Saturday, October 29, 2011

Boy drank rain to survive after Turkey quake

A 13-year-old boy was pulled from a collapsed building without injury on Friday, five days after Turkey's powerful earthquake struck, and state-run TV said he survived by drinking rain water that seeped through cracks in the wreckage around him.

  1. Only on msnbc.com

    1. Sports fans play the Washington game
    2. Rock Center: Birth tourism becomes a global industry
    3. Updated 117 minutes ago 10/28/2011 4:44:17 PM +00:00 Michael Moore confesses: I am the 1 percent
    4. Rough week for Romney and Perry
    5. Students with private debt left out by Obama plan
    6. Scary treat? Black licorice can harm heart, says FDA
    7. Breast cancer causes foot-in-mouth disease in others

The boy, Ferhat Tokay, also used shoes under his head as a pillow and peered through a tiny gap in the wreckage to see when it was day or night outside, his uncle said.

Tokay was discovered early Friday morning, soon after rescue workers from Azerbaijan had sent the uncle and other relatives away from the site to get some rest, saying there was no chance of finding the missing boy alive.

"He didn't even have a scratch on him!" the uncle, Sahin Tokay, told NTV television. "He was hungry on the first day, but the hunger pangs later disappeared."

The 7.2 magnitude quake leveled about 2,000 buildings in eastern Turkey on Sunday, killing at least 575 people and leaving about 2,500 injured and thousands of homeless.

Authorities say another 5,700 buildings are now unfit for habitation.

The government's crisis management center said 187 people have been freed from the rubble alive.

Interior Minister Idris Naim Sahin said search and rescue efforts were continuing "in small sections" of Ercis, the hardest-hit area. "Hopefully we will be successful in pulling out survivors there too," he told reporters.

But news from one of those sites was gloomy. Rescuers recovered the body of a missing father whose 2-week-old baby girl had been pulled alive from the rubble with her mother and grandmother on Tuesday.

Ferhat Tokay was working in a shoe shop on the ground floor of a multistory building in the town when the quake hit. State-run Anatolia news agency said he kept alive by drinking water that reached him in the wreckage during heavy rains.

'We prayed'
Turkey is mostly Muslim, and in Ercis on Friday many people held traditional Muslim prayers outdoors, in parks or in streets strewn with rubble from the earthquake.

Others prayed in tents or in the few mosques still standing, Anatolia said.

One of them was the Seyid Muhammed mosque. Its only damage is a gaping crack at the foot of its minaret.

As men entered it to pray Friday, its imam, Selahattin Tasdemir, said: "It wouldn't have been considered a sin to not pray today because these people are victims and in a difficult situation."

"But their conscience wouldn't allow it. They're used to praying, so we prayed," he said in an interview with Associated Press Television News.

The 213-person Azerbaijani rescue team that saved Tokay on Friday is equipped with sniffer dogs and it has saved nine other people from the wreckage since Sunday night.

On Thursday, the team pulled 18-year-old Imdat Padak from another destroyed building in Ercis. During that effort, rubble hit one of its sniffer dogs, Cip, while it was searching a narrow gap, seriously injuring its paws.

Meanwhile, aid workers delivered tents, prefabricated homes, blankets and heaters from a dozen other countries to the desolate and cold areas hit by the quake.

Survivors complained about a shortage of tents following the quake and the government acknowledged initial difficulties in sending aid. Officials also have said some aid trucks have been looted before reaching Ercis.

Sahin, the interior minister, said the shortage of tents had largely been overcome by Friday.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45078457/ns/world_news-europe/

nyc weather nyc weather philadelphia weather chris carpenter chris carpenter the brothers grimm the brothers grimm

Samsung Focus S, Focus Flash geared up for a November 6th release

If you've been concentrating on which Windows Phones are coming out this fall, here's two more to add to your meditating mind: the Samsung Focus S and its little brother, the Focus Flash, are heading to AT&T on November 6th, according to AT&T's Facebook page. The Focus S, brandishing its 4.3-inch Super AMOLED Plus display, 1.4GHz single-core CPU, front-facing cam and 8MP shooter, will be up for grabs at $200; the Flash, meanwhile, can be yours for $50 and still offers the same processor with a smaller 3.7-inch Super AMOLED display, front-facing cam and a 5MP rear camera. Get ready, get set...

[Thanks, Neil]

Samsung Focus S, Focus Flash geared up for a November 6th release originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 28 Oct 2011 14:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceFacebook  | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/10/28/samsung-focus-s-focus-flash-geared-up-for-a-november-6th-releas/

shel silverstein dont ask dont tell dont ask dont tell troy davis execution date troy davis execution date

Friday, October 28, 2011

University of Minnesota researchers flex the mind's muscle, steer CG choppers

You've undoubtedly been told countless times by cheerleading elders that anything's possible if you put your mind to it. Turns out, those sagacious folks were spot on, although we're pretty sure this pioneering research isn't what they'd intended. A trio of biomedical engineers at the University of Minnesota have taken the realm of brain-computer interfaces a huge leap forward with a non-invasive control system -- so, no messy drills boring into skulls here. The group's innovative BCI meshes man's mental might with silicon whizzery to read and interpret sensorimotor rhythms (brain waves associated with motor control) via an electroencephalography measuring cap. By mapping these SMRs to a virtual helicopter's forward-backward and left to right movements, subjects were able to achieve "fast, accurate and continuous" three-dimensional control of the CG aircraft. The so scifi-it-borders-on-psychic tech could one day help amputees control synthetic limbs, or less nobly, helps us mentally manipulate 3D avatars. So, the future of gaming and locomotion looks to be secure, but we all know where this should really be headed -- defense tactics for the Robot Apocalypse.

University of Minnesota researchers flex the mind's muscle, steer CG choppers originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 27 Oct 2011 16:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Medical Xpress  |  sourcePLoS One  | Email this | Comments


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/xEzU9b1RS0k/

nbc news donald driver donald driver koch industries dexter season 6 ben roethlisberger homeland

Just Show Me: How to enable instant uploads in Google+ (Yahoo! News)

Welcome to?Just Show Me on Tecca TV, where we show you tips and tricks for getting the most out of the?gadgets in your life. In today's episode we'll show you how to enable instant upload on Google+.

If you take a lot of photos on your Android-based phone, and if you find yourself often uploading them to Google+, it's easy to set up instant upload. That way your photos will immediately be uploaded to a private folder on your Google+ account, where you can then choose to share them with others.

For more episodes of Just Show Me, subscribe to Tecca TV's You Tube channel and check out all our Just Show Me episodes. If you have any topics you'd like to see us cover, just drop us a line in the comments.

This article originally appeared on Tecca

More from Tecca:

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_technews/20111026/tc_yblog_technews/just-show-me-how-to-enable-instant-uploads-in-google

grimm boo at the zoo when is daylight savings time 2011 when is daylight savings time 2011 renaissance festival melanie iglesias catherine tate

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Daimler, VW feel chill of Europe car slowdown (Reuters)

FRANKFURT (Reuters) ? Daimler (DAIGn.DE) and Volkswagen (VOWG_p.DE) reinforced the gloomy outlook for Europe's vehicle industry on Thursday, revealing weak sales of premium cars and downbeat demand outlooks that overshadowed some robust truck sales data.

The warnings fit with the signals coming from other car and truck makers, which have benefited since the industry's 2008-2009 crisis from robust demand in emerging markets including Brazil and China, but now warn the outlook for Europe, beset by sovereign debt woes, is increasingly gloomy.

Daimler said its weaker-than-expected quarterly operating profit suffered as premium car sales were hit by the economic downturn., while better news in the truck sector for Daimler and its peers, showed predicted slowing demand had not yet arrived.

Martin Winterkorn, Chief Executive of Europe's largest car maker Volkswagen, also warned Europe's debt crisis would weigh on demand for cars in many Western European markets, although the company expects continued growth in Eastern Europe, India, China and North and South America.

Overall demand for cars would be flat in 2011, he said.

VW predicted a big rise in revenues and operating profit this year but warned volatile interest rates and currency fluctuations as well as commodity prices would dent margins.

It posted a quarterly operating profit of 9 billion euros thanks to double digit sales growth rates and a boost from derivatives used in the merger with Porsche.

TRUCK BRIGHT SPOT

Despite the gloom, data on Thursday from industry group ACEA showed the signs of cooling demand reported by truck makers had not yet filtered through to sales.

Truck sales in the European Union rose 4.5 percent in September, ACEA said.

But against this background truck manufacturers are bracing themselves for lower demand ahead, in an industry closely linked to international trade and the health of the wider economy.

World number two truck maker Volvo (VOLVb.ST) on Tuesday said it was preparing to cut output in anticipation of lower vehicle demand in Europe next year, and warned of slowing growth in emerging regions.

Competitor Scania had earlier said it would make further production cuts if economic uncertainty led to lower orders as it posted a profit drop as expected.

PREMIUM SALES WEAK

Daimler's sales of Mercedes-Benz Cars, which also includes the Smart brand, fell 2 percent in Western Europe in the third quarter, with stagnating sales in Germany, Europe's biggest car market.

Car sales growth has been shrinking in Europe, with Germany the only major market in the region to expand in September, while the boom in China that bolstered German carmakers in recent quarters has eased to a milder pace for now.

"At the beginning of the fourth quarter of 2011, the outlook for the world economy is distinctly less favorable than just a few months ago," Daimler said in its quarterly financial report.

However, it reaffirmed its full-year outlook.

"Perhaps the stock will struggle today -- but we still see Daimler as an out of favor, cheap stock with durable earnings power," wrote Bernstein analyst Max Warburton in a research note. "2012 looks like it's going to be a tough year, but Daimler may well fare better than many fear," he added.

Daimler shares rose 1.5 percent to 38.44 euros by 0843 GMT (4:43 a.m. EDT), underperforming a 3.2 percent rise in the STOXX 600 European autos index (.SXAP). Volkswagen rose more than 6 percent.

France's PSA Peugeot Citroen (PEUP.PA), beset by gloom in European showrooms, on Wednesday warned its core car making business would barely make money this year and announced 6,000 job losses to cut costs.

Its competitor Renault (RENA.PA) also reports on Thursday.

Also on Thursday, South Korea's Hyundai Motor (005380.KS) reported a 21 percent rise in third-quarter net profit but warned of rising competition and economic uncertainty.

And auto makers felt a worsening impact from floods in Thailand. Toyota Motor Corp (7203.T) said it would cut production in North America for one day because of the interruption of parts supplies from the country.

(Reporting by Maria Sheahan, Helen Massy-Beresford and Hyunjoo Jin; Writing by Helen Massy-Beresford; Editing by David Cowell and Andrew Callus)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111027/bs_nm/us_autos

new orleans saints world series game 4 world series game 4 indianapolis colts colts colts turkey

NY hotel maid: Strauss-Kahn doesn't have immunity (AP)

NEW YORK ? Former International Monetary Fund leader Dominique Strauss-Kahn doesn't have diplomatic immunity from a civil lawsuit filed by a hotel maid who claims he sexually assaulted her in his room, according to court papers her lawyers filed Monday.

The papers quote the IMF and the U.S. Department of State as saying Strauss-Kahn wasn't immune in the days after the May encounter at the Sofitel hotel in Manhattan.

According to the papers filed by attorney Douglas Wigdor, the Department of State wrote: "The IMF is not seeking to assert any immunities on behalf of Dominique Strauss-Kahn. But our understanding is that immunity in this particular case and with IMF officials is that it would only involve their official capacity and carrying out their duties in their official role. And that doesn't apply in this case."

Strauss-Kahn initially was charged with attempted rape after the maid said he attacked her in his hotel suite and forced her to perform oral sex. The criminal case was dismissed when prosecutors said they had lost faith in her credibility after a series of lies she told them unrelated to the assault allegations.

The maid filed the civil complaint against the one-time French presidential contender when the criminal case was still active.

Strauss-Kahn argued last month that the civil case, pending in the Bronx, should be dismissed because he had diplomatic immunity. His lawyers argued he should be immune under international law even though he had already resigned his post as leader of the IMF when the lawsuit was filed. They said his immunity stood until he left the United States, shortly after his criminal case was dismissed.

Attorneys for the maid, Guinean immigrant Nafissatou Diallo, said the suggestion Strauss-Kahn had immunity was "a transparent attempt to delay these proceedings and should be denied in its entirety as utterly meritless and frivolous." If he had any immunity at all, they argued, he forfeited it when he resigned.

An IMF quote on the issue echoed the Department of State, saying his immunities were limited and not applicable to this case.

Attorneys for Diallo, who came forward publicly in a series of interviews, filed the lawsuit against Strauss-Kahn on Aug. 8. The motion filed Monday reiterated in graphic detail her version of their encounter. The lawsuit doesn't ask for specific damages.

There is a lower burden of proof in civil cases, and it is possible that Strauss-Kahn would have to testify if the maid's case went to trial.

Strauss-Kahn, who's married, has admitted what he called an inappropriate sexual encounter with the chambermaid, calling it a "moral failing" that he deeply regrets but insisting there was no violence.

A writer's case against Strauss-Kahn in Paris also was dropped this month. French prosecutors said that while he may have done something that qualifies as sexual assault they couldn't send him to trial because it happened too long ago. Strauss-Kahn called the writer's claim imaginary.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111025/ap_on_re_us/us_strauss_kahn_lawsuit

blackout iceland reggie bush jordin sparks kid rock new zealand clay matthews

NYPD keeps files on Muslims who change their names (AP)

NEW YORK ? For generations, immigrants have shed their ancestral identities and taken new, Americanized names as they found their place in the melting pot. For Muslims in New York, that rite of assimilation is now seen by police as a possible red flag in the hunt for terrorists.

The New York Police Department monitors everyone in the city who changes his or her name, according to interviews and internal police documents obtained by The Associated Press. For those whose names sound Arabic or might be from Muslim countries, police run comprehensive background checks that include reviewing travel records, criminal histories, business licenses and immigration documents.

All this is recorded in police databases for supervisors, who review the names and select a handful of people for police to visit.

The program was conceived as a tripwire for police in the difficult hunt for homegrown terrorists, where there are no widely agreed upon warning signs. Like other NYPD intelligence programs created in the past decade, this one involved monitoring behavior protected by the First Amendment.

Since August, an Associated Press investigation has revealed a vast NYPD intelligence-collecting effort targeting Muslims following the terror attacks of September 2001. Police have conducted surveillance of entire Muslim neighborhoods, chronicling daily life including where people eat, pray and get their hair cut. Police infiltrated dozens of mosques and Muslim student groups and investigated hundreds more.

Monitoring name changes illustrates how the threat of terrorism now casts suspicion over what historically has been part of America's story. For centuries, foreigners have changed their names in New York, often to lose any stigma attached with their surname.

The Roosevelts were once the van Rosenvelts. Fashion designer Ralph Lauren was born Ralph Lifshitz. Donald Trump's grandfather changed the family name from Drumpf.

David Cohen, the NYPD's intelligence chief, worried that would-be terrorists could use their new names to lie low in New York, current and former officials recalled. Reviewing name changes was intended to identify people who either Americanized their names or took Arabic names for the first time, said the officials, who insisted on anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the program.

NYPD spokesman Paul Browne did not respond to messages left over two days asking about the legal justification for the program and whether it had identified any terrorists.

The goal was to find a way to spot terrorists like Daood Gilani and Carlos Bledsoe before they attacked.

Gilani, a Chicago man, changed his name to the unremarkable David Coleman Headley to avoid suspicion as he helped plan the 2008 terrorist shooting spree in Mumbai, India. Bledsoe, of Tennessee, changed his name to Abdulhakim Mujahid Muhammad in 2007 and, two years later, killed one soldier and wounded another in a shooting at a recruiting station in Little Rock, Ark.

Sometime around 2008, state court officials began sending the NYPD information about new name changes, said Ron Younkins, the court's chief of operations. The court regularly sends updates to police, he said. The information is all public, and he said the court was not aware of how police used it.

The NYPD program began as a purely analytical exercise, according to documents and interviews. Police reviewed the names received from the court and selected some for background checks that included city, state and federal criminal databases as well as federal immigration and Treasury Department databases that identified foreign travel.

Early on, police added people with American names to the list so that if details of the program ever leaked out, the department would not be accused of profiling, according to one person briefed on the program.

On one police document from that period, two of every three people who were investigated had changed their names to or from something that could be read as Arabic-sounding.

All the names that were investigated, even those whose background checks came up empty, were cataloged so police could refer to them in the future.

The legal justification for the program is unclear from the documents obtained by the AP. Because of its history of spying on anti-war protesters and political activists, the NYPD has long been required to follow a federal court order when gathering intelligence. That order allows the department to conduct background checks only when police have information about possible criminal activity, and only as part of "prompt and extremely limited" checking of leads.

The NYPD's rules also prohibit opening investigations based solely on activities protected by the First Amendment. Federal courts have held that people have a right to change their names and, in the case of religious conversion, that right is protected by the First Amendment.

After the AP's investigation into the NYPD's activities, some U.S. lawmakers, including Reps. Yvette Clarke, D-N.Y., and Rush Holt, D-N.J., have said the NYPD programs are blatant racial profiling and have asked the Justice Department to investigate. Two Democrats on congressional intelligence committees said they were troubled by the CIA's involvement in these programs. Additionally, seven New York Democratic state senators called for the state attorney general to investigate the NYPD's spying on Muslim neighborhoods. And last month, the CIA announced an inspector general investigation into the agency's partnership with the NYPD.

The NYPD is not alone in its monitoring of Muslim neighborhoods. The FBI has its own ethnic mapping program that singled out Muslim communities, and agents have been criticized for targeting mosques.

The name change program is an example of how, while the NYPD says it operates under the same rules as the FBI, police have at times gone beyond what is allowed by the federal government. The FBI would not be allowed to run a similar program because of First Amendment and privacy concerns and because the goal is too vague and the program too broad, according to FBI rules and interviews with federal officials.

Police expanded their efforts in late 2009, according to documents and interviews. After analysts ran background checks, police began selecting a handful of people to visit and interview.

Internally, some police groused about the program. Many people who were approached didn't want to talk and police couldn't force them to.

A Pakistani cab driver, for instance, told police he did not want to talk to them about why he took Sheikh as a new last name, documents show.

Police also knew that a would-be terrorist who Americanized his name in hopes of lying low was unlikely to confess as much to detectives. In fact, of those who agreed to talk at all, many said they Americanized their names because they were being harassed or were having problems getting a job and thought a new name would help.

But as with other intelligence programs at the NYPD, Cohen hoped it would send a message to would-be bombers that police were watching, current and former officials said.

As it expanded, the program began to target Muslims even more directly, drawing criticism from Stuart Parker, an in-house NYPD lawyer, who said there had to be standards for who was being interviewed, a person involved in the discussions recalled. In response, police interviewed people with Arabic-sounding names but only if their background checks matched specific criteria.

The names of those who were interviewed, even those who chose not to speak with police, were recorded in police reports stored in the department's database, according to documents and interviews, while names of those who received only background checks were kept in a separate file in the Intelligence Division.

Donna Gabaccia, director of the Immigration History Research Center at the University of Minnesota, said that for many families, name changes are important aspects of the American story. Despite the stories that officials at Ellis Island Americanized the names of people arriving in the U.S., most immigrants changed their names themselves to avoid ridicule and discrimination or just to fit in, she said.

The NYPD program, she said, turned that story on its head.

"In the past, you changed your name in response to stigmatization," she said. "And now, you change your name and you are stigmatized. There's just something very sad about this."

As for converts to Islam, the religion does not require them to take Arabic names but many do as a way to publicly identify their faith, said Jonathan Brown, a Georgetown University professor of Islamic studies.

Taking an Arabic name might be a sign that someone is more religious, Brown said, but it doesn't necessarily suggest someone is more radical. He said law enforcement nationwide has often confused the two points in the fight against terrorism.

"It's just an example of the silly, conveyor-belt approach they have, where anyone who gets more religious is by definition more dangerous," Brown said.

Sarah Feinstein-Borenstein, a 75-year-old Jewish woman who lives on Manhattan's Upper West Side, was surprised to learn that she was among the Americans drawn into the NYPD program in its infancy. She hyphenated her last name in 2009. Police investigated and recorded her information in a police intelligence file because of it.

"It's rather shocking to me," she said. "I think they would have better things to do. It's is a waste of my tax money."

Feinstein-Borenstein was born in Egypt and lived there until the Suez Crisis in 1956. With a French mother and a Jewish religion, she and her family were labeled "undesirable" and were kicked out. She came to the U.S. in 1963.

"If you live long enough," she said, "you see everything."

___

Contact the Washington investigative team at DCInvestigations(at)ap.org

Read AP's previous stories and documents about the NYPD at: http://www.ap.org/nypd

Follow Apuzzo and Goldman at http://twitter.org/mattapuzzo and http://twitter.org/goldmandc

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/religion/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111026/ap_on_go_ot/us_nypd_intelligence

f8 f8 catherine the great dark shadows ted haggard ted haggard neutrino

Will Ferrell Honored With Much-Deserved Mark Twain Award (Videos)

Will Ferrell Honored With Much-Deserved Mark Twain Award (Videos)

Will Ferrell was awarded the prestigious Mark Twain Award, following in the footsteps of Richard Pryor, Steve Martin, and Bill Cosby. Ferrell received his award [...]

Will Ferrell Honored With Much-Deserved Mark Twain Award (Videos) Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News

Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2011/10/24/will-ferrell-honored-with-much-deserved-mark-twain-award-videos/

emmys 2011 emmys 2011 boxing emmy nominations 2011 florida state football florida state football knowshon moreno

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

'Walking Dead' Star Jon Bernthal Explains Shane's 'Trek'

'You're not doing it to be the hero but because you love him,' actor tells MTV News of his character's dangerous choices.
By Josh Wigler


Jon Bernthal
Photo: Frazer Harrison/ Getty Images

"Walking Dead" character Shane Walsh (Jon Bernthal) cannot catch a break. Once the alpha dog in this ragtag group of survivors, Shane is now at the bottom of the totem pole with everything stripped away from him: Former lover Lori has returned to his best friend Rick's open arms, everyone's following Rick's lead, and Shane wants nothing more than to get the heck out of Dodge and kiss a bad situation goodbye.

But all that changed the moment that Carl Grimes, Rick and Lori's young son, took a bullet to the gut.

In an instant, Shane changed his tune and set out to help his best friend get through a desperate situation by risking life and limb to secure medical supplies for Carl's surgery. But as is so often the case on "The Walking Dead," things did not go as planned, and Shane now finds himself cornered by a pack of flesh-hungry walkers with no apparent way out. It's an especially scary situation considering that the smash-hit AMC series — now two episodes into its second season — has already passed the point in which Shane died in the "Walking Dead" comic books, leaving one to wonder whether or not this is the final hoorah for Rick's best pal.

You might think that Shane, who was a split second from leaving this group just one episode ago, is currently regretting his decision to go out and help Carl. But actor Jon Bernthal has a different explanation for his character's choice.

"One of the things I love about this show is that the situations and circumstances give these characters an opportunity to redeem themselves," Bernthal told MTV News about Shane's current mind-set. "You can be completely on the outs with everyone in the group, but then here's this wonderful opportunity to redeem yourself. Save the kid, the kid you love. Save the woman you love's child. Save your best friend that your relationship is dead and gone. You're doing it not to be the hero but because you love him."

Doing great, brave things in the name of love is a noble idea, but it's a dangerous one as well, Bernthal warned.

"With Shane, I think he really figures out, he adopts this new world order in this new world they're living in. Things like guilt, shame and trying to do things that are morally right are far less important and really have no place in this new world compared to surviving and doing what you have to do to stay alive and protect the people you love," he said.

"If you take that a step further, it gets very dangerous very fast: If you're with a group of people and you're trying to survive and one person is holding you back or slowing you down, in this world, the right thing to do is to help that person and bring them along," he continued. "In [the world of 'The Walking Dead'], the right thing to do is to kill that person and send them away. I think Shane, that whole kind of mission you're referring to, I think it starts Shane off on a trek that will change him forever."

Either Shane's "trek" is going to be a short one, or he'll find some way to survive his current situation. Regardless of what happens next, Bernthal teased that Shane's episode three future is all about "going on that mission, man. Going on that mission and making hard choices."

What did you think of this week's "Walking Dead"? Tell us in the comments.

Related Photos

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1673014/walking-dead-jon-bernthal-shane.jhtml

case mccoy case mccoy kristin davis kristin davis phillies phillies philadelphia phillies

Microwaving Corn Cobs Makes Them Easier to Shuck [Video]

Microwaving Corn Cobs Makes Them Easier to Shuck YouTube user Martin Craig shows us an easy way to shuck corn without having do deal with messy corn silk threads?just microwave each ear for four minutes, cut the end off, and slide the corn out as shown in the video above.

Shucking Corn?Clean Ears Everytime | YouTube

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/ymfC8KDp3f4/microwaving-corn-cobs-makes-them-easier-to-shuck

kindle library lending kindle library lending hp ceo hp ceo r e m gurney gurney

The Waterproof, Dustproof, Shock Proof iPhone 4S Case [Iphone Cases]

Lifeproof iPhone cases are badass. They'll survive everything from drunken drops to extreme sports to war—well, maybe. The Generation 2 case adds additional protection for the buttons on all new iPhones 4/4S models. You clumsy bastard.[Lifeproof] More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/wEmnkixNhbk/the-waterproof-dustproof-shock-proof-iphone-4s-case

black star joan baez gravitas steve jobs and bill gates steve jobs quotes pancreatic cancer symptoms apple stock

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Immigration, energy top Swiss election agenda (AP)

BERN, Switzerland ? Swiss voters appeared Sunday to have denied nationalists an unprecedented 30 percent share of the vote, souring on the People's Party's relentless campaign against immigration while rewarding rivals who emphasized issues such as nuclear power.

The People's Party had come well ahead of other parties, at 29.3 percent, in a recent opinion poll, running campaign ads warning of immigrants spoiling an Alpine nation that's been an oasis of relative stability within stormy Europe.

But exit polls Sunday indicated the party will miss its target of 30 percent, as voters backed a moderate group that split from the party four years ago and a new centrist environmental party that has campaigned to end the use of nuclear power in Switzerland.

Results for 245 seats in Switzerland's upper and lower chamber trickled in after polls closed at noon. A final result for most votes was expected late Sunday or early Monday.

The People's Party accused foreigners of driving up Switzerland's crime rate, and campaigned for those convicted of crimes to be deported. It also wants to reintroduce quotas on immigration from the 27 countries of the European Union, of which Switzerland isn't a member.

Its striking posters of black boots stomping on the Swiss flag with the message "Stop Mass Immigration" build on earlier graphically successful campaigns featuring white sheep kicking out a black sheep or dark hands grasping for Swiss passports.

"For us it's not acceptable that we have to open the frontiers and we have no possibility to say who can come, and under which conditions. We want to regulate this," said Oskar Freysinger, a hardline People's Party lawmaker.

The nationalists and centrist parties have competed with two small green parties and environmental-minded candidates of all stripes, making gains amid growing anti-nuclear power sentiment in the wake of the March disaster at Japan's Fukushima reactor.

Turnout in Switzerland was expected to be close to 50 percent and the results may not be known until late Sunday or early Monday. Run-off ballots may be needed in some of the country's 26 cantons (states) for Senate seats.

The parliamentary election heavily influences the composition of the Cabinet, where the ministers run federal agencies and take turns as president for a year. The result of this election, which is held once every four years, could lead to a shift in Switzerland's multiparty, consensus-focused Cabinet.

Switzerland's president and foreign minister, Micheline Calmy-Rey, is retiring from Swiss politics at the end of this year. The seat vacated by Calmy-Rey, one of the country's most colorful politicians, will be hotly contested during a Dec. 14 parliamentary vote for all seven Cabinet seats.

There also has been uncertainty over whether the popular finance minister, Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf, who broke with the People's Party and formed her own more moderate faction, will be able to keep her seat. If she does, she would likely serve as president next year.

The Swiss People's Party is expected to demand a second seat in the seven-member Cabinet if ? as expected ? it gains the most votes. The party's anti-immigrant stance continues to hold a strong appeal in rural areas.

The number of foreigners living in Switzerland rose almost 3 per cent to 1.7 million over the past year ? mostly Italians, Germans, Portuguese and Serbs. Switzerland, along with Luxemburg and Liechtenstein, has one of the highest proportions of foreign inhabitants in Europe.

They account for one of every five of the country's nearly 7.9 million permanent residents, and mostly live in one of the five large cities of Zurich, Geneva, Basel, Lausanne and Bern.

The immigration debate has focused on jobs and crime. Many of the foreigners who work in Switzerland come for jobs for which they're considered highly qualified, but that hasn't stopped the Swiss from worrying about the influx of foreigners in their midst vying for jobs, pricey real estate and other day-to-day needs.

The free movement accord between Switzerland and the European Union also has been a hot topic, particularly in cities like Geneva and Basel and in the canton of Ticino where authorities say foreign criminals make day trips across Swiss open borders with France, Germany and Italy.

In the capital Bern, architect Timo Odoni expressed disquiet at the People's Party's relentless focus on foreigners.

Pushing a stroller with his twin 1-year-old sons ? half Swiss, half Sri Lankan ? he pointed to one of the Swiss nationalists' posters. "I just can't stand how they do their posters because it reminds me of 60 years before, in Germany, a little bit. And we have to do something about it," Odoni said.

"I certainly will vote the green and left parties," he said. "We have no problem with immigration, really. We have other problems, but not this problem."

In Geneva, Thierry Perroud said the issues that most concerned him were social security, nuclear power and the anti-immigration policies of the People's Party.

"I don't want Switzerland to close its borders to foreigners," said Perroud, casting his vote at a school in Geneva, accompanied by his young son.

Immigration has long concerned the Swiss, who during World War II accepted 27,000 Jews but then claimed "the boat is full" to scale back rescues of those most likely to suffer death at the hands of the Germans. It's a nation of increasing xenophobia and yet there are thousands of foreign workers and its residents have four official languages ? and often switch readily between German and French, or English, as they welcome millions of tourists each year.

The nation prides itself on its unique system of direct democracy, giving voters veto power over the government in frequent referendums, but it only gave women the vote in 1971.

___

Follow John Heilprin at http://www.twitter.com/JohnHeilprin

___

Frank Jordans contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/environment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111023/ap_on_re_eu/eu_switzerland_election

julianna margulies dr oz kym johnson hakeem nicks hakeem nicks alpha lipoic acid 105.1

Crops spring from an urban rooftop

Reporting from New York?

The last thing a New Yorker expects to find atop a massive building in industrial Queens is a farm.

We're talking 140 rows of crops, including leafy greens, tomatoes, even fancy Japanese turnips ? as well as high-tech irrigation and five plump hens who enjoy a sixth-story view of the Manhattan skyline that any penthouse dweller would pay millions for.

The Brooklyn Grange, named before its young founders settled on another borough, is the city's largest rooftop commercial farm ? and one of the few here, on or above ground.

"It just makes sense to utilize the open spaces we do have in the city to benefit the community," says Ben Flanner, head farmer and a co-founder.

Flanner is a 30-year-old hipster-hayseed who came to New York from Wisconsin for a job in finance and threw it all away to turn a compost pile as big as a king-size bed.

His blue eyes widen when the notion is raised that maybe it's a little weird to be rotating crops on top of a building surrounded by gas stations, car dealerships and tire shops. Or that as wildly enterprising as it may seem to dump 1.1 million pounds of dirt to seed an acre of crops, isn't it awfully close to La Guardia Airport's landing route?

Flanner nods brightly. "Yup," he says. "We are amid 8 million people, but the farm allows them to know us and us to know them."

Tall and lanky, Flanner says he never considered farming in a normal place, say, Iowa or even upstate New York. His previous farming experience was on a much smaller roof in Greenpoint, Brooklyn. The engineering graduate put numbers on an Excel spreadsheet and realized that to make a profit, he needed more space.

Last year, Flanner and his partners, also Brooklynites unafraid of dirt under their nails, raised $200,000 from investors and even bake sales, and hunted around for a location, eventually settling on a sturdy 1919 building in Long Island City with a 38,164-square-foot roof empty except for air conditioning units and a water tower.

It took awhile to get the city to allow farming on the roof, under an obscure designation. "They had to dust off that one," Flanner says with a chuckle.

With the farm about to end its second season, Flanner is vague about whether it has made a profit. "We're hitting our target numbers to stay alive," he says. He and an assistant are the only paid staff.

Flanner spends weekdays in running shoes and soil-stained khakis planting seeds and tending eggplants, and weekends selling crops at farmers markets. The farm also supplies produce to a few restaurants and throws "sunset" dinners on a giant wooden table in the middle of the crops.

"Nothing we grow travels more than three miles," Flanner says proudly.

While the farm's carbon footprint may be the size of a baby's shoe, growing on a rooftop also presents special challenges.

Much of the weeding and picking is done by interns and volunteers who aren't always the most competent hands. Wind is also a constant, whipping across the East River, and there is a steady stream of visitors who drop by unannounced and stroll through the dirt pathways. Pesky pigeons are always hanging around the hens, and summer squash and beets just won't grow in soil that is only 7.5 inches deep.

Michael Meier, 24, who has been the farm apprentice for its second growing season, startles a little when an air conditioning unit suddenly roars on while he's giving a tour.

He laughs off the noise and other distractions.

"It's truly amazing to spend an hour kneeling, thinning a bed of carrots, and then get up and see this," he says, sweeping his hand across a panorama of bridges, billboards and red-and-white utility stacks.

Particularly on hot summer days, the farm is an oasis, Meier says.

"You'd be surprised in the summer how much it feels like you're out in the country here," he says, describing butterflies chasing each other around bamboo used for staking, and the smell of flowers and ripening fruit.

A Florida native, Meier describes himself as a foodie who has been "homesteading" ? growing his own food on rooftops ? since he came to New York for college.

On a recent rainy fall day, he surveyed what was left of the rainbow chard, radicchio and a few other late-season vegetables. The farm is now focused on sowing rye and oat grass as ground cover to hold down the soil during the windy winter months.

"Yes, we're in New York City, but we also have to deal with seasonality," Meier says. "We can't just go back into our apartments for the winter and forget about it here."

Just then, Jeffrey Polsky emerges at the stairwell entrance. A singer-songwriter who lives nearby, he shows up usually on Wednesdays when the farm sets up a table to sell produce in the building's modern lobby, and often takes a detour up the elevator to the fifth floor and walks the last flight to the roof.

"I'm all for movie studios," he says of the newest tenants to infiltrate the old Queens warehouse district, "but the farm brings real people, and when you live in the city it's hard to have a sense of what you're missing."

He looked around at the sodden ground and sparse crops yet to be picked, and sighed.

"I came up to say goodbye for the winter," he says, pulling his jacket around him against the rain. "Even though it's sad to see it like this, it's part of the cycle and it will be back."

geraldine.baum@latimes.com

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/latimes/news/science/~3/0gfyvv1IKtE/la-na-rooftop-farm-20111023,0,2999727.story

theme steiner ranch prn winnipeg jets corsica corsica dead island

Perry touches on birtherism in interview (Politico)

Rick Perry, when asked by Parade magazine about President Obama's birthplace, gives something short of a hard "he was born here:"

Governor, do you believe that President Barack Obama was born in the United States?
I have no reason to think otherwise.

That?s not a definitive, ?Yes, I believe he??
Well, I don?t have a definitive answer, because he?s never seen my birth certificate.

Continue Reading

But you?ve seen his.
I don?t know. Have I?

You don?t believe what?s been released?
I don?t know. I had dinner with Donald Trump the other night.

And?
That came up.

And he said?
He doesn?t think it?s real.

And you said?
I don?t have any idea. It doesn?t matter. He?s the President of the United States. He?s elected. It?s a distractive issue.

The birther issue helped Trump ride a populist wave for a time in the polls, before his numbers started sagging - and before Obama asked Hawaiian officials to release the birth certificate.

(Via Political Wire)

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_stories1011_66648_html/43362372/SIG=11mjh9877/*http%3A//www.politico.com/news/stories/1011/66648.html

schweddy balls craigslist killer time change chattanooga joey lawrence joey lawrence iraq war

Monday, October 24, 2011

Redeem Pets Limited Edition content | SNW | SimsNetwork.com

How to redeem Limited Edition content for The Sims 3 Pets Expansion Pack

Thank you for purchasing The Sims 3 Pets Expansion pack for The Sims 3. We know that you want to play your game as soon as possible to enjoy life with pets but we wanted to give you some additional information on how to get your exclusive Pet Store.

  1. Install your The Sims 3 game first!
  2. Register with your game with The Sims 3 Community - Go to www.thesims3.com/register in your browser or click the "Sign Up Now" button on the Game Launcher if you haven?t already registered. If you have already registered with The Sims 3 Community, you will still need to register your game via your ?My Account? page (found on https://www.thesims3.com/myAccount.html).
  3. Once you have registered your game, you?ll see a link to install the items from your Purchase History page (found under My Account on store.thesims3.com). The pop up link will not make any mention of the Limited Edition content, but rest assure it will show up in your Purchase History page. You do not need to take any further action to obtain your exclusive items.
  4. Locate the item on your Purchase History page and click install**. This will launch the game and install your item.

**It may take up to 5 minutes for the item to appear on your Purchase History page.

Source: http://www.simsnetwork.com/news/2011/10/23/redeem-pets-limited-edition-content

memory ducati demi moore asu cerebral palsy hitch alice cooper

Analysis: Will Obama's foreign policy success help? (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? President Barack Obama delivered on another foreign policy promise on Friday with plans to pull the last U.S. troops from Iraq. But in a re-election campaign all about the weak U.S. economy, he may not get much credit.

Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, radical Islamic cleric Anwar al-Awlaki and Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi -- these are all dead U.S. opponents that Democrat Obama can claim a measure of credit for getting.

Now add to that Obama's announcement on Friday that the eight-year war in Iraq is ending, fulfilling a campaign goal he made in 2008 when he declared the conflict a misguided mistake by his Republican predecessor, George W. Bush.

In any other year, Obama might be able to ride these accomplishments to re-election in November 2012. But with the economy teetering and Americans hungry for jobs, the national security successes may only inoculate him from Republican criticism of his foreign policy.

Democratic strategist Bob Shrum said Obama has shown a decisiveness and coolness of character that will help him in 2012, when Obama is seeking a second term. And he called it proof that Obama was able to do the job that his chief opponent for the 2008 Democratic presidential nomination, Hillary Clinton, said he could not with a famous TV ad.

"We now know the answer to the question of whether he's good at answering the phone when it rings at 3 a.m. to tell him there's a crisis," said Shrum, who was 2004 Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry's campaign manager.

But will voters care?

For clues, look at what happened to Republican President George H.W. Bush two decades ago. He saw his approval ratings rise above 90 percent after U.S. forces won the first Gulf War against Iraq, only to see his popularity tumble due to an anemic economy.

Bush lost the 1992 election to Democrat Bill Clinton, whose campaign mantra was, "It's the economy, stupid."

APPROVAL RATING

Now look at some numbers: Obama's job approval rating was at 42 percent on Friday with 74 percent saying the economic outlook was getting worse, according to a Gallup poll.

The biggest number he faces is the 9.1 percent unemployment rate.

"The debate this year and next year is going to be overwhelmingly focused on the economy, on jobs," said Ipsos pollster Chris Jackson. "Foreign policy and international affairs are really going to be sort of pushed to the background."

As political experts attest, however, it is never easy to oust an incumbent president who has the advantages of the office to make his case and ample campaign funds to portray his opponent in a negative light.

Much about politics is about positioning, and Republicans were reluctant to cede much ground to Obama on foreign policy.

Ari Fleischer, a former White House spokesman for George W. Bush, said Obama's announcement has to be seen in context, that it was Bush who had established the end of this year as the timetable for a U.S. pullout from Iraq, a date he declared when he visited Iraq in 2008 and just missed being hit by a shoe thrown by an Iraqi.

Still, he said, Obama deserves some credit. "Unlike Jimmy Carter who was vulnerable on both domestic and foreign policy, Barack Obama heading into this election will not be as vulnerable on foreign policy," Fleischer said.

Carter, a Democrat, lost his re-election bid to Republican Ronald Reagan in 1980.

Republicans raised questions about Obama's Iraq announcement because he had failed to reach an agreement with Iraqi leaders to leave several thousands U.S. troops there as a counter-weight against Iran.

"It's very unfortunate," Republican Senator John McCain told Reuters. "I think that it can have serious implications for Iraq and also the region. It also I think certainly has political reasoning behind it."

And Michael Goldfarb, a Republican national security expert, said Republicans have plenty of ground to make a foreign policy case against the president.

"The mix of it makes it very difficult to attack Obama on war-on-terror policies. Republicans will have a compelling foreign policy argument against the president on Russia, China and the Middle East. Those are not bright spots," Goldfarb said.

(Editing by Will Dunham)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111021/pl_nm/us_iraq_usa_campaign

nasa satellite nasa satellite v for vendetta kate walsh mastectomy space junk space junk

Sunday, October 23, 2011

A quarter of Chinese women suffer domestic abuse (Reuters)

BEIJING (Reuters) ? A quarter of Chinese women have suffered domestic abuse, the government said in a survey issued Friday, showing the ongoing struggle of women in a society in which Chairman Mao Zedong once famously said women hold up half the sky.

The definition of domestic abuse includes physical assault, deprivation of personal freedom, illegal control of income, rape and verbal humiliation, the official Xinhua news agency said of the survey, conducted nearly a year ago by the All-China Women's Federation (ACWF) and the National Bureau of Statistics.

Of more than 105,000 women surveyed last December, 5.5 percent said they had been physically assaulted. The rate was 7.9 percent in rural areas and 3.1. percent in urban areas.

The news agency did not say why it took so long to release the survey results but it noted that domestic abuse became widely discussed last month after a Chinese celebrity's wife posted online photos depicting her alleged abuse.

China does not have an independent law on domestic abuse, Xinhua reported, and only a few laws, such as a marriage law, address the crime.

A representative of the ACWF told Xinhua that the group was pushing the government to adopt legislation, and the news agency said Chinese legislators might release a law by December.

(Reporting by Sabrina Mao and Michael Martina; Editing by Ken Wills and Robert Birsel)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111021/wl_nm/us_china_women

abacus spongebob bot northern lights foot locker cats funny pics

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Swype gets a new beta release, blissfully makes updating easier

Swype beta

We've been in love with the Swype keyboard since, well, forever. But time and time again we've threatened to break up over the stupidest of things. Because Swype's business model is to get preloaded onto phones and you technically can't download a full version, the beta installation process has always been a pain in the ass. Download the Swype app. Register. Sign in. Download the beta. When it comes time to update the beta version, you have to go through the whole thing again, and add in a step where you recover your forgotten password.

That ends now.

Swype Bets Version 3.26, in addition to bringing improved language control (which language you use at any given time), a refined key layout and new settings and help, also brings about automatic updates. You'll get notifications letting you know an update is available, and install it right through the settings. Easy as pie.

Source: Swype


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/nmzRZ5uX7fs/swype-gets-new-beta-release-blissfully-makes-updating-easier

ryan howard meteor shower 2011 meteor shower 2011 home depot center the replacements fleet week scarecrow festival

iPhone 4S shootout: AT&T vs. Sprint vs Verizon

Apple

By?Davey Alba
Laptop?

The AT&T, Sprint and Verizon Wireless versions have all sold out (at least temporarily). And the overwhelming demand is understandable, given the brilliant Siri voice-controlled assistant, faster dual-core processor and super-sharp 8-megapixel camera. But which of the carrier models is best? We evaluated all three versions based on pricing plans, data speeds and call quality to help you decide which iPhone 4S is right for you.

Pricing plans
Let's say you opt for the minimum amount of minutes on each of the carriers (450 minutes), unlimited text messaging, and 2GB of data (it's unlimited for Sprint). If you factor in the cost of the $199 iPhone 4S, over two years you'd pay $1,896 on Sprint, versus $2,520 on AT&T and $2,640 on Verizon. If you went with Sprint, you'd save $144 versus AT&T and $264 versus Verizon. However, Sprint charges more than the other carriers to use your phone as a hotspot ??$30 versus $20 ? and at that point you would be paying about the same amount versus Verizon and about $100 less on AT&T.

Winner: Sprint
Provided you don't plan to use your phone as a hotspot ? something we wouldn't recommend with a 3G phone anyway ??Sprint's plans are much more affordable than AT&T's and Verizon's. And you don't have to watch the data meter.

Data speeds
The AT&T version of the iPhone is the only one that supports speeds up to 14.4 Mbps on the carrier's HSPA network, while the Verizon and Sprint versions are tied to older and slower EV-DO networks. So it wasn't a surprise that AT&T turned in the fastest download and upload speeds in our three testing locations using the Speedtest.net app.

The AT&T iPhone 4S?pulled?off an overall average rate of 970 Kbps for downloads, and 270 Kbps for uploads.?By comparison, Verizon only mustered 380 Kbps on the download and Sprint was even slower at 280 Kbps. Verizon's iPhone 4S consistently offered the slowest upload speeds, with an average of 100 Kbps versus a not-much-better 170 Kbps for Sprint.?

Winner: AT&T
While all three iPhone 4S models trail true 4G phones by a mile, the AT&T iPhone 4S consistently delivered the fastest download and upload speeds.

Laptop

Comparative data speeds for the three phones, gauged using the Speedtest.net app.

Web browsing
Our Speedtest results were backed up by our real-world testing: the average times it took to load different websites. It took an overall average of 19 seconds for the AT&T iPhone 4S to load the full website of the New York Times on the AT&T iPhone 4S, 20 seconds faster than Verizon's overall average time (39 seconds), and 40 seconds faster than the average time it took for the Sprint iPhone 4S to load the page (59 seconds). It loaded the full website of Laptopmag.com and ESPN's mobile website fastest as well, at 20 seconds and 10 seconds, respectively. The only site it did not load faster than the other two carriers was CNN's mobile website, which it loaded in an average of 10 seconds, compared to Verizon's average of 9 seconds.?

Winner: AT&T
The AT&T iPhone 4S loaded sites considerably faster than the Verizon and Sprint versions of the device.

Call quality
We found the call quality on Verizon's iPhone 4S to be top notch. Sound was loud, clear, and exhibited no choppiness. In the first and third locations where we tested for call quality (a noisy coffee shop in New York, a private residential area in New Jersey), our callers had the same comment: We sounded the loudest, and background noise was present. On our end, we heard some scratchiness and static during calls, but there was less of it compared to the AT&T experience, and none during silences.

On Sprint, calls sounded quieter, which some callers said they appreciated, especially coming from two very loud calls (AT&T and Verizon). With Sprint background noise was less of an issue. One caller from our second location even said we sounded like we were in an office cubicle; initially he couldn't tell we were using a mobile phone at all. However, in every location where we tested for call quality, callers commented that the Sprint iPhone 4S sounded choppy. On our end, we sometimes heard a strange sort of echo to our voice.?

Winner: Verizon Wireless
Verizon beat out AT&T and Sprint with the clearest and loudest call quality on both ends of the line.

Final verdict
AT&T has shaken its reputation for poor service on the iPhone in this shootout, offering better data speeds than both Sprint and Verizon. And while Sprint offers unlimited data, AT&T's 2GB plan is cheaper than Verizon's. Verizon wins out for best overall call quality, but that's not why people buy smartphones. Whether you're asking Siri to find nearby steakhouses, downloading an app or sending a tweet, AT&T's iPhone 4S is just faster. And that's why it's your best bet.

More stories from Laptop:

Source: http://gadgetbox.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/10/20/8414796-iphone-4s-shootout-att-vs-sprint-vs-verizon

download ios 5 pokey find my mac gumby derrick mason derrick mason lamichael james

Communications On The Move - Defense Technology & Military Forum

COTM is basically autotracking satcom and - in theory - other long-range NLOS communications on moving platforms. Current Terrestrial UHF/VHF used for NLOS communications is basically screwed once you're on the move, hence the need for an autotracking satcom system.

Pretty much every major defense electronics company in the US has been developing systems for that (e.g. LM, Hughes, Raytheon, L-3, Rockwell Collins) in response to an ongoing bidding contest on portions of the Army's WIN-T (Warfighter Information Network - Tactical) future communications backup. WIN-T is supposed to in the end integrate multiple communications modes (SATCOM, LOS Radio, long-range UHF/VHF, bouncing stuff off aircraft and drones etc pp) in both stationary and mobile platforms, autoswitching between modes to always ensure a live connection. It's a 10-billion dollar project that's currently entering Increment 2 LRIP, with LM recently winning the contract to deliver the equipment for this increment.

Regarding implementation, the 10th Mountain Division has deployed ten MRAPs with a COTM system from Rockwell Collins (MobiLink) in Afghanistan several times over the past couple years for live troop trials / proof-of-system. The USAF has bought several dozen L-3 ArcLight systems for COTM backbone linking.

Source: http://www.defencetalk.com/forums/navy-maritime/communications-move-11515/

arrested development arrested development baltimore ravens shannon tweed shannon tweed don lapre aladdin

Friday, October 21, 2011

Foursquare CEO Dennis Crowley: ?The Daily Deal Companies Are Version 1.0?

Crowley 2.0In Part II of my TCTV interview with Foursquare CEO Dennis Crowley, we get down to brass tacks: How will Foursquare make money? (In Part I, we talked about Radar, Siri, and how mobile interfaces are changing). Foursquare is already experimenting by partnering with various daily deal companies, including Groupon, to show nearby local deals to Foursquare users. But Foursquare is ultimately taking a different approach. ""The daily deal companies are version 1.0 of great things you can build with the Internet that help local merchants drive foot traffic into the door. What we are doing with Foursquare is version 2."

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/Cym2lNEgZ7s/

cam newton emmy awards philadelphia eagles nick collins cape coral fl friday night lights kansas city chiefs

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Taxpayer-Supported Renewable Energy Projects by the Numbers (ContributorNetwork)

Alternative energy sources provide an Earth-friendly solution to fossil fuel and carbon emission causing power sources. Opponents to solar, wind and hydro power do not typically take issue with the use of renewable energy sources but the viability of the industry to function without government subsidies. The recent bankruptcy of Solyndra brought the issue of taxpayer funding for renewable energy companies into the forefront of the news cycle.

Here are some facts and figures about the amount of taxpayer money spent to bolster the solar industry in America:

2.3 billion: Dollars of green energy tax credits included in President Barack Obama's American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

57:

Percent the cheapest solar power manufacturer fell in the stock market this year. First Solar hit its lowest stock prices ever in early October.

30: Percent American-based SunPower fell in the stock market this year.

545 million: Taxpayer dollars funneled to Solyndra through subsidized government loans.

0: Workers hired through a government program that issued $737 million in guaranteed loans to the Nevada Dunes Solar Energy project.

900: Solar and clean energy related projects that each received a share of $11 million from the Rural Energy for America Program grant program in August.

2009: Year the $7 billion Renewable Energy Grant Program funds became available through President Obama's stimulus plan. Grant expenditures are currently being audited by government investigators.

852 million: Dollars loaned for the Genesis Solar Project in August.

2015: Year of deadline for subsidies from corn-generated ethanol to generate 15 billion gallons of fuel. Terms outlined in the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 also require 36 billions of fuel be generated by 2022.

1,200: Companies that attended the Solar Power International convention in Dallas this week to promote products.

2,600: Projects that garnered tax funds to support and promote solar and wind power by the 2009 stimulus bill. The projects are among those currently being investigated. The Treasury inspector general does not expect the evaluation to be completed until 2012.

47: States where companies are under investigation for inflating costs associated with grant projects by the Treasury Department. Companies in Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia are also involved in the fiscal review.

0: Jobs resulting from $58 million of taxpayer funds given to the Evergreen Solar company of Massachusetts. The manufacturer filed for bankruptcy with $485.6 million of debt.

44: Percent of America's corn crop used for ethanol production.

20: Electric car charging stations built in Oregon from a $2 million government grant.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/environment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111018/us_ac/10210015_taxpayersupported_renewable_energy_projects_by_the_numbers

broncos broncos tough love tough love patriots jets patriots jets denver broncos

Summary Box: Philip Morris Int'l 3Q profit grows (AP)

THE RESULTS: Philip Morris International Inc., which sells Marlboro and other cigarette brands overseas, said its third-quarter net income grew 31 percent to $2.38 billion. It sold more cigarettes at higher prices.

ASIAN LEADS: Cigarettes shipped in Asia rose 13 percent, pushing the number of cigarettes the company sold up 4.5 percent to 239.5 billion. Shipments fell in the European Union, and Latin America and Canada, but grew 5 percent in Eastern Europe, the Middle East and Africa.

CIGARETTE MARKET: The company has raised prices and cut costs to compensate for fewer smokers in Western Europe, Latin America and Canada.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/earnings/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111020/ap_on_bi_ge/us_earns_philip_morris_int_l_summary_box

james spader speed of light susan powell jonah hill neutrinos neutrinos autumnal equinox

EU court: No patents for some stem cell techniques

LONDON (AP) ? The European Union's top court ruled Tuesday that scientists cannot patent stem cell techniques that use human embryos for research, a decision some scientists said could threaten major medical advances if it prevents biotech companies from turning a profit.

The ruling sets Europe apart from much of the rest of the world, where there are no such restrictions, and it arose from a lawsuit filed not by a religious group but by the environmental group Greenpeace.

The decision from the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg centered on the case of a University of Bonn researcher who in 1997 filed a patent on a technique to turn embryonic stem cells into nerve cells. Greenpeace challenged Oliver Bruestle's patent, arguing that it allowed human embryos to be exploited.

The court said patents would be allowed if they involved therapeutic or diagnostic techniques that are useful to the embryo itself, like correcting defects.

But the justices concluded that the law protects human embryos from any use that could undermine their dignity. The court also objected to any stem cell techniques used exclusively for research, saying such use of embryos "is not patentable."

Embryonic stem cells can develop into any type of cell in the body. The hope is that one day they might be used to replace or repair damaged tissue from ailments such as heart disease, Parkinson's and stroke.

But using stem cells from embryos has always been controversial ? opposed by some groups for religious and moral reasons.

Greenpeace spokesman Christoph Then explained that the lawsuit was an effort to get a clear, legal definition of what constitutes a living embryo. The group is concerned that patents on plants and animals could lead to monopolies in food production.

Greenpeace approaches the issue from "a completely different angle" than anti-abortion activists, specifically a fear that living creatures will be abused for the sake of profits, Then said.

"We took an ethical approach," he said, noting that European patent law had failed to define what constitutes a human embryo. "We are mostly concerned about commercialization of the human body."

Scientists worried that the decision could further restrict stem cell research. Many feared that companies would be less interested in pursuing costly research projects because they would be unable to protect their inventions.

"This casts real doubt on the possibility of new medicines from stem cell research," said Pete Coffey, a researcher at University College London running several projects on eye disease and stem cells.

"Getting a stem cell technique to cure blindness is fantastic, but it may never get out as a medicine because no manufacturer will get any financial reward from it," he said.

Robert Lanza, chief scientific officer at Massachusetts-based Advanced Cell Technology, called the ruling "a devastating decision for the field."

Lanza, whose company has several stem cell projects, described the European court's decision as "the kiss of death" for research that requires the destruction of embryos. But, he said, other techniques, such as those used by his company, would not be banned.

Some European religious groups welcomed the ruling.

"We are in favor of research and development in biotechnology, but human beings must not be destroyed, not even in the early stages of their development," said Peter Liese of the EPP Christian Democrat group at the European Parliament.

The German Bishops' Conference, part of the Catholic Church, called the decision a "victory for human dignity" and said it strengthened the view that life begins at conception.

Alexander Denoon, a lawyer at a U.K. law firm specializing in life sciences, said attorneys would probably find ways around the European ban, perhaps by seeking patents on discoveries that result from the stem cell techniques rather than the techniques themselves.

Hank Greely, a law professor at Stanford University who directs the school's Center for Law and the Biosciences, said the decision seems like a reasonable interpretation of a 1998 directive by the European Union that forbids patenting the use of human embryos for industrial or commercial purposes.

In its latest move, the court extended that ban to products whose creation requires the destruction of embryos.

The ruling will not have any direct legal impact in the United States, which has no such restrictions on obtaining patents on stem cell techniques.

In Europe, it might provide incentive for using so-called iPS cells, which are stem cells created without destruction of an embryo, he said.

Those types of stem cells have eclipsed embryonic stem cells in recent years. Using a technique announced in 2007, researchers reprogram adult cells to turn into stem cells. Many scientists are now working to fine-tune that method.

But embryonic stem cell research is still considered crucial in leading scientific circles.

Douglas Melton, a stem cell expert at Harvard University, said he knows of few researchers who use cell reprogramming who do not also conduct research on human embryonic stem cells.

___

Associated Press writers Malcolm Ritter in New York, David Rising and Melissa Eddy in Berlin and Raf Casert in Brussels contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2011-10-18-EU-MED-Stem-Cell-Decision/id-b32aba78212945468c42e00238ca3fab

republican presidential candidates bet hip hop awards 2011 bet hip hop awards 2011 kraken kraken calvin johnson calvin johnson