Thursday, February 28, 2013

Ship noise makes crabs get crabby

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

A study published today in Biology Letters found that ship noise affects crab metabolism, with largest crabs faring worst, and found little evidence that crabs acclimatise to noise over time.

The team from the Universities of Bristol and Exeter found that crabs exposed to recordings of ship noise showed an increase in metabolic rate, indicating elevated stress. In the real world this could have implications for growth and, if the metabolic cost of noise causes crabs to spend more time foraging to compensate, could also increase the risk of predation.

Researcher Matt Wale from Bristol's School of Biological Sciences describes the study: "We used controlled experiments to consider how shore crabs of different sizes respond to both single and repeated exposure to playback of ship noise. Ship noise is the most common source of noise in the aquatic environment."

Explains Dr Andy Radford, Reader in Behavioural Ecology at Bristol: "We found that the metabolic rate of crabs exposed to ship noise was higher than those experiencing ambient harbour noise, and that larger individuals were affected most strongly. This is the first indication that there might be different responses to noise depending on the size of an individual."

If commercially important crabs and lobsters are affected by noise, these findings have implications for fisheries in busy shipping areas where large individuals may be losing out. Conversely, if reducing noise reduces metabolic costs, then quietening aquaculture facilities may lead to higher yields.

Dr Steve Simpson from the University of Exeter warned: "Since larger crabs are affected more strongly by noise this could have implications for fisheries in noisy areas. Also, many crustacean species, particularly prawns, are grown in aquaculture, so if acoustic disturbance has a metabolic cost then operational noise in farms may impact on growth, and quieter farms may be more profitable."

###

University of Bristol: http://www.bristol.ac.uk

Thanks to University of Bristol for this article.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127041/Ship_noise_makes_crabs_get_crabby

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Pope changes conclave rules, allows earlier start

VATICAN CITY (AP) ? Pope Benedict XVI has changed the rules of the conclave that will elect his successor, allowing cardinals to move up the start date if all of them arrive in Rome before the usual 15-day transition between pontificates.

Benedict signed a legal document, issued Monday, with some line-by-line changes to the 1996 Vatican law governing the election of a new pope. It is one of his last acts as pope before resigning Thursday.

The date of the conclave's start is important because Holy Week begins March 24, with Easter Sunday March 31. In order to have a new pope in place for the church's most solemn liturgical period, he would need to be installed by Sunday, March 17 ? a tight timeframe if a conclave were to start March 15.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pope-changes-conclave-rules-allows-earlier-start-121031066.html

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Brain Cells Can Outlive the Body

Brain cells can live at least twice as long as the organisms in which they reside, according to new research.

The study, published today (Feb. 25) in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, found that mouse neurons, or brain cells, implanted into rats can survive with the rats into old age, twice as long as the life span of the original mice.

The findings are good news for life extension enthusiasts.

"We are slowly but continuously prolonging the life of humans," said study co-author Dr. Lorenzo Magrassi, a neurosurgeon at the University of Pavia in Italy.

So if the human life span could be stretched to 160 years, "then you are not going to lose your neurons, because your neurons do not have a fixed lifetime."

Long-lived cells

While most of the cells in the human body are being constantly replaced, humans are born with almost all the neurons they will ever have. [10 Odd Facts About the Brain]

Magrassi and his colleagues wanted to know whether neurons could outlive the organisms in which they live (barring degenerative diseases like Alzheimer's).

To do so, the researchers took neurons from mice and implanted them into the brains of about 60 rat fetuses.

The team then let the rats live their entire lives, euthanizing them when they were moribund and unlikely to survive for more than two days, and then inspected their brains. The life span of the mice was only about 18 months, while the rats typically lived twice as long.

The rats were found to be completely normal (though not any smarter), without any signs of neurological problems at the end of their lives.

And the neurons that had been transplanted from mice were still alive when the rats died. That means it's possible the cells could have survived even longer if they were transplanted into a longer-lived species.

Life extension

The findings suggest that our brain cells won't fail before our bodies do.

"Think what a terrible thing it could be if you survive your own brain," Magrassi told LiveScience.

While the findings were done in rats, not humans, they could also have implications for neuronal transplants that could be used for degenerative diseases like Alzheimer's disease or Parkinson's disease, Magrassi said.

But just because brain cells may be able to live indefinitely doesn't mean humans could live forever.

Aging is dependent on more than the life span of all the individual parts in the body, and scientists still don't understand exactly what causes people to age, Magrassi said.

Follow LiveScience on Twitter @livescience. We're also on Facebook?& Google+.?

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/brain-cells-outlive-body-200523739.html

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Oscars Review: MacFarlane Proves He's An Oscar Guy In Hosting Gig

NEW YORK ? He ruffled feathers. He maybe even turned some viewers off.

But it's likely no one turned off Seth MacFarlane.

Best-known until recently as the bad-boy creator and character voice behind "Family Guy" and last summer's hit film "Ted," MacFarlane seized the camera Sunday as host of ABC's Oscarcast and proved to its vast audience that he's a ridiculously versatile entertainer, a guy who can be as charming as he is famously irreverent, even polarizing.

Here's a guy who could toss off a joke Bob Hope might have delivered decades ago ("It's Sunday. Everybody's dressed up. This is like church ? only with more people praying"), then carry off a deliberate groaner like his wisecrack that, while, an actor like Daniel Day-Lewis really captured Abraham Lincoln in his Oscar-winning performance, "I would argue that the actor who really got inside Abraham Lincoln's head was John Wilkes Booth."

Viewers could have gotten fair warning of what to expect from MacFarlane last fall when he hosted "Saturday Night Live" with skill.

But this Oscars hosting gig was the Main Event, and he earned a large measure of credit for keeping the show in satisfying equilibrium.

This was an elegant affair, including a surprise appearance by first lady Michelle Obama, live from the White House, who announced the best picture.

The lovely stage setting glowed and shimmered. And it was put to good use in a show-stopping production number saluting movie musicals including "Chicago," "Dreamgirls" and "Les Miserables," performed by stars from those films.

On a program that honored the 50th anniversary of the James Bond films, Adele wailed the theme song from the newest, "Skyfall." Far juicier, Shirley Bassey belted out the theme from "Goldfinger" about as forcefully as she did in 1964.

And accompanying the In Memoriam tribute, in a year that saw the passing of composer-songwriter Marvin Hamlisch, Barbra Streisand made a rare television appearance to sing "The Way We Were" in his honor.

(If any of the studio-perfect performances raised suspicions of lip-syncing, the academy declared all the singing was done live.)

Speaking of music, the orchestra got surprisingly aggressive forcing off winners in mid-acceptance, often with the sinister theme from "Jaws," of all things.

But silver-tressed Claudio Miranda, accepting the best cinematography Oscar for "Life of Pi," didn't need the hook. Beginning with "Aw, gee, wow," he seemed to be channeling Diane Keaton in "Annie Hall" as he gratefully stumbled through his thank-yous with a series of gasps, sentence fragments, and finally his own self-imposed wrap-up, "Oh, my God, I can't even speak." In his brief appearance, he became the patron saint of any viewer who was ever forced to speak in public from the heart ? and crumbled.

Few presenters knocked it out of the park in their fleeting turns, but none had viewers' teeth grinding.

Perhaps inevitably, Mark Wahlberg was reunited with his "Ted" co-star, a digitally rendered Teddy bear voiced by MacFarlane. Ted, at his politically incorrect best, wondered aloud where the post-Oscars orgy would be ("Jack Nicholson's house," Wahlberg finally replied) and professed that he was Jewish to ensure he would "work in this town."

Yes, MacFarlane had his moments of dubious taste. What did anybody expect who'd ever spent a moment with "Family Guy"?

But did he really cross the line when he described "Django Unchained" as "the story of a man fighting to get back his woman who's been subjected to unthinkable violence ? or, as Chris Brown and Rihanna call it, a date movie"?

Especially on a night where everyone else seemed to be on their best behavior, MacFarlane's strategic misbehavior furnished welcome relief.

In interviews beforehand, he had spoken of his hope to strike a balance between respect for Hollywood and some necessary sass. Mission accomplished.

Leading-man handsome with a gleaming smile, he began the broadcast without a net and looking totally relaxed: Alone on the stage, he delivered a series of one-liners, most of which scored. (The Oscarcast was being watched by "close to a billion people worldwide," he intoned, "which is why Jodie Foster will be up here in a bit to ask for her privacy.")

Then he opened the door to his reputation for raunch with the appearance on a video screen of William Shatner as "Star Trek's" Captain Kirk, who had arrived from the future to scold MacFarland in advance for the hosting performance he was just starting.

"The show's a disaster," declared Shatner.

As evidence, he pointed to an "incredibly offensive song that upsets a lot of actresses in the audience."

With that, a pre-taped production number featured MacFarlane singing "We Saw Your Boobs," saluting a roster of actresses who have bared themselves in their films.

But then, in an effort to atone, MacFarlane sang a classy rendition of "The Way You Look Tonight" accompanied by Charlize Theron and Channing Tatum in dance.

Not good enough, said Shatner, who then revealed a video clip where MacFarlane, costumed in a Flying Nun habit, hit on Oscar nominee Sally Field in the green room.

Back and forth went the routine: Bad Seth and Good Seth. Both were very funny, stewarding a broadcast that never went askew.

___

Frazier Moore is a national television columnist for The Associated Press. He can be reached at fmoore(at)ap.org and at http://www.twitter.com/tvfrazier

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/25/oscars-review_n_2756931.html

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SPIN METER: In budget fight, sky is falling again (The Arizona Republic)

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

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McCarthy's 'Identity Thief' tops box office again

FILE -This undated publicity file image released by Universal Pictures shows Jason Bateman, left, and Melissa McCarthy in a scene from, "Identity Thief." As of Sunday, Feb. 24, 2013, ?Identity Thief?, with a cumulative total of $93.7 million viewers, is the biggest hit so far in 2013. (AP Photo/Universal Pictures)

FILE -This undated publicity file image released by Universal Pictures shows Jason Bateman, left, and Melissa McCarthy in a scene from, "Identity Thief." As of Sunday, Feb. 24, 2013, ?Identity Thief?, with a cumulative total of $93.7 million viewers, is the biggest hit so far in 2013. (AP Photo/Universal Pictures)

(AP) ? Hollywood's latest films performed tepidly at the box-office on Oscar weekend, with Melissa McCarthy's "Identity Thief" returning to the top spot in its third week of release.

The Universal comedy earned $14.1 million on the weekend, according to studio estimates Sunday, enough to regain the box-office title after losing it last week to 20th Century Fox's "A Good Day to Die Hard," the Bruce Willis action sequel.

With a cumulative total of $93.7 million, "Identity Thief" is the biggest hit so far in 2013. Though the film has been badly reviewed by critics, the road trip duo of McCarthy and Jason Bateman has proved popular at the multiplexes, where no other comedy has been around to challenge it.

More than anything, "Identity Thief" has proven the stardom of McCarthy, following her breakout performance in "Bridesmaids."

"The holding power of a film always gives you an idea of the strength of its concept or its star," said Nikki Rocco, Universal head of distribution. "In this case, it's both."

With the industry gathering for the Oscars on Sunday, it's always a weekend where moviegoers' attention goes more to the Academy Awards than the movie theater. For the fifth week in a row, the box office was down as compared to last year's business

One of the two new films in wide release, Lionsgate's Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson action film, "Snitch," opened with $13 million. That was a decent but not strong showing for "Snitch" in a year where action films have largely fared poorly.

Though "A God Day to Die Hard," the fourth film in the franchise, led the box office last week, it slid 60 percent in its second week to $10 million. Earlier action films from Arnold Schwarzenegger ("The Last Stand"), Jason Statham ("Parker") and Sylvester Stallone ("Bullet to the Head") performed worse.

The other new wide release was the Weinstein Co.'s "Dark Skies," a PG-13 horror film starring Keri Russell. It debuted with $8.9 million.

The down weekend was unlikely to dampen the Oscar celebration. The nine best picture nominees have largely fared well at the box office. This weekend, eight of them are in the top 21 films.

For the first time since the category's number of nominees was extended in 2009, six of the nominees grossed more than $100 million domestically: "Argo," ''Lincoln," ''Les Miserables," ''Silver Linings Playbook," ''Django Unchained" and "Life of Pi." ''Zero Dark Thirty" missed narrowly with $91.6 million going into the Oscars.

"It's one of the best performing groups of nominees I've ever seen," said Paul Dergarabedian, an analyst for box-office tracker Hollywood.com. "Great night for Hollywood, tough day at the box office."

A box-office bump could follow for Sunday's big winners, though any benefit might be better found overseas, where some of the films are still expanding. The best picture favorite, Ben Affleck's Iran rescue thriller "Argo," is already out on DVD in North America.

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Hollywood.com. Where available, latest international numbers are included. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.

1. "Identity Thief," $14 million.

2. "Snitch," $ 13 million.

3. "Escape From Planet Earth," $11 million.

4. "Safe Haven," $10.6 million.

5. "A Good Day to Die Hard," $10 million.

6. "Dark Skies," $8.9 million.

7. "Silver Linings Playbook," $6.1 million.

8. "Warm Bodies," $4.8 million.

9. "Side Effects," $3.6 million.

10. "Beautiful Creatures," $3.4 million.

___

Online:

http://www.hollywood.com

http://www.rentrak.com

___

Universal and Focus are owned by NBC Universal, a unit of Comcast Corp.; Sony, Columbia, Sony Screen Gems and Sony Pictures Classics are units of Sony Corp.; Paramount is owned by Viacom Inc.; Disney, Pixar and Marvel are owned by The Walt Disney Co.; Miramax is owned by Filmyard Holdings LLC; 20th Century Fox and Fox Searchlight are owned by News Corp.; Warner Bros. and New Line are units of Time Warner Inc.; MGM is owned by a group of former creditors including Highland Capital, Anchorage Advisors and Carl Icahn; Lionsgate is owned by Lions Gate Entertainment Corp.; IFC is owned by AMC Networks Inc.; Rogue is owned by Relativity Media LLC.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-02-24-Box%20Office/id-023d75eecabc4e4698f78393074a2a6b

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Monday, February 25, 2013

ASUS' MWC press event happens tomorrow at 7AM ET, get your liveblog here!

ASUS' MWC press event happens tomorrow at 7AM ET, get your liveblog here!

Regardless of how you feel about ASUS, we think we can all agree on this: the company knows how to put on a good show. The outfit's made it pretty obvious it's about to announce a new PadFone here at Mobile World Congress, thanks to teasers involving a Spanish-speaking statue and a spaceship landing atop La Sagrada Familia. Plus, chairman Jonney Shih has a little trouble controlling the volume of his voice, especially if you get him on the subject of ubiquitous cloud computing. So the keynote tomorrow should be fun -- and yeah, we're excited about that new PadFone, too. Follow our liveblog tomorrow at 7AM ET and all will be revealed.

February 25, 2013 7:00 AM EST

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/24/asus-is-holding-its-mwc-2013-press-event-tomorrow-at-7am-et/

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Fab Sale Roundup: GILT Baby & Kids, Zulily and More!

Check out our roundup of this week's best mommy and baby deals.

Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/crOyRKs6fCk/

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Alcatel Idol X hands-on (video)

Alcatel Idol X handson video

Alcatel converted its One Touch Idol line from a duo to a trio with today's launch of yet another set at Mobile World Congress: the Idol X. While not quite as thin as its 6.45mm-thin Idol Ultra sibling, at 7mm thick with a tiny 2.4mm bezel it is definitely is about as small as a 5" set can get. The Idol X's giant 1080p IPS display is fantastic to look at and Jelly Bean is snappy driven by a quad core MediaTek MT6589 1.2GHz CPU. Like many of Alcatel's other sets the range of config option varies by market and the same is true here as we'll see both 13 and 8-megapixel variants -- both with 1080p front facing cameras -- and dual or single-SIM, with the single variety getting a bonus microSD slot. While the Idol X is not equipped with LTE it does have 42Mbps HSPA+ connectivity, quad-band GSM and offers dual-band UMTS in both 900MHz / 2100MHz or 850MHz / 2100MHz frequencies.

Alcatel's all about mass market, it isn't chasing the likes of Apple or Samsung but rather is quite happy to simply make "devices for people." So while 2012 marked its first foray into smartphones, judging by what we've seen so far in 2013 from them it seems they've nailed affordability while maintaining a surprising amount of quality, a great combination. Join Myriam just after the break for a quick video tour.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/24/alcatel-idol-x-hands-on-video/

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Friday, February 22, 2013

The Console Wars, Begun They Have: Microsoft May Announce New Xbox At April Event

Image (1) xbox1.jpg for post 105504A number of solid reports, including a new domain name, XboxEvent.com registered to Microsoft, are pointing to an Xbox event in April. While most console reveals happen at E3, as evidenced by Sony's mystery-filled conference, Microsoft will probably announce specs and some launch titles and leave the money shot for Los Angeles in June.

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

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They bailed on mortgage but want to buy again

Home sales are slowly climbing back, thanks to investor demand, improving consumer confidence in housing, and the surprising return of former homeowners who once walked away from their commitments.

These so-called "strategic defaulters," some of them investors and some owner-occupants, are coming back to the market, despite damaged credit, and apparently the market is welcoming them back.

Read More: The Real Estate Recovery, in Your Neighborhood

A new survey of past clients by YouWalkAway.com, a website that assists borrowers in the legal pitfalls of strategic default, found that nearly 80 percent expressed a desire to buy a home again within the next 12 months. It also cites data by Moody's analytics, showing that the number of eligible home buyers who have had a previous foreclosure will be 1.5 million by the first quarter of 2014.

Crashing home prices and sketchy mortgage products caused millions of Americans to default on their loans and eventually lose their homes. For some, it was a tragic fight to the end to keep their single largest investment; for others it was a conscious decision to walk away from their mortgage commitments, given the real fact that they would likely not see home equity again for many years to come.

Some saw this as morally reprehensible, others as a sensible business decision.

Read More: Fewer Borrowers Are Behind on Mortgages, but for How Long?

While home ownership has fallen dramatically since the recent housing boom, from a high of 69.2 percent in 2004 to 65.4 percent at the end of 2012, according to the U.S. Census, the desire to own a home is still strong. About 70 percent of Americans surveyed by online real estate website Trulia.com said homeownership was still a part of the "American Dream." Of those surveyed by Fannie Mae in January of 2013, 65 percent said that if they had to move, they would buy a home, rather than rent.

Coming back to home ownership may not be as difficult as some think. Consumers who only defaulted on their mortgage during the recent recession were far better risks than those who went delinquent on multiple credit accounts, like credit cards and auto loans, according to a 2011 study by TransUnion.

"There appears to be a pocket of opportunity among mortgage-only defaulters that is not the result of excess liquidity, but rather the unique circumstances of the recent recession," said Steve Chaouki, group vice president in TransUnion's financial services business unit in the study release. "This new market segment that the recession created is an important one for lenders to understand. They have the potential, today, to be stronger and more reliable customers."

Not surprisingly, given this potential, YouWalkAway.com is launching the "AfterForeclosure.com Pass/Fail App," which claims to tell potential borrowers in just one minute, "if they have a shot at home ownership."

"We want people to know that it's possible and, in a lot of cases, it's advantageous," says Jon Maddux, former CEO and co-founder of YouWalkAway.com.

Read More: Americans Are Using Their Houses as ATMs Again

It is possible, but mortgage underwriting is far more strict today than during the housing boom, and there are varying waiting periods before former homeowners who went through foreclosure can qualify for a new loan. The Federal Housing Administration, the government insurer of home loans which now backs just over 20 percent of new loan originations, requires a three-year wait. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which own or guarantee the bulk of the remaining new loan originations, require up to seven years for a strategic defaulter to qualify again for a mortgage.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/they-bailed-mortgage-now-want-buy-again-1C8496356

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Thursday, February 21, 2013

Sunlight yields more efficient carbon dioxide to methanol model

Feb. 20, 2013 ? Researchers from The University of Texas at Arlington are pioneering a new method for using carbon dioxide, or CO2, to make liquid methanol fuel by using copper oxide nanowires and sunlight.

The process is safer, simpler and less expensive than previous methods to convert the greenhouse gas associated with climate change to a useful product, said Krishnan Rajeshwar, interim associate vice president for research at UT Arlington and one of the authors of a paper recently published in the journal Chemical Communications. Researchers began by coating the walls of copper oxide, CuO, nanorods with crystallites made from another form of copper oxide, Cu2O. In the lab, they submerged those rods in a water-based solution rich in CO2. Irradiating the combination with simulated sunlight created a photoelectrochemical reduction of the CO2 and that produced methanol.

In contrast, current methods require the use of a co-catalyst and must be conducted at high operating pressures and temperatures. Many also use toxic elements, such as cadmium, or rare elements, such as tellurium, Rajeshwar said.

"As long as we are using fossil fuels, we'll have the question of what to do with the carbon dioxide," said Rajeshwar, a distinguished professor of chemistry and biochemistry and co-founder of the Center for Renewable Energy, Science & Technology, CREST, at UT Arlington. "An attractive option would be to convert greenhouse gases to liquid fuel. That's the value-added option."

Co-authors on the recently published paper, "Efficient solar photoelectrosynthesis of methanol from carbon dioxide using hybrid CuO-Cu2O semiconductor nanorod arrays," are Ghazaleh Ghadimkhani, Norma Tacconi, Wilaiwan Chanmanee and Csaba Janaky, all of the UT Arlington College of Science's Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and CREST. Janaky also has a permanent appointment at the University of Szeged in Hungary.

Rajeshwar said he hopes that others will build on the research involving copper oxide nanotubes, CO2 and sunlight.

"Addressing tomorrow's energy needs and finding ways to stem the harmful effect of greenhouse gases are areas where UT Arlington scientists can connect their work to real-world problems," said Carolyn Cason, vice president for research at the University. "We hope solutions in the lab are only the beginning."

In addition to the journal, the new work also was featured in a recent edition of Chemical and Engineering News. That piece noted that the experiments generated methanol with 95 percent electrochemical efficiency and avoided the excess energy input, also known as overpotential, of other methods.

Tacconi, a recently retired research associate professor at UT Arlington, said the two types of copper oxide were selected because both are photo active and they have complementary solar light absorption. "And what could be better in Texas than to use the sunlight for methanol generation from carbon dioxide?"

Other than fuel, methanol is used in a wide variety of chemical processes, including the manufacturing of plastics, adhesives and solvents as well as wastewater treatment. In the United States, there are 18 methanol production plants with a cumulative annual capacity of more than 2.6 billion gallons, according to the paper.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Texas at Arlington.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Ghazaleh Ghadimkhani, Norma R. de Tacconi, Wilaiwan Chanmanee, Csaba Janaky, Krishnan Rajeshwar. Efficient solar photoelectrosynthesis of methanol from carbon dioxide using hybrid CuO?Cu2O semiconductor nanorod arrays. Chemical Communications, 2013; 49 (13): 1297 DOI: 10.1039/C2CC38068D

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/top_science/~3/hM_Fy9cJ5n0/130220153703.htm

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CyanogenMod 10.1 stock camera app now sports HDR shooting

CyanogenMod 10.1 stock camera app now sports HDR shooting

CyanogenMod 10.1-toting photography fans are in for a treat: the latest version of the modified Android OS now packs an HDR mode, which was in development for three months, within its stock camera app. When a user snaps a photo with the function, a total of three pictures (one at minimal, neutral and maximum exposures) are taken and combined into a single HDR image with the help of an algorithm. Differences in shutter speed, sensors and optics means quality will vary across smartphones, but the CyanogenMod team says that mid- to high-end devices outfitted with decent imaging hardware -- especially those with zero shutter lag -- should perform admirably. Of course, the group also recommends using a stand or tripod to thwart movement and vibration from fouling up photos. Android Central points out that a few handset builds haven't received the update, so a handful of CyanogenMod-wielding photogs will still have to get their HDR fix elsewhere.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/20/cyanogenmod-hdr-camera/

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Will there be a new ?Battlestar Galactica? TV show? David Eick on the strange journey of ?Blood and Chrome?

"Battlestar Galactica: Blood & Chrome" may live on as a TV series. (NBC Universal)The new "Battlestar Galactica" (BSG) prequel film ?Blood & Chrome? is out on DVD and Blu-ray today. So far, the feature-length film has earned positive reviews, but its road to success has been bumpy to say the least, transitioning from potential series, to Web series, to TV movie and now going full circle to a potentially ongoing series.

?The metrics are invisible to me. I don?t know where the measuring stick is,? said "Blood & Chrome" Executive Producer David Eick to Yahoo News in a phone interview. ?We have to see what the parameters are.?

I also had a chance to ask Eick about some of BSG?s seemingly endless, and endlessly fascinating, trivia. But first, a look at what might be happening next in the beloved saga.

Lest he be misunderstood, Eick wants to keep telling stories set in the world of the first Cylon War, which follow a young William Adama (Luke Pasqualino) in the role first made famous by Edward James Olmos. But creating the pilot was such a strange and arduous process that Eick isn?t sure all the pieces will come together, even if the Blu-ray sales match the impressive viewership of the Web series.

Along with the strange programming shuffle that Eick and the other creative powers behind "Blood & Chrome" have endured, they also produced the film under considerable duress, having to make due with some serious budget constraints. For example, scenes that take place aboard the Galactica were all filmed using captured CGI footage taken before the original BSG set was dismantled in 2009.

Nonetheless, acting in front of computer generated sets has created problems on other past productions. Even so, the show looks and sounds fantastic on Blu-ray. In fact, it has a sharper and more engaging visual style than nearly anything that has come before it in the BSG universe.

?They did groundbreaking work,? Eick said of the "Blood & Chrome" effects team. ?Still, it was a tremendous struggle. I certainly wouldn?t want to go backwards on a technical scale, even if the show had the chance to move forward story wise.?

But even with those budgetary limitations, "Blood & Chrome" works as a story.

Actor Ben Cotton, who plays Coker Fasjovik, the film?s foil to Adama?s optimistic character, told Yahoo News that the show?s creators did a masterful job of setting the stage for a unique story that could tie into the larger BSG ethos.

?I would draw a lot of parallels between my character and Colonel Tigh,? Cotton said. ?I thought that was clever in the sense that a character would help Adama learn to deal with Tigh later on.?

Eick was also a driving force behind ?Caprica,? the first attempt at a "Battlestar Galactica" spinoff series. That show has its fans but was largely considered a disappoint due to its more dramatic themes that many people felt drifted away from what made the reimagined 2004-2009 series such a success.

Unlike the often benevolent, sentient creatures in BSG, the Cylons in "Blood & Chrome" have no interest in understanding the spiritual makeup of their human adversaries. It is, simply put, a war.

?I think it?s important that we say that the Cylons are at a place where they are angry,? Eick said. ?Otherwise, there?s no transformation to where we find them at later on.?

"Blood & Chrome" is more rooted in the forward-moving action stories from the BSG series, though Eick says that a long-term show would have plenty of drama and intellectual storylines to consider as well.

?It definitely would have gotten darker as we moved forward,? Eick said. ?We?d be exploring all kinds of aspects of religion and psychology. But for this initial story, we were harkening back to the more strategic and war game aspects of the series.?

For his part, Cotton was also excited about the prospect of digging deeper into the darker themes that defined BSG.

?I imagine there would be a lot of drinking and some destruction involved,? he said of how Coker and Adama might interact in future storylines. ?I think Coker was so jaded and so weary by the whole thing. I think he?s seen it all.?

And, of course, we?d find out exactly how Adama goes from a brash young pilot into the jaded and often ethically compromised, but always passionate, leader we see in his later years.

?It must have been a pretty profound journey,? Eick said when asked if he is still excited to tell that story.

Once we finished discussing the still uncertain future of "Blood & Chrome," I asked Eick a few random questions that have always intrigued me as an unrepentant BSG fun.

For example, despite his serious gravitas, many BSG fans have wondered how the show would explain Edward James Olmos? prominent facial scaring. Well, rest assured, that question is addressed in "Blood & Chrome."

During a battle with the more primitive Cylons that we see on display in the film, the fresh-faced Adama (Pasqualino) is hit with a splash of what appears to be battery acid.

?It started as realism,? Eick said with a laugh, acknowledging that the ?mystery? of Adama?s skin quality had come up in creative discussions. ?It was just in my head. I thought, this could be an explanation for how some of that facial scarring started.?

I also had a chance to ask Eick about one curious incident involving the show?s neologism ?frak.?

Throughout the BSG saga, there are literally hundreds of times where a character says the word "frak? in place of dropping an actual f-bomb. It was a playful wink at the show?s science fiction roots while simultaneously staying within basic cable?s PG-13 language requirements. But there was one moment when frak was replaced by the real thing?and it apparently got by the watchful eyes of broadcast censors.

In Part 1 (?Daybreak?) of the "Battlestar Galactica" series finale, Gaius Baltar (James Callis) is having an argument with his father, during which the actor lets forth with the four-letter word.

?Well, I was on the set, so it certainly was noticed,? Eick said. ?Maybe that one just made it past the censors and most of the viewers.?

Finally, I asked Eick if "Blood & Chrome" would follow the path of other prequel attempts by showing any other established characters like Saul Tigh, Number 6, or Tom Zerek in their earlier years?

?You never say never, but you don?t want to get too cute with the referencing of ?Battlestar? characters,? he said.

One of the rougher, meaner Cylon models in "Blood & Chrome" (NBC Universal)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/battlestar-galactica-tv-show-david-eick-strange-journey-233847184.html

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Union vote means more jobs are coming to Brook Park's Ford plant

BROOK PARK, OH (WOIO) -

The members of the Ford UAW Local 1250 in Brook Park voted Monday night ?for a new contract, and it narrowly passed.

The vote insures new jobs to greater Cleveland when they add a second engine.

There was steady flow outside the Ford Union Hall. "They need to bring more jobs back over here," said one union member.

Sandy Artman believes a new contract with the company is a guarantee more jobs will come the Brook Park plant.

"Let's hope, so I am hoping for that," says Artman.

The Brook Park plant makes the popular EcoBoost 6 cylinder engine and the company's plan is to expand to a four cylinder.

"What that means is additional work and for 700 of our people it will almost double our population," says Mike Gammelia, UAW Local 1250 President.

Even though three sites already closed and the foundry has been demolished.??

Not everyone is pleased with a passing contract.

"The building is down to one plant they don't even know if that is going to last," said Timothy Williams.

But union negotiators say this is a win win for everyone.

"It's a ripple effect from everything to they dry cleaners to the butcher, baker, the candlestick maker --?it will mean more money in the economy," said Gammelia.

And for Philip Santiago, while he has concerns for this new contract he knows a passing it means he gets to keep his job.

"You've got too many people out on the streets looking for jobs and stuff," says Santiago.

The 700 hundred new jobs are expected to be added in August of 2014.?

Ford has sold more than?1/2 million EcoBoost cars and?many of those engines come from this plant in Brook Park.

Copyright 2013 WOIO. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.19actionnews.com/story/21237119/union-vote-means-more-jobs-are-coming-to-brook-parks-ford-plant

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Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Returning troops face 'white knuckled' first weeks

Jessica Mcgowan / for NBC News

Former Marine Paul Menefee, an Iraq war veteran, makes music in his Union City, Ga bedroom, on Feb. 15. Since transitioning to civilian life, Menefee works as a music producer in Atlanta. At home, Menefee spends most of his time in this blacked out bedroom making music and relaxing. Drawing blinds and blacking out windows is a habit Menefee started after his military service to help him feel more secure.

By Bill Briggs, NBC News contributor

In the first month home from war, one Marine routinely searched his darkened bedroom for the rifle he'd left in Iraq, while another Marine shunned his favorite nightspot for fear that someone in the club might carry a gun.?

In the four weeks after their homecomings, one?infantryman drove ?white knuckled? at 55 mph while another soldier purposely began living even faster ??losing her virginity, going blonde and drinking hard with battle buddies.

Some 34,000 service members will ship home from Afghanistan during the next year, President Barack Obama told the nation last week.?

Amid the gleeful glow of arrivals, many of those troops may quickly confront sensory overloads, social awkwardness and, perhaps, deep cravings for personal freedoms, according to interviews with four younger veterans who weathered such moments. ?

?The first 30 days are interesting,? said Alex Horton, who spent 15 months in Iraq as an Army infantryman, including during the 2007 troop surge in Baghdad and Diyala Province.

Today, he works for the Department of Veterans Affairs.?"I?ll call it the unraveling. That first week back you?re still high on everything, kissing your wife or girlfriend, sometimes seeing your kids for the first time. But then the tension starts to build.


?You experience culture and weather shock, and notice your senses are heightened,? said Horton, adding that another common theme ? albeit something he did not go through ? involves disrupting the daily routines established by a spouse and kids during a service member?s absence, and consequently, dealing with strained relationships.?

Distant from family
To that point, two veterans interviewed for this story, including Horton, said they suffered romantic breakups after returning from combat, and two got divorced.?

Jessica Mcgowan / for NBC News

Former Marine Paul Menefee, an Iraq war veteran, shows off his spiritual tattoos at home in Union City, Ga., on Feb. 15. The "Blessed" tattoo is one many Menefee has gotten after his two tours in Iraq.

"Trying to get back to my regular life was hard because I wouldn?t talk much to anybody. I didn?t want to talk about what went on in Iraq, didn't want to describe the details," said Paul Menefee, a former Marine who was deployed twice to Iraq and fought in the?Battle of Fallujah?in late 2004.?

"Things that happened, I didn?t want to remember. I was trying to cope in my own way, not deal with the images in my head," added Menefee, who eventually divorced his wife. "I was distant from my wife, mother, cousins, brothers, sisters, aunts, uncles. At Sunday dinners, I pretty much stayed off to myself."

Old habits came home, too. During his first 30 days back at Camp Lejeune, N.C., Menefee grew jittery in a Wal-Mart checkout line because other customers were queued up behind him. He left the store immediately. He avoided nightclub outings with friends because the bar crowds seemed unpredictable.

He chose seats in the backs of restaurants so he could watch all the patrons and map each exit. At home, he kept his blinds drawn, his door locked and always looked left then glanced right when passing a hallway or an open corner.?

On interstate highways, Menefee ??a truck driver in Iraq ??often pulled four lanes to his left if he spotted a blown tire or crumpled, food wrapper lying on the right shoulder: The types of hiding places in which insurgents routinely planted IEDs in Iraq. While driving in an American city, he would take an early left or an abrupt right if he saw garbage or roadkill on an approaching curb.

"You don?t realize that (your senses are) very fine-tuned to your environment, everything from hearing things to seeing things," Horton said. "I imagine this is what blind people feel with their other senses. You rely on them so much (in combat), they have no business being that acute in the civilian world."

"When I got into a car and drove on a highway for the first time," Horton added, "I was white knuckled."

For former Marine Christian Gutierrez, who returned from Iraq in spring 2008, the open road at first carried a mix of old caution and fresh freedom.

During quick trips to the grocery store, he frequently would exit his car then quickly circle back, thinking he'd left his rifle in the front seat, momentarily forgetting he didn't carry a weapon anymore.?

"But I love cars and love driving. So I drove a lot because it was my time," Gutierrez said. "That moment was your moment. You had control of your car. You had control of that moment."

'Lucky I didn't die'
Soon, he bought a motorcycle to further feed that rush of independence, to expand his new-found personal space ? and because combat left him with another sharp bit of wisdom: Your moments on this planet may be few. ?

"Being back taught me that if I want to do something, I?d better do something right now. You never know," he said.?

That same compulsion drove Iraq veteran Laura Cannon?to use her first 30 days home to mark, she said, "the beginning of a new life for me," a time in which she stepped away from both Evangelical Christianity and the strict rules under which she'd been living since enrolling at West Point. ?

"I knew that if I didn't make drastic changes, being at war would be the last adventure I would ever experience," said Cannon, a former Army infantry member who was part of the 2003 Coalition invasion. "Surviving a war completely changed my perspective. I needed to start living for me. So I made a mental list of goals to accomplish. No. 1 ??lose my virginity. I was 24 for God's sake!"

During her first month home, Cannon also bought an SUV, broke up with a boyfriend, dyed her hair blonde, visited Ground Zero, posted a personal best in a 5K race, and found time to "party my ass off with my war buddies ? heavy drinking."

In Iraq, "there was (stuff) blowing up everywhere. I'm lucky I didn't die. I hadn't done enough with my life," she said. "I had survived a war. I had a second chance to live differently. I was not going to let others control me anymore. It was time to make more adventures and maybe get some baggage along the way. I was so far behind. Lots to catch up on."

"The rapid pace at which I compensated for my repressed life, especially in the first 30 days after the war," Cannon added, "were completely catalyzed by combat."?

Related:

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/18/16976156-home-from-war-troops-face-white-knuckled-first-month?lite

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South Africa academic forms new party

JOHANNESBURG (AP) ? Academic and Black Conscious Movement co-founder Mamphela Ramphele has announced the creation of a new political party and is urging citizens to turn their backs on the 101-year-old African National Congress of Nelson Mandela and "join me in building the South Africa of our dreams."

The 65-year-old medical doctor, social anthropologist and former World Bank managing director accuses the governing party of undermining democracy, abusing power and corruption.

Ramphele tells a news conference Monday that her party will serve millions of South Africans who want a new beginning.

Her party joins several in the opposition at a time South Africa is burdened by a growing chasm between rich and poor, massive unemployment, and increasingly violent protests against job losses, utility shortages and an education and health system in crisis.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/south-africa-academic-forms-party-093647283--politics.html

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Brasfield & Gorrie to kick off work on College Football Hall of Fame

Feb. 14, 2013

Dive summary:

  • Brasfield & Gorrie, contractor for and one of the financiers of a new College Football Hall of Fame in Atlanta, is getting ready to break ground on the $66.5 million project in the city's tourist district.
  • To be built in the area where the Georgia Aquarium, CNN Center, World of Coca-Cola and Center for Civil and Human Rights draw millions of visitors annually, the museum is expected to pump another $9 billion a year into the area.
  • The 95,000-square-foot project is scheduled for completion in the fall ? football season ? of 2014 to replace the South Bend, Ind., museum that closed Dec. 30.

From the article:

The region attracts millions of visitors each year and contributes more than $12 billion annually in tourism revenue to the city of Atlanta. ...

Source: http://www.constructiondive.com/news/brasfield-gorrie-to-kick-off-work-on-college-football-hall-of-fame/100597/

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Monday, February 18, 2013

Quantum Adventures, Adventure Racing and Sprint Races South Africa


Events
1. Spur Bush Kid Adventure Trail
2. Spur Adventure Sprint Race - Long or Short course
3. Spur Warrior mini sprint race. 500m run and 2km mtb. Solos. THERE ARE NO WATER POINTS ON THE COURSE BRING YOUR OWN! Participants will each receive an energy drink at the finish.

REGISTRATION

- Adventure Sprint race Long course: 06H00 - 08H00.
Short course: 06H30 - 08H30 RACE BRIEFING
Long course - 08h15 for a 08h30 start
Short Course - 08h45 for a 09h00 start

START
Long Course - 08h30
Short Course - 09h00

Event Cost: FULL COURSE - R110.00 PER PERSON // HALF COURSE - R60.00 PER PERSON Spur Warriors event - enter on the day - R40.00pp
Teams of: 2or3

Click HERE for further info and online booking links.

Source: http://www.wine.co.za/diary/event.aspx?EVENTID=11486

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Recreational Pursuits Throughout The China's Canton Trade Fest

Within Oct 15 to November 4 2011 at Guangzhou (previously named Canton) not too distant to Hong Kong this 110th Canton Trade Fair is held having 22,000 exhibitors originally from China's production sectors along with 400,000 worldwide prospects. It happens to be established in 3 one-week portions for the good of each hosts and visitors, with electrical items and devices presented the first one week, ceramics and home merchandise the other week, and health-related and clothes the 3rd. These trade fairs occur twice a year, spring and fall, so in case you have skipped the deadline for this next one, the one following is between Apr 15 and May 5 2012.

For a first class corporate travel services solutions across Asia for business travelers meetings and trade shows, visit BLS Asia!

To be able to attend the Canton Fair, you should first obtain an Official Invitation. There are certainly alternative methods concerning how to acquire one, Whenever you previously conduct business with a Chinese vendor they may arrange it for you, that is probably the fastest way.. Yet another way is a Buyer E-Service Tool (BEST) which can be found from the website, another is to look for help from the Economic and Commercial dept of the Chinese Embassy at London.

Next thing you must do is to apply for your business Visa once you curently have the official invitation. You can aquire a visa from a specialized visa provider, or straight from the Chinese Embassy in London, or even through the travel agency you are buying your plane tickets to China from. In addition, you require a valid passport, a photo, and finalized application form along with the invitation, and the visa rates about ?66 for UK citizens.

You have to register whenever you arrive in Guangzhou prior to the fair, almost all of the business hotels supply this kind of services so you can undertake it right at the hotel. You will need an IC card that gives you free accessibility to the exhibit, to get this you need a 5cm by 4cm photo together with your passport and invitation. So, off you go to this giant trade show, and you find some excellent providers as well as some very nice discounts - but before you decide to go back home, ask yourself, have you enjoyed traveling to China? Except for the airport, exhibition places, and inns, have you happen to be in the other areas of this fabulous country? There are lots to check out in the city beyond the commercial center to give you a flavour of classic China - so why not go in a personal excursion in Guangzhou before leaving or in between conferences.

Click here for Business Trips and Canton Fair Travel Packages in Guangzhou!

Start off at the Chan clan ancestral hall to be able to admire old fashioned architecture with a twist - the rooftops have decorative pottery shapes all across the ridges, it is distinctive. There's the Temple of the Six Banyan Trees which is more than a thousand years old and which has turned into a well-known spot for families who adopt Chinese babies to visit for blessings. You may want to observe the mosque and the Nineteenth century French cathedral, the underground tomb of an ancient emperor and the spectacular mausoleum of the founder of the republic, Dr Sun Yat-sen. Another kind of attractions to be are the Yuexiu Park where you can walk around, White Cloud Mountain where one can hike up, Pearl River which you could cruise, and the Zhujiang Brewery which you could enjoy and try out the local beer made up of German yeast, Czech hops, spring water and Canadian barley malt.

Business Liaison Services provides first class Business Travel Agency solutions across Asia for business travelers meetings and trade shows. We are American owned and British run, experts in dealing with high net worth individual?s. Your life is complicated enough, when you arrive in Asia, we will make it easy?.from doorstep to doorstep. Get more information of us as BLS-Asia launches first-of-its-kind business travel packages to China.

Source: http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/14060372-recreational-pursuits-throughout-the-chinas-canton-trade-fest

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Thursday, February 14, 2013

Nok Nok Labs raises $15 million from ONSET Ventures, Doll Capital

BOSTON (Reuters) - Nok Nok Labs, a Silicon Valley startup that is developing technology to help companies quickly validate the identities of their users over the Internet, said on Tuesday that it has raised $15 million in early financing from ONSET Ventures and Doll Capital Management.

The firm, which was founded in November 2011, is collaborating with companies including Ebay Inc's PayPal electronic payment division, PC maker Lenovo Group Ltd and semiconductor maker Infineon Technologies AG to establish standards to help businesses quickly authenticate a person's identity from mobile phones, PCs and any other device that is connected to the Web.

Nok Nok Labs Chief Executive Phil Dunkelberger told Reuters the company will sell software and equipment that businesses can use to implement those standards, allowing customers to authenticate large numbers of customers using methods including fingerprints, facial recognition and traditional passwords.

Dunkelberger is a software industry veteran whose most-recent job was as chief executive of PGP Corp, which he sold to Symantec Corp in 2010 for about $300 million.

Board members include Richard A. Clarke, the former White House anti-terrorism czar who is now CEO of cyber security consulting firm Good Harbor, and Michael Barrett, chief information security officer of PayPal.

(Reporting By Jim Finkle; Editing by Richard Pullin)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nok-nok-labs-raises-15-million-onset-ventures-130121114--sector.html

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Apple?s Brazilian ?iPhone? trademark loses exclusivity


As I?m sure you?re already aware, since it?s now plastered all around the web, Apple has lost its exclusive rights to the ?iPhone? trademark in Brazil. This comes after Apple?s battle with the Brazilian ?Gradiente Eletronica?, which has a trademark in the country for the name that predates the iPhone?s introduction by seven years.

What this means is that Apple?s smartphone may still be named ?iPhone? in Brazil, but Apple will not have exclusivity in the name, meaning Gradiente can continue to sell its products under the ?iPhone? name. In-fact, the Brazilian company does just that, as it introduced its own ?iPhone? in December. It?s also worth noting the laughable irony that Gradiente?s iPhone variant runs on Android. The device?s full name is ?Gradiente?iPhone Neo One? (I?m sorry, but ?iPhone Nexus One?, Anyone?), and it retails for the equivalent of?$304 (or ?196 in the United Kingdom-land).

The?Institute of Industrial Property (INPI) stated that part of Apple?s recently-lost argument was that Gradiente Eletronica hadn?t used its ?iPhone? trademark on a device up until the tail end of 2012, so the Cupertino company should be awarded the trademark with full exclusivity. However, as we now know, Apple was fighting a losing battle. There is a (very) faint light side for Apple, though, as the company still has full trademark exclusivity with the name in every field other than handsets, but you can draw your own conclusions for how much use the trademark will be when applied to a product that isn?t a smartphone.

?

Via: The Verge

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TodaysIphone/~3/8htYztdTu_E/

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Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Grinding poverty re-ignites anger in Tunisia | Morocco World News

TUNIS, Feb 11, 2013 (AFP) -

Farida?s shopping basket is sadly empty as she walks about the Kabaria market in Tunis, where disenchantment is growing over the government?s failure to make good on pledges to improve dire living conditions.

?All the politicians lured us during the elections with many promises but none of them were kept. Our life is miserable,? the 40-year-old housewife says in Kabaria, a poor suburb of the Tunisia capital.

The country where the first Arab Spring uprising led to the ouster in 2011 of a dictatorial regime has been reeling with unemployment at 17 percent and a high cost of living ? the same engines that drove the revolution.

?Prices have never been so high. Even under the ousted regime rich and poor alike could fill their shopping baskets and eat well,? says Saeeda, another female shopper striving to find a good buy among the fruit and vegetable stalls.

The streets of Kabaria are muddy and pot-holed, a reflection of the grinding poverty which the Islamist-led government has been unable to eradicate since it was formed in December 2011.

?This government is responsible for the rise in the cost of living and they need to give us explanations,? says Saeeda, as a dozen women around her nod their heads in agreement.

Merchants, too, join in the lamentations about worsening living conditions.? ?Things are very bad these days in the country and as you can see the market is empty. I can?t even sell a pumpkin,? says Hisham, clad in a thread-bare vest and shoes without socks despite the bitter cold and driving rain.

Hisham is blind and father of two who tries to make a living pushing a vegetable cart.

Supporters of the Islamist Ennahda party try to discourage people from speaking their mind.

?All is well. The prices are reasonable and the government will overcome the crises caused by France,? one supporters of the ruling party says about the former colonial power.

But Lasaad Majeri will not be swayed.? ?They are all thieves. (Ennahda chief) Rached Ghannouchi is a big-time assassin. (Prime Minister) Hamadi Jebali is an assassin,? he shouts loud enough for everyone to hear.

Social tensions that have gripped Tunisia for months were exacerbated last week when leftist leader and outspoken government critic Chokri Belaid was gunned down outside his Tunis home, with his family blaming Ennahda for the murder.

Belaid?s funeral on Friday turned into a massive anti-Islamist rally.

The crisis also laid bare divisions within the party itself as the prime minister threatened to quit and warned of chaos unless key ministries held by fellow Islamists go to independents in a new government of non-partisan technocrats.

But in Kabaria people are more concerned about their everyday survival than politics.

?We don?t have jobs, we don?t have a dignified life,? says Lasaad, a young unemployed man who like many other disfranchised Tunisians dreams of travelling to Europe in search of a better life.

In September a boat carrying over 100 Tunisian migrants sank off the coast of the southern Italian island of Lampedusa. Rescue services managed to pull 56 people to safety but the others were lost at sea.

Source: http://www.moroccoworldnews.com/2013/02/77973/grinding-poverty-re-ignites-anger-in-tunisia/

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