Thursday, February 28, 2013

New In-Cab Cell Phone and Tablet Mounting Brackets from John ...

New mounts for mobile inclination can be located where they are permitted though do not meddle with prominence and appurtenance controls.

OLATHE, Kansas (February 27, 2013) ? The proliferation of intelligent phones, tablets and other mobile inclination has done them renouned and essential communications and information resources for today?s farmers and ranchers. As a result, John?Deere is introducing ascent brackets and attachments to make it easier and some-more available for producers to have hands-free entrance and softened observation of their mobile inclination while handling equipment.

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According to Tyler Rouse, comparison selling deputy for John?Deere Tractor Parts, for correct appurtenance operation, it?s vicious that mobile inclination be located and mounted where they are permitted though do not meddle with prominence and appurtenance controls. ?These brackets and mounts are designed to concede operators to entrance a far-reaching accumulation of opposite mobile inclination while in a cab of a tractor, combine, sprayer or other machine.?

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These new brackets embody a dungeon phone mountain joint kit, a inscription mountain kit, and appendage ascent joint kit. They are all cross-compatible with stream John?Deere guard kits and are customizable to fit any operator?s specific mandate in a cab.

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The dungeon phone mountain joint facilities a four-pronged RAM X-Grip?, that was privately selected since it meets John?Deere?s tough mandate and patron needs. It is designed to resolutely reason dungeon phones, GPS and other inclination of identical size, but a need for froth pads or other stabilizing materials. The RAM X-Grip is concordant and transmutable with a far-reaching operation of renouned RAM and John?Deere mounts.

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The inscription ascent pack also attaches to a appendage ascent joint or existent guard ascent joint in a apparatus cab and resolutely binds incomparable inclination such as iPads? and other tablets. Its durable RAM pattern binds inclination firmly, even in imperishable terrain, and facilities easy-to-adjust wing nuts and round joints that concede a user to change a position of a device to fit their needs.

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?All a mounts concede a user to fast and simply insert or mislay a inclination from a hilt but sacrificing fortitude or durability,? Rouse adds. ?These mounts make it available for business to incorporate these inclination into their cabs while maximizing visibility, accessibility and operational efficiency.?

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For some-more information on a dungeon phone and inscription mounts, as good as other accessories designed for your John?Deere equipment, see your internal John?Deere play or revisit JohnDeere.com. Part numbers for a kits are as follows: BRE10015 ? Cellphone Kit, BRE10034 ? Tablet Kit,?and RE343680 ? Accessory Mounting Bracket Kit.

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About Deere??Company

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Deere??Company (NYSE: DE) is a universe personality in providing modernized products and services and is committed to a success of business whose work is related to a land ? those who cultivate, harvest, transform, heighten and build on a land to accommodate a world?s dramatically augmenting need for food, fuel, preserve and infrastructure. Since 1837, John?Deere has delivered innovative products of higher peculiarity built on a tradition of integrity. For some-more information, revisit John?Deere during the worldwide website during JohnDeere.com.

Article source: http://origin-www.deere.com/wps/dcom/en_US/corporate/our_company/news_and_media/press_releases/2013/agriculture/2013feb27_mobile_devices.page">

Source: http://agrofoodplanet.com/new-in-cab-cell-phone-and-tablet-mounting-brackets-from-john-deere/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=new-in-cab-cell-phone-and-tablet-mounting-brackets-from-john-deere

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Lavanila Healthy Deodorant Stick Review - Makeup and Beauty ...

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Lavanila Healthy Deodorant Stick Review

Lavanila Deodorant can be purchased at Sephora and Retails for $18.00.

One thing you may or may not know about me is that I?m a bit of health nut.

So it was only a matter of time until I decided to embrace my inner hippie and go out in search of a healthy deodorant.

Should be easy right?

Well, let me tell you its not!

In the past few years I?ve tried every natural deodorant known to man (or at least it feels that way) and how many of them would I be willing to call a holy grail?

One: Lavanila The Healthy Deodorant.

What they say:

A clinical-strength deodorant that is 100 percent natural, safe, and effective.

LAVANILA The Healthy Deodorant uses beta-glucan technology to effectively fight odor while soothing, conditioning, and strengthening the skin.

Formulated WITHOUT:- Parabens- Sulfates- Synthetic Dyes- Petro-Chemicals- Phthalates

Lavanila Healthy Deodorant Stick Review

My thoughts:

I picked this up in Vanilla Blackberry and all I can say is yum!

One of the best smelling deodorants out there period.

The best thing about this product though is that it works!

I want you to know that I didn?t just wear this product around the house one day and write this review.

I wore it around town, worked out in it and even wore it to a theme park on a 75 degree day.

Every time it performed just as good as any regular deodorant would if not better.

This product gets 2 thumbs way up from me and I highly recommend it.

Have you tried Lavanila Deodorant before?

Thoughts?

Best,

Related Posts with Thumbnails

Source: http://beflossy.com/2013/02/lavanila-healthy-deodorant-stick-review/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=lavanila-healthy-deodorant-stick-review

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WHO: Small cancer risk after Fukushima accident

FILE - In this April 16, 2011 file photo, Wakana Nemoto, 3, standing next to her mother Naoko, receives a radiation exposure screening outside an evacuation center in Fukushima, northeastern Japan. People exposed to the highest doses of radiation during the Fukushima nuclear plant disaster in 2011 may have a slightly higher risk of cancer that is so small it probably won?t even be detectable, according to a new report from the World Health Organization released on Thursday Feb. 28, 2013. (AP Photo/Hiro Komae, File)

FILE - In this April 16, 2011 file photo, Wakana Nemoto, 3, standing next to her mother Naoko, receives a radiation exposure screening outside an evacuation center in Fukushima, northeastern Japan. People exposed to the highest doses of radiation during the Fukushima nuclear plant disaster in 2011 may have a slightly higher risk of cancer that is so small it probably won?t even be detectable, according to a new report from the World Health Organization released on Thursday Feb. 28, 2013. (AP Photo/Hiro Komae, File)

FILE - In this April 7, 2011 file photo, Japanese police, wearing suits to protect them from radiation, search for victims inside the deserted evacuation zone, established for the 20 kilometer radius around the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear reactors, in Minamisoma, Fukushima prefecture, Japan. People exposed to the highest doses of radiation during the Fukushima nuclear plant disaster in 2011 may have a slightly higher risk of cancer that is so small it probably won?t even be detectable, according to a new report from the World Health Organization released on Thursday Feb. 28, 2013. (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder, File)

LONDON (AP) ? People exposed to the highest doses of radiation during the Fukushima nuclear plant disaster in 2011 may have a slightly higher risk of cancer that is so small it probably won't be detectable, according to a new report from the World Health Organization released Thursday.

A group of experts convened by the agency assessed the risk of various cancers based on estimates of how much radiation people at the epicenter of the nuclear disaster received, namely those directly under the plumes of radiation in the most affected communities in Fukushima, a rural agricultural area about 150 miles (240 kilometers) north of Tokyo.

Some 110,000 people living around the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant were evacuated after the massive March 11, 2011 earthquake and tsunami knocked out the plant's power and cooling systems, causing meltdowns in three reactors and spewing radiation into the surrounding air, soil and water.

Experts calculated that people in the most affected regions had an additional 4 to 7 percent overall risk of developing cancers including leukemia and breast cancer. In Japan, men have about a 41 percent lifetime risk of developing cancer of an organ while a woman's lifetime risk is about 29 percent. For those most hit by the radiation after Fukushima, their chances of cancer would rise by about 1 percent.

"These are pretty small proportional increases," said Richard Wakeford of the University of Manchester, one of the authors of the report.

"The additional risk is quite small and will probably be hidden by the noise of other (cancer) risks like people's lifestyle choices and statistical fluctuations," he said. "It's more important not to start smoking than having been in Fukushima."

Experts had been particularly worried about a spike in thyroid cancer, since iodine released in nuclear accidents is absorbed by the thyroid, especially in children. After the Chernobyl disaster, about 6,000 children exposed to radiation later developed thyroid cancer, because many drank contaminated milk after the accident.

In Japan, dairy radiation levels were closely monitored and children are not big milk drinkers anyway.

WHO estimated that women exposed as infants to the most radiation after the Fukushima accident would have a 70 percent higher chance of getting thyroid cancer in their lifetimes. But thyroid cancer is extremely rare and the normal lifetime risk of developing it is about 0.75 percent. That would rise to 0.5 percent for those women who got the highest radiation doses as babies.

Wakeford said the increase in such cancers may be so small they will probably not be observable.

For people beyond the most directly affected areas of Fukushima, Wakeford said the risk dropped dramatically. "The risks to everyone else were just infinitesimal."

Some experts said it was surprising that any increase in cancer was even predicted and believe that the low-dose radiation people in Fukushima received hasn't been proven to raise the chances of cancer.

"On the basis of the radiation doses people have received, there is no reason to think there would be an increase in cancer in the next 50 years," said Wade Allison, an emeritus professor of physics at Oxford University, who was not connected to the WHO report. "The very small increase in cancers means that it's even less than the risk of crossing the road," he said.

Gerry Thomas, a professor of molecular pathology at Imperial College London accused the WHO of hyping the cancer risk.

"It's understandable that WHO wants to err on the side of caution, but telling the Japanese about a barely significant personal risk may not be helpful," she said.

Thomas said the WHO report used inflated estimates of radiation doses and didn't properly take into account Japan's quick evacuation of people from Fukushima. "This will fuel fears in Japan that could be more dangerous than the physical effects of radiation," she said, noting that people living under stress have higher rates of heart problems, suicide and mental illness.

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Mari Yamaguchi in Tokyo contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2013-02-28-Japan%20Radiation/id-0be46f68b1bc4f64bc22e8b69961598a

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Niels Arden Oplev Directing Flatliners Remake

The first hour or so of Flatliners is one of the coolest horror movies of the '90s. It's a tight, creative, bristling thriller that really digs into the mind of academia gone wrong. After that things get a little wonky, but when it's Kevin Bacon, Kiefer Sutherland, Julia Roberts, William Bladwin and Oliver Platt pushing the boundaries of science (and common sense) by intentionally killing (and then reviving) one another for the pursuit of ultimate enlightenment, it's fantastic. That room for improvement is why news of a Flatliners remake isn't as disheartening to hear as, say, news of another Kevin Bacon horror movie from 1990 would be.

Bloody Disgusting brings news of the remake, which?its source says is set to be directed by original The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo director Niels Arden Oplev. And if that news wasn't intriguing enough, the script will be written by Source Code scribe Ben Ripley. A fine thriller director and a fine sci-fi?writer working on a remake of a fine sci-fi thriller? Flatiners is off to a, uh, good start.

The people behind the camera and typewriter isn't quite as important to the success of Flatliners as those who will end up in front of it. The original has an utterly perfect cast, so we don't envy the casting director who has to top that ensemble. But we're certainly curious to see them try. Who would you like to see in a new generation's Flatliners?

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1926918/news/1926918/

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Alton Coal pursuit of legal fees may have - The Salt Lake Tribune

Alton Coal Development won in its bid to strip-mine coal on private land near Bryce Canyon National Park and now wants to extract legal costs from the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance and other groups. AP file photo

Mining ? Company wants groups that challenged its strip mine to pay.

An attorney-fee dispute arising from the controversial Coal Hollow strip-mine in Alton could have far-reaching consequences on citizens and conservation groups? ability to legally challenge coal projects.

Alton Coal Development prevailed in its bid to strip-mine coal on private land near Bryce Canyon National Park after a string of legal skirmishes that ended last October in the Utah Supreme Court. Now the company wants to extract its legal costs ? it hasn?t detailed a dollar amount ? from the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance and three other groups.

But not content with state regulators? formal opinion that developers must show their adversaries acted "in bad faith" to collect legal costs, Alton Coal lawyer Denise Dragoo has asked the Utah governor to intervene and impose a much lower standard.

The matter, to be argued before the Board of Oil, Gas and Mining Wednesday, could result in environmentalists being liable for hefty legal costs every time they take a Utah coal project to court and lose.

A finding for Alton would deter groups from taking coal developers to court, according to Tim Wagner, head of the Sierra Club?s Utah chapter, which joined SUWA in the Alton suit.

"The availability of the courts for any groups, no matter their agenda, is a part of democracy," Wagner said. "These challenges are not frivolous. These projects are being challenged for good reasons."

The other plaintiffs are the Natural Resources Defense Council and the National Parks Conservation Association. This consortium alleged that the Division of Oil, Gas and Mining, or DOGM, failed to perform an adequate environmental review when it authorized the state?s only strip mine on 600 acres of private coal in 2009.

A separate proposal by Alton, to expand operations onto 3,500 acres, is still under analysis.

The environmentalists lost at every level and now Alton says it?s entitled to be reimbursed for its legal costs. The company contends that an old legal standard ? requiring the winner in coal disputes to show that its opponent sued simply to harass and embarrass ? no longer holds.

DOGM opposes that position, saying the bad-faith standard was "inadvertently omitted" from the state?s administrative code. In its filings with the mining board, regulators argue the state is obligated to abide by this standard as part of a deal it forged 32 years ago with the federal government to win primacy over coal mining regulation. The federal Office of Surface Mining is now threatening action against the state if it fails to apply the bad-faith standard in the Alton matter.

story continues below

Dragoo is seeking help from Gov. Gary Herbert, who received a $10,000 from Alton for his 2010 election campaign, and his energy adviser Cody Stewart.

In a Feb. 21 letter, she accused state regulators of "prematurely capitulating" their authority to the feds and asked the governor to allow the mining board "to proceed unfettered" by federal standards.

bmaffly@sltrib.com

Copyright 2013 The Salt Lake Tribune. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/news/55904038-78/coal-alton-utah-legal.html.csp

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Lawmakers, vet groups panning Pentagon's new medal

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The military's new medal for cyber warriors should get a demotion, according to veterans groups and lawmakers who say it shouldn't outrank such revered honors as the Bronze Star and the Purple Heart.

The Distinguished Warfare Medal, announced by the Defense Department two weeks ago, is a sign of the changing nature of war, in which attacks conducted remotely have played an increasingly important role in gathering intelligence and killing enemy fighters and terrorists.

But the Veterans of Foreign War and other groups say that ranking it ahead of the Bronze Star and Purple Heart is an injustice to those who served on the front-lines.

On Wednesday, his first day on the job, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel received a letter from the Veterans for Foreign Wars about the medal, the first combat-related award to be created since World War II.

John Hamilton, the group's commander-in-chief, said it's important to recognize drone pilots and others. "But medals that can only be earned in combat must outrank new medals earned in the rear," he said.

Members of Congress are also getting involved. Five veterans now serving in the House introduced a bill that would prohibit the Defense Department from rating the medal equal to or higher than the Purple Heart. A medal's order of precedence refers to how they are to be displayed, with the Medal of Honor getting top billing among nearly 60 medals and ribbons.

There is no indication the Pentagon is rethinking the award or its ranking.

"The Defense Department remains committed to honoring the remotely piloted aircraft operators and the cyber warriors as appropriate," said Pentagon spokesman George Little. "This is recognition of their significant contributions and the changing nature of warfare."

The secretaries of the Army, Navy and Air Force are developing the criteria for the medal for each of the military services that will lay out what someone would have to do in order to qualify. The medal has been designed, but it has not yet been minted or created. Once the criteria are finalized, then troops can be nominated for the award.

The backlash to the Pentagon's announcement includes an online petition to the White House that has been signed by more than 15,000 people. The petition calls the medal "an injustice to those who served and risked their lives" and says it should not be allowed to move forward as planned. The organizers need to get to 100,000 signatures to elicit a formal response from the administration, a threshold established by the Obama administration.

John Bircher, a spokesman for the Military Order of the Purple Heart, said the veterans groups are not objecting to the medal at all ? just the ranking. He said some medals ranked ahead of the Purple Heart are achievement medals that can be earned outside of war time. What bothers many veterans is that the new Distinguished Warfare Medal appears be a war-time medal that trumps acts of valor, which he finds insulting.

He said it's extremely rare for veterans' service organizations to publicly chastise the Defense Department, but the new medal risks being looked down upon by veterans.

"These guys work relentless hours, and are dedicated and good at what they do, but it's completely different from the hardships of serving in combat and being on the battlefield," Bircher said.

A spokesman for Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the general has made clear that there will be very high standards for the award, which requires approval at the top service levels. The spokesman, Marine Col. David Lapan, said Dempsey believes the medal will be infrequently awarded because the bar for qualifying is so high.

It is widely expected that the award could be handed out and the public may never know about it because the actions envisioned in the types of cyber, intelligence or drone operations that might qualify for the honor would often be classified as top secret.

___

Associated Press writer Lolita Baldor contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lawmakers-vet-groups-panning-pentagons-medal-195758251--finance.html

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Is it unethical to have two realtors working for you ... - Zillow Real ...

It's not unethical, there really isn't any reason to have two agents looking in the same area.? Both are going to have access to the same properties and information.? It's the services provided by an agent that should be a deciding factor in choosing a Realtor.

What is going to happen, is toes are going to get stepped on and you are going to get caught in the middle.? It's going to cause you more aggravation than it's worth.

If you feel you need to have more than one agent working for you, then you should look at why you are doing so, and go with the agent that will provide you with the services that meet your needs.

Source: http://www.zillow.com/advice-thread/Is-it-unethical-to-have-two-realtors-working-for-you-in-the-same-area-at-the-same-time/480550/

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Plan floated at U.N. to lift Somalia arms embargo for a year

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - A proposal to lift a U.N. arms embargo on the Somalian government for a year but leave in place restrictions on weapons like surface-to-air missiles has been floated among a deeply split 15-member U.N. Security Council, diplomats said on Wednesday.

The Somali government has requested that the 21-year-old arms embargo be lifted so it can strengthen its poorly equipped, ill-disciplined military - more a group of rival militias than a cohesive fighting force loyal to a single president - to battle al Qaeda-affiliated Islamist rebels.

A draft resolution to renew a U.N.-mandated African Union peacekeeping force in Somalia, reconfigure the U.N. mission and decide on the arms embargo request is likely to be circulated among Security Council members this week, diplomats said.

The Security Council is scheduled to vote on the resolution next Wednesday before the mandate of the 17,600-strong AU peacekeeping force, known as AMISOM, expires the next day, March 7.

"What we may see is a lifting for a defined period ... as far as the government itself is concerned but with some caveats," said a council diplomat. "For example, excluding some types of equipment, which would continue to be embargoed."

He said the proposed defined period could be a year.

The United States has been urging council members to agree to demands by the government in Mogadishu for the embargo to be lifted, while Britain and France were reluctant, council diplomats said. Negotiations were ongoing, they said.

The Security Council imposed the embargo in 1992 to cut the flow of arms to feuding warlords, who a year earlier ousted dictator Mohamed Siad Barre and plunged Somalia into civil war. The country last year held its first national vote since 1991 to elect a president and prime minister.

SUPPORT VERSUS SECURITY

"It sends shivers down the spine," one council diplomat said of the proposal to lift the embargo. "This move would come with significant security risks and would set a deplorable precedent as the situation is still extremely volatile."

He said the current embargo provided sufficient exemptions for the Somali security forces to be properly equipped and that the council was very divided over the issue.

Another U.N. diplomat said the Security Council's Monitoring Group on Somalia and Eritrea, an independent panel that reports on compliance with U.N. sanctions, had reported that some al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab militants had infiltrated units of the Somali security forces.

U.N. monitors have also warned that the Islamist militants in the Horn of Africa nation are receiving weapons from distribution networks linked to Yemen and Iran, diplomats have told Reuters.

"There's a good argument for sending a strong signal that Somalia now has a government that is increasingly establishing itself as a proper government ... but on the other hand of course there is continuing concern about security," a council diplomat said.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said earlier this month that the council should consider lifting the arms embargo to help rebuild Somalia's security forces and consolidate military gains against al Shabaab militants.

AU troops from Uganda, Burundi, Kenya and Ethiopia are battling al Shabaab militants on several fronts in Somalia and have forced them to abandon significant territory in southern and central areas of the Horn of Africa country.

The militants, who merged with al Qaeda in February last year, launched their campaign against the government in early 2007, seeking to impose sharia, or strict Islamic law, on the entire country.

(Editing by Peter Cooney)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/plan-floated-u-n-lift-somalia-arms-embargo-213834238.html

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Consumer confidence rebounds in February

NEW YORK (AP) ? Americans seem to be more confident in the economy than they have been in the past few months. But that doesn't mean they're willing to spend more money.

Consumer confidence rebounded in February, reversing three straight months of declines, according to The Conference Board, a private research group. But analysts and economists say that doesn't necessarily mean that they're going to be more likely to open up their pocketbooks and wallets.

"Consumers are feeling better, but they don't feel a whole lot better," says Mark Vitner, an economist at Wells Fargo.

The way Americans feel about the economy has gone through peaks and valleys as they've tried to reconcile improving stock and housing markets with new financial challenges. They've had to deal with a 2 percentage point increase in Social security taxes that started last month, rising gas price and worries that lawmakers won't resolve a budget impasse in Washington that threatens to trigger automatic $85 billion in spending cuts.

The Conference Board's consumer confidence indicator shows that Americans are feeling a little better about the economy, but they're still skittish. The index is closely watched by economists because consumer spending accounts for 70 percent of U.S. economic activity

The figure is well below the 90 reading that indicates a healthy economy, but at 69.6 is up from the revised 58.4 in January and the 60.5 analysts polled by research firm FactSet expected. It was the highest reading since November 2012 when the index was at 71.5.

The Conference Board's survey, which was conducted from Feb. 1 through Feb. 14 on a preliminary sample of 2,300 shoppers, shows that Americans are feeling better about the job and income prospects.

The number of people anticipating more jobs rose to 16.7 percent from 14.4 percent, while those expecting fewer jobs declined to 21.5 percent from 26.7 percent. The proportion of consumers expecting their incomes to increase rose to 15.7 percent from 13.5 percent, while those anticipating a decrease fell to 19.6 percent from 23.3 percent.

The more positive outlook comes amid a mix of good and bad economic news.

Some major retailers reported that sales last month rose higher-than-expected. But a string of big stores, including Wal-Mart Stores Inc. to Zales Corp. have signaled that shoppers already have been pulling back in recent weeks because of payroll tax increase.

At the same time, the stock market is still rallying. And the job market, while still tough, is rebounding. In January, employers added 157,000 jobs. And annual revisions included in the Labor Department's January employment report showed the economy added 600,000 more jobs in 2011 and 2012 than previously thought. But the unemployment rate rose to 7.9 percent in January from 7.8 percent in December.

Whether or not Americans will spend remains to be seen. Many economists think consumer spending has slowed in response to higher tax burdens but will rebound later in the year. But they also worry that the budget fights in Washington will persist for much of 2013 and drag on economic growth.

----

AP Economics writer Chris Rugaber contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/consumer-confidence-rebounds-february-150158242--finance.html

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Future of UC Student Health Insurance 'Up to Students' : New ...

Vice Chancellor Parham says ?all options? are on the table for dealing with the UC SHIP deficit and its future.

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Students will have the opportunity to become involved in the discussion regarding the UC Student Health Insurance Plan (UC SHIP) this week. The Student Health Insurance Advisory Committee (SHIAC) will be holding open forums on Tuesday, Thursday and next Monday to field questions and opinions as the UC looks to move forward on dealing with the projected $57 million deficit SHIP faces.

Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs Dr. Thomas Parham emphasized the importance of maximum student participation, as the SHIACs at their respective UC campuses will be reporting back to the Office of the President and consider options based on student input.

?I?m very interested in making sure that we provide an accurate portrayal of what the exact circumstances and what we know so far about what options we are exploring to address,? Parham said. ?We want as many folk as possible to weigh in ? I am not happy with the way this has turned out. I am not prepared to sit around and whine about what are the big problems ? I am committed to fixing it, addressing it and finding a solution.?

A Sinking SHIP

The University of California switched to a systemwide health insurance plan in 2010. Before then, UC Irvine and other campuses respectively managed their own fully-funded health plans for students through an insurance company. When UC SHIP brought all campuses together in one pool, the goal was to eliminate the insurance company in the middle and have the premiums go directly to UC SHIP.

With this ?self-funded model,? however, the UC also took on the risk of covering claims.

?There is high reward but there is high risk, if you have catastrophic claims,? Parham said. ?If you can manage the plan successfully, you reduce the cost theoretically because you have a healthy population. You save potentially millions of dollars that you would be paying to insurance companies. In theories, lots of that work.?

In January, the actuarial firm that works as a consultant with the UC Office of the President for SHIP, Alliant Insurance Services, released a report that projected a $57 million deficit due to the miscalculations of the former actuarial insurance company, Aon Hewitt.

News of the deficit and rumors of higher premiums sparked protests across the UC campuses as students reacted to the situation. Dr. Parham urged students to be clear and accurate in their knowledge and appraisal of the issue.

?[The UC campuses] were sold the plan based on the fact that it would reduce cost, provide more comprehensive coverage for students, and that we would be able to realize some profits with money that would be redirected into other priorities,? he said. ?Now, the plan is more costly, it definitely is more comprehensive so that part is true, but it?s costing us more. And, we haven?t realized the profits that we thought we would have realized.?

While there were a variety of factors that led to the projected deficit, Dr. Parham said the biggest was that the University did not collect sufficient premiums to cover a ?robust? benefits package.

This deficit, therefore, is not money that is owed to a company; the deficit represents services and benefits that students have received, but that the premium levels did not match.

?Students are saying, ?Why should we pay for the debt??? Parham said. ?It?s like you getting $10 worth of service, but you only paid $3 or $5 for it because we didn?t charge enough premium, but it is also services you received, because you received the full $10 worth of services.?

All Options are on the Table ? for Students to Decide On

As the chair of the UC SHIP Advisory Board and member of the Executive Committee, Dr. Parham said the committee is considering all options when it comes to addressing and reducing the deficit, and reassessing the health insurance plan.

?Our challenge now is to figure out what we do about it, and what we do about it is a two-pronged approach,? he said. ?A part of it is what do we do about the plan itself, as well as what do we do about the deficit.?

The options range from leaving the plan the way it is; leaving the plan self-funded, but changing the benefit structure; switching to a fully-funded model with an insurance company; or having campuses pull out and develop their own student health insurance plans.

Dr. Parham said the forums this week are a result of the recommendations from the UC SHIP committee to have maximum input from students at every campus. He estimated that approximately 60 percent and 75 percent of undergraduate and graduate students, respectively, are enrolled under UC SHIP.

This block of students, Parham said, needs to discuss and decide on which benefits they want to keep, as well as how much they are prepared to pay for them.

ASUCI President Traci Ishigo said that while student participation is essential in the upcoming forums, the UCOP should look to other options to reduce the deficit before raising premiums for students, as well as keeping Aon Hewitt accountable for its mistakes.

?We need to make sure that there is some accountability for how we got into this situation in the first place,? she said. ?It is UCOP?s responsibility to make sure the actuarial firm is doing its job, and if it isn?t in place yet, the UCOP should be doing closer monitoring.

?It wasn?t the students? fault. We were paying the premium that we were told to pay for.?

The town halls will be held three times in the next two weeks:

Tuesday, Feb. 26, 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. at Balboa Island A

Thursday, Feb. 28, 6-7:30 p.m. at Pacific Ballroom A

Monday, March 4, 3-4:30 p.m. at Balboa Island A

Source: http://www.newuniversity.org/2013/02/news/future-of-uc-student-health-insurance-up-to-students/

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Monday, February 25, 2013

Pistorius as mysterious as the shooting tragedy

JOHANNESBURG (AP) ? His head shrouded by a sports hoodie, the young man walked unnoticed through a bustling crowd outside the gates of the Olympic village in London last year. When he got close, I saw a familiar face smiling at me.

It was Oscar Pistorius. "Gerald!" he called and then raised both hands for a double high-five greeting followed by a hug.

On Feb. 14, I saw Pistorius in a hood again, and this time he stared straight at the ground, hands thrust into the pockets of a gray sports jacket. He was flanked by officers as he left a police station. Hours earlier, he'd been charged with killing his girlfriend.

It is hard to reconcile the easygoing, charismatic man I interviewed on several occasions with the man accused of premeditated murder in the shooting of Reeva Steenkamp in his South African home. Prosecutors painted him as a man prone to anger and violence, though he had no prior criminal record. The Olympian says he shot Steenkamp by mistake, thinking she was a nighttime intruder, while prosecutors allege he intentionally shot her after the couple argued.

Who is Oscar Pistorius? I thought I had some idea, and in a sense, so did the millions around the world who cheered the double-amputee athlete as a symbol of determination over adversity.

Now he is as much of a mystery as whatever happened in his home in the early hours of Valentine's Day.

My meeting with Pistorius in London was one of several in the three years I have been covering his remarkable story for The Associated Press, from South Africa to Italy to London ? and last week to Courtroom C on the first floor of the red-bricked and gray-walled Pretoria Magistrate's Court in the South African capital.

On reflection, Pistorius' narrative is partly an exploration of how hard it is to truly know someone who lives so much in the public eye. Journalists witnessed or heard reports of occasional flashes of anger ? with hindsight, do they loom as potentially more meaningful? At the time the outbursts passed largely unnoticed.

What I do know is that the public Pistorius seemed to have a soft spot.

Weeks before his debut at the Olympics, he stopped an interview with me to talk to a little girl who walked up to give him a strawberry from the gardens of the rural hotel at his training base in Gemona, in northern Italy.

"Oscar, Oscar," the little girl said, holding out the berry. Behind her, a woman called the child away to stop her from bothering Pistorius.

"Ciao, baba. Grazie," Pistorius replied with a smile, unfazed by the interruption, showing off his Italian and pretending to eat the strawberry.

"She brings me something to eat every night," he told me delightedly, pointing up to the windows of his hotel room.

Now the world knows Pistorius owns a 9 mm Parabellum pistol, licensed for self-defense, and that he applied for licenses to own six more guns ? listed for his private collection ? weeks before the shooting death of Steenkamp.

His relationships with women have been spread over the gossip pages in South Africa.

We spoke about his running, his love of sneakers and nice clothes but also about his history with fast cars and motorbikes and the high-speed boat crash in 2009 that left him in a serious condition in the hospital with head wounds. He conceded that the crash caused him to rethink how he lived.

"I just realized that I need to make some changes and some of them need to be with my lifestyle," Pistorius told me last year in that interview in northern Italy. "I was messing around a lot with motorbikes and just playing around and taking unnecessary risks."

Again with hindsight, was he grappling with anything deeper than just the high spirits and penchant for thrills of many young men flushed with success and money to burn?

Covering Pistorius' track career, he became more comfortable with me, remembering my name and shouting it when he would see me among a pack of journalists.

During his Olympic preparations in Italy, Pistorius pulled out his cellphone to show me pictures of his bleeding leg stumps, rubbed raw from the friction of pounding around the track on his blades.

It was around the time when people were again questioning whether he should be allowed to run in the 400 meters against able-bodied athletes. The message in showing these graphic photos was: Do you still think I have an unfair advantage?

Until that moment, I hadn't fully realized what Pistorius went through every time he slipped on his prosthetic blades to compete or train. Not many people had, I guess.

It was rare for Pistorius to show images of his amputated limbs, but he grinned and shrugged. He said it was just part of the job.

It took a long time for him to get used to people filming and taking photographs of him putting on his carbon-fiber blades. He used to ask people not to film him without his prosthetics.

When he finished a race at the South African national championships last year, he quickly disappeared to a secluded part of the track to swap his blades for artificial legs, complete with sponsored sneakers that his agent was holding for him. It was his regular post-race routine. He then came bounding back to give me an interview.

He often apologized when he had to end an interview because he was running out of time. It always seemed people wanted more of his time than he could give. After we talked in London, Pistorius stayed a little longer to pose for photographs with Olympic security staff, even convincing one shy lady to get into one of the pictures.

Then he popped on his identity-concealing hood and, on his prosthetic legs, he walked off, anonymous in the crowd.

___

Follow Gerald Imray at http://twitter.com/GeraldImrayAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pistorius-mysterious-shooting-tragedy-151415833--oly.html

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Jennifer Lawrence, 'Silver Linings' Win Big At 2013 Indie Spirits

The 'Silver Linings Playbook' star's win was one of four awards the dramedy took home a day before the Oscars.
By MTV News Staff


Bradley Cooper, Jennifer Lawrence and David O. Russell at the 2013 Film Independent Spirit Awards
Photo: Getty Images

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1702495/independent-spirit-awards-2013-winners.jhtml

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

90% No

All Critics (58) | Top Critics (16) | Fresh (52) | Rotten (6)

Nominated by the Academy as the year's best foreign-language film, No grabs you hard, no mercy, and keeps you riveted.

Larra?n's unarguable point is that, in politics, if we wait for good to issue only from the pure in heart, we will be waiting a very long time.

[Lorrain has] made a few daring choices here, not all of which work.

A troubling, exhilarating and ingeniously realized film that's part stirring political drama and part devilish media satire ...

For anyone fascinated by the political process and the powers of persuasive advertising, No is a resounding yes.

It hangs on three ideas...While each...is intriguing, the execution of all is less than satisfying.

Larra?n's script is punctuated by dark bursts of humour, and the filmmaker knowingly navigates his audience to a nail-biting - though never cloying, and fully warranted - climax.

It makes the superficial Mad Men seem like, well, a commercial. Buy, buy, buy.

A fascinating period re-creation if not an especially compelling drama.

Evocative and suspenseful, the film is a fascinating glimpse into recent history and the democratic process.

The film highlights the sad fact that logical arguments don't win political debates or elections. Sloganeering and advertising do.

Using a technique borrowed from cinema verit? documentaries, the director succeeds in making us feel as if we're living each moment right alongside his politically-charged characters.

It's a perfectly fine movie, but given its fairly radical storyline, the filmmaking tends to hew toward the safe and the familiar.

"No" gives a fresh look at the little known history of a country whose duly elected government under Salvador Allende was overthrown in a military coup led by Pinochet in 1973.

Savvy, often brilliant ...

Bernal plays the creative type perfectly. His big eyes always seem to be seeing things that others don't, and through his calm, methodical demeanor, you can sense the wheels turning in his head.

No quotes approved yet for No. Logged in users can submit quotes.

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/no_2012/

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Race linked to childhood food allergies, not environmental allergies

Feb. 23, 2013 ? Research conducted at Henry Ford Hospital shows that race and possibly genetics play a role in children's sensitivity to developing allergies. Researchers found:

  • African-American children were sensitized to at least one food allergen three times more often than Caucasian children.
  • African-American children with one allergic parent were sensitized to an environmental allergen twice as often as African-American children without an allergic parent.

The study will be presented February 23 at the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology annual meeting,

"Our findings suggest that African Americans may have a gene making them more susceptible to food allergen sensitization or the sensitization is just more prevalent in African American children than white children at age 2," says Haejim Kim, M.D., a Henry Ford allergist and the study's lead author. "More research is needed to further look at the development of allergy."

Sensitization means a person's immune system produces a specific antibody to an allergen. It does not mean the person will experience allergy symptoms.

According to an AAAI study from 2009-2010, an estimated 8 percent of children have a food allergy, and 30 percent of children have multiple food allergies. Peanut is the most prevalent allergen, followed by milk and shellfish. 1The Henry Ford study consisted of a longitudinal birth cohort of 543 children who were interviewed with their parents and examined at a clinical visit at age 2. Data included parental self-report of allergies and self-reported race (African American or white/non-Hispanic). The children were skin-tested for three food allergens -- egg whites, peanuts and milk -- and seven environmental allergens.

Key findings:

  • 20.1 percent of African-American children were sensitized to an food allergen compared to 6.4 percent in Caucasian children.
  • 13.9 percent of African-American children were sensitized to an environmental allergen compared to 11 percent of Caucasian children.
  • African-American children with an allergic parent were sensitized to an environmental allergen 2.45 times more often than African-American children without an allergic parent.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Henry Ford Health System, via Newswise.

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


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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/PEhRA35hK94/130223111515.htm

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Is China's Military Behind Cyberattacks on U.S.?

Copyright ? 2013 NPR. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

IRA FLATOW, HOST:

This is SCIENCE FRIDAY, I'm Ira Flatow. The Internet is the new battleground.

PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA: We know foreign countries and companies swipe our corporate secrets. Now our enemies are also seeking the ability to sabotage our power grid, our financial institutions, our air traffic control systems. We cannot look back years from now and wonder why we did nothing in the face of real threats to our security and our economy.

FLATOW: In his State of the Union address, President Obama said we need to focus more on cybersecurity. That point was driven home this week by a report released by Mandiant, an American security firm, which claims a unit of the Chinese military has been carrying out extensive cyberespionage against the U.S. since 2006.

And it goes beyond stealing corporate secrets. The report says agencies that control critical infrastructure, everything from power grids to hydro, have been targeted by Chinese hackers. Is China engaged in cyberwarfare against the U.S.? And if it is, why are we so surprised? Doesn't the U.S. do it, don't - doesn't everybody do it?

In this brave new world of cybersecurity, how can we protect our most valuable networks and systems. Our number is 1-800-989-8255 if you'd like to get in on the conversation. You can also tweet us @scifri, @-S-C-I-F-R-I, go to our website at sciencefriday.com.

Jon Lindsay is a research fellow at the University of California Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation, that's at U.C. San Diego. He joins us. Welcome to the program.

JON LINDSAY: Thanks, good to be here.

FLATOW: Is the president overstating the threat?

LINDSAY: Well, there's definitely a lot of malicious cyberactivity that's happening. The question is whether this really raises to the level of a national security threat, whether because it is a massive transfer of wealth through espionage or if there are risks to our critical infrastructure on the level of, you know, large-scale military attack. And there are big debates on both of those questions.

FLATOW: But he is right about all the attacks that are occurring.

LINDSAY: Absolutely. We can certainly observe a lot of activity, especially from China there is a lot of hacking activity. But again the question is how do you relate activity to actual strategic effect. And that is a more tenuous question.

FLATOW: Let's talk about this new report. What kinds of things did we learn from it?

LINDSAY: So this new report is fascinating for - you know, we've had several very interesting reports over the last several years of hacking, which almost certainly originated in China, but that was always based on looking at the motive, the kinds of targets that were hit, maybe a history of attacking, things like this. This is the first report in the public domain, which makes a very, very strong case for not only China, not only the Chinese military but this particular unit.

So, you know, I think that attribution case in this was pretty good.

FLATOW: So you think that the real news is that it's in the public domain because most people in the business know this already?

LINDSAY: Yeah, I think that's true. I mean, when you look at the kinds of information that they provided, no piece of information on its own was a smoking gun, right. So I mean you have Internet addresses from China, you have servers that are in China, you have telephone numbers used to verify Gmail accounts that are in China. You have some, you know, Chinese language in some of the code and idiosyncratic behavior and whatnot.

So, you know, any of these by themselves don't work, but when you see how you put them all together, that's how you see how the fusion of all that intelligence can help to make the attribution case. So I think this just helps to highlight the kind of information that people in the forensics business have been tracking for a while.

FLATOW: And in the report, what type of organizations are being targeted?

LINDSAY: In the report, you know, they lay out a very wide range. I mean, it's everything from the energy industry to the chemical industry to information technology was one of the big ones. I mean, you name it. And what's very interesting is that there's a pretty good, you know, correlation between that and the strategic emerging industries that China is interested in developing.

So again, this is, you know, the kinds of targets are the kinds of things that, you know, China would be interested in.

FLATOW: Something like our infrastructure, like our electrical grid, things like that?

LINDSAY: Sure, but again, you know, you have to ask what is the reason that they're looking at these things. I mean, is - are they interested in finding out information about how it works so maybe they can improve their own operations or, you know, economic espionage? Or is this, you know, the toehold for the great cyber-Pearl Harbor?

And this is where it's - you know, I find that proposition a little bit harder to believe.

FLATOW: Is it more than you think for stealing company secrets or strategies for negotiating with the companies that they deal with all the time?

LINDSAY: Yes, I mean, there's a great deal of theft in all of these things, and you can definitely think of lots of things. There'd be research and development on products and processes that could be valuable, negotiating plans and strategies, mergers and acquisitions could be incredibly valuable, a lot of stuff.

But then all this information then gets, you know, sucked into the Chinese intelligence apparatus. The first question is: Well, are they actually getting that information? You know, we know that there's an incredible amount of junk information on networks and on the Internet in general. So finding that needle in the haystack when you've got the haystacks growing really quickly is very, very difficult.

Then they have to identify that that is useful information. Then they have to be able to get that to a customer that can use it. And there's a great deal of Chinese bureaucracy in the Chinese state between, you know, the PLA Third Department and the actual state-owned enterprises that might be able to use it.

Then they would have to recognize it. So, you know, I guess my bottom line is you can steal text, but you can't steal the context that makes that text really, really valuable. So we see a tremendous amount of information being sucked out that would be potentially useful, but to actually call that a transfer of wealth requires that the Chinese are actually able to do something with it, and that's something that we really do not know anything about.

And the Mandiant report did not give us any new information on that front.

FLATOW: But China can't be the only country that's doing this. Don't we all do it?

LINDSAY: I - that's a great point. You know, there was a - the U.S. government released a report a year and a half, two years ago that also named Russia as a major player in cyberespionage for economic purposes. But clearly the U.S. is very involved. You think of Stuxnet, Flame, Duqu, Gala, a lot of these kinds of things that were designed for, you know, more political- and military-type espionage.

This is certainly a new modality of information collection, and, you know, all countries with advanced intelligence organizations and military are in on the game.

FLATOW: Let me go to the phones, 1-800-989-8255. Let's go to Terry(ph) in Robbins, Tennessee. Hi Terry.

TERRY: Hello, Ira. Thank you.

FLATOW: Hey there, you're welcome.

TERRY: My question is the - well first of all, it's all of the above as far as the uses, but isn't all that outsourcing that we did of sending all of our computer manufacturing and everything to China really showing up to be real cheap now, that we're going to have to deal with all the repercussions?

FLATOW: Are you saying that - and this is an interesting point. If we're buying all oru hardware from China, could there not be stuff, Trojan horses and things inside the hardware they're sending us?

LINDSAY: Yeah, that's a really important concern. You know, we talk about the security of supply chains and the fact that, you know, China is the factory and the workshop of the world, especially on IT. You know, there could be a lot of back doors. And in fact this is a concern that prompted Australia to ban Huawei, which is the major telecommunications company, they build servers and routers, Internet infrastructure, they banned them from bidding on their high-speed backbone project.

There also was a House report on Huawei, which recommended against dealing with either Huawei or ZTE for exactly these kinds of reasons. You know, but that kind of shows you that, you know, that concern can have a huge business impact for these corporations. So do they necessarily have an interest in getting involved?

Plus, again, you know, I won't get into the technical details, but if you start thinking about, you know, if you put a bug in there, then actually being able to use it at a time and place of your choosing is going to be a really difficult proposition because supply chains are incredibly, incredibly complex. So being able to activate that logic bomb, if you will, and understanding where it is and understanding all of the other complex factors that go into its embeddedness in human and technical systems is a really, really hard thing.

So, you know, it's a genuine concern, but again it's a technical possibility is probably a lot greater than its actual probability.

FLATOW: Is there a high-tech fix to any of this snooping around?

LINDSAY: To snooping around? No, I don't think there's a high-tech fix because, you know, if you -you know, the Mandiant report and, you know, plenty of other reports from MacAfee or Symantec which kind of walk you through similar information show you that the weaknesses are less technical and more in exploiting just human gullibility or, you know, people who let their guard down.

Some of these phishing emails are incredibly sophisticated, right. I mean, if it comes from your boss, and it's talking about a project that you're working on, you're going to be very likely to open that file. Well, you've just installed a root kit onto your server, and now they can start moving laterally and, you know, compromising other pieces of the network.

FLATOW: So that's how they can do it? You had something called spear phishing, which is even higher level than regular - P-H-I-S-H, phishing.

LINDSAY: Yeah, so the term speak phishing means that, you know, they have identified you and your interests and your relationships. So for example, you know, you might get an email from one of your colleagues at NPR that says hey Ira, this is about the story that we're running next week. And you're like OK, that's interesting. You would open that up, bam you get hit.

So they made it very, very believable because they did the intelligence work on your background, which is now very easy to do because we have Twitter and Facebook, and people put all kinds of personal information that they can basically, you know, fake a contact.

FLATOW: Yeah, that's why I don't open my NPR mail anymore.

(LAUGHTER)

FLATOW: So is there - what do you see of the future here? Where is this headed?

LINDSAY: Well, I think that there's going to continue to be a lot of noise and friction in cyberspace. This isn't going to get fixed, but I think it's just going to be sort of the general level of background radiation that we will get used to. You know, when militaries go to war, there will be a cyber component, but people don't go to war because of cyberspace, you know, they just use it as one tool amongst many.

So, you know, it's going to be a complex world, but I don't think it's necessarily going to be a more dangerous world.

FLATOW: If you unplug for total security, can you have total security? Let's say you want to just unplug from the Internet and stay in-house.

LINDSAY: Yeah, absolutely. I mean, you know, the only reason that people can hack your computer is because you're connected to the network. So if you don't connect to anything, you can't do anything. But then it's not very useful. And this gets to the fundamental tradeoff in a lot of the policy that we're considering.

If we get really scared about the threat, and we start imposing, you know, technology standards and, you know, all kinds of things that would impact the productivity of our information networks, then you're going to see kind of the great gifts of the information economy start to be whittled away.

So right now we just don't have a good sense of how fast the threat is increasing relative to the productivity benefits of computers. And everything that I've looked at says that, you know, for every dollar that we make because of computers in the workplace, you know, we're definitely not losing a dollar, in fact we're losing, you know, far less than that.

FLATOW: All right, I've got to go, Jon.

LINDSAY: OK.

FLATOW: Thank you very much, Jon Lindsay of U.C. San Diego. We'll be right back after this break. Stay with us. I'm Ira Flatow; this is SCIENCE FRIDAY from NPR.

Copyright ? 2013 NPR. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to NPR. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/02/22/172696686/is-chinas-military-behind-cyberattacks-on-u-s?ft=1&f=1007

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ManageEngine Ships Free iPhone App for Server, Website Monitoring Mobile Management Tool for IT ? PingTool for iPhone ?

ManageEngine, the real-time IT management company, today announced the launch of PingTool for iPhone, the free iPhone native app for server monitoring. With PingTool for iPhone, administrators can?

Read the original post: ManageEngine Ships Free iPhone App for Server, Website Monitoring Mobile Management Tool for IT ? PingTool for iPhone ?

Source: http://applenewsgator.com/2013/02/23/manageengine-ships-free-iphone-app-for-server-website-monitoring-mobile-management-tool-for-it-pingtool-for-iphone/

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

Bride Meets Wedding

Bride Meets Wedding | CrunchBase Profile

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    Source: http://www.crunchbase.com/company/bride-meets-wedding

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Petition to legalize phone unlocking reaches goal

A Whitehouse.gov petition to rescind the recent decision making personal unlocking of cell phones illegal has reached the 100,000 signatures necessary for an official response from the administration.

Unlocking is the process of removing carrier restrictions on a device; For instance, a phone bought at Verizon might only work on its network, even if its hardware is compatible with AT&T's network. By unlocking it, a user could take their phone to another network and avoid having to buy a new one.

Various carriers took different approaches to unlocking phones, some offering unlocked phones out of the box, some making the process a chore. But if you wanted to do it, you generally could.

That is, until October of 2012 brought a decision from the Librarian of Congress that, under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), unlocking your own phone was technically illegal, and could only be done with carrier permission. A 90-day grace period allowed one last chance to unlock, but ended on Jan. 26, at which point it became forbidden by law.

The decision was criticized widely by groups such as the Electronic Frontier Foundation for removing consumer options for no good reason. Owners of phones, they argued, should be able to do whatever they like with them ? from installing custom software to unlocking the device for new carriers.

Shortly before unlocking became officially illegal, a petition on the Whitehouse.gov We The People site was started, asking for the decision to be rescinded, or if that wasn't possible, to pass a law allowing phone unlocking. With just two days left before its expiration, it hit the 100,000-signature mark that means the administration will issue an official response.

It's doubtful that unlocking will be made legal again in a hurry (such legislation would certainly take time), but at the very least, it is clear that many are concerned about this perceived misstep in tech governance.

Devin Coldewey is a contributing writer for NBC News Digital. His personal website is coldewey.cc.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/petition-legalize-phone-unlocking-reaches-goal-1C8485954

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Conan: Google Glass Is Only Preparing the World For Google ASS

Wearing a computer on your face may sound ridiculous, but according to Conan, Google Glass only marks the first step in the search giant's ambitions in wearable computing. The real destination? Your ass. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/657qWZWQfg4/conan-google-glass-is-only-preparing-the-world-for-google-ass

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Explore The French Alps From A Birds-eye View

Skiing breaks are usually fast paced, action filled holidays, suitable for the entire family, a couple or a party of friends. If you book a catered chalet for your getaway all you will have to worry about is just how much fun you're going to have! Everything else will be taken care of. The French Alps is a perfect place to ski or snowboard the slopes and it certainly won't be hard to find a catered chalet there. They usually have the facilities to deal with a large number of people, making them suitable for parties or family gatherings, but there are also options for small groups available in all shapes and sizes, you are sure to find a chalet that suits your needs.

The best thing about renting a catered chalet is that by their convenient locations they provide you access to the best equipment and pistes. Cable cars and tramways can take you to the top of the tallest peaks for your skiing and sightseeing pleasure and most are just a short distance from your accommodation. Some of these in the popular Chamonix region are the Telecabine Panoramique Mont-Blanc, the Aiguille de Midi and the Le Brevent Cable Car.

The Telecabine Panoramique Mont-Blanc, Chamonix

This tramway takes you to the very top of Mount Blanc and is well known for its spectacular views - the white snow sparkles beneath you and the impressive mountains loom overhead as you pass by. The trip takes about two hours, giving you plenty of time to take everything in. There is a small village at the end, providing you a wonderful place to warm up with a hot drink and to take in the sheer beauty of the Alps. Going home to your delightful catered chalet after an excursion like this or a hard day's skiing on the pistes means you have the best of both worlds you get to experience the outdoor beauty of the Alps while knowing you have a cosy home and a warming, hearty meal to go back to.

Aiguille de Midi, Chamonix

Riding the cable car/tramway up to the top of Aiguille de Midi is an impressive and truly memorable experience. The trip is split between two cable cars and is a perfect introduction to the snow covered landscape, although it may not be advisable for those not keen on heights. Though it's cold on the journey, the picturesque views of the snow covered cap makes up for it, and, after all, the cold ensures snow and skiing fun throughout the year! Even spring temperatures are close to freezing though, so it is important you dress warmly. Knowing you have your cosy catered chalet to come back to is a reassuring feeling depending on where you book you may even have a spa bath or own private sauna to look forward to on your return.

Le Brevent Cable Car, Chamonix

The Le Brevent cable car is perfect for a bird's-eye view of the French Alps. It is less crowded than other areas, and is perfect for a leisurely trip with the family when you fancy somewhere different. As with anywhere in the Alps it is important to dress for the weather and to consider ailments that may be triggered by the cable car - such as vertigo. A cafe is located at the top for lunch or a snack and, once you are ready, you can access the south facing slopes or simply enjoy the beauty of the region by taking a hike.

About the Author:
Danielle Hodges is the Marketing Manager for Ski Amis, a specialist ski travel agency and booking service offering bonded holidays staying in a catered or self catered chalet in La Tania and other fantastic destinations. For a luxury or good-value skiing holiday and the best catered chalets call Ski Amis.

Source: http://www.articlesnatch.com/Article/-Explore-The-French-Alps-From-A-Birds-eye-View--/4448839

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