Saturday, December 31, 2011

Netflix, Gap lag in customer satisfaction online (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? Netflix Inc and Gap Inc were among the worst performers in customer satisfaction among the largest online retailers this holiday season, according to a survey released on Wednesday.

Overstock.com Inc came last out of the 40 largest online retailers, with a rating of 72 out of 100, down 4 points from last year, the survey by ForSee found.

Gap.com, Gap's main website, was second last with 73 points, down 5 from a year ago. Other laggards included buy.com and websites run by Sony and Toys R Us, ForSee said.

Customer satisfaction is important for retailers because it can lead to higher sales, more loyalty and increased word-of-mouth recommendations, ForSee said.

Netflix saw the biggest decline in customer satisfaction in ForSee's most-recent survey after the company tried to raise prices and split its DVD and video-streaming services. The plan was scrapped after customers defected.

"Netflix totally misread its customer base and is paying the price, damaging its brand among both consumers and investors," said Larry Freed, chief executive officer of ForSee.

Netflix shares lost more than half their value this year, with most of the damage coming after the company unveiled its intention to split its services.

Netflix had come close to customer-satisfaction leader Amazon.com in previous ForSee surveys. But in the latest poll, Netflix dropped 7 points to 79, the largest decline of any retailer in the survey.

Amazon climbed 2 points to 88 to lead ForSee's survey for the 14th consecutive time. ForSee runs the poll about every six months.

The biggest gainer was TigerDirect.com, a tech gadget and parts website owned by Systemax Inc, which climbed 6 points to 79.

Another big gainer was JCP.com, J.C. Penney's website, which rose 5 points to 83. That put the retailer in a tie for third place with QVC.com, Apple's online store and VistaPrint.com.

(Reporting by Alistair Barr; Editing by Tim Dobbyn)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111228/wr_nm/us_netflix_onlinesurvey

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Hoops fans: Check out George Washington men's basketball coach Mike Lonergan, wh...

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Source: http://www.facebook.com/MASNsports/posts/168287563271091

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Gingrich to launch 'Pets with Newt' website | MNN - Mother Nature ...


As the 2012 Republican primaries approach, White House hopeful Newt Gingrich is scrambling to stay atop the heap of contenders. But the former House speaker has vowed to avoid negative ads, and many of his recent policy ideas ? such as sending federal agents to arrest "activist" judges ? have drawn bipartisan criticism. So he's trying a new strategy, hoping voters will relate to another of his pet issues: pets.

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Gingrich is already known for his love of zoos; he claims to have visited 95 in the U.S., and as a child he dreamed of becoming "either a zoo director or a vertebrate paleontologist." He abandoned that dream long ago to pursue politics, but he hasn't lost his soft spot for animals. And now he hopes the two interests can make for a winning combination with primary voters.

?

Gingrich has created a new website called "Pets With Newt," which aims to highlight his "lighter side" as a presidential candidate, he tells ABC News. The site remains empty as of Tuesday afternoon ? aside from a large "Pets With Newt" logo and pawprint ? but Gingrich says it will launch soon. (Update, 12/28: Pets With Newt is now live. The site lets users submit photos of their pets, provides links to Gingrich's campaign website and lists his favorite zoos.)

?

"As speaker I made it possible for people in public housing to keep their pets," he says, referring to his tenure as House majority leader from 1995 to 1999. "I love pets, so we're going to have an entire project."

?

Gingrich doesn't own any pets, but says he'd like to have a dog in the White House ? assuming he and his wife, Callista, can agree on a size. Callista likes small dogs, he tells ABC News, while he prefers bigger ones. "When I was a child I had a cocker spaniel and Doberman pinscher and German shepherd," he says. "But we have not yet had a family conference on this topic."

?

On top of promoting its candidate's love for animals, the Gingrich campaign is also making a music-education video starring Callista, who is classically trained as a singer and a French horn player. Both projects are part of a broader effort to portray a light-hearted side of the couple, ABC News reports, and to make them seem above the fray. "Politics doesn't have to be mean and nasty and disgusting," according to Gingrich. "You can actually have fun as citizens working together."

?

The initiatives could also be an attempt to bolster Gingrich's family-values cred among conservative voters, especially since some of his rivals have increasingly alluded to his two divorces and past marital infidelity. Mitt Romney, for example, released a campaign ad earlier this month touting the "steadiness and constancy" of his 42-year marriage, although it didn't specifically compare Romney to other candidates.

?

Gingrich has recently acknowledged his past behavior was "not appropriate," telling the Christian Broadcasting Network earlier this year that his infidelity was "partially driven by how passionately I felt about this country, that I worked far too hard." And while he's likely still working hard as the Iowa caucuses loom, his campaign seems to be highlighting his domestic life as a way to popularize the new Newt Gingrich. By focusing on wholesome passions like his love of dogs, for instance, maybe he can persuade Republican voters that his own days in the doghouse are behind him.

?

Also on MNN:

?

The opinions expressed by MNN Bloggers and those providing comments are theirs alone, and do not reflect the opinions of MNN.com. While we have reviewed their content to make sure it complies with our Terms and Conditions, MNN is not responsible for the accuracy of any of their information.

?

Source: http://www.mnn.com/earth-matters/politics/blogs/gingrich-to-launch-pets-with-newt-website

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Compatible OS with the first batch windows phone 7 [updated]

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Source: http://windowsphone.uservoice.com/forums/101801-feature-suggestions/suggestions/2303890-compatible-os-with-the-first-batch-windows-phone-7

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QUAthletics: Men's Basketball Heads To Upstate New York For Colgate On Wednesday: The Quinnipiac University men?s basketball ... http://t.co/xwAVjDln

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Occupy Wall Street: 2011 Reflections | Daily Ticker - Yahoo! Finance

FOLLOW THE DAILY TICKER

The Daily Ticker covers the most important business stories of the day -- the economy, investing, corporate leadership and politics. The Daily Ticker picks up where Tech Ticker left off and is hosted by Aaron Task, Henry Blodget and Daniel Gross. Often serious, sometimes irreverent and always interesting, The Daily Ticker gives viewers a unique take on the business world's most crucial stories.

Source: http://finance.yahoo.com/blogs/daily-ticker/occupy-wall-street-2011-reflections-080955204.html

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When a Regular Rubik?s Cube is Just Too Easy

For those of you show-offs who find a regular Rubik’s Cube too easy, there’s the Simplicity Cubic 3x3x7 Uneven IQ Brick from Brando’s toy selection.? Brando says this toy offers left and right brain training, and IQ & EQ training.? They also say that it will provide fun in your home and at your office.? [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2011/12/27/when-a-regular-rubiks-cube-is-just-too-easy/

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Panasonic, Samsung, SanDisk, Sony ve Toshiba, yeni DRM flash bellek ??z?m? i?in biraraya geliyor

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Source: www.donanimhaber.com --- Monday, December 26, 2011
Veri g?venli?i konusunun son derece ?nem kazand??? bu d?nemde flash bellek ?reticilerinden konu ile ilgili ?nemli bir ad?m geldi. Panasonic, Sony, Toshiba, Samsung ve SanDisk firmalar? ge?ti?imiz hafta bir duyuru yaparak haf?za kartlar?, entegre haf?za mod?lleri ve di?er flash depolama cihazlar? i?in daha g?venli bir ortam geli?tirmek ?zere ortakl?k yapt?klar?n? a??klad?.Ortakl?k; ak?ll? telefon, tablet ve Blu-ray oynat?c?lar gibi birden fazla platform aras?nda ?al??abilen y?ksek ??z?n?rl?kl? i? ...

Source: http://www.donanimhaber.com/Panasonic_Samsung_SanDisk_Sony_ve_Toshiba_yeni_DRM_flash_bellek_cozumu_icin_biraraya_geliyor-30941.htm

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NORAD Santa trackers have record holiday

FILE - In this Dec. 24, 2010 file photo, volunteers take phone calls and answer emails at the Santa Tracking Operations Center at Peterson Air Force Base near Colorado Springs, Colo. Santa is already piling up monster numbers on social networking sites this season, so the volunteer Santa-trackers at NORAD are bracing for tens of thousands of calls and emails when their operations center goes live on Christmas Eve. (AP Photo/Ed Andrieski, File)

FILE - In this Dec. 24, 2010 file photo, volunteers take phone calls and answer emails at the Santa Tracking Operations Center at Peterson Air Force Base near Colorado Springs, Colo. Santa is already piling up monster numbers on social networking sites this season, so the volunteer Santa-trackers at NORAD are bracing for tens of thousands of calls and emails when their operations center goes live on Christmas Eve. (AP Photo/Ed Andrieski, File)

FILE - In this Dec. 24, 2010 file photo, Air Force Lt. Col. David Hanson, of Chicago, takes a phone call from a child in Florida at the Santa Tracking Operations Center at Peterson Air Force Base near Colorado Springs, Colo. Santa is already piling up monster numbers on social networking sites this season, so the volunteer Santa-trackers at NORAD are bracing for tens of thousands of calls and emails when their operations center goes live on Christmas Eve. (AP Photo/Ed Andrieski)

(AP) ? Santa Claus set records Christmas Eve as he raced across the globe on his traditional holiday mission.

Santa tracking volunteers at Peterson Air Force Base in Colorado said they fielded about 102,000 telephone queries beginning early Saturday on his progress, breaking the previous mark of 80,000.

And his NORAD Facebook page recorded about 999,000 "likes," compared with 716,000 a year ago. Twitter followers increased from about 53,000 last year to more than 89,000.

Officials said records set this year were likely generated by people passing the word as well as social media interest.

"I think what happens is that every year the ones that participated" tell others, Canadian Navy Lt. Al Blondin. "There's word of mouth."

Volunteers at NORAD Tracks Santa said kids started calling at 4 a.m. Saturday to find out where Santa was.

"The phones are ringing like crazy," Lt. Cmdr. Bill Lewis said Saturday.

The North American Aerospace Defense Command has been telling anxious children about Santa's whereabouts every year since 1955. That was the year a Colorado Springs newspaper ad invited kids to call Santa on a hotline, but the number had a typo, and dozens of kids wound up talking to the Continental Aerospace Defense Command, NORAD's predecessor.

The officers on duty played along and began sharing reports on Santa's progress. It's now a tradition at NORAD, a joint U.S.-Canada command that monitors the North American skies and seas from a control center at Peterson.

First lady Michelle Obama was among the volunteers for a second year in a row. She took about 10 calls from her family's holiday vacation in Hawaii. Lewis said Obama's voice didn't throw any of the phoning children.

"They all just asked run-of-the-mill stuff. They wanted to know about Santa," Lewis said.

After visiting many nations, Santa's first stop in the U.S. came at 9:02 p.m. MST in Atlanta, Blondin said.

The NORAD website said Santa then set a generally westward course, making numerous stops including Cleveland, Denver and San Francisco. He later passed through Hawaii and Alaska before setting his home course for the North Pole.

In addition to NORAD's Santa website and Facebook and Twitter pages, Santa this year has a new tracking app for smart phones. The app includes the Elf Toss, a game similar to Angry Birds. Blondin said there had been more than 700,000 downloads.

___

Online:

http://www.noradsanta.org

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-12-25-Tracking%20Santa/id-bd0e912470db4fb8bbdc1057f26dc1f0

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Three reasons Microsoft's Bing will gain ground against Google in 2012

By Preston Gralla

Bing recently became the second most popular search site on the Internet, but is still far behind to Google. Here are three reasons Bing will narrow that gap in 2012.

Bing partnerships with Facebook and Twitter will pay off

In 2011, Bing partnered with both Facebook and Twitter, something that Google didn't do. Instead, Google is relying on Google+, which is a great social network, but with a tiny market share compared to Facebook and Twitter. Facebook, for example, has an estimated 800 million users. That partnership helped Bing improve its overall market share in 2011, and will likely yield even bigger results in 2012.

Bing integration with Xbox and Kinect will help

Xbox has been one of Microsoft's biggest and most surprising successes outside operating systems, Office, and the enterprise. In 2011, Microsoft improved integration with both Xbox and the newer Kinect gaming system. This will pay off in 2012 as well. And because the gaming demographic is a young one, if Microsoft can get gamers to use Bing instead of Google, they'll have a highly sought after audience for advertisers.

Bigger reach in mobile will grow market share

Because of the success of Android, which uses Google as the default search engine, and because iOS uses Google for search, Google has dominated mobile search. It will continue to do so in 2012, but Microsoft will make gains. In November, Microsoft released a very good updated Bing app for Android and iOS, and it's better in some ways than Google's mobile search. In addition, expect Windows Phone 7 to finally gain market share in 2012, as the Nokia deal goes into full effect. I don't expect significant market share, but any will be an improvement over the minuscule share Microsoft now has.

I'm not alone in thinking that Microsoft's moves in 2011 will pay off in 2012. Patrick Moorhead, principal analyst at Moor Insights & Strategy, told Computerworld "I believe Microsoft won the overall rivalry this year in terms of overall growth and strategic moves," citing specifically "improved integration of social media, the Bing iOS app, and Bing for Xbox and Kinect."

Does this mean that Microsoft will overtake Google or even come close in 2012? Not a chance. It think it's unlikely Microsoft will ever catch Google. But consider that Google fears Bing enough that it will pay Mozilla nearly $1 billion over the next three years to remain the default search engine on Firefox. Google wouldn't pay that money if it didn't recognize that Bing was a formidable competitor. 2011 was a good year for Bing; I expect 2012 to be even better.

Source: http://blogs.computerworld.com/19485/three_reasons_microsofts_bing_will_gain_ground_against_google_in_2012?source=rss_gralla

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Robert De Niro, wife welcome baby girl (AP)

LOS ANGELES ? Robert De Niro is a father again.

Stan Rosenfield, the 68-year-old actor's spokesman, says De Niro and his 56-year-old wife, Grace Hightower, welcomed a healthy 7-pound, 2-ounce baby girl named Helen Grace Hightower through a surrogate mother.

She is the couple's second child. Their son, Elliot, is 13. No other details were provided.

The "New Year's Eve" and "Limitless" star has four other children from previous relationships.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111223/ap_en_ot/us_people_robert_de_niro

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Red Eye Mocks 'Pets For Newt' Website: Gingrich Is 'Pandering To ...

video

Newt Gingrich?s campaign has taken a few hits in recent weeks, and the candidate is working to reclaim the lead in time for Iowa. Yesterday the Gingrich campaign announced a new venture that panders to the all-important demographic of household pets. ?Pets for Newt? will be launched shortly in an effort to show off ?Gingrich?s love for animals.? This new venture naturally caught the attention of the Red Eye crew, who poked fun at the candidate for it.

Andy Levy played a montage that could double as a Tumblr page titled ?Newt Gingrich and his Animal Friends.? And then, in an incredibly confusing segway, Levy brought up new statistics showing millions of voters are leaving the Republican and Democratic parties in droves out of frustration in the two-party system. Of course, in keeping with the theme, the analysis was paired with a video of a literal fat cat.

RELATED: How Does Rick Perry Relax? By Shooting Off Sniper Rifles. ?It?s My Golf?

The Daily Caller?s Jamie Weinstein thought the pets initiative was a good way for Gingrich to show his ?aww? side, but thought the campaign?s other announcement, that Callista Gingrich will be releasing a video about music education in tandem with her husband?s campaign, was just weird. Bear in mind that Mrs. Gingrich plays the French horn, so there?s still a coolness factor to be reckoned with here.

Country music singer Larry Gatlin suggested that ?Pets with Newt? is just a shameless way to pander to Canine-Americans, but on a more serious note he argued that in a time of high unemployment and massive uncertainty in the job market, an initiative to show a presidential candidate?s ?light side? might not be the best move for a campaign to make. Remi Spencer agreed, adding that people tend not to judge who gets to be the next leader of the free world based on adorability.

Bill Schulz thought the very notion of a humanized candidate was counterintuitive, positing that he would be more likely to give his vote to a robotic candidate like Optimus Prime. (Though if the rumors are true and Mitt Romney turns out to be a robot, that would be a hard ticket to beat.)

RELATED: Report: Donald Trump Officially Switches Party From Republican To ?Unaffiliated?

As for the millions more independents not labeling themselves as part of the two major parties, Weinstein ascribed some of the change to the concept of being ?independent? sounding cooler and more intelligent to others. Schulz thought it a novel concept that people might actually vote for who they like instead of who party leaders want them to. The biggest consensus the panel reached was that the chances of a third-party candidate winning the White House any time soon are slim, especially this year.

Watch the video below, courtesy of Fox News:

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Source: http://www.mediaite.com/tv/red-eye-mocks-pets-for-newt-website-gingrich-is-pandering-to-canine-americans/

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Anti-Putin protests draw tens of thousands

Demonstrators rally to protest against election fraud in Moscow, Saturday, Dec. 24, 2011. Tens of thousands of demonstrators rallied in the Russian capital Saturday in the largest protest so far against election fraud, signaling growing outrage over Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's 12-year rule. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko)

Demonstrators rally to protest against election fraud in Moscow, Saturday, Dec. 24, 2011. Tens of thousands of demonstrators rallied in the Russian capital Saturday in the largest protest so far against election fraud, signaling growing outrage over Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's 12-year rule. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko)

Demonstrators hold Russian opposition flags during a rally protesting against election fraud in Moscow, Saturday, Dec. 24, 2011. Tens of thousands of demonstrators rallied in the Russian capital Saturday in the largest protest so far against election fraud, signaling growing outrage over Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's 12-year rule. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko)

Protesters hold a portrait of Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin as they gather to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia's parliamentary elections on Sakharov avenue in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 24, 2011. Tens of thousands of demonstrators on Saturday cheered opposition leaders and jeered the Kremlin in the largest protest in the Russian capital so far against election fraud, signaling growing outrage over Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's 12-year rule. (AP Photo/Misha Japaridze)

A demonstrator holds an old Russian imperial flag during a protest against election fraud in the Arctic seaport of Murmansk, 1,450 kilometers (906 miles) north of Moscow, Saturday, Dec. 24, 2011. A demonstration in Moscow was even bigger than a similar protest two weeks ago, although rallies in other cities in the far east and Siberia earlier in the day drew smaller crowds than on Dec. 10. (AP Photo/Andrei Pronin)

From left, Russian former Financial Minister Alexei Kudrin, leaders of the opposition Boris Nemtsov and Alexei Navalny attend a rally to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia's parliamentary elections on Sakharov avenue in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 24, 2011. Tens of thousands of demonstrators on Saturday cheered opposition leaders and jeered the Kremlin in the largest protest in the Russian capital so far against election fraud, signaling growing outrage over Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's 12-year rule. (AP Photo/Misha Japaridze)

(AP) ? Tens of thousands of Russians jammed a Moscow avenue Saturday to demand free elections and an end to Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's 12-year rule, in the largest show of public outrage since the protests 20 years ago that brought down the Soviet Union. Gone was the political apathy of recent years as many shouted "We are the Power!"

The demonstration, bigger and better organized than a similar one two weeks ago, and smaller rallies across the country encouraged opposition leaders hoping to sustain a protest movement ignited by a fraud-tainted parliamentary election on Dec. 4.

The enthusiasm also cheered Mikhail Gorbachev, the last Soviet leader who closed down the Soviet Union on Dec. 25, 1991.

"I'm happy that I have lived to see the people waking up. This raises big hopes," the 80-year-old Gorbachev said on Ekho Moskvy radio.

He urged Putin to follow his example and give up power peacefully, saying Putin would be remembered for the positive things he did if he stepped down now. The former Soviet leader, who has grown increasingly critical of Putin, has little influence in Russia today.

But the protesters have no central leader and no candidate capable of posing a serious challenge to Putin, who intends to return to the presidency in a March vote.

Even at Saturday's rally, some of the speakers were jeered by the crowd. The various liberal, nationalist and leftist groups that took part appear united only by their desire to see "Russia without Putin," a popular chant.

Putin, who gave no public response to the protest Saturday, initially derided the demonstrators as paid agents of the West. He also said sarcastically that he thought the white ribbons they wore as an emblem were condoms. Putin has since come to take their protests more seriously, and in an effort to stem the anger he has offered a set of reforms to allow more political competition in future elections.

Kremlin-controlled television covered Saturday's rally, but gave no air time to Putin's harshest critics.

Estimates of the number of demonstrators ranged from the police figure of 30,000 to 120,000 offered by the organizers. Demonstrators packed much of a broad avenue, which has room for nearly 100,000 people, about 2.5 kilometers (some 1.5 miles) from the Kremlin, as the temperature dipped well below freezing.

A stage at the end of the avenue featured banners reading "Russia will be free" and "This election Is a farce." Heavy police cordons encircled the participants, who stood within metal barriers, and a police helicopter hovered overhead.

Alexei Navalny, a corruption-fighting lawyer and popular blogger, electrified the crowd when he took the stage. He soon had the protesters chanting "We are the power!"

Navalny spent 15 days in jail for leading a protest on Dec. 5 that unexpectedly drew more than 5,000 people and set off the chain of demonstrations.

Putin's United Russia party lost 25 percent of its seats in the election, but hung onto a majority in parliament through what independent observers said was widespread fraud. United Russia, seen as representing a corrupt bureaucracy, has become known as the party of crooks and thieves, a phrase coined by Navalny.

"We have enough people here to take the Kremlin," Navalny shouted to the crowd. "But we are peaceful people and we won't do that ? yet. But if these crooks and thieves keep cheating us, we will take what is ours."

Protest leaders expressed skepticism about Putin's promised political reforms.

"We don't trust him," opposition leader Boris Nemtsov told the rally, urging protesters to gather again after the long New Year's holidays to make sure the proposed changes are put into law.

He and other speakers called on the demonstrators to go to the polls in March to unseat Putin. "A thief must not sit in the Kremlin," Nemtsov said.

The protest leaders said they would keep up their push for a rerun of the parliamentary vote and punishment for election officials accused of fraud, while stressing the need to prevent fraud in the March presidential election.

Former world chess champion Garry Kasparov was among those who sought to give the protesters a sense of empowerment.

"There are so many of us here, and they (the government) are few," Kasparov said from the stage. "They are huddled up in fear behind police cordons."

The crowd was largely young, but included a sizable number of middle-aged and elderly people, some of whom limped slowly to the site on walkers and canes.

"We want to back those who are fighting for our rights," said 16-year-old Darya Andryukhina, who said she had also attended the previous rally.

"People have come here because they want respect," said Tamara Voronina, 54, who said she was proud that her three sons also had joined the protest.

Putin's comment about protesters wearing condoms only further infuriated them and inspired some creative responses. One protester Saturday held a picture montage of Putin with his head wrapped in a condom like a grandmother's headscarf. Many inflated condoms along with balloons.

The protests reflect a growing weariness with Putin, who was first elected president in 2000 and remained in charge after moving into the prime minister's seat in 2008. Brazen fraud in the parliamentary vote unexpectedly energized the middle class, which for years had been politically apathetic.

"No one has done more to bring so many people here than Putin, who managed to insult the whole country," said Viktor Shenderovich, a columnist and satirical writer.

Two rallies in St. Petersburg on Saturday drew a total of 4,000 people.

"I'm here because I'm tired of the government's lies," said Dmitry Dervenev, 47, a designer. "The prime minister insulted me personally when he said that people came to the rallies because they were paid by the U.S. State Department. I'm here because I'm a citizen of my country."

Putin accused the United States of encouraging and funding the protests to weaken Russia.

Putin's former finance minister surprised the protesters by saying the current parliament should approve the proposed electoral changes and then step down to allow new parliamentary elections to be held. Alexei Kudrin, who remains close to Putin, warned that the wave of protests could lead to violence and called for establishing a dialogue between the opposition and the government.

"Otherwise we will lose the chance for peaceful transformation," Kudrin said.

Kudrin also joined calls for the ouster of Central Election Commission chief Vladimir Churov.

Putin has promised to liberalize registration rules for opposition parties and restore the direct election of governors he abolished in 2004. Putin's stand-in as president, Dmitry Medvedev, spelled out those and other proposed changes in Thursday's state-of-the nation address.

Gorbachev, however, said the government appears confused.

"They don't know what to do," he said. "They are making attempts to get out of the trap they drove themselves into."

____

Associated Press writers Nataliya Vasilyeva and Jim Heintz contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-24-EU-Russia-Protests/id-e3ef9aa8c87044499e268d52bf7d4ddd

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Dr. Nicholas A. Piro, Inorganic Seminar of Special Interest, University of California, Berkeley, "Transforming Phosphorus- and Nitrogen-Based Small Molecules on Transition Metal Platforms"

Dr. Nicholas A. Piro, Inorganic Seminar of Special Interest, University of California, Berkeley, "Transforming Phosphorus- and Nitrogen-Based Small Molecules on Transition Metal Platforms"

Time 4:00 pm ? Inorganic Seminar of Special Interest Sponsor Inorganic Seminar of Special Interest

112 Chem Annex

Source: http://illinois.edu/calendar/detail/81/11700710

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From Abkhaz to Zuni: The Language Collections of the University Library, thru Feb 17, 2012

From Abkhaz to Zuni: The Language Collections of the University Library

Exhibit - Artifacts | October?6, 2011 ? February?17, 2012?every?day?with exceptions | Moffitt Undergraduate Library, Elevator Lobby

(No event on these dates: November 11, 24, 25; December 17, 18, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 2011; January 1, 7, 8, 14, 15, 16, 2012)

Library

This exhibit highlights the linguistic diversity of the UC Berkeley Library?s collections, a cornerstone of the world-class research for which the University is famous. The campus libraries include material in over 400 languages, representing a vast array of cultures and time periods.

Some of the highlights include a reproduction of the Bancroft Library's Codex Fernandez Leal, one of the oldest surviving documents of Indian America, about nine feet of which is displayed on the back of the security desk of Moffitt Library; a Swahili cookbook from the Biosciences Library's famed cookbook collection, and a delightful bilingual children's book from the Education/Psychology Library.

Open during operating hours of Moffitt Library. See our website for current hours.

Check the Exhibit blog for more information and virtual updates from the Library's collections.

Anyone wishing to enter Moffitt Library must show a current UC ID, UC Berkeley Library Borrower's Card, or Stanford ID.

clee@library.berkeley.edu, 510-768-7899

Source: http://events.berkeley.edu/index.php/calendar/sn/library.html?event_ID=48817&date=2011-12-21

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Christmas Staple Frankincense 'Doomed,' Ecologists Warn (LiveScience.com)

The biblical Christmas story of the three kings may need a rewriting, or at least a tweak to one of the gifts ? frankincense. Production of the fragrant resin, which is used in perfume and incense, could decline by half over the next 15 years, a new study finds.

Tapped from various species of the Boswellia tree that grow in the Horn of Africa and the Arabian Peninsula, ?frankincense has been traded internationally for thousands of years. However, researchers warn that the trees are declining at a troubling rate.

Ecologists from the Netherlands and Ethiopia monitored Boswellia trees growing in 13 plots of about 65 acres (2 hectares) each located in northwest Ethiopia, near the source of the Blue Nile river. The plots contained trees that were tapped for frankincense, as well as some that were left untapped. The researchers studied the survival, growth and seed production of more than 6,000 Boswellia trees over the course of two years.

Based on their finding, the researchers created demographic models to predict the fate of Boswellia populations. They estimate that the production of frankincense could drop to half over the next 15 years, and the number of Boswellia trees could decline by 90 percent in the next 50 years.

"Current management of Boswellia populations is clearly unsustainable," said study researcher Frans Bongers of Wageningen University in the Netherlands. "Our models show that within 50 years, populations of Boswellia will be decimated, and the declining populations mean frankincense production is doomed. This is a rather alarming message for the incense industry and conservation organizations."

The researchers cited a decline in both the tapped and untapped Boswellia tree populations they studied. This suggests that other factors are at the root of the problem, according to the ecologists.

"Frankincense extraction is unlikely to be the main cause of population decline, which is likely to be caused by burning, grazing and attack by the longhorn beetle, which lays its eggs under the bark of the tree," Bongers said.

The study also showed that, along with high levels of mortality among adult trees, older trees were not being replaced by new trees because few Boswellia seedlings survived to become saplings.

"The number of fires and intensity of grazing in our study area has increased over recent decades as a result of a large increase in the number of cattle, and this could be why seedlings fail to grow into saplings," Bongers explained. "At the same time, a large proportion of trees we studied died after being attacked by the longhorn beetle."

The researchers recommend that management incentives be introduced to preserve and protect Boswellia populations and the future of frankincense production. The study is detailed online today (Dec. 20) in the Journal of Applied Ecology.

You can follow LiveScience writer Remy Melina on Twitter @remymelina. Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescience? and on Facebook.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/science/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20111220/sc_livescience/christmasstaplefrankincensedoomedecologistswarn

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Special Olympics in Doral, its own community

Anna-Marie Martinez loves her job.

As head coach of Doral?s Special Olympics program she is inspired daily by the effort and excitement her athletes put into practice.

Martinez had never spent time with children with intellectual disabilities, and she quickly found them to more special than anything else.

?They?re very enthusiastic about what they do and it?s helped me to see things in my life in a more positive light. They?re very inspirational,? Martinez said.

Martinez began as a volunteer in 2009 when the fledgling program was practicing on their own home-made bowling alley made from a red rug and plastic pins. There were nine athletes on the team.

Two years later they have 28 athletes and practice at Bird Bowl in Westchester.

The Doral kids compete at sports like bowling, track and field, and basketball against Special Olympic teams from elsewhere in South Florida. Special Olympics seasons are eight to ten weeks, and the top athletes go to summer and fall state competitions, which are free to the players.

Eunice Kennedy Shriver founded the Special Olympics in 1968 giving children the chance to enjoy motion and pride in what they could do.

Let me win, but if I cannot win, let me be brave in my attempt.

This is the athlete?s oath for Special Olympics.

Mark Thompson, executive director of Special Olympics in Miami-Dade County says he witnesses bravery in athletes even before they step into the game. He remembers one young woman, typically shy, reciting the oath with self-assured perfection in front of a 1,000 of her comrades.

?I guarantee people will feel better about life after an event,? Thompson said. And he is not just referring to the athletes.

Given Thompson?s 22 years of experience in the non-profit sector, he thought he had a lot to offer.

?Shortly after it gave me more than I could possibly give back,? Thompson said.

This is a familiar testament given by many of the volunteers, families, and staff within the program?s wide orbit. Miami-Dade County has 80 programs and 2,500 athletes.

The Doral Special Olympics has blossomed into a community with its own dedicated pack of volunteers and supportive families showing up for competitions to cheer and help out.

?I have had several parents tell me that it has been hard to find programs their children can grow in and have long term development in,? Vianca Peron said. Peron serves as the Special Needs Programs Coordinator of Doral.

Lina Mejia said her daughter Paulina Botero started making friends and she became more sociable after she joined the Doral team.

?It?s like a family,? Mejia said.

And the athletes do win. Doral walked away in 2010 from its first state competition with one gold medal and two silver medals.

?One of the global benefits of the program is exposing the community to the misconceived perceptions of the population?s abilities,? Thompson said.

At competitions the number of hugs given out probably outnumbers the score, regardless of the sport being played. Given the challenges these kids face their generosity adds to their bravery.

Botero, 14, had to miss out on several events this year due to a litany of conditions she battles daily. Botero?s mother, Mejia, carries a printout and flash drive in her purse listing all her daughter?s ailments along with contact information for her doctors. She says her daughter teaches her to fight but she wishes some would try more to understand this population.

?There are a lot of people that don?t understand them,? Mejia said. ?They are really special. There is no evil, there is no hatred. Everything they have is lovely.?

The Special Olympics? number one priority is the athletes but their work is meant to reach a larger scope; to change attitudes and impact lives for the better.

Botero made it to the state championships for ramp bowling at the ESPN Wide World of Sports in Kissimmee. There were 6,000 bowling athletes at the competition. Botero went home with a silver medal.

?I like to be with me friends,? Botero said.

With basketball season concluding Martinez takes inspiring anecdotes. She recalls one young man trying for two years to make a basket. One day at practice, his shot suspended in the air, closer to the net than he had ever come and went in.

?Everything stopped. It was like a mini-celebration in the middle of practice,? Martinez said.

Now with a year-round schedule of seasonal sports and regular practices, Coach Martinez manages more than a full-time coaching schedule. She nurtures her relationships with her athletes.

?You need to be a very patient person, you need to be understanding and kind. I tend to look at the bigger picture, I?m more concerned with whether the athletes are having a good time,? Martinez said.

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/12/22/2558244/special-olympics-in-doral-its.html

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

CNN star Piers Morgan faces UK media inquiry (AP)

LONDON ? CNN star interviewer Piers Morgan faces questions Tuesday about his time at the top of Britain's tabloid industry ? widely anticipated testimony that may dredge up allegations his British newspaper career was colored by wrongdoing.

Morgan ran two British tabloids ? the News of the World and the Daily Mirror ? before his editorship was cut short by scandal in 2004. He's due to give evidence to Britain's media ethics inquiry by video link from the United States ? one of a host of tabloid newspaper executives to face the inquiry, set up in the wake of the News of the World phone hacking scandal.

More than a dozen journalists have been arrested, senior executives with Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. media empire have lost their jobs, and top U.K. police officers have resigned over their failure to tackle the scandal. Witnesses at the inquiry have exposed the seamy side of British journalism, with reporters accused of cooking up stories, blackmailing subjects, hacking phones and paying bribes to police officers to secure tips.

Morgan may have more juicy details to add. His memoirs contain tantalizing references to questionably obtained material, and the 46-year-old has acknowledged condoning unethical behavior ? including overseeing payoffs to spies on rival newspapers.

Morgan denies having ever hacked a phone or knowingly run a story based on hacked information. But he's expected to be quizzed on statements that appear to refer to the practice ? in particular a 2006 article in which he says he was played a phone message left by former Beatle Paul McCartney on the answering machine of his now ex-wife Heather Mills.

Mills has said there's no way Morgan could have gotten hold of the message honestly.

The inquiry, led by Lord Justice Brian Leveson, heard Tuesday about the culture in tabloid newsrooms ? one described by some witnesses as being scarred by bullying.

Steve Turner, general secretary of the British Association of Journalists, said he had dealt with more than a dozen cases of bullying in the newsroom in recent years. He blamed diminishing circulation and "the demand to produce better stories and more of them from a diminishing work force" for some of the pressure, but said the culture at Murdoch's News of the World was particularly challenging.

That, he said, may have "pressured people more than most into behaving appallingly."

The inquiry heard earlier Tuesday from reporter Sharon Marshall, whose book "Tabloid Girl: A True Story" detailed the misdemeanors of Britain's press ? including faked expenses, manufactured quotes, unscrupulous reporters, hot-tempered editors and worse.

Marshall took pains to distance herself from her own book, saying she never intended to accuse anyone of wrongdoing and that the last half of the title ? "True Story" ? might have been misleading.

"I intended this as a comical tale," she said.

One by one, she dismissed her nearly all her own stories ? which her book insists are accurate ? as "dramatization," "topspin," "a good yarn," "a joke," or an "embellished shaggy dog tale."

True or not, Morgan seems to have approved; In a blurb splashed across the cover, he called the book "hilarious and gossipy."

Separately, the lawyer for former England soccer player Paul Gascoigne suggested that the sportsman's legal action against the News of the World was close to being settled. Gascoigne is one of several dozen people suing the paper over claims that their phones were hacked. Lawyer Jeremy Reed said the case was "settling" but didn't give any further details.

Murdoch shut down the 168-year-old News of the World in July after the full hacking scandal broke.

___

Online:

Leveson Inquiry: http://www.levesoninquiry.org.uk/

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111220/ap_en_tv/eu_britain_phone_hacking

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Drug Users With HIV at Much Higher Overdose Risk (HealthDay)

FRIDAY, Dec. 16 (HealthDay News) -- HIV-infected drug users are 74 percent more likely to have an overdose than those without HIV, a new evidence review finds.

Behavioral and biological factors may be among the reasons for this increased risk, according to the Rhode Island Hospital researchers. Drug overdose is a frequent cause of non-AIDS death among people with HIV.

The link between HIV infection and drug use is well documented, but the association between HIV and overdose has received less attention and was the focus of this study, which involved a review of 24 previous studies.

"Over the past 30 years, we have made impressive strides in caring for and prolonging the lives of people with HIV. Our study found that premature death by overdose is an issue that affects people with HIV disproportionately," study leader Traci Green, a researcher with Rhode Island Hospital and the Lifespan/Tufts/Brown Center for AIDS Research, said in a hospital news release.

"It is not entirely clear why the risk is greater, and few studies have endeavored to figure out why this might be happening," she added.

Biological factors may include clinical status, weakened immune systems, opportunistic infections and poorer physical health among HIV-infected drug users. Some research has suggested that hepatitis C infection and other conditions that affect metabolic ability may also increase the risk of overdose, according to the release.

Behavioral factors -- such as high-risk lifestyles and an increased rate of psychiatric conditions -- may also contribute to the higher risk of overdose among HIV-infected drug users, Green said.

Other possible factors could include homelessness and poverty, and poor access to medications and therapy used to treat opioid dependence, she suggested. Many HIV patients take opioid painkiller drugs as part of their treatment, while others use illegal opioids.

The study appears online in advance of print in the journal AIDS.

"Bringing overdose awareness and prevention into the HIV care setting is critical to reducing overdose deaths," Green said.

"Health care providers who treat HIV-infected patients with a history of substance abuse or who are taking opioid medications should consider counseling patients on how to reduce their risk of overdose. They may also consider prescribing naloxone (Narcan) to patients, or offering a referral to MAT (medication-assisted therapy) to reduce the risk of overdose," she advised.

Naloxone is a prescription medication that reverses an opioid overdose and has no abuse potential.

More information

The New Mexico AIDS Education and Training Center has more about recreational drugs and HIV.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/diseases/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111217/hl_hsn/druguserswithhivatmuchhigheroverdoserisk

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Surgical Checklist Helps Lower Patient Death Rates, Study Shows

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - A surgical checklist, similar to what pilots use before every flight, can lower patient death rates, a study at one hospital confirms -- though the drop was smaller than past research has found.

About 100,000 hospitals worldwide now use the surgical safety checklist developed by the World Health Organization (WHO).

The list has 19 items that the surgical team checks right before and after a patient's procedure. That includes making sure they have the right patient, that they're operating on the correct body site and are aware of the patient's allergies.

A 2009 study of eight hospitals in different countries found that in the year after the centers adopted the WHO checklist, the overall death rate among surgery patients dropped from 1.5 percent to 0.8 percent.

In the new study, researchers at University Medical Center Utrecht, in the Netherlands, found a significantly smaller effect at their hospital.

Surgery patients' death rate dipped from 3.1 percent to 2.8 percent in the year-and-a-half after the hospital took up the WHO checklist.

But a lot depended on surgical teams' actually completing the checklist, the researchers report in the Annals of Surgery.

Patients with fully completed checklists, they found, had about one-third of the death risk of those without checklists. But the lists were completed for only 39 percent of patients.

"Checklist compliance was clearly far from perfect in our hospital," write Dr. Wilton A. van Klein and his colleagues.

One reason for that was that more-critical patients needing emergency surgery were less likely to have a completed checklist. But that did not seem to explain the lower death risk among patients with fully completed checklists, according to the researchers.

"Mortality was strongly associated with checklist compliance," van Klein's team writes, "suggesting that large variations in the level of implementation for different groups of patients need to be reduced."

One possible reason for the smaller effects compared with the 2009 study is differences among hospitals, according to van Klein and his colleagues.

Their center is a university hospital that tends to get more critically ill patients than a community hospital would. And the overall death rate among surgery patients there was higher than the average seen in the 2009 study, which included a mix of university and community centers.

The current findings are more in line with a recent study of U.S. Veterans Health Administration (VHA) hospitals, van Klein's team writes.

The VHA, which is the largest integrated health system in the U.S., has taken steps to cut medical errors -- which includes checklists and special training sessions to stress teamwork among staff.

A study earlier this year found that the number of medical errors at VHA hospitals -- like operating on the wrong patient, or the wrong side of a patient's body -- dropped from 3.2 to 2.4 per month, between 2006 and 2009.

It's estimated that across the U.S., medical errors occur in about one in 75,000 surgeries every year.

And surgical checklists alone are unlikely to be enough without an overall focus on the "safety culture" at hospitals, van Klein's team writes.

What's more, safety is an issue not only around the time of surgery. Some of the biggest problems in hospitals are infections, medication errors and injuries to patients who fall, according to WHO.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/uoA69F Annals of Surgery, online November 24, 2011.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/16/surgical-checklist-patient-deaths_n_1154853.html

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DOJ: Arpaio mistreated Latinos (Politico)

The Justice Department on Thursday accused Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio of violating constitutional and civil rights in a ?pattern of misconduct? that involved targeting and mistreating Latinos.

The Obama administration?s report found there was ?reasonable cause? to believe Arpaio was involved in discriminatory policing practices, such as unlawful stops, detentions and arrests of Hispanics; discriminatory jail practices against Latino inmates with limited proficiency in English by punishing them and denying certain services; and unlawful retaliation against individuals criticizing the office?s practices.

Continue Reading

Arpaio, a sheriff known for his tough treatment of inmates, has been highly sought-after in the conservative community for his tough-on-crime and tough-on-immigration credentials. Last month, the sheriff endorsed Texas Gov. Rick Perry for president.

His tenure as sheriff has not been without controversy - in fact, he?s drawn the ire of many pro-immigration advocates because of his strong support for Arizona?s immigration law, SB 1070, regarded as one of the toughest in the nation.

The Justice Department?s investigation also found evidence that Arpaio?s Maricopa County Sherriff?s Office (MCSO) had used excessive force; did not adequately protect Latino residents, and failed to properly investigate sexual assault allegations.

?MCSO?s systematic disregard for basic constitutional protections has created a wall of distrust between the sheriff?s office and large segments of the community, which dramatically compromises the ability to protect and serve the people,? said Thomas E. Perez, Assistant Attorney General for the Justice Department?s Civil Rights Division. ?The problems are deeply rooted in MCSO?s culture, and are compounded by MCSO?s penchant for retaliation against individuals who speak out.?

The Justice Department said that it would work with Arpaio?s office to develop a ?comprehensive reform plan? to address the alleged violations of the constitution and federal civil rights law. Arpaio?s office has to decide by Jan. 4 whether it will take part in talks about reforms, or else the Justice Department will sue him to force complaince, according to a letter from the DoJ.

The Justice Department?s involved more than 400 interviews, including with MCSO supervisors and deputies, as well as former inmates. It also involved reviewing thousands of pages of the office?s documents and reaching out to the local community.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/politico_rss/rss_politico_mostpop/http___www_politico_com_news_stories1211_70498_html/43917377/SIG=11mfks65s/*http%3A//www.politico.com/news/stories/1211/70498.html

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Spotted: Ty Burrell?s Modern Family

Frances enjoys an ice cream while visiting dad Ty Burrell on the set of Modern Family Tuesday in Los Angeles.

Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/CU91rct9PO8/

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Survivor South Pacific Recap, Episode 13

We begin this recap of Episode 13 of Survivor South Pacific on Night 32 at Te Tuna Beach. The original Upolu Five alliance celebrates their accomplishment. They have made it to the final phase of The Game. Coach leads the group in prayer. But inside, he knows that the REAL game will now begin. In fact, Albert is already busy plotting to boot Sophie! Coach Ben Wade looks like he just might make it to the Survivor finals. Image Credit: Wenn.com. Day 33 and we see Albert actually doing some work! He helps Brandon and Rick fetch firewood. Albert talks with Rick on the side and offers a deal for Coach and them to be the Final Three. Over at Redemption Island, everyone is gathered to watch Ozzy dispose of Edna. The task is a puzzle game, giving her something of a chance. But Ozzy wins, as usual, despite Edna getting help from her tribe mates. Back at camp, Albert talks with Brandon about giving Sophie the boot. Meanwhile, she is talking with Coach about sending Brandon to Redemption Island. Rick joins the chat and agrees that Brandon should go next. Later, Albert talks with Coach about booting Sophie. Coach [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RightCelebrity/~3/iyykmgBjguk/

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Friday, December 16, 2011

Father of Kris Humphries Threatens to Pen Kim Kardashian Tell-All


Might the manipulative, large-breasted roof soon get blown off DivorceGate?

In the latest issue of Life & Style, William Humphries - the father of Kris Humphries and the very brief father-in-law of Kim Kardashian - says he'd "love to write a book" about the ordeal Kim and her family put his son through.

"It's important to him that Kris' side of the story is out there," a friend tells the tabloid.

Kim Kardashian Tell-All to Kome?

Humphries may not be entitled to any of Kim's assets, due to a prenup, but no non-disclosure agreement was ever signed. He and/or his dad are free to dish and dish and dish and "Kris has told his father everything," a source notes.

William "has many stories to tell," the magazine reports.

Kris, of course, says he just wants to move forward and find a new NBA team. But we have a feeling this story is far from over.

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/12/father-of-kris-humphries-threatens-to-pen-kim-kardashian-tell-al/

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Tycho's star shines in gamma rays, NASA's Fermi shows

ScienceDaily (Dec. 13, 2011) ? In early November 1572, observers on Earth witnessed the appearance of a "new star" in the constellation Cassiopeia, an event now recognized as the brightest naked-eye supernova in more than 400 years. It's often called "Tycho's supernova" after the great Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe, who gained renown for his extensive study of the object. Now, years of data collected by NASA's Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope reveal that the shattered star's remains shine in high-energy gamma rays.

The detection gives astronomers another clue in understanding the origin of cosmic rays, subatomic particles -- mainly protons -- that move through space at nearly the speed of light. Exactly where and how these particles attain such incredible energies has been a long-standing mystery because charged particles speeding through the galaxy are easily deflected by interstellar magnetic fields. This makes it impossible to track cosmic rays back to their sources.

"Fortunately, high-energy gamma rays are produced when cosmic rays strike interstellar gas and starlight. These gamma rays come to Fermi straight from their sources," said Francesco Giordano at the University of Bari and the National Institute of Nuclear Physics in Italy. He is the lead author of a paper describing the findings in the Dec. 7 edition of The Astrophysical Journal Letters.

Better understanding the origins of cosmic rays is one of Fermi's key goals. Its Large Area Telescope (LAT) scans the entire sky every three hours, gradually building up an ever-deeper view of the gamma-ray sky. Because gamma rays are the most energetic and penetrating form of light, they serve as signposts for the particle acceleration that gives rise to cosmic rays.

"This detection gives us another piece of evidence supporting the notion that supernova remnants can accelerate cosmic rays," said co-author Stefan Funk, an astrophysicist at the Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology (KIPAC), jointly located at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory and Stanford University, Calif.

In 1949, physicist Enrico Fermi -- the satellite's namesake -- suggested that the highest-energy cosmic rays were accelerated in the magnetic fields of interstellar gas clouds. In the decades that followed, astronomers showed that supernova remnants may be the galaxy's best candidate sites for this process.

When a star explodes, it is transformed into a supernova remnant, a rapidly expanding shell of hot gas bounded by the blast's shockwave. Scientists expect that magnetic fields on either side of the shock front can trap particles between them in what amounts to a subatomic pingpong game.

"A supernova remnant's magnetic fields are very weak relative to Earth's, but they extend across a vast region, ultimately spanning thousands of light-years. They have a major influence on the course of charged particles," said co-author Melitta Naumann-Godo at Paris Diderot University and the Atomic Energy Commission in Saclay, France, who led the study with Giordano.

As they shuttle back and forth across the supernova shock, the charged particles gain energy with each traverse. Eventually they break out of their magnetic confinement, escaping the supernova remnant and freely roaming the galaxy.

The LAT's ongoing sky survey provides additional evidence favoring this scenario. Many younger remnants, like Tycho's, tend to produce more high-energy gamma rays than older remnants. "The gamma-ray energies reflect the energies of the accelerated particles that produce them, and we expect more cosmic rays to be accelerated to higher energies in younger objects because the shockwaves and their tangled magnetic fields are stronger," Funk added. By contrast, older remnants with weaker shockwaves cannot retain the highest-energy particles, and the LAT does not detect gamma rays with corresponding energies.

The supernova of 1572 was one of the great watersheds in the history of astronomy. The star blazed forth at a time when the starry sky was regarded as a fixed and unchanging part of the universe. Tycho's candid account of his own discovery of the strange star gives a sense of how radical an event it was.

The supernova first appeared around Nov. 6, but poor weather kept it from Tycho until Nov. 11, when he noticed it during a walk before dinner. "When I had satisfied myself that no star of that kind had ever shone forth before, I was led into such perplexity by the unbelievability of the thing that I began to doubt the faith of my own eyes, and so, turning to the servants who were accompanying me, I asked them whether they too could see a certain extremely bright star?. They immediately replied with one voice that they saw it completely and that it was extremely bright," he recalled.

The supernova remained visible for 15 months and exhibited no movement in the heavens, indicating that it was located far beyond the sun, moon and planets. Modern astronomers estimate that the remnant lies between 9,000 and 11,000 light-years away.

After more than two and a half years of scanning the sky, LAT data clearly show that an unresolved region of GeV (billion electron volt) gamma-ray emission is associated with the remnant of Tycho's supernova. (For comparison, the energy of visible light is between about 2 and 3 electron volts.)

Keith Bechtol, a KIPAC graduate student who is also based at SLAC, was one of the first researchers to notice the potential link. "We knew that Tycho's supernova remnant could be an important find for Fermi because this object has been so extensively studied in other parts of the electromagnetic spectrum. We thought it might be one of our best opportunities to identify a spectral signature indicating the presence of cosmic-ray protons," he said.

The science team's model of the emission is based on LAT observations, along with higher-energy TeV (trillion electron volt) gamma rays mapped by ground-based facilities and radio and X-ray data. The researchers conclude that a process called pion production best explains the emission. First, a proton traveling close to the speed of light strikes a slower-moving proton. This interaction creates an unstable particle -- a pion -- with only 14 percent of the proton's mass. In just 10 millionths of a billionth of a second, the pion decays into a pair of gamma rays.

If this interpretation is correct, then somewhere within the remnant, protons are being accelerated to near the speed of light, and then interacting with slower particles to produce gamma rays, the most extreme form of light. With such unbelievable goings-on in what's left of his "unbelievable" star, it's easy to imagine that Tycho Brahe himself might be pleased.

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Supreme Court to judge on patents for treating disease

THE long arm of the law may soon reach your doctor's office. In a case before the US Supreme Court, a drug company is fighting for a patent that could hold medical knowledge hostage.

Prometheus Laboratories in San Diego, California, holds a patent on guidelines for treating gastrointestinal diseases. It is battling the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota over claims that the clinic's methods of treating these diseases conflict with its patent, which covers dosage adjustments that tell doctors how much medicine should be prescribed based on metabolites in the body.

Although discoveries can be patented in the US, this claim over natural body processes goes too far, according to a statement by a group of organisations including the American Medical Association in support of the Mayo Clinic. "Long before the patentee drafted his claims, physicians treating autoimmune disorders... recognized the relationship between metabolite levels and therapeutic efficacy of the drugs," they write.

They say that patenting the "utterly conventional steps" will result in poorer patient care. "Higher priced medical care is an inevitable result," they add.

If you would like to reuse any content from New Scientist, either in print or online, please contact the syndication department first for permission. New Scientist does not own rights to photos, but there are a variety of licensing options available for use of articles and graphics we own the copyright to.

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

The best iPhone travel apps of 2011 (Appolicious)

Some of my favorite apps on the iPhone fall under the ?Travel? category. I?m not a glutton for booking trips, rather iTunes uses that wide-ranging term to encompass everything from trip-booking apps, to grand reference guides for cities and parks, to collections of the best cuisines in certain areas. If variety is truly the spice of life, as many people claim to have once said, then travel apps are the spiciest app category. Here are five of my favorites from 2011.

An app ideal for the would-be camper that doesn?t know where to start, Oh, Ranger! ParkFinder is a massive app that has information on thousands of different public lands including state and national parks, national forests and even US Army Corps of Engineers recreation centers.

If you?re looking for something specific to do while you camp, you can search for the nearest ones that support 20 activities including caving, climbing, fishing, golfing and boating. Even if you already think you have the best camp site mapped out, Oh, Ranger! ParkFinder might be worth a look to see if there is a better one out there.

Suppose you go on a trip. Of course, you don?t want any old meal, you want the best your temporary home has to offer. Best Of? packs that and a lot more into its inviting layout. Supported in over 30 major US cities, Best Of? tells you more than 10,000 of the best things to do in a given place.

From the best burger to the best use of bacon, your every curiosity will be piqued. You can also vote on whether you agree something truly is one of the best things and even keep tabs on places you?d like to try but haven?t yet.

The strangest thing about Expedia Hotels is that it took so long to come to an iPhone. Other than that, the app is a lean, mean hotel booking machine. You can book a room in over 130,000 hotels spread across 20,000 cities worldwide in just a handful of screen taps.

It?s incredibly easy to find the best deal and the number of sort options combined with solid user reviews means you?ll rarely be led astray for your stay. You can even find directions to any hotel you?re looking at via a Google Maps screen. If you?re booking a hotel, this is the app with which to do it.

Sometimes when you?re in a strange new place, you just need somewhere relatively close by that won?t make you sick. Where To Eat? will find something better than that for you, but it does a great job keeping geography in mind. With over 45 cuisines and 30 food types, you?ll have quite the choice of selections, too.

Where To Eat? will even supply turn-by-turn directions for you to get to the restaurant you end up choosing. That?s a great feature for travelers in an unfamiliar town. And if you can?t decide what to eat at all, a quick shake of the app and Where To Eat? will find something for you in a hurry.

Road trips can be a blast, especially when you start exploring the little-known places off the sides of small town exits. RoadAhead attempts to help you out even further on your journey by giving you all the info you can use on the upcoming exits on your trip. It will calculate where you are and tell you pertinent info on the next exit, including the price of gas and what sort of shops and restaurants are nearby.

RoadAhead covers every exit on all highways in the US and you can also use it when you?re not on the highway by entering the road and nearby exits you?ll be passing by. You can also search by category, in case you want to scope out the cheapest gas at the next three exits.

Love travel apps? Create your very own list here.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/applecomputer/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/appolicious_rss/rss_appolicious_tc/http___www_appolicious_com_articles10369_the_best_iphone_travel_apps_of_2011/43803408/SIG=12kf963tj/*http%3A//www.appolicious.com/tech/articles/10369-the-best-iphone-travel-apps-of-2011

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