Friday, August 31, 2012

Dawn spacecraft leaving huge asteroid

NASA's Dawn probe is gearing up to depart the giant asteroid Vesta next week and begin the long trek to the dwarf planet Ceres, the largest object in the asteroid belt.

The Dawn spacecraft is slated to leave Vesta on the night of Sept. 4 (early morning Sept. 5 EDT), ending a 14-month stay at the 330-mile-wide (530 kilometers) body. The journey to Ceres should take roughly 2.5 years, with Dawn reaching the dwarf planet in early 2015, researchers said.

"Thrust is engaged, and we are now climbing away from Vesta atop a blue-green pillar of xenon ions," Dawn chief engineer and mission director Marc Rayman, of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., said in a statement. "We are feeling somewhat wistful about concluding a fantastically productive and exciting exploration of Vesta, but now have our sights set on dwarf planet Ceres."

Dawn is spiraling away from Vesta as gently as it arrived last year. The spacecraft uses super-efficient ion propulsion, which generates thrust by ionizing xenon atoms with electricity. [ Photos: Asteroid Vesta by Dawn Probe ]

The $466 million Dawn mission launched in 2007 to explore Vesta and Ceres, huge and ancient objects that have borne witness to most of the solar system's history. Scientists hope Dawn's observations of these two bodies can shed light on our cosmic neighborhood's earliest days.

Dawn's stay at Vesta revealed that the massive space rock is a complex, layered body with an iron core. Based on these observations, researchers have concluded that Vesta is actually a long-surviving protoplanet ? a planetary building block like those that coalesced to form rocky planets such as Earth and Mars.

Vesta appears to be the only such building block left, as the others were incorporated into planets or destroyed by collisions long ago, researchers said. Vesta itelf has taken a beating, with Dawn spotting craters from two colossal impacts over the past two billion years.

One of these craters, called Rheasilvia, spans 314 miles (505 km) ? nearly Vesta's entire diameter.

"We went to Vesta to fill in the blanks of our knowledge about the early history of our solar system," said Dawn principal investigator Christopher Russell, of UCLA. "Dawn has filled in those pages, and more, revealing to us how special Vesta is as a survivor from the earliest days of the solar system. We can now say with certainty that Vesta resembles a small planet more closely than a typical asteroid."

  1. Space news from NBCNews.com

    1. Saturn changes color with the seasons

      Science editor Alan Boyle's blog: Saturn's shades of blue and butterscotch are changing along with the planet's seasons, as illustrated by true-color photos from the Cassini orbiter.

    2. Uwingu space-game venture boosts SETI
    3. Curiosity begins first long Mars road trip
    4. NASA discovers black hole 'bonanza'

Dawn traveled about 1.7 billion miles (2.7 billion km) to reach Vesta, and the trip to the 590-mile-wide (950 km) Ceres will roll the probe's odometer reading up to 3 billion miles (5 billion km) or so, officials said.

Follow Space.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcomand on Facebook.

? 2012 Space.com. All rights reserved. More from Space.com.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/48847219/ns/technology_and_science-space/

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Analysis: Mexico's Pena Nieto to focus first on clean government

MEXICO CITY | Fri Aug 31, 2012 3:09pm EDT

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Enrique Pena Nieto cast himself as an economic reformer to win the Mexican presidency but, after facing accusations of vote-rigging, his immediate focus is likely to be tackling his party's reputation for corruption.

Pena Nieto is set to take office in December after the electoral tribunal on Thursday threw out a bid by leftist rival Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador to annul the July 1 election.

Nevertheless, the vote-buying and money-laundering claims and a series of street protests tainted Pena Nieto's victory and likely will color early legislative efforts by his Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, which fell short of a majority in Congress and will need opposition support to pass laws.

The telegenic Pena Nieto, 46, is likely to bide his time on promoting tricky economic reforms until he is firmly installed, focusing first on showing a commitment to clean government and seeing next year's budget through Congress.

The job of ringing the bell for economic change in the new Congress, which begins on Saturday, is likely to fall first to outgoing President Felipe Calderon, who officials say will throw his weight behind a new drive to overhaul antiquated labor laws.

Calderon's past efforts to win congressional backing for economic reforms were blocked by the PRI for tactical reasons in opposition but since the party won the presidency campaigning in favor of very similar measures, labor reform has a fair chance of approval before Pena Nieto takes office on December 1.

Mindful that tough economic reforms will face opposition and that it does not have a majority, the PRI has signaled it will first seek deals on measures to reduce corruption, boost governmental transparency and oversee ties between the media and elected officials.

"These three reforms will be a priority for us," Manuel Anorve, a senior incoming PRI congressman told Reuters.

Establishing stronger curbs against abuses of political power and imposing tighter controls on election advertising are at the heart of the proposed measures.

Although the electoral court ruled Lopez Obrador had failed to prove that Pena Nieto's centrist PRI broke the law, critics say the election campaign at the very least showed there is still not a level playing field, and that the winner was helped by a cozy relationship with Mexico's top broadcaster, Televisa.

FAMILIAR ALLEGATIONS

By concentrating on political reform at the outset, Pena Nieto will try to blunt accusations long leveled against the PRI but it means his once-vaunted tax and energy reforms will probably take a back seat until after his new administration draws up the 2013 budget in late December.

The PRI governed Mexico for 71 consecutive years until 2000, a rule that was beset by allegations of graft, dirty tricks, collusion with the media and a hard line against dissent.

Lopez Obrador tapped into those memories in this year's election campaign, raising pressure on Pena Nieto to show he is serious about leaving the PRI's checkered past behind.

Shady dealings continue to haunt the party as federal prosecutors said this week an order had been issued for the arrest of Tomas Yarrington, a fugitive former PRI state governor suspected of working with drug cartels.

The smear of criminality helped fuel street protests during the election campaign. They ate into Pena Nieto's once-huge opinion poll lead and denied him a majority in Congress.

That was a blow to his planned reforms to the labor market, the tax system and state oil monopoly Pemex, which he hopes will help boost economic growth to about six percent a year.

Top PRI lawmakers were hopeful there would be consensus on the economic reforms by the time Pena Nieto took office but they have been more guarded since the election. Though he won by 6.5 percentage points, a clear victory, it was less than expected.

Pena Nieto plans to allow more private investment in Pemex, long a symbol of Mexican self-sufficiency, and soften labor regulations. He is also expected to review extending a sales tax to food and medicine, a measure the PRI has blocked in the past because it is seen as raising the tax burden on the poor.

The timeline for those reforms has been pushed back due to steadfast opposition to any sweeping changes from left-wing parties and even some wariness from leftists inside the PRI.

DEMONSTRATIONS AHEAD?

To press hard on Pemex and tax changes immediately would risk saddling Pena Nieto with a "permanent social protest" in office, said Roy Campos of polling firm Consulta Mitofsky.

Demonstrations may dog the new president regardless after Lopez Obrador said on Friday he would not accept the electoral tribunal's ruling, and called for a big rally on September 9.

Given the simmering tensions, only an overhaul of the labor laws appears a possibility this year - led by Calderon and his conservative National Action Party, or PAN.

A government official told Reuters that Calderon would likely present the new Congress with a proposed labor reform to be voted on before December. The prospects for a deal look good.

The PRI has been at pains to strike a conciliatory note with the PAN and leftist parties since the election.

Manlio Fabio Beltrones, the PRI leader in the lower house, has repeatedly stressed his party's desire to broker deals.

"This is a plural house of Congress and deals will be made within that plurality here," Beltrones said this week.

Early in August, he said the PRI's first initiatives in Congress would be to create an anti-corruption authority and extend the powers of an existing transparency watchdog.

Soon afterwards the PRI said it also would draw up guidelines to regulate the sale of media advertising to public office holders under independent supervision.

That plan appears designed to temper accusations that Pena Nieto owed his rise to the top to Televisa, which provided a stream of favorable coverage for him while he was a state governor between 2005 and 2011 and during the election campaign.

But with parties eager for good relations with broadcasters, overhauling media laws may take more time than the PRI's efforts to create a stronger framework to tackle corruption.

Long a byword for graft, the PRI is hoping the clean governance drive will not be lost on voters.

"They're trying to take these issues away from the (protesters) on the street," Campos said.

(Editing by Kieran Murray and Bill Trott)

Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/08/31/us-mexico-reforms-idUSBRE87U10B20120831?feedType=RSS&feedName=worldNews

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gametimegirl: NBA: Toy Figurine Company Reveals The New Brooklyn Nets Uniform?! .. http://t.co/E4x3fqwq

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Thursday, August 30, 2012

Mitt Romney to make his case: 'Need jobs, lots of jobs'

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August 30, 2012 5:49 PM

TAMPA, Fla. - Mitt Romney launched his fall campaign for the White House in a Republican National Convention finale Thursday night, declaring "what America needs is jobs, lots of jobs" and promising he has a plan to create 12 million of them.

"Now is the time to restore the promise of America," Romney said in excerpts released in advance of his prime-time speech to a nation struggling with 8.3 percent unemployment and the slowest economic recovery in decades.

"Many Americans have given up on this president, but they haven't ever thought about giving up. Not on themselves, Not on each other. And not on America," Romney said.


PHOTOS: Mitt Romney | Paul Ryan |?Cartoons from Walt Handelsman

MORE: Where do you stand? | Live video from the convention | Local donors database | Complete coverage


Romney muted his criticism in the advance excerpts of President Barack Obama, his quarry in a close and unpredictable race for the White House.

"I wish President Obama had succeeded because I want America to succeed," he said. "But his promises gave way to disappointment and division."

"This isn't something we have to accept," he said, appealing to millions of voters who say they are disappointed in the president yet haven't yet decided to cast their votes for his Republican challenger.

In a speech that blended the political and the personal, Romney talked in his excerpts of the importance of the love he felt from his parents and that he and his wife Ann have sought to give their children and grandchildren.

"All the laws and legislation in the world will never heal this world like the loving hearts and arms of mothers and fathers," he said.

Yet the economy is issue No. 1 in the race for the White House, and Romney presented his credentials as the man better equipped than the president to help create jobs.

"When I was 37, I helped start a small company," he said. "That business we stated with 10 people has now grown into a great American success story."

More than the political hoopla, the evening marked one of a very few opportunities any presidential challenger is granted to appeal to millions of voters in a single night.

The two-month campaign to come includes other big moments ? principally a series of one-on-one debates with Democrat Obama ? in a race for the White House that has been close for months. In excess of $500 million has been spent on campaign television commercials so far, almost all of it in the battleground states of Florida, North Carolina, Virginia, New Hampshire, Ohio, Iowa, Colorado and Nevada.

Romney holds a fundraising advantage over Obama, and his high command hopes to expand the electoral map soon if post-convention polls in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin and perhaps elsewhere indicate it's worth the investment.

Romney's aides scripted a Thursday night program that included a video tribute to Ronald Reagan, the two-term president revered still by conservatives. Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush also had his moment on the podium, and Newt and Callista Gingrich shared one of their own.

Florida Sen. Marco Rubio was tapped to introduce Romney.

Romney aides said the convention's final night was designed to fill out a portrait of the GOP nominee as a successful businessman, last-minute savior for a troubled 2002 Olympics and a man of family and faith. A portion of the convention podium was rebuilt overnight so he would appear surrounded by delegates rather than speaking from a distance, an attempt to soften his image as a stiff and distant candidate.

But these aides did not say whether he would offer any new information on what has so far been a short-on-details pledge to reduce federal deficits and create 12 million jobs in a country where unemployment stands at 8.3 percent.

Romney has called for extension of tax cuts due to expire at all income levels at the end of the year, and has proposed an additional 20 percent cut in tax rates across the board. But he has yet to sketch out the retrenchment in tax breaks that he promises to prevent deficits from rising.

Nor has he been forthcoming about the trillions in spending cuts that would be needed to redeem his pledge of major deficit reduction, or about his promise to rein in Medicare or other government benefit programs before they go broke.

His vice presidential running mate, Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan, the chairman of the House Budget Committee, has called for remaking Medicare into a program in which the government would send seniors checks to be used to purchase health care insurance.

Under the current approach, beneficiaries pay premiums to the government, which then pays a part of all of their medical bills, and Democrats say the GOP alternative would expose seniors to ever-rising out-of-pocket costs.

Romney said in his fundraising email, as he often does in his speeches, "We believe in America, even though President Barack Obama's failed policies have left us with record high unemployment, lower take-home pay and the weakest economy since the great Depression."

Obama's surrogates missed no opportunity to criticize Romney, the convention proceedings or Ryan's own acceptance speech.

"He lied about Medicare. He lied about the Recovery Act," Obama's campaign manager, Jim Messina, emailed Democratic donors in a plea for cash.

"He lied about the deficit and debt. He even dishonestly attacked Barack Obama for the closing of a GM plant in his hometown of Janesville, Wisconsin ? a plant that closed in December 2008 under George W. Bush."

For Romney, 65 and the first Mormon to become a major party presidential nominee, the evening sealed a triumph more than five years in the making. He ran unsuccessfully for the nomination in 2008 after a single term as a moderate Republican governor of a liberal Democratic state.

This year, as then, he was assailed as a convert to conservatism, and a questionable one at that, as Gingrich, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum and other rivals battled him for the nomination. With a superior organization and an outside group that spent millions criticizing his foes, Romney eventually emerged as the nominee in early spring.

His selection of Ryan, a young lawmaker admired by fellow conservatives for his understanding of the federal budget, reinforced Romney's appeal to the right.

The economy alone makes the race a close one, and polling makes clear that Romney enters the fall campaign with strengths and weaknesses.

In the most recent Associated Press-GfK poll, conducted Aug. 16-20, some 48 percent of registered voters said Romney would do a better job handling the economy, while 44 percent chose Obama. The Republican was also favored narrowly on job creation and held a 10-point advantage on the issue of reducing federal budget deficits.

Yet by 51-36, registered voters said Obama better understands the problems of people like them, that the president is a stronger leader and also a more honest and trustworthy candidate.

Polls also show Romney trails Obama among female voters and Hispanics, and the convention was scripted from beginning to end to try and cut into the GOP ticket's disadvantages in those areas.

The first night of the GOP convention drew an estimated 22.3 million TV viewers, the vast majority over 55. The Nielsen ratings company said that figure was down from the 23.1 million who watched the first full night of the 2008 convention, which nominated John McCain. Nielsen said just 1.5 million of those who watched Tuesday's convention session were in the 18-34 age group.

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Source: http://www.newsday.com/elections/mitt-romney-to-make-his-case-need-jobs-lots-of-jobs-1.3937813

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Robert Pattinson Sells Home, Agrees to See Kristen Stewart

Two developments in the Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart saga make it clear that talk about Stewart's juicy cheating scandal is far from done. Not only is Pattinson selling the Los Angeles home he and his estranged girlfriend have shared since September 2011, but he is reportedly going to meet with her face-to-face.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/robert-pattinson-sells-home-agrees-see-kristen-stewart/1-a-483469?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Arobert-pattinson-sells-home-agrees-see-kristen-stewart-483469

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Thought-controlled quadcopter takes to the skies

Hal Hodson, technology reporter

Up, down, bank, take a photo! Researchers at Zhejiang University in Hangzhou, China, have developed a quadcopter that can be controlled by thought alone. The idea is to give people with impaired motor abilities a new avenue for interaction.

Their system relies on the commercially available Emotiv electroencephalography (EEG) headset to interpret brain activity as commands for the quadcopter. Commands are relayed first by Bluetooth to a laptop, then by wireless to the hovering aircraft.

The quadcopter's range of motion is limited by the brain activity that the EEG can pick up. A user can move the flyer forward by thinking "right", fly up by thinking "push", and turn clockwise by thinking "left". Thinking "left hard" tells the quadcopter to take off from the ground. Clenched teeth and blinking both produce a brain signal that the EEG can read, commanding the flyer to descend or to take a picture using the on-board camera, respectively. By default, that camera sends a stream of video back to the laptop, and the user can capture a still of any scene they choose by blinking four times. The system is due to be presented next month at the Ubiquitous Computing Conference in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Seeing and taking pictures from new vantage points are two applications that the researchers think will be useful for disabled users. They also suggest that the thought-controlled quadcopters could "fight" against physically controlled quadcopters, dodging, diving and pushing to force each other out of a ring.

"Maybe one day in the future, disabled people can use brain [control] to drive a plane in which they are seated, and go anywhere they want to go," the researchers imagine in the conclusion to their presentation.

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judyth_piazza: Federal Court Blocks Discriminatory #Texas Voter ID Law http://t.co/Mw496HgH via @newsblaze

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Source: http://twitter.com/judyth_piazza/statuses/241280394052370433

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Wednesday, August 29, 2012

The Color Run 5K Is A Lot More Than Just Another Race

Every year, there are 25 different cities throughout the United States that host a Color Run 5K celebration. This is no ordinary 5K, and at the end of the race the runners will be a lot brighter and happier than at the end of any other race. Everyone gets to play a part in the joy that the race has to offer, and coming in last is by no means a bad thing. Participants of the race will get to have their plain white t-shirts colored for free, and they will also get a free race t-shirt upon completion. Part of the money that is gathered during the registration process will be donated to a local charity.

Racers usually start the race sporting a plain white t-shirt. Once the race begins, runners will be bombarded with colors every five minutes by volunteers on the Color Bomb Squad. Runners' t-shirts will rapidly transform from white to rainbow colored as the race begins. Each section of the race will have its own color, and the colors that are used are yellow, purple, blue, pink, and green. There is no need to be concerned about the safety of the colors - it is merely corn starch.

Everyone who takes part in the race will receive a t-shirt for the event, whether they are racers or volunteers. Sponsors of the function will show their support and gratitude by providing food and great music. All of this follows the greatest color celebration of the day where everyone will throw handfuls of color at each other.


The Color Run 5K gives a piece of the money collected from the registration fees to a local charity. More than 25 charities in the US are being supported because the Color Run 5K occurs in 25 different cities. The money collected in the course of the Color Run San Diego is donated to the charity known as Deaf Community Services of San Diego. Enriching the lives of the community of deaf and hard of hearing men and women in San Diego through services, education, and advocacy is the mission of this charity.

People who want to have a great time, see colors, and get some exercise would like the Color Run 5K. Not only will you be making yourself feel healthier, but you are even helping to give back to your community. You will meet great people and have a wonderful time either in San Diego or any of the other host cities in the US.

Source: http://www.artipot.com/articles/1353759/the-color-run-5k-is-a-lot-more-than-just-another-race.htm

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Naturalized U.S. Citizens Represent a Powerful Voting Bloc for ...

Unless you?ve been living in a bunker for the past few months, you may have noticed the hotly contested presidential campaign currently raging in the U.S. Democratic President Barack Obama and former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney, a Republican, are currently locked in a statistical dead heat for the presidency, according to polling data aggregator Real Clear Politics. Just as in 2000, when Republican George W. Bush narrowly defeated Al Gore, pundits believe the election will be determined by razor-thin margins. It?s no surprise that both Obama and Romney are looking to sway these significant voting blocs ahead of the November election.

What role do legal immigrants play in the upcoming elections?
Legal immigrants represent a rich source of potential votes. Recent research suggests that registered naturalized immigrants vote at higher rates than native-born Americans. However, immigration reform remains a polarizing topic, and both Romney and Obama have had to adopt stances that sometimes alienate legal immigrants.

Although Obama won 67% of the Hispanic vote in 2008, according to the Pew Hispanic Center,
Republicans in battleground states like Nevada have branded him the ?deporter-in-chief.? Furthermore, while Obama?s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, ?potentially provides relief from deportation for eligible unauthorized immigrants ages 30 and under who arrived in the U.S. before age 16,? it falls far short of the comprehensive immigration reform he promised in 2008, as well as the DREAM Act, which would offer young illegal immigrants a path to citizenship.

Romney took a hard-line stance on immigration reform during the 2012 primaries, according to a recent USA Today article. The Republican candidate, ?pushed identity-verification laws to keep illegal immigrants out of American jobs and endorsed the idea of ?self-deportation,? where laws make life so hard for illegal immigrants that they choose to return to their home countries.?

Reaching out to this voting segment
In recent weeks, both parties have created commercials in different languages hoping to reach and influence legal immigrant voters, but the Republicans have generally been outspent by Obama?s team. Reaching this key voting bloc could be easily accomplished through the effective use of resources. For example, deploying interpreters and translators would not only help Spanish voters, but also Chinese, Tagalog, Korean, Hindi, Punjabi, Japanese, and Russian speakers. This simple tactic would allow both parties to reach much wider audiences.

It should also be noted that many naturalized citizens are affected by the 180 bills introduced in state legislatures requiring voter identification and/or proof of citizenship in order to vote. The necessity of these bills is open to debate, but they clearly demonstrate the need for solid translation and interpretation.

Northwest Interpreters, Inc., as a language services company, supports the use of professional interpreters and translators for advertising aimed at multilingual voters, or voters who do not speak English as a first language. Naturalized citizens, as noted above, are motivated voters and take their civic responsibility seriously. NWI believes this voting constituency will only grow more crucial in the years to come.

Source: http://www.nwiservices.com/blog/2012/08/naturalized-u-s-citizens-represent-a-powerful-voting-bloc-for-presidential-candidates/

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Choosing LASIK Requires Careful Advance Research

Old Bridge, NJ, August 28, 2012 ?(PR.com)? ?I?m concerned about the number of people I?ve met who want to have LASIK surgery the day they first see me,? Dr. Ilan Cohen said. ?Some of my colleagues in the vision correction field are reporting similar experiences, and I want to make sure people realize that they should not make an impulse decision to get LASIK or similar procedures.?

Dr. Cohen, director of 5th Avenue Eye Center, assists people who are seeking New Jersey LASIK surgery and those throughout the Tri-State area with his ground-breaking LASIK surgical procedures. However, he wants to promote the importance of people doing plenty of research and advance preparation before undergoing LASIK.

?LASIK is safe most of the time, but it is not like coloring your hair,? Dr. Cohen said. ?We live in an instant-gratification society where we want to see change right now. But getting LASIK eye surgery in NJ is not a decision to make on an impulse. It is indeed surgery, and, whenever you have surgery, there are a few risks.?

Ideally, a person interested in LASIK surgery should first attend a group information seminar followed by an initial consultation with a qualified corneal and refractive specialist. Then the patient should meet with his desired surgeon on another date to ask any final questions before undergoing LASIK.

?I encourage people to research worst-case scenarios through reputable websites, such as those of our federal government,? Dr. Cohen said. ?The Federal Trade Commission is sort of a watchdog for modern consumers and they have plenty of information that outlines the potential benefits as well as risks of LASIK. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is another great resource.?

Doing the proper research to find the best LASIK surgeons in NJ before jumping in to surgery will help avoid potential complications. Some patients do not experience 20/20 vision even after multiple LASIK procedures. In very rare cases, blindness may occur; however, this is usually related to the poor skills of the surgeon or the fact that the patient was probably not a suitable candidate for LASIK surgery. Severe dry eye can also be a potential problem even after successful vision correction.

5th Avenue Eye Center is a comprehensive vision center with branches in Old Bridge, New Jersey, as well as the Manhattan and Queens boroughs of New York City. Dr. Cohen was fellowship trained in corneal surgery at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tenn. and Catholic Medical Center in Boston, Mass. His state-of-the-art LASIK techniques and ability to correct other surgeons? mistakes have garnered international media attention on CBS, CNBC, and FOX News. Dr. Cohen teaches LASIK surgery at the American Academy of Ophthalmology.

For more information or to schedule a consultation with Dr. Cohen, call 5th Avenue Eye Center at (732) 679-6100 or visit http://www.worldclasslasik.com

Contact Information:
5th Avenue Eye Center | Ilan Cohen MD
Ilan Cohen MD
212 764 2020
Contact via Email
www.worldclasslasik.com

Click here to read the full story: Choosing LASIK Requires Careful Advance Research

Press Release Distributed by PR.com

Source: http://health.rambergmedia.com/choosing-lasik-requires-careful-advance-research/

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Vehicle Trouble Shooting Secrets Is An Online Site To Save You ...

We all run into car problems every so often. In the event it happens, we should determine what is wrong and how should it get fixed. There exists a program online that can help you with diagnosing your problems. The site that will help you with your car issues is ATS or Automotive Troubleshooting Secrets. The problem solving is not with software or robots, but person-to-person with a legitimate mechanic online.: Auto Transport Quotes ? Hire The Right Car Shipping Co.

The auto mechanic will go over the symptoms with you and help you figure out the problem yourself. You will get useful feedback and sketches that are simple to understand. The effectiveness of this system depends on the latest information on automotive repairs you get with a click of a button. Just about any problem can be fixed by you if you have the most current information. No matter what auto mechanic does the work, ATS will assess the work done on your vehicle. ATS offers a considerable database of garage fixes and automotive software and all technicians are experienced and ready to help you solve your problem. The fixes are e-mailed to you as soon as they are analyzed.

The best approach to fixing your car problem is going to be properly researched and evaluated. Due to their big collection of repair information, they?re able to combine wiring diagrams and common fixes and figure out what parts are causing the problem using secret techniques. Many of the troubleshooters are actually retired engineers and mechanics who understand the various systems and can analyze the problems very well. Your trouble might be much more complicated and hard to fix, so the scanners used by the top garages will be used by the technicians to guide you. ATS is a great package with a one time payment for lifetime membership plus there is a 90 day money back guarantee.

The simplicity of ATS is actually the reason why it works so well. You can find out things to tell your repair shop, saving them time so they will charge you less. It helps if you test your fixed vehicle only to find that the problem is still there. Together with problems like no-starts, stalling, and hesitations, you can get an analysis with sketches and quick and practical solutions.
Learn how to repair small problems before they escalate into big problems. Until eventually your trouble is fixed, you will get limitless support, and any vehicle driver can use ATS, even garage owners and mechanics in car moving service.

Not everybody can fix their own car but at least with this information, you know exactly what the mechanic needs to do. With ATS, you will definitely save time and money and maybe headaches as well. Automobile problems are definitely annoying but at least you have an option to make the repairs less distressing.

Source: http://www.cowcreekhunts.com/1005-vehicle-trouble-shooting-secrets-is-an-online-site-to-save-you-money-on-car-repairs

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Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Extra pounds tied to breast cancer recurrence, death

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Among women who have been treated for breast cancer, heavier women are more likely to have their disease come back and more likely to die of cancer, according to a new study.

That could be because certain hormones that are linked to body weight may also fuel tumor growth in the most common form of the disease, known as estrogen receptor-positive cancer.

Previous studies have tied obesity to a higher chance of getting breast cancer - and worse outcomes in women who have already been diagnosed.

But these findings make the post-diagnosis picture clearer, said lead researcher Dr. Joseph Sparano, associate chairman of medical oncology at the Montefiore Einstein Center for Cancer Care in the Bronx, New York.

"Obesity seemed to carry a higher risk of breast cancer recurrence and death - even in women who were healthy at the time that they were diagnosed, and despite the fact that they received the best available chemotherapy and hormone therapy," he said.

Data for the new study came from trials sponsored by the National Cancer Institute (NCI) of women with stage I, II and III breast cancer who were given standardized treatment, with drug doses adjusted based on weight.

Out of close to 5,000 women treated for cancer, about one-third were obese and another one-third were overweight.

Over the next eight years, one in four women had their cancer come back and 891 died - including 695 from breast cancer.

Sparano and his colleagues found that compared to women of normal weight, obese women were 40 percent more likely to have a breast cancer recurrence over the study period and 69 percent more likely to die from breast cancer or any other cause.

Even among overweight but not obese women, there was also a general trend toward a higher risk of recurrence and death with increasing weight, according to findings published Monday in the journal Cancer.

The link was especially strong for women with estrogen receptor positive cancer, which accounts for two-thirds of breast cancers.

But weight wasn't clearly linked to breast cancer outcomes for women with other types of cancer not dependent on estrogen for growth.

ESTROGEN, INSULIN, OR SOMETHING ELSE?

Although the new study can't prove that extra weight and fat have a direct impact on certain breast cancers, Sparano said that was "biologically plausible."

"There may be factors that are fueling the growth of the estrogen receptor positive tumors," he said - such as estrogen itself. Women carrying extra fat have been shown to make more estrogen.

In addition, Sparano added, "Insulin levels are known to be higher in patients who are obese because they develop insulin resistance... (and) insulin can stimulate the growth of breast cancer cells."

Dr. Massimo Cristofanilli, head of medical oncology at the Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia, said it's possible that anti-estrogen drugs such as tamoxifen can't do enough to overcome the extra-high estrogen levels in obese women.

"Maybe obese women require much longer treatment because their risk of recurrence remains over time," Cristofanilli, who has studied the link between weight and breast cancer outcomes but wasn't involved in the new study, told Reuters Health.

According to the NCI, one in eight women in the U.S. will be diagnosed with breast cancer at some point, but the risks vary greatly over the course of a woman's life.

Whether women with the disease can improve their long-term outlook by losing weight hasn't been proven, researchers said.

"The highest priority is just getting through the chemotherapy if chemotherapy is necessary and taking their endocrine therapy," Sparano told Reuters Health.

"But for those who are obese or overweight, there may be additional benefits that one can achieve through diet and through weight reduction that may produce a reduction in the risk of recurrence that's just as significant as the reduction that they get from the standard therapies," he said.

Cristofanilli agreed on the benefits of weight loss and said "it's never too late" for women to become healthier through diet and other lifestyle changes, even after a cancer diagnosis.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/gzHzeL Cancer, online August 27, 2012.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/extra-pounds-tied-breast-cancer-recurrence-death-123907124.html

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No Comments - the daily | news and information for Case Western ...

Posted: August 28th, 2012 | Author: thedaily | Filed under: accolades, news | No Comments ?

As a renowned scholar on elderly care issues, Eva Kahana has won countless awards from national and international organizations. Yet the news that she had been named one of Case Western Reserve?s Distinguished University Professors took her entirely by surprise.

?They say that people far away might recognize one?s achievements more readily than those who are next door, so I think it?s very unique when the colleagues you work with day in and day out feel the work you?ve done merits such recognition and nominate you for such a great honor,? said Kahana, the Pierce and Elizabeth Robson Professor of Humanities and Sociology.

The title of Distinguished University Professor the highest honor bestowed upon a member of the faculty at Case Western Reserve University. Kahana?along with four other members of the faculty?will have receive this permanent, honorific title during fall convocation held at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 29 in Severance Hall.

The awarding of Distinguished University Professor recognizes the outstanding contributions of full-time, tenured professors with exceptional academic records of research, scholarship, teaching and service. The rest of the faculty members will be profiled throughout upcoming issues of The Daily.

Kahana?s accomplishments throughout her 28-year career at Case Western Reserve are many. So it?s no surprise her colleagues in the College of Arts and Sciences?as well as in the Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing, the Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences and the School of Medicine, where she holds secondary appointments?are impressed by her drive, intellect and consistently cutting-edge ideas.

?Professor Kahana is internationally known for her sustained program of innovative and well-funded longitudinal research based at the Elderly Care Research Center,? said Cyrus Taylor, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences.??A distinguished teacher and mentor, Professor Kahana is also a role model for faculty, particularly for women, with a record of success and effective leadership as chair of the Department of Sociology for nearly 20 years.?

An influential scholar who has published more than 170 journal articles or book chapters, co-authored two books (with two more in production) and edited three volumes, Kahana?s research focuses on finding new ways to improve life for older people. Her work, especially as director of the university?s Elderly Care Research Center, has been recognized as breaking new ground in the understanding of resilience among elderly and disabled persons living with trauma

?When I got started in [my research], this was a very fledgling new field, so it was a new area of inquiry. I really got in on the ground floor,? Kahana said.

Kahana has received continuous funding from the National Institutes of Health since 1969. She has been principal investigator of more than two dozen research grants, with budgets totaling more than $16 million.

In addition, Kahana has earned many awards throughout her career, including the Distinguished Career Contribution to Gerontology Award from the Gerontological Society of America (GSA), the organization?s highest award; the GSA?s Powell Lawton Award; the American Sociological Association?s Matilda White Riley Distinguished Scholar Award; and the Prochovnik Award of the Israel Gerontological Society. She also was the first female awarded an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters from her alma mater, Stern College for Women (now part of Yeshiva University).

But her most memorable and meaningful honors, she said, relate to her work as a mentor. She?s earned national recognition with the Distinguished Mentorship Award from the GSA, as well as campuswide attention with the John S. Diekhoff Award for Graduate Teaching, which recognizes exemplary contributions to the education and development of graduate students.

?I really do value getting across to the next generation of students and researchers the importance of curiosity and love of the subject matter,? Kahana said. ?One of the biggest joys at my career stage is when you see your previous students being honored at national conferences, see them heading up an institute or getting a special appointment, and then remembering what they were like as a student and feeling like you helped play a role in [their success].?

Not only has she helped inspire her students, but she?s also set an example for her two children?both of whom are alumni of Case Western Reserve and are now academics. The two follow in the footsteps of Kahana and her husband, Boaz, a professor at Cleveland State University, with whom she regularly conducts research?often, she said, just for fun.

?We are kind of happy workaholics. Our work is also our play,? she said. ?It may sound odd, but there?s nothing I like more than sitting and discussing an interesting research article with Boaz on a Sunday morning over coffee.?

Other Distinguished University Professors have been announced already: James P. Anderson and Claudia Coulton. The rest of the group will be profiled in tomorrow?s issue of The Daily. More information on past recipients can be found online.


Source: http://cwru-daily.com/news/?p=9483

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TiVo Stream DVR-to-iOS transcoder box pops up for $129 pre-orders early

TiVo Stream DVRtoiOS transcoder box pops up for $129 preorders early, ships September 5th

We haven't heard a lot about TiVo's Stream transcoder since it was officially unveiled in May, but today emails went out to winners of a Facebook contest informing them they can pre-order one for $129 (plus shipping) and receive it on September 5th. In case you've forgotten what its capabilities are, the notice shown above from Zatz Not Funny also includes a description of its capabilities which include streaming shows to up to three different mobile devices (iPhone, iPad or iPod Touch) in the home at once, streaming a show to your mobile as it's recorded, or wirelessly transferring shows to the device to view them on the move, TiVoToGo-style. Those interested will of course need a Premiere series DVR that's hard-wired to a router, but with that it's just a one time fee to easily cut the tether on TV content. Interestingly, a few TiVo Community posters report being able to preorder from the listed number without being in the contest, so if you're already intending to jump just pick up the phone and give it a shot.

[Thanks, @BrennokBob, Joe]

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TiVo Stream DVR-to-iOS transcoder box pops up for $129 pre-orders early originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Aug 2012 19:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/08/28/tivo-stream-dvr-to-ios-transcoder-box-pops-up-for-129-pre-order/

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Comment: Finding the right technology to suit you - Retail Gazette

Comment: Finding the right technology to suit you

Mark O'Hanlon, Manager at Kurt Salmon

Mark O'Hanlon 10:07AM - Tue 28th August 2012

The operating models for grocery and fashion retailers may be quite different but there is considerable overlap when it comes to adopting new technology to improve the customer experience in the omni-channel world.

While leading edge technology, such as virtual shopping walls and augmented reality, for instance, are being trialled by a handful of retailers worldwide there is no doubt that the organisations that are innovative in the use of technology will gain considerable competitive advantage. Today?s customers increasingly expect innovations and, relatively quickly, these become a hygiene factor. There is a considerable risk to those retailers who have inflexible operating models and are unable to capitalise on the opportunities that new technology will provide.

So while much of this new technology is having a customer-facing impact, it will inevitably have a bearing on how retailers go to market and impact on their overall business strategy. An added advantage for early adopters, even for trials, is both valuable brand awareness that lives longer than the trial itself and the opportunity to collect more data about customers and products. Furthermore, technology offers all retailers the opportunity to lower their ?per customer cost?, meaning improvements in Return on Capital Employed and other key metrics.

Adidas was the first company in the world to launch a virtual shopping wall and since then the next most high profile adopter has been Tesco, first with the walls in railway and bus stations in Korea designed to assisted time-pressed commuters and, more recently, its trial at Gatwick Airport.

Virtual walls represents a relatively low investment (compared with establishing a bricks and mortar store) to gain a presence in high footfall locations. Tesco has relentlessly pursued a decade-long strategy to give everyone in the country access to its brand more often than its competitors and with the wall has identified another opportunity to sign up customers to its online network, this time while they have time on their hands. Naturally, Tesco will crawl all over the data that it gleans on the back of this trial and be in a really good position to decide whether this scheme represents another great way to expand its UK footprint.

The Tesco trial is timely as all grocers are taking a closer look at their property portfolios and virtual walls could become another ?format? to reach new (or existing) customers .

Ocado has already conducted two similar trials: last year at One New Change in London and then in July in Birmingham?s Bullring shopping centre. How long will it be before Amazon follows suit? And on the fashion side, will we see Net-a-Porter, ASOS or even Missguided developing versions to give them a presence ?on the street??

Where fashion retailers are further ahead is in the use of augmented reality. While this is still emerging technology, both in terms of its sophistication and relative cost , it is beginning to be used more widely by retailers to improve the customer experience. Principally, it is allowing shoppers to understand products better and to make comparisons easily, as well as, creating a point of differentiation.

One of the better examples of this is Goertz, which has set up virtual fitting rooms in busy shopping centres and train stations in Germany that allow shoppers to try on multiple types of shoes and even send pictures of them to their friends and request feedback.

Among UK early adopters are Net-a-Porter, ASOS and New Look who are using it within advertisements, directing viewers to richer product information with the opportunity to go directly to buy the product.

The grocery ?version? has just come to life with another Tesco first ? this time with its cover-to-cover augmented reality food magazine Real Food. Recipes are brought to life and readers can scan them and go straight to the Tesco online store to buy the ingredients.

For grocers the investment in new technology is always going to around the convenience factor, whereas with fashion retailers it is much more about enabling consumers to further explore the company?s offer and be ?inspirational? ? that it also addresses the convenience factor is a bonus.

What is certain is that technology is advancing quicker than retailers can update their operating models to capitalise on each new opportunity. However, what they need to make certain is that the technology is not just about adding a new ?gimmick? but something that will help customers get what they want.

Sponsored Jobs:

Buyer - Toys

Posted 02 Aug 11:42 - GBP45000 - United Kingdom,Hertfordshire

Source: http://www.retailgazette.co.uk/articles/03411-comment-finding-the-right-technology-to-suit-your-business

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PFT: Rams send ex-No. 2 overall pick to Jets

Brandon Brooks, Derek NewtonAP

After the Texans surprisingly cut right tackle Eric Winston in the offseason, it was assumed that veteran Rashad Butler, acquired in 2007 on waivers from the Panthers, would get the job.

Assume again.

Coach Gary Kubiak said Monday that Derek Newton, a seventh-round pick in 2001, has won the spot at the top of the depth chart.

?Looking at the body of work, I think it was very, very close, as I told y?all all along,? Kubiak said in comments transcribed and distributed by the team.? ?I think the thing that has moved this toward Newton is watching his progress, watching where he was the end of last year going to the offseason, going through camp, watching him get better and better and better.? Did a good job the other night.? Young player that we think?s ascending.? We know that there?s a lot of things he?s got to clean up, but we think he?s definitely committed to doing that, just like the way he?s progressed.? So we?ll give him an opportunity to do it.? Big responsibility but we think he?s ready for it.?

Kubiak credited offensive line coach John Benton for developing the team?s linemen.? ?He?s taken, you go back to [Mike)]Brisiel, free agent, we go get Chris [Myers], [Benton] comes in here and Chris becomes a Pro Bowl center.? Wade [Smith] coming in here as a free agent.? Some of the work that John has done since his stay here in Houston has been exceptional.?

?This is a big opportunity for me,? a smiling Newton said.? ?Coming from a small school, two years of high school [football].? Coming from a small town, not many people make it, but the grind, it was tough.? I had a lot of friends [and] a lot of family support back home and they helped me get through it.?

The Texans have extra-high hopes for Newton, who appeared in 14 regular-season games as a rookie, with no starts.

?We watch him play each week and we just see things that give him a chance to be a great player, not just a good player,? Kubiak said.

The Texans had one of the best offensive lines in football last season, blowing open running lanes with a zone-blocking scheme and protecting the quarterback in a West Coast passing attack that often rolls the quarterback out.? This year, 40 percent of that line is being replaced.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/08/27/jets-send-wayne-hunter-to-st-louis-for-jason-smith/related

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To cap or not to cap: Scientists find new RNA phenomenon that challenges dogma

ScienceDaily (Aug. 27, 2012) ? Some RNA molecules spend time in a restful state akin to hibernation rather than automatically carrying out their established job of delivering protein-building instructions in cells, new research suggests.

And instead of being a fluke or a mistake, the research suggests that this restful period appears to be a programmed step for RNA produced by certain types of genes, including some that control cell division and decide where proteins will work in a cell to sustain the cell's life.

This could mean that protein production in cells is not as clear-cut as biology textbooks suggest, scientists say.

"This could mean there are more variations to the proteins in our bodies than we realize; it means that RNAs can be stored and reactivated and we don't know what biological process that affects -- it could influence embryonic development, or neurological activity, or even cancer," said Daniel Schoenberg, professor of molecular and cellular biochemistry at Ohio State University and lead author of the study.

Schoenberg and colleagues discovered this phenomenon by tracing the origins of a cap-like structure on messenger RNA (mRNA) that is known to coordinate most of this RNA molecule's short life. Messenger RNA is manufactured in a cell's nucleus and each mRNA contains the instructions needed to produce a specific protein that a cell needs to live.

Until now, scientists have believed that once an mRNA is no longer needed to make protein, the cap comes off and the molecule is degraded, its job complete. But Schoenberg's lab discovered in 2009 that some mRNAs that were thought to be degraded were instead still present in the cell, but they were missing part of their sequence and had caps placed back on the newly formed ends. Because these mRNAs were in the cytoplasm, the changes had to happen there rather than inside the nucleus.

In this new study, the researchers were looking for further evidence of these apparent rogue mRNAs, but instead they found that a completely unexpected biological process occurs before some proteins are even a glimmer in a gene's eye: The uncapping and recapping of mRNAs outside the nucleus results from a cap recycling operation in the cell cytoplasm. This process appeared to enable certain RNAs to pause, without being degraded, before launching protein production.

"What this discovery tells us is a complete fundamental reworking of the relationship between a gene, messenger RNA and a protein. It's more complicated than we realize," Schoenberg said.

The research is published online in the open-access journal Cell Reports.

That fragments of mRNA could exist at all in the cell's main body was first reported by other scientists in 1992. Years later, Schoenberg asked a postdoctoral researcher in his lab to revisit these unexpected RNA fragments and confirm they exist. The postdoc's experiments showed that these mRNA, thought to be the dregs left over from their degradation, had caps on them -- suggesting they still had the potential to function in protein production. Schoenberg, also director of Ohio State's Center for RNA Biology, has been investigating this cytoplasmic capping operation ever since.

In 2009, he and colleagues reported the discovery of two enzymes in the cell's main body that would enable mRNA capping to occur completely outside the nucleus and in the cytoplasm instead.

In the current studies, Schoenberg sought to determine the physiological significance of this capping operation. The researchers engineered a way to block cytoplasmic capping in cells in the lab and then looked at changes in more than 55,000 RNAs.

This interference with cytoplasmic capping revealed that two different types of pathways could exist in the cells -- some mRNAs remained stable without their caps, while others without caps were rapidly destroyed. This finding indicated that mRNAs can lose their caps in the cytoplasm and at some point get recapped. With further experimentation, the researchers determined that only some mRNAs lost their caps in the cell body.

"It's not all of any particular message that's uncapped, just a portion of a message," Schoenberg said. "We wanted to show that we have uncapped RNAs in the cell and they are not degraded. It means they're stored that way."

This finding offered hints that there is a higher order to this phenomenon, and that some mRNAs purposefully rest in an uncapped state without being degraded by enzymes within the cell whose job is to remove them. It also suggested that as the capping circumstances change inside the cell body, signals from genes might undergo change that allows for two or more proteins, one being shorter than the other, to be made from the same mRNA.

"We have always thought that one gene would give an mRNA for one kind of protein. But what we have found makes us wonder if multiple proteins could be made from each of the messenger RNAs that undergo decapping and recapping in the cytoplasm," Schoenberg said.

The researchers used bioinformatics technology to determine which genes were manufacturing mRNAs that could exist in this uncapped and recapped state in the cytoplasm. These genes included those that control some of the most basic elements of cell survival: They determine the location of proteins and RNAs within the cell and, perhaps most significantly, the mitotic cell cycle -- part of the process of cell division.

"It wasn't random. It was very specific," Schoenberg said. "There are specific families of mRNAs that are regulated in this way, and that has ramifications for how proteins are expressed and regulated."

As an example, he cited how neurons communicate messages across vast distances to other nerve cells. It is known that mRNAs are deliberately kept in a silent state while they travel from, for example, the spinal cord to the fingertip, where they are then activated to make new proteins.

"What would the condition be of the mRNA to keep it silent? The possibility is it doesn't have a cap on it, and if it doesn't, it can't be translated. Maybe cytoplasmic capping in neurons is a function that allows that message to be translated at just the right time," Schoenberg said.

Or, in the case of cancer: "What if one of the things that happens is you are making shortened proteins instead of full-length proteins and the regulatory part of the protein is missing in the shortened protein? If that's true, can you interfere with this process and interfere with malignancy as a result?"

For now, these scientists can only speculate about what this unexpected biological process really means. Schoenberg's lab plans to investigate the phenomenon more thoroughly in a line of breast cancer cells.

This work is supported by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences.

Co-authors include Chandrama Mukherjee, Deepak Patil, Brian Kennedy and Baskar Bakthavachalu of the Department of Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry; and Ralf Bundschuh of the departments of Physics and Biochemistry, all at Ohio State. All also are members of the Center for RNA Biology.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Ohio State University. The original article was written by Emily Caldwell.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Chandrama Mukherjee, Deepak?P. Patil, Brian?A. Kennedy, Baskar Bakthavachalu, Ralf Bundschuh, Daniel?R. Schoenberg. Identification of Cytoplasmic Capping Targets Reveals a Role for Cap Homeostasis in Translation and mRNA Stability. Cell Reports, 2012; DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2012.07.011

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/QwXPplS09jY/120827105135.htm

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Monday, August 27, 2012

Mind Blown: The Internet needs a new patron saint!

Well, the current reigning patron saint of the Internet and computers in general is Saint Isidore of Seville, an Archbishop of Seville for more than three decades, and considered to be the last scholar in the ancient tradition. Based on this flimsy pretense and nothing else, this man, who died in the year 636 having missed even the invention of the Difference Engine by a millennium, was decreed to be the patron saint of the Internet, and all of computing technology, programmers, and students.

Mind you, this is the same guy who joined in the general Catholic persecution of Jews, by passing "Canon 60 calling for the forced removal of Jewish children from the parents and their education by Christians and Canon 65 forbidding Jews and Christians of Jewish origin from holding public office".

Internet users, programmers, and techie stemmers of all kinds - are you ready to join me in crying "bunk"?

BUNK!!

We have far better candidate for the patron saints of programming, computing, and Internetting:

Saint IGNUcious, the tongue-in-cheek alter-ego of Richard M. Stallman, founder of the Free Software Foundation and spiritual father of all software. Listen, if I stood them both up before Saint Peter at the pearly gates, I'd bet Isidore would be nervously shuffling his feet and eying the side exit before Peter was done reading the half of the list of Stallman's good deeds.

Tim Berners-Lee He got to be in the Olympic opening ceremonies through virtue of creating the World Wide Web, the improvement which opened the Internet up to the masses. That's gotta be worth a brownie point or two.

Ken Thompson and Dennis Ritchie, the inventors of both Unix and the C programming language. All modern operating systems - no matter how loudly Microsoft lies otherwise - descend from Unix, and all modern programming languages descend from C. I mean, literally the patron saints of computing and programming!

What, you don't know who Douglas Englebart is??? I explain in that link. He invented the modern GUI computing interface - the mouse, the icon, the menu, the graphical interface, hypertext... all the pretty pictures on the screen that let you use a computer without having to type in hexadecimal runes at a command prompt. Before Microsoft, before Apple, before even Xerox. And he did it all as research at Stanford university, way back in 1967. Now just look at that picture and that serene, beatific smile on that saintly face: doesn't he look like a saint?

Vatican, your choices suck! Each of the people I've named here did what they did in the genuine desire to benefit all of mankind by putting more computing power into the hands of the masses, potentially doing the human race more good than any ten canonized saints, and they all did it with no thought to their own profit or power.

If your religion can't recognize that these are the true saints, then there's something wrong with your religion.

Source: http://mind--blown.blogspot.com/2012/08/the-internet-needs-new-patron-saint.html

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German minister rejects more time for Greece

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, right, and German Economy Minister Philipp Roesler, left, arrive for the weekly cabinet meeting at the chancellery in Berlin, Germany, Wednesday, Aug. 22, 2012. (AP Photo/Michael Sohn)

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, right, and German Economy Minister Philipp Roesler, left, arrive for the weekly cabinet meeting at the chancellery in Berlin, Germany, Wednesday, Aug. 22, 2012. (AP Photo/Michael Sohn)

BERLIN (AP) ? Germany's economy minister has rejected calls for Greece to get more time to implement economic reforms, saying in an interview Sunday that Athens needs to respect the bailout deal reached with its international creditors.

Philipp Roesler's comments to ZDF public television come after a visit by Greece's prime minister to Berlin on Friday, during which Antonis Samaras told German Chancellor Angela Merkel that his country needs "time to breathe" before it can make all the budget cuts and reforms demanded as part of its ?240 billion ($300 billion) bailout packages.

"What the Greeks have asked for, half a year or two years, that's not doable," said Roesler, who is also the vice chancellor in Angela Merkel's coalition government. He added that "time is always money" and all parties had agreed that additional funds for Greece weren't up for debate.

Roesler, the leader of Germany's pro-business Free Democratic Party, has long taken a hard line on Greece. Last month, he caused an outcry in Greece by suggesting the idea of the country leaving the 17-nation eurozone had "lost its horror."

Those comments appeared to put him at odds with Merkel, who has always insisted that Greece should remain in the euro.

But his latest views on the need for Greece to stick to the agreed time plan for reforms were echoed by German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, who told a newspaper in comments published Sunday that "more time generally means more money and that quickly means a new (bailout) program."

Merkel has so far shied away from making new promises to Greece. On Sunday, she dodged questions on the subject during an interview with German public TV station ARD. Instead, she insisted that "we are at a crucial moment in the fight against the debt crisis and that's why I think we should all weigh our words carefully."

The question of how to avert a Greek debt default, which could spark a chain reaction among other ailing European economies, has preoccupied EU leaders as they return from their traditional summer break.

French President Francois Hollande urged Greece on Saturday to do more to show its commitment to reforms, and offered the country no immediate hope for relief from its current regime of painful austerity measures. Like Merkel, Hollande said further decisions on Greece need to wait for a report next month by the country's debt inspectors.

Meanwhile, the respected German weekly Der Spiegel reported in its latest edition that Merkel wants EU leaders to forge ahead with deeper political integration within the unwieldy 27-nation bloc.

Merkel has long advocated closer political integration as a means of preventing the European project from unraveling under the strain caused by the eurozone crisis.

Asked about her plans, the chancellor told ARD television Sunday: "Our task now is to remove the founding mistakes of the currency union, namely the lack of political cooperation, and that's what we are going to discuss in the coming months."

She suggested that EU member state could be subject to closer budget scrutiny, and that measures such as tax harmonization could be up for discussion.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-08-26-Europe-Financial%20Crisis/id-8a75ecc0840a4c2bbb6b4becdb35eb65

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Foreclosures Tuscaloosa - Homes in Tuscaloosa | Real Estate ...

If you are organized and willing to put in some serious spadework, buying a Tuscaloosa foreclosure can save you thousands of dollars.? A new wave of foreclosures could be heading our way later this year. According to RealtyTrac, the leading source of foreclosure statistics, one in every 665 national housing units received a foreclosure filing in June. More foreclosures mean more opportunities; but it also means that more buyers will begin to think seriously about going after them. In other words ? more competition.

If you have never looked into what is involved in snagging one of the foreclosures in Tuscaloosa, a few basics will greatly improve your chances for success:

?

Do Your Research So You Can Act Quickly.

The foreclosure market performs differently from the traditional market. Arming yourself with accurate comps and knowledge of Tuscaloosa trends will enable you to recognize the right opportunity as soon as it arises ? ideally, before other buyers catch wind of it. Working with a knowledgeable agent who keeps you informed is the quickest way to get up to speed. It will help you avoid being dragged into bidding wars with other deal-shopping buyers. Since under-bidding will cause you to miss the best opportunities, and over-bidding will defeat your whole purpose, up-to-the-moment market knowledge is essential for formulating a canny offer.

Weigh in With Cash.

Time is an important factor in buying a Tuscaloosa foreclosure. Your goal is the same as the seller?s: to close the sale as quickly as possible. Naturally, paying cash up front is the simplest route to a speedy closing. If you are buying as an investment, that means targeting only properties that are within your financial reach. As Ron Peltier of HomeServices of America puts it, ?A cash buyer who can close in 10 days can certainly get the best deal.?? Since closing on a house via traditional mortgage can take anywhere from 30 to 60 days, it is clear which route sellers prefer.

3. Create Clean Offers.

If, like many of my clients, you can?t really afford to propose an all-cash deal, you can still create an offer that lands your foreclosure. Writing a clean offer ? one with simple terms and serious cash down ? can bring a favorable reaction. Let?s face it: bank officers don?t want to fuss with complicated terms or repairs. A buyer with 20% down, a confirming loan and an ?as-is? offer will get a lot more consideration than a buyer with an FHA loan and a minimal deposit. Success means targeting foreclosures at a price point where you can afford to put as much down as possible?then being ready to get dirty and make any needed repairs yourself.

As with any vigorous market, participants need to play by the rules or else be stuck on the sidelines.? If you are considering buying a Tuscaloosa foreclosure and are looking for an experienced agent to stand by your side, call me ? and let?s get to work!

Source: http://mytuscaloosarealestate.com/tuscaloosa-foreclosures-go-to-prepared-buyers/

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