Friday, May 31, 2013

Chicago Sun-Times lays off photography staff

CHICAGO (AP) ? The Chicago Sun-Times has laid off its entire full-time photography staff.

Sun-Times Media released a statement Thursday to The Associated Press confirming "the very difficult decision" to do away with the positions at the city's tabloid newspaper and its suburban sister publications.

The statement noted that the "business is changing rapidly" and audiences are "seeking more video content with their news."

The newspaper company's statement cited its efforts to bolster reporting capabilities with video and other multimedia elements and said the resulting restructuring of multimedia goes "across the network."

Steve Buyansky (beye-AN'-skee), a photo editor for three of the group's suburban newspapers, says about 30 photographers heard from Sun-Times editor Jim Kirk that they were laid off at a mandatory meeting Thursday morning.

He says the photographers are "in shock."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chicago-sun-times-lays-off-photography-staff-175916089.html

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The new Gmail sorts email into categories for you

Internet

2 hours ago

In an attempt to aid you in the battle against email overload, Google has redesigned the Gmail inbox. Your email is automatically funneled into categories based on whether it's a message from a friend, a notification from a social network, a newsletter, a promotional email, a bill, and so on.

Wait! What exactly is happening to my Gmail inbox?
You will soon have the option ? yes, Google is giving you a choice ? to have your email sorted for you. The inbox will be split into up to five categories; you can choose to use some or all of the following:

  • Primary: Messages from friends, family and other individuals you seem to contact regularly (as well messages which don't fit into the other categories).
  • Social: Messages from social networks, dating services and so on. This is where you'll find the email telling you that someone commented on your Facebook status.
  • Promotions: Offers, deals and the like go into this category. This is where you'll find things like a Best Buy reminder about an upcoming sale.
  • Updates: This is where many of the boring but important things go. Think order confirmations, receipts, bills and statements.
  • Forums: Messages from online groups, discussion boards and mailing lists wind up in this category. It's where you'll discover that someone replied to your post on the secret Squirrel Fanclub forum.

These categories basically become tabs in your inbox, but you have the ability to move messages between categories or set filters in order to teach Gmail where you want certain things ? just in case it gets something wrong.

Google

Google

How well does this work?
In about a week of use, I've found that the new Gmail inbox is fairly reliable. It takes a bit of blind faith to actually trust the sorting process, but once your initial reservations are out of the way, things work fairly well.

I set up some filters to guarantee that a couple of items will land in specific categories and I've also moved some messages between categories. I've never had to tell Gmail something twice though ? it accommodated my sorting preferences after each adjustment.

Google

Google

The Gmail for Android and Gmail for iOS apps will get a fresh new look as well, thanks to the new inbox.

Will this make my life easier? Harder?
After my trial week, the new inbox seems to provide a better at-a-glance overview of my email pile than the old one did. I see all of my Primary mail, and I can see how many new messages are waiting behind the other four tabs. It's a lot easier to ignore stupid promotional emails, but then again, I decided to reroute certain items that were automatically dumped in the Updates tab, such as online order confirmations.

You may need to tweak your email workflow a little bit ? you'll have to peek into your different tabs, at least every so often ? and if you're already prone to sorting email using filters, you may have to tweak your settings, but not as much as you might fear. Overall, it's an improvement.

How do I get the new inbox?
Google is gradually rolling out the new Gmail inbox over the next few weeks. Just keep an eye on the little gear menu in Gmail and pick the "Configure Inbox" option once it appears in the settings.

Will I get it on my smartphone?
Yep! The Gmail for Android and Gmail for iOS apps will be receiving updates to enable the new inbox. They're available through Google Play and the Apple App Store, respectively.

Google is a bit quiet on what happens if you use Gmail on your phone's standard mail app, however. We hope to see incoming Gmail automatically sorted into corresponding folders.

What if I don't like this new inbox?
No worries! You can switch off all the categories and tabs at anytime in order to return to the "classic" Gmail inbox (or another one of the available inbox types, like the "Important" view).

Want more tech news or interesting links? You'll get plenty of both if you keep up with Rosa Golijan, the writer of this post, by following her on Twitter, subscribing to her Facebook posts, or circling her on Google+.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653377/s/2c930b2b/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Cnew0Egmail0Esorts0Eemail0Ecategories0Eyou0E6C10A10A9546/story01.htm

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::C.PRO DES!GNS:: ? Actual estate management

Real estate management companies making life easier

Owning a home sometimes happens for different reasons. Because you need a house for yourself (that house of one?s goals that you so badly need) you could spend money on real estate. Real estate could be used by you as a way for supplementing your earnings either by selling at an increased price and getting at a diminished price or by letting it out. Sometimes you might purchase a property for the purpose of resale but might want to wait for many years before you actually sell it. In such a case, again it would sound right to book the house and earn some funds until you really decide to sell it off.

Regardless of the cause, making out real estate requirements real estate management and real estate management isn?t an easy problem for everybody. In reality, a great deal of people find it so much of a headache they prefer keeping their house bare rather than letting it. Real estate management requirements time, that you simply will rarely have. Property management isn?t nearly acquiring tenants and collecting rent from their website. Real estate management can be about ensuring that you do all the tasks that a landlord/landlady must do. Real estate management is approximately verifying the qualifications of the tenants before your property is actually let out by you for them. Property management is about ensuring that most of the paper work is full and correct i.e. the tenancy agreement etc are properly done. Real-estate management also requires you to do repairs as and when needed. Real estate management activities also include preservation, painting, polishing and so on of the house once the tenants re-locate and before the new tenants get in. Therefore, really, property management isn?t that simple a job for anyone who?s in a complete time job. Nevertheless, there is a solution to the and that is hiring a genuine estate management firm to complete every one of these actions for you. Yes, this will mean that what you receive being an income by letting your premises will be reduced (because of the commission/ fee charged by the real estate management company). But that?s only a small cost for the convenience that a genuine estate management company gives to you. But, its important that you pick the property management company carefully. There are all kinds of real-estate management companies out there (good and bad). You should examine the sources of the real estate management firm before you actually hire them for the job. A great real estate management company will not only keep your premises occupied constantly but will also make sure that you always have the rent in time and without the headache.The Law Offices of Gregory T. Lattanzi, LLC
45 Court Street
Suite 1
New Haven CT 06511
(203) 772-3000 connecticut attorney

Source: http://www.cortneyprovini.com/actual-estate-management/

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Thursday, May 30, 2013

Server Sales Are Down As Cloud Apps Abound At The Expense Of IBM, Enterprise Giants

gartnerGartner Research reports worldwide server sales are down 5 percent for the first quarter of the year, with IBM, HP and the other members of the top five taking the biggest hit. Server shipments declined 0.7 percent. But the drop in server sales is not at all surprising. Cloud apps are popping up by the thousands across the market, as the developer movement speeds up. But these apps are not surfacing from that souped-up x86 server made for big workloads.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/ic0BX88wbUM/

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Adam Levine Dating Model Nina Agdal!

Adam Levine Dating Model Nina Agdal!

Nina Agdal and Adam Levine togetherSinger and coach on “The Voice” Adam Levine has landed himself another supermodel. Levine is dating 21-year-old Danish model Nina Agdal, after splitting with Victoria’s Secret model Behati Prinsloo last year. Adam Levine, 34, has reportedly been dating Nina Agdal since early Spring following his split with Namibian model Behati Prinsloo. A source revealed, “Behati ...

Adam Levine Dating Model Nina Agdal! Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News

Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/05/adam-levine-dating-model-nina-agdal/

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Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Scientists develop CO2 sequestration technique

Scientists develop CO2 sequestration technique [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-May-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Anne Stark
stark8@llnl.gov
925-422-9799
DOE/Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

LIVERMORE, Calif. -- Lawrence Livermore scientists have discovered and demonstrated a new technique to remove and store atmospheric carbon dioxide while generating carbon-negative hydrogen and producing alkalinity, which can be used to offset ocean acidification.

The team demonstrated, at a laboratory scale, a system that uses the acidity normally produced in saline water electrolysis to accelerate silicate mineral dissolution while producing hydrogen fuel and other gases. The resulting electrolyte solution was shown to be significantly elevated in hydroxide concentration that in turn proved strongly absorptive and retentive of atmospheric CO2.

Further, the researchers suggest that the carbonate and bicarbonate produced in the process could be used to mitigate ongoing ocean acidification, similar to how an Alka Seltzer neutralizes excess acid in the stomach.

"We not only found a way to remove and store carbon dioxide from the atmosphere while producing valuable H2, we also suggest that we can help save marine ecosystems with this new technique," said Greg Rau, an LLNL visiting scientist, senior scientist at UC Santa Cruz and lead author of a paper appearing this week (May 27) in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

When carbon dioxide is released into the atmosphere, a significant fraction is passively taken up by the ocean forming carbonic acid that makes the ocean more acidic. This acidification has been shown to be harmful to many species of marine life, especially corals and shellfish. By the middle of this century, the globe will likely warm by at least 2 degrees Celsius and the oceans will experience a more than 60 percent increase in acidity relative to pre-industrial levels. The alkaline solution generated by the new process could be added to the ocean to help neutralize this acid and help offset its effects on marine biota. However, further research is needed, the authors said.

"When powered by renewable electricity and consuming globally abundant minerals and saline solutions, such systems at scale might provide a relatively efficient, high-capacity means to consume and store excess atmospheric CO2 as environmentally beneficial seawater bicarbonate or carbonate," Rau said. "But the process also would produce a carbon-negative 'super green' fuel or chemical feedstock in the form of hydrogen."

Most previously described chemical methods of atmospheric carbon dioxide capture and storage are costly, using thermal/mechanical procedures to concentrate molecular CO2 from the air while recycling reagents, a process that is cumbersome, inefficient and expensive.

"Our process avoids most of these issues by not requiring CO2 to be concentrated from air and stored in a molecular form, pointing the way to more cost-effective, environmentally beneficial, and safer air CO2 management with added benefits of renewable hydrogen fuel production and ocean alkalinity addition," Rau said.

The team concluded that further research is needed to determine optimum designs and operating procedures, cost-effectiveness, and the net environmental impact/benefit of electrochemically mediated air CO2 capture and H2 production using base minerals.

###

Other Livermore researchers include Susan Carroll, William Bourcier, Michael Singleton, Megan Smith and Roger Aines.

Founded in 1952, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (http://www.llnl.gov) provides solutions to our nation's most important national security challenges through innovative science, engineering and technology. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is managed by Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC for the U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Scientists develop CO2 sequestration technique [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-May-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Anne Stark
stark8@llnl.gov
925-422-9799
DOE/Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

LIVERMORE, Calif. -- Lawrence Livermore scientists have discovered and demonstrated a new technique to remove and store atmospheric carbon dioxide while generating carbon-negative hydrogen and producing alkalinity, which can be used to offset ocean acidification.

The team demonstrated, at a laboratory scale, a system that uses the acidity normally produced in saline water electrolysis to accelerate silicate mineral dissolution while producing hydrogen fuel and other gases. The resulting electrolyte solution was shown to be significantly elevated in hydroxide concentration that in turn proved strongly absorptive and retentive of atmospheric CO2.

Further, the researchers suggest that the carbonate and bicarbonate produced in the process could be used to mitigate ongoing ocean acidification, similar to how an Alka Seltzer neutralizes excess acid in the stomach.

"We not only found a way to remove and store carbon dioxide from the atmosphere while producing valuable H2, we also suggest that we can help save marine ecosystems with this new technique," said Greg Rau, an LLNL visiting scientist, senior scientist at UC Santa Cruz and lead author of a paper appearing this week (May 27) in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

When carbon dioxide is released into the atmosphere, a significant fraction is passively taken up by the ocean forming carbonic acid that makes the ocean more acidic. This acidification has been shown to be harmful to many species of marine life, especially corals and shellfish. By the middle of this century, the globe will likely warm by at least 2 degrees Celsius and the oceans will experience a more than 60 percent increase in acidity relative to pre-industrial levels. The alkaline solution generated by the new process could be added to the ocean to help neutralize this acid and help offset its effects on marine biota. However, further research is needed, the authors said.

"When powered by renewable electricity and consuming globally abundant minerals and saline solutions, such systems at scale might provide a relatively efficient, high-capacity means to consume and store excess atmospheric CO2 as environmentally beneficial seawater bicarbonate or carbonate," Rau said. "But the process also would produce a carbon-negative 'super green' fuel or chemical feedstock in the form of hydrogen."

Most previously described chemical methods of atmospheric carbon dioxide capture and storage are costly, using thermal/mechanical procedures to concentrate molecular CO2 from the air while recycling reagents, a process that is cumbersome, inefficient and expensive.

"Our process avoids most of these issues by not requiring CO2 to be concentrated from air and stored in a molecular form, pointing the way to more cost-effective, environmentally beneficial, and safer air CO2 management with added benefits of renewable hydrogen fuel production and ocean alkalinity addition," Rau said.

The team concluded that further research is needed to determine optimum designs and operating procedures, cost-effectiveness, and the net environmental impact/benefit of electrochemically mediated air CO2 capture and H2 production using base minerals.

###

Other Livermore researchers include Susan Carroll, William Bourcier, Michael Singleton, Megan Smith and Roger Aines.

Founded in 1952, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (http://www.llnl.gov) provides solutions to our nation's most important national security challenges through innovative science, engineering and technology. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is managed by Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC for the U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-05/dlnl-sdc052813.php

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Crystal-clear method for distinguishing between glass and fluids

May 28, 2013 ? Many solids are produced from melting. Depending on how quickly they cool off, invariably, internal tensile stresses begin to build up. One example are Prince Rupert's Drops, or Dutch tears: you can hit their thick end with a hammer without breaking them while a slight pressure applied to their thin end is enough to shatter the entire tear.

The properties of safety or even gorilla glass are determined to a large extent by their internal tensile stresses. However, until now, our understanding of the unique characteristics exhibited by the condition of the glass as compared with a tough molten mass was spotty at best. Now, a collaboration of several German and Cretian research teams has offered a surprisingly simple model to explain the difference between glass and molten materials.

The HZB's contribution was by chemist Dr. Miriam Siebenb?rger of the Institute for Soft Matter and Functional Materials. Siebenb?rger came up with a rather elegant model system consisting of spherical plastic particles in aqueous solution (a mixture known as a suspension). Due to the tiny size of the particles -- each having a diameter of around 150 nanometer -- they float in the aqueous solution but never sediment. The nanoparticles are covered by a thermosensitive "shell," whose thickness can be adjusted by varying the temperature, causing them to shrink and grow reversibly in a continuous manner. This allows the chemist to convert her samples from a densely packaged "glass" into a less dense, more fluid state, in other words melt them down. Through a series of rheological measurements, Miriam Siebenb?rger was able to determine how quickly the internal tensions in her samples could relax at different particle packing densities.

For this purpose, she placed the samples in-between two parallel plates, which she counter-rotated relative to each other to produce shearing forces within the sample. After reaching a stationary state of shearing stress at a constant shearing rate, the rotating plates were actively stopped. Next, the force it takes to stop the plates to zero shear rate, and which is a gauge for internal tensions, was measured. In the process, the critical difference between the fluid and glassy state became apparent:

Whereas the fluid tensions dissipated without a trace, a proportion of the tensions was maintained in the glassy state. The results are fitting nicely into the theoretical model developed by a group of Constance physicists who calculated the behavior of hard spheres at different packing densities. What's more, measurements of the internal tensile stresses and dynamics of larger-sized particles (in the mm range) by Cretian and D?sseldorf researchers and the molecular dynamics simulation of hard spheres by a team of researchers from Cologne and Mainz exhibit similar patterns of behavior. The scientists are convinced that their findings apply to all types of glass that are created as a result of their high packing densities including metallic glass, which is mainly used for high-tech applications. The researchers' findings have now been published in the renowned scientific journal, Physical Review Letters and is selected as Focus in Physics" and "Editor's Suggestion."

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/gthsi94qbYo/130528105944.htm

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Monday, May 27, 2013

Bitter election aftermath undermines Malaysian PM Najib

By Niluksi Koswanage

KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak may have won this month's disputed election but he faces a fight for legitimacy that could slow reforms, embolden a strong opposition protest movement and spark a leadership battle.

Already the signs are not good.

At a busy intersection across from one of Kuala Lumpur's fanciest shopping malls, a huge poster of Najib and his deputy has been defaced, a rare display of public disrespect in the Southeast Asian nation.

One of the comments scrawled on the poster poked fun at the unconvincing share of the votes won by Najib's long-ruling Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition: "47 percent PM."

"If you don't like it, you can leave," mocked another, alluding to a comment by Najib's new home minister that those unhappy with the May 5 poll result - and the electoral system that produced it - should pack up and emigrate.

The tense political atmosphere threatens to prolong policy uncertainty that investors hoped the polls would put to rest, as Najib braces for a possible leadership challenge and the opposition mounts a noisy campaign to contest the result.

By securing 60 percent of parliamentary seats with less than 50 percent of the popular vote, the BN's victory has served to expose starkly the unfairness of a gerrymandered electoral system that is also prone to cheating and bias.

That has galvanized the opposition, led by former deputy prime minister Anwar Ibrahim, into holding a series of big rallies as it refuses to accept the result and prepares legal action to challenge the outcome in nearly 30 close-run seats.

Disgruntled Malaysians have submitted more than 220,000 signatures to the White House online petition page, exceeding the number required for a response from President Barack Obama.

In response, divisions have appeared in the United Malays National Organization (UMNO), the main party in the ruling coalition - in power since independence from Britain in 1957.

Hardliners have urged a crackdown on dissent and blamed minority ethnic Chinese voters for deserting the ruling coalition. That has raised racial tensions in a country whose ethnic Malay majority dominates politics and enjoys special privileges to offset what its leaders see as its disadvantaged position compared to relatively wealthy ethnic Chinese.

ANGRY MALAYSIANS

Reformers have urged Najib to press ahead with social and economic reforms to blunt the opposition's appeal and address the concerns of discontented young and urban voters. That includes many ethnic Malays who voted for the opposition.

"Every day Najib sees angry Malaysians on the Internet. It is not an easy thing to swallow," said a senior government official who declined to be identified. "There are people in his cabinet asking for a crackdown and there are others asking for him to brandish his reformist side."

The hardliners appeared to gain ground last week when police used the colonial-era Sedition Act to detain three opposition politicians and activists and charged a student with inciting unrest.

The three arrested were later released after a court rejected the police remand order, but could still face charges.

Najib is under pressure from UMNO conservatives such as Mahathir Mohamad, who served as prime minister for 22 years, to show a tougher side ahead of a leadership election that could be held as early as August. At least until then, planned reforms such as steps to widen Malaysia's tax base and reduce heavy food and fuel subsidies are likely to stay on hold.

"Najib is not in a very strong position," Mahathir told reporters in Tokyo on Saturday, saying there was a risk that his majority could be weakened further if some ruling coalition politicians defected to the opposition.

"When you are concerned about that, the focus on development, economy and all that will be affected. That is Najib's problem."

FRAUD CLAIMS

The opposition has yet to present clear evidence of widespread fraud, but Reuters interviews with 15 polling agents give an indication of why many Malaysians have lost faith in an electoral system that clearly favors the governing coalition.

A majority said officials of the Election Commission (EC), which is part of the Prime Minister's Department, did not follow procedures or were ill-equipped to oversee the polls.

"Some, not all, officials were not trained enough or did not have the experience to determine what was a spoiled vote," said a counting agent in the Segamat parliamentary seat in southern Johor state, where the BN candidate won by a slim 1,200 majority with 950 votes deemed as spoiled.

"I cannot speculate on whether it was deliberate but there was quite a bit of incompetence," said the agent, who declined to be identified due to the sensitivity of the issue.

Anwar's three-party alliance says it has evidence that BN officials bought votes with cash and transported immigrants, who were granted citizenship on shaky grounds, to vote in areas with close races.

While its legal action, due to be filed with courts around the end of May, is unlikely to succeed, it will keep the electoral fraud issue in the spotlight for months ahead.

In Selangor state near Kuala Lumpur, a Reuters examination found at least 2,000 voters had identity cards deemed "dubious" by a commission of inquiry in Malaysia's Borneo island state of Sabah. That commission is investigating long-standing allegations that the ruling coalition handed out citizenship to immigrants for votes.

The government denies the fraud claims, accusing the opposition of being sore losers and of trying to stir up an Arab Spring-style revolt. The EC says it took a tough approach in eradicating possible fraud in the electoral rolls.

"The opposition did not lose because of election rigging, it lost because they did not get the vote," EC Chairman Abdul Aziz told Reuters.

Deep concerns over the integrity of Malaysia's elections are nothing new. The government has been shaken by huge street rallies in recent years organized by the influential Bersih (clean) movement that has called for sweeping reforms, including a clean-up of the electoral roll and equal access to media.

After a violent police response to a 2011 rally, Najib burnished his reform credentials by rolling back some draconian security laws and introducing limited electoral reforms.

REFORM DILEMMA

Bersih says those reforms did not go far enough, and is refusing to recognize the election results until it has verified hundreds of allegations of fraud in a "people's tribunal". It has previously highlighted instances of voters more than 120 years old and hundreds of voters living at a single address.

Electoral boundaries that have been manipulated over the years to favor the BN are likely far more influential than fraud. Pro-opposition constituencies in urban areas have up to nine times the number of voters than pro-government seats.

The opposition won just 89 seats in the 222-seat parliament, despite winning more than 51 percent of the vote.

"Najib won on malapportionment rather than his policies to eradicate corruption and reform the economy as voters felt he wasn't sincere," said Ooi Kee Beng, Singapore-based deputy director of the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies.

Najib, the 59-year-old son of a former prime minister, is unlikely to countenance deeper electoral reforms, a move that could be political suicide for the BN.

Reformists within UMNO are urging him, however, to ignore calls for a security crackdown and push ahead with steps to tackle corruption and make the ruling coalition more appealing to urban and ethnic Chinese voters who have deserted it.

"Of course the debate on whether we are truly a majority government will go on. But we can gain respect from the people," said Saifuddin Abdullah, a prominent reformist who is a member of UMNO's Supreme Council.

(Additional reporting by Stuart Grudgings, Siva Sithraputhran and Al-Zaquan Amer Hamzah in Kuala Lumpur, and Yoko Kubota in Tokyo.; Editing by Stuart Grudgings, Ron Popeski and Paul Tait)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bitter-election-creates-long-term-headache-malaysias-najib-020524004.html

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Sunday, May 26, 2013

NWSL sees mixed results in startup season

Associated Press Sports

updated 11:06 a.m. ET May 24, 2013

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - The Portland Thorns' season couldn't be going any better. They're sitting tied atop the National Women's Soccer League's opening-season standings and drawing more than 11,000 fans to home games. And they've got Alex Morgan.

But just a few hours' drive north, the Seattle Reign are struggling with a roster unexpectedly missing its star power, and with no wins and four total goals so far.

The two contrasting teams paint a picture common to many startups: successes and snags.

The eight-team NWSL, which started play last month, is a collaboration between American, Canadian and Mexican soccer federations. Ultimately, the league's survival will come down to whether fans support the teams.

After its first six weeks, the NWSL had drawn more than 101,494 total fans to 24 league games, a respectable average of 4,229 at each game.

The Thorns, averaging 13,342 fans per game at Jeld-Wen Field, have undoubtedly boosted that average. FC Kansas City has the second-best home gate at the 6,150-seat Shawnee Mission District Stadium, averaging 5,070 fans per match. New Jersey's Sky Blue FC is drawing the fewest fans with an average of 1,586.

"I've had the pleasure and the opportunity to go around to all eight teams and be at all eight facilities, and at each one - whether it's been an excessively large crowd like Portland, or one that might not be as large because the facilities don't all hold the same amount - the enthusiasm from the fans at the games and the quality of play on the field, and the ability of the players, has been outstanding," said Cheryl Bailey, the league's executive director.

There have been two other recent attempts at a women's pro league in the United States, but both failed after just two seasons: The Women's United Soccer Association was founded in 2000, hoping to capitalize on the U.S. national team's victory in the 1999 World Cup, but the league folded in 2003. Another league, Women's Professional Soccer, played from 2010-2012 but had insurmountable internal organization and financial issues.

The NWSL believes it is better positioned to succeed because of its association with the North American soccer federations, which pay the salaries of their national team players to help keep costs down.

"The uniqueness of having three federations come together, not only providing the talent on the field, but also giving the financial support to the teams, now sets us in a different light than the past two leagues, and gives us a different platform to build upon," Bailey said.

To be fair to the rest of the league, the Thorns and their fan base are an anomaly.

Portland sits tied with Sky Blue FC atop the NWSL standings at 5-1-1. Morgan, whose star rose exponentially when she scored in overtime against Canada to send the United States to the gold medal match in the London Olympics, leads Portland with four goals, while Canadian Christine Sinclair has three.

"So far so good," Thorns coach Cindy Parlow Cone said about the start of the season. "I think with each week the level of play gets better and better, and that's just teams having more time together. It takes a while for everyone to jell. The quality of the individual players is outstanding and as a result you're seeing teams really come together now."

Merritt Paulson, the owner of Major League Soccer's Portland Timbers, also owns the Thorns and both teams share Jeld-Wen Field. Timbers supporters, who have sold out 40 straight games, were quick to support the Thorns, too, and the women's team sold more than 7,500 season tickets for their 11 home games before the season even started.

This past weekend that crowd was announced at 12,474 for Portland's 2-0 victory over the Washington Spirit.

"It was great to come in here and automatically have the supporters have our backs and be behind us," Morgan said. "I think being in the same organization helps and playing at Jeld-Wen, definitely. It's great to see."

In contrast, the Reign was hit with the unforeseeable to start the season. National team forward Amy Rodriguez became pregnant with her first child shortly after she was assigned to Seattle, and goalkeeper Hope Solo needed left wrist surgery. Megan Rapinoe, meanwhile, decided to play in France.

Had the original team come together, Seattle probably wouldn't be sitting at 0-6-1 at this point in the season.

Surprisingly, Reign owner Bill Predmore isn't discouraged. Rapinoe and Solo should join the team next month, and the Reign will likely see a boost to the average of 1,815 fans that have been attending games at the Sounders' 4,000-seat training facility just outside Seattle.

"We're looking at this as a very long-term project," Predmore said. "I had no expectations that we were going to get 10,000 fans to show up on Day 1. We are a brand new club, the business entity has existed for only a little over five months. So I think we're realistic in our expectations that this is going to have organic, grass-roots growth."

Other NWSL teams were similarly hit by disappointing injuries to allocated players. Carli Lloyd of the Western New York Flash broke her shoulder, Sky Blue FC goalkeeper Jill Loyden broke her hand, and Chicago Red Stars midfielder Shannon Boxx had surgery on her right knee late last month.

Additionally, all eight NWSL teams are about to take a bit of a hit for the next couple of weeks. Both the Canadian and U.S. national teams have recalled players for an international exhibition on June 2 in Toronto - a rematch of the nail-biting semifinal in London.

The main knock on the NWSL is that it was launched so quickly; the formation of the league was announced in November and the teams opened the season in mid-April. Teams did not have much opportunity to market themselves.

Bailey said she understands, but it was important to launch in a year without a world championship, so that fans could have access to elite players, and they in turn could maintain training in an off year. The league also serves to develop talent.

"Our ultimate goal is to have a league that's sustaining. What we're doing right now to do that is laying the groundwork and the foundation. It's not perfect," Bailey said. "The timing didn't give us all that we needed to lay out everything ... but it's certainly given us a wonderful platform to put our roots down."

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Familiarity breeds contempt

PST: Borussia Dortmund and Bayern Munich?know each other well?as they meet in the Champions League final, but they've never played with stakes like these.

AFP - Getty Images
PST: Should Europa Lg. winners get a UCL spot?

PST: Should the winners of the Europa League be awarded a spot in the following season?s Champions League? That is the question that UEFA, Europe?s soccer governing body, will likely answer in the affirmative on Friday.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/51987029/ns/sports-soccer/

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Saturday, May 25, 2013

Spotted: 1st Evidence of Leopard Eating Chimp

Only rarely have people seen what happens when chimpanzees and leopards come into close quarters in the wilds of Africa. On these occasions, chimpanzees have made loud, fearful calls, or played the aggressor: In one case, chimps even surrounded a leopard den and killed a cub.

But the big-brained primates don't always win: For the first time, scientists have found evidence of a leopard eating a chimpanzee.

In Tanzania's Mahale Mountains National Park, researchers spent 41 days collecting African leopard scat from June to August 2012 (summer internship, anyone?). In one of the cat's "offerings," scientists found several chimpanzee patella and phalanges, corresponding to kneecaps and toe bones, respectively. DNA analysis showed that the bones came from an adult female chimp.

The researchers can't be entirely certain that the leopard hunted down the chimp, because the cats occasionally eat dead animals; in other words, it's possible the chimp keeled over and then became leopard chow. However, the finding has led scientists to re-examine three mysterious wounds incurred by three different chimps in Mahale over the last few years. The wounds were deeper than thought to be possible from fights with other chimps, which is what scientists previously thought had happened.

A 2009 study suggested that chimpanzees face only negligible pressure from predators. If it's indeed true that the leopard ate a live chimp, scientists may need to rethink this view and further examine how predation from leopards, or other animals, might have driven the chimpanzee's evolution, the researchers said. One study from 1993 found evidence of lions eating four chimpanzees, also in Mahale Mountains National Park. The park is one of the few places with ongoing research where the range of leopards and chimpanzees overlap, which helps explain why this was witnessed there.

The new research was published online May 21 in the Journal of Human Evolution.

Email?Douglas Main?or follow him on?Twitter?or?Google+. Follow us @livescience, ?Facebook?or?Google+. Original article on LiveScience.com.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/spotted-1st-evidence-leopard-eating-chimp-132531860.html

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Friday, May 24, 2013

The Great Liberal Death Wish, London Edition (Powerlineblog)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/307680052?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Spheres can form squares

May 23, 2013 ? Everybody who has tried to stack oranges in a box knows that a regular packing of spheres in a flat layer naturally leads to a hexagonal pattern, where each sphere is surrounded by six neighbours in a honeycomb-like fashion. In an article just published on-line in PNAS, researchers from Wageningen University report an exception to this rule: when small, micrometer-sized particles are placed on a curved oil-water surface, they arrange in a square pattern, as on a chessboard.

Since a number of decades, scientists are looking for strategies to create ordered crystal structures of regularly arranged small particles. Such crystals are interesting, because they can be used to control, modulate, or steer visible light in applications like lasers or other optical devices. While creating hexagonal patterns is relatively easy -- this is the natural way in which the particles tend to order -- anything different from that is much more difficult.

The team from the Laboratory of Physical Chemistry and Colloid Science at Wageningen University, part of Wageningen UR, has now found a way to create square particle arrays. To do this, they make use of the surface tension of the underlying oil-water surface, that is the tendency of the surface to minimize its area. When a particle sticks to the liquid surface it deforms the surface somewhat, and thereby increases the total area. The surface tension acts to minimize these deformations, which can be done by clustering all the particles together.

This effect is also responsible for the clumping of breakfast cereals in a bowl of milk or of bubbles at the surface of a soft drink. The researchers have found that this effective attraction between particles resulting from the surface tension depends on how the liquid surface is curved. A slight curving of the surface already makes the interaction between particles highly dependent on their relative orientation, with attraction in two perpendicular directions and repulsion in the other directions. This is what causes the particles to arrange spontaneously in square patterns.

The researchers believe that their findings will lead to new bottom-up strategies for the design of structured materials, to be used in high-tech optical applications.

The research has been supported financially by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research, NWO.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Wageningen University and Research Centre.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. D. Ershov, J. Sprakel, J. Appel, M. A. Cohen Stuart, J. van der Gucht. Capillarity-induced ordering of spherical colloids on an interface with anisotropic curvature. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2013; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1222196110

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/le2u5z_doJk/130523093147.htm

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Sunday, May 12, 2013

Watch NASA's Emergency Spacewalk - Business Insider

Astronauts on the International Space Station (ISS)?are currently on an emergency space walk?to fix?an Ammonia leak.

[UPDATE 15:00 EDT] Success!?Check out The Telegraph's fantastic live blog?to see what they did and how they did it.

NASA said the leak is "very serious" but poses no safety threat, adding that the area has had a slow, small leak for many years that suddenly accelerated on Thursday.

Space Station Program Manager?Mike Suffredini said that the chief suspect for the leak is space junk hitting a cooling tube?and two astronauts are going outside to investigate:

"We are going to get them outside and see if we can't lay eyes on the leak source.

Most probably the cause is the pump itself so we are going to go ahead and change out that pump."

Here's Suffredini?detailing what they were doing:

Here's the nifty NASA live feed that broadcast the mini-mission:


Stream videos at Ustream

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/watch-nasas-emergency-spacewalk-2013-5

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Saturday, May 11, 2013

Custom Web Design Advantages over Website Templates - Make ...

Design
By: Jeremy Keith

Published on May 10th, 2013 | by Guest Author

Businesses an companies looking at cost cutting often face a dilemma. They reach a stage where they need to choose between a custom designed website or a website template. When money is an issue, using a template and creating a website in a jiffy sounds like a great idea. Just that, it isn?t.

Importance of a custom designed website

These days, a website is the face of a company. There is no way a company can get away without having to build a great looking and effective website. A website that doesn?t stand out from the rest of them in terms of design, interactivity and usability will soon be forgotten just like millions of other websites that are forgotten.

In order to ensure that a company will succeed in its enterprise, a company must brag about a website that is different from the rest. The website should be an extension of a company?s beliefs, personality and character. With that in mind, a custom designed website is certainly a better option for even smaller companies that may not have huge budgets.

Here are the major benefits of custom web design:

  1. A website that is custom designed offers individuality and uniqueness.
  2. Designers can discuss with clients what they exactly ant and what they have in mind. Specific requests can be considered and a unique website can be built based on client?s requirements.
  3. Careful consideration can be given to user experience, visual graphics, layout, color scheme and overall personality of the website.
  4. A custom designed website gives complete control to the website owner with regard to the way they are represented to visitors.
  5. Custom websites offer future growth, further customizations, fluidity for change and versatility in coding.

Why hand-me-down templates are not good for business:

  1. The template will never represent the company in the true sense.
  2. It will be used and shared by many others, and thus robs the company f its individual face online.
  3. It may be cheaper, but in the long run, causes losses in terms of stagnancy and lack of profits.
  4. A template design can easily be recognized. People may just go to the next attractive website just because the template looked ?cheap?.
  5. Templates may not support future changes in technology and trends on the Internet.

As any web design firm worth its salt would tell clients, choosing custom web design over website templates should be attempted even if the company is small or has limited budget. Though it may seem like a difficult thing to spend money on, in the long run it will companies to offset losses that occur due to loss of identity and uniqueness on the Internet. Professional custom web designers may even help companies to reduce costs by helping them to make certain decisions which may prove to be surprisingly economical. Templates may seem attractively affordable, but in the long run, the investment made on custom web design pays off.

Featured Image: Creative Commons ? Attribution by Jeremy Keith

Article by Smith

Smith is a professional web developer who has ghostwritten several books on web design and Internet trends. His web design firm conducts workshops for upcoming web designers and helps them make important professional decisions.

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Guest Author This post was written by the guest author credited above. If you have an awesome idea, or an article you'd like to contribute, or if you'd like to become a regular author, feel free to contact us.



Source: http://makeyourideasart.com/design/custom-web-design-advantages-over-website-templates/

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Senate panel to vote on stalled EPA nomination Thursday

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The head of the Senate Environment Committee on Friday rescheduled a vote on President Barack's Obama's nominee to head the Environmental Protection Agency, Gina McCarthy, and urged Republicans to stop stalling the nomination.

Democratic Senator Barbara Boxer, who heads the committee, rescheduled for next Thursday what may be a party-line vote after Republicans boycotted a meeting scheduled this week.

Boxer said McCarthy was highly qualified for the job, and told the top Republican on the committee that it was time to move forward on her nomination after four weeks of delays.

McCarthy "has a demonstrated record of working with Republicans and Democrats, including four Republican governors and a Democratic president," Boxer said in a letter to Senator David Vitter.

"It is time to move forward with her nomination. I hope you will attend," she said.

Republicans have used a series of procedural moves to stall nominations, making it difficult for Obama to get his second-term Cabinet in place. The Democratic president has complained that Republicans have stymied his agenda at every turn.

The dispute over McCarthy stems from more than 1,000 written questions Republican senators asked her after her confirmation hearing - what Democrats say is a new record for the number of written questions asked of a nominee.

An administration official said she answered every one.

All eight committee Republicans refused to participate in a scheduled vote on McCarthy on Thursday, leaving her nomination in limbo and unable to advance to the next stage - a full Senate vote.

A spokesman for Senator Frank Lautenberg, another Democrat on the committee, said Boxer was ready to move forward on the nomination on party-line basis if Republicans refused to drop their boycott. Democrats hold a majority on the panel.

"The Chairman said she wants Republicans to participate, but if they don't, she is prepared to move this nomination on a party-line process," Caley Gray told Reuters in an email. He said Lautenberg would be present to support the nomination next week, if a party-line vote was needed.

Even if the committee proceeds with a vote, McCarthy's nomination still faces further hurdles.

Republican Senator Roy Blunt, who is not a member of the Environment Committee, has already said he will put a hold on McCarthy in the full Senate because of delays in approvals for a floodway project in his home state of Missouri.

Although the Democratic majority controls the Senate and its committees, congressional rules give some procedural advantages to the minority Republicans, enabling them to stall or block legislation and nominees.

The boycott of McCarthy's vote came a day after Republican senators used an obscure procedural rule to delay a scheduled committee vote on Obama's nominee for labor secretary, Thomas Perez.

Other Cabinet nominations have run into partisan opposition.

McCarthy was a state environmental official in Connecticut and Massachusetts before joining the EPA in 2009 as assistant administrator of the Office of Air and Radiation. She sailed through the Senate nomination process for that role. She was the top environmental enforcer for Mitt Romney, the 2012 Republican presidential nominee, when he was governor of Massachusetts.

(Reporting By Valerie Volcovici and Andrea Shalal-Esa; Editing by Doina Chiacu)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/senate-panel-vote-stalled-epa-nomination-thursday-003243278.html

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Chinese inflation surprise weighs on markets

A man walks past an electronic stock board of a securities firm showing the Nikkei 225 index in Tokyo, Wednesday, April 8, 2013. Japan's Nikkei 225 index rose 105.45 points to 14,285.69 Wednesday as Asian stock markets were powered higher by an improvement in China's trade and yet another record-busting session on Wall Street. (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara)

A man walks past an electronic stock board of a securities firm showing the Nikkei 225 index in Tokyo, Wednesday, April 8, 2013. Japan's Nikkei 225 index rose 105.45 points to 14,285.69 Wednesday as Asian stock markets were powered higher by an improvement in China's trade and yet another record-busting session on Wall Street. (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara)

People watch an electronic stock board of a securities firm in Tokyo, Wednesday, April 8, 2013. Japan's Nikkei 225 index rose 105.45 points to 14,285.69 Wednesday as Asian stock markets were powered higher by an improvement in China's trade and yet another record-busting session on Wall Street. (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara)

Passers-by talk each other in front of an electronic stock board of a securities firm in Tokyo, Wednesday, April 8, 2013. Japan's Nikkei 225 index rose 105.45 points to 14,285.69 Wednesday as Asian stock markets were powered higher by an improvement in China's trade and yet another record-busting session on Wall Street. (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara)

(AP) ? Higher than expected Chinese inflation figures on Thursday gave investors a chance to cash in on recent gains, which have sent some of the world's stock indexes up to record highs.

Government figures showed China's consumer price index rose 2.4 percent in the year to April, up from 2.1 percent the previous month and ahead of expectations of a more modest advance to 2.2 percent.

"Sentiment has soured somewhat in Asia after that fractionally higher than expected Chinese CPI reading as this may prompt Beijing to attempt to cool demand," said Fawad Razaqzada, market strategist at GFT Markets.

"Should this happen then the consequences will likely be played out on a global basis, but given the overshoot was so limited, the caution may be somewhat exaggerated by the fact markets are simply looking a bit toppy at these levels," he added.

In Europe, Germany's DAX, which has set a series of record highs, was down 0.2 percent at 8,238. The CAC-40 in France was 1.1 percent lower at 3,915 while the FTSE 100 index of leading British shares fell 0.1 percent to 6,578 ahead of the monthly Bank of England policy decision ? no change in interest rates or its stimulus program are expected.

Trading in many parts of Europe was light as many countries were on a public holiday, though markets remained open.

U.S. shares were also poised for a modest retreat after days of closing record highs ? both Dow futures and the broader S&P 500 futures were down 0.1 percent. There's little economic and corporate news later, meaning that weekly jobless claims figures may be the focus of attention. Last week's figures showed claims down at a five-year low. A modest uptick to 335,000 is expected.

Currency markets were fairly subdued too, with the euro 0.1 percent lower at $1.3142.

Many reasons have been cited for the recent strength of stock markets around the world, including hopes over the U.S. economy, a seeming easing in Europe's debt crisis and an aggressive new monetary policy from the Bank of Japan.

Earlier, Japan's Nikkei 225 index dropped 0.7 percent to 14,191.48 ? a modest retreat after a strong run that's sent the Nikkei up to five-year highs.

Another aspect of the Bank of Japan's massive monetary stimulus has been to weaken the yen dramatically. That feeds through into stocks as a lower currency makes the country's exports relatively cheaper. On Thursday, the dollar was 0.2 percent lower at 98.72 yen.

Elsewhere in Asia, Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell 0.1 percent to 23,211.48 after the Chinese inflation figures. However, mainland Chinese shares were mixed with the Shanghai Composite Index down 0.6 percent to 2,232.97 while the smaller Shenzhen Composite Index gained 0.2 percent to 967.69.

South Korea's Kospi index was also in focus as it jumped 1.2 percent to 1,979.45 after the Bank of Korea lowered its benchmark interest rate for the first time in seven months. In announcing that it was lowering the rate by a quarter percentage point to 2.5 percent, the Bank of Korea became the latest central bank to take steps to boost flagging economic growth.

Oil prices drifted lower alongside equities following recent strong gains ? the benchmark New York contract was down 54 cents at $96.08 a barrel.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-05-09-World-Markets/id-5427163763e74156b41d5451fc6b2add

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Friday, May 10, 2013

Video: Trading For One Fund Boston

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

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/51839644/

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'Power plants': How to harvest electricity directly from plants

May 9, 2013 ? The sun provides the most abundant source of energy on the planet. However, only a tiny fraction of the solar radiation on Earth is converted into useful energy.

To help solve this problem, researchers at the University of Georgia looked to nature for inspiration, and they are now developing a new technology that makes it possible to use plants to generate electricity.

"Clean energy is the need of the century," said Ramaraja Ramasamy, assistant professor in the UGA College of Engineering and the corresponding author of a paper describing the process in the Journal of Energy and Environmental Science. "This approach may one day transform our ability to generate cleaner power from sunlight using plant-based systems."

Plants are the undisputed champions of solar power. After billions of years of evolution, most of them operate at nearly 100 percent quantum efficiency, meaning that for every photon of sunlight a plant captures, it produces an equal number of electrons. Converting even a fraction of this into electricity would improve upon the efficiency seen with solar panels, which generally operate at efficiency levels between 12 and 17 percent.

During photosynthesis, plants use sunlight to split water atoms into hydrogen and oxygen, which produces electrons. These newly freed electrons go on to help create sugars that plants use much like food to support growth and reproduction.

"We have developed a way to interrupt photosynthesis so that we can capture the electrons before the plant uses them to make these sugars," said Ramasamy, who is also a member of UGA's Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center.

Ramasamy's technology involves separating out structures in the plant cell called thylakoids, which are responsible for capturing and storing energy from sunlight. Researchers manipulate the proteins contained in the thylakoids, interrupting the pathway along which electrons flow.

These modified thylakoids are then immobilized on a specially designed backing of carbon nanotubes, cylindrical structures that are nearly 50,000 times finer than a human hair. The nanotubes act as an electrical conductor, capturing the electrons from the plant material and sending them along a wire.

In small-scale experiments, this approach resulted in electrical current levels that are two orders of magnitude larger than those previously reported in similar systems.

Ramasamy cautions that much more work must be done before this technology reaches commercialization, but he and his collaborators are already working to improve the stability and output of their device.

"In the near term, this technology might best be used for remote sensors or other portable electronic equipment that requires less power to run," he said. "If we are able to leverage technologies like genetic engineering to enhance stability of the plant photosynthetic machineries, I'm very hopeful that this technology will be competitive to traditional solar panels in the future."

"We have discovered something very promising here, and it is certainly worth exploring further," he said. "The electrical output we see now is modest, but only about 30 years ago, hydrogen fuel cells were in their infancy, and now they can power cars, buses and even buildings."

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/DGyPqzUJWok/130509104358.htm

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Richard Madden Cast as Prince in Cinderella

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/05/richard-madden-cast-as-prince-in-cinderella/

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Thursday, May 9, 2013

ESPN Wants to Subsidize Your Data Plan Because Carriers Are Awful

Because data caps are the terrible reality to owning a smartphone, even giant companies want to help us poor saps who've signed our life away to carriers one 2-year contract at a time. ESPN is trying to make a deal with carriers to subsidize our data plans. Seriously.

According to the WSJ, ESPN has had discussions with 'at least' one major US carrier to help with our data load. In one scenario, the Worldwide Leader of Sportin' would actually pay carriers money so "that people viewing ESPN mobile content wouldn't have that usage counted toward their monthly data caps." I knew cheering for grown men in different colored laundry all my life would eventually pay off for me!

However, the WSJ stresses that no deal is imminent and that ESPN isn't even sure that the numbers would make sense but it just goes to show how horrible carriers all are. Their bloodthirsty desire to slap caps and fees on everything is making content providers like ESPN concerned about the shitty experience of the carrier's customers (a less noble but more realistic motivations: companies like ESPN want to generate more mobile ad revenue and with customers who reach their monthly data caps too often, they won't be able to grab those high usage eyeballs). [WSJ]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/espn-wants-to-subsidize-your-data-plan-because-carriers-499293302

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Whole walnuts and their extracted oil improve cardiovascular disease risk

Whole walnuts and their extracted oil improve cardiovascular disease risk [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 8-May-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Sara LaJeunesse
SDL13@psu.edu
814-863-4671
Penn State

Consumption of whole walnuts or their extracted oil can reduce cardiovascular risk through a mechanism other than simply lowering cholesterol, according to a team of Penn State, Tufts University and University of Pennsylvania researchers.

"We already know that eating walnuts in a heart-healthy diet can lower blood cholesterol levels," said Penny Kris-Etherton, Distinguished Professor of Nutrition, Penn State. "But, until now, we did not know what component of the walnut was providing this benefit. Now we understand additional ways in which whole walnuts and their oil components can improve heart health."

In a randomized-controlled trial, the researchers gave 15 participants with elevated blood cholesterol one of four treatments -- either 85 grams of whole walnuts, 6 grams of skin, 34 grams of defatted nutmeat, or 51 grams of oil. The team evaluated biochemical and physiological responses in the participants before the treatments were administered and again 30 minutes, one hour, two hours, four hours and six hours after administering the treatments. The researchers repeated this process for each of the remaining three treatments.

Results -- which will appear in the June 1 issue of the Journal of Nutrition and are now online -- showed that a one-time consumption of the oil component in walnuts favorably affected vascular health. In addition, consumption of whole walnuts helped HDL -- good cholesterol -- perform more effectively in transporting and removing excess cholesterol from the body.

"Our study showed that the oil found in walnuts can maintain blood vessel function after a meal, which is very important given that blood vessel integrity is often compromised in individuals with cardiovascular disease," said Claire Berryman, graduate student in nutritional sciences, Penn State. "The walnut oil was particularly good at preserving the function of endothelial cells, which play an important role in cardiovascular health."

According to the researchers, walnuts contain alpha-linolenic acid, gamma-tocopherol and phytosterols, which may explain the positive effects of the walnut oil treatment.

"Implications of this finding could mean improved dietary strategies to fight heart disease," said Berryman. "The science around HDL functionality is very new, so to see improvements in this outcome with the consumption of whole walnuts is promising and worth investigating further."

Further studies are needed to determine the mechanisms that account for cardiovascular disease risk reduction with walnut consumption, according to Kris-Etherton.

"Our study indicates that simple dietary changes, such as incorporating walnuts and/or their oil in a heart healthy diet, may reduce the risk of heart disease," she said.

###

Other authors on the paper include Jessica Grieger and Sheila West of Penn State, Oliver Chen and Jeffrey Blumberg of Tufts University, and George Rothblat and Sandhya Sankaranarayanan of the University of Pennsylvania.

The California Walnut Board funded this research.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Whole walnuts and their extracted oil improve cardiovascular disease risk [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 8-May-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Sara LaJeunesse
SDL13@psu.edu
814-863-4671
Penn State

Consumption of whole walnuts or their extracted oil can reduce cardiovascular risk through a mechanism other than simply lowering cholesterol, according to a team of Penn State, Tufts University and University of Pennsylvania researchers.

"We already know that eating walnuts in a heart-healthy diet can lower blood cholesterol levels," said Penny Kris-Etherton, Distinguished Professor of Nutrition, Penn State. "But, until now, we did not know what component of the walnut was providing this benefit. Now we understand additional ways in which whole walnuts and their oil components can improve heart health."

In a randomized-controlled trial, the researchers gave 15 participants with elevated blood cholesterol one of four treatments -- either 85 grams of whole walnuts, 6 grams of skin, 34 grams of defatted nutmeat, or 51 grams of oil. The team evaluated biochemical and physiological responses in the participants before the treatments were administered and again 30 minutes, one hour, two hours, four hours and six hours after administering the treatments. The researchers repeated this process for each of the remaining three treatments.

Results -- which will appear in the June 1 issue of the Journal of Nutrition and are now online -- showed that a one-time consumption of the oil component in walnuts favorably affected vascular health. In addition, consumption of whole walnuts helped HDL -- good cholesterol -- perform more effectively in transporting and removing excess cholesterol from the body.

"Our study showed that the oil found in walnuts can maintain blood vessel function after a meal, which is very important given that blood vessel integrity is often compromised in individuals with cardiovascular disease," said Claire Berryman, graduate student in nutritional sciences, Penn State. "The walnut oil was particularly good at preserving the function of endothelial cells, which play an important role in cardiovascular health."

According to the researchers, walnuts contain alpha-linolenic acid, gamma-tocopherol and phytosterols, which may explain the positive effects of the walnut oil treatment.

"Implications of this finding could mean improved dietary strategies to fight heart disease," said Berryman. "The science around HDL functionality is very new, so to see improvements in this outcome with the consumption of whole walnuts is promising and worth investigating further."

Further studies are needed to determine the mechanisms that account for cardiovascular disease risk reduction with walnut consumption, according to Kris-Etherton.

"Our study indicates that simple dietary changes, such as incorporating walnuts and/or their oil in a heart healthy diet, may reduce the risk of heart disease," she said.

###

Other authors on the paper include Jessica Grieger and Sheila West of Penn State, Oliver Chen and Jeffrey Blumberg of Tufts University, and George Rothblat and Sandhya Sankaranarayanan of the University of Pennsylvania.

The California Walnut Board funded this research.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-05/ps-wwa050813.php

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