their stories, that would be OK, too.”

Her remarkable recovery has included co-authoring a Justice Department pamphlet about how to survive abduction. Smart works as a contributor for a national TV news network and she runs a foundation aimed at protecting children from predators.

Last year, Smart married Scotsman Matthew Gilmour, whom she met while they performed missionary work in France for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Dugard focuses on hope

In 1991, Jaycee Dugard was a carefree tween walking toward a school bus stop in South Lake Tahoe, California. But when Phillip and Nancy Garrido drove by looking for a victim, 11-year-old Jaycee’s life changed forever.

A picture of Jaycee Dugard before she was kidnapped sits framed in her stepfather's home.

For the next 18 years, Jaycee became a captive at a hidden compound in Antioch, California. Not allowed to say her own name and raped repeatedly, she bore two daughters fathered by Garrido.

“There’s a switch that I had to shut off,” she told ABC News’ Diane Sawyer. “Just went someplace else.” In her book, “A Stolen Life,” Dugard wrote that she survived each day by concentrating on her children and the hope of seeing her mother again.

Her captivity ended in 2009 after two police officers at the University of California, Berkeley, met Garrido and the two daughters and noticed “there was just something about the girls that wasn’t right.” Suspicions after that meeting eventually led to the Garridos’ arrest and freedom for Dugard and her little girls.

“You can endure tough situations and survive,” she wrote in her book. “Not just survive, but be okay even on the inside, too. I’m not sure how I did endure all that I did. … I’m beginning to think that I have secretly known all along.”

Related: Dugard reacts to Cleveland abductions


Dugard: Amazing time to talk about hope

And it was her support network that was key to her recovery. “With the help of my mom and my family, and especially my therapist I have come to realize I can now do things for myself,” Dugard wrote. “I can make my own decisions and not worry about if it’s not what someone else wants.”

Coincidentally, on Tuesday as the Cleveland survivors were tasting their first hours of freedom, Dugard was scheduled to speak at an award ceremony. “What an amazing time to be talking about hope,” she told the audience, “with everything that’s happening.”

Hornbeck: Respect and faith

During an interview this past week with the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Shawn Hornbeck sported two fresh tattoos on his forearms. One says “respect” and the the other “faith.”

Shawn Hornbeck as he was pictured on a missing person poster from 2002.

They’re the bywords of a 21-year-old who’s been through hell and lived to tell about it.

When he was 11, Hornbeck was kidnapped while riding his bike near his Kirkwood, Missouri, home. For the next four years, he was held captive and sexually abused by a pizzeria manager Michael Devlin. Folks believed him when Devlin presented Shawn as his son.

On December 1, 2005, someone identifying himself as Shawn Devlin of Kirkwood posted a message on a Web site that Shawn’s parents had set up, www.shawnhornbeck.com. It read, “how long are you planing (sic) to look for your son?” Later that day, the same person apparently posted a new message apologizing for the previous one and asking whether it would be OK to write a poem for Shawn Hornbeck.

Two police officers who frequented the pizzeria where Devlin worked ran into him, as he was taking out trash from his apartment, the officers said.


Hornbeck’s advice on life after kidnapping

They asked him about his white truck, which was similar to a vehicle investigators were seeking in the kidnapping of another missing boy, Ben Ownby. Police were disturbed by Devlin’s demeanor, and they alerted the FBI. When investigators returned to Devlin’s apartment, they find not only Shawn, but Ben as well.

More than seven years has passed since Hornbeck regained his freedom.

“My life right now is actually pretty normal,” he told the Post-Dispatch. He’s living with his parents in Richwoods, Missouri, and working a full-time factory job. He’s waiting for the right time to return to college and finish a degree in criminal law. He calls the survival of the Cleveland victims a “miracle.”

Speaking out to offer them support through the media “makes me feel better as a person,” Hornbeck told the paper. He said he wants to “help as much as I can.”

The hardest part of their recovery, Hornbeck said, will be reconnecting. “They’re going to be scared to go out in public for a while.”

“They just gotta know that their family is going to be there for them and there’s nothing to be afraid of.”

Patricia Hearst: ‘In a way, you’ve given up’

Arguably the most infamous abduction of the 1970s targeted newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst. Hearst was a 19-year-old student at UC Berkeley in 1974 when she was kidnapped from her apartment, imprisoned in a closet, sexually assaulted and forced to participate in a bank robbery. She was held for 84 weeks before she and her captors — revolutionaries who called themselves the Symbionese Liberation Army — were arrested by the FBI.

Kidnapped heiress Patricia Hearst, pictured here in 1970, has gone on to act in several Hollywood films.

Related: Hearst talks about life after kidnapping

Hearst was tried, convicted and served 22 months of a 35-year original prison sentence that was commuted by President Jimmy Carter. President Bill Clinton pardoned her in 2001. After prison, Hearst married, had two children, acted in several Hollywood films and won an award with her French bulldog at the 2008 Westminster Dog Show. Now 59, she uses her married name, Patricia Hearst Shaw.

As a captive, “You have been so abused and so robbed of your free will and so frightened that you come to a point that you believe any lie that your abductor has told you,” Hearst told CNN’s Larry King in 2003. “You don’t feel safe. You think that either you will be killed if you reach out for help, or you believe your family will be killed.”

“You’ve, in a way, given up, you’ve absorbed the new identity they’ve given you. You’re surviving — you’re not even doing that — you’re just living while everything else is going on around you,” she said.

She didn’t really feel free, Hearst said, until she faced her abductors in court. Then she “knew for sure that they could never, ever hurt me again.”

Carlina White: Snatched as an infant

Some of the nation’s youngest kidnapping victims may not even realize their dark pasts.

Carlina White, kidnapped from a hospital in 1987, reunited with her family 23 years later.

Before 2011, Atlanta resident Carlina Renae White had no idea that a woman posing as a nurse abducted her at a hospital in New York’s Harlem neighborhood when she was just 3 weeks old. White had always had a nagging feeling that she was raised by a family to which she did not belong, said Ernie Allen from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.

White grew suspicious when the woman who raised her could not provide her with a birth certificate. She found her own baby picture on the national center’s website and eventually learned the truth. There was a DNA test, and White reconnected with her biological family in an emotional reunion in January 2011. “I never gave up hope,” White’s grandmother, Elizabeth White, told WABC. “It is like she has been around us all her life. She wasn’t a stranger. She fit right in.”

Related: Snatched after birth, woman reunites with family

Steve Carter was inspired by Carlina White's story, and learned he, too, was an abduction victim.

White’s surprise lead to a similar discovery by Philadelphia software salesman Steve Carter. Carter, who’s in his mid-30s, was adopted at age 4 from an orphanage in Honolulu. White’s story inspired him to check www.missingkids.com, where he was shocked to find his own face in a photo staring back at him. He contacted the Honolulu Police Department and later underwent a DNA test.

Police determined that three decades earlier, Carter’s biological mother, Charlotte Moriarty, took him for a walk and didn’t return. His biological father Mark Barnes filed a missing persons report.

Carter says he believes Moriarty put him in the Hawaiian orphanage and told authorities his name was Tenzin Amea. CNN could not independently confirm that account.

Related: Adopted man learns sad truth about his childhood

Now Carter knows his birth name: Marx Panama Moriarty Barnes.

It was, as Carter put it, “a happy ending to a story that usually isn’t a happy ending.”

Austrian horrors

Two of the most heinous child abductions in recent years took place in Austria.

 Natascha Kampusch pictured in 2011, just before her 23rd birthday.

In 1998, 10-year-old Natascha Kampusch was abducted while walking to school. Her 2010 autobiography “3,096 Days” describes the relationship she fostered with her abductor Wolfgang Priklopil. Kampusch wrote how she endured Priklopil’s bizarre routines to save her own life.

The book, which was serialized in the UK’s Daily Mail newspaper, details how Kampusch was locked inside a “hermetically sealed” concrete jail.

She wrote about being beaten as many as 200 times a week — until she heard her own spine “snap.”

She recalls how she was manacled to Priklopil while they slept together in his bed.

Kampusch escaped in August 2006 when she was 18. In 2010, she was reportedly living in Vienna. Priklopil, 44, an engineer, committed suicide shortly after Kampusch’s escape.

In the years after her escape, Kampusch became a media personality, appearing on television shows around the world. She worked for a while as a television presenter in Austria in 2007.

Full story: Kampusch details life as ‘domestic slave’

Two years after Kampusch’s escape, the world learned about the fate of Austrian teen captive Elisabeth Fritzl.

In 1984, her own father, Josef Fritzl, threw Elisabeth — then 18 — into a specially designed cellar, said prosecutors. He told other family members Elisabeth had run away to join a cult.

Elisabeth Fritzl's father locked her in the family basement for 24 years.

Josef Fritzl kept his daughter locked in the basement for the next 24 years, authorities believe, repeatedly sexually assaulting her. During that time, he fathered Elisabeth’s seven children.

Fritzl’s dungeon remained secret until April 2008, when Elisabeth’s 19-year-old daughter, Kerstin, became seriously ill and was taken to a hospital. Hospital staff became suspicious and alerted police, who then discovered the cellar.

At a 2009 trial, jurors found Josef Fritzl guilty of rape and imprisonment and sentenced him to life in prison.

Full story: Fritzl jailed for life

Elisabeth Fritzl and her children were given new identities by the state. They also received a pension and and a home in an undisclosed location in rural Austria, according to a report in The Sun.

Katie Beers: Foster family ‘instrumental’

Katie Beers was only 9 in 1992 when neighbor John Esposito kidnapped her and locked her in his Long Island, New York, dungeon.


Katie Beers reacts to Cleveland escape

Esposito imprisoned Beers there for 17 days, sexually assaulting her repeatedly. She was chained by the neck in a locked wooden box suspended above the ground. A television in the corner provided the only distraction and the only light. Her only meals were junk food. Her captor broke down, and she was rescued.

Now a 30-year-old married mother of two living in rural Pennsylvania, Beers reveals details of her ordeal in her autobiography, “Buried Memories: Katie Beers’ Story.”

Beers describes the life of abuse she led before her kidnapping.

“My childhood consisted of enslavement by my godmother and my godmother’s husband,” she told CNN’s Soledad O’Brien. “Not only that,” she continues, “but also sexual abuse by my godmother’s husband; verbal, physical and emotional abuse by both my godmother herself and her husband; and neglect by my mother.”

After her rescue, Beers lived with a foster family, who she says was “instrumental” to her recovery.

“Personally, what my foster parents did for me was they kept me secluded and kept me out of the public eye for so long, and that gave me the ability to recover,” Beers told New York radio station 1010 WINS.

Now that the trauma is behind them, should the three Cleveland survivors look back?

It depends on their personality.

Some, such as Beers, will refuse to speak of it again. “I try not to think about it,” she said. “There’s no point in thinking about the past. I’ve gone through therapy. I’ve said my piece.”

“I tend to believe as a therapist that this is less helpful,” said Bonnie Forrest.

Instead, “you have to come to believe that it wasn’t your fault and that you made the best choices at the time to survive — no matter what that took,” she said. “Survival is something to be proud of — proud that you have those resources — and you go on.”

For Smart, being happy offers the best punishment for her abductor.

“By dwelling on the past and holding on to the pain and the hurt that you’ve had to go through, that’s only allowing him to steal more of your life away from you and he doesn’t deserve that.”

There’s no looking back. She’s facing forward, pointed toward the rest of her life.

CNN’s Ann O’Neill, Nina Melendez, Thair Shaikh, Diana Magnay, Frederik Pleitgen, Sabrina Kahn and Stephanie Elam contributed to this report.


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First-ever Web site is brought back to life

April 30th, 2013 No comments


(Credit:
CERN)

A quick history lesson for readers.

In 1989, British physicist Tim Berners-Lee invented what would be called the “World Wide Web.” The first trials were held in December 1990 at the laboratories of CERN, the major research laboratory in Geneva that’s better known today as the home of the Large Hadron Collider.

On April 30, 1993, CERN published a statement — on the Web, no less! — that made the technology behind the World Wide Web available on a royalty-free basis. (Specifically, this was the software required to run a Web server, a basic browser, and a library of code.)

And thus the modern public Web was born, at info.cern.ch.

The first Web site in the world was, understandably, dedicated to the World Wide Web project itself. (For Apple geeks reading this, it was hosted on Berners-Lee’s NeXT computer.) The Web site described what the Web was and instructed how to access others’ documents.

That original NeXT machine is still at CERN, but the world’s first Web site is no longer online at its originaladdress.

CERN seeks to change that. To mark the 20th anniversary of this birth of “the open Web,” the researchers announced today that they are beginning a project to restore the first Web site and “preserve the digital assets that are associated with the birth of the Web.”

Dan Noyes writes:

For many years, this URL has been dormant, inactive. It simply redirected to the web host root of http://info.cern.ch We just put the files back online, using the archive that is hosted on the W3C site. This is a 1992 copy of the first website. This may be the earliest copy that we can find, but we’re going to keep looking for earlier ones.

History and technology nerds, it doesn’t get much better than this. Want to browse the original site? Click this hyperlink, as the kids used to say.

This story originally appeared as “First-ever website is back online” on ZDNet.

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‘Star Trek’ Wikia fan portal warps into cyberspace

April 25th, 2013 No comments

Gene and Majel Roddenberry

This wedding photo of Gene and Majel Roddenberry gives a glimpse into the Great Bird’s life.


(Credit:
Roddenberry Entertainment)

A new enterprise was born today. The Trek Initiative brings together wiki host company Wikia and Roddenberry Entertainment, the creators of “Star Trek,” in a brave new Web site dedicated to offering fans a home planet on the Internet. It offers communities for fan interaction, fan fiction, fan films, and rare images from the Roddenberry Entertainment archives.

Hard-core Trekkies will particularly enjoy a 55-minute audio clip of Gene Roddenberry discussing his motivations for “Star Trek” and his views on the future of humanity. The “Star Trek” franchise is currently under the ownership of CBS, publisher of CNET.

Gene Roddenberry’s son, Rod Roddenberry, welcomes fans with an introductory blog post. “One of the things I have always been proud of is the way my mother and father interacted with the fans and admirers of Star Trek,” he writes. He intends the Trek Initiative to continue that Roddenberry family tradition.

The Trek Initiative isn’t the prettiest site around, but it’s certainly jammed full of information. If you’re looking to find a local fan club, browse a Klingon dictionary, or make connections online, it’s a good place to start. Keep an eye on the exclusives section for special treats from Roddenberry Entertainment.

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Firefox OS developer phones sold out

April 23rd, 2013 No comments

Firefox OS app developers hoping to snag one of the new Firefox OS phones seem to be out of luck.

The Keon and the Peak popped up for sale today courtesy of manufacturer/seller Geeksphone. But the two phones already appear on the company’s Web site as “out of stock.” The page for each phone simply says “this product is no longer in stock” with no further explanation.


(Credit:
Screenshot by Lance Whitney/CNET)

A spokeswoman for Geeksphone told CNET at around 6:15 a.m. PT that the phones are currently out of stock due to great demand. But the online sale is expected to restart in the coming hours.

The Peak was available earlier in the day, while the Keon sold out more quickly. Priced at $119, the Keon is the budget-oriented model with a 3.5-inch 480×320-pixel screen. At $195, the html”Peak offers a 4.3-inch 960×540-pixel multitouch screen.

Geeksphone is the only source for the Mozilla OS phones at this point.

The two
Firefox OS phones aren’t meant for consumers; rather they’re designed for developers who want working models to test their apps for Mozilla’s mobile operating system.

Mainstream Firefox OS phones are expected to be manufactured by such companies as ZTE, Alcatel, LG Electronics, and Huawei for release next year. Sony is also eyeing a Firefox OS phone for 2014.

Mozilla’s goal behind Firefox OS is to offer low-cost phones and other devices that will appeal to consumers in developing markets.

Updated at 6:30 a.m. PT
with response from Geeksphone.

Correction at 9:57 a.m. PT: The story incorrectly described Geeksphone. It is a manufacturer and seller.

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Living with Chromebook: Giving Google’s OS a second chance

April 23rd, 2013 No comments


(Credit:
Sarah Tew/CNET)

Anyone needing proof that the post-PC era is real need only consult the recent sales figures: traditional PC sales are down 14 percent year over year, even as sales of tablets and smartphones — mostly using Apple’s iOS and Google’s Android — become more ubiquitous.

But even as
Android adoption continues to flourish, Google has another horse in the race: Chrome OS. Chrome’s mission statement is simple: With everything moving to “the cloud,” why have a heavy, expensive Windows or
Mac operating system acting as a middleman? Why not just have the browser be the OS? And that’s precisely the reason it shares a name with Google’s increasingly popular Web browser.

It’s a clever enough idea, and one that plays to Google’s strength: search, Gmail, Google Docs, Maps, Picasa, and nearly all of the company’s other products don’t require traditional software — just a browser and a live Web connection. Still, when we last looked at it in the fall of 2012, we found Chrome OS to be promising, but ultimately not up to the level of a full-time OS. In other words, it was generally fine for a “second computer,” but not quite ready to run your one and only go-to PC for every task.


However, Google’s pace of improvement for the OS (and the browser) is ambitious, to say the least. The company updates it on a six-week schedule, and — again, because it’s all based on a remote server — the changes are instantly available to users. With the advent of new Chromebook laptops — from HP’s $329 Chromebook to Google’s own flagship, the $1,600 touch-screen Chromebook Pixel (and also the Samsung Chromebox compact desktop) — we thought it was time to take a longer look at Chrome OS.


(Credit:
Sarah Tew/CNET)

For me, the real test is not a dry comparison of specs on paper, or even a handful of short-haul benchmark tests. No, the real test of the Chromebook as a real-life device is this: can I survive for a week or more with a Chrome OS device as my primary computer?

Haven’t we seen this before?
A great many $300 Netbook laptops, running Windows XP and Intel Atom processors, were sold several years ago under a similar premise — that laptop shoppers had for years simply been buying too much computer. Why spend $1,000 or more when $300 would do for the everyday computing tasks of e-mail, Web browsing, social media, and video consumption?

Back during the 2007-to-2010 heyday of the 10- and 11-inch Netbook, many people bought into that argument (myself included, to a degree), but the long-term Netbook experience was less than satisfactory, in part because we were asking these low-power processors to run a full version of Windows. What you ended up with was a lot of people who thought they were getting a great deal, but then found themselves sitting and staring at a rotating hourglass as their Netbooks struggled to load multiple Web pages or load up
Microsoft Office or Adobe Photoshop.

The ‘offline’ apps available in the Chrome OS Web store.

The Chromebook aims to solve that problem, albeit in an extreme way. Much like what we used to call a dumb terminal, the Chromebook is just a window to the online world. What Google calls the Chrome OS is essentially the same Chrome Web browser you might already be using on your Windows or OS X computer. Nearly everything you do is within the browser, and Chrome OS users are encouraged (practically required) to work via cloud-based tools, from Google Docs to Netflix.

A fairly basic file system allows files to be kept and accessed locally, for example through no-frills media player apps for video and music, or through a rudimentary photo editor. But for the most part, a Chromebook is meant to be used exclusively online — that’s why the first wave of Chromebook hardware included 3G connections as key hardware components.

Later Chromebooks backed off on that claim a bit, and some models, such as the HP Pavilion 14 I’m writing on right now, don’t even offer a 3G option, requiring you to be within range of a Wi-Fi signal, unless you use one of a handful of “offline” apps that offer limited offline functionality for Chromebooks disconnected from the hive mind.

Setting up the hardware
For this experiment, I’m using a slightly unusual Chromebook, but one that is perhaps better suited for all-day, multiday use. The HP Pavilion 14 has the largest screen we’ve seen to date in a Chromebook, eschewing the 11- and 12-inch displays we’ve seen from Samsung and Acer for a midsize 14-inch screen. That, coupled with a decent-sized keyboard and touch pad, makes it a device that could easily be mistaken for a run-of-the-mill plastic laptop. Except, instead of costing $550 to $700 or so, the Pavilion 14 Chromebook starts at $329.

As noted in our review of this laptop, that price requires certain sacrifices to cost-cutting. The keyboard and touch pad feel especially low-budget and clacky, and onboard storage is limited to a small 16GB solid-state drive (SSD), although there is an SD card slot for expansion.

Turning on the HP Pavilion 14 for the first time, I found setup was easy — you’re immediately prompted to enter your master Google account username and password, much as you might when installing the Chrome browser on any other PC. Once synced, that sets up your Gmail and Google Drive/Docs access, as well as your saved bookmarks, but the actual tile-based Chromebook menu is new — you’ll have to add, remove, and reorder the tiles to your liking.


(Credit:
Sarah Tew/CNET)

That easy portability of bookmarks, passwords, and online service access is what makes Chrome my current preferred Web browser, although I still use Safari and IE10 as well (Firefox, not so much these days). On the Chromebook, the familiar look and feel of Chrome are comforting. If you already use Chrome, then despite running an uncommon OS on a new laptop, having access to your personal bookmarks, preferences, and settings definitely makes the Chromebook experience less alien.

But does it actually work?
While there are many things about using Chrome OS on this HP Pavilion 14 that feel familiar, one has only to close or minimize the browser window to be in unfamiliar territory.

While there’s an Android-feeling app menu that pops out of the bottom-edge task bar, it’s largely an illusion. Most of the tiles lead to online tools or Web sites. You won’t find files, photos, Office docs, or anything else on the icon-free desktop. Unless you’re one of those anal-retentive “clean desktop” people, that can be very jarring to see.

The Chrome equivalent of the Windows Start menu.

Over the next installments of this series of posts, I’ll detail how Chrome OS worked, and didn’t work, for workplace productivity, entertainment, and social connectivity. If you’re considering a Chromebook because of the low price or simple interface, or just because it’s suddenly trendy, then this guide should give you a basic understanding of the rewards and challenges. But a Chromebook is so different from a Windows or Mac PC that I strongly encourage you to try one for yourself before buying, either at a retail store or via a Chromebook-owning friend or colleague, to get a better idea of the radically different environment you’d be committing to.

In a pinch, you can also sort of replicate what using Chrome OS is like through the Google Chrome Web browser on any Windows or Mac computer. The look and feel are similar, and even the Chrome app store works the same. Just keep all your work inside the browser, don’t download anything besides basic docs or media files, or use any offline programs (such as Photoshop or iTunes), and you’ll get a reasonably good feel for what it’s like to use a Chromebook — although keep in mind you’ll certainly be working with a much more powerful processor.

Next time
In my next installment, I’ll examine how a Chromebook works as a professional productivity tool. Is Google Docs (aka Google Drive) a usable replacement for Microsoft Office?

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Gran Turismo 6 rumors rev up

April 23rd, 2013 No comments

Is this the box art for Gran Turismo 6?


(Credit:
Multiplayer.com)

Vroom vroom! PlayStation gamers should get ready to rev up their racing rigs as it appears Gran Turismo 6 might be coming later this year.

Following last week’s discovery of Newegg’s nondescript placeholder for Gran Turismo 6, Italian retailer Multiplayer put up a very revealing listing for the unannounced racing game on its Web site. Surprisingly, the page hosts a never before seen image of what could be GT6′s box art as well as a November 28 release date. Keep in mind these details could be exclusive to Europe and the North America version may differ.

Newegg and Multiplayer’s respective product pages for Gran Turismo 6 point towards the game appearing on the PlayStation 3 — with no mention of a version for the upcoming
PlayStation 4. However, this doesn’t mean squat about the game appearing on the PS4, as placeholders for those games haven’t really hit the Internet yet.

Sony Computer Entertainment, parent company of Gran Turismo developer Polyphony Digital, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. CNET will update this story when we hear back.

In February, Sony Computer Entertainment Europe SVP Michael Denny told Silicon Republic that gamers should expect GT6 this year — putting further weight behind these recent discoveries. As of September 2012, the various titles in the hit racing simulator collectively achieved worldwide sales of more than 68 million copies.

Sony may reveal more information about Gran Turismo 6 during its June 10 press event at the upcoming E3 gaming expo in Los Angeles.

Top 10 concept cars from the 2012-2013 auto show season (pictures)

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My life with the Fitbit One activity tracker

April 23rd, 2013 No comments

Fitbit One


(Credit:
Fitbit)

Continuing my series of life with four different activity trackers, it’s time to talk about the Fitbit One.

In what will likely disappoint several of my Fitbit-loving friends, it’s my least favorite of the tracking devices I’m using because I do so many “non-step” activities. But the Fitbit does have a lot to offer, and I have high hopes for the forthcoming Fitbit Flex wristband.

For now…my life with the One.

Fitbit currently sells two trackers. The basic Fitbit Zip ($60) tracks steps taken, calories burned, and distance traveled. The Fitbit One that I’ve been using ($100) adds tracking of stairs climbed, hours of sleep, and sleep quality. A wristband version, the Fitbit Flex, will be out in the coming weeks. I’ll be looking at that in the near future.

The Fitbit One is a thumb-sized device that weighs about one-third of an ounce. You wear it clipped to your belt or bra or tucked in a pocket. It charges quickly using a special USB adapter, and the battery lasts up to a week. I rarely worried that it was running out of power.

It can sync to your PC or Mac wirelessly using a special USB dongle that comes with the device. Mobile sync is offered via Bluetooth for later generation iPhone and
iPad devices via Bluetooth. For
Android devices, the Galaxy S3 and
Galaxy Note 2 are the only ones supported for now.

Focus on steps
I know several people who’ve used Fitbit and greatly enjoy a rivalry in outdoing each other for steps taken, plus they’re clearly motivated by the device to be active by taking more steps. That underscores what a step-centric device this is, unlike the Nike FuelBand that revolves around a “NikeFuel” activity score, or the calories-oriented Jawbone Up and BodyMedia Fit devices

Consider the Activity overview from the Fitbit Dashboard. This is the online view; the version for mobile is similar:

Fitbit activity dashboard

The activity list leads-off with steps taken, followed by floors climbed and distance traveled, all stats largely revolving around walking or running. But as I covered before, a non-step activity like paddleboarding pretty much doesn’t register at all.

This is something that the forthcoming Fitbit Flex will hopefully help correct for. As for the One, you can manually log activities, which I’ll get back to. But even if you do this, you won’t see that reflected in your “Active Score” goal, which tracks how active you’ve been — unless you log into the Fitbit Web site. The active score appears there, not in the mobile app nor on the device itself. The latter two are what you’re more likely to use regularly for guidance on how active you’ve been

Getting motivated
That’s what all these devices are largely about: motivating you to be active. Like the Nike FuelBand, a big plus is that the Fitbit One has a display that allows you to get feedback from the device itself about your activity:

Fitbit One display


(Credit:
Fitbit)

As you can see from the image above, the Fitbit One has six different readouts that show (from left-to-right, first row then second):

  • Steps taken
  • Distance traveled
  • Calories burned
  • Stairs climbed
  • Recent activity “flower”
  • Current time

Unlike the Nike band, you won’t be shown your progress toward any goals you have have set for these areas. If you’re trying to hit 10,000 steps per day, you’ll have to keep that in mind. The same is true for a calorie goal you may have set. As noted, there’s no ability to see what your Active Score might be, though the “flower” gives you a kind of cryptic guide to whether you’ve been active recently or not.

Also unlike the Nike band, the readout isn’t easily accessible. As the Fitbit is typically worn on the waist, you have to lean your neck over to see the display or alternatively unclip it for a check. In short, you’ve got a display, but it’s not one that’s readily viewable.

This might sound like nitpicking, and perhaps it is. After all, the Fitbit at least has a display, unlike the the Jawbone and BodyMedia devices. But as I wrote about the Nike band, I found having an at-a-glance view to hitting a particular goal was incredibly motivating. Indeed, that may be why with the forthcoming Fitbit Flex, it dumps the display in favor of five lights that show your progress toward a set goal.

How the Fitbit tracks
Does the Fitbit track activity well? For recording steps, it seems to be fine. In my wrap-up piece to this series, I might do a “counts steps” comparison to explore this in more depth. But given these devices are all “activity” trackers, I’ve been more focused on how well they record activity overall. In that, the Fitbit is a mixed bag.

As mentioned, paddleboarding didn’t register. But for inline skating, the Fitbit surprised me in measuring that activity better than either my Nike or Jawbone bands. With that exercise, while I wasn’t stepping, hip movement was still calculated as “steps” that were tracked and turned into calories burned.

Distance is drawn from the steps you take; stairs climbed are based on an altimeter in the device. But that can lead to some funny readings. Last week, I went on a 15-mile bike ride. I got back and discovered I’d “climbed” 40 floors, according to my Fitbit. I hadn’t. But I had ridden from sea level up onto some coastal bluffs and back down. The elevation change was translated into floors climbed.

Calories burned
Calories burned, especially “active” calories beyond those you burn beyond just being alive, really resonate with me as one of the best ways to know my activity level. The BodyMedia Fit arm band continues to impress me by seeming tocapture everything I do. The Nike FuelBand tries to just show my activity calories, though there’s no way to compensate for activities it doesn’t record correctly. The Fitbit One, like the Jawbone Up, occupies a middle ground allowing you to manually enter things that are missed.

By default, the Fitbit estimates how many calories you’re burning per day even if you’re not active, based on your assumed metabolic rate. Then, as you’re actually registered by the device being active, it translates that activity into more calories burned.

Logging 30 minutes of basketball playing manually would add 274 calories to your Fitbit total.

What about the stuff you miss? That’s where manual logging comes in. For example, if you played basketball, you can search for that activity, where it may be listed with an estimated number of calories it burns per a set period. You can do this online or through the Fitbit app, as shown to the right.

If there’s not a listed activity, you can add a custom one. For example, I have one defined for paddleboarding, with how many calories I estimate are burned in 30 minutes. After entering that activity for a given day, for a given period, my estimated calories burned for that day increases, as does my Active Score and the time Fitbit assumes I’ve been active.

That’s great. What’s not so great is that you have to figure out on your own how many calories an activity burns, if not listed, or whether to trust what’s given for those in the database. More important, you have to remember when you started that activity and for how long. That’s because whatever you log manually will override whatever Fitbit has recorded.

The good news is that the Fitbit One, like the Jawbone, has a timer that will help you record when an activity starts and stops. Initially, I thought this was only for use with the sleep logging feature, but it can also be used for activity tracking, which will appear either in your activity or sleep log:

An activity might hit your sleep log if you’re not that active during it, especially if it goes on for a long time, I found. If this happens, it’s easy to transfer it to your activity log. But disappointingly, timed activities cannot be linked to anything in the activity database. That’s a pain, requiring you to effectively double-log things.

In the screenshot above, you can see that the Fitbit captured the time I spent paddleboarding, because I started the timer went I went out and turned it off when I returned. But while I can name that timed activity “paddleboarding,” that won’t cause the estimated calories to change. Fitbit still thinks I only burned 113 calories after this 1 hour and 30 minute activity.

Instead, to more accurately record calories, I have to enter a new activity, choose “Paddleboarding” from the activity database (where I’ve added it with an estimated burn of 120 calories for 30 minutes), then enter the start time as reported by by timer along with the total time. By doing this, I get a total burn of 360 calories.

It’s workable, but it could be much more elegant. With the Jawbone Up, as my future write-up will explain, any timed activity can much more easily be transformed to a defined one with a more accurate calorie burn.

Calories consumed
A big plus to the Fitbit is the ability to track what you eat. You can log your food intake, and there’s a decent database of products. The database isn’t perfect, but I’ve yet to find one that is. You’ll see food listed in different ways, the same foods with different calories and so on. If you’re serious about food logging, expect to spend some time researching which foods apply best to what you’ve eaten or creating custom foods to enter.

Yes, this can be a pain, just as much as I remember doing it two years ago using Daily Burn Tracker. But I’ve focused on using it as a general guide to what I’ve eaten, not a perfect record. I’ve also found it an incredibly useful way to lose weight. Once I realize just how much I’m snacking and how many calories are in what I eat, I start making more careful choices.

The Fitbit tries to ease the pain by allowing you to quickly get to foods you consume most often. You can also group common foods you eat together into a “meal,” which makes logging even easier. As you add food, you see a running total of all calories consumed for a given day:

Overall, I found the food logging tool pretty good. FYI, both the Jawbone and BodyMedia devices provide food tracking. The Jawbone perhaps has a slight edge through the ability to barcode scan some foods to add them to its database plus has a nice overall interface. But any of these do well.

Fitbit also has a wireless scale, the Aria, which I have. That makes the Fitbit alone among these devices I’m using able to automatically combine both my activity and weight into a common dashboard. I found that very useful.

Indeed, when I bought the Aria, I thought it was an unnecessary luxury. Why not just write my weight down each day? But in the past, I’d forget to do this. With the Aria, it’s painless. I step on, and in a few seconds, my weight goes right to my account for future reference. About the only glitch was when it once confused me with my wife, sending her weight to my account (and giving me a huge loss for that day!) That’s not happened again, however.

Sleep tracking
Sleep tracking is more a novelty to me, but if you want it, the Fitbit One will tell you this type of thing:

Fitbit sleep tracking

Both the Jawbone and BodyMedia devices also do sleep tracking. As I said, I find it more a novelty, I’ve not spent much time trying to analyze which seems to do a better job. They all generally record about the same. The Fitbit seems to record times I wake up during the night more accurately than the Jawbone, but it also seems to report I’m waking up more than I remember. Maybe I don’t remember!

The downside to sleep tracking with the Fitbit is that you have to use a special wristband to hold the tracker that I didn’t find particularly comfortable. This is something that will be much improved with the Fitbit Flex.

Waiting for the Fitbit Flex
Overall, the Fitbit One isn’t great match for me, given my “non-stepper” habits and how I feel bands do a better job with that. The Fitbit Flex may very well change all that. I feel like it potentially will log more of what I do, plus give me a better sense of my progress toward goals. Being water resistant will be an added plus.

For those who can’t wait for the Flex, who are big steppers, or who don’t mind perhaps having to do more manual logging of activities, the Fitbit One may work well. Plus, anyone who has a Fitbit wireless scale or is considering one may find this device helps close the loop better than others.

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FBI seeks crowdsourcing help in Boston bombing case: ID these two men!

April 19th, 2013 No comments

One of the images of the suspects captured by still cameras and surveillance cameras along the marathon route. The FBI released a set of such pictures today.

One of the images of the suspects captured by still cameras and surveillance cameras along the marathon route. The FBI released a set of such pictures today.


(Credit:
FBI)

The FBI has undertaken what is law enforcement’s highest-profile effort at crowdsourcing to date: asking for help identifying two suspects linked to this week’s Boston Marathon bombing.

“Someone out there knows these individuals,” Richard DesLauriers, the special agent in charge of the FBI’s Boston field office, told reporters this afternoon. He asked the media and the public for help in “identifying and locating these individuals.”

The photos published on the FBI’s Web site show two men, one wearing a black baseball cap and carrying a backpack, and the other wearing a white baseball cap, around the scene of the blasts.

Asking the public for help is hardly new, of course: post office “wanted” posters were standard police procedure over a century ago. A journalist who became the British “railway murderer” in the late 1800s was the subject of a wanted poster that appeared in newspapers, and a Jesse James wanted poster from Missouri was recently sold for $42,000 at an auction. The FBI routinely asks for the public’s help in identifying bank robbers.

But a traditional manhunt becomes something much different in the age of Twitter, Instagram, and face recognition technology.

FBI agent Richard DesLauriers asked for the publics help in identifying the suspects, but warned: Do not take any action on your own.

FBI agent Richard DesLauriers asked for the public’s help in identifying the suspects, but warned: “Do not take any action on your own.”


(Credit:
Getty Images)

Fueling that in the Boston investigation is the proliferation of camera-capable devices that accompanied such a high profile event — one runner even captured the blast live on her head-cam — coupled with a heightened interest in finding the perpetrators that’s given rise to a distributed investigative effort on sites such as Reddit and 4chan.

The New York Post made a high-profile mistake today when it published a front-page photo, with the headline “Bag Men,” implying that two people were suspects in the bombing. But they weren’t: Salah Barhoun, 17, told ABC News that he was shocked to find himself falsely linked to the explosions.

Without mentioning any Web site by name, Deloria took a swipe at some of those distributed efforts, presumably ones like Reddit’s findbostonbombers, that have identified a plenitude of possible suspects.

The photos released today are “the only ones that the public should view to assist us,” Deloria said. He added: “Other photos should not be deemed credible [and] create undue work for vital law enforcement resources.”

An announcement on Reddit posted after the FBI’s press conference began says: “At this point in time the only photographs that are allowed to be posted in this subreddit are images that may contain the FBI’s two suspects — all others will be deleted.”

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App lets Icelanders know if they’re about to bjork a cousin

April 17th, 2013 No comments


(Credit:
Henry Hathaway, public domain)

At just 320,000, Iceland’s population is tiny — and apparently that can be a real problem, since, as every Icelandic native is descended from the same family tree, everyone is related to everyone else.




(Credit:
Sad Engineer Studios)

Luckily, there’s enough distance between most people so that inbreeding isn’t a serious concern, but it seems that enough Icelanders end up in bed with their cousins without knowing it for it to be a bit of a problem. So much of a problem, in fact, that in 2010, the Islendingabok (book of Icelanders) Web site was launched, containing a database of every person born in Iceland since the 18th century, so that Icelanders can make sure they’re not getting a little too Lannister-like.

And now, there’s a more accessible way of using thedatabase.

Three engineers at Sad Engineer Studios have designed an Android app that lets you check that you’re not too closely related before you jump into bed with a new lover. All you have to do is bump phones before you bump, well, other things, to see the genealogy of both yourself and your love interest — with a built-in “incest alarm” if you’re just a little too close for comfort.

It has the potential to stop a great many awkward situations. As one user on the app’s Google Play page said, “If I’d had this in earlier, maybe I would not go home with my aunt.”

And that’s not all it does. It also tracks your relatives’ birthdays, so you’ll never miss another one again. We call that a win.

(Source: Crave Australia via News of Iceland)

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