Thursday, January 31, 2013

Study rebuts hypothesis that comet attacks ended 9,000-year-old Clovis culture

Jan. 30, 2013 ? Rebutting a speculative hypothesis that comet explosions changed Earth's climate sufficiently to end the Clovis culture in North America about 13,000 years ago, Sandia lead author Mark Boslough and researchers from 14 academic institutions assert that other explanations must be found for the apparent disappearance.

"There's no plausible mechanism to get airbursts over an entire continent," said Boslough, a physicist. "For this and other reasons, we conclude that the impact hypothesis is, unfortunately, bogus."

In a December 2012 American Geophysical Union monograph, first available in January, the researchers point out that no appropriately sized impact craters from that time period have been discovered, nor have any unambiguously "shocked" materials been found.

In addition, proposed fragmentation and explosion mechanisms "do not conserve energy or momentum," a basic law of physics that must be satisfied for impact-caused climate change to have validity, the authors write.

Also absent are physics-based models that support the impact hypothesis. Models that do exist, write the authors, contradict the asteroid-impact hypothesizers.

The authors also charge that "several independent researchers have been unable to reproduce reported results" and that samples presented in support of the asteroid impact hypothesis were later discovered by carbon dating to be contaminated with modern material.

The Boslough trail

Boslough has a decades-long history of successfully interpreting the effects of comet and asteroid collisions.

His credibility was on the line on in July 1994 when Eos, the widely read newsletter of the American Geophysical Union, ran a front-page prediction by a Sandia National Laboratories team, led by Boslough, that under certain conditions plumes from the collision of comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 with the planet Jupiter would be visible from Earth.

The Sandia team -- Boslough, Dave Crawford, Allen Robinson and Tim Trucano -- were alone among the world's scientists in offering that possibility.

"It was a gamble and could have been embarrassing if we were wrong," said Boslough. "But I had been watching while Shoemaker-Levy 9 made its way across the heavens and realized it would be close enough to the horizon of Jupiter that the plumes would show." His reasoning was backed by simulations from the world's first massively parallel processing supercomputer, Sandia's Intel Paragon.

On the one hand, it was a chance to check the new Paragon's logic against real events, a shakedown run for the defense-oriented machine. On the other, it was a hold-your-breath prediction, a kind of Babe Ruth moment when the Babe is reputed to have pointed to the spot in the center field bleachers he intended to hit the next ball. No other scientists were willing to point the same way, partly due to previous failures in predicting the behavior of comets Kohoutek and Halley, and partly because most astronomers believed the plumes would be hidden behind Jupiter's bulk.

That the plumes indeed proved visible started Boslough on his own trajectory as a media touchstone for things asteroidal and meteoritic.

It didn't hurt that, when he stands before television cameras to discuss celestial impacts, his earnest manner, expressive gestures and extraterrestrial subject matter make him seem a combination of Carl Sagan and Luke Skywalker, or perhaps Tom Sawyer and Indiana Jones.

Standing in jeans, work shirt and hiking boots for the Discovery Channel at the site in Siberia where a mysterious explosion occurred 105 years ago, or discussing it at Sandia with his supercomputer simulations in bold colors on a big screen behind him, the rangy, 6-foot-3 Sandia researcher vividly and accurately explained why the mysterious explosion at Tunguska that decimated hundreds of square miles of trees and whose ejected debris was seen as far away as London most probably was caused neither by flying saucers drunkenly ramming a hillside (a proposed hypothesis) nor by an asteroid striking the Earth's surface, but rather by the fireball of an asteroid airburst -- an asteroid exploding high above ground, like a nuclear bomb, compressed to implosion as it plunged deeper into Earth's thickening, increasingly resistive atmosphere. The governing physics, he said, was precisely the same as for the airburst on Jupiter.

Among later triumphs, Boslough was the Sandia component of a National Geographic team flown to the Libyan Desert to make sense of strange yellow-green glass worn as jewelry by pharaohs in days past. Boslough's take: It was the result of heat on desert sands from a hypervelocity impact caused by an even bigger asteroid burst.

In the present case

In the Clovis case, Boslough felt that his ideas were taken further than he could accept when other researchers claimed that the purported demise of Clovis civilization in North America was the result of climate change produced by a cluster of comet fragments striking Earth.

In a widely reported press conference announcing the Clovis comet hypothesis in 2007, proponents showed a National Geographic animation based on one of Boslough's simulations as inspiration for their idea.

Indiana Jones-style, Boslough responded. Confronted by apparently hard asteroid evidence, as well as a Nova documentary and an article in the journal Science, all purportedly showing his error in rebutting the comet hypothesis, Boslough ordered carbon dating of the major evidence provided by the opposition: nanodiamond-bearing carbon spherules associated with the shock of an asteroid's impact. The tests found the alleged 13,000-year-old carbon to be of very recent formation.

While this raised red flags to those already critical of the impact hypothesis, "I never said the samples were salted," Boslough said carefully. "I said they were contaminated."

That find, along with irregularities reported in the background of one member of the opposing team, was enough for Nova to remove the entire episode from its list of science shows available for streaming, Boslough said.

"Just because a culture changed from Clovis to Folsom spear points didn't mean their civilization collapsed," he said. "They probably just used another technology. It's like saying the phonograph culture collapsed and was replaced by the iPod culture."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by DOE/Sandia National Laboratories.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. M. Boslough, K. Nicoll, V. Holliday, T. L. Daulton, D. Meltzer, N. Pinter, A. C. Scott, T. Surovell, P. Claeys, J. Gill, F. Paquay, J. Marlon, P. Bartlein, C. Whitlock, D. Grayson, and A. J. T. Jull. Arguments and Evidence Against a Younger Dryas Impact Event. Climates, Landscapes, and Civilizations, Geophysical Monograph Series, 2012; 198: 13-26 DOI: 10.1029/2012GM001209

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/xtIJFODsKWY/130131095314.htm

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Paritor Music Education Blog: Teacher Pay Types - Music Education ...

Paritor Music Education Blog: Teacher Pay Types - Music Education Hubs

Teacher Pay Types - Music Education Hubs

The morning session of our Music Education Manager's Discussion Day focused purely on teacher pay types. Here are the results:

Reconciling Pay ? the reliability of Teachers

?

This issue was regarding the processes of retrieving information from Claim and Contracted staff, some of the services mentioned a problem chasing claims/hours from Contracted staff as it does not directly affect their pay. Often each school will sign off the tuition which is used as a double check. Several services use several documents (Registers, Timesheets, Schedules etc) to cross reference the claims Some services carry out random spot checks with schools and timesheets rather than analysing each one. For contracted staff, some services have it written into their contracts that contracted staff cannot claim additional hours. One customer pointed out that teachers are paid depending on the number of pupil?s in their lesson rather than hourly, therefore teachers cannot get paid for extra time and also teachers are efficient in updating registers etc.

?

Managing Varied Contracts

This issue was around managing multiple contracts and agreements with the teaching staff, what is the most efficient way to manage this situation. Another point that was made in connection to this was: If salaried hours fall below the contract, is it the responsibility of the management to fill that time or of the teacher. One solution to overtime was to only pay overtime once a year rather than once a month. This works on the assumption that although a teacher may do more that their contract one month, in a later month they may have fewer hours than their contract dictates, therefore the two will balance themselves out over time. There was another solution called an ?Annualised Hours? contract, which is a contract that directly reflects the teacher?s hours over a year, rather than having a salary. Others suggested the PAYE method of payment

?

Teacher Mileage

Most services had interesting ways of managing Teacher Mileage. Some services have the mileage built into the contract The mileage is calculated at the beginning of the year, and that calculation is what is paid ? so no claims Another solution is that if services were able to claim the VAT back from the mileage, the finance generated would cover the extra administration time needed.

?

Projected costs for Claim staff

This issue was raised in relation to calculating the monthly wages for teachers. There is a need to log lessons which have been missed by teachers, including whether or not these lessons need to be made up When completing Salary projections, these potential make-ups need to be considered Also it is necessary to calculate the costs of these non-delivered lessons

?

Employing Teachers through an Agency

This is the interesting way that Swindon Music Service employ and manage their teachers. All teachers are employed on a PAYE contract with the Agency Teachers are then supplied on request No liability as employers If customers/Service are not happy with a Teacher they can get replaced by the agency

?

Increase contributions and emotional investment by teachers

This was discussed as ways to award and appreciate teachers who go above and beyond what is expected, and from that creating a culture where teachers are encouraged to do more. It is important for Teachers to see that they are appreciated There were suggestions of financial rewards to outstanding work Provide a platform for teachers to show what they have done, with pictures and videos etc. Potential issues if teachers are unwelcome?

?

Make sure that costs are covered

This issue was discussed as it is not yet something that Ensemble fully caters for. Feeding in associated costs into Ensemble Reflecting personal finance budgets


Source: http://blog.paritor.com/2013/01/teacher-pay-types-music-education-hubs.html

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Monday, January 21, 2013

8 Tools To Help Run Your Business Effortlessly

8 Tools To Help Run Your Business Effortlessly

You?re a small business owner with too many things to do and too little time to do them in.

Wouldn?t it be great if you could find a way to do things automatically and find more time in your day?

Lucky for you, we?ve found just the apps that can do that and more. Run your business ? and your life ? more efficiently in 2013 with help from the 8 apps we?ve rounded up for you:

Get Organized

Organization is key to running any business smoothly ? and saving your sanity.

Keeping all of your notes, ideas and favorite links in one place makes it easy to access them right when you need them. Storing virtual copies of your business receipts makes it easy to categorize everything at tax time. Tracking all of your finances at-a-glance can save you from a lot of spending headaches.

These tools will help you keep everything in order:

Click to see full-size screenshot.

Evernote: Keep Your Ideas Organized
What it is: A virtual notebook for saving anything and everything.
What it does: Are you a chronic bookmarker, saving links for later? Do you have to-do lists scattered everywhere and Post-It Note reminders all over your workspace? Do you get brilliant ideas while you?re out somewhere and don?t have anywhere to jot them down? Evernote saves, stores and organizes all of these for you through virtual notebooks:

  • Create separate notebooks for different kinds of links you want to save for inspiration or reading later
  • Make a notebook for content ideas you get while you?re out.
  • Snap pictures of your to-do lists and Post-It Note reminders so you?ll always have them with you.

Evernote has apps for your computer, smartphone and tablet, and syncs your notes across all of your devices, so you?ll always have the information you need right at your fingertips.

Click to see full-size screenshot.

Shoeboxed: File All Your Important Papers Online

What it is: A virtual filing cabinet for your receipts and other business documents.
What it does: Saves you from hunting down paper receipts at tax time and gets rid of that big stack of important business papers. Shoeboxed lets you either mail or scan receipts and other documents and organizes them for you in an online account. You can get rid of all that paper, save some drawer and desk space and still have access to everything you need.

Click to see full-sized screenshot.

Mint: Track All Your Finances In One Place
What it is: A personal finance and budgeting tool.
What it does: Mint lets you track exactly where your money is going, set budgets and financial goals, and see all of your bank accounts and credit cards at one glance. Their mobile app makes it easy to check your finances on the go.

Create and Share Content

Content creation can be a chore that you don?t always have time for. Tracking down ideas to write about, including eye-catching images and getting more eyes on your blog posts and emails can take a lot of effort.

These tools are to help you get inspired and share your content more easily:

Click to see full-size screenshot

StumbleUpon: Find Great Sites To Inspire You
What it is: A web browser extension that discovers new websites for you in categories you can specify.
What it does: StumbleUpon is like channel surfing the Internet. You can choose a category to ?stumble,? and StumbleUpon will show you random sites listed in that category. Try ?stumbling? categories related to your industry the next time you need a flash of inspiration to see what others are writing about.

Click to see full-size screenshot.

Pixlr: Edit Photos On The Fly
What it is: A suite of online image editing tools
What it does: If you need to jazz up an image for a blog post or an email, Pixlr has you covered. The site offers a full-featured editor that?s similar to Photoshop, a more basic editor for making simple adjustments, and a ?fun? editor for adding Instagram-like effects to your images. Pixlr also makes their online editors available as apps for Android, iPhone and iPad, so you can edit photos when you?re away from home, too.

Click to see full-size screenshot.

Click to Tweet: Get Others Tweeting For You

What it is: A tweet generator that makes it easy for other people to share your content on Twitter.
What it does: Click to Tweet lets you write a tweet for other people to share. You write a blog post with some tweetable stats or quotes. You want them shared on Twitter. Use Click to Tweet to write out what you want the tweet to say ? with a link back to your blog post ? and copy and paste the link they provide right into your post. Anyone who clicks the link gets redirected to their own Twitter account with your pre-written tweet ready to send.

Automate To Save Time

While organization is the key to running your business smoothly, automation makes it run effortlessly.

The more things you can schedule in advance to happen automatically, the more time you can save and focus on other areas of your business.

These are tools you can use to stay active on Pinterest and share things between different online accounts with hardly any effort on your part:

Click to see full-size screenshot.

Pingraphy: Schedule Pins In Advance
What it is: A web app to preschedule Pinterest posts.
What it does: Pingraphy is like Hootsuite for Pinterest. You can schedule pins in advance to keep your Pinterest presence active without falling into the time suck and distraction that Pinterest can sometimes create.

Click to see full-size screenshot.

IFTTT: Automate Smaller Tasks
What it is: An online app that can automate almost anything.
What it does: IFTTT (short for ?If This Then That?) connects your online services together to automate some of the smaller things you do throughout the day. Have images with a certain hashtag from your personal Instagram account post to your business?s Facebook page. ?Star? articles in Google Reader and have them autopost to Hootsuite. Save important events from your calendar to Evernote. IFTTT can save you a lot of time on little tasks.

Save Time With Your Email Marketing, Too

Email marketing is highly profitable tactic for marketing your business. [link to ROI stat] But if you?re both the owner and marketer for your business, finding time to create messages can be a challenge.

Luckily, AWeber has two tools that automate your email marketing, saving you time while keeping you in touch with your customers:

Click to see full-size screenshot.

Follow Up Emails: Send Emails Automatically
What they are: A series of emails that you can write in advance to send automatically when a new customer joins your email list.
What they do: Follow up emails save you time by sending emails to your subscribers automatically. You can write as many emails as you want in advance and schedule them to send at different intervals ? daily, weekly, even monthly if you want. Follow ups let you stay in touch with customers at a point where their interest in you is at its highest, and continue following up with less effort through emails that send themselves.

Click to see full-size screenshot.

Instant Blog Newsletters: Turn Blog Posts Into No-Fuss Newsletters

What they are: Emails that send every time you publish a new blog post.
What they do: Blog broadcasts are another great time-saving feature. A new email gets created every time you publish a new blog post, which you can schedule to send to your readers instantly or as a weekly digest. Once you decide how frequently to email your blog posts, your messages will send themselves automatically to all the readers on your list. So much easier than duplicating posts from your blog on your own!

What are some other ways that you save time and keep your business organized? Share with us in the comments!

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Source: http://www.aweber.com/blog/email-marketing/2013-business-tools.htm

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Official: 25 more bodies found at Algerian plant

ALGIERS, Algeria (AP) ? An Algerian security official says bomb squads scouring a gas plant where radical Islamists took dozens of foreign workers hostage have found 25 more bodies.

The state of some of the bodies discovered Sunday, a day after a bloody raid ended a four-day siege at the plant in the Sahara desert, is making it difficult to tell whether the dead were hostages or the attackers, the official said. He spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject.

Algerian authorities said on Saturday that 23 hostages and 32 captors were known to have died but that those figures were expected to rise.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/official-25-more-bodies-found-algerian-plant-170035306--finance.html

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Sunday, January 20, 2013

Analysis: Optimistic Obama faces tough to-do list (The Arizona Republic)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/278318943?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Surprising connections between our well-being and giving, getting, and gratitude

Jan. 19, 2013 ? We all know that getting a good night's sleep is good for our general health and well-being. But new research is highlighting a more surprising benefit of good sleep: more feelings of gratitude for relationships.

"A plethora of research highlights the importance of getting a good night's sleep for physical and psychological well-being, yet in our society, people still seem to take pride in needing, and getting, little sleep," says Amie Gordon of the University of California, Berkeley. "And in the past, research has shown that gratitude promotes good sleep, but our research looks at the link in the other direction and, to our knowledge, is the first to show that everyday experiences of poor sleep are negatively associated with gratitude toward others -- an important emotion that helps form and maintain close social bonds."

Social psychologists are increasingly finding that "prosocial" behavior -- including expressing gratitude and giving to others -- is key to our psychological well-being. Even how we choose to spend our money on purchases affects our health and happiness. And children develop specific ways to help others from a very young age. Gordon and other researchers will be presenting some of these latest findings at the Society for Personality and Social Psychology (SPSP) annual meeting January 19 in New Orleans.

Sleeping to feel grateful

A large body of research has documented that people who experience gratitude are happier and healthier. In three new studies, Gordon and Serena Chen, also of the the University of California, Berkeley, explored how poor sleep affects people's feelings of gratitude.

In the first study, people who experienced a poor night's sleep were less grateful after listing five things in life for which they were appreciative than were people who had slept well the night before. The researchers adapted the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, which measures sleep quality and number of hours slept, among other variables, to evaluate the previous night's sleep.

In the second study, participants recorded their sleep from the previous night for two weeks and their feelings of gratitude. The researchers found a decline in gratitude associated with poor sleep, and those participants reported feeling more selfish those days.

The final study looked at heterosexual couples and found that people tend to feel less grateful toward their romantic partners if either they or their partners generally sleep poorly. "In line with this finding, people reported feeling less appreciated by their partners if they or their partner tends to sleep poorly, suggesting that the lack of gratitude is transmitted to the partner," Gordon says.

"Poor sleep is not just experienced in isolation," Gordon says. "Instead, it influences our interactions with others, such as our ability to be grateful, a vital social emotion."

Giving away money to feel wealthy

Just as expressing gratitude confers benefits, so too does giving to others. New research shows that people all around the world -- from Canada to Uganda, from South Africa to India -- derive more happiness from spending money on others than they do on themselves.

"For the first time, we show that giving away money or spending it on others confers the ironic psychological benefit of increasing the giver's sense of wealth," says Michael Norton of Harvard Business School and co-author with Elizabeth Dunn of the University of British Columbia of the upcoming book Happy Money: The Science of Smarter Spending. In a suite of new, not-yet published, studies, Norton and colleagues showed that charitable giving makes people feel wealthier.

This research follows on other recent work published in Psychological Science by Norton and colleagues that shows that giving time to others -- from helping with homework to shoveling a neighbors' driveway -- actually makes people feel that they have more time. "In fact, giving time away alleviates people's sense of time famine even more than receiving unexpected windfalls of free time."

That people feel wealthier from spending money on others may explain why poor individuals tend to give away a higher fraction of their income than members of the middle class do. In one study, researchers reported that Americans earning less than $20,000 a year give a higher percentage of their income to charity than others earning up to $300,000 a year.

"Our results suggest when the poor give money away, that very act might mitigate their feelings of poverty," Norton says. "More broadly than this specific benefit, our investigation contributes to the growing body of research documenting the benefits of prosocial behavior, which include greater happiness, reduced mortality, and better immune function."

Buying experiences to feel happy

In related research, psychologists are finding that spending money on experiential purchases, such as vacations, concerts, and meals out, tends to bring us more happiness than material purchases, such as clothing, jewelry, or electronic gadgets. Amit Kumar and Thomas Gilovich of Cornell University are investigating one potential explanation for this difference: that experiences prompt storytelling more than possessions do.

In new research, they asked participants to recall either a significant experiential purchase or a significant material purchase. They then asked them how much they had talked about the purchase they recalled, and questions related to the satisfaction they derived from their purchase. Participants rated a higher satisfaction for experiences than for possessions, which was because they were more likely to talk about the experiences with other people.

In another experiment, the researchers measured what happens when people cannot talk about their purchases. They asked participants if they would be willing to pay a price to be able to talk about a beach vacation (experiential purchase) or an electronic good (material purchase). "Participants were more likely to switch from a better purchase that they could not talk about to a lesser purchase that they could talk about in the experiential condition than in the material one," Kumar says.

"Well-being is likely to be enhanced by shifting the balance of spending in our consumer society away from material goods and towards experiential ones," Kumar says. "This research also suggests that there are benefits to be had not only by nudging people to choose experiences over possessions, but also by encouraging people to share stories about their experiences."

Knowing what is best to help others

The roots for how we give to others form at a very young age. Children, it turns out, are very sophisticated givers -- not only coming to someone's aid when needed but also coming up with the best strategy for doing so, often independent of an adult's instruction.

In new research, Kristina Olson of Yale University and Alia Martin have found that children often will act, thinking they know better than others what is best for them or others. In a series of experiments, the researchers investigate whether 3-year-old children will help someone by ignoring the specific request and instead offering a better alternative.

In one study, for example, when an experimenter asks the child for a specific marker, but the child knows that marker does not work, the child will instead offer up a better marker. In another study, a pre-recorded child asks the child participant to give her a piece of chocolate via a tube that supposedly connects them. If the participant knows that chocolate makes the other child sick, the participant will decide to give her fruit snacks instead.

"Perhaps most provocatively, children will selectively decide not to help in this way if they don't like the person," Olson says. "For example, if an experimenter has previously been mean, children won't warn the adult of a potential harm -- such as something sharp in the container they are reaching in -- but will if the experimenter was not mean."

"These results suggest that children are able to help adults and peers already by the preschool years in rather complex ways, even when the beneficiary is misguided about what he or she wants," Olson says. "Children don't just blindly do as they are requested, but rather consider a person's goal and consider alternative possible ways to achieve that goal."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Society for Personality and Social Psychology.

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


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/living_well/~3/WNNU_QvaL5Y/130119185025.htm

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Saturday, January 19, 2013

Despite Media Companies' Best Efforts, 'TV Everywhere' Is Nowhere ...

People are streaming online video more than ever before but only 17% of pay TV subscribers have watched cable programming online using so-called ?TV Everywhere? services, according to a new study.

The study, from research firm GfK Media, is the latest bad news for big media companies? TV Everywhere initiative, which is aimed at reinforcing the value of traditional cable subscriptions. But since its launch four years ago, the effort has been plagued by delays in launch as a result of difficult rights negotiations between various entertainment companies and pay TV operators ? cable, satellite and phone companies.

TV Everywhere requires pay TV subscribers to sign in with their pay TV providers? credentials to access TV programming online. The services let people watch on-demand programs, and in some cases live TV channels, on personal computers as well as mobile devices like iPads and smartphones inside the home. In a few cases the content is available outside the home.

One major obstacle, the 1000-person study showed, is the requirement for people to sign in with their cable account details to prove that they are paying video subscribers. Seventy percent of pay TV subscribers who have ever watched programming online said they would be deterred from watching Internet TV content if it required them to sign in with their cable account credentials.

TV Everywhere began as a joint push from Time Warner Inc. and Comcast Corp. as the industry?s response to the threat of cord cutting posed by the rising tide of cheap online video alternatives. The availability of content varies with channel and pay TV provider. As a result of a deal struck between Comcast Corp. and Walt Disney Co. last year, for instance, Comcast customers can watch ESPN live? outside the home on tablets or mobile phones over the Internet. But other deals have been far more limited in scope.

One of the main issues that has been separating entertainment companies and pay TV providers is the question of which will deal directly with consumers, traditionally the province of providers. While providers like Comcast have made a big push to make content available online through their own website or apps ? in Comcast?s case, Xfinity ? channels like ESPN, Time Warner?s HBO and CNN have their own individual apps and websites with TV programming content. Those give consumers a direct relationship with channels they haven?t traditionally had.

So far, in the battle for online eyeballs, the programmers appear to have the edge. The GfK study shows that 37% of folks who have ever viewed TV online watched the content through a TV network?s app or website, while only 30% of those surveyed reported watching through a cable operator or other distributor?s online portals. That could partly be because TV watchers associate what they?re watching more with a TV channel than with their cable provider. But cable executives believe eventually customers will choose their portals so they can find everything in one place?without sifting through a number of apps.

One bright spot for distributors is that about a quarter of respondents said that they are more likely to keep their existing providers? services as a result of their TV everywhere products.? For the vast majority of those surveyed, however, it still hasn?t made a difference in how they view their cable, satellite or phone company.

Source: http://blogs.wsj.com/digits/2013/01/18/despite-cable-companies-best-efforts-tv-everywhere-is-nowhere/

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The Speed Bumps Slowing Down the Cars of Tomorrow

It makes sense that the first major auto show of the year began just one week after CES 2013 in Las Vegas; more technologies, like apps and voice recognition, are driving their way into cars. It used to be that the intersection of cars and technology could be found at the annual auto show in Detroit, which is where the action is this week and next.

Source: http://ectnews.com.feedsportal.com/c/34520/f/632000/s/27a844fb/l/0L0Stechnewsworld0N0Crsstory0C77120A0Bhtml/story01.htm

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Video: What is ahead for the president in his second term?

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/50517946/

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Friday, January 18, 2013

How cells know when it's time to eat themselves

Jan. 17, 2013 ? Researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine have identified a molecular mechanism regulating autophagy, a fundamental stress response used by cells to help ensure their survival in adverse conditions.

The findings are published online in the January 17 issue of Cell.

Senior author Kun-Liang Guan, PhD, a professor of pharmacology at UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center, and colleagues report that an enzyme called AMPK, typically involved in sensing and modulating energy use in cells, also regulates autophagic enzymes.

Autophagy, which derives from the Greek words for "self" and "eat," is triggered to protect cells when times are tough, such as when cells are starved for nutrients, infected or suffering from damaged organelles, such as ribosomes and mitochondria. Much like the human body in freezing conditions will reduce operations in extremities to preserve core temperatures and organ functions, cellular autophagy involves the degradation and synthesis of some internal cellular elements to ensure survival of the whole.

The scientists found that AMPK regulates different complexes of an enzyme class called Vps34 kinase in different ways. Some Vps34 enzymes are involved in normal cellular vesicle trafficking -- the vital movement of molecules inside a cell. Other Vps34 complexes are involved in autophagy. Guan and colleagues say AMPK inhibits some non-autophagy enzymes, but activates autophagous ones.

The study more fully illuminates a process essential to healthy cell function and survival. "Autophagy is an important way for cells to clear damaged parts that could be harmful to them and to digest parts for nutrients when cells are experiencing starvation conditions," Guan said.

More broadly, he noted that "defects in autophagy have been associated with human disease, such as cancer and neurodegenerative disorders." Failure of normal autophagy has also been associated with accumulated cell damage and aging.

Co-authors are Joungmok Kim, Department of Oral Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Kyung Hee University and UCSD Department of Pharmacology and UCSD Moores Cancer Center; Young Chul Kim, Chong Fang and Ryan C. Russell, UCSD Department of Pharmacology and UCSD Moores Cancer Center; Jeong Hee Kim, Department of Oral Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Kyung Hee University; and Weiliang Fan, Rong Liu and Qing Zhong, UC Berkeley Division of Biochemistry, Biophysics and Structural Biology, Department of Molecular and Cell Biology.

Funding for this research came, in part, from grants from the National Institutes of Health ((R01CA108941; R01GM51586) and U.S. Department of Defense and the Bio&Medical Technology Development Program of the National Research Foundation of Korea.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of California, San Diego Health Sciences.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Joungmok Kim, Young?Chul Kim, Chong Fang, Ryan?C. Russell, Jeong?Hee Kim, Weiliang Fan, Rong Liu, Qing Zhong, Kun-Liang Guan. Differential Regulation of Distinct Vps34 Complexes by AMPK in Nutrient Stress and Autophagy. Cell, 2013; 152 (1-2): 290 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2012.12.016

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/strange_science/~3/eNgoYm_dDl0/130117132921.htm

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Nokia sheds 300 IT jobs, transfers 820 workers

(AP) ? Struggling Nokia Corp. is downsizing by more than 1,000 jobs, part of a wide-ranging plan to cut costs and streamline operations.

The Finnish firm says it will lay off 300 workers in its IT sector and transfer "some activities and up to 820 employees to strategic partners," India-based HCL Technologies and TATA Consultancy Services, which have operations in Finland.

Nokia said Thursday that the changes, mostly in Finland, are part of 10,000 job cuts and plant closures announced in June.

The former No.1 phone maker has been edged out by Samsung Electronics and Apple Inc.'s iPhone in the tough smartphone race and is aiming to save ?1.6 billion by the end of 2013. Last week, Nokia said it expects to return to profitability as fourth-quarter mobile phone sales exceeded expectations.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-01-17-Finland-Nokia-Cuts/id-09f0bbf6356f4a35b403110edeffa2c4

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Thursday, January 17, 2013

Use These Handy Tips For Effective Credit Score Improvement ...

Are you struggling because you have bad credit? In the current economy, it?s not uncommon to see credit scores quickly declining. This article will teach you how to protect and improve your credit.

Maintain an active bank account, both savings and checking, to begin credit improvement. Active accounts will display to creditors that there is constant income, your bills are paid, and that you avail overdraft protection. Having checking and savings accounts without problems will improve your attractiveness to potential creditors.

If your credit is such that you cannot get a new card to help repair it, apply for a secured one. The account is funded in advance, which provides the lender with a level of insurance against unpaid debts. This is why secured cards are often easier to get. By using a new card responsibly, your credit rating will start to increase.

Credit Card

Check your credit card carefully each month to ensure that there?s no incorrect information. Contact the credit card company right away if there are incorrect fees, so that they won?t be on your credit report.

Keep your credit cards in your wallet. Use cash when you need to buy something. When you find credit card spending unavoidable, pay down your balance immediately.

The quickest way to work on repairing any type of credit is to first pay off any outstanding debt. If you are not paying off your debt, your credit will take a hit.

Doing so can help to keep good credit. Credit card companies are one of the few businesses that report on a regular basis. Paying late can severely hurt your credit score.

If your credit score repair effort is stagnating, one way to get it back on track might be to try debt consolidation. When you consolidate all of your debts into just one payment, it is much easier to budget that money into your monthly expenses. You will be able to pay in a timely manner, and improve your credit rating substantially.

If you are unable to make minimum payments, contact the better business bureau for information on a trustworthy credit counseling service. These services will help you communicate with creditors to make a simplified payment arrangement that will help you in the long-term. A credit counselor can give you the best advice on how to be in control of your finances, and pay off your debts.

Credit Score

Having a lower credit score can lower your interest rate. This will make your payments easier and it will enable you to repay your debt a lot quicker. Get a good offer along with good rates, and you?ll have credit that you can pay off easily, and improve your credit score.

In order to start repairing your credit, you should close all but one of your credit card accounts. You should plan on how you will pay the remaining open balances, or how to consolidate them into one account. This way you can work on paying one credit card balance off, instead of a bunch of smaller ones.

You need to read and understand the credit card statements you receive in the mail. Make sure that all of your fees and charges are correct and that there are not any items that were not authorized by you. You bear the responsibility for looking after your own best interests, and you are the only person who will know if your statement is accurate.

Keeping a tight rein on the balances you carry on your credit cards is a good way to improve and safeguard your credit. By carrying a high balance, your credit score will suffer, even if you make timely payments every month.

Some sound advice to follow, is to be sure to take the time to contact your credit card company and work with them. When you work with company you are not working against anyone, including yourself. This will help prevent furthering yourself into debt. Talk to the company and see if you can change your due date or monthly fees.

Credit Score

Use these tips to change your credit score and make it better. Stop the damage and start repairing your credit score today.

It is imperative to learn all you can about growth stock. You are now better prepared to succeed now that you have taken the time to read this article. Keep the information you?ve learned in mind, and dedicate yourself to finding out more.

Source: http://thefinancenewstoday.com/2013/01/16/use-these-handy-tips-for-effective-credit-score-improvement/

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Biden: Nation needs to respond to gun violence

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Vice President Joe Biden said the nation could not wait any longer to respond to gun violence, telling mayors on Thursday that the White House would "take this fight to the halls of Congress."

Biden outlined President Barack Obama's sweeping proposal, announced Wednesday, during a speech to the United States Conference of Mayors, providing a rationale for a plan that includes a ban on assault weapons, the limiting of high-capacity ammunition magazines and requiring background checks for all gun buyers.

Obama's proposal, which is the broadest attempt to tighten gun laws in nearly two decades, faces an uncertain future in Congress, where lawmakers have resisted tougher laws in recent years and some members of Congress have responded warily to the president's plan. But Biden made clear that the White House would push aggressively for the plan following the deadly school shooting in Newtown, Conn.

"We're going to take this fight to the halls of Congress and we're going to take it beyond that. We're going to take it to the American people. We're going to go around the country making the case," Biden said, vowing that "this time will not be like the times that have come before." Biden said he had "no illusions about the fight that is in front of us" about the challenges of passing the gun control measures but said "we have no choice."

The vice president offered an extensive and detailed explanation of Obama's proposal, which was at the forefront of discussions at the meeting of the national mayor's organization. The group has long supported a ban on assault weapons and other forms of gun control.

Biden urged the mayors to push their state legislatures and governors to make records on gun purchases more available to the federal government and defended efforts to limit high-capacity magazines, saying they "leave victims with no chance" and are "not worth the risk" because the deadly potential in the hands of a criminal.

Responding to calls from the National Rifle Association to have armed guards at schools, Biden says, "We don't want rent-a-cops in schools armed."

Biden's remarks came during the winter meeting of the United States Conference of Mayors, where mayors trade ideas on creating jobs, financing infrastructure projects like water and sewer systems and responding to natural disasters, such as the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy along the East Coast.

During a news conference before Biden's address, mayors said the recent spate of mass murders have brought renewed attention on the issue but it remains one they deal with on a daily basis ? a problem that Kansas City, Mo., mayor Sly James likened to "slow-motion mass murder."

Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter, the organization's president, said mayors supported the Second Amendment right to bear arms but cautioned that "your right to own a firearm should not interfere with my right to live."

Joe Riley, the mayor of Charleston, S.C., said it was time for Congress to deal with the problem, calling Obama's proposal a "sound, comprehensive, reasonable, common-sense approach that can make our communities safer."

___

Online:

United States Conference of Mayors: http://usmayors.org/

___

Follow Ken Thomas on Twitter: http://twitter.com/AP_Ken_Thomas

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/biden-nation-needs-respond-gun-violence-194814386.html

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GDL Israel on HTML5 Game (In Hebrew)

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Source: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQPU0oyL3SY&feature=youtube_gdata

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Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Blasts at Syrian university causes casualties

DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) ? Two explosions struck the main university in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo on Tuesday, causing an unknown number of casualties, state media and anti-government activists said.

There were conflicting reports as to what caused the blast at Aleppo University, which was in session Tuesday.

State TV said two rockets hit the university, killing students and people who had fled fighting elsewhere in recent months and taken refuge on the campus grounds. It did not say how many people were killed, and blamed rebels for the attack.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which has a network of activists around the country, offered a slightly different account. It said 15 people were killed and "tens" wounded in two explosions near the university's dorms, but said it was not clear whether the blasts were the result of shells or bombs.

Aleppo, a former commercial hub, has been a major front in the country's civil war since July. Since then, the fight in the Syria's largest city has settled into a bloody stalemate between regime troops and rebels, with ferocious street battles, sniper fire and frequent exchanges of rocket and mortar rounds.

The city, along with the capital, Damascus, also has been hit by a wave of explosions in recent that have killed scores of people. Many of the bombings, which have largely targeted government buildings, have been claimed by Islamic extremists fighting on the rebel side.

Violence raged in other parts of Syria as well on Tuesday, with clashes in the suburbs of Damascus, and government air raids and shelling in other regions that killed dozens of people, activists said.

The violence came a day after Syria's deputy foreign minister said President Bashar Assad will not step down before scheduled presidential elections in mid-2014. Faisal Mekdad said Assad will run again for the post next year ? a declaration which lowers already diminished expectations that a political settlement can be reached.

Since Syria's crisis began in March 2011, the opposition has said it will not accept anything less than Assad's departure.

Mekdad's comments appear to contradict a plan proposed by international envoy Lakhdar Brahimi. Since starting his job in the summer, Brahimi has sought to advance an international plan that calls for an open-ended cease-fire between rebels and government troops and the formation of a transitional government to run the country until elections can be held.

Brahimi did not mention Assad by name in the plan, but he has said the transitional government would have "full executive powers," meaning "all the authority of the state should be possessed by that government" ? a description that would seem to exclude the incumbent Assad from a role.

Asked by a BBC interviewer if the president says he wants to run in 2014, Mekdad answered, "What's wrong with that?"

"The president and many other candidates who may run will go to the people put their programs and to be elected by the people," Mekdad said in English. "The ballot box will be the place where the future of the leadership of Syria will be decided."

"It is a coup d'etat ... if we listen to what the armed groups and those enemies of Syria are proposing," Mekdad said, referring to the opposition and countries that support it.

Earlier this month, Assad dismissed calls from the U.S. and others that he step down and vowed to keep fighting until the country is free of "terrorists" ? his government's shorthand for rebels.

Last year, a new constitution drafted in Syria imposed a limit of two seven-year terms on the president, but the limit would not count the nearly 13 years that he has already held office. It means Assad could remain legally in power through 2028.

Assad took office in 2000 after the death of his father, Hafez Assad, who ruled Syria for 30 years.

Mekdad said it would be undemocratic to tell Assad not to run for the post again.

Also Tuesday, Syrian Prime Minister Wael al-Halqi arrived in Iran, Syria's strongest ally in the region, where he will discuss the country's crisis, including Assad's proposal to end the fighting, with Iranian officials.

Iran has tried to mediate in the past but the opposition rejected the offer saying Tehran is taking sides in the conflict.

Meanwhile, activists reported clashes in suburbs south of Damascus. The government is trying to drive rebels from their bases around Damascus from which they can threaten key facilities.

Away from Damascus, the Observatory and the Local Coordination Committees activist groups said troops bombarded the Houla region in the central province of Homs, killing at least 10 people including five women and two children. The LCC said 17 people were killed in Homs, most of them in Houla.

The U.N. says at least 60,000 people have been killed in the war and millions have fled their homes.

___

Mroue reported from Beirut. Associated Press writer Ali Akbar Dareini contributed to this report from Tehran, Iran.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blasts-syrian-university-causes-casualties-151223277.html

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Health and fitness Could Be Enjoyable With ... - Critical Care 2011 ...

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Locan Credit Union Accepting Scholarship Applications

Warner Robins, GA ? Robins Federal Credit Union is now accepting applications for the 2013 Most Excellent Senior Team (MEST) Scholarship.

Five high school seniors will be awarded a four year, $4,000.00 scholarship. The deadline to apply is noon on Friday, March 22nd. Guidelines and applications may be found on Robins Federal Credit Union?s website, www.robinsfcu.org, or picked up at any of Robins Federal Credit Union?s 19 branch locations.

Robins Federal Credit Union is a local non-profit financial cooperative with nineteen branches in central Georgia. Robins Federal currently provides financial services to over 145,000 members, with assets exceeding $1.8 billion. Membership is open to anyone who lives, works, worships or attends school in the 16 counties Robins Federal serves.

Source: http://forsythmonroe.13wmaz.com/news/business/80978-locan-credit-union-accepting-scholarship-applications

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Nissan slashing price on new Leaf

5 hrs.

Nissan will drop the price on a new version of its Leaf battery-electric vehicle by 18 percent, or about $6,000, the maker announced during a North American International Auto Show news conference.?

The Nissan Leaf S trim level will now start at $28,800, according to executive Carlos Munoz, who noted that with the $7,500 federal tax credit on qualified electric vehicles and various state incentives added in, buyers in some parts of the country will now be able to purchase a Leaf for as little as $18,000.

?We are confident this will represent a tipping point,? in terms of driving up demand for the Leaf, the first mainstream battery-electric vehicle from a major manufacturer in nearly two decades, said Munoz.

Nissan launched the Leaf late in 2010 to strong headlines but weak consumer demand. On a global basis, the maker has so far sold about 50,000, but while its goal was to boost worldwide demand, Nissan achieved only a 22 percent increase in sales last year, ?which was a disappointment for us,? said the maker?s CEO Carlos Ghosn.

The decision to drop the price on the Leaf ? other versions are?also seeing a small price cut ? comes as Nissan launches production of the battery car on a new assembly line in Smyrna, Tenn. Until now, the car and its 24-kilowatt-hour lithium-ion battery pack have been produced in Japan.

That?s meant a significant penalty for Nissan because of the currently lopsided dollar-yen exchange rate.? Ghosn noted the maker?s original business plan for the Leaf anticipated an exchange rate of 100 yen to the dollar but that has dipped to as little as 80.

Ghosn said the maker realized the price of the original Leaf models was a problem after listening to ?a lot of feedback from customers.?

Moving the vehicle to the U.S. helps trim production costs but Nissan has taken other steps to improve production efficiencies and lower component costs ? especially for the battery pack, the single-costliest part of an electric vehicle like Leaf.

But there are other issues to address, he noted, including the lack of a readily accessible charging network.? Analysts also cite limited range, with?the Leaf getting between 80 and 100 miles, routinely, per charge.

Nissan is by no means the only maker that has recognized the problems with pricing on battery-based vehicles. Chevrolet has been discounting its Chevrolet Volt in recent months, a move that helped it triple sales last year ? though demand still reached only about half of the 45,000 total it had forecast for the plug-in hybrid in the U.S. market for 2012.

Like Ghosn, General Motors President Mark Reuss told TheDetroitBureau.com there are a number of ways to boost demand. Sales of the Volt picked up momentum after California regulators approved the use of the vehicle in the state?s coveted HOV lanes with just one person onboard.

?We?re going to watch and see what happens? as Nissan launches production of the lower-price Leaf S model,?Reuss said.??It will have an effect, no question about it,? said the GM executive, though he would not commit to a similar strategy for the Chevy Volt.?

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Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/nissan-slashing-price-leaf-battery-car-1B7972322

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