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Q&A: How to Share an Apple TV

Q.

My son has an Apple TV with his iTunes account for TV shows, YouTube videos and music. We don't share tastes. Can I also log onto the device to access the stuff from my own iTunes account?

A.

Logging into the Settings screen on the Apple TV to pair the device with another iTunes library and Apple ID account is one way to share, but an update for the small black second- and third-generation Apple TV makes it easier. The Apple TV now allows the use of multiple iTunes accounts without having to sign in and out, but you need to have at least version 5.1 of the Apple TV software. The latest update does not work on the first-generation silver Apple TV model, which was discontinued in 2010.

To check for a software update (if you have not updated recently), turn on the Apple TV and use the remote to select Settings from the main screen. In the Settings menu, select General and then Update Software. If an update is av ailable, select the option to download and install it.

Once you have updated the Apple TV, go back to the Settings menu and select iTunes Store. Click the Accounts link with the remote. If your son has been the only one using the Apple TV to play his iTunes Store content, his Apple ID account should be listed on the screen. To add your Apple ID account (and with it, access to your own iTunes library and purchases that live online up in Apple's cloud), select Add New Account on the screen. Enter your Apple ID user name and password.

Once you have added your Apple ID information, both accounts should be listed on the screen. It's a little kludgy, especially for apple, but to switch back and forth between your son's account and yours, just revisit the Settings screen, choose iTunes Store, Accounts and select the account you want to use from the list. If you are purchasing iTunes content directly on the Apple TV, make sure you have your own account selected before yo u buy.



Sunday Breakfast Menu, Dec. 30

Sunday's Breakfast MenuStephen Crowley/The New York Times

As the deadline to avert the automatic tax increases and spending cuts of the so-called fiscal cliff draws near, the Sunday shows feature members of Congress and, most notably, President Obama, who will join NBC's “Meet the Press.”

Two members of the tax-writing Senate Finance Committee - Senator Charles E. Schumer, Democrat of New York, and Senator Jon Kyl of Arizona, the chamber's No. 2 Republican - will join ABC's “This Week” to weigh in on the last-minute attempts to come to an agreement. Also on the program will be Representative Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, ranking Democrat on the House Budget Committee, and Representative Raúl R. Labrador, Republican of Idaho and a member of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.

On CBS's “Face the Nation,” Senator Richard J. Durbin of Illinois, the No. 2 Democrat in the Senate, and Senator Tom Coburn, Republican of Oklahoma, will discuss the negotiations.

Senator John Barrasso of Wyoming, chairman of the Senate Republican Policy Committee; Senator Debbie Stabenow, Democrat of Michigan; Representative Donna Edwards, Democrat of Maryland; and Representative Darrell Issa, Republican of California and chairman of the House oversight committee, will appear on CNN's “State of the Union.” Plus, Tom Vilsack, the agriculture secretary, will talk about a potential increase in the price of dairy products if Congress fails to pass a new farm bill soon.

“Fox News Sunday” features a discussion about several of the issues grabbing headlines, including the fiscal talks, gun control and the investigation into the September attack in Benghazi, Libya. Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, and Senator Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of California, will join the program.

Luke Messer of Indiana, president of the 113th Congress's incoming freshman class, will be on C-Span's “Newsmakers.”

And Representative Luis V. Gutierrez, Democrat of Illinois, and Representative Mario Diaz-Balart, Republican of Florida, will talk about the challenges facing Congress in the year ahead on Univision's “Al Punto.”



Democratic Establishment Voices Support for Markey\'s Bid to Succeed Kerry

The Democratic ranks are closing behind Representative Edward J. Markey of Massachusetts in the race to succeed Senator John Kerry, who hopes to become Secretary of State.

The race is shaping up with unusual speed, considering that Mr. Kerry has not yet vacated the seat, and Gov. Deval Patrick of Massachusetts has yet to set a date for a special election.

But several big guns in the Democratic Party began on Friday to line up behind Mr. Markey, who declared his c andidacy Thursday in a race that was expected to be crowded with wanna-bes.

The first to issue a statement was Mr. Kerry.

“While I began last week to formally step out of politics and it's very important that I respect the apolitical nature of the post I hope to soon occupy, as Massachusetts' senior senator today and as a colleague of Ed Markey's for 28 years, I'm excited to learn of and support his decision to run for the United States Senate,'' the statement said.

It avoided the word “endorse” but was clearly intended to send a signal that Mr. Kerry was supporting Mr. Markey.

Victoria Reggie Kennedy, the widow of Senator Edward M. Kennedy, then endorsed Mr. Markey, saying in a statement, “He knows how to get things done.”

Mrs. Kennedy is said to be interested in being appointed interim Senator until the winner of the special election is declared, but she did not mention this in her statement.

Her s tatement was followed by one from Senator Michael Bennet, chairman of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, in favor of Mr. Markey.

“At a time when the country needs real leadership that looks out for the middle class, Ed Markey always remembers where he came from and will continue the hard work needed to turn our economy around,” Mr. Bennet wrote.

Mr. Markey, 66, is the dean of the Massachusetts Congressional delegation and was first elected to the House in 1976. The other most likely candidates are also members of Congress: Stephen Lynch and Michael Capuano.

The Democrats appear to be trying to head off a potentially bruising primary and save their money for the special election. Their most likely Republican opponent is Massachusetts' other outgoing senator, Scott Brown.

Mr. Brown, who lost his seat last month to Elizabeth Warren, has not said yet whether he intends to run again this time. But he is presumed to be a formidable candidate; he is certainly the best known in the field, now that a couple of high-profile Democrats have said they are not interested. They include Edward M. Kennedy Jr., the late Senator's son, and Ben Affleck, the actor.

Representative Niki Tsongas, the widow of another senator, has also said that she will not run. So has Martha Coakley, the state attorney general, who lost a special election to Mr. Brown in 2010.

Mr. Markey, the son of a milkman, has $3 million in his campaign account. He ranks ninth in seniority in the House.

Follow Katharine Q. Seelye on Twitter at @kseelye.



Lawmakers Suggest New Rules to Speed Up Senate Business

A bipartisan group of eight senators on Friday proposed a detailed set of Senate rule changes that could speed the legislative process considerably but would stop short of the most dramatic changes to the filibuster that some Democrats are demanding.

Under the proposed changes, the minority party in the Senate could no longer filibuster motions to take up bills for debate or to convene formal negotiations with the House on Senate-passed legislation.

The new rules would also make clear that if no senator is on the floor to mount a filibuster, the senator presiding over the Senate could immediately move to a vote on the pending matter. That, the advocates say, would put an end to the current practice of mounting filibusters without even showing up on the Senate floor.

For the minority party, the new rules would also guarantee at least four amendments on every bill, two for the Republicans and two for the Democrats.

“What we're proposing on a biparti san basis is a way to end the major sources of gridlock around here,” said Senator Carl Levin, Democrat of Michigan, who, along with Senator John McCain, Republican of Arizona, unveiled the plan.

It is not clear whether the proposal will win over the young Democratic senators pressing for more sweeping changes. One of those senators, Jeff Merkley of Oregon, said Senate Democrats had a “very healthy debate” on Friday in a closed-door lunch dedicated to the rules-change debate. He continued to insist that any new rules include a measure that forces senators wishing to filibuster a bill to stand and talk until the body is worn down, a scenario captured in the classic movie, “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington.”

“It's extremely important any package have the talking filibuster in it,” he said.

But to make that change, Democrats on Jan. 3 would have to pull what supporters call the “constitutional option” and what others in both parties call the “nuclear option” â€" forcing the change with a simple 51-vote majority by overruling the parliamentarian when he rules the changes out of order. By tradition, Senate rules changes take 67 votes to enact.

Mr. Merkley and Senator Tom Udall, Democrat of New Mexico, said the Senate majority leader, Harry Reid, will have 51 Democrats if he wants to force the issue. But Mr. Levin raised serious doubts about that.

“A number of us are deeply troubled that we would do something that would break the rules,” he said.

Under the bipartisan proposal, some of the most dilatory procedures of the last two years â€" like filibustering even efforts to take up bills â€" would end. Many more presidential nominees would be put on an expedited calendar, and even the 448 remaining on the traditional route to confirmation would face a shorter path.

And the eight advocates of the proposal said their rules would effectively bring back the stand ing filibuster by ending the custom in which objections to consent agreements can be lodged with a phone call to a senator nearby. Now filibusters would have to be on the floor to stop the presiding officer from calling a snap vote.



Q&A: Going Deeper Into FileVault

Q.

Does Apple's FileVault security program for Mac OS X encrypt just the Home folder or the whole drive?

A.

FileVault's abilities depend on the version you are using. The FileVault encryption feature has been around since Mac OS X 10.3,M, also known as Panther, which was released in 2003, but FileVault has evolved over the years. More recent versions of the system - OS X 10.7, nicknamed Lion, and OS X 10.8, Mountain Lion - use an updated version of the software, FileVault 2.

While the original version of FileVault just encrypted the contents of the user's Home folder, the newer FileVault 2 encrypts the entire disk, and can take advantage of the faster Intel processors in newer Macs to make the encryption/decryption time quicker. FileVault 2 also supports incremental backup and recovery with Apple's built-in Time Machine backup software and offers a user recovery key in case the FileVault 2 password is forgotten. You have the option of storing the recovery key with Apple, which encrypts the key and will unlock it only if three security questions you previously provided are answered successfully.

While faster and more versatile than the original version, FileVault 2 has had some issues, including a password bug earlier this year that has since been fixed. Apple has instructions for setting up FileVault 2 that further explain how it works. The Macworld site has an extensive guide to using FileVault 2 as well if you want more information before you decide if you want to use this optional feature of OS X.



App Smart Extra: The Melodies Linger On

Streaming music, and streaming “radio” apps like Pandora and Spotify, were the topics of this week's App Smart column. They let you listen to music you do not necessarily have in your own collection. They can also be an excellent way to break out of a musical rut and discover new sounds.

Here is another app that you may like: ooTunes ($5 on iOS). It behaves like a very clever access point to a huge list of online radio stations, among which you may well find music you would like to hear. I love the Radio RooLette function, which takes you to a random selection of tracks. The Lyrics option is nice too, because I bet that you, like me, often wonder what the heck a singer just said.

The app's “Similar” function also does a surprisingly good job of suggesting similar music; clicking on this while listening to some holiday tunes by Andy Williams led me to Bobby Vee's “Christmas Vacation,” for example. But from the point it delivers the list, it's a bit o f potluck to see if those tracks are being played somewhere on the radio now, or can be found on YouTube. Unfortunately this app had flaky audio quality for me several times, even though I'm on a superfast Wi-Fi broadband connection. Also, its interface is far from being highly polished. But at least it's not expensive, and it comes with bonus powers to record the tracks and act as a radio alarm clock.

Don't forget that these kinds of apps can also help you identify music you haven't heard before when listening from a more conventional source, like over a store's speaker system, or on a friend's radio. Shazam (free on iTunes and Android) is my favorite app for doing this; you simply run it and let it “listen” to the music. It then does a clever pattern-matching to identify the song, and presents you with a page crammed with data like the name of the artist, information about tours, a link to YouTube and, in the iOS edition, the “artist's popular songs” on iTune s. Clicking on this last option is, of course, a great way to listen to more of the music that has just attracted your ear. Finally, the app's “Discover” tab helps you find new music by showing the popular tracks people are listening to and identifying with Shazam.

Quick Call

The popular social music app maker Smule has a new, free iOS app out, Strum. It is a little like Instagram, but is all about sharing video clips on a social network. Unlike other, similar apps, Strum applies both video and audio filters - to the extent of composing new music for you, or editing the audio and video of your clips to make them look and sound as if you're rapping.



Different Tax Proposals and Their Reach

WASHINGTON - As part of a deal being negotiated by President Obama and Speaker John A. Boehner to avert the worst of the year-end tax increases and spending cuts, Social Security payments might be lower in the future for millions of Americans.

On Tuesday, Democrats and Republicans were examining a multitrillion-dollar deficit reduction package put forward by the president, though the two sides were trading barbed remarks and aides were emphasizing that nothing was final until the whole deal was done.

But the White House seemed willing to make a concession to Republicans with a switch in the formula that ensures that Social Security payments keep up with the pace of inflation - an idea that immediately proved unpopular with its liberal base.

“Any talk of shrinking the program to save money is flawed from the start because Social Security is not part of the national budget in the same way as military spending,” Representative Raúl M. Grijalva of Arizona said in a statement. “It's paid for through a dedicated payroll tax separate from general budgeting.”

Representative Charles B. Rangel of New York was among many on the left who echoed that sentiment. “Everyone has a grandparent, a friend or a neighbor who relies on the Social Security benefits they earned to pay for medical care, food and housing,” he said in a statement. “A move towards chained Consumer Price Index would be a long-term benefit cut for every single person who receives a Social Security check.”

Democrats and Republicans are considering switching Social Security payment adjustments to a “chained” Consumer Price Index. The Consumer Price Index tracks the price of a basket of commonly purchased household goods. A chained index accounts for consumers' tendency to substitute similar items for one another as prices fluctuate. A consumer might buy more apples when the price of oranges increases, for instance.

Though it sounds like nothing more than a technical fix, adopting a chained index would squeeze benefits over time. The chained index ends up, in a given year, about 0.3 percentage points lower than the unchained index. That difference accumulates, so after five years, it might be 1.5 percentage points lower. Using a chained index would cut Social Security spending by about $112 billion over a decade, according to an estimate by the Congressional Budget Office.

AARP, the lobbying and research group for older Americans, immediately criticized the proposal. “We would rather see a broader discussion addressing retirement security,” said Debra Whitman, an executive vice president at AARP. “We object to the context in which it's being discussed, which is a few weeks before Christmas, without people understanding what the change really means.”

Because the payment reductions would accumulate over time, AARP and other groups argue that they would hit the oldest Americans disproportionately hard. They might also unduly burden women, who tend to live longer than men, and the lowest-income older people, who are most dependent on Social Security checks, the groups warned.

Some economists and policy experts have also argued that both the current and the chained indexes underestimate the inflation that older Americans experience. The government produces an experimental “elderly index,” for instance, that tries to capture the consumption habits of people over 62 more accurately than other measures. For instance, older people buy more health care and less education than the average family, so the elderly index puts more weight on the former and less on the latter.

In no small part because of spiraling health care costs, inflation as measured by the elderly index has grown faster than inflation as calculated by the standard index that Social Security uses. That implies that the purchasing power of Social Security payments linked to a chained index would erode more over time, given what older Americans buy.

Still, other economists and policy experts from across the political spectrum have argued that a chained index is a more accurate measure of the inflation that households actually experience, and therefore is a better policy tool. They note that the elderly index is still experimental, and that not just older people receive or spend Social Security payments.

“We know that the current measure of inflation is not adequately measuring experienced inflation, and we should hence go with the better measure,” said Christian E. Weller, a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, a liberal research group based in Washington, and the author of a plan to modernize Social Security.

Both liberals and conservatives have at times argued against making changes to Social Security outside the context of a broader overhaul. Many analysts - particularly Democrats - argue that Social Security does not contribute to long-term deficits because it has its own financing stream in payroll taxes. But it does have a long-term fiscal challenge, as payouts would eventually overwhelm its trust fund and revenues.

“Back when the system started, the demographics were really favorable,” said Andrew G. Biggs of the American Enterprise Institute, a right-leaning research group in Washington. “You could provide decent benefits for the rich and poor alike at low cost. You can't do that anymore, mathematically. We could provide decent benefits for the rich and the poor by raising taxes a lot, but we need to raise taxes for other things.”

Mr. Biggs said Social Security changes that provided more ample benefits to vulnerable low-income older people and less to the well-off might prove to be a better path forward.

“We oppose chained C.P.I.,” Representative Peter Welch, Democrat of Vermont, said in an interview. “But I think all of us are waiting to see the details in the final package, and we'll make our determination then.”

Correction: December 19, 2012
An earlier version of a caption in this post misstated Representative Raúl M. Grijalva's affiliation. He is not affiliated with the American Enterprise Institute.



Obama Returns to Washington, With Bo

President Obama returned to the White House on Thursday to resume efforts to end a partisan impasse on a fiscal deal without his wife and daughters, who remain on vacation in Hawaii. His only companion: the family dog, Bo.

Which inevitably brings to mind the aphorism (wrongly) attributed to his one of his predecessors, Harry S. Truman: “If you want a friend in Washington, get a dog.”

So Mr. Obama will have his spirited pet for company in the White House as he confronts the uphill struggle to win House Republicans' acq uiescence to legislation extending the Bush-era tax cuts, which expire after Monday, for income below $250,000 a year. Anti-tax Republicans in the House demand an extension of the cuts for all income levels.

According to a report from the press pool that accompanied the president on the overnight flight, the Obamas' Portuguese water dog three times wandered into the press cabin, which is at the far end of Air Force One from the president's lair.

Late on Wednesday, before leaving Oahu, Mr. Obama called the four congressional leaders â€" the Democrats, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, and the Republicans, House Speaker John A. Boehner and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.



Gay Republicans Take Out Ad Criticizing Hagel

The White House may not be making any more announcements about President Obama's new national security team this week, but that hasn't stopped the anti-Chuck Hagel drumbeat.

An organization of gay Republicans took out a full page ad in The New York Times on Thursday proclaiming the former Nebraska senator - who has been on Mr. Obama's short list for defense secretary - as “wrong on gay rights.” The ad also labeled Mr. Hagel as “wrong on Iran” and “wrong on Israel,” but the focus of the ad was on Mr. Hagel's words, made more than a decade ago, on gays.

In an interview in 1998 about James C. Hormel, a San Francisco philanthropist nominated by President Bill Clinton to be ambassador to Luxembourg, Mr. Hagel spoke out against the appointment, saying that an “openly, aggressively gay” man should not represent the United States.

Mr. Hagel did not oppose the nomination when Mr. Hormel came before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, but he did tell the Omaha World-Herald: “They are representing America.” He added: “They are representing our lifestyle, our values, our standards. And I think that it is an inhibiting factor to be gay - openly, aggressively gay like Mr. Hormel - to do an effective job.”

Mr. Hagel has since apologized for the remark, saying in a statement last week that his comments “were insensitive,” and not reflective “of my views or of the totality of my public record.” The White House has sought to defend Mr. Hagel, while at the same time leaving options open about whom Mr. Obama may appoint as defense secretary.

Administration officials said that they did no t expect an announcement this week. Others believed to be under consideration for the post include Michèle A. Flournoy, a former top Pentagon official who worked on Mr. Obama's re-election campaign; former Navy secretary, Richard Danzig; and a former Pentagon official, Ashton B. Carter, a Harvard physicist.

Mr. Obama must also appoint a new director of the Central Intelligence Agency.

Since Mr. Hagel's name emerged as a contender for the top Pentagon job, he has been sharply criticized for his record on Iran, Israel and militant groups like Hamas and Hezbollah, as well as comments he made about pro-Israel lobbying groups in Washington. Representatives of some pro-Israel lobbying groups have now been ferociously attacking Mr. Hagel.



Three Tips for Taking Frosty Photos

Mark Theriot

As a beginning photographer, Mark Theriot's best source of subjects were to be found at the nearby Mississippi River. “Having nothing else to shoot, it drove me outside,” he said. In time he developed into a noted outdoor photographer, specializing in pictures of birds, and especially eagles.

Spending four to five hours at a clip outdoors year round has taught him a few things about cold weather photography. Mr. Theriot here offers some tips for keeping your camera (and fingers) in working order even in subzero temperatures.

Don't Condense One of the big dangers to your camera is condensation. Take a warm camera into the cold and condensation can wet the inside of your lenses and dampen the works of the camer a. To avoid that problem slowly raise or lower your camera's temperature. Mr. Theriot uses his camera bag as a insulator against quick temperature changes. “If I am going on a really, really cold shoot, I leave the camera out in the bag overnight.”

Do the same when you bring the bag inside, giving it at least six hours to warm, he said. “Take out batteries and memory cards before bringing the camera in,” he said. That way you don't have to take the camera from the bag prematurely to upload shots or charge the batteries.

No Bad Breath The other source of condensation is your breath. “Be aware of breathing through your nose,” Mr. Theriot said. Mouth breathing can frost your lens. He also uses a Hoodman Eyecup on his camera, which moves his face back enough to provide a margin of safety. Be careful if you goof. “If you have wet moisture, you can wipe it off,” he said. But, he added, “frost is a different animal.” For frost, you have to warm the l ens surface and wipe the moisture, otherwise “you just end up smearing stuff around.” He also uses an anti-fogging agent, Cat Crap, on his lenses.

Preserve Power Cold kills battery power. So you might consider keeping your batteries inside your coat, right? Wrong. “Put your battery in the outside pocket,” Mr. Theriot said. “It doesn't do a lot of good to have your batteries and memory card under four layers of clothes.” His trick is to put chemical hand warmers in the pocket with the batteries, usually whatever is on sale. “I look for ones that are at least six hours in duration.” Also, getting an accessory battery grip can double your shooting time.

Love Your Gloves Touching cold metal with bare hands is a good way to lose digits. “I've darn near had frostbite,” Mr. Theriot said. “I do my best not to take my gloves off.” To manage that, he uses presets on his camera, which can be programmed to his most common shutter and aperture setups, making it easy to switch between them. Mr. Theriot wears liners in case he needs to manipulate the settings. Over the liners are Thinsulate gloves, and over those, arctic gloves. “You either adapt or you don't get to shoot very long,” he said.



Q&A: Erasing Your Video-Viewing History

Q.

Does YouTube keep track of the videos I previously watched with my account? If so, how can I erase this information from Chrome?

A.

YouTube does track the viewing history of the videos watched from a YouTube account. Unless you were surfing the Web in “Incognito” mode, which does not keep track of the sites you visit, the Web browser's history list also shows the pages you have recently viewed. You can, however, clear both lists.

If you are logged into a YouTube account, click the triangle next to your user name up in the right corner and choose Video Manager from the menu. On the left side of the Video Manager page, click History to see a list of all the clips you have previously watched. Click the “Clear all viewing history” button to delete the list. If you just want to remove specific clips from the history list instead, select them by clicking the box next to the video thumbnail and then click th e Remove button.

You can also manage your history list from the main YouTube home page if you are logged into your account. Click Watch History on the left side of the window and then click the Manage button at the top of the history list to get to the “Clear all viewing history” button and other cleanup options. Reload the page to make sure your history list has been cleared.

To erase the Chrome Web browser's history list - which keeps track of all recent sites you have visited along with YouTube pages - click the Chrome menu on the right side of the toolbar (it is represented as an icon of three stacked lines). Select the Tools menu and then on the Tools submenu, choose Clear Browsing Data.

A box will pop up, giving options for erasing your browser's history and other information collected in the past hour, day, week, four weeks or the time since you started using Chrome. Make your selections and click the “Clear browsing data” button to erase you r Chrome history. Google has more information on clearing specific items from your Chrome history here.



If You\'re Tired of Instagram, Here Are Some Alternatives

Instagram has backpedaled furiously from its apparent effort to own all the photographs posted on its site.  But if you are looking for an alternative anyway, there are some.

First you need to understand what Instagram does. It adds artistic filters to your phone camera photos, which do things like enhance colors, make the background blurry or add a frame. Then it lets you share your shots with other Instagram users and popular social sites like Twitter. Or it used to. Since Facebook bought Instagram, you can no longer post your photos directly on Twitter. Instead it posts a link. There are workarounds though.

Which brings us to the first alternative. Twitter. The social site has added its own sets of photo effects so you don't need Instagram. Using the Twitter app on an Android or iPhone, tap on the new post icon, then the camera icon. Take your photo, then use the controls that appear at the bottom of the screen. It's pretty intuitive, and you will benefit b y experimenting.

Snapseed, a free photo editing app owned by Google, offers a great deal more flexibility in editing images than most free filter programs. It not only has a range of filters, but also has control that let you customize each effect. Although it has one button for sharing to Google's social site Google+, you need a workaround to share to Facebook and Twitter. All you have to do is save your completed photo, then you can go find it in your gallery. Share it from there as you would any photo. It is available for Androids and iPhones.

Finally there is Hipstamatic. I never saw the point in it since it charged $2 and did basically the same things that Instagram did for free. But one point in its favor would be that it has never tried to make a rights grab for your photos. It differs from most filter apps because you choose your filter (by picking a virtual film and lens) before you take the shot. It comes with three styles of film and lenses that can be combined for different looks. Additional effects are for sale. Perhaps spotting an opportunity, Hipstamatic is currently on sale for 99 cents. Hipstamatic also features one button sharing with Twitter and Facebook.

There are dozens more. If you have a favorite, feel free to share in a comment.



Our Favorite Holiday Gifts

As you can imagine, the technology reporters and editors of the New York Times love tech, so many of the gifts they gave and received during the holidays were tech-related.

Some picked their favorites (and took a guess at the prices):

Portable Charging Station. (AviiQ; $60) I travel a lot and I travel with at least four electronic devices that need frequent rechargings. This charging station is a zippered vinyl case, much like a shaving kit or toiletries kit looked like before the TSA forced us all into plastic bags. Neatly arranged inside are USB ports to plug in the wires and a capstan to wind up the wires out of the way. The USB port is attached to an electrical plug. So I no longer will have to deal with a tangle of wires in my bag or - and this is so important - leave rechargers behind in hotel rooms. DAMON DARLIN

Hadley Pro Camera Bag (Billingham; $280). When I'm not writing on a keyboard, I'm often out documenting the underbelly of a city with my L eica camera. It has been difficult finding the right bag that is inconspicuous enough to hold an expensive camera, laptop and iPad while I'm shooting. A new camera bag made by Billingham seems to be the perfect accessory for my equipment. It is designed to fit a DSLR or rangefinder camera and an extra lens, an 11-inch Macbook Air, and an iPad, Mini or biggie. There are also a few pouches in the front for wires, cables and additional SD cards. The bag comes in a few colors, including black, beige and an army green. NICK BILTON

Pizza stone and iPhone case. My family tends to dabble in low-tech gift giving tendencies. Books, artwork and chunky scarves are a bit more in their comfort zone. So this year for Christmas, I bought myself two techie accessories intended to make my life a bit more interesting. The first was a pizza stone, to make all of my pizza party dreams for 2013 a reality. Ceramic is supposed to be more porous than other materials, absorbing moisture and le aving behind a crispy, crunchy crust, the perfect vehicle for roasted tomatoes, cheese and anything else you throw on there.

I also bought a new case for my iPhone 5. It's white, to match the finish of my phone, and the back is covered with gold metal spikes. It's infinitely less practical than my previous case, a Speck SmartFlex Card, which is outfitted with a pocket that doubles as a wallet, but much more interesting and a guaranteed conversation starter. Despite its pointy exterior, the case is soft and fits snugly in a back pocket or even wedged between cheek and chin for taking the rare mobile phone call. Plus, I kept the Speck case around for afternoon jogs or evenings out when I don't feel like carrying a separate wallet or purse.

I found my latest case on Etsy, which is full of inventive and creative smartphone covers and cases.

The best techie gift I gave: A StickyGram gift certificate to my older sister, an Instagram fanatic. StickyGram is a servi ce that lets you turn your Instagram photos into cute refrigerator magnets. It costs $15 per set of 9 magnets, including shipping. JENNA WORTHAM

Streaming music system. Sonos Play:3; ($300) There are a lot of ways to cobble together a wireless system for streaming music to multiple rooms in your house at the same time, but none work as well as the products made by Sonos. The Play:3 is a speaker with a built-in wireless receiver that plays songs stored on my computer and from Pandora, Spotify and an array of other online music services. I've resisted buying Sonos products for years because of their price. I finally gave in after realizing the reliability and elegance of Sonos is worth it. NICK WINGFIELD



A Little Extra Power When You Need It

The Peak 6000 rechargeable power bank from MyCharge. The Peak 6000 rechargeable power bank from MyCharge.

Smartphones are convenient, until they run out of power. To help provide an extra jolt of juice, MyCharge has introduced a line of rechargeable power banks that are compatible with a variety of devices.

The power banks come with names like Sojourn, Voyage and Trek, suggesting that life is an adventure, so you better be prepared. The top-of-the-line model is the $100 Peak 6000, which can charge devices three ways: through an Apple dock connector, a micro USB connector or a USB port. The multiple connectors are tucked away like the ever-ready blades of a Swiss Army knife.

MyCharge claims that the Peak 6000 can provide an extra 27 hours of talk or 20 hours of browsing, and it comes fully charged, so you can technically use it right out of the box. However, the test unit that was supplied to me was dead on arrival. Fortunately, the Peak 6000 comes with fold-out prongs designed to charge the unit at a wall outlet.

After a full charge, which took about four hours, the Peak 6000 was able to charge my depleted iPad to only 72 percent, which took another couple of hours. Connecting the iPad directly to a wall outlet would have charged it fully in half the time. I found myself more concerned about getting the power bank charged than I did charging my own devices.

But the Peak 6000 was helpful on a recent train ride, when I became obsessed with the “LostWinds” iPad app. I didn't have immediate access to an outlet, and the app's graphics were draining the tablet's battery. Fortunately, the Peak 6000 gave me enough power to play the game for the entire four-hou r ride.

The Peak 6000 could charge a little faster, but when you really need an extra boost of power, it comes in handy.



Nine Ski Apps to Make the Most of the Mountain

Headed to the mountains for the holidays? Here are nine ski-friendly apps that will help you make the most of your trip.

1. Liftopia (Free, iOS)

Liftopia helps you ski cheaply. The app offers discounts of up to 80 percent off ski lift tickets and rentals at more than 150 ski resorts from Squaw Valley, Calif., to Park City, Utah, and at resorts as far away as South America, Alaska and the Alps.

A screengrab of the main menu on Waze in Android. A screengrab of the main menu on Waze in Android.

2. Waze (Free, iOS, Android, Windows, BlackBerry)

Waze helps get you to the mountain stress-free. This crowdsourced mapping app alerts users to traffic and accidents in real time. Once your ski buddies downlo ad the app, they can alert you to traffic jams, skid-offs, black ice, accidents and traffic jams. The app then gives the best driving directions based on that data. The more people use the app, the more precise the directions become. Waze got a big boost after Apple replaced Google with its own criticized map feature, then apologized and named Waze as a plausible alternative. Waze downloads jumped to 100,000 from 70,000 that day.

3. EpicMix (Free, iOS and Android)

Vail Resorts - which now owns the Vail, Beaver Creek, Breckenridge and Keystone resorts in Colorado, and Heavenly, Kirkwood and Northstar in California - has done an impressive job of modernizing the mountain. Vail's EpicMix app integrates with the radio-frequency identification, or RFID, technology in its lift tickets. Every time you hop on a lift and scan your pass, the app charts how many trails and vertical feet you've covered. Users win “pins” if they cover enough distance or ski enough resorts . They get an “Over the Moon” pin if they ski more than 350,000 vertical feet, for instance, or a “Connoisseur” pin if they ride more than 75 lifts. They can compete with other users and share stats on Facebook and Twitter. Vail recently added an EpicMix Racing app that lets users track their times and race other users down the mountain.

4. Ski and Snow Report (Free, iOS and Android)

Besides Vail, other ski resorts - like Squaw Valley in California and Telluride in Colorado - offer apps that give skiers and snowboarders a comprehensive peek at trail maps and snow and road conditions. Ski and Snow Report does the same for over 2,000 ski resorts around the world. You can customize the app to send you alerts if three or more inches fall at your favorite mountains. It integrates with Facebook and Twitter if you want to recruit ski buddies or just rub your freshies in their faces.

The EpicMix app. The EpicMix app.

5. Find My Friends (Free, iOS and Android)

Finally, an app that tells you exactly where your buddies are on the mountain. Once you and your friends successfully download the app and agree to share your location, Apple's Find My Friends app tells you precisely which chairlift your friends are on, or where they're hunkering down over some hot toddies.

6. Ski Tracks (99 cents, iOS and Android)

This app not only tracks your distance, but also your speed, altitude and slope angle, as well as the runs and vertical feet you've covered. But the best part is that it doesn't require a cellphone signal to work, which is ideal on the mountain, where reception is often spotty. Users can share their tracks - and any photos they took along the way - on Fa cebook or Google Earth.

7. Realski (Free, iOS)

This neat augmented reality app pulls in data from your phone's camera, compass and GPS. All you have to do is aim your phone like a camera and the names of chairlifts, restaurants, lodges and restrooms pop up in the view. It will even show you how difficult - on a scale of green, blue or black - a ski run is. The app works at over 100 ski resorts in North America from Alpine Meadows to Telluride to Whistler. As a bonus, Realski lets you geotag where you parked your car so you don't have to haul your skis and poles in circles around the parking lot at the end of a long day.

8. Pano ($1.99, iOS; $3.06, Android)

Cellphone cameras never quite do the mountain justice. Pano, a photo app, lets you aim your camera and move it along the view you want to capture, then merges the images together into surprisingly stunning panoramic shots.

9. SnoWhere ($9.99, iOS)

Back country enthusiasts would do well t o augment their avalanche beacon with the SnoWhere app, which converts a phone's GPS into a beacon. SnoWhere can help other users find you in the event you are lost, injured or - worst case situation - taken out by an avalanche.



In Speaker Dock, a Minimalist Home for the iPhone 5

The JBL OnBeat Micro speaker dock from Harman. The JBL OnBeat Micro speaker dock from Harman.

Capitalizing on the sudden need for iPhone 5 docking stations, Harman has released the JBL OnBeat Micro speaker dock that features the must-have Apple Lightning connector.

The $100 JBL OnBeat Micro is a redesigned version of its predecessor, the On Stage Micro. It still comes with an AC power adapter, which charges devices while they are docked, but the remote control was dropped.

The speaker dock is intended to be portable as well. It weighs less than a pound and is compact enough to fit in a purse or backpack. But its battery life offers only five hours of playback, which isn't much. It's probably better j ust to leave it plugged in.

The test unit that was sent to me for review did not include instructions, not that any were needed. It has only two buttons: power and volume. Pretty simple, right? You don't have to synch, download or fiddle with anything.

I was able to dock my iPhone 5 without removing its case, but thicker cases might not fit, because the Lightning connector is nestled flush in the bottom of the recessed dock. The dock is too small to house the iPad, full or Mini, but a USB port and a 3.5mm audio input in the back can accommodate most devices.

For a small speaker, the JBL OnBeat Micro produces surprisingly good sound, which filled my living room, tiny as it is. Even at high volumes, I didn't notice any distortion.

The JBL OnBeat Micro doesn't have all the bells and whistles of its rivals. There is no Bluetooth capability, rechargeable battery, alarm clock, AM/FM radio or speakerphone. But it is one of the few on the market with a Lightn ing connector, which raises its profile considerably.



Tip of the Week: Start Menu Alternatives for Windows 8

The new interface of Microsoft's Windows 8 operating system may be disorienting at first for those who have spent years automatically heading toward the Start menu. While the new Windows 8 Start screen is a colorful alternative for displaying frequently used programs, widgets and apps, it may not appeal as much to people who favor things in lists, or who are not using a touch-screen computer.

For quicker access to the system's popular places - like the desktop, Windows Explorer or the Control Panel - press the Windows key and the X key on the keyboard to see a menu pop up from the bottom left corner of the screen. To see a list of all the computer's installed apps, press the Windows and Q keys, or right-click the screen and click the All Apps button in the bottom right corner.

But if keyboard shortcuts will not cut it, a third-party utility that mimics the old Start screen may make Windows 8 more comfortable. Classic Shell and StartW8 are just two of the many S tart menu replacement programs available around the Web.



From a Tiny Projector, a Big Picture

The HDMI Pocket Projector from Brookstone. The HDMI Pocket Projector from Brookstone.

As consumers switch from laptops to tablets and smartphones, the makers of projectors are adapting.

Brookstone has come out with an HDMI Pocket Projector, which connects to multiple devices through an HDMI cable for a variety of uses, including presentations, videos, slide shows and games.

Measuring 3.8 inches by 3.9 inches, the compact projector is about the size of a thick piece of French toast. But Brookstone found room for a powerful Digital Light Processing chip from Texas Instruments, which it claims can project high-definition images up to 1080p at 60 inches diagonal on a flat surface.

The pro jector, which costs $300, comes with a three-inch HDMI cable, and micro and mini adapters. It has a rechargeable battery, which offers up to two hours of playback on a charge.

I tested the projector with my iPhone, which, like all Apple products, needed a special adapter. The connection was pretty simple, and within seconds, the screen of my iPhone was projected on the wall of my living room. The projector does not replicate the screen of all devices, however.

I tried the projector on a variety of applications, including playing with apps and watching YouTube clips and episodes of “The Simpsons” and “Planet Earth.” In each instance, the picture was remarkably clear and the colors bright from about three feet away, but even at eight feet the picture maintained most of its clarity. The device was surprisingly quiet when running and cool to the touch.

The only downside was the sound, which was weak and tinny coming from the projector's speakers. The pr ojector has an auxiliary jack that would enable the use of external speakers, but that defeats the purpose of having a pocket projector. You want it to work as a single unit; if you need to carry attachments, you might as well go back to using a laptop.



Q&A: Selling Your Own iBooks

Q.

If I use the iBooks Author program to create my own e-book, do I have to sell it through Apple's online bookstore?

A.

Apple's iBooks Author software for the Mac lets you design your own interactive e-books with templates and built-in widgets. According to its frequently asked questions page, Apple requires that the finished work be sold in its iBookstore only if you keep it in the .ibooks format and want to sell the book for money.

To put a book up for sale in Apple's online store, sign up for an iTunes Connect account to get the software and information you need to upload your creation to the iBookstore. Apple's fee for distributing your book in its store is 30 percent of the purchase price.

If you do not plan to charge money for your book, or you export the final version as a PDF document or a text file, you are not limited to sales through the iBookstore and can distribute it elsewhere.

The iB ooks Author software is free and works on Mac OS X 10.7.4 or later. More information and a link to download the program are here. Apple's site offers a guide to using the software as well.



Forget the Sleigh, Bring On Air Force One

Of all the first lady's official duties, the Christmas Eve phone calls to young children eagerly anticipating news of Santa's arrival must rank among the least prone to complication.

But on Monday, Michelle Obama had an exchange with a young man who wouldn't take no for an answer when he asked her to visit him. Then, evidently displeased with her politely noncommittal answer, asked to talk to her husband.

When Mrs. Obama informed a young man identified by the White House as Anthony from Texas that military satellites had detected Santa's sleigh somewhere over Italy, he was quick to change the subject.

The following is an edited transcript of the conversation, released by the White House.

MRS. OBAMA: I'm working with the people who track Santa by satellite, and I'm looking at the screen right now and they say that - it's showing that he was last spotted in Italy - Venice, Italy. Can you imagine that? He's al l the way in Europe. And in about 20 seconds he's going to be headed for Croatia.

ANTHONY: Can you come visit me in Texas?

MRS. OBAMA: Yeah, he's heading your way. He's heading your way. But you know what, Santa doesn't come until you're fast asleep. You do know that, right?

ANTHONY: Yeah, I was talking about you trying to visit me.

MRS. OBAMA: Oh, me come to visit you. (Laughter.) Well, I don't know if I'm going to be able to come and visit before Christmas tomorrow, but if ever I find myself in Texas next year - and I know I'm going to be coming to Texas one time next year - hopefully we can see each other then. How does that sound?

ANTHONY: Will you come to my house?

MRS. OBAMA: Yeah, I don't know if I can come to your house. I might not be able to do that. But I'll be keeping an eye on you, though.

ANTHONY: How about my school?

MRS. OBAMA: Your school - maybe your school. What school do you go to?

ANTHONY: (Inaudible) .

MRS. OBAMA: All right, well, I'm going to tell my assistant right now. What part of Texas are you from?

ANTHONY: Fort Worth.

MRS. OBAMA: You're at Fort Worth? I was in Fort Worth last year. So maybe we can come back. But until then, I want you to have a merry Christmas, okay Anthony?

ANTHONY: Okay.

MRS. OBAMA: All right, you give your family my best - what did you say, babe?

ANTHONY: Can I talk to your husband?

MRS. OBAMA: He's not here right now. (Laughter.) But you know what, I will tell him that you asked about him. Okay?

ANTHONY: Okay.

MRS. OBAMA: All right. You keep being a good kid. Work hard in school, okay?

ANTHONY: Okay. Tell your daughters I said Merry Christmas.

MRS. OBAMA: I sure will. Thank you so much. You give your family my best, okay? You give them all a Merry Christmas from all of the Obamas, okay?

ANTHONY: Okay. Thank you.

MRS. OBAMA: All right, bye-bye.

ANTHONY: Bye-bye.



A Gaming Laptop That\'s Quick and Costly

The word “extreme” may be overused in describing male-dominated activities like the X Games or the cinnamon challenge, but it fits the bill when it comes to the Razer Blade gaming laptop.

It is extremely fast, extremely thin and extremely expensive.

I don't play computer games so I turned the Razer Blade over to two lifelong gamers, Evan and Morgan Dilks. Evan, as the owner of the Firehouse Coffee Company in Baltimore, has spent plenty of caffeinated play time on game consoles, like the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 he currently owns.

The pair tried out Battlefield 3, which came preinstalled for demonstration on the machine. “One of the pros was how fast it was,” said Evan. “The processor is just crazy.” That crazy processor is an Intel Core i7, a quad-core chip found in some high end Macs.

That speed is paired with a 17.3-inch high-definition screen impressive enough that the brothers spent some time watching videos on it. Although the laptop is almost 11-by-17-inches to accommodate the screen, it is less than an inch thick and weighs 6.6 pounds, relatively light for a laptop this size. Part of the way Razer kept it thin was by omitting an optical drive.

What really sets it apart from other laptops is the Switchblade user interface. That is an LCD trackpad that shows game information, like who in your player group is inflicting the most damage on foes. Evan said his brother Morgan adjusted more easily to the controls than he did, but he caught on eventually.

There are also 10 buttons above the trackpad that change their assigned functions depending on the game. They can represent different weapons, and automate actions that would normally take se veral steps, like drawing and loading a firearm. Or you can create your own custom actions, even for non-gaming software, like if you wanted to use the laptop for Photoshop.

What the brothers did not like about the Razer Blade was the price: $2,500. “That is a huge investment,” said Evan. “Add in accessories like a sound system, headset, game and gaming subscription, and special controllers you might need, and the price keeps rising.”



Q&A: Finding a Simplified Smartphone

Q.

Are there any smartphones designed for the eager-to-learn, but still-on-training-wheels senior citizen?

A.

With the right amount of help and training, many people - regardless of age - can learn the basics of smartphone operation. To help make things easier for those who do not have a lot of experience or patience with modern gadgetry, some manufacturers are making smartphones specifically designed to be easier to use.

Such products include the Pantech Flex, an Android smartphone that offers an optional Easy Experience interface with larger text and home screen shortcut buttons. GreatCall, which makes the big-buttoned Jitterbug flip phone, now has a touch-screen smartphone, the Jitterbug Touch.

The Doro PhoneEasy 740, another simplified Android handset with a large touch screen and a keyboard, is scheduled for introduction in the United States next spring. The CNET site has an early review of the PhoneE asy 740.

If a bigger screen is the most desired feature, standard smartphones like Samsung's Galaxy Note line, which has a 5.3-inch display and can be used with a stylus, may be easier to use than a smartphone with a smaller screen. Apple's iPhone 5 model features a more petite four-inch screen, but Apple offers free workshops for new users at its Apple Stores in most major cities.



Booker Opts Not to Run for Governor, but Considers Senate Bid

In Today's Times:

President Obama plans to make gun control a higher priority in his second term in the wake of the Connecticut school massacre. Michael D. Shear reports that Mr. Obama has named Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. to lead an interagency effort to develop the White House's approach to curbing gun violence, and he plans to start sending proposals to Congress in January. Mr. Obama will also address the topic in his State of the Union speech next month.

Negotiations to avoid the automatic tax increases and broad spending cuts set to kick in next year appear closer to a deadlock than a deal after Mr. Obama and Speaker John A. Boehner of Ohio reached an impasse on Wednesday. Jackie Calmes and Jonathan Weisman writ e that with time running out, the House is set to vote today on Mr. Boehner's “Plan B,” despite Senate opposition and a veto threat from Mr. Obama.

A central player in the fiscal negotiations leads a double life as a top Congressional aide and a local councilman, Michael D. Shear writes. The aide, Steve Stombres, the chief of staff to Representative Eric Cantor, the Republican majority leader, has a reputation on the Fairfax City Council and on Capitol Hill that could bode well for the fiscal talks - he is know as an intense negotiator who is eager to reach a deal.

A scathing report on the security conditions that left a diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya, vulnerable to attack has led to the ouster of four State Department officials. Michael R. Gordon and Eric Schmitt write that the report said officials' lack of leadership and a culture of “husbanding resources” contributed to insecurities at the compound, where Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three other Americans were killed on Sept. 11. Two deputy secretaries of state are expected to testify today on Capitol Hill about the attacks.

Around the Web:
Medicare officials began the formal steps to carry out a 27 percent cut in doctors' payments, as the possibility of a temporary patch to prevent the cut remains ensnared in fiscal negotiations, according to The Hill.

Happening in Washington:

Economic data expected today include third-quarter gross domestic product and weekly jobless claims at 8:30 a.m., followed at 10 by leading indicators for November, existing home sales for last month, and weekly mortgage rates.

William F. Burns, the deputy secretary of state, and Thomas R. Nides, the deputy secretary of state for management and resources, testify about the Sept. 11 attacks in Benghazi, Libya, at two hearings: an 8 a.m. session with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and a 1 p.m. session of the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
At 10, public viewing begins in the Capitol Rotunda for Senator Daniel K. Inouye of Hawaii, who died on Monday.

In the afternoon, the House is expected to vote on Speaker John A. Boehner's “Plan B,” a measure to raise tax rates only on incomes over $1 million, and another measure to replace automatic spending cuts set to kick in next year.



Two Inaugural Balls to Honor Obama Guests and Military Families

Booker Studies Bid for Senate, Not Governor

Despite pressure from party leaders, Mayor Cory A. Booker of Newark will not challenge Gov. Chris Christie for re-election next year in New Jersey, deciding instead to focus on making a bid for a Senate seat in two years.

Cory A. Booker, the mayor of Newark.

“Let there be no doubt, I will complete my full second term as mayor,” Mr. Booker wrote on his Web site. “As for my political future, I will explore the possibility of running for the United States Senate in 2014.”

Mr. Booker, seen by many as a rising political star, was considered by Democrats to be their best hope to unseat Mr. Christie, a Republican. Mr. Christie's popularity, however, has surged since Hurricane Sandy, and Mr. Booker, who has faced growing criticism in his second term that he has been more focused on publicity than the mundane work of managing, most likely would have faced an uphill battle, according to the most recent polls.

The decision to skip the race for governor, which Mr. Booker shared with party leaders before his announcement, clears the path for someone else to challenge Mr. Christie. A number of Democrats have expressed interest in taking on one of the nation's most prominent and provocative political figures.

Mr. Booker's interest in running for federal office raises the prospect of a possible primary battle with the Democratic incumbent, Senator Frank R. Lautenberg. Mr. Lautenberg, 88, has served five terms in Washington, and despite being the oldest current senator, he has not hinted that he plans to retire. He already has more than $400,000 in the bank for a re-election campaign and a personal fortune he can tap into.

In his announcement, Mr. Booker was careful to praise Mr. Lautenberg, even as he made it clear he wanted his job.

“As I explore a run for the United States Senate, I look forward to consulting with Senator Lautenberg,” the mayor wrote. “During my lifetime, he has been one of New Jersey's most important leaders. It would be a privilege to continue his great legacy of service.”

A spokesman for Mr. Lautenberg, who declined a request for an interview, issued a statement: “Senator Lautenberg is focused on passing a critical disaster relief bill for New Jersey and addressing America's broken gun laws. The last several months and weeks have been a painful time for New Jersey and America, and the senator is working on the tough issues we face. This is not the time for political distractions, and the senator will address politics next year.”

Though Senator Charles E. Schumer of New York, the vice chairman of the Senate Democratic conference, has expressed his support and desire to see Mr. Lautenberg hold on to his seat, party leaders in Washington have privately expressed concerns about Mr. Lautenberg's age. To those around him, he appears to be as engaged as ever in his job, holding hearings, introducing legislation and appearing at public events, but the World War II veteran and businessman would be 90 by the time he started another six-year term.

Leading Democrats say that they do not want to discourage potential candidates from exploring the possibility of a run. And in Mr. Booker's case, many Democrats see a young, energetic politician and gifted fund-raiser who would be able to defend the seat against even a strong Republican challenger.

Even if Mr. Lautenberg does not seek re-election, Mr. Booker may not have a clear path to the Senate seat. The State Senate president and the speaker of the State Assembly - both with close ties to the state's political bosses, the president in the south, the speaker in the north - have told party leaders they are interested in running. And Representative Frank Pallone Jr., a 13-term Democrat from Monmouth County, has already begun calling party leaders in the counties to tell them he is interested in running, aides said.

Some New Jersey Democrats were disappointed that Mr. Booker would not run for governor.

“He is an attractive candidate,” said Assemblyman John S. Wisniewski, chairman of the state Democratic Party. “However, New Jersey Democrats have a number of talented, experienced individuals on our bench who would make both excellent candidates and excellent governors.”

Kate Zernike contributed reporting.

A version of this article appeared in print on December 21, 2012, on page A25 of the New York edition with the headline: Booker Studies Bid for Senate, Not Governor.

The Caucus: Paying Final Respects

President Obama will hold just two official inaugural balls â€" one for guests of his choosing, with some limited tickets for the public, and the other to honor military families â€" after he takes the oath of office to begin his second term, inaugural planners said Thursday.

Mr. Obama held 10 official inaugural balls â€" including a low-cost Youth Ball for people age 18 to 35 - in 2009, but the president wants a scaled-down celebration in 2013. The planners said that Mr. Obama and his wife, Michelle, would attend both official balls, which will take place Monday, Jan. 21, after his public swearing-in ceremony and the traditional inaugural parade.

The balls will fill every hall of the 2.3 million-square-foot Washin gton Convention Center, according to an official with Mr. Obama's inaugural planning committee, who spoke anonymously because the events have not yet been announced. The official said planners wanted to keep the dances Mr. Obama attends confined to one space, to minimize the need for security.

In holding a “Commander-in-Chief's Ball,'' Mr. Obama is continuing a practice begun by his predecessor, George W. Bush, at his second inaugural in 2005. (Mr. Obama also held a military ball for his first inauguration.)

Tickets will go to active-duty members of the military, reservists, Medal of Honor recipients, wounded veterans and their spouses. The Defense Department and the Joint Task Force for the National Capital Region, which oversees military support for the inaugural festivities, will select the guests.

While most of the inaugural parties are for adults, Mrs. Obama and Jill Biden, the wife of Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., will also host a concert the Saturday before the inauguration for children whose parents are serving in the armed forces. An inaugural committee spokeswoman, Addie Whisenant, said the Obamas and Bidens want to “continue the tradition of honoring America's brave service members and their families.”

In addition to the two official parties, members of Mr. Obama's national finance committee have been told that there will be a candlelight ball for them on Jan. 20 and that the Obamas would attend, according to a donor who has been briefed on the preparations.



White House Asks Police for Help in Shaping Gun Control Policy

Sen. Daniel Inouye of Hawaii, who died Monday at 88, laid in state in the Capitol rotunda on Thursday. A ceremony attended by Senate and House leaders celebrated his long tenure in government.Brendan Hoffman for The New York Times Sen. Daniel Inouye of Hawaii, who died Monday at 88, laid in state in the Capitol rotunda on Thursday. A ceremony attended by Senate and House leaders celebrated his long tenure in government.

TimesCast Politics: The Push for Gun Control

The White House recruited national law enforcement leaders on Thursday to help shape a response to last week's school shootings in Connecticut, hoping to use the credibility of America's police officers to build support for measures curbing the spread of assault weapons.

Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. met with a dozen leaders of police and sheriff's organizations, including police chiefs from Pennsylvania, Florida, Maryland and Virginia, as he kicked off a task force to develop proposals by next month. By enlisting police officers, the White House hoped to blunt criticism by conservatives wary of gun regulations.

“You're the first group that I wanted to speak with” after being assigned by President Obama to produce a plan to reduce mass killings, Mr. Biden told the group during a few minutes of remarks in front of reporters. “I want to hear your views because for anything to get done, we're going to need your advocacy. We're going to need your advocac y with law enforcement organizations in this country.”

Mr. Biden noted that he worked with many of the same groups nearly two decades ago when as a senator he helped usher through Congress a crime bill that included a ban on assault weapons. That ban passed in 1994 but expired in 2004, and its effectiveness was debated. Mr. Biden repeated President Obama's support for renewing it and suggested they would seek more limits even if “we can only save one life.”

After reporters were ushered out of the room, Mr. Biden solicited ideas from the gathered police officers. One person who was in the room said it was an open-ended discussion of what might work rather than an attempt by the White House to dictate what it planned to do. The visiting law enforcement leaders were then asked to come up with spe cific ideas and send them to the White House.

“I‘ve been in Washington over 20 years and this was unique, it really was,” Chuck Wexler, executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum and a participant in the session, said in an interview afterward. “It was almost like you were sitting at a domestic national security meeting. There is a sense of importance and urgency to this issue, which is impressive.”

Mr. Biden was joined by high-ranking cabinet and White House officials, including Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr.; Janet Napolitano, the homeland security secretary; Arne Duncan, the education secretary; Kathleen Sebelius, the health and human services secretary; and Valerie Jarrett, the president's senior adviser.

The guests included Charles H. Ramsey, the police commissioner of Philadelphia and president of both the Police Executive Research Forum and the Major Cities Chiefs Association; Thomas J. Nee, a Boston police officer and t he president of the National Association of Police Organizations; James Pasco, the executive director of the Fraternal Order of Police; Rich Stanek, the sheriff of Hennepin County, Minn., and the president of the Major County Sheriffs' Association; and Walter McNeil, the police chief of Quincy, Fla., and the immediate past president of the International Association of Chiefs of Police.

After the meeting, Mr. Holder traveled to Newtown, Conn., to meet with investigators and with police officers who were among the first to respond to the school where a gunman shot to death 26 people, including 20 children, then killed himself.

A new poll released Thursday suggested a shift in public attitudes toward gun control since the massacre but still suggested the challenge Mr. Obama and Mr. Biden will have in persuading Congress.

Just under half of all America ns, or 49 percent, now say it is more important to control gun ownership, while 42 percent said it was more important to protect the rights of Americans to own guns, according to the Pew Research Center. This represented the first time since Mr. Obama took office that significantly more Americans prioritized control over rights. But it was still far lower than the 66 percent who picked gun control over gun rights more than a decade ago.



When Reality and Perception Part Ways

Luke Sharrett for The New York Times
  • 0:01  A Gun Politics History Lesson

    Michael Cooper discusses the politics of earlier mass shootings and looks at how gun restriction laws have been written in the past.

  • 6:25  One-on-One With Patrick Gaspard

    Jeff Zeleny interviews Patrick Gaspard, the executive director of the Democratic National Committee, about how his party will approach fights on Capitol Hi ll and at the ballot box.

  • 9:27  Catching Up on the Debt Talks

    Annie Lowrey talks to Maya MacGuineas of the “Fix the Debt” campaign about the latest in the fiscal negotiations, and we listen in to House Speaker John A. Boehner's press conference.

  • 21:35  Booker's Next Steps

    Mayor Cory Booker of Newark, Democrats' best hope to challenge Gov. Chris Christie in New Jersey, said he will consider a Senate run in 2014 instead.



The Early Word: Setback

In Today's Times:

  • Speaker John A. Boehner's latest attempts to avert a year-end fiscal crisis came to an abrupt halt Thursday after House Republicans refused to back his fallback plan to allow taxes to rise on the most affluent households, representing an embarrassing setback for Mr. Boehner, Jonathan Weisman reports.
  • Because of gaps in the Federal Bureau of Investigation's database of criminal and mental health records, thousands of people who should be barred from being able to purchase firearms are slipping through the cracks, Michael S. Schmidt and Charlie Savage report.
  • Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts, the leading candidate to become the next secretary of state, said Thursday that the United States should take another look at how the military might play a greater role in protecting diplomats abroad after the September attacks in Benghazi, Libya, Eric Schmitt and Michael R. Gordon report.

Washington Happenings:

  • President Obama and Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. will speak at the funeral of Senator Daniel K. Inouye of Hawaii in Washington on F riday.
  • The N.R.A. is scheduled to hold a press conference at 10:45 a.m. Friday on last week's shootings.


Obama Asks Supporters to Push Congress on Gun Control

President Obama sought on Friday to enlist supporters to mount a public lobbying campaign on behalf of gun control in the wake of the mass killings in Newtown, Conn., suggesting that Congress would listen only if forced to by a populist backlash to gun violence.

In a video posted on the White House Web site, Mr. Obama responded to a pet ition demanding action on gun control. “We hear you,” the president said as he again vowed to push to Congress in the new year to ban assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition clips.

“I can't do it alone,” he added. “I need your help. If we're going to succeed, it's going to take a sustained effort from mothers and fathers, daughters and sons, law enforcement and responsible gun owners, organizing, speaking up, calling their members of Congress as many times as it takes, standing up and saying enough on behalf of all our kids. That's how change happens.”

The video suggested that Mr. Obama might make a more serious effort to advance gun control than he had after previous multiple shootings during his presidency. Until now, Mr. Obama typically responded with words of grief and commitment, calling again on lawmakers to renew an expired assault weapon ban but not making a concerted effort to rally supporters to his si de and pressure Congress. This time will be different, Mr. Obama said earlier in the week, calling gun violence a “central issue” for his second term.

Mr. Obama posted his video pitch for help just hours before the National Rifle Association planned to hold a Washington news conference providing its first extended response to the massacre in Newtown, Conn., that claimed the lives of 27 people, including 20 children, plus the gunman, who shot himself.

Mr. Obama was careful to express respect for what he called the “strong tradition of gun ownership” in the United States. In exit polls, 42 percent of voters in 2008 reported having a gun in their house or property, while a 2011 Gallup survey found that 47 percent of Americans had a gun at home, the highest since 1993.

The president said he believed the Second Amendment guaranteed an individual right to own guns and added that most gun owners “are responsible.” But he added: “It's encouraging that many gun owners have stepped up this week to say there are steps we can take to prevent more tragedies like the one in Newtown, steps that both protect our rights and protect our kids,” he said.

The video was posted in response to a petition posted on a section of the White House Web site open to submiss ions from the public. The petition to “immediately address the issue of gun control through the introduction of legislation in Congress” has gathered about 200,000 signatures since it was posted within hours of the shootings last Friday.

That was the second-highest number of signatures for any petition on the White House site, behind the nearly 233,000 who signed one demanding that the president designate as a “hate group” the Westboro Baptist Church, known for staging virulently anti-gay protests at military funerals.

No. 6 on the list expressed another view on the gun debate. “We ask President Obama to support law abiding gun owners in this time of tragedy,” it said, gathering about 57,000 signatures.< /p>

The White House petition section draws a variety of serious and far-fetched suggestions. More than 121,000 have signed a petition to allow Texas to secede from the Union, and others have sought secession for Louisiana, Florida, Georgia, Tennessee, North Carolina and Alabama. About 41,000 used the White House site to demand the impeachment of its occupant, Mr. Obama. Another 31,000 signed one asking the president to begin construction of a Death Star, as in “Star Wars,” by 2016.

But the White House hopes to tap into its base of supporters to raise the stakes fo r Congress, which has not passed a major gun control measure since 1994, when the original assault weapon ban was enacted only to trigger a backlash among gun rights supporters who helped vote out the Democratic majorities.

Follow Peter Baker on Twitter at @peterbakernyt.



With Nomination, Kerry Has Chance to Reshape Résumé

After the 2004 presidential election, John Kerry delivered his concession speech at Faneuil Hall following a tense night of ballot counting by election officials in Ohio.Chris Hondros/Getty Images After the 2004 presidential election, John Kerry delivered his concession speech at Faneuil Hall following a tense night of ballot counting by election officials in Ohio.

Senator John Kerry's nomination to be secretary of state makes him something of a throwback. He is an unsuccessful nominee for president who appears set to ascend to a major new political position following his loss.

If he is confirmed, he will become the first losing general-election candidate to do so since Richard Nixon recovered from his close 1960 loss to John F. Kennedy to win the presidency in 1968.

Since then, failed presidential nominees - Barry M. Goldwater, Hubert H. Humphrey Jr., George S. McGovern, Walter F. Mondale, Michael Dukakis, Bob Dole, Al Gore, Mr. Kerry, John McCain and Mitt Romney - have not disappeared. They have sometimes remained active in the Senate or, in the case of Mr. Gore, even won a Nobel Prize. But they have not taken on a new job with the chance to reshape their résumés.

The postelection career opportunities of losing candidates used to be different. A pr esidential loss was once a springboard. John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, John Quincy Adams, and Andrew Jackson all lost the general election before winning the presidency. (In the early years of the country, the second-place finisher in the presidential electio n became vice president.)

DeWitt Clinton, who lost the presidency to James Madison in 1812, later became governor of New York. Adlai Stevenson served as ambassador to the United Nations under Mr. Kennedy after losing to Dwight Eisenhower in 1952 and 1956. Mr. Nixon ran for governor of California in 1962, and lost, before winning the presidency.

More recently, the saturation of media coverage surrounding presidential elections has created a problematic image for unsuccessful nominees. They and their families become the subject of intense attention, only - it seems - to be rejected by the country. Candidates who lose the nomination and receive less attention, by contrast, find it easier to run again or take on wholly new roles.

Mr. Kerry has experienced the problems of losing the general election himself. His line about a bill to pay for the Iraq War - “I actually did vote for the $87 billion before I voted against it” - has become a standard political joke, and Mr. Romney's struggles in the 2012 campaign were sometimes compared to Mr. Kerry's in 2004.

Yet he is on the verge of overcoming those problems in a way that no other politician has in almost a half century.

Follow David Leonhardt on Twitter at @DLeonhardt.



Hagel Apologizes About Remarks Against Gay Diplomat

Chuck Hagel, a candidate for secretary of defense whose record on gay-rights issues has come under fire in recent days, apologized on Friday for remarks he made as a senator that an openly gay man nominated for a diplomatic post should not represent the United States.

“My remarks 14 years ago in 1998 were insensitive,” Mr. Hagel said in a statement, referring to a newspaper interview he gave about James C. Hormel, a San Francisco philanthropist nominated by President Bill Clinton as ambassador to Luxembourg.

Senator Chuck Hagel.Nati Harnik/Associated Press Senator Chuck Hagel.

“They do not reflect my views or the totality of my public record, and I apologize to Ambassador Hormel and any L.G.B.T. Americans who may question my commitment to their civil rights,” Mr. Hagel said. “I am fully supportive of ‘open service' and committed to L.G.B.T. military families.”

Since Mr. Hagel's name emerged as a candidate for the Pentagon last week, he has been sharply criticized for his record on Iran, Israel and militant groups like Hamas and Hezbollah, as well as comments he made about pro-Israel lobbying groups in Washington.

Mr. Hagel has not addressed those criticisms, though his office has circulated letters attesting to his qualifications, signed by retired military commanders and senior diplomats.

In 1998, Mr. Hagel, a Republican and a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, was approached by his fellow Nebraskan in the Senate, Bob Kerrey, on behalf of Mr. Hormel, whos e nomination was being held up by conservative Republicans.

Mr. Hagel did not oppose the nomination when Mr. Hormel came before the panel. But he later came out against it, saying that an “openly, aggressively gay” man should not be a representative of the United States.

“They are representing America,” Mr. Hagel said in an interview with The Omaha World-Herald. “They are representing our lifestyle, our values, our standards. And I think it is an inhibiting factor to be gay - openly, aggressively gay like Mr. Hormel - to do an effective job.”

Although Republicans succeeded in preventing a vote on the nomination, Mr. Hormel received a recess appointment from Mr. Clinton and went on to serve in Luxembourg.

Gay rights groups said Mr. Hagel's commen ts raised questions about his ability to implement the repeal of the law prohibiting openly gay people from serving in the military. In 1999, he said he opposed repealing the law, telling The New York Times that “the U.S. armed forces aren't some social experiment.”

But some activists welcomed his apology on Friday.

“We are pleased that Senator Hagel recognized the importance of retracting his previous statement about Ambassador Hormel and affirming his commitment to Don't Ask, Don't Tell repeal and L.G.B.T. military families,” said  Allyson Robinson, an Army veteran and executive director of OutServe-SLDN, a gay rights organization. “We look forward to learning more about his commitment to full L.G.B.T. military equality as this nomination and confirmation process unfolds.”

White House officials say that Mr. Obama had not made a decision about the Pentagon job. Officials said the short list also included Michèle A. Flournoy, a former undersec retary of defense, and Ashton B. Carter, who serves as deputy defense secretary.

The White House on Thursday declined to respond to criticism of Mr. Hagel, but the press secretary, Jay Carney, described him as “a remarkable servant to this country.”

The president will announce the nomination of Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts as secretary of state Friday afternoon.