Wednesday, March 13, 2013

AP source: Google to pay $7M to settle Wi-Fi case

(AP) ? Google will pay a $7 million penalty to settle a multistate investigation into the Internet search leader's collection of emails, passwords and other sensitive information sent over wireless networks several years ago in neighborhoods scattered around the world.

The resolution will close a joint investigation by attorneys general in about 30 states, according to a person familiar with the matter. The person asked not to be identified because the settlement isn't expected to be announced until early next week.

The $7 million will be shared among all the states, the person said. Google's revenue this year is expected to surpass $61 billion. At that pace, Google brings in an average of $7 million in revenue per hour.

The case dates back to 2010 when Google Inc. revealed that company cars taking street-level photos for its online mapping service also had been vacuuming up personal data transmitted over wireless networks that weren't protected by passwords. Google blamed the snooping, which started in 2007, on an overzealous engineer who installed an intrusive piece of software on equipment that the company said was only supposed to detect the location of wireless networks.

That explanation didn't placate outraged privacy watchdogs or government regulators in the U.S. and other countries who opened investigations into the company's surveillance of Wi-Fi networks that were operating mostly in homes and small businesses.

The multistate inquiry in the U.S. initially was being led by Connecticut, which is now part of an executive committee overseeing the matter.

A spokeswoman for Connecticut Attorney General George Jepsen declined to say whether Google had agreed to a settlement. The investigation is still "active and ongoing," Jepsen spokeswoman Susan Kinsman said Friday.

Google has maintained it didn't break any U.S. laws by grabbing information sent over open networks, but has repeatedly apologized for a breach of online etiquette. The company, which is based in Mountain View, Calif., issued another note of contrition when contacted Friday.

"We work hard to get privacy right at Google," the company said. "But in this case we didn't, which is why we quickly tightened up our systems to address the issue."

The $7 million will represent the largest sum that the Google has paid so far in the various U.S. investigations into the so-called "Wi-Spy" matter. Last year, the Federal Communications Commission fined Google $25,000 for impeding its investigation. The Justice Department and Federal Trade Commission both decided not to penalize Google after looking into the Wi-Fi data-gathering.

Google has committed other privacy gaffes that have gotten it into trouble with the FTC. In the most expensive episode so far, Google last year faced allegations that it had been secretly tracking the online activities of Web surfers using Apple Inc.'s Safari browser. Without acknowledging any wrongdoing, Google paid a $22.5 million fine to the FTC in that case.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-03-08-Google-Wi-Fi%20Investigation/id-460f587a5a5c40289f0d408120ad46c4

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Fat cat in Texas now slims down, adopted by vet

In this photo provided by veterinarian Brittney Barton, Skinny the cat reclines in Barton's Dallas home Friday, March 8, 2013. The obese stray cat found wandering six months ago near Dallas has slimmed down from 41 to 34 pounds and has been adopted by the Barton, who has been overseeing his care. (AP Photo/Brittney Barton)

In this photo provided by veterinarian Brittney Barton, Skinny the cat reclines in Barton's Dallas home Friday, March 8, 2013. The obese stray cat found wandering six months ago near Dallas has slimmed down from 41 to 34 pounds and has been adopted by the Barton, who has been overseeing his care. (AP Photo/Brittney Barton)

In this photo provided by Brittney Barton, Barton, a veterinarian, poses for a photo with Skinny the cat Friday, March 8, 2013 in Dallas.The obese stray cat found wandering six months ago near Dallas has slimmed down from 41 to 34 pounds and has been adopted by the Barton, who has been overseeing his care. (AP Photo/Todd Barton)

(AP) ? An obese stray cat found wandering six months ago near Dallas has slimmed down to 34 pounds and been adopted by the veterinarian overseeing his care.

Dr. Brittney Barton said Friday that the orange tabby dubbed Skinny is doing well on a special diet to help lose weight and increase his metabolism.

Barton says she became attached to the onetime 41-pound cat she was treating at an animal orphanage and last month he became part of her family. Skinny joins Barton's husband, three children, a dog and another cat at her home.

Barton says Skinny gets along great with the other animals, can jump up on a couch and runs to his food bag at feeding time. She says the house has long hallways that provide good exercise for Skinny.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/aa9398e6757a46fa93ed5dea7bd3729e/Article_2013-03-08-US-ODD-Fat-Cat-Adoption/id-f0478db3c3e5485c81712fae9f9d6ec7

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Heat-stressed cows spend more time standing

Mar. 12, 2013 ? A new study by researchers at the University of Arizona and Northwest Missouri State University shows that standing and lying behavior can predict heat stress in cows.

In a presentation at the 2013 ADSA Midwest Branch / ASAS Midwestern Section Meeting, Dr. Jamison Allen explained that predicting heat stress is vital for keeping cows healthy and productive. Cows will pant, eat less and produce less milk when their core body temperature increases.

Allen said cows prefer standing to lying on hot days. Cows stand to allow more of their surface area to disperse heat into the air. Allen and his colleagues were curious to see if standing behavior could be used to predict core body temperature.

The researchers used two tools to study the relationship between behavior and temperature. They fitted each cow with an intra-vaginal sensor to measure core body temperature. They also fitted each cow with a special leg sensor to measure the angle of the leg and track whether the cow was standing or lying.

After comparing data from cows in Arizona, California and Minnesota, the researchers concluded that standing behavior and core body temperature are strongly correlated. Allen said cows stood for longer bouts of time as their core body temperatures rose from 101 degrees Fahrenheit to above 102 degrees.

"We can predict the animal's behavior to stand according to their core temperature," Allen said.

According to Allen, dairy producers could use standing behavior to improve well being and efficiency in their herds. He said producers could use coolers and misters to target a specific core body temperature. By encouraging cows to lie down, producers will also help their cows conserve energy.

Allen recommended future studies to see how cows respond to different cooling systems. He said researchers could also study cow behavior related to humidity.

Allen's abstract was titled "Effect of core body temperature or time of day on lying behavior of lactating dairy cows." The research was presented Mar. 12 as part of the Animal Behavior, Housing and Well Being Oral Session.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/ITo1IFjO56k/130312134731.htm

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Sunday, March 10, 2013

Sierra Leone charges 29 with defrauding Gates Fund

FREETOWN, Sierra Leone (AP) ? The head of Sierra Leone's Anti-Corruption Commission says that 29 government health officials will appear in court on corruption charges for having allegedly defrauded the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation's vaccine program.

Joseph Fitzgerald Kamara told The Associated Press that the government's Chief Medical Officer, Dr. Kisito Sheku Daoh, six other medical doctors and 22 health officials are charged with defrauding the Gates Foundation's Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization Fund of $523,000. He said all those charged are out on bail and scheduled to appear in court on March 18.

The Gates Foundation's immunization fund has suspended payments of $6 million to Sierra Leone over the allegations of misuse of funds.

The immunization fund has disbursed more than $27 million to Sierra Leone since 2001.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sierra-leone-charges-29-defrauding-gates-fund-113624726.html

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Baylor wins 81-58, No. 4 Kansas shares Big 12

Kansas Elijah Johnson (15), left, drives on Baylor's Rico Gathers (2), right, in the first half of a NCAA basketball game, Saturday, March 9, 2013, in Waco, Texas. (AP Photo/Waco Tribune Herald, Rod Aydelotte)

Kansas Elijah Johnson (15), left, drives on Baylor's Rico Gathers (2), right, in the first half of a NCAA basketball game, Saturday, March 9, 2013, in Waco, Texas. (AP Photo/Waco Tribune Herald, Rod Aydelotte)

Kansas Naadir Tharpe (1), center, shoots between Baylor's A.J. Walton (22), left, and Isaiah Austin (21), right, in the first half of a NCAA basketball game, Saturday, March 9, 2013, in Waco, Texas. (AP Photo/Waco Tribune Herald, Rod Aydelotte)

Kansas Jeff Withey (5), left, blocks the shot of Baylor's Deuce Bello (14), right, in the first half of a NCAA basketball game, Saturday, March 9, 2013, in Waco, Texas. (AP Photo/Waco Tribune Herald, Rod Aydelotte)

Baylor's Cory Jefferson (34), left, dunks over Kansas Jeff Withey (5) in the first half of an NCAA college basketball game on Saturday, March 9, 2013, in Waco, Texas. (AP Photo/Waco Tribune Herald, Rod Aydelotte)

Kansas Trais Releford (24), right, grabs a loose ball over Baylor's Brady Heslip (5), left, in the first half of a NCAA basketball game, Saturday, March 9, 2013, in Waco, Texas. (AP Photo/Waco Tribune Herald, Rod Aydelotte)

(AP) ? Kansas had a share of its ninth Big 12 regular-season title in a row even before Ben McLemore scored a layup off the opening tip at Baylor.

That ended up being the only lead the fourth-ranked Jayhawks had, and as close as they came to claiming the outright league title on the final day of the regular season.

Pierre Jackson had 28 points with 10 assists and Cory Jefferson scored 25 points, mixing in his first three career 3-pointers with his usual powerful dunks, and Baylor handed the Jayhawks their worst loss in seven years. The 81-58 loss Saturday night kept Kansas from winning conference regular-season title outright for the fifth year in a row.

"It doesn't feel like we've won it at all. We tied Kansas State," said Jeff Withey, one of four Kansas seniors in the starting lineup with standout freshman McLemore. "It's cool to win, obviously. To win nine in a row is huge. But it just stinks to lose."

Especially like this, after winning their last seven games.

The Jayhawks (26-5, 14-4 Big 12) will still be the No. 1 seed for next week's conference tournament in Kansas City.

"Yeah, I'm happy we got a ninth, I'm never going to apologize for winning a league championship," Kansas coach Bill Self said. "It's not exactly the way we scripted it, which I think is pretty obvious. They were so much better than us. ... I'm not happy, but I'm a lot happier than I would be if it was different and we finished second."

The Jayhawks knew they already had a piece of the Big 12 title after ninth-ranked Kansas State (25-6, 14-4) lost 76-70 earlier Saturday at No. 13 Oklahoma State. But the KU loss gave the rival Wildcats a share of their first regular-season conference title since 1977 in the Big Eight.

"I'll be candid with you: I was excited and knew that we got piece," Self said. "I thought we would play better because we knew we did. Because there would be no pressure, total freedom, confidence going out and it didn't work out that way for us. We got off to a rough start."

McLemore's quick basket gave the Jayhawks no momentum.

Baylor (18-13, 9-9) scored the next six points, including a two-handed slam dunk by Jefferson, and led the rest of the game.

Jefferson had a pair of early dunks before hitting the first 3-pointer of his career for a 22-13 lead. The 6-foot-9 forward was 0 for 7 from long range before that.

"It's something I've been doing in practice, and I just figured I might as well do it in a game," Jefferson said.

Jackson, the Big 12's leading scorer, and Jefferson both made 11 of 13 field goals ? Jefferson made all three of his 3-pointers. A.J. Walton added 12 points for Baylor and Isaiah Austin had 11 for Baylor.

McLemore had 23 points for Kansas, which hadn't lost this big since a 25-point loss to Texas in February 2006.

Kansas used an 11-0 run in the second half to get within 61-55 with 6:23 left after consecutive baskets by Perry Ellis, who finished with 12 points.

"When we cut it to six, I still thought we were climbing a pretty steep hill," Self said. "They were terrific and we weren't good. They were terrific and had a lot to do with us not being very good. And, of course, two players played about as well as any two players against us in a long, long time off the same team."

After the Jayhawks' spurt, Jackson stole a ball from McLemore and drove for a layup made between two defenders. After Ellis missed a shot, Jackson got the ball and made a pass ahead to Brady Heslip for an easy layup.

The Bears kept piling on after that, and because of that could still have a shot at an at-large NCAA berth with a couple of wins at the Big 12 tournament.

"We were just focused. We knew what was at stake, we know how big this game was," Jackson said. "We handled business."

Baylor had lost six of its previous seven games and was already locked in as the No. 6 seed in the Big 12 tournament. The Bears play Oklahoma State on Thursday night in Kansas City ? they split their two regular-season matchups.

Kansas, which has won an NCAA-best 56 overall conference regular-season titles, plays Thursday against the West Virginia-Texas Tech winner.

Jefferson had 18 points by halftime, including a 3-pointer for the last points of the half. That came on the possession right after he took a charging foul that wiped out a basket by Elijah Johnson.

"Cory was O-for for his career and now I think we'll have to design some plays for him to get him 3-point shots," Baylor coach Scott Drew said. "Cory makes 3s in practice and works on them. ... If you don't go out and guard him, Cory is going to shoot the 3 and he was on fire."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-03-09-BKC-T25-Kansas-Baylor/id-f2242f9c62a34a1288f7b80d4850d49e

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After crash abroad, Mass. student strives to heal

BOSTON (AP) ? Meg Theriault didn't look in a mirror for two months. When she did, a stranger met her gaze.

Most of her hair was gone, but that wasn't the worst of it: There was a dent on the left side of her head. A chunk of her skull was missing.

Meg's parents told her there had been an accident, that she bumped her head. But that was two hospitals and a long plane ride ago.

Whatever had happened to her, she didn't remember any of it. And photos posted around her Boston hospital room of a 21-year-old coed, her chestnut hair flowing below her shoulders, looked like a different person.

Now Meg's two front teeth were cracked into peaks. Her boy-short hair was matted beneath a black hockey helmet. It protected her brain, but made her face break out in blemishes.

She could remember her semester abroad in Australia ? even if some details of traveling in the Outback, scuba diving on the Great Barrier Reef and bungee jumping in the rainforest were coming back slowly. But she couldn't remember New Zealand, and the last days of her foreign adventure. Something had broken and her mind wasn't filling in the blanks.

Her parents, Todd and Deb Theriault, were there by her hospital bed in New Zealand after she came out of her coma.

"I love you, Meg," Todd had whispered.

"I love you," she answered.

Another month would pass before Meg smiled. She was still hospitalized, but back home in Massachusetts.

Her parents had hope, but doctors warned Meg might never be Meg again, the Boston University student who'd been on track to finish school and land an accounting job in the next year. Two months after the accident, connections to her brain were still scrambled.

The business major couldn't remember multiplication tables. She mistook a doctor at Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital in Boston for her sixth-grade teacher. She looked forward to reuniting with a dog that hadn't lived with her family for years.

Meg wobbled as she learned to walk. Therapy filled her days, including speech and reading exercises. She had to practice spooning up her food, and how to bathe and dress herself.

But if Meg didn't understand where she had been, she knew where she wanted to be.

"It's just like being in school," a therapist said one day when she faltered during a drill.

"That's good," Meg said.

Because whatever it took, she wanted to be back at BU for her senior year.

___

She was the first victim they reached in the road.

"Meg, are you OK?"

Her classmate Dustin Holstein didn't get an answer. Deep, fast draws of air were all he heard. It was the kind of breathing, he would say later, "where it's like you're on the verge of dying."

It was the morning of May 12, 2012. Steam from a volcano in the distance curled into a cloudless sky in New Zealand's countryside.

The BU students ? 16 of them in two minivans ? had been headed to Tongariro Alpine Crossing, a trek through volcanic terrain with a view of the peak portrayed as Mount Doom in the "Lord of the Rings" movie trilogy.

Police said it seemed the single-vehicle crash happened after the minivan drifted to the roadside.

Stephen Houseman, the student who was driving, would say later the van began shaking and he couldn't control it. Police said he tried to correct course before the van rolled several times.

Students Austin Brashears, Roch Jauberty and Daniela Lekhno also landed in the road. Friends covered their faces with sleeping bags or blankets before the first fire truck arrived.

Meg was luckier ? but far from lucky. Dustin pushed his friend's hair from her face as American pop star Adam Levine's voice streamed from the stereo inside the wreck. Blood leaked from a laceration on her chin. Skin had ripped off her right arm, baring part of the muscle.

But the worst damage was on the inside. Her skull had fractured. Blood was clotting on her brain.

A helicopter flew her to a hospital, where surgeons removed part of her skull to relieve the pressure from her swelling brain and purge the clot.

Meg had been due back in Boston in a few days. She'd sent ahead an early Mother's Day bouquet of lilies, tulips and roses, promising a celebration when she got home.

Instead, her parents had boarded a flight to New Zealand. Mother's Day melted away as they prayed their daughter wouldn't die.

___

Meg climbed the front steps, one at a time.

Four baby steps, with her mother poised to catch her.

"You gotta use the railing."

"I am."

When Meg had pictured coming home to Salisbury, Mass., she expected a trip from the airport, not the hospital.

But there was comfort in the kind of rewind that comes with a return to a childhood bedroom and a family cat's meow.

"See, Charlie's waiting for you," Meg's mom said.

"I know, adorable kitty."

It was early August. Meg finally took a seat at her family's kitchen table again.

Reminders of the accident were all around. There was a second bannister along the stairs to her room, and support bars in the bathrooms. But Meg could start showering by herself in a special chair. She could shave, too.

Meg had planned to move into a city apartment, and start a summer internship at PricewaterhouseCoopers when she came home. Instead, her parents would drive her to Boston a couple times a week for therapy.

"You just can't put words to it, getting her back," said Deb Theriault, blotting tears. "She's worked so hard."

Meg felt more like herself, but craved the day when doctors would rebuild the missing part of her skull and she could ditch her helmet.

"Sorry you have to see me like this," she told two of her friends.

But soon they were laughing and chatting about Meg's plan to return to school.

"I want to be better as soon as I have the second surgery ...," she said. "I want to go back on time."

___

"I don't remember seeing this shape at all. ... We just went over this, but I don't remember."

Meg's mind wouldn't work the way she wanted.

"This is really pushing your brain to compensate for difficult material," her therapist said.

But something inside Meg urged her forward, a kind of determination captured in a poem on the wall of the therapist's office.

"That one day, changed my life ... That one thing that counts, one thing that I can't let go, the faith that one day I will be whole again," the verse said.

She had been home for more than a month. Her complexion was clearing. She was thinner and back to wearing makeup and earrings. She had been reviewing an accounting textbook and seeing more friends.

But her parents made her sleep with a baby monitor at night. She still couldn't drive a car.

Her left arm floated away from her side when she walked, giving her a robotic gait. She exercised to build her core strength and banish left-sided weakness from her brain injury.

Physiatrist Seth Herman said Meg's memory and mobility had improved a lot, but might never be what they once were. Due to the frontal lobe injury, she had trouble with insight, including recognizing her shortcomings.

"She probably still thinks she can go back to school," the doctor said.

But the day in September the fall semester started, Meg woke before dawn and went back to Massachusetts General Hospital.

The time had come for surgeons to fix the hole in her head.

___

Dr. Anoop Patel marked the left side of Meg's head with violet ink, prepping the area where he and Dr. William Curry Jr. would operate.

"How are you feeling today?" Patel asked. "Ready to get this thing taken care of?"

Meg was more than ready.

She'd drifted away on anesthesia when tufts of her hair began dropping to the operating room tiles. Scars on her fresh-shaved head snaked like lines on a map.

Blood pooled in the pocket of a surgery drape as the doctors sliced into old incisions, dissecting skin and scar tissue.

They wouldn't reuse bone New Zealand surgeons removed from Meg's skull. To minimize infection risk, a custom-made plastic implant would patch the gap.

Designed with 3-D imaging, it had a lima bean's shape. It was a little less than 5 inches long and 4 inches wide.

The surgeons used tiny screws to connect miniature titanium plates to the prosthetic and then to Meg's skull. They perfected the implant's contour by shaving it down with a drill, before washing away blood and sheared plastic.

Several layers of stitches later, the left frontal cranioplasty was complete.

Meg's head was round and her scars would be hidden once her hair grew. She wouldn't bang her brain if she fell.

Meg had more to build on now.

___

Strangers at a waterfront cafe sneaked glances as Meg sipped coffee with a friend. Maybe it was her inch-long hair, brown bristles that stood straight up.

But six weeks post-surgery, some of those closest to Meg said she was well on her way to recovery.

Her friend Julia Petras recalled hospital visits when Meg didn't understand what happened to her, or that students died in the same accident.

"Just talking about the accident itself was really surreal. I don't think you were in a place to really process it," Julia said.

At one point, Meg believed she had some memories of the wreck. She'd been sleeping at the time of the crash, and not wearing a seatbelt.

But five months later, Meg's accident recall ? which she and doctors weren't sure was real -- was gone.

She'd also spent time with other students who were there that day, including Stephen Houseman. He had pleaded guilty to careless driving charges in New Zealand, where a judge forbade him to drive for six months. Meg and her parents didn't blame him for the wreck, saying it could have been any of the BU students behind the wheel.

Meg said survivors and eyewitnesses didn't talk much about the crash. They told her she was lucky, that it was good to see her getting better.

By late October, she had an appointment to fix her teeth and had been shopping for new sweaters.

But neuropsychological testing showed Meg had memory and attention gaps. Her brain injury also was keeping her from grasping how far she still had to go. A clinician suggested she enroll in a community college course or audit a BU class.

It wasn't what Meg wanted to hear. She was missing her senior year.

___

"I can't believe we happened to be here at the same time," Meg told Dustin Holstein. "Today of all days."

Meg beamed when he walked into the sushi place near Boston University. Her friend had chosen an auspicious moment to appear: In a few minutes, she and her parents would meet with BU officials to discuss whether she could return to school, nearly six months after the accident.

Dustin was a senior and looking forward to a job after graduation. But he also did a lot of looking back. He'd suffered flashbacks since the crash. Sometimes, they made him freeze up as he walked down the street in Boston.

But seeing Meg was a salve, and having her back in school would be even better medicine.

"She can tell her story on how she fought back from such a terrible accident," he said later. "And that alone, at least people will remember who was lost on that day and the good that can come out of a situation that was so horrible."

It was agreed that morning that Meg would audit an accounting class when spring semester started in January.

She'd already taken the class for credit and it wouldn't count this time. It was a test to see if she could handle school.

Meg was disappointed. She wanted to move back to Boston and start regular classes. She struggled to see her own progress, or what it could mean to other people.

But Dustin understood and appreciated all she had accomplished.

"I expect her to graduate," he said.

___

Meg's old seat was waiting for her when she slipped into Intermediate Accounting I class, just a little late.

"I was in the traffic but everything's good," she told senior lecturer Eng Wu.

"Excuses," he teased.

A scar on Meg's wrist peeked out of her sleeve as she started to take notes.

But that was the only hint of what had happened. Her hair had grown into a pixie style. She was back working part-time in a Chinese restaurant and in a BU mailroom, and volunteering at an elementary school.

On this morning, Meg had lugged her book bag, set her cellphone down on her desk and swigged her coffee like any other college student.

But then the professor played a video clip his son, a neurosurgeon, had sent him. It wasn't something meant for Meg, just a way for a teacher to connect with students on the semester's first day. The clip was part of a British comedy sketch in which a brain surgeon belittled an accountant.

"Filling in those tax forms can get really confusing, can't it?" the doctor said. "Still, it's not exactly brain surgery, is it?"

Meg laughed with the rest of the class. Because, as just another accounting student, it was funny to her. Because, at just that moment, she knew she was back where she belonged.

In February, Meg got back her first test.

"I got a B, which is OK," she said. "Not great, not phenomenal."

She never thought to hang it on the refrigerator of her new studio apartment in Boston.

It just wasn't something a normal college kid would do.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE: This story is based on a series of interviews with Meg Theriault, her family and friends, doctors and medical personnel. The AP witnessed her surgery and therapy; the description of the accident and its aftermath was drawn from police information and interviews with an eyewitness and the Theriault family.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/crash-abroad-mass-student-strives-heal-165315834.html

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Cat sanctuary to reopen after lion attack

San Francisco (Reuters) - The California wildlife sanctuary where an African lion attacked and killed a 24-year-old worker this week is set to reopen to the public on Sunday.

The Cat Haven preserve, which has been shut since the attack on Wednesday, will resume regular operations, including offering guided tours to visitors, Cat Haven officials said.

"It is important that we attend to (the animals') health and well-being, and we believe returning to a state of normal operations is a part of that process," Cat Haven founder Dale Anderson said in a statement.

Dianna Hanson, a 24-year-old intern who had been working at the park since January, was attacked while cleaning an empty cat enclosure.

A 4-year-old male lion named Cous Cous escaped from his feeding pen, apparently by pushing open an improperly secured gate, and pounced on Hanson, fracturing her neck and killing her instantly, according to Fresno County Coroner David Hadden.

Sheriff's deputies later shot and killed the lion, which weighed at least 400 pounds (181 kgs), after they failed to coax him away from Hanson's body.

Cous Cous and his mate, Pely, were Barbary lions, a species from the region between Morocco and Egypt that is extinct in the wild. He had been handled by humans since he was weeks old.

A necropsy, the animal form of an autopsy, was performed on Thursday to determine whether health issues, such as a neurological disorder or a disease like rabies, could have contributed to the attack.

An initial examination found the lion healthy, but full test results are expected to take weeks, said Janice Mackey, a spokeswoman for the California Department of Fish and Wildlife.

Cat Haven, a 100-acre (16-hectare) sanctuary in Dunlap, California, run by the group Project Survival and located about 40 miles east of Fresno, is still home to 29 large cats.

State and local agencies are investigating whether Cat Haven violated any safety procedures that could have safeguarded against such an attack.

Anderson said the sanctuary is cooperating with the investigation and cautioned that, until law enforcement releases its findings, "anything reported about the accident is purely speculative."

Hanson earned a biology degree in 2011 from Western Washington University and last year she spent six months in Kenya working on a wild feline reserve.

Her family says they see the incident as a tragic accident.

"We know that first and foremost, Dianna would want the work that Cat Haven is doing to continue," her mother, Donna Hanson, said in a statement.

The Hanson family has set up a fund in Dianna's honor that will benefit her favorite charitable organizations, including Cat Haven.

(Editing by Edith Honan and Vicki Allen)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/california-cat-sanctuary-reopen-following-deadly-lion-attack-194133989.html

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Saturday, March 9, 2013

Sistine chimney installed as conclave nears

VATICAN CITY (AP) ? Firefighters on Saturday installed the top of the Sistine Chapel chimney that will signal to the world that a new pope has been elected, as the Vatican took measures to definitively end Benedict XVI's pontificate.

While construction workers prepared the interior of the frescoed Sistine Chapel for Tuesday's start of the conclave, officials elsewhere in the Apostolic Palace destroyed Benedict's fisherman's ring and the personal seals and stamps for official papers.

The act, coupled with Benedict's public resignation and pledge of obedience to the future pope, is designed to signal a definitive end of his papacy so there is no doubt in the church that a new pope is in charge.

The developments all point toward the momentous decision soon to confront the Catholic Church: Tuesday's start of the conclave to elect a new pope to lead the world's 1.2 billion Catholics and try to solve the numerous problems facing the church.

The Vatican outlined the timeline for the balloting and confirmed that the bells of St. Peter's Basilica will ring once a pope has been elected. But Vatican officials also acknowledged that there is some uncertainty about the whole endeavor, given the difficulties in discerning the color of smoke that will snake out of the Sistine chimney ? black if no pope has been elected, white if a victor has emerged.

Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, laughed off concerns, saying that some "suspense" was all part of the beauty of the process.

"We're not going to send out text messages or SMS messages, you'll have to come and see," another Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Thomas Rosica, said.

For the sixth day, cardinals met behind closed doors to discuss the problems of the church and once again they discussed the work of the Holy See's offices "and how to improve it," according to Lombardi.

The Holy See's internal governance has been the major constant in these days of discussion, an indication that the revelations of corruption, political infighting and turf battles exposed by the leaks of papal documents last year are casting a very big shadow over this conclave.

While the cardinals ponder their choices, preparations for the vote continue.

On Saturday, a handful of firefighters climbed onto the Sistine Chapel's roof and installed the top of the chimney. Inside Michelangelo's frescoed masterpiece, construction workers staple-gunned the felt carpeting to the false floor that has been erected over the chapel's stone floor.

The false floor both evens out the steps of the chapel and hides the jamming equipment that has been installed to prevent any cellphone or eavesdropping devices from working. And in fact, on Saturday, cell phones had no reception in the chapel.

For such an important decision, the Sistine chimney is an awfully simple affair: a century-old cast iron stove where the voting ballot papers are burned, with a copper pipe out the top that snakes up the Sistine's frescoed walls, out the window and onto the chapel roof.

After years of confusion about whether the smoke was black or white, the Vatican in 2005 installed an auxiliary stove where fumigating cases are lit. The smoke from those cases ? black or white ? joins the burned ballot smoke out the chimney.

___

Follow Nicole Winfield at www.twitter.com/nwinfield

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sistine-chimney-installed-conclave-nears-135418278.html

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Friday, March 8, 2013

Jessica Simpson Reveals Baby #2 Is A Boy! (Video)

Jessica Simpson is having a baby boy! ?The world now knows that Maxwell is getting ?a little brother thanks to a slip of a tongue from Simpson on Late Night with Jimmy Kimmel last night. If you missed the segment you can see how it all went down in the below vidoe. While making an appearance on Jimmy’s show to promote the upcoming season of Fashion Star, Jessica and the host of course starting talking about her second pregnancy. During the little chit chat as Simpson was talking about how rough it was being knocked up this time around, she shared that this time she has been vomiting a lot more. As she was talking about all of that she made the below remark that totally gave away the sex of her unborn child without her even realizing it. “The crazy thing is I never knew a wiener could make me nauseous!” As soon as the words came out of her mouth she blurted out “Oh, shush!” As Kimmel sat there laughing hysterically at the revelation looked at the singer/fashinista/reality tV star and asked her what she really meant to say. In true light hearted fashion Jess replied?”Well, I guess [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RightCelebrity/~3/HibQ4iNp46A/

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How China Censors Its Twitter at Light Speed

How China Censors Its Twitter at Light Speed Twitter is a great place to say stupid shit. Worst case scenario is that you look like an idiot. In China, things are a bit different; thousands of censors trawl the nation's Twitter-clone Weibo, quashing pesky dissent with lightning reflexes. And though China doesn't share its methods, computer scientists have been able to figure out just how the wildly efficient the process must be.

Wiebo has some 300 million users who send roughly 100 million messages a day between them. That's about 70,000 messages per minute. By observing a sample of 3500 posters who, between them, had about 4500 posts censored over 15 days, Dan Wallach of Rice University in Houston, Texas and his partners were able to uncover the true, blinding speed of China's censorship.

Thirty percent of the heretical tweets manage to be censored within the minute they are pushed out, and 90 percent within the day. That's impressive, but it only gets better (worse?) when you calculate what that censor-force must look like. According to Wallach's calculations:

If an average censor can scan around 50 posts a minute, that would require some 1400 censors at any instant to handle the 70,000 posts pouring in. And if they work 8 hour shifts, that's a total of 4200 censors on the payroll each day.

Surely they must have help, keyword alerts, lists of trouble-posters, auto-blocked phrases like "Secretary of the Political and Legislative Committee" for some reason, etc, but it's clear that China is putting some serious effort into scrubbing Weibo clean in real time instead of delaying posts, or shutting down the service all together. It just goes to show you can do anything you put your mind to, especially if you're an authoritarian government hell-bent on the continued suppression of free speech. Hooray. [MIT Technology Review]

Image by Jirsak/Shutterstock

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/lKG4PSLcCug/how-china-censors-its-twitter-at-light-speed

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Furious over sanctions, NKorea vows to nuke US

(AP) ? North Korea on Thursday vowed to launch a pre-emptive nuclear strike against the United States, amplifying its threatening rhetoric hours ahead of a vote by U.N. diplomats on whether to level new sanctions against Pyongyang for its recent nuclear test.

An unidentified spokesman for Pyongyang's Foreign Ministry said the North will exercise its right for "a preemptive nuclear attack to destroy the strongholds of the aggressors" because Washington is pushing to start a nuclear war against the North.

Although North Korea boasts of nuclear bombs and pre-emptive strikes, it is not thought to have mastered the ability to produce a warhead small enough to put on a missile capable of reaching the U.S. It is believed to have enough nuclear fuel, however, for several crude nuclear devices.

Such inflammatory rhetoric is common from North Korea, and especially so in recent days. North Korea is angry over the possible sanctions and over upcoming U.S.-South Korean military drills. At a mass rally in Pyongyang on Thursday, tens of thousands of North Koreans protested the U.S.-South Korean war drills and sanctions.

The U.N. Security Council is set to impose a fourth round of sanctions against Pyongyang in a fresh attempt to rein in its nuclear and ballistic missile programs.

Russia's U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin, the current council president, said the council will vote on the draft sanctions resolution Thursday morning.

The resolution was drafted by the United States and China, North Korea's closest ally. The council's agreement to put the resolution to a vote just 48 hours later signaled that it would almost certainly have the support of all 15 council members.

The statement by the North Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman was carried by the North's official Korean Central News Agency.

It accused the U.S. of leading efforts to slap sanctions on North Korea. The statement said the new sanctions would only advance the timing for North Korea to fulfill previous vows to take "powerful second and third countermeasures" against its enemies. It hasn't elaborated on those measures.

The statement said North Korea "strongly warns the U.N. Security Council not to make another big blunder like the one in the past when it earned the inveterate grudge of the Korean nation by acting as a war servant for the U.S. in 1950."

North Korea demanded the U.N. Security Council immediately dismantle the American-led U.N. Command that's based in Seoul and move to end the state of war that exists on the Korean Peninsula, which continues six decades after fighting stopped because an armistice, not a peace treaty, ended the war.

In anticipation of the resolution's adoption, North Korea earlier in the week threatened to cancel the 1953 cease-fire that ended the Korean War.

North Korean threats have become more common as tensions have escalated following a rocket launch by Pyongyang in December and its third nuclear test on Feb. 12. Both acts defied three Security Council resolutions that bar North Korea from testing or using nuclear or ballistic missile technology and from importing or exporting material for these programs.

U.S. U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice said the proposed resolution, to be voted on at 10 a.m. EST (1500 GMT), would impose some of the strongest sanctions ever ordered by the United Nations.

The final version of the draft resolution, released Wednesday, identified three individuals, one corporation and one organization that would be added to the U.N. sanctions list if the measure is approved.

The targets include top officials at a company that is the country's primary arms dealer and main exporter of ballistic missile-related equipment, and a national organization responsible for research and development of missiles and probably nuclear weapons.

The success of a new round of sanctions could depend on enforcement by China, where most of the companies and banks that North Korea is believed to work with are based.

The United States and other nations worry that North Korea's third nuclear test pushed it closer to its goal of gaining nuclear missiles that can reach the U.S. The international community has condemned the regime's nuclear and missile efforts as threats to regional security and a drain on the resources that could go to North Korea's largely destitute people.

The draft resolution condemns the latest nuclear test "in the strongest terms" for violating and flagrantly disregarding council resolutions, bans further ballistic missile launches, nuclear tests "or any other provocation," and demands that North Korea return to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. It also condemns all of North Korea's ongoing nuclear activities, including its uranium enrichment.

But the proposed resolution stresses the council's commitment "to a peaceful, diplomatic and political solution" and urged a resumption of six-party talks with the aim of denuclearizing the Korean Peninsula "in a peaceful manner."

The proposed resolution would make it significantly harder for North Korea to move around the funds it needs to carry out its illicit programs and strengthen existing sanctions and the inspection of suspect cargo bound to and from the country. It would also ban countries from exporting specific luxury goods to the North, including yachts, luxury automobiles, racing cars, and jewelry with semi-precious and precious stones and precious metals.

According to the draft, all countries would now be required to freeze financial transactions or services that could contribute to North Korea's nuclear or missile programs.

To get around financial sanctions, North Koreans have been carrying around large suitcases filled with cash to move illicit funds. The draft resolution expresses concern that these bulk cash transfers may be used to evade sanctions. It clarifies that the freeze on financial transactions and services that could violate sanctions applies to all cash transfers as well as the cash couriers.

The proposed resolution also bans all countries from providing public financial support for trade deals, such as granting export credits, guarantees or insurance, if the assistance could contribute to the North's nuclear or missile programs.

It includes what a senior diplomat called unprecedented new travel sanctions that would require countries to expel agents working for sanctioned North Korean companies.

The draft also requires states to inspect suspect cargo on their territory and prevent any vessel that refuses an inspection from entering their ports. And a new aviation measure calls on states to deny aircraft permission to take off, land or fly over their territory if illicit cargo is suspected to be aboard.

___

Lederer reported from the United Nations. Foster Klug in Seoul contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-03-07-UN-North%20Korea/id-1576a03a10984488a091fa29f058a992

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Engineering breakthrough promises significantly more efficient solar cells

Mar. 7, 2013 ? A new technique developed by University of Toronto Engineering Professor Ted Sargent and his research group could lead to significantly more efficient solar cells, according to a recent paper published in the journal Nano Letters.

The paper, "Jointly-tuned plasmonic-excitonic photovoltaics using nanoshells," describes a new technique to improve efficiency in colloidal quantum dot photovoltaics, a technology which already promises inexpensive, more efficient solar cell technology. Quantum dot photovoltaics offers the potential for low-cost, large-area solar power -- however these devices are not yet highly efficient in the infrared portion of the sun's spectrum, which is responsible for half of the sun's power that reaches Earth.

The solution? Spectrally tuned, solution-processed plasmonic nanoparticles. These particles, the researchers say, provide unprecedented control over light's propagation and absorption.

The new technique developed by Sargent's group shows a possible 35 per cent increase in the technology's efficiency in the near-infrared spectral region, says co-author Dr. Susanna Thon. Overall, this could translate to an 11 per cent solar power conversion efficiency increase, she says, making quantum dot photovoltaics even more attractive as an alternative to current solar cell technologies.

"There are two advantages to colloidal quantum dots," Thon says. "First, they're much cheaper, so they reduce the cost of electricity generation measured in cost per watt of power. But the main advantage is that by simply changing the size of the quantum dot, you can change its light-absorption spectrum. Changing the size is very easy, and this size-tunability is a property shared by plasmonic materials: by changing the size of the plasmonic particles, we were able to overlap the absorption and scattering spectra of these two key classes of nanomaterials."

Sargent's group achieved the increased efficiency by embedding gold nanoshells directly into the quantum dot absorber film. Though gold is not usually thought of as an economical material, other, lower-cost metals can be used to implement the same concept proved by Thon and her co-workers.

She says the current research provides a proof of principle. "People have tried to do similar work but the problem has always been that the metal they use also absorbs some light and doesn't contribute to the photocurrent -- so it's just lost light."

More work needs to be done, she adds. "We want to achieve more optimization, and we're also interested in looking at cheaper metals to build a better cell. We'd also like to better target where photons are absorbed in the cell -- this is important photovoltaics because you want to absorb as many photons as you can as close to the charge collecting electrode as you possibly can."

The research is also important because it shows the potential of tuning nanomaterial properties to achieve a certain goal, says Paul Weiss, Director of the California NanoSystems Institute.

"This work is a great example of fulfilling the promise of nanoscience and nanotechnology," Weiss says. "By developing the means to tune the properties of nanomaterials, Sargent and his co-workers have been able to make significant improvements in an important device function, namely capturing a broader range of the solar spectrum more effectively."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Toronto Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Daniel Paz-Soldan, Anna Lee, Susanna M. Thon, Michael M. Adachi, Haopeng Dong, Pouya Maraghechi, Mingjian Yuan, Andr? J. Labelle, Sjoerd Hoogland, Kun Liu, Eugenia Kumacheva, Edward H. Sargent. Jointly Tuned Plasmonic?Excitonic Photovoltaics Using Nanoshells. Nano Letters, 2013; : 130306104227004 DOI: 10.1021/nl304604y

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/NDER8ki7tPo/130307145716.htm

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Motorola makes the Droid RAZR/MAXX Jelly Bean OTA official

Droid RAZR

We had some pretty interesting information regarding a Jelly Bean soak test for the original Motorola Droid RAZR and RAZR MAXX, and now Motorola has made the update official. The support page has just gone up indicating that the update will be rolling out in phases, as is usually the case. There's no specific note about the removal of the Motorola apps and being replaced by stock Google apps, but this looks to be the same update that we were seeing before.

Seeing the update on your own device yet? Shout out in the forums to let other members know what your experience is.

Source: Motorola
More: Droid RAZR forums; Droid RAZR MAXX forums



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/ir_VkeXUzHs/story01.htm

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By the Community, For the Community

? ASPSOFT Launches email2face.com | Main | Stupid Southwest Airlines ?

July 08, 2006

By the Community, For the Community

Microsoft rounded up some MVPs (including myself), and started up a program called By the Community, For the Community. Essentially, the developer community gets to vote on which of several projects we will build and deploy every few weeks. Each project (including source code) will be freely downloadable for you to use and extend. So get on over there and vote.

10:11 AM | Permalink

Comments

Am I allowed to ask that you give me some new choices?

Posted by: Jay Kimble | Jul 18, 2006 2:05:36 PM

Thanks for sharing the information. That?s a awesome article you posted. I found the post very well as interesting. I will come back to read some more.

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The comments to this entry are closed.

Source: http://aspsoft.blogs.com/jon/2006/07/by_the_communit.html

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Thursday, March 7, 2013

Surprised Samsung is pulling Windows RT from Germany? I?m not

News out of CeBIT, the largest consumer electronics show in the world, indicates that Samsung will no longer be selling its Windows RT tablet in Germany and other unspecified European regions. A company spokesperson explained the reason to Heise Online, saying forecasted sales are low. This follows Samsung?s prior decision to not even launch its Ativ Tab with Windows RT in the U.S. But if you?ve followed the Windows tablet product cycle for the past few months, this really shouldn?t be surprising.

I pointed out the problem with Windows RT back in January. It?s not a bad operating system or product. In fact, I like the touch-friendly experience provided by Windows RT and the modern user interface. If it had more apps that I use on a daily basis, I?d like it even more. And the battery life of such slates is typically in the eight to 10 hour range thanks to the power efficient ARM chips inside. There?s a problem, however: consumers can get full Windows 8 tablets running on Intel?s Atom chip for comparable prices.

Here?s a generic breakdown of the product market from my January post that illustrates why there?s a very limited market for Windows RT currently:

?Consumers have three choices when it comes to Windows tablets. They can buy

  1. ARM-based: A Windows RT tablet for around $500 that has acceptable performance, a Desktop limited to Microsoft Office use, no support for legacy software and a device that runs for about 10 hours on a charge.
  2. Intel Atom-based: A Windows 8 tablet for around $500 that has slightly better performance, no desktop or software installation limitations and runs for 8 to 10 hours on a charge.
  3. Intel Core-based: A windows 8 tablet for around $900 that offers the best performance, has?no desktop or software installation limitations and runs for 4 to 5 hours on a charge.?

Let?s look at Samsung?s own tablets in this scope.

Using Amazon?s site for Germany, you can find the Samsung Ativ Tab with 32 GB of storage running Windows RT for 600.39 euros. But the Samsung Ativ Smart PC with 64 GB of storage running Windows 8 is 629 euros. For an extra five percent out of pocket, you get similar battery life, more local storage capacity, the same modern user interface and ? this is key ? the ability to run hundreds of thousands of legacy apps.

If you don?t need support for Windows applications, you might opt for the Windows RT version, I suppose, but why not pay the small premium as a ?just in case? scenario and the greater storage capacity? I would, particularly because I?d also gain my choice of browser.

Microsoft Surface RTAgain, the issue with Windows RT products isn?t necessarily the product itself. The issue is that it?s generally priced too comparably to Windows 8 systems that offer more. Samsung knows this. I?d argue that Samsung actually already knew this and that?s why it never launched the product in the U.S. to begin with. Selling its Windows RT tablet in Europe was probably more wishful thinking rather than a long-term strategy.

Source: http://gigaom.com/2013/03/06/surprised-samsung-is-pulling-windows-rt-from-germany-im-not/

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How to use multiple Apple ID's with one computer and iTunes

How to use multiple Apple ID's with one computer and iTunes

Many families share one computer and in turn, may back up and sync more than one iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch with that one computer. If everyone in your household all shares the same Apple ID for purchases in iTunes, it's normally not an issue. But what if that's not the case and you all want your own Apple ID's for iTunes purchases and you don't want mom's cooking apps mixed in with dad's finance apps? As it happens, you can set iTunes up to separate Apple ID's quite easily.

It'll take a little bit of effort to set up but once you're done, none of your apps, music, tv shows, and movies will be intertwined nor require you to authorize all accounts in the same iTunes library. Here's how.

How to create a new iTunes library

First we'll need to create an iTunes library for each person that's using that computer by performing the following steps:

  1. Completely quit iTunes and make sure it is not running in the background. Now hold down either alt/option on your Mac or Shift on your PC and click to open iTunes again.
  2. You'll notice instead of opening, iTunes is now asking you to either create a new library or navigate to an existing one. Click on the Create Library... option.
  3. Now give it a name and choose where you want to save it at. For most people, the default Music folder is probably fine. After you've named it and selected where you want it to be located at, click on Save.
  4. You'll now be able to scan for media for the new library or you can just sign in to iTunes and bring everything down that you've previously purchased with your Apple ID if you'd like.
  5. Repeat this process and create a library for each person you'd like to have their own iTunes library to use with their own Apple ID.

How to switch between iTunes libraries

Now that you've set up an iTunes library for each person in your household, the rest is easy. You can easily switch between the libraries in just a few taps.

  1. Completely quit iTunes and make sure it is not running in the background. Now hold down either alt/option on your Mac or Shift on your PC and click to open iTunes just like you did to create your libraries.
  2. Instead of creating one, this time you'll select the option for Choose Library....
  3. Navigate to the library you'd like to use and select Open.
  4. That's it. You can close out iTunes when you're done and the next person can do the same thing and open their own iTunes library.

This process will allow each person to have their own personalized library that isn't filled with stuff they don't use by other people who use that same computer. That means your own apps, music, tv shows, music, and other media types that you purchase will only filter into your library, not everyone else's - as long as you're using your own Apple ID's.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/XlIlbuHduHo/story01.htm

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Google Play gift cards available in the UK starting today, Tesco and Morrisons confirmed as retail partners

Google Play gift cards available in the UK starting today, Tesco and Morrisons confirmed as retail partners

Google launched gift cards for its US Play store just over six months ago, now they are arriving in the UK. From today (that's Wednesday if you are reading in the UK), you'll be able to pick them up in the same denominations as the US versions -- £10, £25 and £50. The confirmed retail outlets for the cards so far are Tesco and Morrisons supermarkets, but we'd be surprised if that list didn't grow quite soon. As for online retailers, no mention at this time, but we've asked for confirmation as and when that happens. From launch, there will be no restrictions on what type of content you can redeem them against, with books, movies, music, magazines and -- of course -- apps all eligible. Possibly good timing too, if your new hardware has left you feeling a little light.

Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/05/google-play-gift-cards-available-in-the-uk-starting-today/

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Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Best Phone Service For Entrepreneurs | TechSling Weblog

Entrepreneurs must understand their businesses? unique communications needs in order to find the best possible phone service options. While much of the ins and outs of business can be handled over the Internet these days, the truth of the matter is that some matters must be conducted over the phone. Employees, partners and customers are all important components of the business relationship, and entrepreneurs who know how to communicate effectively with them will get ahead of the pack.

From voicemail to web conferencing, toll-free phone numbers to call following and conference calling to voice-to-text transcription, there are lots of options when it comes to phone service for entrepreneurs. The following primer will highlight some of the phone service providers, as well as the various features they offer, that entrepreneurs might want to consider if they haven?t done so already.

Phone.com insists that its service offers the easiest means of obtaining flexible, low-cost virtual office phone service that entrepreneurs can use to stay connected with their teams. The service offers a toll-free number, option to add unlimited calling users where users get a separate username and password to manage their settings, a business number that entrepreneurs can use to connect their team, custom greeting, advanced call routing, option to connect with their mobile phones, and more.

The Vonage Small Business Premium Unlimited option offers, among other things, unlimited local and long distance in the U.S., Canada and Puerto Rico; calls to landlines in France, Spain, Italy, the UK and Ireland; extensions app for Android and iPhone smartphones that enable users to make calls via the Vonage network over Wi-Fi, 3G or 4G; dedicated fax line with 500 minutes of outgoing fax service and unlimited incoming faxes; voicemail; caller ID; anonymous call block; and three-way calling.

Google Voice offers entrepreneurs a local phone number that can be used to call as many as half a dozen other phones at the same time. The service offers international call options at competitive rates, voice-to-text transcription, call recording, voicemails and more. Its ability to unify communications through one phone number might be its best selling point.

Skype is arguably the best-known option when it comes to Voice over Internet Protocol providers. Entrepreneurs can save money by calling and conferencing with other Skype at no cost to reduce costs associated with calling via mobiles and landlines. They can also share information and ideas with teammates using instant messaging, group video and file sharing; use Skype To Go in order to call customers and colleagues from their mobile or landline; use call forwarding to receive Skype calls when offline; access in excess of 1 million wireless hotspots globally via Skype WiFi; and more.

Grasshopper, which bills itself as the entrepreneur?s phone system, allows entrepreneurs to pick a number for their businesses; record a custom main greeting; add workers and departments as required; and receive calls, voicemails and faxes from anywhere. The company offers unlimited extensions, on hold music, unlimited call handling, conference calling, call forwarding, call screening and more. Entrepreneurs can also get voicemails and faxes via email.

Line2 Pro helps entrepreneurs to equip their company with an auto attendant that guides callers through the various options at their disposal to get the information they need. Workers can also access their business phone line anywhere via any device. Call history, voicemail and texts will be kept in synch across all devices. Entrepreneurs will be able to cut costs by calling and texting over Wi-Fi, which means no more troubling roaming charges.

Freedom800 offers entrepreneurs a toll-free number for their companies, the ability to customize the service to fit their businesses; multiple extensions for automated call routing; the ability to send voicemails and faxes to email; and the option to combine their existing mobile and home/office phones with Freedom800?s cloud-based phone service.

Phone service for entrepreneurs is a serious matter since the ability to communicate with workers, partners and customers is obviously paramount to success in the business world. There are lots of choices available whether in terms of business phone service providers or in terms of features. Entrepreneurs need to carefully assess their options and decide what best fits their particular corporate goals and objectives.

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Source: http://www.techsling.com/2013/03/best-phone-service-for-entrepreneurs/

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Sunday, March 3, 2013

Prehistoric warming linked to CO2

A study of 20,000- to 10,000-year-old?Antarctic ice indicates that a rise in temperatures was driven by natural carbon dioxide emissions. ??

By Tia Ghose,?LiveScience Staff Writer / February 28, 2013

A section of an Antarctic ice core shown under polarized light reveals the individual ice crystals.

Fr?d?ric Parrenin

Enlarge

Rising carbon dioxide levels may have caused Antarctic warming in the past, new research strongly suggests.

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The findings, published today (Feb. 28) in the journal Science, just add to the body of evidence that human-caused greenhouse gas emissions will lead to?climate change.

"It's new evidence from the past of the strong role of CO2 [carbon dioxide] in climate variation," said study co-author Fr?d?ric Parrenin, a climate scientist at the CNRS in France.

Past data

Eons of the Earth's climate history are revealed deep within ice sheets in the Arctic and Antarctic. The?Antarctic ice?traps gas bubbles from the climate that can reveal what the ancient atmosphere looked like, while the ice itself can reveal historical temperatures.

But gas bubbles from a given period get buried deeper than ice of the same period, making it hard to tie past temperatures with atmospheric changes.

In the past, scientists using older techniques found that increases in carbon dioxide happened after global warming, not the reverse. [Images of Melt: Earth's Vanishing Ice]

Past link

But Parrenin and his colleagues wondered whether that was actually the case. To answer that question, the team looked at five ice cores that had been drilled from?Antarctica?over the last 30 years.

They focused on ice from 20,000 to 10,000 years ago, which encompassed the last period when the planet warmed naturally and glaciers melted.

The team measured the concentration of nitrogen-15 isotopes, or atoms of the same element with different weights, at different depths throughout the?ice cores. They compared the depth of that isotope with the ice composition for all the cores to determine the distance between ice bubbles and ice from the same period.

Global warming

The team found that global warming and a carbon dioxide increase happened at virtually the same time ? between 18,000 and 11,000 years ago.

"It makes it possible that CO2 was the cause ? at least partly ? of the temperature increase during the courses of the last glaciation," Parrenin told LiveScience.

And if increased carbon dioxide could lead to?rising temperatures?in the past, it also can in the present day, he said.

The findings may deflate some?climate skeptics, who used the poor dating of ice cores to question the link between carbon dioxide and warming, said Robert Mulvaney, a glaciologist with the British Antarctic Survey, who was not involved in the study.

It also confirmed the view of most climate scientists that in the past, rising temperatures and carbon dioxide were locked in a feedback loop, where high temperatures led to more carbon dioxide being released from the deep oceans, which increased temperatures further, Mulvaney said.

But because predictions of future warming are based on recent carbon dioxide and temperature data, not historical models, "it hasn't really changed anything about our understanding of how climate change will change our modern environment." Mulvaney told LiveScience.

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Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/FiFotxCyB74/Prehistoric-warming-linked-to-CO2

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