Monday, October 31, 2011

South Sudan rebels threaten Warrap state, call for evacuation (Reuters)

JUBA (Reuters) ? A rebel group in South Sudan threatened on Saturday to attack Warrap state to bring down the local government and called on the United Nations and residents to leave within three days.

The South Sudan Liberation Army, one of several rebel groups in South Sudan, said it would turn its attention to the state after earlier attacking Mayom town in neighboring oil-producing Unity state, also on the border on Sudan.

"Within few days, the people of Warrap will be liberated from abject poverty, corruption and abuse of human rights," it said in a statement.

"We would also advise the civilians to evacuate all towns and move to villages in order to be safe," it said.

The United Nations mainly runs humanitarian operations for food deliveries and aid to local people and Southern Sudanese coming from the north.

South Sudan became independent in July after a 2005 peace deal with Khartoum that ended decades of civil war, but the new nation has been struggling to end tribal and rebel violence that has killed around 3,000 people this year.

Rebel and tribal violence undermine stability in South Sudan struggling to build up state institutions. Several rebel militias are fighting government forces in remote parts of the country, which is roughly the size of France.

Officials in South Sudan said earlier on Saturday the SSLA had killed 15 people, including nine soldiers, and wounded 18 when attacking Mayom in the morning.

"We got attacked in Mayom town today by the militias from 6 to 7 a.m. The militia attacked the town, killed 15 and wounded 18," Unity state Information Minister Gideon Gatpan Thoar said. "More than 60 militiamen were killed."

Army spokesman Philip Aguer said: "It was indiscriminate, they didn't differentiate between civilians and the army. The killing included a doctor."

Aguer said Mayom was now under army control but the SSLA rejected that, adding in its statement: "Within four hours, SSLA forces also managed to capture Tomor town and they are now advancing toward Bentiu town."

(Reporting by Hereward Holland; Writing by Ulf Laessing; Editing by)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111029/wl_nm/us_sudan_south

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Sunday, October 30, 2011

ECB's Trichet sees low inflation for 10 years: paper (Reuters)

BERLIN (Reuters) ? European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet was quoted by a German newspaper as saying inflation in the euro zone would be "very low" over the next 10 years, with expectations currently for around 1.8 percent.

"In the coming 10 years, the inflation rate will most probably stay very low; current expectations are for around 1.8 percent," he told the mass-selling Bild am Sonntag newspaper, in one of the final interviews of his term heading the ECB.

"This means: in the euro zone we have price stability. This is something we are very proud of, and rightly so, because we have achieved what is expected of us."

Trichet said European governments had made serious mistakes by not sticking to the Stability and Growth pact.

"They did this although the ECB emphatically warned them to follow the criteria."

Trichet, who said he would "certainly remain active" after stepping down as ECB president, called for a change of values in financial markets.

"We should be very aware of the fact that some ways of behavior on markets caused considerable irritation. One such thing is the level of some bonus payments," Trichet said.

"Banks must raise their level of resistance and avoid behavior that is not in cohesion with the values of our society -- including excessive bonus payments."

He said regulatory bodies should ensure financial market innovations served the real economy and did not damage it.

"At the moment we are working on correcting this," he said.

"There is an agreement among all authorities worldwide that we have to discipline the markets and in general the financial system, and we have to make sure that they are considerably more resistant under all circumstances in the future."

But the central banker warned against restricting banks too much, given that this would have negative impact on the real economy they financed.

Trichet said Europe needed to strengthen its political structures, which would require changes of the constitution.

He called for stronger European governance, making it possible to implement the necessary measures in those countries that continuously contravene the stability criteria and endanger the financial stability of the euro zone.

"In the long run, we will have to go further down the path toward political union," he said.

(Reporting By Sarah Marsh; Editing by Ralph Gowling)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111030/bs_nm/us_ecb_trichet_inflation

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Eccentric UK broadcaster Jimmy Savile dies at 84 (AP)

LONDON ? Veteran British broadcaster Jimmy Savile, a famously eccentric culture figure, has died at his home in northern England. He was 84.

Savile, known for his garish tracksuits, chunky gold jewelry and boundless enthusiasm for pop music and charity work, was the host of two long-running British television programs and claimed to have been a longtime confidant to Prince Charles and ex-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.

Rarely seen without his trademark large cigar, Savile had initially worked in a coal mine as a teenager before embracing music and built a national profile as a disc jockey ? first in Britain's dance halls and later on radio, including the renowned Radio Luxembourg.

West Yorkshire Police confirmed that officers had been called Saturday to Savile's home in the city of Leeds, northern England, and said that there were no suspicious circumstances surrounding his death. The cause of Savile's death is not yet known.

Savile claimed have been the first DJ in the world to use two turntables ? enabling continuous music to be played ? inventing the techniques later embraced by modern dance music, and to have pioneered the use of record, rather than live bands, at nightclubs.

"History has it that I was the very, very first in the whole world" to organize a disco event, he told the BBC in May.

Bestowed with a knighthood for his charity fundraising, Savile was best known as the host of the BBC's "Top Of The Pops" weekly television pop music show, launching the program in 1964 and returning to present its final edition in 2006.

For almost 20 years from 1975, Savile also hosted the hugely popular series "Jim'll Fix It," in which the broadcaster responded to children's letters by arranging for their wishes to be realized.

Savile championed a host of good causes ? frequently running marathons to raise money ? and led work to collect 20 million pounds ($32 million) for the creation of a national spinal injuries center at Stoke Mandeville Hospital in southern England.

"He was a very energetic character," friend and fellow radio presenter David Hamilton told Britain's Sky News television. "But most of all, I remember him as just a totally flamboyant, over the top, larger than life character and as he was on the air, he was just the same off."

Savile never married and lived alone in his native Leeds, in northern England, reserving part of his home as shrine to his late mother.

His guarded, and sometime curious, private life was the subject of a much watched television documentary in 2000 by film maker Louis Theroux, son of author Paul Theroux.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/music/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111029/ap_en_mu/eu_britain_obit_savile

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Dual iPad 2 Case Will Vastly Improve Your Multitasking [Video]

It's hard not to look at this limited edition case from ZooGue, that actually holds a couple of iPad 2s, and not shake your head in disbelief. Until you realize that it's not only an easy, albeit expensive, way to improve the tablet's multitasking capabilities. But it's also being auctioned off to benefit those with autism. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/vrB40Y3Uf-g/

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Mobb Deep Up For Jay-Z Collabo, Despite Past Beef

'It's just hip-hop, man,' Prodigy tells MTV News' 'RapFix Live.'
By Rob Markman, with reporting by Sway Calloway


Havoc and Prodigy of Mobb Deep
Photo: Natasha Chandel/ MTV News

Time heals all wounds. After Jay-Z and Mobb Deep squared off lyrically in 2001, it was hard to imagine that the rap titans would ever get to a place where they would even consider a collaboration.

Nothing is in the works, but after working with Roc Nation's Jay Electronica, Mobb Deep told MTV News correspondent Sway Calloway that they'd be open to the idea of working with Hov.

"Tell [Jay-Z] to get in the studio," Prodigy said when he and his partner Havoc appeared on Wednesday's "RapFix Live." "He gotta come to Infamous Studios in Queens, though."

Though the two acts threw quite a few barbs at each other, most notably on Jay-Z's "Takeover" and Mobb Deep's "Crawlin' " 10 years ago, Prodigy was recently featured on a track with Hov's signee Jay Electronica on his "Call of Duty" track.

On the song's hook, Prodigy even spits, "Put your diamonds in the sky, wave 'em side to side/ Get juxed for your shine," a double-sided lyric that evokes the spirit of a robbery and makes a play on Jay's diamond-shaped hand gesture that he throws up at all his shows.

Mobb Deep even recorded the song at Jigga's Roc Da Mic studios in Manhattan; they clearly harbor no ill will. After Electronica attempted to reach Prodigy on Twitter, the Queens MC got the word that the Hov protégé wanted to work alongside him. "I just got mad phone calls. I woke up late that morning, and everybody was blowin' me up like, 'Yo, Jay Electronica is trying to get in the studio right now,' " Prodigy recalled. "So we just went and knocked it out."

Mobb Deep also plan to get together with J. Cole, another Jay-Z signee. "I was on the phone with J. Cole like the next day, congratulating him on his album and all that," Prodigy said of his conversation with the Cole World MC. "We're supposed to be doing some work together too."

For Mobb Deep, it isn't about beef; instead, the duo are at a place in their careers where all they want to do is make quality tunes. "It's just hip-hop, man, making good songs. Everything else is irrelevant, man," Prodigy stated. "All the feelings and dudes wanna act feminine, put that to the side, man."

Do you hope Mobb Deep and Jay-Z team up? Let us know in the comments!

Related Videos Related Artists

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1673283/mobb-deep-jay-z-collabo-potential.jhtml

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Friday, October 28, 2011

Man United, Arsenal reach League Cup quarters

Associated Press Sports

updated 4:41 p.m. ET Oct. 25, 2011

LONDON (AP) -Manchester United bounced back from its derby humiliation by cruising to a 3-0 victory over forth-tier club Aldershot in the League Cup, while Arsenal overcame Premier League rival Bolton 2-1 to advance to the quarterfinals on Tuesday.

Dimitar Berbatov, Michael Owen and Antonio Valencia scored United's goals at Aldershot after being left out of the team that lost 6-1 to Manchester City on Sunday.

"Sometimes you need a kick in the teeth to get going again," Owen said. "And we were eager to bounce back."

Arsenal, which lost last season's League Cup final to Birmingham, recovered from a goal down against Bolton, with Andrei Arshavin and Chu-Young Park securing the home side's progress.

In Tuesday's other cup matches, Cardiff beat Burnley 1-0 while second-tier leader Southampton lost 2-0 to Crystal Palace.

United had the perfect tonic after its heaviest home defeat in the league since 1955, with a completely changed team having little trouble disposing of the lowest-ranked side left in the League Cup.

Berbatov netted his first goal of the season after 15 minutes after a one-two between Park Ji-sung and Tom Cleverley on the edge of the box ended with the Bulgaria striker slotting into the net.

He turned provider just before half time, setting up Owen's third goal of the campaign. The English forward's shot straight down the middle managed to beat goalkeeper Ross Worner.

And the victory was put beyond doubt by Valencia's fierce strike three minutes into the second half.

"We were under a little bit of pressure after the result at the weekend," Owen said. "We had United's reputation to look after ... we wanted to bounce and thankfully we got the result."

At Emirates Stadium, after a scoreless first half, the match went into overdrive after the interval, with three goals in less than 10 minutes.

Bolton opened the scoring in the 48th, when Fabrice Muamba dispossessed Emmanuel Frimpong near the halfway line. Muamba turned and charged through the middle toward goal, exchanging passes with Darren Pratley before volleying past Arsenal goalkeeper Lukasz Fabianski from inside the area.

Arsenal equalized six minutes later when Arshavin's run down the right evaded Bolton's defense and he curled a shot past Bolton goalkeeper Adam Bogdan.

Three minutes later, Arshavin's run through the middle drew three Bolton defenders and the Russian passed to Park, who was alone on the left. The South Korea international curled a powerful shot past Bogdan to make it 2-1 in the 57th.

Bolton had several chances to equalize, including in the 74th when Fabianski misjudged a shot from Chris Eagles and nearly pushed the ball over his head and into his own net.

Arsenal center back Thomas Vermaelen played his first match in two months following ankle surgery, but picked up a calf injury toward the end of the match. Manager Arsene Wenger said he didn't think the injury was serious, but that Vermaelen would likely miss the Premier League match against Chelsea on Saturday.

There are four all-Premier League matches in the competition on Wednesday.

Man City, which is five points clear at the top of the Premier League, travels to Wolverhampton Wanderers, Chelsea is at Everton, Stoke hosts Liverpool and Blackburn faces Newcastle.

--

Associated Press writer Frank Griffiths contributed to this report.

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


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I'm no saint, but I'm no racist

??Barcelona's Cesc Fabregas says he is no saint but he did not direct any racist abuse toward Sevilla's Frederic Kanoute during a heated encounter on Saturday.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/44131091/ns/sports-soccer/

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Slowing quivering hearts: Promising results from landmark ARISTOTLE trial finds new drug may revolutionize the treatment of atrial fibrillation

ScienceDaily (Oct. 26, 2011) ? New research has the potential to revolutionize the treatment of atrial fibrillation (AF), a condition affecting a quarter of a million Canadians which is expected to strike even more in the coming years, as the Canadian population ages.

AF is the most common type of heart arrhythmia and puts those affected at a three to five times greater risk for stroke. Now, there is a new drug poised to battle the condition.

"The majority of patients with atrial fibrillation need an anticoagulant. The current anticoagulant can be a burden for physicians and patients due to its side effects and narrow therapeutic range," Dr. Justin Ezekowitz, from the University of Alberta, told a late breaking clinical trial session at the Canadian Cardiovascular Congress 2011, co-hosted by the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada and the Canadian Cardiovascular Congress. It is associated with a risk of bleeding and needs very close monitoring, whereas this new drug is taken twice a day and does not require monitoring. Our trial also shows it is not just equivalent, but better than warfarin for preventing strokes. These are important advantages."

The mainstay of treatment for AF, in which the heart's rhythm becomes very irregular and rapid, has been warfarin, an anticoagulant which has been highly effective in preventing stroke in patients with AF. However, it requires patients to come in to their doctor's office for frequent blood tests, is associated with bleeding, and it also can interact with a variety of foods and drugs that patients might also be taking.

Apixaban, a new type of oral anticoagulant known as a factor Xa inhibitor, resulted in fewer strokes (ischemic or hemorrhagic) and fewer systemic embolisms, caused less bleeding and resulted in fewer deaths in patients with atrial fibrillation, said Dr. Ezekowitz.

"We have a drug that can increase reductions in death and stroke and it is safer in terms of bleeding," says Dr. Ezekowitz. "It is also easier to use."

Dr. Ezekowitz presented the results from the large, international, multicentre Apixaban for Reduction In Stroke and Other ThromboemboLic Events(ARISTOTLE) in atrialfibrillation trial. It is the largest prospective trial yet reported for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation.

The trial randomized 18,201 patients with at least one additional risk factor for stroke, such as age greater than 75 years, prior stroke or transient ischemic attack, systemic embolism, heart failure or left ventricular ejection fraction less than 40 per cent, diabetes, or high blood pressure.

The patients came from over 1,000 sites in 39 countries. Their mean age was 70 years and 31 per cent were 75 or older. There were 19 per cent with prior stroke, 87 per cent had high blood pressure, 28 per cent had heart failure or reduced left ventricular ejection fraction, and 24 per cent had diabetesmellitus.

Canada supplied a very large cohort of 1,057 patients, said Dr. Ezekowitz, who led the Canadian arm of the trial with Dr. Paul Dorian from the University of Toronto.

The patients were randomized to apixaban 5 mg twice daily versus dose-adjusted warfarin -- which is often used to treat AF ? using a double-blind, double-dummy design. Warfarin or warfarin placebo was monitored adjusted to a target INR of two to three using a blinded, encrypted point-of-care device. "This was the best possible clinical trial design," says Dr. Ezekowitz.

A bit more than half of the patients (57 per cent) had used warfarin before entering the study, and 43 per cent were new to warfarin.

The patients were followed for 1.8 years, on average.

The study found that apixaban is effective at treating AF. It was also better at reducing all-cause mortality and was associated with less bleeding.

Specifically, apixaban reduced the chance of stroke and systemic embolism by 21 per cent, reduced major bleeding by 31 per cent, and reduced mortality, or all cause death, by 11 per cent.

Clinical trials have resulted in major advances in the management of AF over the past number of years," says Dr. Blair O'Neill, president of the Canadian Cardiovascular Society, which publishes the Canadian AF guidelines for clinicians. "Stroke is a major public health issue and in many instances as a result of AF. These novel anticoagulants are important advances and apply to most patients with AF."

Atrial fibrillation is becoming more common due to the aging of the population, not only in Canada but around the world.

It is also being seen in younger people due to lifestyle factors, especially stress. Also, it is increasing as cardiologists have become better at diagnosing the condition.

Some facts about atrial fibrillation:

  • Atrial fibrillation is associated with a four- to five-fold increased risk of ischemic stroke. It is responsible for 15 per cent to 20 per cent of all ischemic strokes.
  • Atrial fibrillation affects approximately 250,000 Canadians.
  • Atrial fibrillation is the most common arrhythmia managed by emergency physicians and accounts for approximately one-third of hospitalizations for cardiac rhythm disturbances.
  • Hospital admissions for atrial fibrillation have increased by 66 per cent over the past 20 years due to an aging population and a rising prevalence of chronic heart disease.
  • After the age of 55, the incidence of atrial fibrillation doubles with each decade of life.
  • After age 60, one-third of all strokes are caused by atrial fibrillation.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada.

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


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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/10/111026091216.htm

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Interactive Kitchen Teaches French Language Through French Cooking [Homemodo]

Rote memorization of a new language will only teach you so much, you need to actually use it in everyday instances for it to really sink in. An intelligent kitchen from Newcastle University aims to do just that with a bonus of fine French cuisine. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/VdvhIHPabfw/interactive-kitchen-teaches-french-language-through-french-cooking

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Chartis MEMSA Insurance Company and Al Tamimi and Company ...

A key incentive for those attending the event was to learn about how the new laws and regulations can adversely affect certain positions within companies, including the board of directors and officers at multiple levels of organizations, regardless of their size.

The event, which began promptly at 10:30am, was attended by industry leaders in various sectors such as insurance, banking, construction and finance companies. Mr. Farid Saber, General Manager for Chartis MEMSA Insurance Company LTD., began by welcoming members of the Ministry of Commerce & Industry, the Central Bank of Kuwait, the CMA, the US Embassy and the Insurance Union along with the large crowd in attendance.

He later went on to introduce the featured speakers for the event, Mr. Michael Whitwell, President of Chartis Central Region, Alex Saleh, Partner & Head of Kuwait Office for Al Tamimi & Company and the Chartis Assistant Manager for Financial Lines, Middle East, Mr. Muhannad Abdul Majeed, who highlighted the D&O Liabilities Insurance coverage that Chartis offers as well as key cases over the last several years involving the liability of Directors & Officers.

Leading off the speaker list, Mr. Whitwell discussed the importance of D&O Liability insurance regardless of the company size. He noted that; "In 2010, Chartis wrote over $41bn in gross premiums worldwide and over $25bn were written during the first half of 2011." He then added, "Chartis paid an average of $111m in claims for every business day in 2010."

Commenting on the event, Mr. Whitwell said, "Kuwait is a key market for Chartis within the Middle East and we see great potential for the local insurance industry. It is important for the development of the industry that we look to increase awareness regarding risk and the relatively new areas of insurance such as D&O Liability."

Alex Saleh, Partner & Head of the Kuwait Office for Al Tamimi & Company, followed by presenting on the laws and regulations governing the liabilities of Directors & Officers. During his presentation, Mr. Saleh explained how Directors & Officers can be held liable for actions during and after their tenure.

After the event, Mr. Saleh commented by saying; "It is important for Directors & Officers to understand the legal ramifications that their decisions and actions during their tenure can have on them. I am grateful to our friends at Chartis for their proactive approach to informing their clients." He went on by adding; "We at Al Tamimi & Company feel that by taking the proper precautions at the beginning, may save a world of problems later on."

As the need for Director & Officer Liability Insurance rises, leading companies such as Chartis have developed plans to offer liability insurance to Directors & Officers of companies large and small. In recent years due to the global financial crises, Al Tamimi & Company has seen a number of legal cases targeting the Directors and Officers of companies that were affected by the global down turn.

This was the first of a number of planned seminars to be hosted by Chartis MEMSA Insurance Company LTD., aimed at highlighting the risks businesses in Kuwait face and outlining the appropriate insurance solutions available to mitigate these risks.

Source: http://www.ameinfo.com/279379.html

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Never Forget Never Forgive IC

Teddy blinked, continuing to stare at the steadily growing mass of gunmetal gray, which he had been looking at for the passed two days. For most of that time, he had been in a barely conscious state, close to being legally dead, induced by packs of experimentally mixed meds within the stealth suit he was wearing, used to lower his bodily functions and reduce his need for air. It was all in effort to conserve the life-support within the suit, as he, his detachment of commandos and several other detachments, floated through the cold void of space towards the massive orbital fortress, preventing the Sigma Authority fleet from taking up positions around the planet of Haven.

They had been launched at a very low velocity from the bulky troop ships, in order to make sure they could land safety on the hull of the fortress, instead of being turned into red smears on the paint job. Now, with less then ten minutes before they would make contact, the meds changed, pumping a new mixture into their veins, reawakening the commandos and reviving their bodies. It was like molten lead had been poured into the blood vessels, until the whole body burned for thirty seconds or so.

Captain Greaves flexed his fingers and his toes, feeling the digits respond after the pain had disappeared. He wanted to move his arms and legs but doing so might make him crash into one of the forty-nine floating bodies around him. No one wanted to go spinning wildly away from the group, only to bounced off the fortress and be lost in the cold grips of space without hope for rescue. He also wanted to make sure his weapons were still attached to the back of his suit but couldn?t do that either. Slowly, to make sure he didn?t change his trajectory, he raised his left hand to his helmet and pressed the com unit.

?Tenth Detachment sound off?

The com crackled as the commandos around him responded, starting with his second in command and then working through the fire teams in the four squads. It would seem that the meds had worked properly for everyone, within his command at least. He couldn?t tell with the others and this close to his target (a hatch intelligence had identified as being used by repair bots), he didn?t have the time to look at the other floating clouds of men and women or open a channel to their leaders.

As Teddy was about to smack into the hull of the fortress, he grabbed the magnetic attachment anchor at his belt and slapped it against the painted metal. His torso bumped into the hull and bounced back. The short tether snapped tight and held him close to the fortress. Breathing hard, he grabbed at another pouch on his stealth suit and pulled out a square box with four thin spikes. Jamming it into the hatch controls of what hopefully would be an airlock, he pushed a series of commands in the suddenly glowing screen. For a long moment nothing happened and a strengthening feeling of controlled concern grew in the pit of his stomach. Then the hatch soundlessly opened.

Smiling within his helmet, he waved a hand into the opening, wordlessly ordering his command into the airlock. Lieutenant Sisson would be first, as she was carrying the second override unit and would use it to open the second hatch in the airlock, as soon as he had followed the rest of the unit inside and set the outer hatchway to close. Hopefully they would find atmosphere inside but it was likely they there might only be air within the command hub, their target location. The rest of the station might be just as unbreathable as the void, seeing as most the fortress was likely only ever used by Peacekeeper androids.

Want to know more or join up? Please see the roleplay tab, Never Forget Never Forgive

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/JJnJag_JSCA/viewtopic.php

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Monday morning KO: A reminder of Matt Mitrione?s power

With Matt Mitrione taking on Cheick Kongo this Saturday at UFC 137, it's a good time to take a look back at how Mitrione ended his last fight. Here is a snippet of his bout with Christian Morecraft at UFC on Versus 4.

This fight will be Mitrione's toughest test yet. He is undefeated, with all of his fights have? in the UFC after a career in the NFL. Will Mitrione handle Kongo's striking? Tell us in the comments or on Facebook.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/mma/blog/cagewriter/post/Monday-morning-KO-A-reminder-of-Matt-Mitrione-s?urn=mma-wp8479

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Jordan swears in new reform government (Reuters)

AMMAN (Reuters) ? Jordan's U.S.-backed King Abdullah swore in a reform-minded government on Monday to speed up political liberalization after protests inspired by popular uprisings in the Arab world.

The new 30-member cabinet includes moderates, tribal politicians and technocrats. The powerful Islamist opposition declined an invitation to join but said it would support government reform moves.

Prime Minister Awn Khasawneh, a judge who worked at the Hague-based International Court of Justice, was appointed last week to replace Marouf al-Bakhit, who was widely criticized for inept handling of the crisis.

U.S.-educated former central banker Umayya Toukan was named finance minister in a move officials said aimed to allay investors' concerns about soaring public spending that has threatened Jordan's fiscal and monetary stability.

The Islamic Action Front (IAF), the political arm of the Muslim Brotherhood, said it would back Khasawneh's reformist agenda and said his overtures marked a stark contrast from successive governments that had curbed its activities.

Jordan has seen weeks of street protests led by Islamists, tribal figures and leftist opposition that have demanded wider political freedoms and that the king fight corruption.

Abdullah told Khasawneh last week that his cabinet's mission was to accelerate reforms which the outgoing cabinet had been slow in pushing through.

Abdullah told CNN in an interview released on Monday that Khasawneh had the credentials to steer the country toward national elections next year after parliament passes a package of reform laws, including a new electoral law.

"It's just if we're sincere about getting Jordan to national elections and a new phase of political life, you've got to get the right players, so this prime minister is coming in for a specific reason so that we can achieve those ends," the monarch told CNN.

Khasawneh told reporters after he was sworn in that his cabinet would open a debate over the current electoral system that favors tribal but scarcely populated regions against the heavily populated cities where most of Jordan's citizens of Palestinian origin live.

"We will also lead a public debate on the election law," Khasawneh said.

Political commentators say that as long as the electoral system does not address discrimination against citizens of Palestinian origin, under-represented in parliament and the state, real change was still a long way off.

The choice of Khasawneh was also followed by the appointment of a new intelligence chief seen as a less political figure than predecessors who had been criticized by the opposition for meddling in public life and thwarting reforms.

The monarch has said privately that the powerful security service has disregarded his calls to curb its involvement in politics. He sent its newly appointed chief Faisal al-Shobaki a rare public letter telling him his agency should not thwart reforms.

Commentators said the moves eased political tensions that had grown after recent pro-reform rallies were met with violence by members of conservative tribes and an entrenched security apparatus, raising the specter of wider unrest.

TRIBAL DISCONTENT

Politicians say the monarch, who has ruled since 1999, has been forced to take only cautious steps toward democracy, constrained by the tribal power base which sees reforms as a threat to its political and economic benefits.

There has been unprecedented criticism from tribal areas that have traditionally formed the backbone of support for the Hashemite royal family and provide the bulk of manpower for the army and security forces.

The palace has so far contained tribal discontent by offering patronage, state jobs and perks but critics say this policy of placating constituents was not sustainable in a country dependent on fluctuating levels of foreign aid.

Toukan, the new finance minister, faces the task of cutting the budget deficit, expected to be around seven percent of GDP and well above an original 5.5 percent estimate for this year.

"The economic challenges to reduce poverty and ease unemployment are probably the biggest challenges we face," Khasawneh said.

(Reporting by Suleiman Al-Khalidi; Editing by Dominic Evans and David Stamp)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111024/wl_nm/us_jordan_government

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Monday, October 24, 2011

Siri, Seriously: 10 Ways We're Really Using Apple's Voice Assistant [POLL] (Mashable)

By now it seems we're all well aware of the many Easter eggs Apple has left for us in Siri, the intelligent assistant baked into the iPhone 4S. She has enough answers to silly questions to delight you for a weekend or more. Some sites are getting a lot of mileage out of finding each and every amusing answer Siri has up her sleeve. But once the novelty has worn off, will you really use Siri in your everyday life -- or will she fade into the background, an unwanted extra like Apple's previous iPhone voice control feature? After using the 4S for more than a week, I think Siri will enter our lives in small but vital ways. Most of these are things you could do before, but that required too many cumbersome steps that Siri can easily overcome.

[More from Mashable: Steve Jobs Biography: The Best Excerpts]

Here's my shortlist of ways Siri really works for me. If you have an iPhone 4S already, how are you putting her to work? Take our poll and let us know in the comments.


SEE ALSO: Siri Is Impressive, But Still A Work In Progress

[More from Mashable: Teach Siri How to Pronounce Your Name]

1. Siri, Wake Me Up. When you're ready to crash, the last thing you want to do is fiddle with an alarm app. It's much faster and more satisfying to hold down the home button and say "Wake me up at 7:15." This also works well for power naps -- "Wake me in 40 minutes." -- or the weekend, when you don't have a specific appointment but don't want to oversleep: "Wake me in eight hours."

2. Siri, Find Coffee. Likewise, typing on a small screen is something you just don't want to do when you're caffeine-deprived, especially in a strange town. For more complex restaurant requests later in the day, you'll probably want to go straight to the Yelp app -- but if you just need a java jolt to get started, she can point you at the nearest coffee place. Chances are it's a Starbucks.

3. Siri, Do You Know The Way To San Jose? Here's another area where typing takes too damn long (and if you're doing it on the road, where most of us need directions on the go, typing can kill.) Siri is an effective and reliable shortcut to Google Maps directions. She'd be a lot more effective if she offered to read the directions out ahead of each turn; that would give GPS device manufacturers like TomTom a run for their money. But Siri hasn't steered me wrong on any city name I've tried yet. And yes, putting your question in the form of a song title works too.


SEE ALSO: iPhone 4S: Siri Politely Answers 10 Absurd Questions [PICS]

4. Siri, Play A Random Song. I'm pretty fastidious about organizing my tunes; setting up a new "most wanted" playlist every month is only the beginning of it. I thought nothing could ever stop me from scrolling through them to choose the playlist I wanted -- but Siri did. What's more, instructions that match my spur-of-the-moment musical tastes -- like "Siri, play some Queen" -- have come in very handy, especially on my morning run.

5. Siri, Send A Text. Here's where Siri's lift-to-talk feature comes in handy. No more texting and walking! Just turn the phone on, put it to your ear and say "Siri, text my wife and let her know I'm going to be late." No muss, no fuss, and anyone walking past will simply think you're talking to your personal assistant. Which, of course, you are.

6. Siri, Will It Rain Today? Apple made a big deal of Siri's weather prediction capabilities, so it's no surprise that she understands all manner of meteorological questions. But I never expected to be asking so many of them as I stand and stare at my closet, hat rack and umbrella stand.


SEE ALSO: Teach Siri How to Pronounce Your Name

7. Siri, Remind Me To Do This Every Day. Here's another area where I had my system all thought out -- a to-do app called Things combined with Google Calendar. Siri hasn't replaced this system, but she has lessened my need to put stuff in it. Best of all, she can set repeating items with ease: try "Siri, remind me to brush my teeth at 10pm every night." That may sound like micromanaging, by the way, but it's the most effective way I've found to get me to wind down at a certain time.

8. Siri, Remind Me When I Come Back Here. Siri's location-based reminders aren't perfect -- it's hard to get her to understand location labels other than "home" or "work," for one thing. But one location she definitely understands is "here" -- your current GPS coordinates. This can be useful in all sorts of small ways. For example, the other night I walked past a beautiful house I really wanted to take a picture of during the day. A quick note to Siri, and she reminded me when I passed that way a few mornings later. Good Siri.

9. Siri, Settle Our Argument. No, Siri doesn't know it all. But she is plugged into Wolfram Alpha, a two-year-old "computational knowledge engine" that can give you everything from the height of Mount Everest to the size of global GDP to quotes from Pulp Fiction -- all in response to questions in natural language. She just might be able to give you the last word in that spirited discussion of yours faster than Google can. Besides, Google doesn't give you the satisfaction of asking, holding the phone up, and smiling smugly.


SEE ALSO: A Duet With Siri [VIDEO]

10. Siri, Send a Tweet. Going to Twitter.com to post your update? Launching the Twitter mobile app? That's so last month. Twitter and Siri were made for each other -- you just have to do a bit of work to get them together. Follow our step-by-step instructions here.



This story originally published on Mashable here.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/applecomputer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/mashable/20111022/tc_mashable/siri_seriously_10_ways_were_really_using_apples_voice_assistant_poll

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Nevada GOP moves caucus back to February 4th, 2012

rnc-logoAfter all the?posturing?by states to hold their primaries and caucus early so that it can benefit Mitt Romney, Nevada has decided move its caucus date back to February 4th, from January 17th, 2012. If Nevada would have left their January caucus date, they would have lost delegates as a ?penalty? for violating GOP rules.

Some of the lower tiered GOP candidates like Michele ?Bachmann and Jon Huntsman had threatened to boycott the GOP caucus altogether because of Nevada shifting it?s date to early January. Cry baby Huntsman even ?boycotted? the last debate in Las Vegas because of it. Now, according to CNN, New Hampshire is happy.

?Nevada?s decision to reschedule to February 4 will now allow Secretary of State Bill Gardner to schedule our primary at a more appropriate time than would?ve been allowed with Nevada?s earlier date,? said New Hampshire Republican Committee Chairman Wayne MacDonald in a statement. ?The New Hampshire Primary is important not just as a long standing tradition, but as an opportunity for lesser-funded or lesser-known candidates to have the opportunity to be heard.?

The senile old codger Harry Reid couldn?t be reached for comment.

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Plants feel the force

Friday, October 21, 2011

"Picture yourself hiking through the woods or walking across a lawn," says Elizabeth Haswell, PhD, assistant professor of biology in Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis. "Now ask yourself: Do the bushes know that someone is brushing past them? Does the grass know that it is being crushed underfoot? Of course, plants don't think thoughts, but they do respond to being touched in a number of ways."

"It's clear," Haswell says, "that plants can respond to physical stimuli, such as gravity or touch. Roots grow down, a 'sensitive plant' folds its leaves, and a vine twines around a trellis. But we're just beginning to find out how they do it," she says.

In the 1980s, work with bacterial cells showed that they have mechanosensitive channels, tiny pores in the cells membrane that open when the cell bloats with water and the membrane is stretched, letting charged atoms and other molecules to rush out of the cell. Water follows the ions, the cell contracts, the membrane relaxes, and the pores close.

Genes encoding seven such channels have been found in the bacterium Escherichia coli and 10 in Arabidopsis thaliana, a small flowering plant related to mustard and cabbage. Both E. coli and Arabidopsis serve as model organisms in Haswell's lab.

She suspects that there are many more channels yet to be discovered and that they will prove to have a wide variety of functions.

Recently, Haswell and colleagues at the California Institute of Technology, who are co-principal investigators on an National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant to analyze mechanosensitive channels, wrote a review article about the work so far in order to "get their thoughts together" as they prepared to write the grant renewal. The review appeared in the Oct. 11 issue of Structure.

Swelling bacteria might seem unrelated to folding leaflets, but Haswell is willing to bet they're all related and that mechanosensitive ion channels are at the bottom of them all. After all, plant movements ? both fast and slow ? are ultimately all hydraulically powered; where ions go the water will follow.

Giant E. coli cells

The big problem with studying ion channels has always been their small size, which poses formidable technical challenges.

Early work in the field, done to understand the ion channels whose coordinated opening and closing creates a nerve impulse, was done in exceptionally large cells: the giant nerve cells of the European squid, which had projections big enough to be seen with the unaided eye.

Experiments with these channels eventually led to the development of a sensitive electrical recording technique known as the patch clamp that allowed researchers to examine the properties of a single ion channel. Patch clamp recording uses as an electrode a glass micropipette that has an open tip. The tip is small enough that it encloses a "patch" of cell membrane that often contains just one or a few ion channels.

Patch clamp work showed that there were many different types of ion channels and that they were involved not just in the transmission of nerve impulses but also with many other biological processes that involve rapid changes in cells.

Mechanosensitive channels were discovered when scientists started looking for ion channels in bacteria, which wasn't until the 1980s because ion channels were associated with nerves and bacteria weren't thought to have a nervous system.

In E. coli, the ion channels are embedded in the plasma membrane, which is inside a cell wall, but even if the wall could be stripped away, the cells are far too small to be individually patched. So the work is done with specially prepared giant bacterial cells called spherophlasts.

These are made by culturing E. coli in a broth containing an antibiotic that prevents daughter cells from separating completely when a cell divides. As the cells multiply, "snakes" of many cells that share a single plasma membrane form in the culture. "If you then digest away the cell wall, they swell up to form a large sphere," Haswell says.

Not that spheroplasts are that big. "We're doing most of our studies in Xenopus oocytes (frog eggs), whose diameters are 150 times bigger than those of spheroplasts," she says.

Three mechanosensitive channel activites

To find ion channels in bacteria, scientists did electrophysiological surveys of spheroplasts. They stuck a pipette onto the spheroplast and applied suction to the membrane as they looked for tiny currents flowing across the membrane.

"What they found was really amazing," Haswell says. "There were three different activities that are gated (triggered to open) only by deformation of the membrane." (They were called "activities" because nobody knew their molecular or genetic basis yet.)

The three activities were named mechanosensitive channels of large (MscL), small (MscS) and mini (MscM) conductance. They were distinguished from one another by how much tension you had to introduce in order to get them to open and by their conductance.

One of the labs working with spheroplasts was led by Ching Kung, PhD, at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. The MscL protein was identified and its gene was cloned in 1994 by Sergei Sukharev, PhD, then a member of Kung's lab. His tour-de-force experiment, Haswell says, involved reconstituting fractions of the bacterial plasma membrane into synthetic membranes (liposomes) to see whether they would confer large-channel conductance.

In 1999, the gene encoding MscS was identified in the lab of Ian Booth, PhD, at the University of Aberdeen. Comparatively, little work has been done on the mini channel, which is finicky and often doesn't show up, Haswell says, though a protein contributing to MscM activity was recently identified by Booth's group.

Once both genes were known, researchers did knockout experiments to see what happened to bacteria that didn't have the genes needed to make the channels. What they found, says Haswell, was that if both the MscL and MscS genes were missing, the cells could not survive "osmotic downshock," the bacterial equivalent of water torture.

"The standard assay," Haswell says, "is to grow the bacteria for a couple of generations in a very salty broth, so that they have a chance to balance their internal osmolyte concentration with the external one." (Osmolytes are molecules that affect osmosis, or the movement of water into and out of the cell.) "They do this," she says, "by taking up osmolytes from the environment and by making their own."

"Then," she says, "you take these bacteria that are chockfull of osmolytes and throw them into fresh water. If they don't have the MscS and MscL proteins that allow them to dump ions to avoid the uncontrolled influx of water, they don't survive." It's a bit like dumping saltwater fish into a freshwater aquarium.

Why are there three mechanosenstivie channel activities? The currently accepted model, Haswell says is that the channels with the smaller conductances are the first line of defense. They open early in response to osmotic shock so that the channel of large conductance, through which molecules the cell needs can escape, doesn't open unless it is absolutely necessary. The graduated response thus gives the cell its best chance for survival.

Crystallizing the proteins

The next step in this scientific odyssey, figuring out the proteins' structures, also was very difficult. Protein structures are traditionally discovered by purifying a protein, crystallizing it out of a water solution, and then bombarding the crystal with X-rays. The positions of the atoms in the protein can be deduced from the X-ray diffraction pattern.

In a sense crystallizing a protein isn't all that different from growing rock candy from a sugar solution, but, as always, the devil is in the details. Protein crystals are much harder to grow than sugar crystals and, once grown, they are extremely fragile. They even can even be damaged by the X-ray probes used to examine them.

And to make things worse MscL and MscS span the plasma membrane, which means that their ends, which are exposed to the periplasm outside the cell and the cytoplasm inside the cell, are water-loving and their middle sections, which are stuck in the greasy membrane, are repelled by water. Because of this double nature it is impossible to precipitate membrane proteins from water solutions.

Instead the technique is to surround the protein with what have been characterized as "highly contrived detergents," that protect them ? but just barely ? from the water. Finding the magical balance can take as long as a scientific career.

The first mechanosensitive channel to be crystallized was MscL?not the protein in E. coli but the analogous molecule (a homolog) from the bacterium that causes tuberculosis. This work was done in the lab of one of Haswell's co-authors, Douglas C. Rees a Howard Hughes investigator at the California Institute of Technology.

MscS from E. coli was crystallized in the Rees laboratory several years later, in 2002, and an MscS protein with a mutation that left it stuck in the presumed open state was crystallized in the Booth laboratory in 2008. "So now we have two crystal structures for MscS and two (from different bacterial strains) for MscL," Haswell says.

Of plants and mutants

Up to this point, mechanosensitive channels might not seem all that interesting because the lives of bacteria are not of supreme interest to us unless they are making us ill.

However, says, Haswell, in the early 2000s, scientists began to compare the genes for the bacterial channels to the genomes of other organisms and they discovered that there are homologous sequences not just in other bacteria but also in some multicellular organisms, including plants.

"This is where I got involved," she says. "I was interested in gravity and touch response in plants. I saw these papers and thought these homologs were great candidates for proteins that might mediate those responses."

"There are 10 MscS-homologs in Arabidopsis and no MscL homologs," she says. "What's more, different homologs are found not just in the cell membrane but also in chloroplast and mitochondrial membranes. "

The chloroplast is the light-capturing organelle in a plant cell and the mitochondria is its power station; both are thought to be once-independent organisms that were engulfed and enslaved by cells which found them useful. Their membranes are vestiges of their free-living past.

The number of homologs and their locations in plant cells suggests these channels do much more than prevent the cells from taking on board too much water.

So what exactly were they doing? To find out Haswell got online and ordered Arabidopsis seeds from the Salk collection in La Jolla, Calif., each of which had a mutation in one of the 10 channel genes.

From these mutants she's learned that two of the ten channels control chloroplast size and proper division as well as leaf shape. Plants with mutations in these two MscS channel homologs have giant chloroplasts that haven't divided properly. The monster chloroplasts garnered her lab the cover of the August issue of The Plant Cell.

"We showed that bacteria lacking MscS and MscL don't divide properly either,"Haswell says, "so the link between these channels and division is evolutionarily conserved."

The big idea

But Haswell and her co-authors think they are only scratching the surface. "We are basing our understanding of this class of channels on MscS itself, which is a very reduced form of the channel," she says. "It's relatively tiny."

"But we know that some of the members of this family have long extensions that stick out from the membrane either outside or inside the cell. We suspect this means that the channels not only discharge ions, but that they also signal to the whole cell in other ways. They may be integrated into common signaling pathways, such as the cellular osmotic stress response pathway.

We think we may be missing a lot of complexity by focusing too exclusively on the first members of this family of proteins to be found and characterized," she says. "We think there's a common channel core that makes these proteins respond to membrane tension but that all kinds of functionally relevant regulation may be layered on top of that."

"For example," she says, "there's a channel in E. coli that's closely related to MscS that has a huge extension outside the cell that makes it sensitive to potassium. So it's a mechanosensitive channel but it only gates in the presence of potassium. What that's important for, we don't yet know, but it tells us there are other functions out there we haven't studied."

What about the sensitive plant?

So are these channels at the bottom of the really fast plant movements like the sensitive plant's famous touch shyness? (To see a movie of this and other "nastic" (fast) movements, go to the Plants in Motion site maintained by Haswell's colleague Roger P. Hangartner of Indiana University).

Haswell is circumspect. "It's possible," she says. "In the case of Mimosa pudica there's probably an electrical impulse that triggers a loss of water and turgor in cells at the base of each leaflet, so these channel proteins are great candidates.

###

Washington University in St. Louis: http://www.wustl.edu

Thanks to Washington University in St. Louis for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 1309 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/114530/Plants_feel_the_force_

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Sunday, October 23, 2011

Nigerian sect shoots, kills state-run TV cameraman (AP)

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria ? Authorities in Nigeria say members of a radical Muslim sect in the northeast have shot dead a cameraman for the state-run television network after making a threat against journalists in the oil-rich country.

A military spokesman confirmed the killing Saturday of Zakariya Isa, a cameraman for the Nigerian Television Authority. Col. Victor Ebhaleme said Isa died after sustaining several gunshot wounds to the head and chest. Police said they have made no arrests.

Authorities blamed the attack on a radical Muslim sect known locally as Boko Haram. Boko Haram claimed responsibility for a string of assassinations and bombings in northern Nigeria in its campaign to implement strict Shariah law in Africa's most populous nation.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111022/ap_on_re_af/af_nigeria_violence

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Romney, Perry recast GOP primary as a contest over character (Star Tribune)

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

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Facebook's advertising business: CPM up 60% (report)

Summary: A new report suggests Facebook?s cost per thousand impressions (CPMs) is up 60 percent, while cost per click (CPC) revenue is up 30 percent, for the first half of 2011.

Facebook?s revenue passed $1.6 billion in the first half of 2011. For the whole year, Facebook?s advertising revenue is expected to be $3.8 billion out of a total $4.27 billion, or 89 percent. These are all estimates we?ve heard before, but it gets better, according to Ad Age.

Because Facebook?s advertising marketplace relies on an auction sales model, greater competition and improved ad products has increased the social network?s overall advertising yield. In fact, cost per thousand impressions (CPM) is reportedly up 60 percent, while cost per click (CPC) revenue is up 30 percent for the first half of 2011. As competition increases, these numbers are expected to as well, into the next quarter and potentially even into the next year.

In the past six months, Facebook has made significant improvements and innovation to its advertising products, including launching new products like the Sponsored Stories ad unit, zip code targeting, topical targeting, broad targeting and improved ad metrics. Businesses have been increasingly investing in Facebook pages and Facebook apps instead of spending their budgets on Yahoo, AOL, and MSN. On top of all this, with its quickly growing user base (800 million active users and counting), the company?s social graph is exploding across all demographics, which fuels improved ad targeting, performance, and revenue as well.

Skeptics will note that Dave Williams, the author of the report, is the co-founder and CEO of Blinq Media, a company that specializes in Social Engagement Advertising. In other words, he is biased in that he wants to see Facebook Ads grow. On the other hand, Williams also has an insider look at what?s happening in the advertising business. It?s certainly not the first time we?ve heard that Facebook is turning the industry upside down.

See also:

Emil Protalinski has covered the tech industry for five years for multiple publications.

Biography

Emil Protalinski

Emil Protalinski has covered the tech industry for five years for multiple publications, including Neowin for two years and Ars Technica for three years. He has written 1,000s of articles for both, with a particular focus on scrutinizing Microsoft products and services. Recently, Emil has expanded his coverage to non-Microsoft technologies, including the social networking giant Facebook.

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Saturday, October 22, 2011

Video: Spine-Tingling Technology

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Giant flakes make graphene oxide gel

Friday, October 21, 2011

Giant flakes of graphene oxide in water aggregate like a stack of pancakes, but infinitely thinner, and in the process gain characteristics that materials scientists may find delicious.

A new paper by scientists at Rice University and the University of Colorado details how slices of graphene, the single-atom form of carbon, in a solution arrange themselves to form a nematic liquid crystal in which particles are free-floating but aligned.

That much was already known. The new twist is that if the flakes ? in this case, graphene oxide ? are big enough and concentrated enough, they retain their alignment as they form a gel. That gel is a handy precursor for manufacturing metamaterials or fibers with unique mechanical and electronic properties.

The team reported its discovery online this week in the Royal Society of Chemistry journal Soft Matter. Rice authors include Matteo Pasquali, a professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering and of chemistry; James Tour, the T.T. and W.F. Chao Chair in Chemistry as well as a professor of mechanical engineering and materials science and of computer science; postdoctoral research associate Dmitry Kosynkin; and graduate students Budhadipta Dan and Natnael Behabtu. Ivan Smalyukh, an assistant professor of physics at the University of Colorado at Boulder, led research for his group, in which Dan served as a visiting scientist.

"Graphene materials and fluid phases are a great research area," Pasquali said. "From the fundamental point of view, fluid phases comprising flakes are relatively unexplored, and certainly so when the flakes have important electronic properties.

"From the application standpoint, graphene and graphene oxide can be important building blocks in such areas as flexible electronics and conductive and high-strength materials, and can serve as templates for ordering plasmonic structures," he said.

By "giant," the researchers referred to irregular flakes of graphene oxide up to 10,000 times as wide as they are high. (That's still impossibly small: on average, roughly 12 microns wide and less than a nanometer high.) Previous studies showed smaller bits of pristine graphene suspended in acid would form a liquid crystal and that graphene oxide would do likewise in other solutions, including water.

This time the team discovered that if the flakes are big enough and concentrated enough, the solution becomes semisolid. When they constrained the gel to a thin pipette and evaporated some of the water, the graphene oxide flakes got closer to each other and stacked up spontaneously, although imperfectly.

"The exciting part for me is the spontaneous ordering of graphene oxide into a liquid crystal, which nobody had observed before," said Behabtu, a member of Pasquali's lab. "It's still a liquid, but it's ordered. That's useful to make fibers, but it could also induce order on other particles like nanorods."

He said it would be a simple matter to heat the concentrated gel and extrude it into something like carbon fiber, with enhanced properties provided by "mix-ins."

Testing the possibilities, the researchers mixed gold microtriangles and glass microrods into the solution, and found both were effectively forced to line up with the pancaking flakes. Their inclusion also helped the team get visual confirmation of the flakes' orientation.

The process offers the possibility of the large-scale ordering and alignment of such plasmonic particles as gold, silver and palladium nanorods, important components in optoelectronic devices and metamaterials, they reported.

Behabtu added that heating the gel "crosslinks the flakes, and that's good for mechanical strength. You can even heat graphene oxide enough to reduce it, stripping out the oxygen and turning it back into graphite."

###

Rice University: http://media.rice.edu

Thanks to Rice University for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/114525/Giant_flakes_make_graphene_oxide_gel

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Adobe Flash exploit allows websites to access your webcam without permission (Yahoo! News)

Your webcam can be a powerful tool for communicating with loved ones or even having a conversation with a world-famous luminary. But when that power is put into someone else's hands, it can have dire consequences. A new exploit of Adobe's Flash media application could potentially allow websites to access your webcam without your permission, opening the door for any number of unseemly people to peer into your world.

The exploit ? which only affects Macs thus far ? can be performed on web surfers using Safari and Firefox web browsers. The gaping hole in Adobe's security features was discovered by a Stanford computer science major named Feross Aboukhadijeh, who brought it to the attention of Adobe. After weeks without a response, Aboukhadijeh decided to make the glitch publicly known, in an attempt to force Adobe's hand. His?plan worked, and Adobe released a statement saying they were working on the problem, and the fix wouldn't require a Flash update.

In the video above, the intrepid college student showcases just how the exploit can be performed, calling attention to a gap in Adobe's coding that was somehow completely overlooked. This unfortunate oversight is just another reminder than no matter how secure your computer may seem, your safety is ultimately in the hands of the people behind the scenes.

This article originally appeared on Tecca

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/techblog/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_technews/20111021/tc_yblog_technews/adobe-flash-exploit-allows-websites-to-access-your-webcam-without-permission

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