Friday, January 25, 2013

AP Debate: Training needed to redesign job market

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AP Debate: Training needed to redesign job market
AP

Michael Oreskes, Vice-President and Senior Managing Editor at the Associated Press (AP) moderates the session 'Creating Economic Dynamism' at the 43rd Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum, WEF, in Davos, Switzerland, Friday, Jan. 25, 2013. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)

Michael Oreskes, Vice-President and Senior Managing Editor at the Associated Press (AP) moderates the session 'Creating Economic Dynamism' at the 43rd Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum, WEF, in Davos, Switzerland, Friday, Jan. 25, 2013. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)

Chinese Min Zhu, Deputy Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund, U.S. professor Joseph E. Stiglitz and Vittorio Grilli, Italian Minister for Economy and Finance, from left to right, attend the Associated Press session 'Creating Economic Dynamism' during the 43rd Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum, WEF, in Davos, Switzerland, Friday, Jan. 25, 2013. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)

U.S congressman Eric Cantor speaks in the Associated Press session 'Creating Economic Dynamism' during the 43rd Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum, WEF, in Davos, Switzerland, Friday, Jan. 25, 2013. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)

Ali Babacan, right, Turkey's Deputy Prime Minister speaks as U.S congressman Eric Cantor looks on during the Associated Press session 'Creating Economic Dynamism' at the 43rd Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum, WEF, in Davos, Switzerland, Friday, Jan. 25, 2013. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)

Michael Oreskes, left, Vice-President and Senior Managing Editor at the Associated Press (AP) talks to Chinese Min Zhu, Deputy Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund during the session 'Creating Economic Dynamism' at the 43rd Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum, WEF, in Davos, Switzerland, Friday, Jan. 25, 2013. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)

(AP) ? Economists and officials say a host of new training programs are needed to rebuild the job market after technological gains and the financial crisis wiped out millions of middle-class jobs over the past five years.

IMF Deputy Managing Director Min Zhu said governments aren't paying enough attention to training amid a widespread push for austerity. Eric Cantor, a Republican Congressman from Virginia, says training is needed to give workers the tools they need for the "new labor force."

They spoke Friday at an Associated Press debate at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

Italian Finance Minister Vittorio Grilli, also at the debate, warned that shrinking birth rates are making economic prospects even worse: "To get people employed you need young people to be born."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-01-25-Davos%20Forum-AP%20Debate/id-0056081e2e3f4bdcb6af399b0ab50637

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Teargas and protests mark second anniversary of Egypt uprising

CAIRO (Reuters) - Hundreds of youths fought Egyptian police in Cairo on Friday on the second anniversary of the revolt that toppled Hosni Mubarak and brought the election of an Islamist president who protesters accuse of riding roughshod over the new democracy.

The January 25 anniversary showcased the divide between the Islamists and secular foes hindering President Mohamed Mursi's efforts to get a stagnant economy moving, and reverse a plunge in Egypt's currency, by attracting back investors and tourists.

Inspired by Tunisia's ground-breaking popular uprising, Egypt's revolution spurred further revolts across the Arab world. But the sense of common purpose that united Egyptians two years ago has given way to internal strife that has only worsened and last month triggered lethal street battles.

Opponents of Mursi and his Muslim Brotherhood allies began massing in Cairo's Tahrir Square to revive the demands of a revolution they say has been betrayed by Islamists.

Police battled hardcore protesters who threw petrol bombs and firecrackers as they tried to approach a wall blocking access to government buildings near the square in the early hours of the morning.

Clouds of tear gas fired by police filled the air. At one point, riot police used one of the incendiaries thrown at them to set ablaze at least two tents erected by the youths, a Reuters witness said. Clashes between stone-throwing youths and the police continued in streets near the square into the day.

Ambulances ferried away a steady stream of casualties. The health ministry said 25 people had been injured since Thursday in clashes around Tahrir Square.

Some protesters pledged to march to Mursi's palace.

Thousands more protested against the Brotherhood in cities across Egypt including Suez, Ismailia, Port Said and Alexandria.

The Brotherhood decided against mobilizing in the street for the anniversary, wary of the scope for more conflict after violence in December that was fuelled by Mursi's campaign to fast-track an Islamist-tinged constitution.

"The people want to bring down the regime," declared banners in the square, echoing the main Arab Spring slogan of 2011. "Save Egypt from the rule of the Supreme Guide," said another, a reference to leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, Mohamed Badie.

Mursi, in a speech on Thursday marking the Prophet Mohammad's birthday, called on Egyptians to mark the anniversary "in a civilized, peaceful way that safeguards our nation, our institutions, our lives".

"The Brotherhood is very concerned about escalation, that's why they have tried to dial down their role on January 25," said Shadi Hamid director of research at the Brookings Doha Center.

"There may very well be the kinds of clashes that we've seen before, but I don't see anything major happening that is going to fundamentally change the political situation," he said.

BADIE CALLS FOR "PRACTICAL, SERIOUS COMPETITION"

With its eye firmly on forthcoming parliamentary elections, the Brotherhood marked the anniversary with a big charity drive across the nation. It plans to deliver medical aid to 1 million people and distribute affordable basic foodstuffs.

Writing in Al-Ahram, Egypt's flagship state-run daily, Brotherhood leader Badie said the country was in need of "practical, serious competition" to reform the corrupt state left by the Mubarak era.

"The differences of opinion and vision that Egypt is passing through is a characteristic at the core of transitions from dictatorship to democracy, and clearly expresses the variety of Egyptian culture," he wrote.

Still, Mursi faces discontent on multiple fronts.

His opponents say he and his group are seeking to dominate the post-Mubarak order. They accuse him of showing some of the autocratic impulses of the deposed leader by, for example, driving through the new constitution last month.

"I am taking part in today's marches to reject the warped constitution, the 'Brotherhoodisation' of the state, the attack on the rule of law, and the disregard of the president and his government for the demands for social justice," Amr Hamzawy, a prominent liberal politician, wrote on his Twitter feed.

The Brotherhood dismisses many of the criticisms as unfair. It accuses its opponents of failing to respect the rules of the new democracy that put the Islamists in the driving seat by winning free elections.

Six months into office, Mursi is also being held responsible for an economic crisis caused by two years of turmoil. The Egyptian pound has sunk to record lows against the dollar.

SOURCES OF FRICTION ABOUND

Other sources of friction abound. Little has been done to reform brutal Mubarak-era security agencies. A spate of transport disasters on roads and railways neglected for years is feeding discontent as well. Activists are impatient for justice for the victims of violence over the last two years.

These include hardcore soccer fans, or ultras, who have been rallying in recent days to press for justice for 74 people killed in a soccer stadium disaster a year ago in Port Said after a match between local side al-Masry and Cairo's Al Ahly.

A verdict in the case brought against 73 people charged in connection with the deaths had been expected on Saturday, but could be delayed after a request by the prosecutor for time to present new evidence. A delay will likely kindle more protests.

The parties that called for Friday's protests listed demands including a complete overhaul of the constitution.

Critics say the constitution, which was approved in a referendum, offers inadequate protection for human rights, grants the president too many privileges and fails to curb the power of a military establishment supreme in the Mubarak era.

Mursi's supporters say enacting the constitution quickly was crucial to restoring stability desperately needed for economic recovery, and that the opposition is making the situation worse by perpetuating unrest.

(Additional reporting by Ashraf Fahim; Writing by Tom Perry; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egyptian-opposition-mark-uprising-protests-012625590.html

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Bell Corruption Trial: Opening Statements Outline $1.3 Million Scheme To Scam Bell, Calif.

LOS ANGELES -- With six former city officials lined up in chairs behind him, a Los Angeles County prosecutor portrayed them Thursday as thieves who bilked their small town treasury for over $1.3 million, paying themselves for work they did not do.

In one instance, the defendants stole more than $300,000 during a two-minute meeting in which they voted themselves salary raises for sham positions on commissions that did nothing, said Deputy district Attorney Edward Miller.

"The evidence will show the defendants stole over $1.3 million," he said.

Running through the list of meetings that lasted a few minutes each, Miller said, "They worked less hours than my opening statement will take this morning."

Legally, he said, the officials could have paid themselves $673 a month for what was a part-time job since they did not actually run the city. The blue collar suburb of Los Angeles was managed by Robert Rizzo, who stands trial later in the year with his assistant city manager on allegations he misappropriated millions.

In addition to their council salaries of upward of $80,000 a year, the officials collected payment for sitting on the boards of four sham commissions that did no work, Miller said.

He alleged a pattern of scams in which the defendants appointed each other to the commissions that did nothing, held meetings that sometimes lasted only two minutes, and often met yearly just to increase their salaries.

The most blatant, he said, was creation of the Solid Waste and Recycling Authority, which he called "a fiction" designed to line the officials' pockets.

"They gave themselves raises which were not even drafted by a lawyer. Somebody just made this up out of the blue," Miller said.

The former mayor, vice mayor and four City Council members are charged with misappropriation of public funds. All but one of the defendants served as mayor at some point.

Prosecutors said the city treasury was looted to the tune of $5.5 million and the modest city of Bell was driven to the brink of bankruptcy.

Miller said the yearslong scam thrived because few people every attended City Council meetings to keep watch on their elected leaders. At one meeting, 12 people were in the audience and most were relatives of the council members, he said.

Those now on trial are former Mayor Oscar Hernandez, former vice mayor Teresa Jacobo and former council members George Mirabal, George Cole, Victor Bello and Luis Artiga.

Their lawyers were to speak later in the day and were expected to argue that they were upstanding citizens who worked hard for the city.

The six are charged in a 20-count felony complaint accusing them of paying themselves exorbitant salaries and setting up sham commissions.

Miller said the alleged wrongdoing was discovered in 2008 when Roger Ramirez, a citizen who attended council meetings regularly, heard that Rizzo was being paid $400,000 a year and council members were being paid $80,000. He asked for an accounting and despite efforts by Rizzo to avoid the revelations, they became public.

Outraged residents who had seen their taxes and fees go up turned out by the thousands to protest when the scandal broke. They held a successful recall election and threw out the entire council.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/24/bell-corruption-trial-openin_n_2545622.html

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Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Basecamp Personal Takes Project Management Out Of The Office, Ditches Subscriptions For A One-Time Fee

basecamppersonallogoBasecamp, the project management platform from 37 Signals that originally launched back in 2004, has withstood the test of time to become one of the established players in the online collaboration market. Today, it's making a move to expand beyond its current target customer base of small businesses (or small groups within small businesses) with the debut of a new platform called Basecamp Personal.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/SViSfVYcIw4/

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New test predicted presence of harmful BRCA mutations

Jan. 22, 2013 ? A new multiple gene expression profile test was able to predict the presence of harmful BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations in otherwise healthy women carrying the mutations, according to data published in Cancer Prevention Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.

"This novel technology aims to provide a layer of information regarding the cell functionality aspect of BRCA mutations that could greatly enhance the doctor's ability to identify high-risk carriers," said Asher Y. Salmon, M.D., a breast cancer specialist at the Hadassah Hebrew University Medical Center in Jerusalem, Israel.

Women with a mutation in their BRCA1 or BRCA2 gene have a significantly increased risk for developing breast cancer or ovarian cancer, and for many of those at risk disease may develop at an early age. Researchers are investigating ways to detect these genetic mutations so women carrying the genes can consider taking measures to reduce their cancer risk or increase the chance for detecting cancer in its early stages.

"The current tool for mutation detection is gene sequencing, which is expensive, time-consuming and, in many cases, lacking clear and decisive clinical decision making information," said Salmon. "In many cases, the current sequencing tool identifies a mutation, but we do not know if the mutation is neutral or harmful."

According to Salmon, emerging evidence has revealed that cells with a mutation in one of the two copies of the BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes have a distinct gene expression profile when exposed to causes of DNA damage, such as radiation.

After collecting white blood cells from blood samples donated by nine healthy women with a mutated BRCA1 gene and eight healthy women with a mutated BRCA2 gene, Salmon and his colleagues cultured the cells and exposed them to radiation. They then extracted the total RNA from these cells and compared it to the total RNA from identically treated white blood cells from 10 healthy, noncarrier women.

About 1,500 genes were differentially expressed between carriers and noncarriers. They narrowed this list to 18 genes that were the most significantly differentiated between the two groups of women. The final narrowing was done with a validation study of a model using 21 of the newly identified genes and five control genes to predict the risk for carrying a mutation. They used blood samples from an independent group of 40 women who were carriers of mutated BRCA1 and/or BRCA2 and 17 noncarrier women. The model had a sensitivity of 95 percent and a specificity of 88 percent.

According to Salmon, this test can portray whether a patient carries a harmful mutation regardless of the patient's ethnic origin or specific mutation. In addition, it is affordable and quick, he said.

"In wealthy societies, it can become a screening tool for identifying individuals with a very high susceptibility for carrying a mutation, and full sequencing can be reserved only for them," Salmon said. "In societies in which sequencing is not feasible, this test can substitute for it with a very high accuracy rate."

Salmon and colleagues are assembling a large validation study in Europe and North America to analyze the efficacy of the test in heterogeneous populations.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Association for Cancer Research (AACR).

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Asher Y. Salmon, Mali Salmon-Divon, Tamar Zahavi, Yulia Barash, Rachel S. Levy-Drummer, Jasmine Jacob-Hirsch, and Tamar Peretz. Determination of Molecular Markers for BRCA1 and BRCA2 Heterozygosity Using Gene Expression Profiling. Cancer Prev Res, January 22, 2013 DOI: 10.1158/1940-6207.CAPR-12-0105

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/top_news/top_health/~3/gHjxGTv7dJ4/130122142843.htm

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Minister: Somber Newtown needs MLK's words of hope

A young woman wears a green and white bow, the colors of Sandy Hook Elementary School, in her hair with the initials of the victims names from the Dec. 14, 2012 shooting during an interfaith a sermon at Newtown Congregational Church in Newtown, Conn., Sunday, Jan. 20, 2013. The Rev. James A. Forbes, Jr., who led one of the country?s most prominent liberal Protestant churches, is speaking at the church to honor the victims of last month?s school shooting and the legacy of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

A young woman wears a green and white bow, the colors of Sandy Hook Elementary School, in her hair with the initials of the victims names from the Dec. 14, 2012 shooting during an interfaith a sermon at Newtown Congregational Church in Newtown, Conn., Sunday, Jan. 20, 2013. The Rev. James A. Forbes, Jr., who led one of the country?s most prominent liberal Protestant churches, is speaking at the church to honor the victims of last month?s school shooting and the legacy of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

A child sits with her family in a pew during an interfaith a sermon at Newtown Congregational Church in Newtown, Conn., Sunday, Jan. 20, 2013. The Rev. James A. Forbes, Jr., who led one of the country?s most prominent liberal Protestant churches, is speaking at the church to honor the victims of last month?s school shooting and the legacy of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

The Rev. James A. Forbes Jr. is interviewed before a sermon at Newtown Congregational Church in Newtown, Conn., Sunday, Jan. 20, 2013. Forbes, who led one of the country?s most prominent liberal Protestant churches, is speaking in Newtown to honor the victims of last month?s school shooting and the legacy of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

Parishioners reach for each other's hands as they sing the song "We Shall Overcome" at the end of an interfaith service at Newtown Congregational Church in Newtown, Conn., Sunday, Jan. 20, 2013. The Rev. James A Forbes, Jr., who led one of the country?s most prominent liberal Protestant churches, spoke at the service to honor the victims of last month?s school shooting and the legacy of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

Parishioners hold hands as they sing the song "We Shall Overcome" at the end of an interfaith service at Newtown Congregational Church in Newtown, Conn., Sunday, Jan. 20, 2013. The Rev. James A Forbes, Jr., who led one of the country?s most prominent liberal Protestant churches, spoke at the service to honor the victims of last month?s school shooting and the legacy of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

(AP) ? A former leader of one of the nation's most prominent liberal Protestant churches told residents still grieving one of the deadliest school shootings in U.S. history that Martin Luther King Jr.'s words of healing and nonviolence "are needed now more than ever."

The Rev. James A. Forbes Jr., the first black minister to lead New York's historic Riverside Church, spoke Sunday night at the Newtown Congregational Church in a service honoring King and the elementary school shooting victims.

About 300 residents filled the church for the community worship service, called For the Healing of Newtown, on the eve of Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Forbes delivered a sermon calling for a transformation and healing of communities.

"The saddest face I ever saw on Martin Luther King was at the funeral of the four little girls slain in Birmingham, Ala.," he said. "We ask today, as King did then, 'Lord, what can come out of this that will honor those lost in this tragedy?'"

Twenty Sandy Hook Elementary School first-graders and six school officials died in the Newtown shooting last month. The gunman who attacked them had killed his mother at home before going to the school and later committed suicide.

Forbes' message of transformation was delivered to the Newtown community a day before the federal holiday honoring King's legacy and a little more than a month after the Dec. 14 school shooting.

The senior minister of the Newtown Congregational Church, the Rev. Matt Crebbin, welcomed the congregation and spoke of the long journey ahead.

"Though we are all interconnected, our destiny lies in our ability to be one, as a community and as a nation," he said. "Tonight we gather to heal and mend hearts."

As the congregation sang the hymn "When Aimless Violence Takes Those We Love," many fought back tears and others simply wept.

Forbes told the congregation his message would be one of hope and healing.

With great passion, he spoke of his experiences during the civil rights movement and the struggles and challenges along the way. But, he said, one way to get encouragement is to recognize when progress is made.

"As a community, overcoming a tragedy will take time, but progress will be made," he said.

Forbes said that King believed in the power of community and faith and the need for good to come from tragedy. He stepped down from the pulpit to be closer to the congregation as he raised his voice to finalize his message.

"We have seen that violence can strike anywhere," Forbes bellowed. "Yes, King talked about violence, but he also talked about transformation and healing in the wake of violence."

He then asked people in the church to consider something: "What if history records what happened in Newtown and that leads to a new America?"

"Maybe if we listen to the Spirit, we as a town will be able to stay out of the depths of despair," he said. "If we listen to the Spirit, there will emerge a beacon of light that can lead an entire nation."

Crebbin said this was a fitting time for Forbes, who was leader of the Riverside Church on Sept. 11, 2001, but retired in 2007, to visit Newtown, which is about 60 miles northeast of New York City.

"He's been able to share his insight about grief through his experience with 9/11," Crebbin said. "In the midst of the grieving, we can't try to fix the grief. We need to help with the grieving. It won't be the same life."

Everyone stood to sing "We Shall Overcome" as the service ended. Forbes, founder of the Healing of the Nations Foundation, walked down into the congregation to take the hands of those sitting across the aisle from each other and connected the crowd into one.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-01-21-School%20Shooting-Community%20Service/id-e482501065de4027a26e98109d8cf715

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Monday, January 21, 2013

Healthy Exercise and Fitness: Kids With Down Syndrome Twice as ...

Last Updated: 2012-11-14 15:10:14 -0400 (Reuters Health)

By Kerry Grens

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - More than one in four children with Down syndrome in The Netherlands is overweight, a rate double that of Dutch youth without the developmental disability, according to a new study.

"We were alarmed by the high prevalence of overweight in children with Down syndrome," said Dr. Helma van Gameren-Oosterom, the lead author of the study from the Netherlands Organization for Applied Scientific Research in Leiden.


"Of course we knew that the prevalence of overweight is rising; for Dutch standards a twofold level, however, was not expected."

Previous studies have suggested children with Down syndrome are especially prone to being heavy. But researchers still aren't sure why that is, according to Dr. Sheela Magge, an endocrinologist at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, who was not part of the new study.

Theories have ranged from physiological differences in metabolism or the way the body suppresses appetite to behavioral differences, such as in how much exercise children get, she said, but no studies have been able to pin down the definitive cause.

About 6,000 babies - or one in every 691 - are born with Down syndrome each year in the U.S., according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

For the latest study, the researchers compared growth patterns among 659 children with Down syndrome and no other health problems to general data on youth in The Netherlands.

By calculating kids' weight relative to their height - a unit called body mass index (BMI) - the research team determined which children were overweight and which were obese. The BMI cutoffs for obesity and overweight are different for each age in children.

Magge said they're not a perfect measure for children with Down syndrome because their body proportions are different than those of other children, but it's the best available yardstick for now.

Gameren-Oosterom and her colleagues found 25.5 percent of boys with Down syndrome were overweight and 4.2 percent were obese.

Among girls with the condition, 32 percent were overweight and 5.1 percent obese, they report in the medical journal Pediatrics.

In comparison, children in the rest of the Dutch population had much lower rates: for boys, 12.3 percent were overweight and 1.7 percent obese; for girls, 14.7 percent were overweight and 2.2 percent were obese.

Magge said researchers have also observed higher rates of overweight among children with Down syndrome in the U.S.

Gameren-Oosterom wrote in an email to Reuters Health that she and her colleagues suspect lifestyle has something to do with that pattern. Because it's harder for young people with Down syndrome to develop their motor skills, they may be less active.

Low muscle tone and poor coordination often accompany the disability as well, Magge told Reuters Health.

Her concern with so many kids being overweight is that as people with Down syndrome are living longer, "we may start seeing more complications and comorbidities such as diabetes, cardiovascular disease (and) hypertension, all those things that we worry about in all of our obese adolescents."

Gameren-Oosterom said it's difficult to develop a prevention or treatment strategy to target overweight and obesity in children with Down syndrome, given that the causes are unknown.

But like all youth, she added, those children will benefit from a healthy diet and sufficient exercise.

Magge said people with Down syndrome tend to prefer keeping strict routines, which could be something parents can take advantage of to help instill healthy habits.

"In adults it might be that if they get into a routine of eating healthy it's more likely to stick," she said.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/SnWv05 Pediatrics, online November 12, 2012.

Copyright ? 2012 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.

Source: http://healthyexerciseandfitness.blogspot.com/2013/01/kids-with-down-syndrome-twice-as-likely.html

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18 Amazing Art Deco Clocks From a Futuristic Past

Among the many material forms of Art Deco—from buildings to furniture to cars—clocks somehow seem to make the best use of the machine-age motifs that make the style so wonderful. Feverish geometric forms, mind-bending symmetry, high-contrast colors, modern and ancient materials combined with ticking mechanics and streamlined electricity in order to measure something more imaginary: time. Here are 18 clocks of that era that we just adore. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/h2aIQqXVjIA/18-amazing-art-deco-clocks

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Oprah's Favorite MLK Quote: 'Greatness Is Determined By Service' (VIDEO)

What Oprah Winfrey has said she knows for sure is that...

"'Everyone has the power for greatness -- not for fame, but greatness, because greatness is determined by service.' Even before I first heard my all-time favorite quote from Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., I knew in my heart that the message was true. As far back as I can recall, my prayer has been the same: 'Use me, God. Show me how to take who I am, who I want to be, and what I can do, and use it for a purpose greater than myself.'"

In this clip from "Oprah's Lifeclass," Oprah talks about how the best way to begin to figure out who you are really meant to be is to ask the universe the question, "How can I be used in service, to myself first, and how can I then use that service to serve the world?"

"Use your life to serve the world, and you will find that it also serves you," she says.

"Oprah's Lifeclass" airs on OWN.

Related on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/21/oprahs-favorite-mlk-quote_n_2496816.html

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Sunday, January 20, 2013

Dave Goldberg SurveyMonkey Interview - Business Insider

AP

Sheryl Sandberg and Dave Goldberg

Over a year ago, Dave Goldberg, the CEO of online survey company SurveyMonkey decided he wanted to raise fresh capital for his 13-year-old startup.

He didn't want to go public to raise capital. He wanted to stay private. At the same time, he wanted to let early employees and investors sell some of their stock in SurveyMonkey. His investors told him if he could figure out a way to stay private while giving everyone a chance to cash in on stock that appreciated in value, he had their blessing.

This week, SurveyMonkey announced the details of a plan that would do just that. It is getting a whopping $800 million in fresh capital. Of that, $444 million will come from new investors buying equity from old employees and investors. The new investment is being led by Goldberg himself, along with Tiger Global Management. Google is also investing through a new late-stage investment vehicle. The rest, $350 million, is coming from debt being led by JP Morgan.?

It's an unusual move for a Silicon Valley company. But in light of the way tech companies like Zynga, Groupon, and Facebook have been treated on the public markets, it's not surprising Goldberg wants to avoid an IPO.

There's an interesting twist to this story. Goldberg is the husband of Sheryl Sandberg, the COO of Facebook. The biggest story in tech for 2012 was the Facebook IPO. The scrutiny of the stock's drop, and the IPO process have been a source of endless fascination.

We spoke with Goldberg, and below is a lightly edited transcript of our conversation. He says he makes it a rule not to talk about Facebook, but still talked around the topic. He suggests the Facebook IPO had no impact on his decision. He's taken companies public in the past. He knows what it's like and he believes it's the wrong choice for SurveyMonkey.

"Part of the reason we're not going public is that we don't want to measure our results on a quarterly basis," says Goldberg, "And then having people say 'They grew 30% this quarter so they should grow 30% this quarter' and all that." He wants to run his company on his terms, not the public market's terms.

His company is very profitable. It generated $113 million in revenue with EBITDA of $61 million. He could probably avoid an IPO in the long run and pay down the debt from SurveyMonkey's cash flow if he really wanted to stay private forever.

Here's our conversation.

Business Insider: Explain the business model for SurveyMonkey.

Dave Goldberg: Our business model is that we have a free version of our survey tool, and then people upgrade to the paid version to get additional features. We have another business called SurveyMonkey audience, which is if you want to buy respondents to fill out your survey. It's not how most people use us, but it's a new addition in the last year and a half to fill a need some people have. We have disclosed 2012 revenue of $113 million and EBITDA $61 million.

BI: Why be so open about your financials?

DG: As part of the raising debt process, we got rated by Moody, and S&P, so that information was going to come out as part of those anyway, so it wasn't going to stay secret.

BI: Why are companies so quiet about that?

DG: In general you don't want competitors to understand your business, outside of telling people your revenue and profitability numbers.

Part of the reason we're not going public is that we don't want to measure our results on a quarterly basis. Part if that is you don't want to release numbers on a quarterly basis and then having people say, "They grew 30% this quarter so they should grow 30% next quarter" and those kind of things. If you're private, you'd rather just keep all that information for yourself. There's not a whole lot of advantage for a company to be public.

BI: When did you start thinking about raising new money?

DG: We started working on it at the end of 2011. We had a conversation with my existing investors Spectrum and Bain. I said,"Here's where we are, should we think about staying private if we can get liquidity for investors and employees at a good price?" They said look, "If you can figure out how to do this, we'll support it." Once I knew I had their sign off, I wanted to do it as soon as possible.

I talked to a lot of different people - wealth funds, hedge funds, strategic wealth funds. It all came together in the beginning of November after Tiger committed to being the lead. Google had expressed interest before I signed up Tiger, but they weren't going to lead. Once I had Tiger, Google was in.

The weirdest thing for me, this is the most money I've ever raised and my biggest problem was I had way more demand than I could fill. My investors didn't want to sell any more shares. I probably could have raised $900 million in equity. It's a nice, but sort of strange, problem to have.

BI: You want investors focused on the long-term. SurveyMonkey will be private for a very long time, right?

DG: I'm not saying we're never going public in the future, but we might stay private. I just wanted the option to not have to go public just because one of my investors needed liquidity. I want to go public because I have the right reason to go public ? because the benefits outweigh the costs. If that happens in two years, four years, ten years, or never ? it won't be just because of investor liquidity needs.

BI: How much does being close to Facebook and the whole hoopla that surrounded the IPO influence your thinking on this?

DG: I have a rule not to talk about Facebook, so I'm not going to specifically address Facebook. What I will say is we were not concerned about going public. We were concerned about being public and having to hit quarterly numbers and the impact that has on your investment decision making process of the company.

BI: But, seeing what happened to Zynga and Groupon when they hit the public markets, it had to influence your decision making, right?

DG: I took my first company public, I was at Yahoo for six years, I saw a lot of ups and downs, so I'm pretty familiar with what it's like being involved in a public Internet company. It's not like this glorious moment, but it's a financing event. If you need the financing, it's good, and if you don't, you need to think about it very hard before you go do it.

A lot of companies can't do what we do. We have a lot of cash flow that we don't have the use for, so we can can pay down our debt. We're a very stable predictable business. So this isn't going to be an option for a lot of people, but if it is, then you have to ask yourself those hard questions about whether it makes sense to be public.

BI: Why can't a public company just ignore shareholders to a certain extent? Our CEO Henry Blodget likes to talk about Jeff Bezos and how he basically came out and said, "Wall Street, you can sit on the sidelines, we have a long term vision and plan. Do what you want with the stock, we have a long term plan." Why can't others do that?

DG: In Amazon's case, Jeff has built that credibility up over many, many, many, years and quarters. He didn't start out that way.

In the beginning, you have to build a base of shareholders who actually believe in that long-term vision. Generally, when you're going public, you're transitioning from your existing private shareholder base to a new public shareholder base.

They have to get comfortable with that vision, so you can say all those things, and if your existing private shareholder base is looking at this to get out and you have to find a whole new base of public shareholder base, you can't ignore what they want, or you'll have a real problem. The stock will fall dramatically even if the business is doing fine. Because if you're not communicating what's happening to them in the business, if you're not focused on making the quarterly numbers, they're not going to have faith in you. And they're not going to want to invest.

You'll be left without a shareholder base. Your former shareholder base will be selling, and you wont have the new shareholders. What actually happens, it happens to a bunch of companies, is even if the business is doing well, and there isn't that shareholder base, then the stock falls and it impacts the business. It impacts customer's perception of the business, recruiting for new employees ? so if you don't focus on keeping the stock up and rising, it creates a negative feedback loop within the business.

BI: It sounds awful. Is sounds like a nightmare! Why does anyone do this?

DG: I think it makes a lot of sense for some companies. Look at LinkedIn. It helped grow their revenue streams, it was a huge boon for LinkedIn to go public. I think Jeff Weiner did a masterful job. It was a real catalyst for their business, it helped grow the business. I think Salesforce, going public very early on before they were profitable, it made a lot of sense for them because it got customers comfortable that these guys were going to have capital and be transparent about their business.

BI: The company that shall not be named [Facebook] had its hyper growth period before the public got a crack at the stock. Isn't there a risk in IPOing once you're mature?

DG: I don't think that's a problem for the company. What everyone is upset about is the problem for the public market investors. They're missing out on a lot of the value creation in these companies because they're staying in the private markets. What you see is people like Fidelity and Capital Research buying late stage private companies because they would have in the past been public already.?

The companies were going to get to that phase whether they were public or private. The valuation was going to reflect that. If it was going to slow down, it was going to slow down, whether you had gone public or not. The stock price will reflect the growth rate was at that time. Part of the reason people get upset about that stuff because they're missing all this upside as investors.

It's a lot of sour grapes from public market investors. If you don't like the growth projection, then don't buy it.?

Business Insider

BI: Do you ever talk about your wife Sheryl in your interviews? She called you one of her best career decisions. What do you think of her?

DG: She asked that I not talk about her too much. She has a book coming out, and we'll be talking more when that's out. But, what I will says is that's certainly the best decision I've made in my life, was getting married to her. We're fortunate that we have a great life together. She's my most trusted advisor. It's just great to have someone who's smart and thoughtful and knowledgeable about these type of businesses. She's been incredibly helpful and encouraging to me through this whole process. From taking the job at SurveyMonkey, to going forward. A lot of my best ideas come from her.

BI: Do you share the housework 50/50? She says you guys split it, but you can be honest, are you doing 60% of the work? If you want to vent, you can do that, no one will know, just get it off your chest.

DG: I think we definitely aspire to that. At certain points in time I'm probably not at 50/50, especially in the last couple of weeks, but we try to be there. That's the sort of partnership that we have.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/dave-golderg-surveymonkey-interview-2013-1

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UK Satellite broadcaster Sky set to roll out local downloads on its Sky Go mobile apps

UK Satellite broadcaster Sky set to roll out local downloads on its Sky Go mobile appsUK satellite television broadcaster Sky will launch updates to its hugely popular Sky Go apps next week that will enable users to download content and not just stream it. According to UK newspaper The Telegraph, the service will see Sky launch a subscription based service that will not only allow users to stream content that matches their actual home Sky subscription but be expanded to include movies and TV series too.

The subscription will cost ?5 a month and will allow you to register up to four devices to download on-demand TV shows and movies from Sky?s huge catalogue. The content will stay on your device for 30 days after you have downloaded it then it will not be available. You will be able to download as much content as you like with the only restrictions being the available storage on your device.

The move by Sky will certainly bring some competition to Lovefilm and Netflix which both offer movie and TV show streaming services in the UK. Sky however is such a well-known brand that it is sure to take a big chunk of that market when it launches next week. Currently Netflix offers its streaming service for ?5.99 a month and Lovefilm is offering a special price of ?4.99 a month; it?s no surprise then that Sky chose the ?5 a month figure for its service.

Sky claims that more than a quarter of its 11 million subscribers already actively use its Sky Go service. The Sky Go Extra service will be the first mobile TV subscription service in the UK and Ireland that offers Hollywood movies to download and watch offline.

If you are currently a Sky subscriber, would you be happy to pay an additional ?5 a month to get access to this service?

Source: The Telegraph



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/hfi86aXABXE/story01.htm

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DEA Agents Could Be Allowed To Visit Venezuela

Fox News Latino:

Relations between the United States and Venezuela have been strained ever since President Hugo Ch?vez took office in 1999.

However, in what could be seen as a thaw in the icy relations between the two countries, Venezuela is weighing a U.S. government request to let a high-level DEA official visit the South American country.

Venezuelan Ambassador to the Organization of American States Roy Chaderton told The Associated Press on Friday that his country's main consideration is ensuring mutual respect between the countries.

Read the whole story at Fox News Latino

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/20/dea-agents-could-be-allowed-in-venezuela_n_2515731.html

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Thursday, January 17, 2013

Facebook Graph Search; New MySpace Opens; Disney 'Infinity' Coming in June

Facebook Graph Search

Facebook had the tech world talking on Tuesday with the introduction of Graph Search, a new way for users to wade through the 1 trillion connections that exist on the social network for useful information about what their friends like, where they've been, and more.

Now in beta, Graph Search is only focused on people, photos, places, and interests at this early stage of its development but will continue to grow, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said at a press event at the company's Menlo Park campus.

"Graph Search is not Web search," Zuckerberg said, explaining some key differences between Facebook's new, tightly focused product and broader search services provided by Google and Microsoft's Bing. For more, see Before Graph Search: Facebook's Biggest Changes.

Meanwhile, Facebook's former rival MySpace had some news of its own yesterday.?The completely revamped site dropped the invite-only status and?opened to the public.?The Justin Timberlake-backed social network underwent a?Biggest Loser-like shedding of pounds, debuting with sleek, modern horizontal navigation and a simple black, white, and grey color scheme.

In gaming news, Disney Interactive yesterday announced what the company called its "most ambitious gaming initiative ever" ??Disney Infinity.?The new platform brings together beloved characters from The Walt Disney Company and Pixar Animations Studio to fight hand-in-hand against animated evil.?The Disney Infinity universe launches in June across all consoles.

Also making headlines yesterday:?

For more from Angela, follow her on Twitter @amoscaritolo.

Source: http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2414345,00.asp?kc=PCRSS05039TX1K0000762

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Monday, January 14, 2013

Egypt court grants Mubarak appeal, orders retrial

CAIRO (AP) ? A court granted Hosni Mubarak's appeal of his life sentence in a Sunday hearing, ordering a retrial of the ousted Egyptian president on charges that he failed to prevent the killing of hundreds of protesters during the uprising that toppled his regime nearly two years ago.

The ruling read out by judge Ahmed Ali Abdel-Rahman during a brief hearing also granted the appeal of Mubarak's security chief Habib el-Adly, who is also serving a life sentence after his conviction on the same charges. He too will be retried.

No date has been set for the start of their retrial.

The ruling came one day after a prosecutor placed a new detention order on Mubarak over gifts worth millions of Egyptian pounds (hundreds of thousands of US dollars) he and other regime officials allegedly received from Egypt's top newspaper as a show of loyalty while he was in power.

The public funds prosecutor ordered Mubarak held for 15 days pending the completion of the investigation. Mubarak, 84, was moved to a Cairo military hospital last month after slipping inside a prison bathroom and injuring himself.

Mubarak's two sons, one-time heir apparent Gamal and businessman Alaa, are in prison while on trial for alleged insider trading and using their influence to buy state land at a fraction of its market price. The two were acquitted of corruption charges in the same case as Mubarak, but judge Abdel-Rahman on Sunday said the court has granted the prosecution's appeal against their not-guilty verdict.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypt-court-grants-mubarak-appeal-orders-retrial-085633665.html

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A trail of bullet casings leads from Africa's wars to Iran

By C.J. Chivers


New York Times

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Jan 12, 2013

The first clues appeared in Kenya, Uganda and what is now South Sudan. A British arms researcher surveying ammunition used by government forces and civilian militias in 2006 found Kalashnikov rifle cartridges he had not seen before. The ammunition bore no factory code, suggesting that its manufacturer hoped to avoid detection.

Within two years other researchers were finding identical cartridges circulating through the ethnic violence in Darfur. Similar ammunition then turned up in 2009 in a stadium in Conakry, Guinea, where soldiers had fired on anti-government protesters, killing more than 150.

For six years, a group of independent arms-trafficking researchers worked to pin down the source of the mystery cartridges. Exchanging information from four continents, they concluded that someone had been quietly funneling rifle and machine-gun ammunition into regions of protracted conflict, and had managed to elude exposure for years. Their only goal was to solve the mystery, not implicate any specific nation.

When the investigators' breakthrough came, it carried a surprise. The manufacturer was not one of Africa's usual suspects. It was Iran.

Iran has a well-developed military manufacturing sector, but has not exported its weapons in quantities rivaling those of the heavyweights in the global arms trade, including the United States, Russia, China and several European states. But its export choices in this case were significant. While small-arms ammunition attracts less attention than strategic weapons or arms that have drawn international condemnation, like land mines and cluster bombs, it is a basic ingredient of organized violence, and involved each year and at each war in uncountable deaths and crimes.

And for the past several years, even as Iran faced intensive foreign scrutiny over its nuclear program and for supporting proxies across the Middle East, its state-manufactured ammunition was distributed through secretive networks to a long list of combatants, including in regions under U.N. arms embargoes.

The trail of evidence uncovered by the investigation found Iranian cartridges in the possession of rebels in Ivory Coast, federal troops in the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Taliban in Afghanistan and groups affiliated with al-Qaida in the Maghreb in Niger. The ammunition was linked to spectacular examples of state-sponsored violence and armed groups connected to terrorism ? all without drawing wide attention or leading back to its manufacturer.

The ammunition, matched to the world's most abundant firearms, has principally been documented in Africa, where the researchers concluded that untold quantities have been supplied to governments in Guinea, Kenya, Ivory Coast and, the evidence suggests, Sudan.

From there, it traveled to many of the continent's most volatile locales, becoming an instrument of violence in some of Africa's ugliest wars and for brutal regimes. And while the wide redistribution within Africa may be the work of African governments, the same ammunition has also been found elsewhere, including in an insurgent arms cache in Iraq and on a ship intercepted as it headed for the Gaza Strip.

Iran's role in providing arms to allies and to those who fight its enemies has long been broadly understood. Some of these practices were most recently reported in the transfer of Fajr-5 ground-to-ground rockets to Gaza. Its expanding footprint of small-arms ammunition exports has pushed questions about its roles in a shadowy ammunition trade high onto the list of research priorities for trafficking investigators.

"If you had asked me not too long ago what Iran's role in small-arms ammunition trafficking to Africa had been, I would have said, ?Not much,"' said James Bevan, a former U.N. investigator who since 2011 has been director of Conflict Armament Research, a private firm registered in England that identifies and tracks conventional weapons. "Our understanding of that is changing."

The independent investigation also demonstrated the relative ease with which weapons and munitions flow about the world, a characteristic of the arms trade that might partially explain how Iran sidestepped scrutiny of governments and international organizations, including the United Nations, that have tried to restrict its banking transactions and arms sales.

The United Nations, in a series of resolutions, has similarly tried to block arms transfers into Ivory Coast, Congo and Sudan ? all places where researchers found Iranian ammunition.

Ammunition from other sources, including China, Russia, Hungary, the Czech Republic and other former Soviet bloc states remain in circulation in Africa, along with production by African states. Why Iran has entered the market is not clear. Profit motives as well as an effort by Iran to gain influence in Africa might explain the exports, Bevan said. But much remains unknown.

Neither the government of Iran nor its military manufacturing conglomerate, the Defense Industries Organization, or DIO, replied to written queries submitted for this article.

The researchers involved in the investigation ? including several former experts for the United Nations and one from Amnesty International ? documented the expanding circulation of Iranian ammunition, not the means or the entities that have actually exported the stocks. They are not sure if the ammunition had been directly sold by the Iranian government or its security services, by a government- or military-controlled firm, or by front companies abroad.

But the long mysterious provenance of the ammunition appears beyond dispute. The cartridges were made, the researchers say, by the Ammunition and Metallurgy Industries Group, a subsidiary of DIO.

Matching the cartridges to the producer took time, in part because the ammunition had been packaged and marked in ways to dissuade tracing. Eventually the identifications were reached via data-pooling.

Much of the world's ammunitions bears numeric or logo markings, known as headstamps, that together declare the location and year of a cartridge's manufacture. Over the years, governments and private researchers have assembled encyclopedic headstamp keys that can make matching particular markings to particular factories a straightforward pursuit.

The ammunition in these cases included rounds for Kalashnikov assault rifles, for medium machine guns and sniper rifles and for heavy machine guns.

In each case, the cartridges carried headstamps not listed on the publicly available records. The stamps were simple caliber markings and, typically, two digits indicating the year of manufacture.

Similarly, neither the ammunition's wooden crates nor its packaging in green plastic carry bags or plain cardboard boxes, when these items were found with the ammunition, disclosed the place of manufacture.

All of the ammunition shared a unique combination of traits, including the caliber headstamp in a particular font, the alloy of the bullet jackets, and three indentations where primers attached to cartridge cases. The traits together suggested a common manufacturer.

Over the years, the researchers bided time and gathered data. They collected samples of used and unused ammunition at conflicts and recorded their characteristics. They collaborated with other specialists, exchanging their finds.

Some sources were confidential. Others were not. Mike Lewis, a former member of the United Nations Panel of Experts on the Sudan, documented the presence of the ammunition at the Conakry stadium crackdown while investigating for Amnesty International.

One sample ? from Afghanistan ? was found by The , which was surveying ammunition used by the Taliban and provided an image of a then-unidentifiable cartridge's headstamp to Bevan in 2010.

Once the data was assembled, the breakthrough came in what a soon-to-be-released report by the researchers called "cross-case analysis" and by looking away from the ammunition to other sources.

In late 2011 Bevan obtained the bill of lading for 13 shipping containers seized by the authorities in Lagos, Nigeria, in 2010. The document showed that the containers originated in Iran and declared the contents to be "building materials."

But, as the researchers noted in their report, "concealed behind stone slabs and insulation materials" was a shipment of arms, including the same ammunition that they had been finding in the field.

The shipping company was based in Tehran, Iran's capital.

Declassified documents obtained via the Freedom of Information Act by Matthew Schroeder, an arms-trafficking analyst at the Federation of American Scientists, later showed that the U.S. military had identified ammunition packaged in the same materials as Iranian. Schroeder shared his documents with Bevan. This provided another link.

Ultimately, Bevan noticed that Iran had published limited technical details of its cartridges, including bullet weights. Some of these weights are atypical. Late in 2012 he had samples weighed on a jeweler's scale, confirming the match.

Bevan made clear in repeated interviews that he and his fellow researchers are not advocates for military action against Iran. When they began tracing the ammunition, they did not know or expect that the evidence would point to Tehran.

He also noted that while the ammunition is Iranian-made, it may not have been sent to directly by Iran to some of the combatants.

"In terms of prescription, if it was clear that there were repeated violations by Iran, I think we could come down more strongly about it," he said. "But a good portion of this, and in perhaps the majority of these cases, the ammunition was transferred around Africa by African states."

He added that while the original source of the ammunitions is now clear, many questions remain unanswered, including who organized the delivery to regions under embargo or enmeshed in ethnic conflicts.

Bevan and his fellow researchers said their findings pointed to a need for further research, to gather facts upon which policy decisions can be based.

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'; } } } if (google_ads[0].bidtype == "CPC") { /* insert this snippet for each ad call */ google_adnum = google_adnum + google_ads.length; } document.write(s); return; } google_ad_client = 'pub-9695435974299667'; /* substitute your client_id (pub-#) */ google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '3'; google_ad_channel = '0826849200'; google_ad_type = 'text'; google_image_size = '468x60'; google_feedback = 'on'; google_adtest = 'off'; google_skip = google_adnum; /* to skip for multiple units, insert this snippet for each ad call */ // -->

Source: http://www.staradvertiser.com/news/20130112_A_trail_of_bullet_casings_leads_from_Africas_wars_to_Iran.html

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More planets than stars in our galaxy

Mark Hoffman

First Posted: Jan 13, 2013 02:05 AM EST

billions of planets

(Photo : NASA/JPL-Caltech) The standard assumption of science-fiction like Star Wars, and also many researchers over a century, is just now becoming bolstered by scientific facts: There are billions and billions of planets - in our galaxy alone.

How common are Earth-sized planets? A study dealing with this question was officially published on January 11, and independently from that, a graphic from NASA appeared the day after, illustrating another extrapolation from recent data taken by NASA's orbiting Kepler spacecraft. According to the latter estimate, which is based on planets (including unconfirmed candidates) discovered in close orbits around their stars, computer models are indicating that at least one in ten stars are orbited by an Earth-sized planet, making our Milky Way Galaxy the home to over ten billion Earths. And there would be even more super-earth-sized planets with up to twice the mass of our homeworld, as well as Neptune sized worlds, as can be seen on the graphic.

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But the numbers could be even higher according to the study "One or more bound planets per Milky Way star from microlensing observations", published in Nature this week. The researchers is to extrapolate the number of potential planets by statistical analysis of planets found with the microlensing method, which can discover planets that are relatively far away from their stars, by the very slight gravitational 'wobble' of a star caused by the planets orbiting it. The result is that around 62 percent of all the 100 billion stars in our Milky Way have super-earth class planets, 52 percent host cool Neptune-like planets, and still 17 percent could be circled by Jupiter class giants.

?2013 ScienceWorldReport.com All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission. The window to the world of science news.

Source: http://www.scienceworldreport.com/articles/4403/20130113/more-planets-than-stars-galaxy.htm

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Sunday, January 13, 2013

Can Learning This Skill Prevent Alzheimer's? - Retirement Homes

Learning another language has long been held by mental health experts as beneficial to one?s memory, verbal and non-verbal communications, as well as math skills.

But a new study suggests that bilingualism is especially valuable for seniors.

But as reported by science news website RedOrbit.com, researchers from the University of Kentucky College of Medicine (UKCM) have found seniors who are born and raised in bilingual environments have better changes of avoiding cognitive decline with age than their peers who grew up with only one language.

That could potentially translate to a lower chance of contracting Alzheimer?s Disease, less of a need to move into an Alzheimer Care community.

?This suggests that bilingual seniors use their brains more efficiently than monolingual seniors,? researcher Brian Gold of UKCM told the news source. ?Together, these results suggest that lifelong bilingualism may exert its strongest benefits on the functioning of frontal brain regions in aging.?

One of the potential long-term impacts of this study could be more funding for bilingual education, and more opportunities for parents to educate their children at home in another language.

Did you grow up speaking two languages? Do you feel it benefitted you as a child, and do you still see the benefits now? Tell us about it in the comment section below.

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Source: http://www.retirementhomes.com/library/can-learning-this-skill-prevent-alzheimers/

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