Monday, July 29, 2013

Top College Cuisine

3rd Place in Derby #313: College!, with 165 votes!

Have you ever wondered how these ramen noodle packets taste so good but cost so cheap? It's their secret ingredients. Check em out:

  • Salt
  • Double-Salt
  • The Salt-ese Falcon
  • Vitamin Salt
  • Mineral Salt
  • Essential Salt
  • Salt-ute your Shorts
  • The Salt of the Earth
  • Salt Water Taffy Salt
  • Meat Salt
  • Salt, Who Goes There?!
  • Salt Noodles

Now it makes sense, right?

Source: http://shirt.woot.com/blog/post/top-college-cuisine

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Saturday, July 20, 2013

NetSuite ERP

By Kathy Yakal

I first reviewed NetSuite about 10 years ago, when it was a very young product. At that point, it was an integrated suite of solutions that consisted of Oracle Small Business Suite, NetCRM and Advanced Accounting. Even in those early years, it was taking on functionality that would eventually make it competitive with the low end of the midrange market. I gave it five stars. Since then, NetSuite has advanced rapidly and intelligently. But so has the competition. No one received five stars in my latest group of reviews, though I looked at best-of-breed solutions.

Today's NetSuite family consists of several different integrated, cloud-based products, each with a different emphasis. NetSuite ERP focuses on financial management but is much more sophisticated and flexible than what you find in entry-level accounting software; we evaluated this element of the solution. Its core solution (which is priced from?$129 per user per month on average)?includes General Ledger, Accounts Receivable and Accounts Payable, Inventory, and Fixed Assets, with many other less all-encompassing features.

NetSuite ERP is at its core a customer relationship management system, though it also supports sales force and marketing automation, as well as customer support and order management. NetSuite Ecommerce offers a rich set of tools for your online sales presence. Both are easily integrated with the core financial solution.

Excellence from the Start
NetSuite's flexibility and thoroughness are evident from the very start, from the first thing most users would look at: the dashboard. Like its competitors, NetSuite offers several pre-configured but customizable screen layouts designed for specific company roles. Employees can customize their dashboards if they're allowed to do that by the administrator.

These are real-time dashboards that report and analyze the data in the system, helping company managers monitor, for example, Key Performance Indicators (KPIs). KPIs do more than tell you how many outstanding invoices or bills exist and what your account balances are. Simply put, they provide ways to assess the company's performance in terms of its organizational goals. Dashboards also deal with the more mundane details of the day with reminders of meetings, calls, and deadlines, etc.

The competition offers similar capabilities, but only?Intacct??

rivals NetSuite in this area. Both do fine jobs of presenting pre-configured data and allowing customization ? and presenting this information with a polished, state-of-the-art look and feel.

ERP is One Louder
When you start talking about the type of financial management that midrange solutions such as NetSuite offer, the phrase "accounting software" is replaced byEnterprise Resource Planning?systems (ERP). NetSuite is a good example of an ERP system. It automates and integrates critical back-office processes in ways that?go beyond what?QuickBooks Enterprise Solutions?and?Sage 50 Quantum Accounting?do, both in depth and breadth.

ERP?as exemplified in NetSuite?starts with the basic financial management tasks that QuickBooks Enterprise Solutions and Sage Quantum 50 Accounting do?only it accommodates more of them. The basic configuration provides the record formats and transaction forms that?accounting staff uses for tasks related to their areas?and they're more in-depth than Intacct's or?Microsoft Dynamics GP's. This is a key differentiator.

This means that you can create invoices, pay bills, and submit purchase orders. You can supply customers with products in a timely, accurate fashion because you know how many widgets you have in stock and can orchestrate the shipping process. You can manage documents and track time and expenses and create reports and keep precise records on your interaction with contacts. Payroll is not a built-in function, as it is in Microsoft Dynamics GP. You have to sign up with an integrated partner.

But NetSuite goes well beyond those bookkeeping tasks. For example, it's more than multi-currency; it knows how to comply with many international accounting regulations. It doesn't just keep a catalog of your fixed assets; it manages the whole fixed asset lifecycle. Rather than just keeping track of income and expenses, it facilitates sophisticated revenue recognition management. NetSuite doesn't just track inventory; it manages the entire supply chain. Wherever possible, repetitive, rules-based processes can be automated.

NetSuite's foundation is far more flexible than Sage 50 Quantum Accounting's and QuickBooks Enterprise Solution's. Its database capabilities are unlimited, and it doesn't just manage the details of jobs and projects; it does full-blown project accounting. Where low-end accounting counts integration with Excel as a plus, one of NetSuite's strengths lies in its ability to go beyond spreadsheets and let businesses do custom, system-wide inquiries based on any criteria imaginable (Intacct offers similar functionality). Real-time access to virtually any data in the system?via customizable templates and custom reports?combined with the ability to create unlimited what-if scenarios makes NetSuite an exceptionally powerful financial planning tool.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/ujqh1IlegMg/0,2817,2421699,00.asp

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Friday, July 19, 2013

Noonan wants post-bailout credit | Irish Examiner

Noonan wants post-bailout credit

The Minister for Finance Michael Noonan wants a credit line in place for when the country exits the EU/IMF bailout programme in November.

By John Walsh, Business Correspondent

?I would like us to get back into the markets at low interest rates and that we will have some type of credit line, which if we needed it would act as a backstop or a guarantee to the markets that we are a safe bet to the markets that we are a safe bet to lend to at low interest rates,? the minister told reporters at an event in the Irish Stock Exchange.

So far, there has only been preliminary talks on what a credit line might look like. ?There was a general discussion [with the Troika] on an exit strategy, but we will not conclude talks on exit strategies until the autumn ? after the German elections,? said Mr Noonan.

But feedback about the latest review of the economy was positive, he added. ?The Troika is working away at official level. The format is that there is normally a meeting with myself and Minister Howlin and then there is a concluding meeting which we will have [today]. But the briefing I am getting back from officials is that everything is fine and we are working our way through it.?

The Troika originally wanted the Irish banks to undergo stress tests before the exit from the bailout programme in November on the basis that a possible recapitalisation of the banks presents the biggest contingent liability for the State.

But now the stress tests have been postponed until March at the earliest to coincide with the EU wide stress tests.

As it stands, there is no political agreement in place to recapitalise the banks through the ESM. Consequently, if the banks need more capital and they cannot source it from the private markets, then the Government would have to take responsibility for the shortfall.

If this scenario were to unfold, then it would be crucial to have a credit line in place.

Moreover, it looks like it would be the IMF would have to extend the credit line. An ECB source has told the Irish Examiner that the bank?s outright monetary transactions programme could not be used as a credit line by Ireland.

?First of all it would be up to the [ECB] Governing Council to decide if a country is eligible for outright monetary transactions. But it is meant to be a precautionary measure in the event the markets think that the euro is going to break up so it is not a credit line as such. It would be up to the IMF or the [EU] Commission to provide a credit line for Ireland,? says the ECB source.

? Irish Examiner Ltd. All rights reserved

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Source: http://www.irishexaminer.com/business/noonan-wants-post-bailout-credit-237204.html

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Earnings gains drive stocks higher in early trade

NEW YORK (AP) ? Solid earnings gains at major U.S. companies drove stocks higher in early trading on Wall Street Wednesday.

The advance put the Dow Jones industrial average and the Standard & Poor's 500 index back into record territory.

A drop in claims for unemployment benefits also encouraged investors. The number of Americans applying for benefits fell 24,000 last week to 334,000, a sign that steady job gains should continue.

Morgan Stanley was among the standouts among companies reporting second-quarter results, rising 89 cents, or 3.4 percent, to $27.42. The New York bank reported sharply higher earnings driven by investment banking gains. IBM rose $5.46, or 2.9 percent, to $200.10 after its profit beat analysts' forecasts as software sales grew.

Investors will also be watching for comments from Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke, who is delivering what could be his final semiannual economic report to Congress. Bernanke is appearing before the Senate Banking Committee and repeating testimony he gave to the House Financial Services Committee Wednesday.

Bernanke gave stocks a lift on Wednesday when he said that there was no "preset course" for ending the Fed's $85 billion-a-month bond-buying program and that any change would depend on how well the economy is doing. Investors have worried that the central bank might reduce its stimulus before the economy was strong enough to withstand it.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 74 points, or 0.5 percent, to 15,543 as of 10:10 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time. The Standard & Poor's 500 index climbed 5 points, or 0.3 percent, to 1685.

The Nasdaq composite edged up 3,614 after several weak earnings reports from major technology companies.

eBay fell $3.89, or 6.8 percent, to $53.44 after its CEO John Donahoe said late Wednesday that economic weakness in Europe and Korea will "continue to be a challenge" in the second half of the year.

Intel fell 77 cents, or 3.2 percent, to $23.26 after the world's largest maker of computer chips predicted flat sales amid a decline in PC sales. The company's earnings and revenue fell in the second quarter.

In government bond trading, the yield on the 10-year note edged up to 2.52 percent from 2.49 percent late Wednesday.

In commodities trading, the price of oil rose $1.10, or 1 percent, to $107.57 a barrel. The price of gold gained $6.10, or 0.5 percent, to $1,283.70 an ounce.

The dollar rose against the euro and the Japanese yen.

Among other stocks making big moves, UnitedHealth Group, the nation's largest health insurer, rose $3.72, or 5.6 percent, to $69.92 after reporting earnings that beat analysts' estimates. The company's enrollment increased by 3 million people. UnitedHealth is the first major health insurer to report earnings every quarter and is seen as a bellwether for other insurers.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/earnings-gains-drive-stocks-higher-early-trade-134948163.html

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Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Hospitals, cancer centers now getting women drunk at 'mammogram ...

(NaturalNews) The cancer industry has apparently become so desperate to recruit new customers that it is now resorting to what can only be described as a type of medical date rape. A number of hospitals and cancer centers across the country are reportedly now holding community-driven "mammogram parties," a deceptive cancer marketing scheme that basically entails deliberately getting women tipsy or drunk on alcohol with their friends and neighbors in order to entice them into getting medically molested via mammograms.

The horrendous bait and switch tactic is taking place under the guise of "saving lives," as it is specifically designed for women who feel uncomfortable with getting mammograms, and who would otherwise avoid getting them if it were not for the added pressure of being wined and dined in a comfortable and relaxing environment. Women are being encouraged to "grab their girlfriends" for a night out at the local cancer center, during which time they take turns getting blasted with ionizing radiation in between munching down fancy cheeses and chocolate fondue, and sipping down delectable wine.

"It may be a good way to improve compliance and make having a mammogram more enjoyable," claimed Dr. Julie Silver, an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School, to ABC News about the disturbing mammogram party phenomenon.

It is interesting that Dr. Silver would use the word "compliance" in conjunction with mammograms, as the word is generally used in reference to someone giving an order or command to do something. This, combined with the fact that cancer centers which hold "mamm" parties are basically having to induce inebriation in order to convince many women to get mammograms, shows how slyly coercive the cancer industry is becoming in its quest to recruit new cancer patients.

With thousands of women waking up to the fact that mammograms are much more dangerous than we are all being told, and a cause of cancer in and of themselves, it is hardly surprising that the cancer industry has sunk to unconscionable new lows. And yet at the very same time, getting women drunk in order to compress their breasts for a radiation screening is technically a form of rape, or at the very least, molestation with alcohol and ambiance representing the date rape drugs of choice.

Even worse is the fact that many insurance companies are now covering the costs associated with holding mamm parties, which include not only food and beverage costs, but also all the massages and other luxurious spa resort amenities that increasingly characterize many of the gatherings. Whatever it takes to get women to subject themselves to radiation blasts is fair game, in other words, and it appears as though the specious strategy is quite a success.

"I am having fun," explained one woman attending a recent mamm party in Nevada to KTVN Channel 2 News in Reno. "Way better than the last time I came here and had [a mammogram]. This time it didn't hurt. Maybe it was the glass of wine I had before I went."

Sources for this article include:

http://abcnews.go.com

http://www.huffingtonpost.com

http://bellevue.patch.com

Have comments on this article? Post them here:

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Source: http://www.naturalnews.com/041024_mammogram_parties_medical_date_rape_crimes_against_women.html

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Monday, July 1, 2013

Supreme Court petitioned to reimpose California gay marriage ban (reuters)

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

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Kerry says progress made in peace talks

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry smiles at a question from a reporter during a news conference about his trip to the Middle East, in Tel Aviv, Israel on Sunday, June 30, 2013. Kerry engaged in breakneck shuttle diplomacy to coax Israel and the Palestinians back into peace talks over a four-day span with multiple trips to Jordan and Israel and a stop in the West Bank town of Ramallah. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, Pool)

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry smiles at a question from a reporter during a news conference about his trip to the Middle East, in Tel Aviv, Israel on Sunday, June 30, 2013. Kerry engaged in breakneck shuttle diplomacy to coax Israel and the Palestinians back into peace talks over a four-day span with multiple trips to Jordan and Israel and a stop in the West Bank town of Ramallah. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, Pool)

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry speaks about his trip to the Middle East during a news conference in Tel Aviv, Israel on Sunday, June 30, 2013. Kerry engaged in breakneck shuttle diplomacy to coax Israel and the Palestinians back into peace talks over a four-day span with multiple trips to Jordan and Israel and a stop in the West Bank town of Ramallah. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, Pool)

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, right, and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas brief the media after the meeting in the West Bank city of Ramallah, Sunday, June 30, 2013. Kerry continued his frenzied shuttle diplomacy Sunday to restart Mideast peace talks, but while Israel says it's ready to sit down, it showed no sign of bending to the Palestinians' long-standing demands for negotiating a two-state solution to the conflict. (AP Photo/Majdi Mohammed)

(AP) ? U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry on Sunday wrapped up four days of shuttle diplomacy without agreement on restarting Mideast peace talks but left on a positive note, saying he had considerably narrowed the gaps between Israel and the Palestinians and that the resumption of negotiations could be "within reach."

Kerry delivered the assessment after a final, frantic day of diplomacy that included a late-night meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and a last-minute meeting in the West Bank with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

"I ... know progress when I see it, and we are making progress," Kerry told reporters at Israel's international airport before departing to Brunei for an Asian security summit.

He would not elaborate, but said he would leave a team of aides in the region to continue the mediation efforts. He also said that at the request of both sides, he would return in the near future.

"We started out with very wide gaps and we have narrowed those considerably," Kerry said. "We have some specific details and work to pursue but I am absolutely confident that we are on the right track and all of the parties are working in very good faith in order to get to the right place."

Since taking office early this year, Kerry has been shuttling between Israel and the Palestinians in search of a formula to restart negotiations aimed at forging a final peace agreement. The talks seek to establish an independent Palestinian state alongside Israel.

Kerry's visit was his fifth to the region as secretary of state, and the lack of any apparent progress has begun to generate skepticism on all sides. After their meeting Sunday, the Palestinians were quick to note that there had been no breakthroughs.

But Kerry said he was convinced that both sides are serious about restarting peace efforts. Kerry extended his stay, canceling a visit to Abu Dhabi, in order to continue his peace efforts in Jerusalem, the West Bank and neighboring Jordan.

"I am pleased to tell you that we have made real progress on this trip and I believe with a little more work, the start of final status negotiations could be within reach," he said. "I believe their request to me to return to the area soon is a sign that they share cautious optimism."

The last substantial round of peace talks broke down in late 2008, and with the exception of a brief attempt at restarting negotiations in 2010, efforts have remained at a standstill.

The Palestinians seek a state in the West Bank, east Jerusalem and Gaza Strip, territories that Israel captured in the 1967 Mideast war.

The Palestinians have said they will not resume talks unless Israel stops building Jewish settlements in the West Bank and east Jerusalem, or accepts its pre-1967 frontiers as the basis for a future border. The Palestinians are also pressing Israel to release more than 100 of the longest-serving Palestinian prisoners it is holding.

Kerry is believed to be pursuing a package of incentives to both sides that would include economic aid to the Palestinians, some sort of slowdown in Israeli settlement construction, a prisoner release, security guarantees to Israel and assurances to the Palestinians that talks on borders will take place quickly.

Kerry declined to identify the ideas under discussion, saying that secrecy was needed for negotiations to take place in good faith. He also declined to set any deadlines or time limits.

"This has been years and years; if it takes another week or two weeks or some more time that is minimal, minuscule compared to the stakes and what we are trying to do," he said.

Israel's Netanyahu has insisted that talks begin immediately without any preconditions. But Netanyahu rejects a return to the 1967 lines and has allowed thousands of new settler homes to be built on his watch, raising Palestinian suspicions that he is not serious about peace.

Israel withdrew from Gaza in 2005, and the Hamas militant group's takeover of the territory has added to the complicated task facing Kerry.

Addressing his Cabinet on Sunday, Netanyahu showed little signs of bending.

"We are not putting up any impediments on the resumption of the permanent talks and a peace agreement between us and the Palestinians," he said.

At the same time, he said, "We will not compromise on security, and there will be no agreement that will endanger Israelis' security."

He added that any agreement would be presented to the public in a referendum.

Critics have said such a step would merely add an additional obstacle to implementing any deal, which would require a broad pullout from the West Bank.

Following Sunday morning's meeting in Ramallah, the chief Palestinian negotiator, Saeb Erekat, reported progress but said that gaps remained.

"I cannot say we have a breakthrough," he said. "All I can say once again is no one benefits more from the success of Secretary Kerry than the Palestinians, and no one stands to lose more from its failure than Palestinians."

___

Associated Press writers Mohammed Daraghmeh in Ramallah, West Bank, and Josef Federman in Jerusalem contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-06-30-ML-Kerry/id-9566947ca75c43eebca92b946edbfbb5

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34 sent to hospitals in Las Vegas as record heat parks over West, Southwest

In Los Angeles, heat-related power failures snarled traffic, and in Death Valley, where temperatures hit triple digits, the forecast is could bring a record 129 degrees. NBC's Gabe Gutierrez reports.

By M. Alex Johnson, staff writer, NBC News

More than thirty people were taken to hospitals for heat-related injuries and illnesses Friday at a music festival in Las Vegas, authorities said, as a wave of life-threatening blistering temperatures blazed across the West.

Clark County fire personnel treated close to 200 people for heat-related nausea, vomiting and fatigue Friday afternoon and evening at the Vans Warped Tour, an eclectic outdoor music festival at the Silverton Casino off the famous Strip.


Most were given water and taken to shaded areas, but 34 had to be taken to hospitals for further treatment, the fire department said.

"It's pretty intense," said Clark County spokesman Eric Pappa. "We're used to summer temperatures of 100, 105. But we're beyond 100. It's a scorcher."

The high temperature officially hit 117 degrees at Las Vegas-McCarran International Airport ? equaling the airport's record ? Friday as thousands of people streamed to the casino site for the festival. The thermostat fell slightly Saturday, leveling at a still-steamy 105 degrees, according to The Weather Channel.

Records are similarly expected to be broken across the West and the Southwest through the weekend and into next week, the National Weather Service said, thanks to a high pressure "dome" parked over the sprawling region.

Death Valley, Calif., could even top 130 degrees Saturday through Monday, just below the world record high of 134 recorded there on July 10, 1913, The Weather Channel said.

Temperatures in Phoenix are expected to soar between 115 and 120 degrees. In western parts of Arizona, temperatures could reach 125.

Officials in Arizona warned residents to take precautions.

"If you get dizzy or lightheaded, those are some signs of dehydration. If you become confused, that's a real warning sign," Dr. Kevin Reilly of the University of Arizona Department of Emergency Medicine told NBC station KVOA of Tucson.

In Las Vegas, meanwhile, the National Weather Service warned of the potential for a "life-threatening heat event." Temperatures were expected to match those of a July 2005 heat wave when 17 people died in the Las Vegas Valley.

The extreme weather is expected to reach Reno, Nev., reach across Utah and stretch into Wyoming and Idaho, where forecasters are predicting potentially lethal hot spells. Triple-digit temperatures were forecast during Idaho's Special Olympics in Boise.

Matt York / AP

Runners take advantage of lower temperatures at sunrise Thursday in Mesa, Ariz. Excessive heat warnings will continue for much of the Desert Southwest as building high pressure triggers major warming in eastern California, Nevada and Arizona.

Organizers urged coaches to prepare their athletes.

"The basic stuff, wearing breathable, appropriate clothes, staying in the shade as much as possible, staying hydrated is obviously a big thing," Matt Caropino, director of sports and training for Special Olympics Idaho, told NBC station KTVB. "We've put in place some misters that we're going to have at our outdoor venues."

The National Weather Service advised people to keep tabs on signs of potentially lethal heat stroke.

"Heat stroke symptoms include an increase in body temperature, which leads to deliriousness, unconsciousness and red, dry skin," it said in a report. "Death can occur when body temperatures reach or exceed 106-107 degrees."

Los Angeles was forecast to peak between the upper 80s and the lower 90s Saturday as inland communities like Burbank edge toward the low 100s. Palm Springs, Calif., no stranger to steamy summers, may peak at 120 degrees, NBC station KMIR reported. Sweltering heat also is expected for the state's Central Valley, according to The Weather Channel.

While the west remains hot and dry, the east is getting lots of rain that has resulted in flash flooding. Some of the worst flooding was in upstate New York where whole neighborhoods remain under water. ?The Weather Channel's Mike Seidel reports.

Commercial airlines were also monitoring conditions because excessive heat can throw flights off course. The atmosphere becomes less dense in extremely high heat humidity, meaning there's less lift for airplanes ? calculations that have to be made individually for every type of aircraft.

Triple-digit heat forced several airlines to bring operations to a halt after Phoenix climbed to 122 degrees in June 1990.

Daniel Arkin of NBC News contributed to this report.

Related:

'It's brutal out there': Weekend heat wave to bake western US

Alaska sweating through brutal blast of heat

Oppressive heat hits West as storms soak East

This story was originally published on

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