Saturday, December 31, 2011

World rings in 2012 and bids adieu to a tough year

Fireworks burst over the Sydney Opera House, rigfht, as New Year's celebrations begin in Sydney, Saturday, Dec. 31, 2011. (AP Photo/Rick Rycroft)

Fireworks burst over the Sydney Opera House, rigfht, as New Year's celebrations begin in Sydney, Saturday, Dec. 31, 2011. (AP Photo/Rick Rycroft)

Fireworks burst over Sydney Harbour as New Year's celebrations begin in Sydney, Australia, Saturday, Dec. 31, 2011. (AP Photo/Rick Rycroft)

Fireworks burst over Sydney Opera House as New Year's celebrations begin in Sydney, Saturday, Dec. 31, 2011. (AP Photo/Rick Rycroft)

In this Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2011 photo, a post office official shows memorial postage stamps featuring the phrase "into the future," marking the date line switch in Apia, Samoa. When the clock struck midnight Thursday, the country skipped over Friday and moved 24 hours ahead, straight into Saturday, Dec. 31. Samoa aimed to align its time zone with key trading partners in the Asia-Pacific region by shifting west of the international date line. (AP Photo/Kyodo News) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY CREDIT, NO LICENSING IN CHINA, FRANCE, HONG KONG, JAPAN AND SOUTH KOREA

People gather along Beach Road in Apia, Samoa, and celebrate as the time approaches 12 midnight on Thursday, Dec. 29, 2011. At midnight the country will jump forward in time, crossing westward over the international date line and effectively erasing Friday, Dec. 30, 2011, from the country's calendar. (AP Photo/Samoa Observer)

(AP) ? Fireworks glittered and boomed Sunday as revelers in Australia and Asia welcomed 2012 and others around the world looked forward to bidding adieu to a year marred by natural disasters and economic turmoil.

In Sydney, more than 1.5 million people watched the shimmering pyrotechnic display designed around the theme "Time to Dream" ? a nod to the eagerness many felt in moving forward after the rough year. New York's Times Square was awash in optimistic sentiments as it prepared to welcome hordes of New Year's Eve partiers.

The mood was less bright in Europe, where leaders set the tone for a continent hammered by an unprecedented economic crisis that has put the euro's existence in question, turning in New Year's messages that 2012 will bring more financial hardship.

Hannah Magauer, a 26-year-old German who was visiting London for New Year's, tried to put a hopeful spin on Chancellor Angela Merkel's warning that 2012 would be more difficult than 2011.

"When you see all of Europe, everything seems to be falling apart and it's a bit scary," she said. "But, at the moment we are very positive we will survive it."

In New York, the crowd cheered as workers lit the crystal-paneled ball that drops at midnight Saturday and put it through a test run, 400 feet (122 meters) above the street. The sphere, now decorated with 3,000 Waterford crystal triangles, has been dropping to mark the new year since 1907, long before television made it a U.S. tradition.

"2012 is going to be a better year. It has to be," said Fred Franke, 53, who was visiting the city with his family even after losing his job in military logistics this month at a Honeywell International division in Jacksonville, Florida.

Authorities in Berlin expected a million revelers to gather around the city's landmark Brandenburg Gate for a massive party complete with live performances from the Scorpions and other bands, as well as a 10-minute long firework display.

Merkel said in her annual speech ? which was prerecorded and released in written form before being broadcast on national TV ? that despite the problems Europe is facing, the financial crisis will eventually bring the continent closer together.

"Germany is doing well, even if next year will no doubt be more difficult than 2011," Merkel said.

In Greece, where the government has imposed especially harsh austerity measures, Prime Minister Lucas Papademos could promise no reprieve.

"A very difficult year is coming: we must continue our effort decisively. So that our sacrifices will not have been in vain," he said.

In light of the warning, Nicholas Adamopoulos, who works as a manager at a pharmaceuticals company, couldn't muster a sunny outlook for the new year.

"You want optimistic people, you go to Brazil," he said.

Thousands of people marched through Edinburgh, some carrying torches or wearing period costumes, on Friday night in preparation for the world-famous Hogmanay street party, where around 80,000 partygoers are welcoming 2012 at the stroke of midnight, before erupting into a mass rendition of Auld Lang Syne.

Across France, 60,000 police, firemen and other emergency personnel were on standby to assure the New Year's celebrations went off safely, the Interior Minister said.

In London, some 250,000 people are expected to gather to listen to Big Ben strike twelve at midnight during London's scaled-back New Year's celebrations. Fireworks are set off from the London Eye, the giant wheel on the south bank of the river.

Revelers in Spain will greet 2012 by eating 12 grapes in time with Madrid's central Puerta del Sol clock, a national tradition observed by millions who stop parties to follow the chimes on television.

Tens of thousands of young people in the Spanish capital were expected to gather at six indoor "macro-parties" the city council had authorized in big venues such as the city's main sports hall.

Milena Quiroga was to be among the many there happy to move on. "I am glad to see 2011 go because it was a tough year; my restaurant laid off almost half of the staff," said the 25-year-old waitress.

The mood was festive in the South Pacific island nation of Samoa, where, for once, revelers were the first in the world to welcome the new year, rather than the last.

Samoa and neighboring Tokelau hopped across the international date line at midnight on Thursday, skipping Friday and moving instantly to Saturday. The time-jump revelry that began at 12:01 a.m. on Dec. 31 spilled into the night.

Samoa and Tokelau lie near the date line that zigzags vertically through the Pacific Ocean, and both sets of islands decided to realign themselves this year from the Americas side of the line to the Asia side, to be more in tune with key trading partners.

For Japan, 2011 was the year the nation was struck by a giant tsunami and earthquake that left an entire coastline destroyed, nearly 20,000 people dead or missing and the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant in meltdown.

"For me, the biggest thing that defined this year was the disaster in March," said Miku Sano, 28, a nursing student in Fukushima city. "Honestly, I didn't know what to say to these people, who had to fight sickness while living in fear about ever being able to go back home. The radiation levels in the city of Fukushima, where I live, are definitely not low, and we don't know how that is going to affect our health in the future."

Raymond Lo, a master of feng shui ? the Chinese art of arranging objects and choosing dates to improve luck ? offered hope that things might get better. He said he wasn't surprised that 2011 was such a tumultuous year because it was associated with the natural elements of metal and wood. The year's natural disasters were foreshadowed, Lo said, because wood ? which represents trees and nature ? was attacked by metal.

2012 could be better because it's associated with ocean water, which represents energy and drive and the washing away of old habits, Lo said.

"Big water also means charity, generosity," Lo said. "Therefore that means sharing. That means maybe the big tycoons will share some of their wealth."

___

Associated Press writers Harold Heckle in Madrid, Meera Selva in London, Melissa Eddy in Berlin, Lynn Berry in Moscow, Ray Lilley in Wellington, New Zealand, Teresa Cerojano in Manila, Philippines, Kelvin Chan in Hong Kong and Yuri Kageyama in Tokyo contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-31-New-Year-'s-Eve/id-9911b88e6c1c4638ac1905a33486b8d3

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

When Viruses Invade the Brain

Head Lines | Mind & Brain Cover Image: January 2012 Scientific American MagazineSee Inside

Neurodegenerative diseases may result from a nasal infection

Image: Patrick McDonogh/Getty Images

Neurodegenerative diseases were once considered disorders of the mind, rooted in psychology. Now viruses rank among the environmental factors thought to trigger brain-ravaging diseases such as multiple sclerosis (MS) and Alzheimer?s disease. Human herpesvirus-6 (HHV-6), in particular, has been linked to MS in past studies. Neuroscientist Steven Jacobson and his colleagues at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke have determined that the virus makes its entry to the human brain through the olfactory pathway, right along with the odors wafting into our nose.

The researchers tested samples of brain cells from people with MS and healthy control subjects and found evidence of the virus in the olfactory bulb in both groups. Infection via the nasal passage is probably quite common, as is harboring a dormant reservoir of HHV-6, but in people with MS, the virus is active. Genetics and other unknown environmental factors probably determine the likelihood of the virus reactivating once inside the brain, which can cause the disease to progress.

The virus appears to invade the brain by infecting a type of glial cell called olfactory ensheathing cells (OECs), which nourish smell-sensing neurons and guide them from the olfactory bulb to their targets in the nervous system. These targets include the limbic system, a group of evolutionarily old structures deep in the brain, ?which is where viruses like to reactivate,? Jacobson explains. He points out that olfactory neurons and their OECs are among the few brain cells known to regenerate throughout our life. This neurogenesis may keep our sense of smell sharp, but at the cost of providing the virus the opportunity to spread.


Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=d82cd29eceb066b46dfddb293ec4954a

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The Dos And Don'ts Of Real Estate Buying

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Investing Edge: Will Greece Leave the Euro? - CNBC

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CNBC's Michelle Caruso-Cabrera makes a prediction on whether Greece will leave the euro next year.

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Union opposes eastern NY transmission route to pipe Montreal power to NYC

Dec 24 - McClatchy-Tribune Regional News - Nancy Madsen Watertown Daily Times, N.Y.

A proposal from a Canadian company to build a transmission line from Quebec to New York City is opposed by union officials who believe it would hurt job prospects in upstate New York and keep transmission system improvements on the back burner.

"We are opposed to importing power from Canada," said Philip G. Wilcox, business representative for the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 97, Orchard Park. "We want the commitment to invest in New York sources."

The union represents 14,000 electrical generation facility workers, and other IBEW unions in the state represent those who run and maintain transmission lines.

Mr. Wilcox said the union began voicing opposition to the project in the fall, nearly two years after it became public, because generation facilities where its members work are at risk due to the state grid system's congestion. Facilities such as AES Somerset in Niagara County are losing money because its power can't reach the higher-priced market in New York City.

And the delivery of 1,000 megawatts through two high-voltage, direct-current lines under Lake Champlain and the Hudson River would lower prices in the city, making it harder to finance projects to improve and upgrade other congested lines, he said.

Transmission Developers Inc., Toronto, designed the Champlain Hudson Power Express, a 330-mile link between hydroelectric facilities in Montreal. The $2 billion project is funded entirely by private investors, led by the Blackstone Group, New York City.

London Economics, London, said the project would save ratepayers in New York City $500 million to $800 million.

"It makes the state more efficient and productive," Transmission Developers President and CEO Donald Jessome said. "It has its own spinoff benefits."

The cable's construction would take four years and employ 200 people each year.

But if state investor-owned utilities, the New York Power Authority, the Public Service Commission and the New York Independent System Operator followed through on $4 billion in potential transmission upgrades around the state, that could employ 17,100 jobs directly and up to 52,000 directly and indirectly, said a May 2011 report by the Working Group for Investment in Reliable and Economic Electrical Systems and The Brattle Group.

And those grid improvements would allow existing facilities to ramp back up and new facilities, including new wind power projects, to sell on the wholesale market.

"Moreover, deficiencies in the State's electrical grid played a role in the decision not to site an additional nuclear power facility in Oswego County," wrote state Sen. Patricia A. Ritchie, R-Heuvelton, in a Nov. 21 letter to the governor's office. She wrote that both east-west connections and north-south lines need upgrades. "The New York Power Authority (NYPA) is well positioned to make strategic investments along these lines to relieve current pressures in the marketplace. I have spoken directly with NYPA officials in regards to my support of such investments."

Mrs. Ritchie, who is a member of the Energy and Telecommunications Committee, supports the cost of the upgrades being borne by downstate electricity users, who are paying a premium for electricity because of tight supply anyway.

New York Independent System Operator's State Transmission Assessment and Reliability Study found which improvements would be economically beneficial. They include transmission lines that run from the New York Power Authority's St. Lawrence-Franklin D. Roosevelt Power project south to Marcy. The two 230-kilovolt lines that are more than 50 years old are known as the Moses-Adirondack lines. They run parallel to each other and to a 765-kilovolt line.

"The New York Power Authority is evaluating all options related to the replacement of its Moses-Adirondack lines due to the asset age which is consistent with the findings published in the STARS report," spokeswoman Connie M. Cullen said in an email. "NYPA is continually assessing its statewide transmission system to ensure the continued reliability of its system for decades to come. NYPA recognizes the importance of its transmission system for the delivery of economical electric supplies to businesses and residences, and to also incorporate more electricity from renewable sources into the state's power grid."

A second report through NYISO, the Congestion Assessment and Resource Integration Study, will allow developers to propose specific projects to address congestion.

TDI's CEO said the need for power in the city won't be overcome with just the Champlain Hudson project.

"It allows delivery of 1,000 megawatts in a 40,000 megawatt system," Mr. Jessome said. "There is lots of room for many projects to be built in the New York system and ours is just one of many solutions that are going to be required over a number of years for the existing needs and future needs of New York state."

The underwater route was chosen to avoid as much environmental and aesthetic harm as possible. Other similar projects include the Cross Sound Cable from Long Island to Connecticut and the Neptune Cable from New Jersey to Long Island. The project has support letters, filed in the state Public Service Commission process, from those in New York City, the League of Conservation Voters and 20 members of Congress.

A few environmental groups have raised objections to the project. Those groups, including the Adirondack Council, are involved in private negotiations on an undisclosed issue with the developer, PSC and other state and local agencies. The issue may be resolved by Jan. 10 and if private stakes are successful, the project will avoid a longer review.

In a letter Thursday, IBEW raised its objections to the PSC.

"The CHP project will be deleterious of New York State energy jobs, as well as the ability to finance investment into our transmission system, negatively impacting system reliability, energy independence, renewable energy development, and further threatening already struggling NYS-based power generators, especially in upstate New York," Local 97 President, Business Manager and Financial Secretary Theodore J. Skerpon wrote.

But Mr. Jessome said the project is an environmentally friendly approach to connecting to a market that is one of the most highly congested in North America and a difficult interconnection.

"That has been the real emphasis of the project -- to ensure the benefits are there for the state of New York," he said.

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Source: http://c.moreover.com/click/here.pl?r5666106755

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Presidential race in Iowa quieter than in the past

Republican presidential candidate, Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., signs an autograph during a campaign stop at at Tangleberries in Centerville, Iowa, Friday, Dec. 23, 2011. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

Republican presidential candidate, Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., signs an autograph during a campaign stop at at Tangleberries in Centerville, Iowa, Friday, Dec. 23, 2011. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

Republican presidential candidate, Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., listens to a question during a campaign stop at Lodge Pizza & Steakhouse in Corydon, Iowa, Friday, Dec. 23, 2011. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

Republican presidential candidate Texas Gov. Rick Perry speaks to workers and local residents after touring the TPI Iowa wind blade manufacturing facility, Thursday, Dec. 22, 2011, in Newton, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Republican presidential candidate Texas Gov. Rick Perry signs an autograph for Jeanne Dietrich, of Omaha, Neb., after speaking to local residents and workers at the TPI Iowa wind blade manufacturing facility, Thursday, Dec. 22, 2011, in Newton, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

(AP) ? It's been a different presidential race in Iowa this year ? quieter.

Campaign headquarters have hardly been buzzing with activity, unlike the around-the-clock nature of past contests. Candidates have barely visited the state, compared with years when most all but moved here. And they have largely refrained from building the grass-roots armies of yesteryear, in favor of more modest on-the-ground teams of paid staffers and volunteers.

The final rush of campaigning here gets under way Monday, just a week before the Jan. 3 caucuses, and, to be sure, there will be a flurry of candidate appearances and get-out-the-vote efforts all week.

But that will belie the reality of much of 2011, a year marked by a less aggressive personal courtship of Iowans in a campaign that, instead, has largely gravitated around a series of 13 nationally televised debates, a crush of television ads and interviews on media outlets watched by many Republican primary voters, like Fox News Channel.

"We just haven't had as much face time," Republican chairwoman Trudy Caviness in Wapello County said. "That's why we're so undecided."

Indeed, people here simply don't know the Republican presidential candidates that well. And it's a big reason why the contest in Iowa is so volatile and why the caucus outcome could end up being more representative of the mood of national Republicans than in past years when GOP activists here have gone it alone by launching an unlikely front-runner to the top of the field.

With a week to go, the state of the race in Iowa generally mirrors the race from coast to coast.

Polls show Newt Gingrich, the former House speaker, having lost ground and Texas Rep. Ron Paul having risen, with both still in contention with former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney at the head of the pack. All the others competing in Iowa ? Texas Gov. Rick Perry, Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann and former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum ? are trailing.

But, in a sign that the contest is anyone's to win, most polls have shown most Republican caucusgoers undecided and willing to change their minds before the contest in a state where the vote typically breaks late in the campaign year.

There are a slew of reasons why the Iowa campaign is a much more muted affair than in 2008 ? marked by the iconic clash of Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton, who together employed almost 300 staff in Iowa and held blockbuster rallies. This year, there is no contested Democratic primary, given that President Barack Obama has no serious challenger. Only Republicans are competing, and those candidates are approaching the state differently, both visiting and hiring less. Also, like it did everywhere else, the race here started slowly ? months later than usual ? as a slew of GOP politicians weighed candidacies, only to abort White House bids.

Long-time Republican activists here, who often joke that they like to meet the candidates several times before deciding, have barely seen the candidates once, much less at all, and no campaign has more than 20 paid staff in the state.

All that's partly a consequence of how technology has changed both the political and media environments in recent years. Campaigns now can more precisely ? and cheaply ? target their pitches to voters from afar, sending personalized e-mails and YouTube video messages from the candidates to voters directly, and more campaign outreach is being handled by volunteers and through central national websites. And voters, themselves, now can go online and find information about the candidates without having to wait for the White House hopeful to show up in the town square.

"Caucuses don't exist in a vacuum. They're not the same every time," said John Stineman, a West Des Moines Republican activist who ran Steve Forbes 2000 Iowa campaign. "But everything else has changed. Why wouldn't the caucuses change?"

Part of the change has been driven by Romney's approach to the state.

The nominal GOP front-runner for most of the year, Romney has been far less aggressive in cultivating support in Iowa than in his failed bid of 2008. He's only spent 10 days in the state this year, compared to 77 days four years ago, in an attempt to lower expectations in the leadoff state where evangelical conservatives have harbored doubts about Romney in light of his Mormon faith and changed positions on some social issues.

Paul, the Texas congressman, has been focused more on building a national following than being a one-state candidate.

Gingrich only became a serious contender in the state a few weeks ago. And, until recently, he didn't have the money or manpower to launch a full-scale Iowa campaign, meaning more sporadic visits and a smaller team. He's struggled to reach all parts of the state more than once; it was just last week that he visited Ottumwa, seat of the county Caviness represents and a medium-size Iowa city uniquely situated in the southeast with its own small media market.

Likewise, Perry has not been to Marshalltown, a central Iowa GOP hub about the same size as Ottumwa and home of the state-run veterans home. It would seem like a natural spot for Perry, a former Air Force officer who has sought veterans support. But he also hasn't visited Fort Dodge, also another mid-size Iowa city in north-central Iowa on the way to heavily Republican northwest Iowa.

Those who have been struggling to gain traction ? and who lack the money of better-funded, better-known rivals ? are turning to old-fashioned retail campaigning in hopes of wooing voters the traditional way.

Bachmann is in the midst of a bus tour that has her crisscrossing the state. And Santorum, who never has broken out of the back of the pack, is betting that a year of one-on-one campaigning will pay off in the end.

Barb Livingston is proof that, for all the changes, there's still something to be said for the personal approach. She has struggled all year to find a candidate to back and is basing her decision on a personal impression she had ? except that impression was established four years ago, riding around Marshall County with Romney.

"When push comes to shove, I had a chance to meet him and travel around with," said Livingston, a former Marshall County GOP chairwoman. "He's someone personally I connected with."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2011-12-26-Iowa-Different%20Campaign/id-4476d4da2487401f8c6db016e06509a0

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CatholicNewsSvc: CNS Rome bureau: Pope says Christmas shows God's will to save people from sin, violence: http://t.co/N2lVjuU6 #CNSstory

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Fuel pipeline blast kills 11 in Colombia (Reuters)

DOSQUEBRADAS, Colombia (Reuters) ? A huge explosion at a gasoline and diesel pipeline in Colombia killed 11 people, injured nearly 100, and destroyed dozens of homes on Friday, in an accident described by President Juan Manuel Santos as a "great tragedy."

The explosion at a pipeline controlled by Colombia's state-owned Ecopetrol was caused by a landslide following heavy rains, the company said, retracting an earlier statement that fuel thieves were probably to blame.

"This really is a great tragedy ... For the time being there are 11 people dead, 78 injured, of which about nine or ten are in critical condition," Santos said during a visit to the village of Dosquebradas in the western region of Risaralda.

Many children were among the injured, he added, speaking amid blackened houses while firefighters searched for survivors among the debris.

Ecopetrol said there were several explosions and a fire. "As a result of severe winter weather in the country there was a landslide, which put pressure on the pipeline and it broke ... leading to a spill of fuel in the river," the company said.

In its statement late on Friday, Ecopetrol said the number of injured had increased to 99 people.

The pipeline is about 140 miles long and links Salgar, in the center of the country, to western regions. Ecopetrol said the supply of fuel should not suffer because there are two other pipelines pumping fuel to western provinces.

Locals told Reuters that they were awakened by a strong gasoline odor in the wee hours of Friday and could not breathe properly, which prompted many to go outdoors.

"We were gasping for air, and were able to come out, but there were other people who could not leave before the flames and the explosions started," said Hugo Nelson Sanchez, 36, whose house was destroyed.

Colombia has endured months of heavy rains, triggered by the La Nina weather phenomena, in which dozens of people were killed and bridges, roads and other key infrastructure were destroyed, causing billions of dollars in damage.

(Additional reporting by Luis Jaime Acosta; Writing By Eduardo Garcia; Editing by Gary Hill)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/energy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111224/wl_nm/us_colombia_pipeline

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Canadian Company Sues RIM for BBM Trademark (NewsFactor)

As if Research In Motion needed another lump of coal in its Christmas stocking, the BlackBerry maker has received more bad news -- this time on the legal front. RIM may have to spend more money trying to ward off yet another trademark dispute.

Indeed, even as RIM is reeling from the forced name change of its next-generation operating system from BBX to BlackBerry 10, a Canadian company has taken issue with the name of its long-popular instant-messaging platform.

BlackBerry Messenger has been a RIM favorite, allowing BlackBerry users to send each other text messages and pictures through the RIM network and get delivery and read confirmation. Many users just call the service BBM for short, but BBM Canada is looking to Canadian federal court for a remedy.

BBM Canada Willing to Deal

According to a Reuters report, BBM Canada, a company somewhat like Nielsen in that it measures radio and television audiences, plans to argue its case against RIM in February. Jim MacLeod, BBM's CEO, told Reuters he wants RIM to stop advertising the BBM name. But MacLeod also suggested he would be willing to change BBM Canada name -- for a price.

"We have to be practical, they operate worldwide, we don't. But we're not prepared to just walk from our name," MacLeod told Reuters. "I'm sure to a really big company this looks like relatively small numbers, but to us it's a big deal. It's a trademark they don't even own, it's ours."

The timing is noteworthy. BlackBerry has been offering BBM for many years, but recently made a big splash in the RIM world when it rolled out BBM Music. BBM Music is a cloud-based music service for BlackBerry users. RIM was not immediately available for comment.

Should RIM Go Android?

Some are calling for RIM to sell itself, with Microsoft, Nokia and Amazon being named as potential suitors. But Zeus Kerravala, principal analyst at ZK Research, says he doesn't know if RIM is sellable with its falling subscriber base. As he sees it, RIM needs two things: a leadership change and a strategy change.

"When people buy iPhone and Androids they buy them because they like the operating system. I don't think that's the case with RIM. People like RIM's handsets and the keyboard," he said. "If I were RIM, I would give up on QNX and put Android on the handsets and become a hardware vendor."

In a smartphone world where apps are vital, that strategy may hold wisdom. Developers are spending most of their attention on the iPhone and Android platforms, and the extra work it takes to build out an app for RIM isn't always worth the effort, especially with RIM's declining market share.

"RIM has lived and died this for so long. It's in their culture. That's why they need a new CEO. I am also not convinced that dual CEOs work anymore," Kerravala said. "RIM has grown to the point to where someone has to take control of that ship and the two guys together aren't doing well, so bringing in someone with Android experience, maybe even someone from Google, might make some sense."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/personaltech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nf/20111224/bs_nf/81514

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Fill Out Your Address Book to Make Siri Work Better [SIRI]

Fill Out Your Address Book to Make Siri Work BetterOut of the box Siri can do a few common things, but it struggles when you try to get too complicated with it. GigaOM offers up a few clever address book customizations to make Siri work more naturally.

We've previously covered the basics of talking to Siri, but GigaOM takes it a step further by walking you through the steps to setting up your workplace, family members, and pronunciation. For instance, if you enter in your work address, you can make better use of the Reminders app and get a better functionality out of maps. For those of us who haven't done a lot of data entry into the Address Book, this is simple way to make Siri work in a more natural way. The bottom line is that the more Siri knows about you, the better it can do its job. Check out the full set of tips over on GigaOM.

Quick tip: Introduce yourself to Siri | GigaOM

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/OQNAOymRmcw/fill-out-your-address-book-to-make-siri-work-better

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Video: Almost 85 million will travel by car this holiday

AAA projects 83.6 million Americans will be driving this holiday season. As for road conditions, a big storm system pushing across the South and the Ohio Valley could produce some tornadoes, along with rain and snow showers. NBC?s Brian Williams reports.

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/45770686/

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

University scholars enhancing sex archive

PHILADELPHIA ? The Widener University scholars who are amassing a growing archive of materials on human sexuality have an ambitious goal: Bigger than Kinsey?s.

Pun intended.

The Kinsey Institute at Indiana University is, of course, the premier academy for sex and gender research. But now Widener, based in Chester, Pa., is striving to become a major center of sexuality studies, expanding its master?s and doctoral programs and attracting students from across the country and around the world.

"The work of our faculty and graduates positively affects public health and well-being across the globe," Widener president James Harris III said. "While other programs have collapsed due to a lack of support, our program has grown in degree offerings and number of students, attracting the best and brightest."

The school celebrated the recent opening of the archive, in the Wolfgram Memorial Library, by hosting a series of provocative speakers under the heading "Sex in the Library." (Tagline: "We?re doing it all week long.") Topics ranged from teen sexting to "gender outlaws" for whom male-or-female is an insufficient choice.

The rectangular fourth-floor repository is tucked between a quiet study area and the dense racks of children?s books used by students studying to become teachers.

What?s in it? Posters from 1970s porn films. X-rated movies. Doctors? waiting-room pamphlets from the 1940s, in which sex occurred only between white, married, heterosexual couples. A signed galley proof of "The Human Pony," which, trust us, you really don?t want to know about.

"Students can look at these things and see a history of sexuality, of sex education ? the culture, the prejudices, how our attitudes have changed, how have they not changed," said Molly Wolf, the archive founder and curator, and a graduate of the sexuality master?s program.

A particular prize is an original, stapled-together copy of "Our Bodies, Ourselves," which before its huge popularity in the 1970s was called "Women and Their Bodies" and sold for 75 cents.

"It?s a seminal text," Wolf said. "No pun intended."

Awkward jokes and double entendres seem almost mandatory in any discussion of sex ? and that?s fine, she said. It helps lower the tension around the subject.

Widener arranged its sexuality program to encourage immersion, citing studies that show longer exposure makes students more comfortable and open to learning.

Classes are held all day Saturday and Sunday on two weekends so students can complete a semester?s coursework in a four-day marathon, augmented by online instruction and other assignments.

That lure has drawn working students from Austin, Atlanta, San Diego, Seattle, and elsewhere. They fly in at the start of the weekend, and fly out at the end.

"I get calls and e-mails every single day ? ?Can I commute from North Dakota?? " said professor Betsy Crane, the program director.

In three years, the program has grown from 130 to 212 students. Full-time faculty has increased from two to six in four years.

Full-time students can complete a master?s degree in two years, and a doctorate in a minimum of five years, which is typical at U.S. colleges.

Widener scholars explore not just the function of the body and the desires of the brain, but the impact on sexual behavior of chronic illness, trauma, social norms, and cultural expectations, examining how sexuality seeps into everything from government to religion.

There?s no area of human life "that on one hand is more capable of joy and connection, and on the other hand is so often associated with violence and pain and suffering," Crane said.

For graduates, the rise of sexually transmitted disease, calls for same-sex marriage, greater awareness of sexual abuse, and the battle over birth control and abortion have created employment opportunities. They find jobs not only in teaching but in criminology, social services, counseling, and health.

One graduate, sex therapist Tiffanie Davis-Henry, is a frequent guest on the television show "The View," and was recently named co-host of a new ABC self-help program, "The Revolution"

Ryan McKee, 33, a doctoral student, became interested in social movements such as civil rights and gay rights while earning a master?s degree at Virginia Commonwealth University. But it was a class on human sexuality, he found, that connected those issues and spurred him toward a Ph.D.

At Widener, he has found "professors and colleagues that are incredibly supportive, and a university that?s incredibly supportive. It?s a subject that in many programs gets dumped on the person who teaches abnormal psychology, or addictions, but here we?ve developed a really supportive environment for training professionals."

Widener was his first choice for a doctorate. In fact, it was his only choice.

In recent years, financial pressures have pushed colleges to merge stand-alone sexuality programs into medical-school curriculums or psychology departments. With the merger of a University of Sydney program, Widener officials believe they offer one of a very few, if not the only, fully accredited, university-based doctoral programs.

? Copyright (c) McClatchy-Tribune Information Services

Source: http://feeds.canada.com/~r/canwest/F184/~3/eK9Q2bllMgc/story.html

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PlayStation Vita enjoys great first week. Is it enough?

The PlayStation Vita, the newest handheld from Sony, is due on shelves in the States in 2012. In Japan, the Vita is already off and running. ?

The PlayStation Vita ? competitor to the Nintendo 3DS, and successor to the Sony PSP ? isn't slated to hit shelves in the US until February. But in Japan, the Vita has already launched, and according to the analytics firm Enterbrain, the device is off to a strong start.?In a press release this week, Enterbrain estimated that?Sony had unloaded 321,000 Vita units in two days, just shy of the 371,000 3DS units sold by Nintendo over the same time period.?

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The Vita, more so than the 3DS, is a graphical powerhouse, intended to appeal to committed gamers. As?Sony exec?Shuhei Yoshida?told?Eurogamer earlier this year, "if you are a very casual person who might just want to kill time as you're waiting for your train, you might not need a dedicated, big game experience. But if you like games, if you really love games, you would want to play the kind of games you like, even on the portable."?

Among the niceties on the Vita are a 5-inch OLED touch screen, a?4-core?ARM Cortex-A9 MPCore?processor, the?Sixaxis?motion sensing system and a?three-axis electronic compass. In the US, the Vita will sell at two price points:?$250 for a Wi-Fi-only version or $300 for a 3G version. In an early hands-on with the device, the CNET team called the Vita "dazzling."?

The question, of course, is whether even a "dazzling" gaming portable will be able to grab lasting market traction in 2012. Many users increasingly prefer to play portable games on their tablets or smart phones, calling into question the very concept of a committed gaming device (to say nothing of a committed gaming device that costs 300 bucks with 3G monthly payments).?

Consider the Nintendo 3DS, which?debuted in the?US?in late March to?generally favorable reviews.?By June, however Nintendo had managed to unload only 710,000 3DS units ? far short of expectations ? and in late July, in an effort to work up some excitement in the device, Nintendo dropped the price on its?3DS?from $249 to $169. It was, one pundit?quipped, the "fastest post-launch price drop (by one-third) ever."

Sales are reportedly up ? Nintendo execs have promised the 3DS has "good momentum" going into the holidays ? but thus far, the 3DS has fallen far short of the DS, the insanely popular handheld launched by Nintendo in 2004.?

For more tech news, follow us on?Twitter @venturenaut. And don?t forget to sign up for the weekly?BizTech newsletter.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/2jTPkMkjIJo/PlayStation-Vita-enjoys-great-first-week.-Is-it-enough

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Video: No incidents reported since DADT repealed



>>> tomorrow will mark one year to the day that president obama signed the repeal of the u.s. military policy known as don't ask, don't tell, banning openly gay and lesbian service members. just today a sign of the times . two women shared the traditional first kiss after the u.s.s. oak hills returned to home port in virginia. sailors and their families buy dollar raffle tickets for the chance at it. those two women happened to win it. critics said changing this law would never work in the real world of combat. tonight, nbc's jim maceda takes one measure of the change on the ground with some of america's troops in afghanistan .

>> reporter: task force bulldog, on patrol in eastern afghanistan . it's the kind of combat unit that would implode, critics warned, if don't ask, don't tell were repealed.

>> get ready to move!

>> reporter: but the chaos they predicted if openly gay and lesbian soldiers served in close quarters during combat never happened.

>> i don't think anything's really changed at all.

>> reporter: staff sergeant chris bostik is on his third combat tour, a squad leader .

>> every one of my soldiers know i'm gay. they know who i am and what i stand for.

>> reporter: how do his straight buddies see it?

>> if you want to fight for our country, i don't care what you do.

>> reporter: the repeal divided the country when a year ago president obama lifted the ban on gays, lesbians and bisexuals serving openly. now soldiers from grunts to top brass, even u.s. marines have embraced the law. so far, no reports of incidents like hazing or gay bashing . behind front lines at large bases like bag ram airfield, groups of gays and lesbians meet publically. a coffee hour unheard of only months ago.

>> is it easier to be a soldier?

>> definitely. just knowing you won't be kicked out or have difficulties because of what you say.

>> reporter: 13,000 gays were discharged during don't ask, don't tell. half of these worried about reaction among peers. but hundreds, perhaps thousands of gay soldiers have posted their own coming out videos on youtube, often to their own families.

>> dad, i'm gay.

>> reporter: this phone call home by airman randy phillips based in germany to tell his family he's gay went viral erin jones now tells anyone who asks that she's lesbian.

>> i always felt like a part of me died every time i had to say, oh, my boyfriend, oh, this guy i have been talking to when i didn't mean that.

>> reporter: even james amos , once against lifting the ban now supports it.

>> i'm a little bit more proud of my unit and my country for taking this kind of step.

>> reporter: allowing soldiers -- straight or gay -- to excel as they always have in war, but now to do it freely. jim maceda, nbc news, logar, afghanistan .

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/45758539/

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Engadget's Holiday Blues-buster 2011: win an unlocked iPhone 4S, courtesy of Wyse!

Day two of our week-long contest is upon us, and we're just getting started! Today we'll be giving away an unlocked GSM / HSPA+ iPhone 4S thanks to Wyse, the company behind PocketCloud. The usual rules apply, with one caveat: in the comments below, simply state how you plan on using PocketCloud this holiday season (keep it family friendly, please). Sound good? It's just going to keep getting better and better throughout the week, so keep coming back every day!

Note: The above picture is not the actual iPhone being given away. The unit we have is an unlocked GSM iPhone 4S, though gift receipts are available if the winner prefers to exchange it out for a CDMA model.

Continue reading Engadget's Holiday Blues-buster 2011: win an unlocked iPhone 4S, courtesy of Wyse!

Engadget's Holiday Blues-buster 2011: win an unlocked iPhone 4S, courtesy of Wyse! originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Dec 2011 11:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Video: Golf cart injures 7 at football stadium



>>> celebration turned to horror as a runaway cart rolled across the stadium. officials believe someone failed to turn off the engine. seven people were injured, none of them seriously before somebody finally was able to put a stop to the vehicle. it is awful to

Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/45721752/

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Thursday's 'critical' Iowa debate: 4 predictions (The Week)

New York ? The GOP gang is getting together Thursday night for one last hurrah in 2011 ? the final chance to make their pitch before the voting starts

Thursday night's Republican presidential debate in Sioux City, Iowa, "will be the final episode in one of the most popular reality television series of 2011," say Peter Hamby and Paul Steinhauser in CNN, and "the stakes could not be higher for all involved." After this face-off between the remaining seven GOP presidential contenders, most voters will tune out until Jan. 3, when the Iowa caucuses launch the actual vote-counting phase of what's already been a long and grueling campaign. What can we expect from this "critical" Fox News/Iowa GOP debate?

1. This will be the last debate for some of the candidates
"If first impressions matter in politics ? and they do ? so too does the last thing voters see before casting a vote," GOP strategist Doug Heye tells CNN. At least half of Iowa caucus-goers are still undecided, giving everyone a strong incentive to shine. That's especially critical for the low-polling candidates ? Michele Bachmann, Rick Santorum, and to a lesser extent Rick Perry ? who have staked their campaigns on a strong finish in Iowa. When the next debate rolls around Jan. 7, "the GOP field will undoubtedly be smaller," says Catalina Camia in USA Today. This debate will help determine "who stays and who goes."

SEE MORE: Saturday's GOP 'alpha dog' debate: 4 key questions

?

2. Romney will try to knock Gingrich out
"Expect Mitt Romney, in his elegant way, to slice Newt Gingrich to pieces," Republican strategist Alex Castellanos tells CNN. Romney doesn't have to win Iowa, but if he can keep Gingrich from coming out on top, "his last serious opponent will be dead and stored in a freezer." As the acknowledged and self-proclaimed frontrunner, Gingrich "has the most at stake when the bantering begins tonight," says Bret Hayworth in the Sioux City Journal, but "Romney has the most to gain."

3. Everyone else will be gunning for Gingrich, too
"Frankly, Romney would be more than happy to see Reps. Ron Paul (Texas) or Bachmann (Minn.) have a good night," says Jennifer Rubin in The Washington Post. Paul especially, since he has a real shot at winning Iowa, and Romney wants him to. But "the more votes Gingrich loses, the better for everyone else," so with all his rivals "trying to provoke and skewer him," Gingrich had better turn in "a steady and uneventful performance." He "can't afford to lose his cool," agrees CNN's Castellanos. "If Newt does his 'angry badger' impression, he will be finished."

SEE MORE: Should GOP candidates skip Donald Trump's debate?

?

4. Someone will have an "oops" moment
"Expect to see at least one candidate make a significant mistake," says the Sioux City Journal's Hayworth, something like Romney's $10,000 bet or Perry's brain freeze. "But don't expect to learn much more about where the candidates stand on the issues." The format of the debate is definitely skewed toward forcing "an oops moment," says Iowa State political science professor Steffen Schmidt. "That's been the biggest news from almost all these debates ? who is gonna slip on the banana peel." Everyone will be waiting for, or trying to cause, those pratfalls.

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Study Identifies Strategies to Reduce Maternity, Child Deaths (ContributorNetwork)

The World Health Organization released findings from a three-year study on interventions to prevent death in mothers during pregnancy and childbirth and also deaths in children under five. Here are study results and how they affect parents.

Maternal and child mortality

According to the Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (PMNCH) 358,000 women die each year during pregnancy or in childbirth. 7.6 million children die before their fifth birthday. Most maternal deaths occur during or right after childbirth. The most common causes are bleeding, high blood pressure, difficult labor and infection. 40 percent of under-age-5 deaths occur within 28 days of birth. 50 percent of the infant deaths happen during the first 24 hours and three-quarters in the first week of life. Leading causes of infant mortality are preterm birth, severe infections and asphyxia.

WHO study goals

The goal of the study was to determine what strategies were working best, were the best use of funds allocations and could be implemented most successfully in hospitals, birthing centers and by midwives in local communities. Study author and WHO Department of Maternal, Newborn, Child and Adolescent Health director Elizabeth Mason says what's new about the study is " putting together information in a different way and building consensus among physicians, scientists and professional organizations to lay out an evidence-based path to help women before, during and after birth and their children. "

WHO study details

WHO, in partnership with Aga Kahn University (AKU) in Pakistan and PMNCH, conducted a far-reaching global study which explored over 50,000 scholarly papers, from 440 PMNCH partners covering 142 different health interventions. The criteria for intervention took into consideration differing maternal and parent profiles: they looked for strategies that could be adapted to whatever families had available in treatment, from local midwife to large hospital.

Study findings

Study leader and chair of AKU's Women and Child Health Zulfiqar Bhutta says, "What came back was a hodge-podge. PMNCH partners had very different ideas of what should be undertaken." Of the various strategies, WHO identified 56 techniques that could be combined into "packages" of birthing care. WHO organized the 56 techniques into five main thrusts of mother-and-child care.

Key interventions for mothers

Anemia, they determined was a dominant factor in maternal death, so getting iron via nutrition and supplements to mothers during pregnancy and childbirth is crucial. Strategies to prevent post-partum hemorrhaging was also addressed.

Key interventions for infants and children

WHO found that immediate thermal care for newborns was essential. They recommend techniques like Kangaroo Mother Care (keeping the infant close to the mother's body and encouraging breast feeding). Other strategies include improving feeding support for LBW (low birth weight) and preterm babies. LBW is linked to several issue in childhood and even adulthood, Medscape says. WHO says pneumonia is a leading cause in child death, so the study recommended antibiotic therapy.

Marilisa Kinney Sachteleben writes about parenting from 23 years raising four children and 25 years teaching K-8, special needs, adult education and homeschool.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/parenting/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111216/hl_ac/10686483_study_identifies_strategies_to_reduce_maternity_child_deaths

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Gingrich Courts Iowa Conservatives as Critics Label Him a 'Pro-Life Fraud' (ABC News)

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Friday, December 16, 2011

United Kingdom: Isolated within Europe (The Week)

New York ? The British Prime Minister will not go along with changes to the European Union treaty that require member countries to submit their national budgets to bureaucratic oversight.

Prime Minister David Cameron has ?proved he is no pushover,? said the London Times in an editorial. He has ?out-Thatchered Margaret Thatcher? by becoming the first British leader to veto a European Union treaty. The French and the Germans last week came up with a plan to save the imperiled euro by changing the EU treaty to provide for oversight of national budgets for all members, including those, like Britain, that do not use the euro currency. Cameron threatened to veto the change unless it included a clause exempting Britain?s financial sector from EU regulations. So now the rest of the EU is pressing ahead with a new pact. The French and the Germans?as well as the pro-Europe camp here at home?view Britain?s decision to opt out as a betrayal. But in fact the prime minister has delighted most of his countrymen by preserving British sovereignty.

Don?t think for a moment that Cameron?s position comes from strength, said Peter Mandelson in The Guardian. Even Thatcher operated under the principle that we ?should never vacate a table at which a decision was being taken that affected British interests.? Cameron has done just that, not because he chose to, but because he lacks the authority to stand up to the anti-Europe camp in his party. Now Britain will be left out of whatever new body arises to govern Europe?s fiscal health. We have lost influence and gained nothing?not even the exemption from regulation that Cameron was insisting on. And that exemption was not even worth fighting for, said John Lichfield in The Independent. Cameron wanted Britain ?to become a kind of Cayman Islands within the EU: enjoying the benefits of being part of a European single market for financial services but not subject to EU oversight or regulation.? No wonder the other leaders couldn?t accept that.

The rest of Europe may be saddened at Britain?s behavior, but it shouldn?t be surprised, said the Paris Le Monde. The British ?do not believe in the idea of Europe.? They never have. They have always been interested ?in just one thing: the single market.? The rest of the European project of closer integration has always drawn British ?indifference, if not outright hostility.? There should be no lamenting what happened last week in Brussels. The British have always been an island, separate from Europe. Now they are ?more insular than ever.?

Those poor Continentals, said Boris Johnson in the London Telegraph. They?re understandably put out at being proved so very wrong about the euro. For years, Britain wisely resisted the lure of the common currency, warning that monetary union wouldn?t work without an anti-democratic political union. Now here we are in a euro crisis, and the Europeans are scrambling to create a sort of ?Supra National And Fiscal Union??let?s call it SNAFU?whose leaders are unaccountable to any electorate and whose rules aren?t likely to be heeded any more than the old EU treaty?s were. Britain is much better off keeping its distance from a project so ?intellectually, morally, and democratically bankrupt.?

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Pogoplug Launches New Hardware, Brings Unlimited Storage To Your PC

Series4 HeroPogoplug is launching the fourth generation of its flagship product today, the Pogoplug Series 4. As with all Pogoplug hardware, the new device lets you attach your hard drives and plugs into your router in order to instantly give you your own personal cloud of online storage. The service also comes with 5 GB of free online storage?optimized?for mobile users, and allows you to purchase additional cloud storage, if need be.?However, all users of the Pogoplug device who host their own storage, can do so for free.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/ha5MjsFwR1k/

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