Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Video: New Zealand man killed in shark attack



>>> a popular new zealand beach has been closed after a rare and deadly shark attack . police say a 47-year-old local man was swimming off beach when the shark, estimated to be about 14 feet long, attacked.

>> he just shout out, shark! and the next moment we saw him like rolling around. there was blood everywhere on the water.

>> experts say the shark was likely a great white. it was eventually scared away by police gunfire.

Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/50970696/

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Big powers offer Iran some sanctions relief, await reply

ALMATY (Reuters) - Major powers offered Iran limited sanctions relief in return for a halt to the most controversial part of its atomic work during the first day of nuclear talks on Tuesday, and Iran promised to respond with a proposal on the same scale.

The talks in Kazakhstan were the first in eight months between Iran and the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council plus Germany - the "P5+1" - on a decade-old dispute that threatens to trigger another war in the Middle East.

Iran has used the time since the last meeting in June to further expand activity that the West suspects is aimed at enabling it to build a nuclear bomb, something that Israel has suggested it will prevent by force if diplomacy fails.

The two-day negotiations in the city of Almaty follow inconclusive meetings last year in Istanbul, Baghdad and Moscow.

Western diplomats described the first day of talks as "useful" but said Iranian negotiators did not immediately respond to the P5+1's demand that Tehran closes its underground nuclear facility Fordow, at the center of their concerns.

"Hopefully the Iranians will be able to reflect overnight and will come back and view our proposal positively," said a spokesman for European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton who oversees Iranian diplomacy for the six powers.

With the Islamic Republic's political elite preoccupied with worsening infighting before a presidential election in June, few believe the meeting will yield a quick breakthrough.

"It is clear that nobody expects to come from Almaty with a fully done deal," the EU spokesman, Michael Mann, said before the meeting started.

OFFER PRESENTED

A U.S. official said that the offer - an updated version of one rejected by Tehran last year - would take into account its recent nuclear advances, but also take "some steps in the sanctions arena".

For years, the powers had attempted a mix of economic pressure and diplomacy to persuade Iran to scale back its atomic work, but Tehran has insisted that sanctions are lifted before it complies with any demands.

In Almaty, a source close to the Iranian negotiators told reporters: "Depending on what proposal we receive from the other side we will present our own proposal of the same weight. The continuation of talks depends on how this exchange of proposals goes forward".

At best, diplomats and analysts say, Iran will take the joint offer from the United States, Russia, France, Germany, Britain and China seriously and agree to hold further talks soon on practical steps to ease the tension. Initial meetings could involve only technical experts, who cannot strike deals.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said in Berlin that he hoped Iran "will make its choice to move down the path of a diplomatic solution".

But Iran, whose chief negotiator Saeed Jalili is close to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and is a veteran of Iran's 1980s war against Iraq and the Western powers that backed it, has shown no sign of willingness to scale back its nuclear work.

It says it has a sovereign right to carry out nuclear enrichment for peaceful energy purposes, and in particular refuses to close the underground Fordow enrichment plant, a condition the powers have set for any sanctions relief.

FASTER ENRICHMENT

A U.N. nuclear watchdog report last week said Iran was for the first time installing advanced centrifuges that would allow it to significantly speed up its enrichment of uranium, which can have both civilian and military purposes.

Accelerating Western sanctions on Iran over the last 14 months are hurting Iran's economy and slashing oil revenue. Its currency has more than halved in value, which in turn has pushed up inflation.

The central bank governor was quoted on Monday as saying Iran's inflation was likely to top 30 percent in coming weeks as the sanctions contribute to shortages and stockpiling. [ID:nL6N0BP51A] Iranians say inflation is already much higher than that official figure.

But analysts say the sanctions are not close to having the crippling effect envisaged by Washington and - so far at least - they have not prompted a change in Iran's nuclear course.

Western officials said the powers' offer would include an easing of restrictions on trade in gold and other precious metals if Tehran closes Fordow.

The facility is used for enriching uranium to 20 percent fissile purity, a short technical step from weapons grade.

Western officials acknowledge an easing of U.S. and EU sanctions on trade in gold represents a relatively modest step. But the metal could be used as part of barter transactions that might allow Iran to circumvent financial sanctions.

Iran's foreign ministry spokesman last week dismissed the reported incentive as insufficient and a senior Iranian lawmaker has ruled out closing Fordow, close to the holy city of Qom.

(Additional reporting by Fredrik Dahl in Almaty, Zahra Hosseinian in Zurich, Arshad Mohammed and Stephen Brown in Berlin; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/powers-offer-iran-sanctions-relief-nuclear-talks-055616179.html

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How a 1970s Discount Store Can Increase Your Conversion Rate |

How a 1970s Discount Store Can Increase Your Conversion Rate

I want to tell you a true story about a discount store from the 1970s called D.B. Sales.

Now, before you start yelling?

?Join me in the 21st century, Grandpa! We have the Internet, Snuggie blankets and millions of cat videos to watch.?

?give me a chance to explain. I promise to make it worth your while.

D.B. Sales was run by Morris and Tessie Benatar ? friendly, hard-working folks who were trying help their small business succeed. The problem is, in the mid-70s, their business wasn?t doing too well. Sales were down, money was tight, and tensions between Morris and Tessie were rising.

Morris and Tessie Benatar

Sure, they look nice, but you wouldn?t want to get Tessie angry. She had a mean right hook.?

Like any good businessperson, Morris doggedly tried everything he could think of to increase sales. He changed the window displays, ran promotions, offered free delivery, and placed ads in local newspapers. But, nothing worked.

Then, one day, everything changed.

Morris finally had a promotion that worked. In fact, the promotion worked so well that he ran it year after year for the next 10 years:

Liquidation Sale Sign

You don?t actually have to go out of business to have one of these sales, do you?

Now, why did I tell you this story? Because I think it contains a valuable lesson about how to increase the conversion rate of your website.

Morris spent a lot of his time testing out different ideas until he finally (and luckily) came across something that worked. As online marketers, we do the exact same thing.

We test different button colors, call to actions, headlines, images, and everything else we can think of. Occasionally, on our good days, we come across something that works and we feel good about ourselves.

However, we should learn from Morris. He could?ve saved himself a lot of money, stress, and dirty looks from Tessie, if he would?ve talked to his customers. They could?ve helped him answer one of the most important questions:

Why aren?t people buying from me?

This was an easy question for Morris to ask because customers would walk right into his store. But, as people who manage websites, how do we find out why people aren?t buying from us?

Tron Image

In my mind, this is what a website visitor looks like. It makes life more exciting.

That?s why I want to share with you my patent-pending approach* to finding out what your website visitors are thinking.

*Okay, you got me, it?s not patent pending. Does that make it ?patent pretending?? Insert Drumroll

Five ways to find out why your customers aren?t buying from you

1) Chat transcripts

If you have a chat feature on your website then you can get really helpful feedback RIGHT NOW by simply reading through your chat logs. Whenever we?re going to revise a page at UserTesting.com we always start by searching for all of the chats that happened on that URL.

This is an easy way to learn about your customers? main questions, concerns and objections.

If you don?t have chat on your site, but are considering adding it, then check out SnapEngage. They?re who we use and we?ve been very happy with them.

Chat Window

Chat logs make it easy to find out what questions your visitors ask on specific pages.

2) Surveys

If you have a question for your visitors, or want some feedback, then often times the best thing to do is ask. Use tools like Qualaroo, SurveyMonkey or 4QSurvey and ask open-ended survey questions like: ?If you didn?t sign-up, can you tell us why not??

Survey Example

Sometimes the easiest thing to do is ask.

3) Talk to your sales and customer support people

Your sales and customer support people spend all day communicating with your site?s visitors. This means that 1) they?re amazing people and 2) they understand the objections of your web visitors better than anyone.

So go talk with your sales and support people and ask them how they overcome the common objections. You can then take this learning and apply it to your site.

4) Eat your own dog food

Spend time pretending to be your customer and use your website and product. At UserTesting.com we have one of our team members pretend to be a customer each and every month, write up their suggestions for improvement, and then email them directly to our CEO.

This isn?t quite as good as unbiased feedback from someone in your target market, but you?ll be surprised at the amount of good ideas your team will come up with.

5) ?Think aloud? testing

Look, I?m biased, but this is definitely my favorite way to find out why customers aren?t buying. With ?think aloud? testing you can watch people in your target market speak their thoughts out loud as they try to accomplish common tasks on your website or mobile device.

When you run this kind of test you can see with your own eyes where your users get stuck or have problems.

Lady putting whiteout on screen

You just think you know your users.

Remember, the people visiting your website are actual human beings ? they?re not ?uniques? or ?pageviews?. To understand how to make your website better, you need to learn from Morris Benatar: either pretend to always be going out of business, or talk to your customers.

Article source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/seomoz/~3/2CJSqbrrEHg/how-a-1970s-discount-store-can-increase-your-conversion-rate

Source: http://www.nethority.com/blog/2013/02/27/how-a-1970s-discount-store-can-increase-your-conversion-rate/

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

The Suit Won't Save You: Four Ways Space Can Kill You Dead

Turns out, being blown out of an airlock and turning into a meat popsicle after succumbing to hypoxia isn't so bad. At least, not when compared to the multitude of other deadly maladies that await you in the depths of space. Here are just a few ways that interplanetary exploration is conspiring to kill us all. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/ZOwe_JLCahI/the-suit-wont-save-you-four-ways-space-can-kill-you-dead

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Mark Cuban And 500 Startups-Backed Switchcam Launches iPhone App And Director Dashboard In Public Beta

switchcam-600x139Switchcam has been working on a whole new set of tools that will help solve this problem, enabling event organizers to recruit contributors and to manage and curate video submitted by them. There are two main parts to this solution: The startup has launched Switchcam director, a new cloud-based dashboard for managing events and sorting through video submissions uploaded by users.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/KwW1ownMZXY/

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Monday, February 25, 2013

Graphene: A material that multiplies the power of light

Feb. 24, 2013 ? Bottles, packaging, furniture, car parts... all made of plastic. Today we find it difficult to imagine our lives without this key material that revolutionized technology over the last century. There is wide-spread optimism in the scientific community that graphene will provide similar paradigm shifting advances in the decades to come. Mobile phones that fold, transparent and flexible solar panels, extra thin computers... the list of potential applications is endless.

The most recent discovery published in Nature Physics and made by researchers at the Institute of Photonic Science (ICFO), in collaboration with Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA, Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research, Germany, and Graphenea S.L. Donostia-San Sebastian, Spain, demonstrate that graphene is able to convert a single photon that it absorbs into multiple electrons that could drive electric current (excited electrons) -- a very promising discovery that makes graphene an important alternative material for light detection and harvesting technologies, now based on conventional semiconductors like silicon.

"In most materials, one absorbed photon generates one electron, but in the case of graphene, we have seen that one absorbed photon is able to produce many excited electrons, and therefore generate larger electrical signals" explains Frank Koppens, group leader at ICFO. This feature makes graphene an ideal building block for any device that relies on converting light into electricity. In particular, it enables efficient light detectors and potentially also solar cells that can harvest light energy from the full solar spectrum with lower loss.

The experiment consisted in sending a known number of photons with different energies (different colors) onto a monolayer of graphene. "We have seen that high energy photons (e.g. violet) are converted into a larger number of excited electrons than low energy photons (e.g. infrared). The observed relation between the photon energy and the number of generated excited electrons shows that graphene converts light into electricity with very high efficiency. Even though it was already speculated that graphene holds potential for light-to-electricity conversion, it now turns out that it is even more suitable than expected!" explains Tielrooij, researcher at ICFO.

Although there are some issues for direct applications, such as graphene's low absorption, graphene holds the potential to cause radical changes in many technologies that are currently based on conventional semiconductors. "It was known that graphene is able to absorb a very large spectrum of light colors. However now we know that once the material has absorbed light, the energy conversion efficiency is very high. Our next challenge will be to find ways of extracting the electrical current and enhance the absorption of graphene. Then we will be able to design graphene devices that detect light more efficiently and could potentially even lead to more efficient solar cells." concludes Koppens.

Scientists, industries and the European Commission are so convinced of the potential of graphene to revolutionize the world economy that they promise an injection of ?1.000 million in graphene research.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by ICFO-The Institute of Photonic Sciences, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. K. J. Tielrooij, J. C. W. Song, S. A. Jensen, A. Centeno, A. Pesquera, A. Zurutuza Elorza, M. Bonn, L. S. Levitov, F. H. L. Koppens. Photoexcitation cascade and multiple hot-carrier generation in graphene. Nature Physics, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/nphys2564

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/5QHhG2DLkpc/130224142831.htm

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Cutting edge Calif. tunnels poised to open

(AP) ? Two slick new mile-long tunnels are undergoing final safety tests this month, poised to divert motorists away from an ocean cliff-hanging roadway dubbed Devil's Slide south of San Francisco to a smooth, Alpine-like passageway unlike any in the U.S. today.

The $439 million project, paid with federal emergency funds, features massive exhaust fans, carbon monoxide sensors and a pair of 1,000-foot bridges soaring 125 feet above a grassy horse ranch. A series of 10 fireproof shelters are staggered between the double bores, and remote cameras dangle from the ceiling, monitored by an around-the-clock safety staff of 15.

The tunnels, the first in the U.S. designed and built with an Austrian technique, have a Euro-glossiness to them, with white, glistening walls and shiny pipes gliding down a rounded ceiling. There's a bit of theme park vibe as well, with retaining walls and fake boulders at the entrance sculpted by the man who shaped and molded Disneyland's Indiana Jones ride.

"A new highway tunnel is a rare beast in this country, and what they are doing at Devil's Slide is certainly different than anything we've seen in the U.S.," said Neil Gray, director of government affairs at the Washington, D.C.-based International Bridge, Tunnel and Turnpike Association.

The Tom Lantos Tunnels, named after the late congressman, are the first tunnels built in California in more than 50 years. There are only a handful of tunnels under construction in the U.S. today, including the Alaskan Way Tunnel in Seattle, and the fourth bore of the Caldecott Tunnel, just 34 miles east of Devil's Slide in the eastern San Francisco Bay area.

Unlike those tunnels built to relieve commuter congestion, this new pair, 15 miles south of San Francisco, will divert a treacherous 1.2-mile stretch of the Pacific Coast Highway that constantly erodes and frequently collapses.

It's a spectacular section of road that was never meant to be.

Just three years after its 1937 completion, the road tumbled into pounding waves below. The road has fallen eight times since, causing costly closures that have devastated communities to the south ? Montara, Moss Beach, El Granada, Princeton and Half Moon Bay ? that depend on the route for daily commutes and for tourism from motorists heading south from San Francisco.

Each closure turns a 7-mile scenic drive from Pacifica to Montara into a 45-mile detour through the hills, and some have lasted for months.

In addition to slides, every year there are serious ? often deadly ? accidents on the narrow roadway, which twists so sharply that safe drivers are forced to slow to less than 25 mph. Reckless motorists have plunged hundreds of feet down the cliffs or drifted into oncoming traffic, resulting in horrifying head-on collisions. Plans are to turn the road, once closed, into a pedestrian and cycling park.

The new route, once bitterly contentious, became a model of Californian cooperation in 2006 after local voters declared 3-to-1 that they wanted the more expensive tunnels instead of a state-backed 4.5-mile road that would cut inland around a rugged, sage-covered mountain, crossing streams and paving over sensitive plants and habitat.

But not everyone wants to be rerouted.

For decades, Capt. William "Smitty" Smith, has eased his SUV every morning through the stretch, driving south from San Francisco to his charter boat in Half Moon Bay.

"I come around the Devil's Slide bend and the whole world opens up, the entire coast, and I can see what kind of day I'm going to have," he said.

Now, instead of dense fog, rainbows, choppy seas and rolling currents, he'll face a tunnel long enough to challenge the toughest breath holders in the back seat.

Other residents are apprehensive about earthquakes. The tunnels cut through a seismically flashy area, where the notorious San Andreas fault grumbles and jolts.

"I'm not going to like going through those tunnels, but it's mind over matter," said Phoebe McGaw, working in a coffee shop a few miles south of the project. "And it's about time they finish."

Neither on budget nor on time, it was a 5-year, $240 million project when it launched in 2006. Seven years and $439 million later, Y. Nien Wang, project manager for design contractor HNTB Corp., said seismic concerns, along with few existing standards and regulations, made it a particularly challenging project.

The Federal Highway Administration is only now developing national tunnel inspection standards, and doesn't track information on tunnels in any systematic way. And since this was the first tunnel constructed in decades in California, there were many first-time decisions to be made about seismic safety and design.

"A lot of what we did will be a model for future tunnel work in California," said Wang.

The one-lane tunnels with wide shoulders for stalled cars and bicycles are built to withstand a magnitude 7.5 to 8.0 earthquake, the maximum movement geologists estimate for this reach of the San Andreas fault.

Caltrans spokesman Bob Haus said the site's geology also added costs. With one set of machinery for soft rock, a different set for hard rock, crews dug with what were at the time the two largest excavators in the country, 148 tons each. Each time they bumped into a different type of rock, they would have to swap out the entire set of machinery.

"We had to demobilize, remobilize, demobilize, remobilize," said Haus. "That adds up."

And then there were the red-legged frogs. Early on, planners realized that at least one of the 256 streams this protected species lives in ran close to the tunnel sites. Thus, a team of three biologists were hired to protect whatever frogs they could find.

Going from sliding roadway to high-tech tunnels has been a grinding process for U.S. Rep. Jackie Speier, D-Calif., who spent hours in emotional hearings about the slide as a county supervisor 25 years ago.

"When we first started debating this issue, I was young and frisky. Now I'm old and color my hair," she said. "But residents on the coast no longer have to live in fear that their road will wash out and they'll be stranded."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-02-25-US-Devil's-Slide-Tunnel/id-1e64df0ac153460ab160d827bf2f871f

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Pope Benedict XVI and the road not taken (+video)

At one point, the young?Joseph Ratzinger looked like a budding church reformer. By the time he abdicated as pope this week, he had become one of the stoutest defenders of Catholic tradition.

By Robert Marquand,?Staff writer / February 13, 2013

Pope Benedict XVI attends Ash Wednesday mass at the Vatican Wednesday. Thousands of people are expected to gather in the Vatican for Pope Benedict's Ash Wednesday mass, which is expected to be his last before leaving office at the end of February.

Alessandro Bianchi/Reuters

Enlarge

By the time Pope Benedict XVI made his surprise announcement to abdicate, his image had become fixed as one of the stoutest defenders of tradition and an arch-enemy of change, liberality, and the reforming intent of the Vatican II council. But at the start of his career, he looked as if he might be a budding reformer himself. ?

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'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // --> Worshippers crowded in to get a glimpse of Pope Benedict XVI at his last public mass at St. Peter's Basilica in Rome.

The pope, then Joseph Ratzinger, collaborated on changes during Vatican II with Karl Rahner, a Jesuit star from Munich who in the 1970s was talked about as pope material in liberal circles. Mr. Rahner advocated women?s ordination, supported seekers in churches outside the Catholic faith, and his theology arced more toward a universal spirituality than institutional rules, emphasizing ?a?human search for meaning ? rooted in the unlimited horizon of God?s own being experienced within the world.?

The young Ratzinger in the 1960s was brought to Tubingen University partly by Catholic theologian Hans Kung (later censored for views bordering on heresy) and taught in a progressive Protestant-Catholic faculty.?

Ratzinger's first faculty lecture at Tubingen, eagerly awaited and still remembered today, stressed the importance of the interpretation of the Bible via church fathers of the pre-medieval era, at a time of relative excitement in scholarly circles over new "subjective" and "spiritual" interpretations of scripture. Mr. Kung was disappointed, his colleagues remember.?

Later in the mid-1960s Ratzinger experienced student campus protests firsthand. For a shy scholar whose vision of church was hewn in the clean and well-ordered Alpine villages of Bavaria ? the experience deeply soured him on change as well as the often excessive experiments of Vatican II to open the church up "to the modern world," as the saying went.?

Vatican II was heady days at a time of ferment, but neither Ratzinger nor the church he eventually led, ever made the leap. Faced with a changing world, Benedict opted for a church of greater purity and reliance on past traditions ??even as his tenure will be marked by a priestly child abuse scandal that two years ago was described as the biggest challenge faced by Rome since the Reformation.

Yesterday Vatican officials affirmed the outgoing Benedict will not personally direct the choice of his successor. But the outgoing pontiff has been so instrumental in shaping the policies and personnel of the Roman Catholic church that his presence won?t matter, analysts say.

For 24 years Benedict, as Cardinal Ratzinger, ruled the roost in the Vatican as Pope John Paul II?s enforcer, the powerful head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and he has overseen a tightening, not a loosening, of church doctrine.

Since 2005 he further consolidated power as pope. So the conclave of cardinals and bishops meeting in Rome next month are there precisely due to their loyalty to Benedict?s vision of the Roman church.

The effect of Benedict?s reign as pope in this sense cannot be understated.

To take one example: In recent years under direct Vatican influence one of the largest Benedictine training schools in the US has, against the sentiment of its teaching clergy, been forced to disallow males and females to study in classes together. So the "Benedict effect" is not something found only in books and encyclicals; it has had an effect?"on the ground," as one Benedictine theologian reports, off the record.?

In a church still quite divided on moral issues, sexuality, modernity, the concept of priest, and so on, it is unclear whether the pope?s resignation, itself an unusual break from the past, may lead to other changes.

Benedict oversaw a 2,000-year-old church with an all-male hierarchy that struggled to respond to a child abuse and pedophilia scandal that reached new excesses two years ago on both sides of the Atlantic during the "year of the priest."

The German pope did not create what some hoped would be a ?Benedict generation? with his robust defense of church doctrines and a controversial return to a more traditional liturgy. While?some conservative religious orders have seen some new applicants in the US, the overall numbers remain a far-cry from those before 1960. Instead, church issues among youth seem pressing, at least in the post-modern West that Benedict had hoped to appeal to with a new Catholic moment. If that moment never comes, says?one New York-based Jesuit, ?The church is going to go one way and the rest of us are going to go another.?

The child abuse scandal, which many dissidents in the church say is a result of the policies of all-male clergy and celibacy (the Vatican denies this) did allow, however briefly, space for different voices to be heard, and for issues treated by church fathers as settled for all time, to be raised.

The issues run from sex and gender to spiritual authority inside the church. They track the shrinking of Mass attendance in the West, the sharp downturn of youth desiring to be priests, and the angry reaction of females (again in the US and Britain) who see roles as clergy closed off when in many churches they are the most faithful.

In the midst of the priestly child abuse scandal, the church issued a circular that put women?s ordination into the same category of disciplinary crimes as heresy, pedophilia, and promoting schism.?Benedict was given credit for suggesting that wearing a condom is acceptable in certain odd cases, such as that of a male prostitute. But with many Catholics no longer even following church teaching on condoms, and with the pope visiting Africa and talking about abstinence and no wearing of condoms, many can?t relate.

The pedophile cases also sparked what many Catholics say is a need for a greater spiritual awakening in a church that has placed a great emphasis on institutional authority; they placed a critical focus on old assumptions that male priests, through the act of their ordination, are holier or more spiritually endowed than ordinary members of the laity.

The British newspaper The Guardian pointed out in an editorial that it could not find a single current liberal candidate for pope, and quoted from Carlo Maria Martini, a cardinal, who said before passing last year that, ?The church is tired in Europe and America. Our culture has aged, our churches are large, our religious houses are empty, and the bureaucracy of the church climbs higher, our rituals and our clothes are pompous?[the church] must recognize her mistakes and must follow a path of radical change, starting with the pope and the bishops.?

Yet many following the daily operations of the Holy See feel there is unlikely to be any revolutionary ?Papal Spring.? Some reform-minded Catholics and many who have left the church say the Vatican is so deeply into the wrong questions, and has been relying so heavily on those who are not interested in questioning in the first place, that any positive reforms will only be on the margins.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/Xi3En-sq4ow/Pope-Benedict-XVI-and-the-road-not-taken-video

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

Belgian national killed in Mexican resort of Acapulco

ACAPULCO (Reuters) - A Belgian man was shot dead in Mexico's Pacific resort city of Acapulco on Saturday, the latest episode of violence to strike one of the country's most important tourist destinations.

Acapulco police spokeswoman Gloria Mendez said the man, 58, resisted two assailants who were attempting to steal his convertible Mercedes Benz, one of whom shot him in the chest.

The shooting took place just minutes away from the city's landmark Princess hotel, site of next week's Mexico Open professional tennis tournament. Many players have already arrived, including tournament star attraction Rafael Nadal.

Mexico's interior ministry had announced earlier on Saturday that police had captured a top Acapulco cartel leader, Ricardo Reza, late Friday.

Earlier this month, six Spanish women were raped when hooded gunmen forced their way into the beach house they had rented.

Drug-related violence has been on the rise in Acapulco and last year the city was Mexico's murder capital.

(Reporting by Luis Enrique Martinez and David Alire Garcia)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/belgian-national-killed-mexican-resort-acapulco-035222651.html

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Study reveals Apple iPhone to be 300% more reliable than Samsung models Apple f...

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Source: http://www.facebook.com/GeekyGadgets/posts/10151323165435967

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Israel sues citizens for slander and apologies to Turkey

?

every idle word that men shall speak, they shall give account thereof in the day of judgment?Matthew 12:36

?

By RoiTov.com for Veterans Today

?

Few newspaper editors have the capability to see the large picture; buried in their tactical manipulation of information they often miss the odd links created by their uncoordinated decisions, sometimes to the extent of hitting their own masters.

On February 23, 2013, Israeli newspaper Haaretz did just that. Its Hebrew version grouped two strangely complementing pieces.

One reported on an expected apology of Israel to Turkey due to the Freedom Flotilla crimes committed by Israel. A few days ago, Turkey and Israel became friends again after Israel agreed to supply spying equipment that had been frozen since 2011. In parallel, the two former allies are holding negotiations to end the rupture between them. Apparently, Israel would apologize for its crimes and would indemnify the hurt Turkish citizens while Turkey would drop its demand of Israel to end the siege on Gaza. If an agreement would be reached, it would be announced soon after a new government is formed in Israel.

The last time Israel surrendered to such pressure was after it attacked Khaled Mashal. As often reported here, Israel understands only brute force as a negotiation tactic; after Turkey became a serious contestant to the Eastern Mediterranean Gas Fields, Israel accepted a compromise. Israeli citizens seldom have a similar power; thus, Israel decided to sue those criticizing the State. This was the topic of the article placed next to the one on Turkey. This odd mix portrayed Israel?s real face, a bigot seeking to take advantage of the weak but subservient of those holding the real power.

Suing State

The Association for Civil Rights in Israel published these days a report on an unusual topic, it was titled Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation. It deals with a new trend, the State, its various organizations, corporations and large companies are systematically suing citizens criticizing them. The process is designed to maximize the harassment of the citizens, including trials for comments placed on innocuous internet forums.

David Perl is a real-estate?consultant; in 2011, he published several warnings in Tapuz (?orange fruit? in Hebrew), a popular Israeli portal, against the Eisenberg Group. The latter was selling agricultural terrains claiming that they will be ?thawed? for urban construction shortly afterwards. The claim was a lie; buyers had no protection against it. The company sued Perl in two different courts (Nazareth and Hertzeliya) both far from his residence, so that he would be forced to move between these two cities.

The company demanded him to pay a combined sum of roughly $500,000. In February 2013, following a complex saga, the President of the Supreme Court declared Perl innocent and sentenced the company to pay him roughly $500 for the harassment. The sum allotted won?t pay even for the costs caused by the judicial process. Following the sentence, Mr. Perl apologized for his use of words like ?charlatans? in the forum but did not retract the facts.

Mr. Perl?s case is just one of the many analyzed by the report. One of the lawyers who authored it said, ?the main effect of these trials is not legal but social: it silences the complaints and hurts those making them.? This terror system is backed by the State. In the former Knesset, relevant legislation was fixed by the work of Meir Shitrit (then from party Kadima, now from HaTnua) and Yariv Levin (Likud). According to the new version, the suing party doesn?t need to show any proofs of damage if it is requesting less than NIS300,000 as damages.

This is not a law, but State Terror. The trials are usually carried out against social organizations, activists, and regular citizens who complain on their violation by the State or its cherished corporations. A good example is the case of Avi Tamir, the man in the window at the top picture. He lives in Rehovot with his wife in a humble apartment; both are over 70 and retired. A few years ago the municipality decided to build a tower over his home. He placed the protests signs seen in the picture, which are not offensive in the Israeli context.

He got a threatening letter from the municipality saying the signs are not allowed as per local regulations and that he would be sued for NIS50,000, well below the sum that requires providing proofs, but a fortune for the couple. The municipality is now waiting to begin the process after the next local elections; Mr. Tamir left the signs. This is State Terror.

The lawyers analyzed also the typical letters sent by the companies. The Byzantyne, colorful text doesn?t translate well into English, but the trend was clear. Lawyers send accusation letters in which they define the crime, namely slander, but don?t provide details how it was committed. A citizen dared to answer them, asking the blaming lawyer in a florid style to please, please describe his offense so that he would be able to avoid committing it again. The corporate lawyer sent again the blaming letter, without providing any details. He can sue without proofs. This is State Terror.

There is a Hebrew saying that translates as ?to be smart on the weak;? it is used against those who attack the weak just because they can, while they refrain from even looking in the direction of those with power. It describes a state of cowardice, a state of violence, a society of ignorant lawlessness. It describes the State of Israel.

???
?Addendum: The People?s Right to tell Unpleasant Truths

Slander, also known as defamation, calumny, vilification, traducement, and libel, is defined as a statement that makes a claim, expressly stated or implied to be factual, that may give an individual, business, product, group, government, religion, or nation a negative or inferior image. Obviously, the claim must be false and communicated to someone other than the person defamed to create liability. The main international law dealing with people?s rights on the issue is the International Covenant on of Civil and Political Rights, which deals with the right to life, freedom of religion, freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, electoral rights and rights to due process and a fair trial.. In certain countries, slander is dealt with as a crime rather than a civil wrong. Yet, in 2012, the United Nations Commission on Human Rights ruled that the criminalization of libel violates Freedom of expression and is inconsistent with Article 19 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.


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Saturday, February 23, 2013

College tests fingerprint purchasing technology

By Amber Hunt

Futurists have long proclaimed the coming of a cashless society, where dollar bills and plastic cards are replaced by fingerprint and retina scanners smart enough to distinguish a living, breathing account holder from an identity thief.

What they probably didn't see coming was that one such technology would make its debut not in Silicon Valley or MIT but at a small state college in remote western South Dakota, 25 miles from Mount Rushmore.

Two shops on the School of Mines and Technology campus are performing one of the world's first experiments in Biocryptology - a mix of biometrics (using physical traits for identification) and cryptology (the study of encoding private information). Students at the Rapid City school can buy a bag of potato chips with a machine that non-intrusively detects their hemoglobin to make sure the transaction is legitimate.

Researchers figure their technology would provide a critical safeguard against a morbid scenario sometimes found in spy movies in which a thief removes someone else's finger to fool the scanner.

On a recent Friday, mechanical engineering major Bernard Keeler handed a Red Bull to a cashier in the Miner's Shack campus shop, typed his birthdate into a pay pad and swiped his finger. Within seconds, the machine had identified his print and checked that blood was pulsing beneath it, allowing him to make the buy. Afterward, Keeler proudly showed off the receipt he was sent via email on his smartphone.

Fingerprint technology isn't new, nor is the general concept of using biometrics as a way to pay for goods. But it's the extra layer of protection - that deeper check to ensure the finger has a pulse - that researchers say sets this technology apart from already-existing digital fingerprint scans, which are used mostly for criminal background checks.

Al Maas, president of Nexus USA - a subsidiary of Spanish-based Hanscan Indentity Management, which patented the technology - acknowledged South Dakota might seem an unlikely locale to test it, but to him, it was a perfect fit.

"I said, if it flies here in the conservative Midwest, it's going to go anywhere," Maas said.

Maas grew up near Madison, S.D., and wanted his home state to be the technology's guinea pig. He convinced Hanscan owner Klaas Zwart that the 2,400-student Mines campus should be used as the starter location.

The students all major in mechanical engineering or hard sciences, which means they're naturally technologically inclined, said Joseph Wright, the school's associate vice president for research-economic development.

"South Dakota is a place where people take risks. We're very entrepreneurial," Wright said.

After Maas and Zwart introduced the idea to students this winter, about 50 stepped forward to take part in the pilot.

"I really wanted to be part of what's new and see if I could help improve what they already have," said Phillip Clemen, 19, a mechanical engineering student.

Robert Siciliano, a security expert with McAfee, Inc., minimized potential privacy concerns.

"We are hell bent on privacy issues here in the U.S. We get all up in arms when someone talks about scanning us or recording our information, but then we'll throw up everything about us on Facebook and give up all of our personal information for 10 percent off at a shoe store for instant credit," he said.

Jay Stanley, senior policy analyst with the American Civil Liberties Union, said fingerprint technology on its own raises security issues, but he called "liveness detection" a step in the right direction.

"Any security measure can be defeated; it's a question of making it harder," he said.

The key to keeping biometric identification from becoming Big Brother-like is to make it voluntary and ensure that the information scanned is used exactly as promised, Stanley said.

Brian Wiles, a Miles mechanical engineering major, said it's exciting to be beta testing technology that could soon be worldwide.

"There was some hesitation, but the fact that it's the first in the world - that's the whole point of this school," said Wiles, 22. "We're innovators."

AP

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/co/HCaY/~3/8oBEuwI3VC8/Default.aspx

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MacArthur President Robert Gallucci Addresses ASAN Nuclear Forum

The keynote address at the ASAN Nuclear Forum in Seoul, South Korea on Tuesday, as delivered on ?February 19, 2013.


I want to thank Dr. CHUNG Moo Joon, Dr. HAHM Chaibong and ASAN for putting together this conference and giving me the opportunity to speak this morning. I would like to take this time to tell you all about the good work of the MacArthur Foundation, all around the world. And perhaps someday I will.

But I think it is inevitable, with this audience, in this city, at this time, that I would instead address Northeast Asian Security; particularly the impact on the region of North Korea's nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programs.

Let me begin by observing that we are very close to the 20th anniversary of the beginning of talks to address the first North Korean nuclear crisis in 1993. That crisis, you will recall, arose when the IAEA found the DPRK to be in violation of its safeguards commitments.

The Security Council then took action, and North Korea announced its intension to withdraw from the NPT. The rest, as they say, is history. But now, twenty years later, it is appropriate to begin by asking what has changed over the years, what's new, and what difference does it make?

I note first that many periods of crisis with North Korea have occurred over the last two decades. The United States has changed Presidents three times since then, and North Korea has changed leaders twice.

So, while there is a d?j? vu about today's situation, there are obviously important differences as well.

One difference is that we have indeed "been here before", we now have experience with each other and, like experienced judo players, we know each other's moves and favorite throws.

There are the recurring threats of death and destruction from the North, followed by nuclear explosives and ballistic missile tests, and sometimes by dangerous and provocative military and naval actions.

For our part, we have predictably reacted by intensifying the sanctions regime against the North, increasing its isolation from the rest of the world and probably added to the hardships facing the North Korean people.

In between crises we have had periods of political engagement. The North has more than once committed to eventually giving up its nuclear weapons program. Political and economic contacts between South and North have increased, and the United States has engaged in diplomatic activity, at different times, involving different numbers of parties, from the bilateral at two, to a full house at six.

But before we conclude that "le plus sa change, le plus la meme chose," let us remember that 20 years ago North Korea had accumulated only a small amount of plutonium, had no uranium enrichment program, and had neither tested nor built any nuclear weapons. And its most sophisticated ballistic missile was the medium range No Dong.

Now, a fair estimate would be that North Korea has accumulated 20 to 40 kgs of plutonium, enough for up to 8 nuclear weapons, conducted three nuclear explosive tests, is increasing its fissile material stocks daily with a modern gas centrifuge enrichment program, and is headed for a robust nuclear weapons program mated to a ballistic missile capability of intermediate and eventually intercontinental range.

But what does all that mean?

First, I think however one characterizes the policy we have pursued over the last 20 years?engagement, containment, whatever?it has failed to reduce the threat posed by North Korea to the security of the region.

What is that threat?

Starkly put, it is that some incident or provocation from the North will result in a significant military or naval engagement on or near the Korean peninsula and, exacerbated by the presence of nuclear weapons in the North, it will lead to a larger conflict and the tragic loss of life on all sides.

The threat is also, of course, that nuclear weapons could be used in such a conflict.

Short of war, the threat is that the growing nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programs in the North will lead the governments of other countries in the region to reconsider their commitment to non-nuclear status and the non-proliferation regime will unravel, reducing the security of countries in the region and around the world.

The threat is also that, at any moment, North Korea will transfer some sensitive bit of nuclear weapons material or technology to a terrorist group or to a country known to sponsor terrorists. I note that this has already happened, referring here to the plutonium separation plant that North Korea built in Syria and which Israel destroyed by bombing before its completion six years ago.

This particular threat?nuclear terrorism?is the thing we worry about most in the United States. It is not your major concern, but it is one of ours. Right now, one analyst, Graham Allison of Harvard, argues that the North Korean nuclear test is sort of an announcement that "the store is open for business," that the North will sell HEU, nuclear weapons designs or even nuclear weapons to all comers. Not a happy thought if you live in one of America's cities.

I would ask you all to understand that for Americans this threat is far greater and unlike the threat that may someday be posed by North Korean nuclear weapons delivered by ballistic missiles. That threat may be met first by deterrence, the promise of retaliation against a strike, or even by mounting a defense by denial, a ballistic missile defense, which would shoot down an incoming missile.

But the terrorist threat?an improvised nuclear device, delivered anonymously and unconventionally by boat or truck across our long and unprotected borders?is one against which we have no certain deterrent or defensive response. This is why the threat of North Korean transfer is so serious from the American perspective.

The second thing that strikes me as true now is that the dominant, but mostly unspoken question of twenty years ago about North Korea, still plagues us today:

Does the North pursue a nuclear weapons program because it fears an attack from the South, an invasion aimed at regime change by the United States, in other words, because it wants a deterrent for defensive purposes?

Or, is the North actually unalterably committed to reunifying the peninsula by force, and intent on breaking the South's alliance with the United States by holding American cities hostage to a ballistic missile strike? Or, in other words, is the North's nuclear weapons program aimed at deterring the United States for offensive purposes?

Simply put, if the first characterization is correct, there is hope for diplomacy, hope that, over time, the right formula might be found for reducing tensions, de-fusing the nuclear issue and building trust among all parties.

But if the second proposition is more nearly correct, evolutionary change should not be expected, and perhaps the best that can be achieved is the constant avoidance of armed conflict, but with no genuine reduction in tensions.

Under the circumstances, I conclude now, as I did twenty years ago, that exploring the North Korean position, carefully testing the North to discern its intensions, engaging diplomatically to see if tensions can genuinely be reduced and a political settlement found is the best way to proceed. All, of course, while maintaining military readiness. We cannot afford to leave any doubt in the minds of those in the North about our determination and ability to meet and defeat any threat that they might present.

The third thing that seems clear to me then, if this is the route we decide to take, is that an exclusive focus in our diplomacy on the one thing that troubles us most, the North's nuclear weapons program, is not a productive way to proceed. This is the opposite of what I thought twenty years ago. Then, I thought we needed to limit our goal to stopping the North Korean nuclear weapons program. Now I am convinced that our engagement must be broad with the aim to address a range of political, economic, and security issues.

That said, we need to be clear that the end game must envision the North's abandonment of its nuclear weapons program. We need not, indeed should not, lead with this objective, but there can be no ambiguity about this being a feature of any political process structured to address all parties' concerns.

This approach resembles more closely the six-party diplomacy of 2007 than the bilateral approach that gave us the Agreed Framework in 1994. To some, this may suggest that for engagement to work, we should resurrect the six-party formulae. I am not so sure. I think at the core is the North Korean concern about survival of its political system. This suggests that Seoul, Washington and Beijing are the essential players, at least initially.

There are probably many reasons why the arrangements of 2007 came undone, but I suspect the failure to reach a clear understanding of how the nuclear issue would be resolved was critical to the failure. We should not repeat that mistake; there will be plenty of opportunities for us to make new ones.

Three more points need to be made in connection with any proposal to engage the North.

First, there is no basis for successfully dealing with the North absent a solid foundation for policy rooted in the US-ROK Alliance. The North will always look for ways to shake that foundation, but the national security of both our countries and the basis for a political settlement with the North that includes the elimination of nuclear weapons from the peninsula, assumes a strong alliance between Seoul and Washington. That has always been true and will remain so.

Second, China has a legitimate interest in how matters are resolved with North Korea, and can play an important role in shaping outcomes. Consulting with Beijing early in the development of a policy of political engagement will be critical to its success.

Other countries, Japan and Russia, for starters, would have to be included as well, of course, before any settlement was concluded.

And, finally, I cannot imagine a protracted engagement with North Korea?and if engagement is to succeed, it will be protracted?which fails to attract sufficient domestic political support in the United States and South Korea. In short, while our diplomacy may begin quietly, it must eventually be open, based on realistic assessments of our national security interests, and reflect neither naivet? nor wishful thinking. We are, after all, democracies.

Among the implications of this proposition is that restraint must be part of a negotiating process. Provocations from the North of the kind we have seen in the past must be understood as incompatible with negotiations, undercutting the domestic support essential to sustain diplomatic engagement.

When I was involved in negotiations with North Korea twenty years ago and visited Seoul for consultations with the government of President Kim Yum Sam, I was often asked by the press if I was pessimistic or optimistic about our chances for success. I never seemed to come up with a satisfactory answer. But if you asked me today, I would say neither word captures the attitude we need to strike. We should all be realists.

If it were to turn out that for now, at least, there is no way to address the North Korean nuclear program through negotiation, that as Pyongyang now claims, and critics of diplomacy have asserted for decades, the North will not give up its nuclear weapons program, then I would not favor the United States engaging in a broad negotiation with the North. Such as negotiation could only serve to legitimize the North's nuclear weapons status.

Sanctions, political containment and sustaining a strong deterrent and conventional military defense would seem to me to be more appropriate.

But, as a realist and a pragmatist, I want to test the proposition that there is no negotiated way to a nuclear weapons-free North Korea, before we simply act on that assumption.

Thank you.

Source: http://www.macfound.org/press/speeches/macarthur-president-robert-gallucci-addresses-asan-nuclear-forum/

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Friday, February 22, 2013

St. Louis City, County Plan To Join Forces On Job Creation

St. Louis Post-Dispatch:

For decades now, Skinker Boulevard has been a dividing line in the St. Louis region.

East of Skinker, you?re in St. Louis city, dealing with one local government. West of Skinker, it?s St. Louis County, and a whole different government.

Now both governments are moving to erase that line, at least when it comes to efforts to grow the economy.

Read the whole story at St. Louis Post-Dispatch

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/21/st-louis-city-county-plan_n_2733810.html

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Israel Not Pushing Obama to Arm Syrian Rebels

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Source: http://worldpress.org/feed.cfm?http://www.ipsnews.net/2013/02/israel-not-pushing-obama-to-arm-syrian-rebels/

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Abe - Japan acting calmly in island dispute with China

WASHINGTON | Fri Feb 22, 2013 7:18pm GMT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Friday said he told President Barack Obama in a meeting that Japan would act calmly in its row with China over tiny islands in the East China Sea claimed by both Asian countries.

"I explained that we have always been dealing with this issue ... in a calm manner," he said through a translator, while sitting next to Obama in the White House Oval Office.

"We will continue to do so and we have always done so," he said.

Abe said the existence of the Japan-U.S. alliance was a stabilizing factor in the region. He also said that he and Obama discussed additional sanctions against North Korea.

(Reporting by Jeff Mason; Editing by Vicki Allen)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/Reuters/UKWorldNews/~3/zmaGGLi9fn4/uk-usa-japan-abe-islands-idUKBRE91L10Y20130222

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State logs another flu death; hospitalizations waning

A 7-year-old from Cherokee County died of the flu in the latter part of 2012, the Oklahoma State Health Department said Thursday.

"Certain disease investigations may be more prolonged due to the nature of the individual case as well as the information the Oklahoma State Department of Health must gather to ascertain and confirm the case," according to a statement from the health department.

The number of deaths since Sept. 30 is 26.

Six of those deaths have been in Tulsa County, which has more than twice as many reported hospitalizations as any other county.

Hospitalizations continued to drop.

Nearly 950 flu hospitalizations have been reported, and 24 of those were in the past week. That is down from 36 the week before.

Twenty of the dead have been 65 or older, and five others were between the ages of 19 and 64.

Source: http://www.tulsaworld.com/site/articlepath.aspx?articleid=20130221_17_0_Onemor900512

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Video: Gas explosion injures at least 14 in Kansas City



>> here at home, we're following a major story developing this morning, emergency crews searching for possible victims after a kansas city restaurant was flattened in a fire.

>> reporter: cadaver dogs will be back at work this morning at the scene. overnight they got no hits. when given the size of this explosion, this is remarkable that so far there have been no fatalities reported.

>> boom, everything just exploded. it was just the scariest thing i ever witnessed.

>> reporter: a gas main break in this upscale kansas city shopping district sparked an explosion and raging inferno in a restaurant at about 6:00 pm tuesday night. happy hour. the fire so big, it engulfed an entire city street. the impact of the blast felt blocks away.

>> it set off all the car alarms through the entire block. the flames were even taller than the building next to it.

>> reporter: more than a dozen people were injured, taken to area hospitals. at a news conference last night, officials were still not sure of the cause or if anyone had been killed, promising to focus first on human lives.

>> what we're really trying to get a handle on right now is how many people were hurt, where are they? who are they? what's their condition, et cetera ? that's a moving target.

>> also concern there may be additional people that were not able to get out of the structure. we have cadaver dogs thoroughly combing the scene right now.

>> reporter: the epicenter of the explosion, jj's restaurant. david francais.

>> my brother has spent his life running this business, built it into one of the finest restaurants in the city. to come here and see a hole in the ground and in flames is a pretty staggering experience.

>> reporter: as the search for potential victims continues, so does the search for a cause. last night the utility company said preliminary indications are that a contractor hit an underground natural gas line . david?

>> john yang , thanks very much,

Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/50868838/

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Thursday, February 21, 2013

Yammer Earns Its Keep for Microsoft, One Kahlua Sundae at a Time

The Next WebAbout six months ago Microsoft (MSFT) acquired Yammer for $1.2 billion. The price tag still seems shocking. Surely some engineers at Microsoft could look at Facebook (FB), mimic the social networking service, and make it slightly more corporate, just ?

Read more at Businessweek.

Source: http://www.twytter.net/blog/yammer-earns-its-keep-for-microsoft-one-kahlua-sundae-at-a-time/

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Why promising minority students aren't signing up for AP exams

Minority students sign up for AP exams at a lower rate than white peers, even if they are likely to pass. Cultivating early interest in math and science is key to fulfilling potential.

By Ryan Lenora Brown,?Contributor / February 20, 2013

Maia Luick marks an answer during a 30-minute science test at the GCI Alaska Academic Decathlon in Anchorage, Alaska, this month. Overall, more high school students are passing Advanced Placement exams, but minority students, even those likely to pass, aren't signing up for tests.

Erik Hill/The Anchorage Daily/AP

Enlarge

The number of high school students passing at least one Advanced Placement (AP) exam is up overall this year, but students from minority groups still lag behind their white peers, particularly in math and science.

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Among members of the class of 2012, more than 32.4 percent (950,000 students) took at least one AP exam, up from 30.2 percent in 2011. A decade ago, the number was 18 percent, according to an annual report released Wednesday by the College Board, which administers the tests.

But the College Board also finds that many minority and low-income students, even those with a high likelihood of succeeding on AP exams, aren?t taking them. For students?deemed likely to pass an AP mathematics exam, only 30 percent of African-American and Hispanic students and 20 percent of American-Indian students signed up for the test, compared with 40 percent of white students and 60 percent Asian and Pacific Islander students.

?It?s really unconscionable that we?re not better as a nation at helping students from underserved backgrounds prepare for and enroll in AP courses,? says Trevor Packer, College Board senior vice president for AP.

Since its inception in the 1950s, the AP program has grown into a staple of the college preparatory curriculum in American high schools. The AP curriculum teaches college-level material to high school students in 31 subjects across a wide range of disciplines, including both traditional courses like physics and US history and atypical specialties like human geography and Japanese language and culture.

Passing an AP exam in high school is correlated to a higher college grade point average and an increased likelihood of graduating from a four-year college, the College Board reports. It can also bring down tuition costs for students who enter college with credits earned through AP scores. Exams are scored on a five-point scale ? three points or higher counts as passing and can be used for college credit or placement at many universities.

Enrollment in AP courses has recently become more diverse. In 2002, less than 18 percent of AP exam takers were so-called ?underserved minorities.? Now the figure is 26 percent. And the number of low-income students in the AP program has grown from 11 percent to nearly 27 percent in the same time period. This is due in part to widespread subsidies to help offset the test's nearly $100 price tag. ?

Mr. Packer says that low-enrollment in AP courses and exams among minority students is often a function of availability.?But other education experts argue that the problem is more systemic. ?

When it comes to math and science, minority students are ?often not recognized as the smart kids in the class,? says Mary Walker, an education professor at the University of Texas in Austin who focuses on math and science education.

If you don?t cultivate students? interest and aptitude for a subject early in their educational careers, she says, increasing their access to AP exams may simply be too little too late.

?If you don?t get them interested at middle school level they won?t be on track to take advanced courses in high school because they won?t have taken the necessary prerequisites,? she says.

The ?high likelihood? that a student will pass an AP exam is determined by looking at a student?s score on the Preliminary Scholastic Assessment Test (PSAT) ? an SAT-style test the College Board offers to high school sophomores and juniors. Students with certain qualifying scores on one or more sections of that exam have at least a 60 percent chance of passing an AP exam, the College Board reports.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/bOzRVc9IEk8/Why-promising-minority-students-aren-t-signing-up-for-AP-exams

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BlackBerry Security Flaw Could Compromise Enterprise Servers

If you associate BlackBerry with top-notch security, time to think again. The company has released news which warns of a vulnerability that could expose enterprise servers to massive malware attacks. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/gFL9IYAEDo0/blackberry-security-flaw-could-compromise-enterprise-servers

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Eurotunnel says to challenge UK antitrust stance on ferries

PARIS (Reuters) - Channel tunnel operator Eurotunnel said it would challenge a U.K. watchdog's view that its takeover of three ships owned by failed ferry operator SeaFrance would hamper competition on cross-Channel services.

The U.K. Competition Commission said earlier on Tuesday that passengers and freight customers could face higher prices with the arrival of MyFerryLink, a ferry service Eurotunnel launched using the three former SeaFrance vessels.

The group last year branched out into sea transport with the 65 million euro ($87 million) purchase of three of the ships formerly operated by SeaFrance, a unit of French railway operator SNCF that went into liquidation in early 2012.

France's antitrust watchdog cleared the deal in November.

"Eurotunnel intends to continue to work with the Competition Commission to allay the concerns raised by existing ferry operators," Chief Executive Jacques Gounon said in a statement.

Eurotunnel operates the vehicle shuttle services in the Channel tunnel between Britain and France and earns revenue on other freight and passenger trains that pass through the tunnel.

(Reporting by Elena Berton; Editing by Helen Massy-Beresford)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/eurotunnel-says-challenge-uk-antitrust-stance-ferries-100952093--finance.html

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