Saturday, May 25, 2013

Moon hit by boulder-size meteoroid, causing 'explosion' visible from Earth (+video)

If you had been looking up at the moon at the right moment on March 17, you could have seen a one-second burst of heat caused by the impact of a large meteoroid.

By Mark Trumbull,?Staff writer / May 18, 2013

Hundreds of meteoroid impacts on the moon, detected by NASA's lunar monitoring program, are pictured in this undated NASA handout photo. The brightest, detected on March 17, 2013, in Mare Imbrium, is marked by the red square.

NASA/Handout/REUTERS

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If you had been looking up at the moon at the right moment on March 17, you could have seen an unusual flash of light ? a one-second burst of heat caused by the impact of a large meteoroid.

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'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; // google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // --> NASA researchers who monitor the Moon for meteoroid impacts have detected the brightest explosion in the history of their program.

No telescope required.

?For about one second, the impact site was glowing like a 4th magnitude star,? NASA said in reporting the news Friday.

This meteoroid was the size of a small boulder, and was travelling very fast. NASA estimates the size at 0.3 to 0.4 meters wide, and the speed at 56,000 miles per hour.?

The resulting explosion? delivered a force equal to 5 tons of TNT.

NASA puts a footnote on the word ?explosion.? The bright light wasn?t combustion, since the moon has no oxygen atmosphere. Rather, it was the glow of molten rock and hot vapors after an impact of large kinetic force.

That said, this was the biggest such ?explosion? in eight years of close monitoring of the moon?s surface.

And it?s not that meteoroids on the lunar surface are rare.

The moon lacks a protective atmosphere like Earth?s, in which meteoroids typically burn up. Lunar meteor showers have turned out to be more common than expected, with hundreds of detectable impacts per year.

On March 17, the pyrotechnics on the moon coincided with an active night for meteors in Earth?s atmosphere as well.

NASA?s Space Exploration Policy eventually calls for extended astronaut stays on the moon, so tracking meteor activity has long-term relevance.

?Identifying the sources of lunar meteors and measuring their impact rates gives future lunar explorers an idea of what to expect,? the space agency said in announcing the bright explosion Friday. ?Is it safe to go on a moonwalk, or not?? The middle of March might be a good time to stay inside.??

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/FTebFAvcP94/Moon-hit-by-boulder-size-meteoroid-causing-explosion-visible-from-Earth-video

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Box Acquires French File Storage Startup Folders To Help Develop Its Next-Gen iOS App

Box.net-LogoIt was just two weeks ago that fast-growing enterprise cloud storage company, Box, went out and acquired document embedding service and Y Combinator grad, Crocodoc. Apparently Aaron Levie sees what Yahoo is doing and he wants to show that Box is ready to do a little acquiring of its own.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/cLnbl0ZvHcQ/

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Friday, May 24, 2013

Kentucky Tax on Internet Sales worth $200 M | WEKU

Your online purchases could alleviate some of Kentucky's budget woes. The federal legislation that allows states to collect sales taxes from more online retailers would benefit the Kentucky state budget, argues a policy group focused on economic policy.? If such legislation passed, Kentucky could gain $130 million to $200 million in revenue per year, the state's?Blue Ribbon Tax Commission has estimated.

That sort of money could lead to a restoration to programs that have recently been cut, including the?child care subsidy for low-incoming, working families,?says?Jason Bailey, director of the Kentucky Center for Economic Policy.

The new revenue wouldn't be a miracle fix for the state budget, Bailey says, but it could reverse some serious cuts made the last few years.

"But there's some key cuts that have gotten a lot of attention that people are concern about, like the child care cuts, like the textbooks, that this could definitely help with," he says.?

Bailey argues that the bill's opponents are wrong to call it a new tax?because online sales are already suppose to have sales tax applied to them. But, under current law, the onus is on the customer to pay those taxes and compliance and oversight is low, he says.?

The proposed federal legislation?would put an onus on large companies to collect state sales taxes on their products when sold online, but would exempt businesses that have less than $1 million a year in revenue.

The bill has already passed the U.S. Senate, but is hung up in the House. Of Kentucky's federal delegation only U.S. Rep. John Yarmuth, a Democrat, is supporting the bill. Republican Congressman Thomas Massie?has opposed it, while the other four Congressional members have not weighed in yet.?

The bill passed with heavy bipartisan support in the Senate. But both of Kentucky's Republican senators, Mitch McConnell and Rand Paul, voted about the bill.?

Bailey adds that under currently law many small businesses lose out on revenue to online sales, yet the so-called internet sales tax bill could level the playing field. Also, many poor families don't have the luxury of computer to buy things online, Bailey says, which is another way the bill would help level things out.?

"It's a win-win across the board for the budget, for small businesses, for tax fairness," he says.?

--

Source: http://weku.fm/post/kentucky-tax-internet-sales-worth-200-m

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Tests show that deadly flu could spread among people

New influenza virus transmits through air between ferrets, raising concerns that it could do the same in humans

New influenza virus transmits through air between ferrets, raising concerns that it could do the same in humans

By Tina Hesman Saey

Web edition: May 23, 2013

A new bird flu that has killed 36 people in China can spread from ferret to ferret through the air. A laboratory test showing airborne transmission of the H7N9 avian influenza virus between the animals has raised fears that the virus is poised to become a human pandemic.

The H7N9 avian influenza virus emerged suddenly at the end of February and has infected 131 people. A few patients may have caught the virus from other infected people, but no evidence has emerged that H7N9 can readily transmit from human to human.

To find out how the virus might spread among people, an international group of researchers infected ferrets, which often stand as proxies for people in influenza studies. Infected ferrets passed the virus to all of the uninfected animals housed in the same cage, indicating that H7N9 spreads through direct contact, the team reports May 23 in Science. One of three uninfected ferrets in neighboring cages also caught the virus, suggesting that it can also transmit through airborne droplets when an infected animal sneezes or coughs. Airborne transmission among people is a prerequisite for a pandemic.

As a comparison, the researchers also exposed ferrets to an airborne flu strain that caused a pandemic in 2009. All of the animals got sick. Because only one of three ferrets that could have contracted the new H7N9 virus through the air actually did, the researchers conclude that airborne H7N9 transmission is inefficient.?

But the experiment was not designed to quantify the efficiency of airborne transmission and ferrets aren?t perfect representations of people, so it may be difficult to gauge a person?s risk of catching H7N9 through airborne droplets, says coauthor Robert Webster of St. Jude Children?s Research Hospital in Memphis. ?It shows it can happen. Statistically, who knows what it means??

There?s no guarantee the virus will spread similarly from person to person, says Ana Fernandez-Sesma, a viral immunologist at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York. In the experiment, ferrets are together for hours with forced airflow under temperature and humidity conditions that favor viral transmission, she says. ?I don?t think this is what happens in real life.?

Ram Sasisekharan, an MIT biochemist who studies influenza viruses, agrees that the virus probably is not capable of person-to-person spread through the air. But it could evolve that ability. ?With these viruses, you will never know if and when they mutate and if it will acquire mutations that will be a cause of concern,? he says.

That could happen via pigs. The animals can serve as mixing vessels where human and bird viruses swap genes, creating new flu strains. That?s how the 2009 pandemic virus came to be. In the new study, the researchers exposed pigs to the H7N9 virus. The animals became infected but didn?t pass the new flu to other pigs or to ferrets, the researchers found. That result indicates that pigs probably are not a source of the virus and would not pass H7N9 along if they did become infected. Outside the lab, no pigs have been found to carry the virus.

Public health officials have not located the origin of the H7N9 virus, but growing evidence suggests that birds sold at live poultry markets infected some patients. George Gao of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention in Beijing and colleagues have now traced the source of one woman?s infection to poultry sold at the market where she was a butcher. Those birds already carried the virus when they arrived from a wholesaler. The team recounts the trail May 22 in the New England Journal of Medicine.

No new human cases have been reported since May 8, which Webster attributes partially to the seasons changing (summer weather is not favorable to the flu), but mainly to China?s temporary closing of the live bird markets in Shanghai and other affected areas. The markets have been closed since April 6 and the government has not announced when trading will resume. ?We could get it stamped out if China can close the markets for a bit longer,? Webster says.

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/350619/title/Tests_show_that_deadly_flu_could_spread_among_people

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City gears up for All-Energy conference

Council news??>??Press Releases??>??City gears up for All-Energy conference

The UK's largest renewable energy event takes place at the Aberdeen Exhibition and Conference Centre this week.

All-Energy 2013 will attract more than 8,000 visitors to the city and cement the region's reputation as a leader in the renewables and energy industry. Hundreds of exhibitors, including organisations from the city and Aberdeenshire, as well as from overseas, are participating in the event which will hear from hundreds of speakers in the conference and seminars.

Lord Provost of Aberdeen George Adam will give an introductory speech at the annual two-day event tomorrow [Wednesday].

As a long-standing supporter of All-Energy, Aberdeen City Council continues to support the AREG Aberdeen City and Shire pavilion at the exhibition to ensure Aberdeen's high profile in the industry sector is maintained.

The pavilion will feature local businesses, demonstrating the region's leading capabilities in renewable energy innovation, skills and supply chain solutions. Aberdeen City Council will have two stands on the pavilion: one promoting the development opportunities available in the city, the Energetica Corridor, and the EU-funded MUSIC Project, which aims to halve carbon emissions in Aberdeen by 2030; the other is dedicated to hydrogen projects and plans.

Council leader Barney Crockett said: "The week of the All-Energy conference is always a very busy and exciting time in Aberdeen, with delegates flying in from across the globe and bringing in a phenomenal wealth of expertise across all aspects of the energy industry to complement our energy city's leading renewables knowledge-base.

"Huge amounts of business are done during All-Energy and it presents great opportunities to attract new investment in Aberdeen, while establishing new links and building on existing partnerships.

"This year the council has taken its own stand in the AREG pavilion to promote the Energetica Corridor and the many development opportunities available in the city. We also have a stand dedicated to hydrogen and the city's exciting plans to secure a hydrogen economy in Aberdeen and build on our hydrogen infrastructure projects.

"The future is bright for Aberdeen. Business is booming here and All-Energy provides an ideal opportunity to show what the energy city can offer now and in the future."

Visit Aberdeen City Council on stands AB11 and AB13 in the AREG Aberdeen City and Shire pavilion.

Source: http://www.aberdeencity.gov.uk/CouncilNews/ci_cns/pr_AllEnergy_210513.asp

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Revised Edition of The Pacific Islands: Environment and Society ...

Posted by UH Press Marketing on 22 May 2013

The Pacific IslandsThe Pacific is the last major world region to be discovered by humans. Although small in total land area, its numerous islands and archipelagoes with their startlingly diverse habitats and biotas, extend across a third of the globe. This revised edition of the popular text The Pacific Islands: Environment and Society, edited by Moshe Rapaport, explores the diverse landforms, climates, and ecosystems of the Pacific island region. Multiple chapters, written by leading specialists, cover the environment, history, culture, population, and economy. The work includes new or completely revised chapters on gender, music, logging, development, education, urbanization, health, ocean resources, and tourism. Throughout two key issues are addressed: the exceptional environmental challenges and the demographic/economic/political challenges facing the region. Although modern technology and media and waves of continental tourists are fast eroding island cultures, the continuing resilience of Pacific island populations is apparent.

May 2013 / ISBN 978-0-8248-3586-6 / $48.00 (PAPER)

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Source: http://uhpress.wordpress.com/2013/05/22/revised-edition-of-the-pacific-islands-environment-and-society-now-available/

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Thursday, May 23, 2013

1.1 Million Memorial Day Travelers Launch Summer Vacation Season

LANSING (WWJ) ? An estimated 1.1 million Michigan residents will travel 50 miles or more on vacation during the upcoming Memorial Day weekend, launching the 2013 summer travel season, according to AAA Michigan. The Memorial Day holiday travel period is defined as Thursday, May 23 to Monday, May 27.

AAA says the iconic road trip will be the dominant mode of transportation, with 89 percent of travelers nationally going by vehicle. In Michigan, nearly 92 percent will travel by vehicle, slightly more than last year. They will find Michigan gas prices about $3.93 per gallon (as of May 22), up 20 cents from last year.

The number of air travelers in Michigan is slightly down from last year ? 4.8 percent this year, compared to nearly 6 percent last year. The remaining estimated three percent of travelers will go by train or bus.

According to AAA?s Leisure Travel Index, hotel rates for AAA Three-Diamond lodgings are expected to increase four percent, with travelers spending an average $166 nightly. Weekend daily car rental rates will average $43, 19 percent more than last year.

According to survey results, the average distance traveled during the holiday is expected to be 690 miles, 48 miles more than last year. Median spending is expected to be $659, six percent less than last year. Transportation is expected to consume some 28 cents of every dollar. Travelers expect to spend 22 percent on food and beverage and 20 percent on lodging.

Among popular state top travel destinations will be campgrounds, resort areas and lakes.

Source: http://detroit.cbslocal.com/2013/05/22/road-trip-1-1-million-memorial-day-travelers-launch-summer-vacation-season/

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Building Xbox One: An inside look at Microsoft's play for the next generation of gaming

Building Xbox One

The engineers in Microsoft's windowless next-gen Xbox silicon lab are rattled. And understandably so. We're in their office, after all, and we have a mess of cameras in the one place you're not allowed to have cameras (or even cellphones). We're obviously outsiders on Microsoft's multi-building, security-heavy Mountain View campus, especially given our quartet of esteemed escorts: Todd Holmdahl, Ilan Spillinger, Nick Baker and Greg Williams. These four gentlemen are leading the charge on both Microsoft's next big thing and, perhaps more importantly, a major effort to internalize silicon architecture at the traditionally software-focused megacorp.

The skittish engineers aren't worried we'll film the mess of 24-inch LCD screens running video-compression tests, or the rows of desks with water hose stations used for temperature stress tests, or even the sea of circuit boards in various states of disrepair -- that's all standard for any Silicon Valley computer lab. It's really just a single chip that's causing concern: a custom-built Microsoft SoC that sits at the heart of the Xbox One. It's this SoC that has us in Mountain View, Calif. -- in Silicon Valley, literally down the road from Google -- a mere five days before Microsoft will unveil its next game console to the world. Over six hours last Friday, we learned not just about that SoC, but also how the company plans to utilize it in the new console. We spoke with its four lead hardware architects. We toured the labs where they are testing the silicon, and where the next-generation Kinect was born. What follows is more than a look behind the silicon that drives the next Xbox -- it's a deep dive into the changing approach Microsoft's taking to creating devices.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/21/building-xbox-one-an-inside-look/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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I'm an idiot. Protected sex with an escort. STDs risk? - STDs - MedHelp

Welcome to the forum.??THanks for your question.

I guess I'll start by saying the title you chose for your question is an oxymoron, i.e. internally contradictory.??Sex with an escort???Potentially risky.??Protected???No risk for HIV and little or none for other STDs.

Even the escort part may not have been risky, even without a condom.??Many escorts -- i.e. expensive female sex workers by appointment -- probably have low STD rates, especially if they use condoms regularly (as yours seems to do).??They also tend to be selective in their clients (you're at low risk for STDs, right? -- probably the same for others), and many get tested regularly to assure they are disease free, which also seems to apply to your partner.??After all, they don't want bad health outcomes any more than you do -- and of course it would also be pretty bad for business!

The important thing, though, is that condom-protected sex is safe sex.??How the condom is applied makes little difference.??As for potential exposure to saliva by applying the condom with her mouth, even without a condom, unprotected oral sex is generally safe -- not completely free of STD risk, but low risk for all STDs and virtually zero risk for some, including HIV.

As for the genital discomfort you describe, there is no STD that causes such symptoms -- and anyway, it began too soon, since no STD can start to cause symptoms of any kind sooner than 2-3 days after exposure, and for most infections the incubation period is a week or more.??You're on the right track with your statement about stress.??This sort of symptom is typical for genitally focused anxiety following a regretted sexual choice.

Had you asked ahead of time, I would have recommended against taking doxycycline.??However, now that you have started, you need to take it in the present dose for a full 7 days.??It will prevent any infection with chlamydia, syphilis, and gonorrhea from taking hold.??But don't expect it to clear your genital discomfort (except maybe by placebo effect).??And don't bother to be tested for any of these 3 STDs:??if you in fact were infected, the doxycycline will eradicate them no test will ever be positive.??One of the downsides of self treatment is that there will never be any way for you to know for sure whether you actually caught anything.

So I don't advise any testing at all.??The risk for any other STD is nil, including HPV, herpes, viral hepatitis, or HIV.??And if you have a regular sex partner, I would advise you to continue unprotected sex without fear of transmitting anything.??That's what I would do if somehow I found myself in this situation.

I hope this has helped.??Best wishes--??HHH, MD

Source: http://www.medhelp.org/posts/STDs/Im-an-idiot-Protected-sex-with-an-escort-STDs-risk/show/1950615

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Thursday, May 16, 2013

Melting Glaciers Cause One-Third of Sea-Level Rise

The world's glaciers lost 260 gigatons of water each year between 2003 and 2009, making these rivers of ice responsible for almost a third of sea-level rise in that time, new research finds.

The study, to appear tomorrow (May 17) in the journal Science, used multiple methods to pin down estimates of how much ice is lost from glaciers. The results suggest that on-the-ground measurements yield estimates that are too extreme, but some satellite methods don't go far enough.

"There was a large amount of uncertainty in how much these glaciers were contributing to sea-level rise prior to this study," lead researcher Alex Gardner, a professor of geography at Clark University in Massachusetts, told LiveScience. "What our study provides is a really strong estimate for what the glacial contribution was over this time." [Ice World: Gallery of Awe-Inspiring Glaciers]

Observing ice

Sea-level rise is caused by melting ice from glaciers as well as from the Greenland ice sheet and the Antarctic ice sheet. Sea levels also go up as the oceans warm, because warm water takes up more space. Teasing out the influence of each factor can be tricky.

In November, an international group of researchers published a study in Science estimating the loss of ice from polar ice sheet melt. That research determined that ice lost from Antarctica and Greenland is responsible for a fifth of the 2.2 inches (5.59 centimeters) of sea-level rise since 1992.

"What they did for the ice sheets, we've done for the glaciers," Gardner said.

In many ways, glaciers are even tougher to track than ice sheets. They're scattered across the globe, many in inaccessible spots. Before 2002, all scientists could do was trek out on the ice, make measurements, track changes, and then extrapolate those changes to glaciers they couldn't observe directly.

In 2002 and 2003, however, NASA launched two satellite missions to give a better view of Earth's melting ice. The first, GRACE (or Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment), uses two satellites that measure the Earth's gravity field. These satellites can detect changes in the gravity field that occur when a glacier loses or gains a lot of ice.

A second mission, ICESat (Ice, Cloud and land Elevation Satellite), ran until 2009 and measured, among other things, Earth's elevation across the globe. These elevation measurements also captured changes in ice thickness.

Bringing it all together

Gardner and his colleagues compared the data from these satellite missions directly. The two have different strengths, he said. GRACE, for example, is not sensitive enough to tell the difference between ice lost from ice sheets and ice lost from glaciers right next door to ice sheets ? which include about 30 percent of the world's glaciers.

For large regions, Gardner said, GRACE and ICESat's measurements are nonetheless in close agreement. In contrast, in icy regions of less than about 1,900 square miles (5,000 square kilometers), the satellite measurements didn't agree as clearly.

That lack of agreement is because GRACE doesn't always catch melt in small glaciers, which are often in mountainous regions surrounded by lakes and groundwater.?

"What if the glaciers are melting but the lake is filling?" Gardner said. "GRACE sees that nothing happened, because no mass was actually removed from that region."

The upside, Gardner said, is that in large icy areas, GRACE and ICESat provide strong measurements of melt. In spots dotted with smaller glaciers, ground observations turn out to be more accurate.

The 260 gigatons of water lost per year was more than would be expected from previous satellite estimates, which were limited in scope. But the loss was less than would have been expected from extrapolating just from ground measurements, likely because glaciers that are closer to civilization and therefore easier to observe may be melting more rapidly than remote glaciers, Gardner said.

Future melt

Antarctic glaciers lost the least ice overall, the researchers found, because spots on the continent melting rapidly were offset by other regions gaining ice. Glaciers in the Canadian Arctic, Alaska, coastal Greenland, the southern Andes and high-mountain Asia were vanishing rapidly, however. Glaciers alone were responsible for about 0.3 inches (0.71 millimeters) of sea-level rise per year between 2003 and 2009, the researchers concluded. The glacial melt represents about 30 percent of the sea-level rise in that time period. [8 Ways Global Warming is Already Changing the World]

?Now that it's clear that ground observations weren't providing good estimates, scientists need to go back to their old observational data to try to figure out how to use it to come up with better global estimates of previous glacier melt, Gardner said. Knowing what happened in the past is important for understanding what will come in the future. The current study can't say precisely what future climate change has in store.

"All we know is that every region on Earth right now, regardless of any additional warming, is losing glacial mass to the oceans," he said. "We anticipate that the rate will increase with additional warning."

Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter?and Google+. Follow us @livescience, Facebook?& 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/melting-glaciers-cause-one-third-sea-level-rise-180709507.html

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Google intros Play for Education, a curated portal for apps and books

Google intros Play for Education, curates apps and books

Google's making it easy for educators and their students to discover and recommend applications and books with Play for Education. Announced onstage at this year's I/O by Chris Yerga, Google's Android Engineering Director, the new Play storefront organizes content by education type, age and various other criteria to make the content discovery process simple for higher learning institutions. What's more, all of the content that appears within this curated portal bears educators' stamps of approval, so users know that what they're accessing is tried-and-tested for quality.

Play for Education also makes use of Google+ groups, so schools and universities can quickly push apps, books and other content out to their students and even bill to one central account. A pilot program for the service has already been underway with six New Jersey schools. Despite Google making the service official today, the actual sign-up window for general access won't be until sometime later this fall. However, developers can start submitting their applications right now.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/15/google-intros-play-for-education-a-curated-portal-for-apps-and/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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New secretary lays out agenda on Native Americans

WASHINGTON (AP) ? New Interior Secretary Sally Jewell is prepared to detail how she will move forward on issues affecting Native Americans and Alaska Natives.

Jewell is scheduled to testify Wednesday afternoon before the Senate Indian Affairs Committee chaired by Washington Democratic Sen. Maria Cantwell.

Jewell's experience with Native American affairs is limited and she's not as well known among tribes as her predecessor, former Secretary Ken Salazar. But she has had a relationship with tribes in the committee chairwoman's home state.

Her appearance at the hearing comes as tribes have been watching for the effects of budget cuts on their programs, many that are very dependent on federal money. The Obama administration has won praise from tribes for work it has done on their behalf.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/secretary-lays-agenda-native-americans-170123739.html

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Alcatel One Touch Idol (Unlocked)


You might have seen the Alcatel One Touch Idol in Iron Man 3. I haven't seen it yet, but with its sleek, thin design, I can see how the Idol looks like a natural pairing for Tony Stark's rich-boy bravado. But I can't imagine that Iron Man himself would ever use a device that's so behind the times. The Idol has no LTE, for instance. There's no HSPA+ either, which means you're stuck in the Internet slow lane. Performance is less than stellar across the board, voice dialing doesn't work, and the camera takes photos that border on impressionistic. The attractive design and $299.99 price tag may make the Idol seem tempting, but you don't need to spend more money to score a much better phone.

Design and Call Quality
Aside from the price, the best thing the Idol has going for it is its design. The phone measures 5.24 by 2.66 by 0.31 inches (HWD), which feels like the perfect size for a big-screen phone you can still comfortably hold in one hand. It is extremely thin, and at just 3.88 ounces, Alcatel claims this is the lightest phone available for its size.

The phone has a unibody construction, made entirely of high-quality plastic designed to look like brushed aluminum, with a buttonless, all-glass front panel. I reviewed the silver model, but the phone comes in a number of much louder colors like green, red, and turquoise. There's a volume rocker and SIM cards slot on the right, a headphone jack and Power button on the top, and a microSD card slot on the left. The back of the phone is completely sealed, so there's no access to the 1,800mAh battery. I prefer a removable back, so you can carry a spare battery if necessary, and the Idol was only good for 6 hours and 31 minutes of talk time on AT&T's network.

The Idol's 4.7-inch IPS LCD is a mixed bag. It gets very bright, but the 960-by-540-pixel resolution makes it considerably less sharp than many of the 720 and 1080p screens we've been seeing lately, on phones like the Oppo Find 5?and Sony Xperia ZL. Alcatel claims there's a special coating on the display that repels fingerprint oil, but it didn't seem to look noticeably different than any number of new phones we've tested.

The Idol is unlocked, so you can use it on either AT&T or T-Mobile's network, or with smaller GSM-based carriers like Simple Mobile (which uses T-Mobile's network). But no matter which carrier you choose, the Idol is running at painfully crippled network speeds. There's no LTE support, or even HSPA+. The phone maxes out at HSPA 7.2, which places you firmly in 3G territory. I tested the phone on AT&T's network and got fine reception, but the phone struggled to reach download speeds of 1Mbps. Uploads were even worse. That means unless you're connected to Wi-Fi (the phone supports 802.11 b/g/n), using the Idol can feel frustratingly slow.

At least call quality is good. Voices sound extremely crisp and clear in the phone's earpiece. Calls made with the phone sound round and full, though aggressive noise cancellation can make voices sound slightly muted. The speakerphone is not loud enough to hear outdoors. I paired the phone with a Jawbone Era?Bluetooth headset. Calls sounded fine, but I was unable to use voice dialing. I tried again without the headset, but the voice dialing app doesn't seem to work at all.

Performance, Android, and Apps
We're seeing more and more quad-core phones every day, but so far there's nothing wrong with a phone still powered by a good dual-core processor. Unfortunately, this one isn't. The Idol uses a dual-core 1GHz MediaTek MT6577 chip, which turned in some pretty low benchmark scores. It's fast enough that navigating your way around the phone feels fine, but opening apps can take a while, and 3D gaming performance is poor. You'll still be able to run most of the 800,000+ apps in the Google Play store, but they may not run optimally.

(Next page: Camera, Multimedia, and Conclusions)

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/VO9EmywthdI/0,2817,2418898,00.asp

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Tuesday, May 14, 2013

New approach to back immigration bill

WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Barack Obama's political support group is joining with a Republican pro-immigration organization and an effort run by New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg to try to boost support for a comprehensive immigration bill.

Organizing for Action, a grassroots group run by Obama loyalists that grew out of his 2012 re-election campaign, will co-sponsor a "virtual march on Washington" planned for next week aimed at getting people to use social media platforms to register their support for the immigration legislation.

Bloomberg's Partnership for a New American Economy is behind the effort, and was announcing OFA's participation Tuesday. Republicans for Immigration Reform, a group headed by former Bush administration Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez, also is co-chairing the endeavor.

"By bringing together leaders from both parties and Americans across the country, we hope to send Congress a clear message that there is broad support for smart reform ? and the time for action is now," Bloomberg said in a statement.

The virtual "March for Innovation," planned for May 22-23, is designed to get people to use Twitter, Reddit, Facebook and other social media platforms to push Congress to pass the immigration bill, which may come to a vote next week in the Senate Judiciary Committee.

It's another sign of engagement by business and high-tech leaders and officials across the political spectrum to support the immigration legislation.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/approach-back-immigration-bill-132913645.html

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Gene associated with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis identified

May 12, 2013 ? Researchers from the RIKEN Center for Integrative Medical Sciences in Japan have identified the first gene to be associated with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (also called AIS) across Asian and Caucasian populations. The gene is involved in the growth and development of the spine during childhood.

Their study is published today in the journal Nature Genetics.

AIS is the most common pediatric skeletal disease, affecting approximately 2% of school-age children. The causes of scoliosis remain largely unknown and brace treatment and surgery are the only treatment options. However, many clinical and genetic studies suggest a contribution of genetic factors.

To understand the causes and development of scoliosis, Dr Ikuyo Kou, Dr Shiro Ikegawa and their team have tried to identify genes that are associated with a susceptibility to develop the condition.

By studying the genome of 1,819 Japanese individuals suffering from scoliosis and comparing it to 25,939 Japanese individuals, the team identified a gene associated with a susceptibility to develop scoliosis on chromosome 6. The association was replicated in Han Chinese and Caucasian populations.

The researchers show that the susceptibility gene, GPR126, is highly expressed in cartilage and that suppression of this gene leads to delayed growth and bone tissue formation in the developing spine. GPR126 is also known to play a role in human height and trunk length.

"Our finding suggest the interesting possibility that GPR126 may affect both AIS susceptibility and height through abnormal spinal development and growth," explain the authors.

"Further functional studies are necessary to elucidate how alterations in GPR126 increase the risk of AIS in humans," they conclude.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/M5VGft2quH0/130512140943.htm

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Sunday, May 12, 2013

Prince Harry, injured U.S. officer launch Warrior Games

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) ? Combat helicopter pilot Prince Harry of Britain along with Olympic swimming champion Missy Franklin joined an American naval officer who had been blinded in Afghanistan in launching the Warrior Games for wounded service members.

Lt. Bradley Snyder, Harry and Franklin lifted a torch Saturday to ignite an Olympic-style cauldron, after completing the last leg of a brief torch relay at the U.S. Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs to formally start the games. .

It was a touching start to the Paralympic-style games, which run through Thursday. About 260 athletes are competing in basketball, volleyball, shooting, archery, track and field and swimming ? Snyder's sport.

Britain sent a 35-member team, and the prince met with the athletes earlier in the day. He also sat on a gymnasium floor in a circle of 12 sitting volleyball players, batting the ball around amid whoops and laughter.

Harry served as a combat helicopter in pilot in Afghanistan, and the British veterans said that makes him easy to talk to.

"He knows what it's like out there," said Army Capt. Dave Henson, a member of the volleyball team. "He's been on the ground and in the air."

Henson, 28, lost both legs when an improvised bomb exploded in Afghanistan two years ago. He said Harry took a personal interest in the athletes' recovery and the quality of their health care.

Royal Marine Matthew Hancox, 25, said the prince recognized some wounded veterans he had met before and asked them how they were recovering.

"He's very down-to-earth," said Hancox, who was shot in the chest in Afghanistan in 2011.

The prince on Saturday afternoon pulled a Union Jack jersey over his uniform and joined the British team in a raucous exhibition game of sitting volleyball against U.S. players. That delighted the audience of several hundred and prompted a string of teasing taunts from the arena announcer.

The visit to Colorado got underway Friday night when Harry charmed dozens of dignitaries, British expatriates, students and military officers at a cocktail party welcoming him to Colorado. He also joined the crowd in singing "Happy Birthday" to Franklin, a Coloradan who was celebrating turning 18 at a golf club south of Denver.

She won four gold medals in the 2012 Olympic Games in London.

A captain in Britain's Army Air Corps, Harry has deployed to Afghanistan twice, and he wore a brown camouflage uniform and tan combat boots when he met with the British team.

His first deployment, as a forward air controller in 2007-2008, was cut short after 10 weeks when details of his whereabouts were disclosed in the media.

On his second deployment, he was a co-pilot and gunner on an Apache helicopter.

He acknowledged to reporters he had targeted Taliban fighters, and when asked if he had killed anyone, said, "Yeah, so, lots of people have."

He's attending the Colorado games because he believes the wounded deserve recognition, according to a statement from St. James' Palace in London, the official residence of the royal family.

"He seemed very interested in what stage we are all in in terms of our rehabilitation," said Erica Vey, a veteran of the British Air Force.

Vey, who competes in track and field and shooting, had a leg amputated after an injury she suffered when a cargo plane had to take sudden evasive action.

Harry caused a scandal on his last trip to the U.S. when he was photographed frolicking nude with an unidentified woman in a Las Vegas hotel suite in August.

"It was probably a classic example of me probably being too much army, and not enough prince," he said afterward.

___

Follow Dan Elliott at http://twitter.com/DanElliottAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/uk-prince-injured-us-officer-launch-warrior-games-080435580.html

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Saturday, May 11, 2013

Dog DNA May Yield Clues to Human Eczema - Health News and ...

shepherd2 Dog DNA May Yield Clues to Human Eczema

FRIDAY, May 10 (HealthDay News) ? A gene associated with eczema in dogs has been identified, and that might one day lead to better treatments for people with the skin disease, a new study contends.

The skin of patients with eczema ? whether canine or human ? is easily irritated by allergens such as pollens, house mites and certain foods. This irritation leads to itching, scratching and flaky skin that is vulnerable to infections.

Examining the DNA of dogs, the researchers found that a genetic region associated with eczema contains the gene PKP-2, which produces a protein important for the formation and proper functioning of skin structure. The finding suggests that an abnormal skin barrier is a potential risk factor for eczema, the study authors said.

?With the help of pet owners, we have managed to collect a unique set of DNA samples from sick and healthy dogs, which allowed us to gain insight into atopic dermatitis genetics,? said first author Katarina Tengvall of Uppsala University in Sweden.

The findings, published online May 9 in the journal PLoS Genetics, could lead to better understanding of the disease, which may open the door to improved treatments and perhaps a genetic test for the condition, Tengvall said in a journal news release.

Eczema affects 10 percent to 30 percent of people and up to 10 percent of dogs. Purebred German shepherds are prone to eczema because of generations of selective breeding, the researchers said.

For the study, the researchers compared DNA samples from healthy dogs with DNA samples from German shepherds that had eczema to locate the particular genetic segment associated with the disease. Compared to human DNA, the structure of canine DNA makes it easier to locate areas that carry disease-risk genes, the researchers said.

The similarity between canine and human eczema was underscored by another recent discovery, the researchers said. In that case, a gene involved in the skin barrier was linked to human eczema.

More information

The American Academy of Family Physicians has more about eczema.

HEALTHDAY Web XSmall Dog DNA May Yield Clues to Human Eczema

Source: http://news.health.com/2013/05/10/dog-dna-may-yield-clues-to-human-eczema/

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These Are The 10 Worst Moms on TV (But We Still Love Them)

As Mother's Day arrives, you may find yourself lovingly recalling all that Mom has sacrificed for her family -- and maybe even her few missteps along the way. (Granting you permission for that perm in the '80s, perhaps?)

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/10-worst-mothers-television-we-still-love-them/1-a-535509?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3A10-worst-mothers-television-we-still-love-them-535509

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Friday, May 10, 2013

This Pioneer Turntable Really Grooves

Featuring direct drive and an auto-return tone arm, the Pioneer PL-4 remains a popular turntable sought after by collectors and audiophiles alike more than three decades after its introduction. And after watching this slick piece of retro-futurism from Light & Hevvy, mixing vintage-style shots with Mario Moretti's "In Love With Nebula," is there any wonder why? [LXH - Vinyl Engine]

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Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/MxeODaBN0w8/this-pioneer-turntable-really-grooves-496487575

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Thursday, May 9, 2013

Bone Thugs-N-Harmony rapper arrested at hotel

Celebs

15 hours ago

Layzie Bone.

Getty Images file

Layzie Bone got into some trouble with the law! Early Tuesday morning, the Bone Thugs-N-Harmony rapper was arrested in a Calabasas, Calif., hotel room on two outstanding warrants, the Lost Hills Sheriff's department tells E! News.

Police were first called to the hotel room of Layzie Bone (real name: Steven Howse) because of reports of loud music. Then, deputies conducted a routine identification check and determined Bone had two outstanding warrants, for which he was arrested without incident.

VIDEO: Watch Reese Witherspoon get arrested

The sheriff's department tells E! News that one warrant, for $80,000, was for being an unlicensed driver. It is unknown what the second warrant was for.

The rapper was released from police custody at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday.

PHOTOS: Celebrity mug shots

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/bone-thugs-n-harmony-rapper-layzie-bone-arrested-hotel-room-1C9840871

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'Rihanna 777? Tour Documentary: Review Revue | Music News ...

Remember Rihanna?s whirlwind 777 tour from a few months ago? No? Our own Robbie Daw certainly does, despite his attempts to erase it from his memory. And he was forced to relive the entire exodus/nightmare last night (May 6) when the?Rihanna 777 documentary aired?on Fox. The film (which, surprisingly, was not directed and edited by Rih), follows the Bajan superstar as she embarks on a seven-country, seven-show tour in just seven days.

As impossible and unnecessary as the journey may seem, there?s now a probably unnecessary behind-the-scenes look at how the whole thing went down. So, was the video chronicle the same sort of bizarre hellscape that the #RihannaPlane turned out to be? Here?s what some of the invited journalists and critics had to say about the doc.

::?The Hollywood Reporter?had 777 journalist Emily Zemler give her take: ?Instead of revealing the entertaining tumult that characterized the 777 Tour, the documentary crew has chastened the experience in the editing room, glossing over the rioting incident and the long hours spent waiting around for?Rihanna?to finish lingerie shopping in Paris.?

:: Contact Music?felt little connection to the star:??Rihanna fans are going to lap this up, but anyone looking to learn more about the star might want to steer clear, as the general consensus is that it?s a pile of contrived PR.?

:: SPIN?offers a gloomy outlook:??The beginning of?Rihanna 777, the?RihannaPlane documentary?that aired on Fox last night, is somewhat like the start of a movie like?Turistas. Shots outside the aircraft?s windows into the clouds indicate hope and excitement, and the passengers ? eagerly tearing open their gift bags ? are shouting and giggling and ribbing one another. But you know that by the end, everyone involved will be slaughtered and vivisected in a bloody pile.?

:: Huffington Post?highlights the singer?s performances: ?This isn?t Madonna?s ?Truth or Dare? (or even Katy Perry?s ?Part of Me?); it?s a Rihanna look-book, somehow made less interesting than the singer?s Instagram feed. The performances shown feature her live voice, which has never been Rihanna?s selling point.?

:: USA Today?felt disconnected:??While fans might find her interactions with band and crewmembers backstage interesting, those encounters aren?t particularly revealing. And by the time the trip winds up in New York, everyone involved is elated that it?s over. Even so, the film doesn?t come close to reflecting the tedium described by journalists in their dispatches from the trip.?

:: LA Times?tends to agree: ?This film doesn?t illuminate much about one of contemporary pop?s most successful artists, or even about the famously fraught tour itself. Instead, ?777? is a lightweight Rihanna hagiography, with none of the live-wire tension or creative demons that?D.A. Pennebaker?or Martin Scorsese brought to their own classic music docs ?Don?t Look Back? and ?The Last Waltz.??

Did you watch the Rihanna 777 documentary? Let us know what you thought in the comments below or by hitting us up on?Facebook?and?Twitter!

Source: http://idolator.com/7456897/rihanna-777-tour-documentary-review-revue

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Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Jays' Happ hit in head by line drive, carted off

Toronto Blue Jays starting pitcher J.A. Happ is taken off the field on a stretcher after being hit with a line drive off the bat of Tampa Bay Rays' Desmond Jennings during the second inning of a baseball game Tuesday, May 7, 2013, in St. Petersburg, Fla. (AP Photo/Mike Carlson)

Toronto Blue Jays starting pitcher J.A. Happ is taken off the field on a stretcher after being hit with a line drive off the bat of Tampa Bay Rays' Desmond Jennings during the second inning of a baseball game Tuesday, May 7, 2013, in St. Petersburg, Fla. (AP Photo/Mike Carlson)

Toronto Blue Jays starting pitcher J.A. Happ reacts after being hit in the head with a line drive off the bat of Tampa Bay Rays' Desmond Jennings during the second inning of a baseball game Tuesday, May 7, 2013, in St. Petersburg, Fla. (AP Photo/Mike Carlson)

Toronto Blue Jays starting pitcher J.A. Happ throws during the first inning of a baseball game against the Tampa Bay Rays Tuesday, May 7, 2013, in St. Petersburg, Fla. (AP Photo/Mike Carlson)

Tampa Bay Rays' Desmond Jennings reacts while medical personnel attend to Toronto Blue Jays starting pitcher J.A. Happ after during the second inning of a baseball game Tuesday, May 7, 2013, in St. Petersburg, Fla. Happ was hit by a line drive off of Jennings' bat. (AP Photo/Mike Carlson)

(AP) ? Blue Jays pitcher J.A. Happ has been hit in the head by a line drive and taken off the field on a stretcher during Toronto's game against Tampa Bay.

Desmond Jennings' second-inning liner caromed off the left side of Happ's head, and the ball went all the way into the right-field bullpen. Happ fell down at the front of the mound, holding his head with his glove and bare hand.

Jennings ended up on third base with a two-run triple. Team trainers, paramedics and medical officials rushed to Happ's aid as Tropicana Field fell into an eerie hush.

Jennings and players on both teams stood with their hands on their heads, visibly concerned about Happ. The left-hander was immobilized on a stretcher and waved with his right hand as he was wheeled off the field.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-05-07-BBA-Blue-Jays-Happ-Injured/id-09fae8c546ce4012976de3fe4fc94f30

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Nokia Confirms the Existence of Its New Lumia 928

Rumors have swirled for weeks about Nokia's hotly anticipated new phone, the Lumia 928. Now Elop and co have finally released an official image to tease us.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/lJTwrqaLYHA/nokia-confirms-the-existence-of-its-new-lumia-928-493312533

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98% Mud

All Critics (98) | Top Critics (28) | Fresh (96) | Rotten (2)

Nichols takes his time with the story, dwelling on how the boy is shaped by the killer's tragic sense of romance, yet the suspense holds.

"Mud" isn't just a movie. It's the firm confirmation of a career.

"Mud" unfolds at its own pace, revealing its story in slivers. The performances are outstanding, especially from Sheridan, who plays tough, sweet, vulnerable and confused with equal conviction.

The film is drenched in the humidity and salty air of a Delta summer, often recalling the musical, aphoristic cadences of Sam Shepard, who happens to appear in a supporting role.

A wonderful, piquant modern-day variation on "Huckleberry Finn.''

One of the most creatively rich and emotionally rewarding movies to come along this year.

Mud is a potent and earnest rumination on love and change that gets muddled by moments of overblown as well as scattered storytelling.

The setting, characters and situations in "Mud" are fully formed and fully satisfying.

A modern-day Huck Finn adventure pulled along in the mesmerizing current of a crime yarn and anchored to a teenager's heartbreaking quest for emotional moorings.

Like great directors before him -- Hitchcock, Polanski, Altman, et al. -- Nichols uses duality with real skill and impact.

Poignant coming-of-age tale has some edgy content.

This is no Southern Gothic pastiche but a convincing portrait of a South rarely seen onscreen, the South of Walmarts and water moccasins, of Piggy-Wiggly and punk rock.

I liked Mud. What's frustrating is feeling as if I could have loved it.

It's a lovely, coherent piece of storytelling, with a unique sense of place. Nichols has carved out a niche as a distinctive film-maker.

With Mud, Jeff Nichols demonstrates once again that he's that rare breed of filmmaker who prefers to bury himself in the dirt of rural America rather than carve his initials into the concrete of sprawling urbanity.

Nichols weaves it all together with consummate skill and a little black pepper.

It's rare that films manage to capture the actual experience of what it is like to be a child, but 'Mud' seems to nail the ethos.

Mud is a captivating drama with well-rounded characters and fantastic performances from its three leads.

...a respectful, storyteller's approach to rural America. No mockery, no Hollywood-knows-better, no nonsense. That kind of thing is in shorter supply than the universe's collective desire for McConaughey to return to rom-coms.

Jeff Nichols' script for Mud is a lot like the Mississippi River that serves as a backdrop for the tale of unrequited love. There are times it is big and powerful and other times when it becomes so serene it's easy to forget the depths that hide below.

Mud combines the poignance of a boy coming to terms with life's realities with the excitement of top-notch suspense.

This densely atmospheric film could have used more Mark Twain-like adventure and less dreary adult intrigue.

...a movie about relationships that are tenuous and inescapable, desperate and fraught with misplaced romance.

Set in Arkansas, Mud captures the rhythm of the South in a way few films do.

Mud, from the Austin-based writer/director Jeff Nichols, is many things at once, and all enriched by David Wingo's double-stop, aching, stringed score.

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Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/mud_2012/

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