Saturday, December 31, 2011

Verizon keen on making major changes in January, it seems

Verizon changes

It really doesn't seem that long ago, but with today's news that Verizon will be charging an extra $2 a month for some methods of bill payment starting Jan. 15, 2012, we got to thinking about some of the bigger changes we saw in 2011 -- and exactly 366 days before this latest move takes effect. To wit:

And both of those major changes came on Jan. 16. That's not really a great surprise -- start of the year and all. But does anyone want to do some doomcasting and predict what Verizon customers will lose come January 2012?



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/ZYGQrHCIGlE/story01.htm

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Video: ?Tarzan? sidekick chimp dies

Cheetah, believed to be the original sidekick chimp from the 1930s ?Tarzan? films, died over the weekend. NBC?s Lester Holt reports.

>>> tonight the movie world is mourning the loss of a screen legend, cheetah believe to be the original sidekick chimp of the 1930s tarzan films, cheetah died over the weekend at a primate sanctuary in florida after experiencing kidney fail failu failure. he was 80 years old.

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/45810008/

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Friday, December 30, 2011

GOP voters focus on nation economy, not Iowa's

Republican presidential candidate, Texas Gov. Rick Perry speaks during a campaign stop at the Westside Conservative Club breakfast,Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2011, in Urbandale, Iowa. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

Republican presidential candidate, Texas Gov. Rick Perry speaks during a campaign stop at the Westside Conservative Club breakfast,Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2011, in Urbandale, Iowa. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

Republican presidential candidate, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich speaks to reporters during a campaign stop at the Southbridge Mall in Mason City, Iowa, Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2011. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

Republican presidential candidate, Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, speaks during a campaign stop at the Iowa State Fairgrounds in Des Moines, Iowa, Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2011. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) ? The "Great Recession" barely touched Iowa City.

The University of Iowa and its hospital are in the middle of a construction boom. A manufacturer is touting plans to hire 175 people for a new iron foundry. Farmers working the land outside the city are flush with cash from record-setting crop prices.

Yet, after Rick Perry entered the Republican presidential race, he rolled into town on a bus emblazoned with "Get America Working Again" and offered prescriptions for fixing the economy. Newt Gingrich stopped by to bash what he calls job-killing environmental and labor regulations. Ron Paul said during a recent visit that an overreaching federal government is hurting "the productivity of all of us and means we will be poorer."

Throughout the campaign for Tuesday's Iowa caucuses, it hasn't seemed to matter much that the state economy is in far stronger shape than the rest of the country, with unemployment at 5.7 percent, agricultural real estate selling near all-time highs and some manufacturers reporting a shortage of skilled workers to fill all their openings.

Republican voters who in past election years focused on pocketbook issues specific to Iowa, such as corn subsidies or ethanol policy, say they're taking a wide-angle view of the economy this year. They blame President Barack Obama for its sputters and fear giving him a second term will slide it back toward the abyss.

"The economy is still suffering, even though the numbers don't say it. People are hurting and things have gone downhill since Barack Obama became president," said Pam Swick, a Council Bluffs retiree and Perry supporter.

"Yes, things are better here. But they're still not good," she said. "And don't credit President Obama for it. He's made it worse. Things here are going fine despite him, not because of him."

Iowa's economy fell into recession later than the nation's and didn't drop as far as some other states, said Iowa State University economist David Swenson. There wasn't much of a housing bubble, partly because the state is slow-growing but economically stable.

Yet a recent New York Times/CBS News poll found the economy was by far the most important issue to likely Republican caucus-goers. Leading the polls off and on in recent weeks have been the candidates most associated with the pro-business, small-government, economic freedom slices of the GOP: Mitt Romney, Newt Gingrich and Ron Paul. Those with stronger ties to the party's social conservative base ? Rick Santorum, Michele Bachmann and Perry ? make time for a healthy dose of economics during their stump speeches.

Jim Knapp, a 71-year-old home builder who lives in Iowa City and plans to support Bachmann, is one of many taking the wide view. Knapp said he is collecting Social Security and works on home remodeling projects while his wife works at the University of Iowa. They're doing fine financially.

But he said he's worried about the long-struggling economy in Detroit, where his son is a preacher. His son-in-law, meanwhile, is being laid off in a downsizing at a financial company in Minnesota.

"Iowa's economy has held up because of the agricultural base," Knapp said as he left a Bachmann event at a diner. "But we need to get the whole economy back on track. As long as the nation is suffering, everybody is, to some extent."

To be sure, not all of Iowa is as economically healthy as Iowa City. Swenson said that while Des Moines and the corridor between Iowa City and Cedar Rapids are doing well, cities such as Waterloo and Mason City that rely heavily on manufacturing are struggling with long-term unemployment and a slow recovery.

"We're just kind of stuck in neutral," Swenson said. "On average, we don't look so bad, but a large swath of the state also doesn't look so hot."

Still, Swenson said he wasn't surprised that Iowa's Republican voters are focused on the economy outside of the state. Many are businesspeople and farmers who equate a recovering national economy to renewed demand for their products.

That's the view of Norman Olson, a 77-year-old retired farmer from Northwood, near the border with Minnesota. "It still hurts that other people don't have work other places," he said. "We are not isolated from the rest of the country."

Then, there's Obama. A recent University of Iowa Hawkeye poll found that Iowa Democrats have a brighter view of the economy than those in the GOP, suggesting some of the gloomy Republican outlook could be tinged by anti-Obama partisanship.

That's the case for Carol Ann Christiansen, 55, president of the Johnson County Republican Women and the retired owner of a floral business. She said she wants a candidate who will be frugal in Washington and "create the jobs this country so desperately needs." She dismissed the economic success in the state college town of Iowa City as being largely funded by taxpayers.

"We need a president who is going to give business people some economic certainty," Christiansen said. "Every other day there seems to be some new regulation that makes it hard for them."

___

Associated Press writers Philip Elliott and Shannon McCaffrey contributed to this report from Dubuque, Council Bluffs and Mason City.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2011-12-29-Iowa%20Caucuses-Economy/id-fd50c75fae324fe6b80f1f7bae40cb30

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U.S. says China is not a currency manipulator

Some U.S. politicians have argued that China has gained an unfair competitive edge in global markets by keeping the yuan artificially low to boost exports.

But the Treasury, in a semi-annual report, said that statutes covering a designation of currency manipulator "have not been met with respect to China."

Even so, Treasury said appreciation in the yuan has been too slow. The value of the yuan, which Beijing manages closely, has risen by 4 percent against the dollar this year and 7.7 percent since China dropped a firm peg against the greenback in June 2010.

"The movement of the (yuan) to date is insufficient," the Treasury said in a statement following the release of its semi-annual report to Congress on international economic and exchange rate policies.

"Treasury will closely monitor the pace of appreciation and press for policy changes that yield greater exchange rate flexibility, a level playing field, and a sustained shift to domestic demand-led growth."

The Peterson Institute for International Economics recently estimated the yuan was undervalued by 24 percent against the dollar, down from 28 percent earlier in the year. It attributed the change to both Beijing's policy of gradual currency appreciation and higher Chinese inflation.

MORE OF THE SAME

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has said the law that requires the administration to determine whether U.S. trade partners are deliberately undervaluing their currencies is a poor tool to push Beijing on the yuan.

Instead, the United States has tried to use international economic fora, such as the Group of 20 leading nations and the International Monetary Fund, to ramp up pressure on Beijing to move more quickly to a more-flexible currency.

"It's not very surprising. It's sort of sliding it in under the radar. They're (Treasury) really not in a position to make any major moves at this point," said Sean Incremona, an economist at 4Cast in New York.

The Treasury Department has not labeled country a currency manipulator since July 1994, when it cited China. A designation would require the United States to step up negotiations with Beijing on the yuan's value.

The yuan slipped on Tuesday as strong dollar demand from corporations offset a record high mid-point fixed by the People's Bank of China. The central bank set an all-time high dollar/yuan mid-point in an apparent hope to let the yuan rise a little more at the end of 2011 so as to make the yuan's full-year nominal appreciation look bigger, traders said.

(Additional reporting by Luciana Lopez; Editing by Leslie Adler)

Source: http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/20111227/usays-china-is-notcurrency-manipulator.htm

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Chinese lawyer goes on trial in dissent crackdown (AP)

BEIJING ? A former lawyer and veteran activist left disabled by past police mistreatment went on trial Thursday, the third dissident in a week to be prosecuted as China presses a sweeping crackdown to deter popular uprisings like the ones that shook the Arab world.

Looking thin and frail, Ni Yulan lay on a bed and used an oxygen machine to help her breathe during the hearing, her daughter, Dong Xuan, said afterward. Dong said she told the court about her mother's run-ins with police since 2002 and how police beatings left her crippled.

"Seeing my mother lying on that bed, it made my heart ache," Dong said.

Ni is charged with fraud, accused of falsifying facts to steal property. She is also charged, along with her husband, with causing a disturbance at a hotel where they had been detained by police.

Ni and her supporters deny the charges and say she is being punished for her years of activism, especially her advocacy for people forced from their homes to make way for the fast-paced real estate development that remade Beijing for the 2008 Olympics. Her outspoken defense earned her the enmity of officials and developers. Her family's house in an old neighborhood in the capital's center was also razed, and the couple became homeless.

The couple's trial comes near the end of a year that has seen Chinese authorities use disappearances, house arrest, lengthy prison terms and other means to prevent activists from drawing inspiration from the Arab Spring protests that unseated autocrats in Egypt, Tunisia and Libya.

In the past week, two longtime democracy and rights activists, Chen Wei and Chen Xi, were separately sentenced by courts in southern and central China to nine and 10 years in prison for posting essays on the Internet that the government deemed subversive.

Referring to the two cases, an editorial published in China's state-run Global Times newspaper on Thursday expressed support for the convictions.

"To firmly convict and punish a handful of people who instigate subversion of state power is a must. It is a safeguard for state security and a safeguard for a normal environment for public opinion," the newspaper said.

Like those two campaigners, the 51-year-old Ni has been previously jailed, twice in her case. In a June 2010 interview with The Associated Press, Ni described abuse she suffered at the hands of police, saying that guards have beaten her, insulted her and urinated on her face. While in detention in 2002, police pinned her down and kicked her knees until she was unable to walk, she said.

While serving the second prison term of two years, Ni said she was deprived of her crutches and had to crawl up and down five stories and across the prison yard every day for months.

Ni said the authorities were trying to silence her because in trying to defend those who had been wrongly evicted from their homes, she had found evidence of wrongdoing by Beijing officials in lucrative land deals.

"When they were making me crawl in prison, they were basically trying to kill me so that they can silence me," Ni said in the 2010 interview. "Isn't it just because I'm trying to tell the truth?"

In a sign of the government's sensitivity over the case, Thursday's trial took place under heavy security. Dozens of uniformed police sealed off and patrolled roads around the courthouse, rounding up journalists and about a dozen diplomats from the United States and Europe and taking them to a small office across from the building.

Ni told the court she was not guilty, said her lawyer Cheng Hai, outside the courthouse. Cheng spoke only briefly as he was being pushed away from reporters by plainclothes men who did not identify themselves.

Dong said she was happy to see her parents for the first time in the nearly nine months but she was not optimistic about the outcome of the trial, citing the couple's lengthy detention and the heavy security presence at the courthouse.

"This is definitely not a normal trial procedure, so I feel the risk of conviction is high," she said.

___

Follow Gillian Wong on Twitter at http://twitter.com/gillianwong

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/china/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111229/ap_on_re_as/as_china_human_rights

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AUTOMOTIVE - AUTOS: Rock Star Bret Michaels Returning To ...

Rock legend Bret Michaels will return to the Barrett-Jackson auction block to sell three pieces from his personal collection at the 41st annual Scottsdale collector-car auction at WestWorld from Jan. 15-22.

"We welcomed Bret to Barrett-Jackson last year with the sale of his 1969 Chevrolet Camaro SS," said Craig Jackson, chairman and CEO of Barrett-Jackson. "We're honored Bret is returning to the block to sell three more pieces of his personal collection."

Last year, Michaels' 1969 Camaro sold for $220,000 during primetime auction hours.

Michael's 2011 Ford Explorer was often seen on his TV show 'Life As I Know It.' (Photo: Barrett-Jackson) Before his cars cross the block, Michaels will perform on the stage at the private Barrett-Jackson Opening Gala. Though the exclusive Gala is limited to invited friends, family and VIPs, a few lucky locals will win tickets through local radio stations, facebook.com/Barrett-Jackson and Barrett-Jackson's Twitter feed @barrett-jackson.

Entrepreneur and rock icon Michaels has consigned his 2004 Bentley Continental GT (Lot #705.4), a stunning Moonbeam Silver coupe that features a 6-Liter twin turbo W12, GPS navigation and premium package.

Michaels is also selling his 2004 Lincoln Navigator (Lot #705.5), a true Rock Star vehicle as featured on Michaels' hit VH1 show, Rock of Love. The 5.4 Liter V8-powered SUV features a leather interior and DVD player.

Michaels? 2011 Ford Explorer (Lot #705.6) featured on his hit TV show Life as I Know it will also go over the block. The Explorer features a navigation system, luxury package and V6 engine.

Michaels' beautiful Bentley Continental GT coupe is painted Moonbeam Silver. (Photo: Barrett-Jackson) An avid car and motorcycle enthusiast, Michaels was named 2011 People Magazine's "Survivor of the Year" and Fox411's "Celebrity of the Year." In May 2010, he was hand-picked as Donald Trump's Season 3 winner on Celebrity Apprentice. He has graced the covers of People, US weekly, Billboard, Scottsdale Health, Diabetes Forecast and other magazines.

As front man of legendary rock band Poison, Michaels has sold more than 29 million records and scored an amazing 14 Top 40 hits, including the timeless No. 1 smash single "Every Rose Has its Thorn," his solo country crossover hit "All I Ever Needed" and his rock hit "Go That Far." As an actor, Michaels has made regular appearances on multiple hit television shows and starred in his hit reality show, Rock of Love with Bret Michaels, which became the highest-rated series on Vh1. His most recent show Bret Michaels: Life As I know It, still remains one of the top-ranking shows on the network.

Over the years, fans of Michaels have seen him endure a great deal of personal adversity regarding his health. Since the age of six, Michaels has lived a daily battle with Type-1 diabetes, which he has turned into a lifelong cause that he continues to support as a spokesperson for the American Diabetes Association. He was awarded the ADA's prestigious Chair's Citation Award in 2010 for excellence in raising awareness and funds for diabetes.

In 1994, he survived a car accident along with various traumatic injuries. In 2010, he overcame a near-fatal brain hemorrhage and subsequent stroke. It is Michaels's characteristic determination and strong willpower that pulls him through any hardship that might come his way.

"Bret Michaels is known to fans around the world as a rock star and a television celebrity," said Steve Davis, president of Barrett-Jackson. "But what we've come to appreciate even more as we get to know Bret is the personal side of this rock 'n' roll icon. He is a devoted father, active philanthropist and a passionate automotive enthusiast. We are honored to have him with us again."

For more information about bidding on this special car or any other in the auction, follow the link to www.barrett-jackson.com/bid . To see the latest on Bret Michaels, visit www.bretmichaels.com.

Source: http://automotive.speedtv.com/article/autos-rock-star-bret-michaels-returning-to-barrett-jackson/

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Community reacts to death of Zippy Leonard; counseling sessions set up for classmates of beloved 9-year-old | UPDATE

By PATRICIA DUFF
South Whidbey Record Arts & Entertainment, Island Life
December 26, 2011 ? 2:50 PM

CLINTON ? South Whidbey is beset with unmeasurable shock and sadness over the tragic Christmas Day death of a precious 9-year-old girl in a freak accident Sunday.

Tobiah Zippy Leonard, a fourth-grader at South Whidbey Elementary School, died Sunday afternoon when a tree fell on her family's Ford Explorer as the Langley family was on its way to a holiday gathering.

The loss has devastated many across the island.

?There is a pall in town,? said Gretchen Cole of Langley.

?Not a day goes by when I don?t see Tim and those girls,? Cole said Monday.

?Zippy always had a remarkable quality. She?s like an angel on earth. Whenever I saw that girl I could not take my eyes off her. She has just such a spirit ? it was tangible."

Zippy's father, metal artist Tim Leonard, was also injured in the accident and underwent surgery at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle. He was airlifted to the hospital after the accident with possible head and neck injuries late Sunday, and a Harborview official said he remains in serious condition Monday.

Officials with the South Whidbey School District contacted the families of Zippy's classmates Monday. Teachers and other school staff were also told of the death in phone calls that started Sunday night.

"It's a tragic loss," said Superintendent Jo Moccia. "We are all mourning at this point."

"There are no words to express how horrific it is," she said.

Zippy was a student in Pam Muncey's class at South Whidbey Elementary School, and a special gathering for students and their parents of her classmates has been scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at the school.

A separate meeting for Zippy's former classmates in Susan Milan's kindergarten/first-grade class and Kathy Stanley's second-/third-grade class is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Tuesday.

A pair of counselors will be there for support as students grieve, write letters to the family and share memories.

"There are children at all levels that are impacted," Moccia said.

Students from SWES are on winter break ? classes resume Jan. 2 ? but the school will be open tomorrow so counselors can be available to students and their families.

A link has been set up on the district's website, at www.sw.wednet.edu/sw/site/default.asp, for resources about coping with grief and counseling referrals, including ways to contact the district's six counselors.

Dayle Gray, one of the district's counselors, is also offering individual and family support. She can be reached at 360-730-8158 and dgray@sw.wednet.edu.

News of the horrible accident spread late Sunday across the South End.

Facebook quickly filled with messages of grief and condolences for Zippy and concerns for Tim Leonard.

Damien Cortez of Good Cheer Food Bank said the news put things in perspective for him.

?Tough day,? Cortez wrote in a Facebook post. ?Thinking of the Leonards and Zippy. All the lives, young and old this impacts. Yesterday, I was worried my lights would go off ? Perspective is a funny thing.?

?I am part of a communal awe and sorrow,? wrote Langley resident Kent Junge.

?It goes beyond empathy. In another place I might say with secret relief, ?That could've been me.? But not here. Not now when we are already especially connected in celebration of the season and feel this sorrow in jarring contradiction to our shared good cheer. There is no ?could?ve been me? In a very real sense, what happens to them happens to me, as well.?

According to the Washington State Patrol, the family was heading east on Bailey Road toward Cultus Bay Road at about 12:46 p.m. when high winds snapped a fir tree and it fell on the family's Ford Explorer as it passed by.

Julie Janeshefskie, Zippy's mother, was driving the SUV as a section of the fir tree, about a foot-and-a-half in diameter and about 20 feet long, landed on the vehicle. The weight of the falling tree shattered the passenger side window and crushed the roof from one side of the Ford to the other.

Zippy, the youngest of three girls in the family, was in the back seat of the Explorer with her older sisters Wren Leoshefskie, 12, and Tamara Leonard, 18.

Zippy was sitting in the right rear passenger seat, on the side of the vehicle that took the brunt of the impact of the falling tree, next to Wren in the middle of the back seat.

Emergency workers tried to revive Zippy at the scene but were unsuccessful. Tim Leonard was taken to Whidbey General Hospital and later airlifted to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle, and the other occupants of the vehicle were treated and released.

The family is well-known across South Whidbey. Tim Leonard is an established metal artist with a resume thick with familiar ironworks. He crafted the expansive garden railings outside Useless Bay Coffee Company and helped construct its outdoor performance pavilion, as well as the now-iconic WICA letters that grace the outside of Langley's performing arts center, and has done projects for the Choochokam Arts festival and the Inn at Langley.

Leonard has also been a crowd favorite at the annual Soup Box Derby in Langley, returning to race each year with his custom-built No. 13 speedster, which usually featured Zippy Leonard as the rear-seat co-pilot.

Cole, a friend of the Leonards, said she and Sherry Jennings are busy trying to organize support for the family, and friends are planning to open an account for the family Tuesday at Whidbey Island Bank.

"There is not a nicer person on earth than Tim Leonard and my heart just breaks for him and Juliet," Cole said.

Jennings said a fundraiser is in the works with the help of Dez Rock of Useless Bay Coffee Company. Jenn Jurrians of Prima Bistro said she is also hoping to help with a fundraiser for the family.

The tragedy happened in the middle of a Christmas Day windstorm that hit Puget Sound and left thousands in the region without power.

High winds swept South Whidbey throughout the day, but the strongest gusts were reported shortly after 11:30 a.m.

The maximum windspeed was clocked at 25.3 mph at 11:38 a.m. Sunday, and followed the strongest gust of the day ? measured at 41.4 mph ? at 11:37 a.m., according to the weather site www.whidbeyweather.com.

Scattered power outages were also reported across the area. Allison Stanford, a PSE spokeswoman, said 19,000 customers in six counties were left in the dark.

On Monday, the start of an impromptu roadside memorial was beginning on Bailey Road at the site of the accident south of Clinton.

Flowers, a teddy bear with a letter in a plastic storage bag, an LED light and an angel figurine were placed next to wooden fence that was left smashed by the fallen tree. Tinted shattered glass was scattered along the street, brushed off the driving lanes, among tree branches and pine needles.

Record writers Ben Watanabe and Brian Kelly contributed to this report.

?

Contact South Whidbey Record Arts & Entertainment, Island Life Patricia Duff at pduff@southwhidbeyrecord.com or (360) 221-5300.

Source: http://feeds.soundpublishing.com/~r/whidbeyall/~3/SqZF3Wec3so/136234668.html

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Eight Ways To Go Viral

swine flu virusWhat do Facebook, LinkedIn, Youtube, Dropbox and Skype have in common? Except for being ridiculously successful, they all enjoyed a strong viral effect that helped accelerate their growth. How did they do that? Here's the thing; most people assume that these companies grew by pure word of mouth. Well, that's only half of the story. The other half is that they deliberately built viral features into their products that helped spread the word. Let me explain.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/3UlxNY1yadU/

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

55 Inches: LG To Showcase World?s Largest OLED TV AT CES 2012

featured lgd-oledWe've been waiting for large-sized OLED TVs at least since Sony rolled out the cool (but too small) XEL-1 in 2007. Various bigger OLEDs and "breakthroughs" have made the news in the years after that, and now LG says it's ready to showcase the world's biggest OLED TV at CES 2012 (which kicks off on January 10). Sized at 55 inches, the panel has a contrast ratio of 100,000:1 and has been developed by using the Oxide TFT technology, according to LG. The company has been working on bigger OLED devices for quite a while now, for example a super-thin 31-inch model (which was shown last year).

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/FLClzlAqWS8/

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Source: http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=1110930&goto=newpost

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Sunday, December 25, 2011

NFL Week 16: Idaho connections

How some players with Idaho ties fared Saturday:

- Vikings defensive end Jared Allen (Idaho State) had one sack, and three assisted tackles. That gives him 18 1?2 sacks for the season, four shy of the NFL record.

- Ravens defensive back Chris Carr (Boise State) had one tackle and one assist.

- Jets punter T.J. Conley (Idaho) punted nine times with an average of 39.1 yards per punt. He punted four times inside the 20-yard line, and his longest punt of the day was 49 yards.

- Rams safety Quintin Mikell (Boise State) had four tackles and two assists.

- Panthers receiver Legedu Naanee (Boise State) had two receptions for 12 yards. His teammate, tight end/fullback Richie Brockel (Boise State) had two carries for 5 yards and one catch for 4 yards.

- Lions receiver Titus Young (Boise State) had four catches for 39 yards. His longest reception resulted in 24 yards.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/IdahostatesmancomSports/~3/xdsJNnqXtNY/nfl-week-16-idaho-connections.html

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

(Merry) Christmas Disease

An old post but a good one for Christmas time. This previously appeared on my blog when it lived at fieldofscience.com. I hope you enjoy and I wish you a very Merry Christmas.

ResearchBlogging.orgSo I was feeling a little lazy and thought I should find a disease related to Christmas, that way it?d be topical and I?d look like a genius. Well maybe not a genius, as all I did was type ?Christmas? and ?disease? into google and it returned ?Christmas disease?. Don?t worry though, the disease itself is pretty cool!

Contrary to popular belief Christmas disease is not limited to public drunkenness

Unfortunately for me my attempt at topical blogging reveals that?Christmas disease is not named after the holiday but instead after?Mr Stephen Christmas, a British migrant? who immigrated to Canada, who was diagnosed at the age of 2 in 1949 with haemophilia. On a return visit to England in 1952 Stephen was again hospitalised and a sample of his blood was sent away to the Oxford Haemophilia Centre where it was determined by Rosemary Biggs and R.G. McFarlane that Mr. Christmas did not have a normal case of haemophilia, he had something that had never been described before.

Haemophilia is best described as a blood clotting disease. All haemophilia cases are genetic and are inherited from your parents and although there are many types the risk is that any blood vessel breakage could result in ?bleeding out? as suffers are unable to clot or coagulate normally so the blood keeps spilling.

The proteins responsible for allowing the blood to clot are called ?Factors? and there are 3 that are particularly important yet unhelpfully named as Factor VIII, IX and XI.

Haemophilia C is caused by a genetic mutation that produces a non-functional?Factor XI, a.k.a. plasma thromboplastin antecedent. The gene for Factor XI is carried on chromosome 4, which makes it a?recessive autosomal disease. All that means is that there is an equal chance for both males and females to get it and for the full blown disease you need to inherit dodgy copies of the gene from both parents but an intermediate form of the disease can still occur if you receive only one dodgy copy. For this reason it is super rare making up about 1% of all haemophilia cases but in small groups where children are encouraged to marry and have children with others from inside the same group, say for example?Ashkenazi Jews where C type Haemophilia affects 8% of the population, the proportyion of type C haemophilia cases goes up.

The genetic mutation for types A and B haemophilia are located on the?X chromosome so are classified as X-linked disorders rather than an autosomal disorder like type C. This means the disease is more common, and often more serious, in males. The reason for this disparity is that males only have one X chromosome (remember males are XY at their sex chromosomes) while females have two X?s. One dodgy copy of a gene in an X chromosome in males = disease whereas females can in most cases accommodate one dodgy copy and still be fine.

Type A is the most common form of haemophilia accounting for 80% of all cases and is caused by a mutation destroying the activity of?Factor VIII, a.k.a. anti-haemophilic factor. Factor VIII forms a complex with other clotting factors in the presence of high calcium concentration that result in a clotting cascade. For those of you with a bit of biology background you will know that Ca is not present in high concentrations anywhere in the body (except the bone)?because it is biologically active and so its presence is a potent signal. Nerves use Ca during signalling, immune cells can follow a Ca gradient and other cells use it to talk to each other. Anyway when the concentration that is free in the blood goes up it indicates blood vessel damage and initiates the clotting cascade through activation of Factor VIII.

Finally we work our way back to Stephen Christmas. When the scientists at the Oxford Haemophilia Centre looked they found levels of Factor VIII? was fine (at this stage type C hadn?t been discovered so Factor XI wasn?t analysed) but Stephen was lacking Factor IX. This type of Haemophilia was classed type B.

Type B haemophilia is X-linked and here the mutation breaks?Factor IX, a.k.a. Christmas Factor, that acts as a?serine protease. The activity of Factor IX is controlled by either XI or VIII as either can cut Factor IX in half which converts it from an inactive to active form. The cut or cleaved form of Factor IX also requires high Ca to function and in the right conditions will promote coagulation. Stephen Christmas? condition was treated using transfusions of normal blood which contained normal Factor IX allowing him to clot normally but repeated transfusions in the early 60?s and 70?s resulted in him eventually contracting Human Immuno-deficiency Virus (HIV) which later developed into Auto Immune-deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) which he succumbed to in 1993.

Following the detection of HIV in Stephen?s body he became an active worker and proponent for screen of donated blood to increase the safety of transfusions, which was eventually adopted by1985.

Stephen Christmas was kept alive by transfusions from blood donors and I implore you to give blood as well. Click here for your closest Australian donation centre and just Google for other countries. Best. Gift. Ever.

While Stephen Christmas? life may have been afflicted by a horrible disease his gift was to help bring in an era of change that has undoubtedly saved millions of lives by screening donor blood for harmful elements, including HIV Hepatitis B and C viruses amongst many others.

Fun facts!!!

Type B haemophilia is the form that ran/runs in both the British and Russian royal families!

Christmas Disease is cause for a deficiency in functional Factor IX resulting in an inability to clot. Over production of Factor IX can be just as bad though and has in fact been linked to conditions such as?deep vein thrombosis which are characterised by inappropriate and unnecessary clotting.

And with that I say have a great holiday period for those of you who are celebrating one and I will be back in the new year after taking a short break to socialise with others in meat-space. Have a good, fun and most importantly safe time and I?ll see you again real soon.

James out.

References

Rogaev EI, Grigorenko AP, Faskhutdinova G, Kittler EL, & Moliaka YK (2009). Genotype analysis identifies the cause of the ?royal disease?.?Science (New York, N.Y.), 326?(5954) PMID:?19815722
BIGGS R, DOUGLAS AS, MACFARLANE RG, DACIE JV, PITNEY WR, & MERSKEY (1952). Christmas disease: a condition previously mistaken for haemophilia.?British medical journal, 2(4799), 1378-82 PMID:?12997790

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=a2416cf372f3c7970c8a26c4831f39cc

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Stocks close higher on better job market news

Traders John Panin, center, and Robert Charmay, right, work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange Tuesday, Dec. 20, 2011. Stocks are surging after the opening bell following encouraging signs out of Europe and a jump in apartment building in the U.S. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

Traders John Panin, center, and Robert Charmay, right, work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange Tuesday, Dec. 20, 2011. Stocks are surging after the opening bell following encouraging signs out of Europe and a jump in apartment building in the U.S. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

(AP) ? Encouraging economic reports pushed stocks higher Thursday. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 61 points, its third gain in a row.

The number of people applying for unemployment benefits dropped last week to the lowest level since April 2008, the latest sign that the job market is healing. It was the third week in a row that applications fell. The Conference Board also reported that its measure of future economic activity had a big increase last month. It was the second straight gain, signaling that the U.S. economy was picking up speed and the risk of another recession was fading.

"Today, Main Street is what matters because Main Street makes up 71 percent of the economy," said Quincy Krosby, chief market strategist for Prudential Securities. "You can't argue with the fact that the cost of gas has come down, which puts more money in the pockets of consumers to spend, and so things are starting to tick up."

Krosby noted that the latest data showed that shoppers were opening up their wallets to spend during the holidays. However, she said the economy needs to grow at a faster pace than 2 percent to be able to survive any shocks caused by the European debt crisis or a sharp slowdown in China's economy in 2012.

The government lowered its estimate of U.S. economic growth in the July-September quarter to an annual rate of 1.8 percent from 2 percent. That was still the fastest growth this year, up from 1.3 percent in the April-June quarter.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 61.91 points, or 0.51 percent, to close at 12,169.65. The Dow has risen 409 points over the past three days. Bank of America Corp. rose 4.6 percent to $5.47, the most among the 30 stocks in the Dow.

The S&P 500 index gained 10.28 points, or 0.83 percent, to 1,254. The Nasdaq composite index rose 21.48, or 0.83 percent, to 2,599.45.

Economists say that the improving job market, strong holiday shopping, and cheaper gas prices will leave consumers with more money to spend. That would get the economy growing at an annual rate of more than 3 percent in the final three months of this year, which would be the fastest pace since 3.8 percent growth in the spring of 2010.

Banks, energy and technology stocks were the biggest gainers, while consumer goods companies traded lower. Morgan Stanley led bank stocks, gaining 6.5 percent to close at $15.88, while among tech stocks Akamai Technologies Inc. the biggest gainer, rising 18.6 percent to $31.63.

In other corporate news:

? Mead Johnson Nutrition Co. plummeted 10 percent on news that Wal-Mart Stores Inc. pulled a batch of its powdered infant formula from more than 3,000 of its stores nationwide. A newborn Missouri boy was fed a batch of the Enfamil Newborn powder made by Mead and died from what preliminary tests indicate was a rare bacterial infection. So far, no link has been established between the death and the formula and the government has not ordered a recall of Enfamil.

? Tibco Software Inc. jumped 8 percent after the business software maker reported a 20 percent increase in revenue and net income that was far ahead than what Wall Street analysts were expecting.

? Bed, Bath & Beyond Inc. slid 6 percent after the retailer warned investors that its fourth-quarter earnings might be lower than analysts had expected. Third-quarter sales also fell below analysts' expectations.

With just over a week of trading left in 2011, the S&P 500 is less than 1 percent below where it started the year. The Dow has managed to gain 5.1 percent in 2011, while the Nasdaq is still off 2 percent.

Nearly three stocks gained for every one that fell on the New York Stock Exchange. Trading volume was very light at 3.5 billion, compared to the recent average of 4.6 billion.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-12-22-Wall%20Street/id-5bd3c96c621f40aaa08d9ec7d2b3f496

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Was Shroud created in a flash? Claims rise again

Antonio Calanni / AP

The Shroud of Turin bears the faded image of what appears to be a Christlike figure. Italian researchers say they've come close to the shroud's coloration by blasting strips of linen with ultraviolet laser light.

By Alan Boyle

Last updated 2:15 p.m. ET Dec. 23:

Italian researchers have resurrected the idea that the Shroud of Turin's mysterious image of a Christlike figure could only have been created by a powerful flash of light ? but skeptics still aren't buying it.

Scientists have tussled with believers, and with each other, over the origins of the centuries-old cloth for decades: Many believers think it's the true image of Jesus, left behind miraculously on his burial cloths after his resurrection. Analyses of the?Shroud's chemical makeup, as well as?radiocarbon dating of fiber?samples,?have led lots of researchers to conclude that the image was painted onto the cloth during the 14th century. But other researchers, sympathetic to the Shroud's cause, say those tests were faulty.


The Italian studies, conducted at the ENEA Research Center in Frascati, addresses a specific question in Shroud science: Could a burst of radiation have created the coloration seen on the linen? The answer is yes, although the results reported in the latest studies aren't a perfect match.?So does that mean?the Shroud image?could only have?been created by the flash of a miraculous resurrection? The answer is no, despite what you might read on the Web.

Five years of tests
"Sadly, we have seen many claims spread in the Web made by journalist/bloggers that discuss the content of a paper they never read,"?lead researcher Paolo Di Lazzaro told me today in an email. "It is obvious that a serious scientific work cannot prove any supernatural action. We have shown that the most advanced technology available today is unable to replicate all the characteristics of the Shroud image. As a consequence, we may argue it appears unlikely a forger may have done this image with technologies available in the Middle Ages or earlier. The probability the Shroud is a medieval fake is really low. In this sense, the Shroud image is still a scientific challenge."

Di Lazzaro and his colleagues?based their conclusions on five years of tests, using?an ultraviolet laser apparatus and strips of modern-day linen. They blasted the cloth with UV at different power levels, and reported that they "achieved a very superficial Shroud-like coloration of linen yarns in a narrow range of irradiation parameters." The?best effect depended on laser?pulses lasting less than 50 nanoseconds.

"These processes may have played a role in the generation of the body image on the Shroud of Turin," the researchers report.

They don't go so far as to claim a miracle. But the fact that UV laser blasters didn't exist in the 13th century, let alone?in Jesus' day, strongly implies that they suspect something out of the ordinary?was going on.

Live Poll

What do you think of the Shroud of Turin?

Di Lazzaro told me that the tests were not financed by ENEA, which is a government-sponsored research agency, and were conducted outside working hours. "The research was curiosity-driven, the attempt to replicate an image which is considered 'the impossible image' due to its very peculiar characteristics," he said.

Over the years, Di Lazzaro and his colleagues have published a long list of studies, including peer-reviewed papers?(see below). The latest studies were presented at a May conference in Frascati and published in November as an ENEA technical report (with a disclaimer saying that the contents didn't necessarily express?ENEA's opinion).?But they?didn't really get traction until this week, just in time for Christmas, thanks to a series of sensationalized British news reports.

Critiquing Shroud science
Shroud science, also?known as sindology,?usually percolates outside the scientific mainstream ? but every once in a while a sensational claim comes into the public spotlight. Joe Nickell, an investigator for the New York-based?Center for Inquiry, has been following sindology for decades. He noted that the Italian research revives a discussion going back to the 1980s, spearheaded by a group called the Shroud of Turin Research Project, or STURP.

"This is really nothing new,"?Nickell told me today. "This is a supposed vindication of STURP."

Nickell said Di Lazzaro and his colleagues started out with the assumption that the coloration on the Shroud couldn't have been created by applying pigment to the linen ? which runs counter to the conclusions drawn by other studies.?Starting out?with the idea that?the?human figure shown on the Shroud is an "impossible image" stacks the deck in favor of a miraculous explanation, he said.

"Making the assumption of a miracle is a really, really, really, really, really big assumption," Nickell said. "That it's done in the name of science is just astonishing."

Nickell?said the latest findings don't prove much of anything, even though?they're dressed up in high-tech tests.

"It is made up of whole cloth," he said. "The pro-Shroud people start with the answer, and then they have to get some scientific evidence to back this up."

From 2008: An American researcher says the Shroud of Turin might be the real burial cloth of Jesus after all.

Some folks would suggest that the Shroud of Turin is a valuable focus for faith, whether it's real or not. What do you think? How much value is there in studying the Shroud, and how much impact do scientifico-religious debates like this one have on your own thinking? Check out the Web links below, give it some thought, and add your comments.

Update for 4:15 p.m. ET Dec. 22: Di Lazzaro sent a follow-up email calling attention to?his group's publications, which I've added below, and he poses this question for Joe Nickell: "Was he (or anybody else) able to reproduce by chemical paint, acid and any other color a?depth of coloration which is 0.2 micrometer thick (that is, one-fifth of a thousandth of a millimeter)? We are talking of this, because on the Shroud, the image has a coloration depth so thin?that it is impossible to do with any kind of painting. I can quote peer-reviewed papers that show this is the coloration depth of the Shroud image.

"By the way, Nickell will be interested to know that using VUV photons we obtained this shallow coloration thickness," Di Lazzaro wrote.

I'll pass the question along to Nickell, who says he doesn't use email. I suspect the answer could go along two tracks: One is that it's a tough thing to try to reproduce a precise coloration depth under any circumstances. The other is that centuries of wear and tear might have had an effect that's not easily replicated by the contemporary application of pigments or other chemicals. But we'll see what Nickell has to say.

Update for 2:15 p.m. ET Dec. 23: Nickell responded to Di Lazzaro's question, and added a couple of questions of his own:

"Paolo Di Lazzaro claims the Turin 'Shroud' coloration depth is 0.2 micrometers, but surely he does not claim that that was uniformly measured throughout the cloth. The coloration indeed appears to be generally confined to the topmost fibrils (although the face image does show faintly on the back of the cloth). Using a two-part hypothesis I put forward in 1983, Italian chemist Luigi Garlaschelli has produced a replica shroud with such superficial staining. So let me ask Lazzaro a question in turn: Have you been able, using your high-intensity ultraviolet laser technique, to produce a replica shroud yourself? Until you do, shouldn?t you stop slashing carelessly with Occam?s razor?"

Here's a 2009 Reuters report about the Garlaschelli replica.

This week's chatter on the Shroud:

Earlier tales of the Shroud of Turin:

Journal references from Paolo Di Lazzaro:

Peer reviewed Journals:
G. Baldacchini, P. Di Lazzaro, D. Murra, G. Fanti: ?Coloring linens with excimer lasers to simulate the body image of the Turin Shroud? Applied Optics vol. 47, 1278-1283 (2008).

P. Di Lazzaro, D. Murra, A. Santoni, G. Fanti, E. Nichelatti, G. Baldacchini: ?Deep Ultraviolet radiation simulates the Turin Shroud image? Journal of Imaging Science and Technology vol. 54, 040302-(6) (2010).

Conference Proceedings
P. Di Lazzaro, G. Baldacchini, G. Fanti, D. Murra, E. Nichelatti, A. Santoni: ?A physical hypothesis on the origin of the body image embedded into the Turin Shroud? Proceedings of the Int. Conf. on The Shroud of Turin: Perspectives on a Multifaceted Enigma, edited by G. Fanti (Edizioni Libreria Progetto Padova 2009) pp. 116 ? 125. ISBN 978-88-96477-03-08 01-12.

P. Di Lazzaro, G. Baldacchini, G. Fanti, D. Murra, A. Santoni: ?Colouring fabrics with excimer lasers to simulate encoded images: the case of the Shroud of Turin?, XVIII Int. Symposium on Gas Flow, Chemical Lasers, High-Power Lasers, edited by R. Vilar, Proceedings SPIE vol. 7131 (2009) pp. 71311R-1 ? 71311R-6.

P. Di Lazzaro, D. Murra, A. Santoni, G.- Baldacchini: ?Sub-micrometer coloration depth of linens by vacuum ultraviolet radiation?, Proc. International Workshop on the Scientific approach to the Acheiropoietos Images, edited by P. Di Lazzaro (2010) pp. 3 ? 10.

D. Murra, P. Di Lazzaro: ?Sight and brain, an introduction to the visually misleading images?, Proc. International Workshop on the Scientific approach to the Acheiropoietos Images, edited by P. Di Lazzaro (2010) pp. 31 ? 34.

Technical Reports
G. Baldacchini, P. Di Lazzaro, D. Murra, G. Fanti: ?Colorazione di tessuti di lino con laser ad eccimeri e confronto con l?immagine sindonica? ENEA RT/2006/70/FIM (2006).

P. Di Lazzaro: ?Wissenschaftliche Hypothesen zur Entstehung des Bildes auf dem Turiner Grabtuch? 30Tagen n.4 (2010) pp. 63-66.

P. Di Lazzaro, D. Murra, E. Nichelatti, A. Santoni, G. Baldacchini: ?Colorazione similsindonica di tessuti di lino tramite radiazione nel lontano ultravioletto: riassunto dei risultati ottenuti presso il Centro ENEA di Frascati negli anni 2005 -2010? RT/2011/14/ENEA (2011).


Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

Source: http://cosmiclog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/22/9636065-was-holy-shroud-created-in-a-flash-italian-researchers-resurrect-old-claim

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Friday, December 23, 2011

U.S. removes Baidu from "notorious markets" list (Reuters)

SHANGHAI (Reuters) ? The United States has removed Baidu Inc, China's largest search engine, from its list of notorious markets for piracy in a nod to the firm's efforts to clean up its music offerings.

Baidu, which has been on the notorious markets list for years, in July inked an agreement with top music studios to distribute licensed songs through its mp3 search service, ending a legal dispute over accusations the company encouraged piracy.

However, Alibaba Group's Taobao unit made it on the United States Trade Representative's November notorious markets list for offering a wide range of copyright infringing products.

"Several commentators reported that pirated and counterfeit goods continue to be widely available on China-based Taobao. While stakeholders report that Taobao continues to make significant efforts to address the problem, they recognize that much remains to be done," USTR said in its report on Tuesday.

The report also cited two Chinese music websites, Sogou Mp3 and Gougou as providing "deep linking" services to copyrighted music. Four of the 15 listed physical notorious markets for piracy are located in China, USTR said.

(Reporting by Melanie Lee; Editing by Jacqueline Wong)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/search/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111221/tc_nm/us_baidu

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National Geographic Films shutting down, say insiders (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) ? National Geographic Films, which is associated with the hit documentary "March of the Penguins" in 2005, is shutting down, according to two individuals with knowledge of the independent studio.

The studio has brought in a scant $1.7 million in revenue this year, with five films in release including "The Last Lion," "The First Grader" and "Life in a Day."

"The Last Lion," a documentary about the dwindling population of big cats, took in the most of any film, just $635,000 in 61 theaters.

The individuals said that the New York-based operation was shutting down, and that president Daniel Battsek was negotiating an exit.

Neither Battsek nor spokespersons for National Geographic Films were immediately available when TheWrap reached out for comment.

National Geographic Films is a division of National Geographic Entertainment, created in 2007 and combining Cinema Ventures, Feature Films, Kids Entertainment, Home Entertainment and Music & Radio into a single division headed by David Beal.

Battsek joined the company in January 2010 after leaving Miramax when Disney put that unit up for sale.

The weak showing at the box office this year and tepid development seemed out of step with expectations for the studio. National Geographic had a deep source of funding from Abu Dhabi's Imagenation, which put up $100 million to form a joint venture for movies in 2008.

That fund never seemed to be tapped very deeply and the first project was not a success. Peter Weir's "The Way Back," the first project developed and created under the National Geographic-Abu Dhabi Film Fund, was a flop. It cost $30 million to produce and took in just $20 million worldwide.

National Geographic had a couple of notable films, Oscar-nominated documentaries "Restrepo" and "The Story of the Weeping Camel"; giant-screen films "Sea Monsters: A Prehistoric Adventure," "U2 3D" and "Mysteries of Egypt."

Battsek was seen as a cautious executive who made few movies despite the resources from the Arabian Gulf. And there were rumors from insiders that Abu Dhabi would not renew the relationship once these funds were spent.

Executive Adam Leipzig put National Geographic on the map with the penguins documentary, which won the Oscar for best documentary in 2005 and took in $127 million worldwide.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/enindustry/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111222/media_nm/us_nationalgeographicfilms

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Is Newt Gingrich the Christine O'Donnell of Election 2012?

Some analysts of Election 2012 are comparing the two, saying that Newt Gingrich may be setting the party up to lose a winnable race, as Christine O?Donnell did a little over a year ago.

Is Newt Gingrich the Christine O?Donnell of the national Republican Party?

Skip to next paragraph

You remember Ms. O?Donnell, of course. She?s the tea party favorite who defeated then-Rep. Mike Castle, the GOP establishment choice, in Delaware?s 2010 Senate primary. Dogged by reports that she?d dabbled in the dark arts as a teen, she ran a memorable ad during the general-election campaign that began with her saying, ?I'm not a witch.? Democrat Chris Coons subsequently cruised to an easy victory.

Well, Mr. Gingrich is unlikely to begin an ad by staring into the camera and saying, ?I am not a wizard.? But some Republican analysts compare the two, saying that Gingrich may be setting the party up to lose a winnable race, as O?Donnell did a little over a year ago.

Conservative pundit Ann Coulter hit this theme big during an appearance on Washington?s WMAL radio on Monday. She told the station?s ?Morning Majority? show that while the ex-speaker has done great things for the GOP in the past, ?he does not have a prayer of a chance in a general election.?

With Gingrich, Ms. Coulter said, you get wild over-the-top assertions. She remembered that in 1994, after he was set to become speaker of the House, he proposed opening up orphanages and creating janitorial jobs for poor kids on welfare.

?It made [GOP lawmakers] sound like Dickensian brutes,? said Coulter.

Coulter ? who?s so fiery that her latest book is titled ?Demonic? ? then compared Gingrich to the tea party favorites who scored upset primary victories in 2010, only to crash in flames in the midterms.

?I see Newt Gingrich as the [Nevada Senate candidate] Sharron Angle or the Christine O?Donnell of the national party,? said Coulter.

OK, but Coulter is a Romney backer. She said so herself. Is this comparison unfair?

Well, first of all, Gingrich would have to win the GOP nomination for it to really apply. Right now, that?s certainly possible: He?s tied with Mitt Romney in the national polls. But it looks less likely than it did a week ago. Attack ads from GOP rivals ? and anti-Newt rhetoric from Coulter and other GOP luminaries ? have caused Gingrich to sink in the polls in recent weeks. Suddenly he?s in big trouble in Iowa, for instance.

And Gingrich doesn?t represent the tea party faction of the party so much as he does the anti-Romney faction, which is pretty big. Upwards of 70 percent of GOP voters opt for candidates other than the ex-Massachusetts governor. So in that sense, it?s not as if Gingrich is sneaking up on a beloved establishment figure, as O?Donnell did in Delaware. He?s simply the latest person around whom the sizable stop-Mitt crowd has coalesced.

Gingrich himself has lashed out at his rivals' campaign against him.

?I really wish they would have the courage to be positive, and I wish they would have the courage to have a campaign which would match ideas [rather] than see whose consultants can be the nastier,? he said Monday in Iowa.

True, Gingrich has high negative ratings among independents, as O?Donnell did. In that sense the comparison rings true. The Republicans who pulled the lever for O?Donnell in the Delaware primary just did not see, or chose to ignore, that she was viewed very differently by the state electorate at large. She was in no sense electable.

But here?s one huge difference between ?not a witch? and the ex-speaker: O?Donnell supports Romney. She endorsed him earlier this month, presenting editors with a glorious opportunity to work sorcery on their headlines. Our favorite was ?No 'aye' of Newt: Christine O?Donnell endorses Mitt Romney.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/FwRalRHPzcU/Is-Newt-Gingrich-the-Christine-O-Donnell-of-Election-2012

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Lamb With Lion

I could recall that fifth bottle of wine in Tuzla, Bosnia. Or Hitch still arguing furiously about the Falklands War sometime around 3 a.m. at the poet James Fenton's kitchen table in Oxford. (?Christopher,? said James, raising his head from the table, ?you sound like a bishop.? It was the ultimate insult.) But what pops entirely unbidden into my mind is the leg of lamb he cooked, English-style, with boiled vegetables and mint sauce, for us to eat by the poolside in a high Californian summer. It was parody of parody, like something out of the opening pages of Evelyn Waugh?s The Loved One, and of course he knew it?but at the same time, I think he actually liked it. That was Sunday Lunch, cap S, L.

?I did not always agree with the political positions he took?and they did not always agree with each other?but his company was irresistible. Nowhere was he more genial than at the poolside house in Atherton, arguing, arguing, arguing, while the automatic swimming pool cleaner went about its ceaseless submarine work, hoovering, hoovering, hoovering. Where other people furtively Google it on their iPhones, he had extraordinary natural powers of recall. Detail, anecdote, biography, and quotation would flow almost as fast as the whisky.

Writers and activists from the 17th to the 21st century were brought conversationally into the same room, to argue with each other?a conjuring act he shared with Isaiah Berlin, whom he attacked mercilessly soon after the liberal philosopher's death. In his verbal salon, Tom Paine crossed swords with Edward Said, Thomas Jefferson met P.G. Wodehouse. Yes, Wodehouse?that superficially unlikely hero for a political writer who spent much of his life on the more or less militant left. Last time we met, we traded Wodehouse-isms. (Roderick Spode, leader of Britain's fascist Black Shorts, with ?the sort of eye that can open an oyster at 60 paces.?)

It is this literary, English Hitch that I remember with most affection. The American citizenship he took after the 9/11 attacks on his adopted country meant a great deal to him. In many ways, it defined what we must now call his last decade. But culturally, we can say of him that in spite of all temptations to belong to other nations, he remained an Englishman. Never more so than when dishing up roast lamb, with mint sauce and added Wodehouse, by the poolside on a California summer Sunday.

See Slate?s full tribute to the life of Christopher Hitchens. Read Slate?s complete collection of Christopher Hitchens' columns.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=de1b267f14d0dd287d1d59e11f02a887

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Make a DIY Microphone Pop Filter [DIY]

Make a DIY Microphone Pop FilterPop filters are used to avoid sharp "P" and "B" sounds from overloading the mic level and causing distortion; these are known as ?plosives. Most commercial pop filters are $20-40, but you can build your own with an embroidery hoop, a dowel, and panythose for a fraction of that.

Musician and graphic designer Dean Sabatino offers the following method for making pop filters: cut your dowel to a 12" length and glue it to the outer embroidery hoop as though it were a large lollypop. Cut one of the pantyhose legs off at the thigh and insert the inner ring from the hoop in the pantyhose until you reach the toe area then stretch the nylon and close the hoop. Cut off excess pantyhose. When the glue has dried insert the inner ring into the outer hoop and tighten the screw mechanism on the hoop.

Now all you have to do is figure out a way to mount the pop filter to your microphone. The author bolted together two clamps which you see at the source link below, but I also found another DIYer who used 10 gauge wire and a compression fitting and covered it up with split flex tubing. I'm sure there are lots of other methods you could use as well.

How To: Make Your Own Microphone Pop-Filter | Dean Sabatino's Nextplease

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/8PCegLC-7EA/make-a-diy-microphone-pop-filter

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How to Build a Smarter Airport Terminal

During the end-of-year holiday travel crunch, many of us will wade slowly through the glacial process of boarding a flight. Every year airlines add extra flights to handle the spike with decidedly mixed effectiveness.

But to some forward-thinking engineers, the problem isn?t the planes. Airport terminals, with their labyrinthine security lines and seemingly endless hallways, aren?t built to get you to your plane on time. To ease the groan factor of waiting in airport lines, engineers are now making terminals smarter by employing new thinking and technologies, from optimized layouts to crowd-simulation software.

One of the newest examples is JetBlue?s Terminal 5 at New York?s John F. Kennedy (JFK) airport, which opened in 2008. T5 serves 250 flights daily and 20 million passengers annually, yet boasts impressively fast times for getting passengers from curb to plane and just-landed planes back up in the sky, according to Ray Quinn, a principal at Arup, the global professional services firm that worked with JetBlue in planning T5.

So how do you make a terminal smarter? Well before architectural and engineering firms settled on blueprints and construction plans, Arup built a digital version of the space and populated it with virtual people to see how it all works. Arup has used this approach in various other big-ticket projects, including the Fulton Street Transit Center and the 2nd Avenue Subway, both in New York, as well as the Union Station in Toronto and the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas.

To hone aspects of T5, Arup relied on an in-house software program called MassMotion. In the program, simulated people called agents are designed to act like the members of a crowd. They navigate a 3D terminal with a certain degree of intelligence, and how they move around is based on factors such as lighting and avoiding congestion?if one stairway is too packed, they might try the one down the hall. "MassMotion helps us at a very fine-grained level on the specifics of space, down to the exact width of a corridor or the exact amount of square footage along a travel path," Quinn says. "We can not only fine-tune, but also change elements in the model and see how people react."

Watching all those virtual people navigate the heart of the proposed airport terminal helped back up Arup?s vision of a simple interior design for T5. Rather than a confusing layout of multiple spokes and shuttle services to different gates, T5 resembles a triangle. A long, curved base provides ample curb space for passenger drop-offs and pickups. In the triangle?s center are ticketing, baggage, security, and major amenities. Twenty-six gates then appear along the terminal?s remaining two walls and down a pier extending from the triangle?s apex. This shape creates a bit of a funneling effect that steers departing passengers to their gates.

Modeling traffic flow also allowed Arup to address perhaps the worst part of air travel: getting through security. "Without question, one of the main complaints in large U.S. airport terminals is insufficient processing at security, which can lead to flight delays, congestion, and passenger stress levels," says Regine Weston, Arup?s global leader in aviation planning. To alleviate the problem of having passengers stand around with shoes in hand, T5 has the largest contiguous security checkpoint in the United States: a 340-foot-wide area with 20 lanes to keep lines short.

The farthest gate is then only a 5-minute walk from security, Weston says. All told, many customers can go through the whole curb-to-plane process in around 15 minutes, Weston explains, which is a third of the 45-minute span that the International Air Transport Association recommends as a best practice for world-class terminals.

Arup?s MassMotion modeling technology also helped to sell the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which runs JFK airport, on the wisdom of a cool new feature. Thanks to the T5 layout, lots of passengers are zipping through T5?s central 55,000-square-foot amenities area called the Marketplace. "Typically the goal is to reduce passenger flow, but the Marketplace brings everyone?departing, arriving, and transfer passengers?together," Weston says. That?s good for retailers and makes for an interesting hub of activity, and the "agents" in the MassMotion simulation allowed Weston to demonstrate that it wouldn?t end up in a traffic snarl.

Arup also used another clever bit of software, called SoundLab, to fix one other airport terminal problem: the unintelligibility of the public announcement system. To assess a building?s acoustics before it?s ever built, SoundLab incorporates a building?s dimensions, the sound-bouncing qualities of the wall and other materials, and background noise levels from people and machinery. The software guided Arup to select speakers that could adequately broadcast over the hubbub, Quinn says. (SoundLab also provided its services in designing New York?s National September 11 Memorial and Museum at the World Trade Center.)

Building the terminal of the future isn?t just about making the interior easier for passengers to navigate. It?s also about making the exterior easier for pilots to navigate. Pilots cruise around on the tarmac via dual taxi lanes instead of a single lane, allowing planes to taxi to and from gates simultaneously. "Practically, this means JetBlue pilots can avoid being trapped behind another aircraft when they are arriving or departing at their gate," Weston says.

Look for new terminals, as well as retrofits, to follow the T5 model. "There are only a handful of terminals that are as new and innovative as T5," says Tom Reich, director of air service development for AvPORTS, a private airport operating firm and aviation consultancy. "Fifteen years from now they will be the new standard."

Source: http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/aviation/news/how-to-build-a-smarter-airport-terminal?src=rss

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