Saturday, October 29, 2011

Speedy 3-D X-rays in the operating room

ScienceDaily (Oct. 27, 2011) ? Having an operation always places strain on patients, and this is especially true of complicated operations. Surgeons use 3D X-rays to check the results before the patient has left the operating room. This does help to avoid possible complications, but it also means interrupting the surgery. Fraunhofer researchers are now developing a 3D X-ray system that can be integrated seamlessly into operating procedure -- with no more forced interruptions.

To find out how this system works, visit the Medica 2011 trade fair in D?sseldorf from November 16 to 19.

Mrs. S. is more than a little anxious: she is due to be given a spinal implant in three days' time. The elderly lady is worried about complications -- and not without reason, since complicated operational procedures such as those on the spine, the head or the ankle are a challenge even for highly experienced surgeons. In order to reduce the risk of complications in more difficult operations and to avoid the need for follow-up surgery, doctors carry out progress checks with the help of three-dimensional X-ray images while the operation is in progress. These 3D images allow them to check on the position of implants and fracture fragments, so as to determine the relative positions of pieces of bone or to position implants with millimeter accuracy. The trouble is, currently available 3D X-ray systems such as C-arms interfere with the surgeon's work. The X-ray source and detector have to move in circles around the patient, which takes up a lot of space; if the C-arm were installed on the operating table permanently, it would impede access to patients. So the device must be wheeled over to the operating table to capture the images and then moved out of the way again. This is a nuisance -- and it takes up time, as it entails an interruption to the surgery.

Researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Production Systems and Design Technology IPK are currently working on a solution to this problem. Together with the Charit? -- Universit?tsmedizin Berlin university hospital and Ziehm Imaging GmbH, they are developing ORBIT, a 3D X-ray scanner that can be integrated into operations and does not cause any delays.

"Unlike existing three-dimensional imaging procedures, ORBIT doesn't have to surround the patient to capture images. Instead, it's an open system in which the X-ray source follows a circular path above the operating table. This makes capturing images much quicker, because it does away with time-consuming preparations," says Professor Dr.-Ing. Erwin Keeve of the Berliner Zentrum f?r Mechatronische Medizintechnik, a center founded by the IPK and Charit?. "It takes about 15 minutes to bring a C-arm into position, record individual projected images of the patient and then convert them into 3D image data. Since X-ray scanning takes less time with ORBIT, it speeds up the overall surgical procedure. Plus it's an easier system to use, which means doctors will be more inclined to make this diagnostic tool a routine part of their work," Keeve explains. The device has another big advantage: While implants and screws can cause interference in C-arm scans, ORBIT images feature far fewer artifacts caused by these metal objects because its X-ray source and its detector do not move in the same plane. Keeve is happy to report that "our initial experiments have been a success."

Modular system

ORBIT is made up of three modules: There is a maneuverable X-ray source fitted to an articulated bracket. This swivel arm can be attached to the ceiling or mounted on a wheeled stand for mobile applications, but either way the X-ray scans are always carried out from above. There is a digital flat panel detector recessed into the operating table. Finally, there is a monitor -- either mobile or wall-mounted -- to display the X-ray images. The researchers have already filed a patent application for this system.

Construction of an initial prototype is currently underway and comprehensive testing will begin in 2012. The system is set to be ready for market in three to five years' time. Those who wish to find out more about ORBIT will have their first chance at Medica 2011 in D?sseldorf.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft.

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://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/10/111027082951.htm

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Friday, October 28, 2011

Allstate Renters Insurance Coverage Ranges | Grafiesta

Allstate renters insurance is a company that will give you the best and the most dependable policy. This company offers the most reliable one in affordable price so that you will have a good and very nice policy without having problem with your financial condition. As a renter, you need to protect your belonging since the homeowner will only gives protection for their home structures and buildings. You will never know that you r possession is quite valuable that is where you spend most of your money. Allstate renters insurance understands this condition and offers the best policy for a renter who wants to have more secure life. Easy claim and service will make you feel like special customer of this company. This insurance is dedicated for their customer so you will have a very good service from Allstate renters insurance.

Allstate renters insurance is no ordinary insurance. It has the biggest care in understanding their customer?s needs. You will never know what will happen in your life. Something bad may happen inside your house which is categorized as unexpected events. You may have various accidents like blaze out electricity, burst pipe as well as thieves who intrudes into your house. This company gives the most understanding protection to secure you from these unexpected events. As an understanding insurance company, this insurance will give you nutshell protection. This one of the best insurance company will definitely give you the most reliable coverage for more peace of mind.

Allstate renters insurance makes sure that you will have a very good insurance that will protect your belonging though you are not in the house. You can leave your house with peace of mind. This kind of protection is offered in a very affordable price. This company offers various kinds of payment that can be adjusted according to your financial condition. You can have monthly payment, quarterly or even annual payment. Though you choose different payment, there is no need to worry with the policy since it remains the same. There is also no need to worry with the claim process since it is easy and simple. The company has their representatives and customer services that will answer your question and assists you to get your claim.

Allstate renters insurance policies

Allstate renters insurance also insures various kinds of things and belongings in your place. They also include this coverage in their policy. These are the most beneficial coverage of renter?s options. By applying to this insurance, you will have personal protection, additional protection, additional living expenses, family liability protection and guest medical protection. Those are the primary protection and coverage from renter insurance. If you think you need more complete protection, you can find other coverage and policy for your needs.

Allstate renters insurance also has other additional policy for your needs such as flood insurance policy. If you are interested to have this policy, you should have eligible condition in order to purchase this one. Those options and coverage are also available for office or other business property. There are various additional coverage that will also increase the payment if you are interested to have one of these but of course the benefit is bigger than the payment. Scheduled personal property is also available for your needs if you think you need personal and different coverage for your most precious belongings. One more important information that you should know is that Allstate renters insurance options are different on each state. You should call for each representative to get to know which one is the best for you. Allstate renters insurance is the best company with the most reliable policy for all situations especially for home renters.

Source: http://www.grafiesta.com/allstate-renters-insurance-coverage-ranges.html/

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Verizon updates: Pre-order Droid Razr, receive updates about Galaxy Nexus (Digital Trends)

Verizon users up for renewal, you have a tough choice on your hands. Do you want the incredibly thin Motorola Droid Razr with its 12.5 hour battery life or the not-quite-as-thin Samsung Galaxy Nexus with its massive screen and the brand new Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) operating system? Today, you have a choice. Pre-order the Droid Razr or sign up for updates on the Galaxy Nexus. Both 4G LTE phones will likely cost $300 with a two-year contract and both will probably be released around Nov. 10.

samsung-galaxy-nexus-teaser-page

The signup page for the Galaxy Nexus has gone live. You can now sign up for an email alert. Some bloggers believe that the URL (which has an 11 and a 10) on the signup page indicates a Nov. 10th launch, but we aren?t sure yet.

motorola-droid-razr-verizon-page

The pre-order page for the Droid Razr is a bit more definitive. It promises that the phone will be released no later than Nov. 10.?

So which one should you get? Well, that?s a tough one. We compared the hardware specs of both phones and have held the Razr, but we haven?t yet had any hands-on time with the Galaxy Nexus. Be sure to check out our hardware overview video and Smart Actions & MotoCast demo?to learn more about the Droid Razr. As for GalNex, everything we know is here.

Which phone, if either, are you leaning toward? ?

This article was originally posted on Digital Trends

More from Digital Trends

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/digitaltrends/20111027/tc_digitaltrends/verizonupdatespreorderdroidrazrreceiveupdatesaboutgalaxynexus

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Study of Chinese moviegoers bodes well for Hollywood (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) ? Unlike moviegoers in other parts of Asia, Chinese viewers don't mind seeing films that are set in the United States, a new study shows.

In fact, the study shows that watching Hollywood movies is becoming one of the top leisure activities for Chinese consumers.

The study, by research firm Ipsos OTX's Worldwide Motion Picture Group, is further evidence of what Hollywood already suspects: that the world's most populous nation offers a giant opportunity for American moviemakers to sell their films.

Because of the study's results -- and Hollywood's ongoing interest in the market -- Ipsos plans to start tracking movies in China. It will do that as a joint venture between its Worldwide Motion Picture Group and Ipsos China.

"We are seeing some very interesting and unexpected results come in from the Chinese movie-going population," Vincent Bruzzese, president of Ipsos OTX's Worldwide Motion Picture Group, said in a written statement. "Everyone recognizes that these emerging international markets have rapidly become an integral part of the U.S. film industry."

Ipsos OTX says the ongoing study is the largest ever to look at moviegoing habits in China and that it is the first firm to conduct research screenings in that country. The study is being conducted in cities including Beijing, Shanghai, Chengdu, Guangzhou and Shenzhen to ensure a full representation of the country.

Chinese moviegoers have shown their interest in U.S.-made movies. "Avatar" -- the top-grossing movie of all time -- grossed $207 million in China. "Transformers 3" is China's second-highest grossing movie. It took in $175 million.

OTX also plans studies in South Korea and Russia.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/movies/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111026/film_nm/us_china

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Thursday, October 20, 2011

Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich now official

Google has taken the stage in Hong Kong to make the next version of Android OS, nicknamed Ice Cream Sandwich, a thing of reality.

Developing...

Check out all the action on our liveblog happening right now!

Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich now official originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 18 Oct 2011 22:25:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/10/18/android-4-0-ice-cream-sandwich-now-official/

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ABC's `Modern Family' is big winner with DVRs (AP)

NEW YORK ? ABC's "Modern Family" may not be the top-rated comedy on television, but it's the one most viewers catch up with on their digital video recorders.

Through the first two weeks of the season, the Nielsen Co. said an average of 4.5 million viewers watched a recording of "Modern Family" after it first appeared on the air. That lifted the show's viewership from nearly 14 million people who watched it live to 18.5 million.

It was the prime-time program that got the biggest lift when Nielsen's measurement of who watches on DVR within seven days is added in. Networks are increasingly watching this new ratings measurement as DVR penetration increases.

Eight shows besides "Modern Family" saw their audiences grow by more than 3 million when the DVR statistics were added. Six are on CBS, led by "Two and a Half Men." ABC's "Grey's Anatomy" and Fox's "Terra Nova" picked up significant time-shifted viewing.

By percentage, the two-week champ was Fox's "Fringe." It airs live on Fox on Friday night, when many of the network's young viewers are out, and saw its viewership increase by 45 percent from 3.3 million to 5 million with DVRs added in.

NBC's ratings this season are abysmal, but one ray of light is that the network's "Parenthood," "Prime Suspect" and "Up All Night" increased their audiences by more than 30 percent through DVRs, Nielsen said.

The DVR numbers could be the difference between life and death for marginal series. ABC's just-canceled "Charlie's Angels" had virtually the same live audience as its new "Pan Am" last week, but during the first two weeks of the season the percentage of people who watched "Pan Am" on DVR was more than twice that of "Charlie's Angels."

In what's becoming a pattern, CBS dominated live viewing again last week with 16 of the top 25 shows in Nielsen's ranking. A strong newcomer was ABC's comedy "Last Man Standing," which landed in the top 10 with its premiere, evidence of actor Tim Allen's enduring popularity.

For the week in prime time, CBS led with an average of 10.6 million viewers (6.7 rating, 11 share), Fox had 9 million and ABC had 8.6 million (both 5.5, 9), NBC had 6.4 million (4.1, 7), the CW had 1.7 million (1.1, 2) and ION Television had 940,000 (0.6, 1).

Among the Spanish-language stations, Univision led with an average of 3.2 million viewers (1.7, 3), Telemundo had 1.1 million (0.4, 1), TeleFutura had 510,000 (0.3, 0), Estrella had 220,000 and Azteca 190,000 (both 0.1, 0).

NBC's "Nightly News" won the evening news ratings race, averaging 8 million viewers (5.4 rating, 11 share), ABC's "World News" had 7.5 million (5.1, 10) and the "CBS Evening News" had 5.5 million (3.8, 7).

A ratings point represents 1,147,000 households, or 1 percent of the nation's estimated 114.7 million TV homes. The share is the percentage of in-use televisions tuned to a given show.

For the week of Oct. 10-16, the top 10 shows, their networks and viewerships: "NCIS," CBS, 18.98 million; "Dancing With the Stars Results," ABC, 16.89 million; "Dancing With the Stars," ABC, 16.79 million; NFL Football: Minnesota at Chicago, NBC, 16.57 million; "Two and a Half Men," CBS, 16.2 million; "NCIS: Los Angeles," CBS, 15.4 million; "Sunday Night NFL Pre-Kick," NBC, 14.39 million; "Modern Family," ABC, 13.65 million; "The Big Bang Theory," CBS, 13.58 million; "Last Man Standing," ABC, 13.19 million.

___

ABC is owned by The Walt Disney Co. CBS is owned by CBS Corp. CW is a joint venture of Warner Bros. Entertainment and CBS Corp. Fox and My Network TV are units of News Corp. NBC and Telemundo are owned by Comcast Corp. ION Television is owned by ION Media Networks. TeleFutura is a division of Univision. Azteca America is a wholly owned subsidiary of TV Azteca S.A. de C.V.

___

Online:

http://www.nielsen.com

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111018/ap_en_tv/us_nielsens

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Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Soyuz set for first French Guiana launch (Reuters)

PARIS (Reuters) ? A Russian Soyuz rocket will blast off from French Guiana on Thursday in a new East-West partnership designed to redraw commercial competition in space.

The scheduled lift-off is the first time that Soyuz, which first flew in 1966 and traces its roots back even further to the earliest Cold War intercontinental ballistic missiles, has been launched from outside its former Soviet bases.

Aboard the Soyuz will be the first two satellites in Europe's Galileo global positioning satellite constellation.

Once fully operational later this decade, the system aims to give Europeans autonomy from the U.S. government-controlled Global Positioning System. Russia says it completed its own similar system earlier this month.

The launch follows years of delays and budget disputes over Galileo, as well as almost a decade of discussions since France and Russia agreed to co-operate on Soyuz launches in 2003.

The Soyuz rocket has been adapted to allow European space launch company Arianespace, which operates the Ariane-5 space juggernaut, to lift medium-sized 3.2-tonne payloads into orbit.

Moscow is expected to receive tens of millions of dollars for each launch to help finance its own space activities, while the presence of Russian rockets at the European launchpads at Kourou near the equator will help Arianespace cut costs.

"We are at the end of one episode (in our space business) and at the beginning of another," Arianespace chief executive Jean-Yves Le Gall told Reuters in an interview.

"Soyuz will launch medium-sized satellites that could not be launched by Ariane-5. Soyuz will permit us to launch more often from Guiana.... Soyuz decreases Ariane-5 launch costs because fixed costs at the launch site in Guiana will be spread out through a larger number of launches," Le Gall said.

Arianespace is principally owned by the French Space Agency (CNES) with 34 percent and Astrium, a wholly owned subsidiary of European aerospace giant EADS, holding 30 percent.

It is best known for the Ariane-5 that ferries the biggest satellites. But a market for medium satellites is also gaining.

The arrival of Russian rockets in France's pied-a-terre on the northeast coast of South America is slated to give the Arianespace satellite launch company another vehicle in its effort to maintain its lead launching commercial satellites.

ROCKET FAILURE

Soyuz was the pride of the Soviet Union's space program. The rocket was to have been an integral component in its effort to beat America to the moon during the space race of the 1960s.

Now the Saturn rockets and Apollo capsules that got America to the moon first, and its retired shuttle fleet that supplied the International Space Station (ISS), are all museum pieces.

But Soyuz continues and recently conducted the 1,776th launch in its career, making it by far the most used rocket in space history.

Arianespace is going ahead with this week's launch despite the failure of a Soyuz rocket which led to the crash of an unmanned cargo craft in August.

It has said the Soyuz version that failed was of a different series than the one slated for launch this week.

However two models of the faulty series are in French Guiana for future missions and their upper stages will be sent back to Russia for inspection, repair or possible replacement.

Soyuz is built by Russia's Roscosmos space agency at Samara Space Center and is shipped by train and sea to French Guiana.

The space base there is only 5 degrees north of the equator and this represents a significant bonus for Soyuz.

Equatorial launchpads give an advantage especially for launching communications satellites into geostationary orbit, by using a slingshot effect linked to the earth's rotation.

Arianespace is not alone in turning to Russian rockets to lower costs and competition for commercial launches is fierce.

Its main rival, International Launch Services, a U.S.-Russian joint venture that launches Russian Proton rockets, uses Yuri Gagarin's launch base of Baikonur, Kazakhstan as its springboard.

A Russian-owned competitor, Sea Launch, launched a European telecom satellite last month from a converted oil rig launch pad in the Pacific Ocean using a Soviet-era Zenit rocket.

China's Long March rocket recently launched a satellite for Paris-based Eutelsat. But the launch, the first Western satellite hoisted by China since the 1990s, is unlikely to be repeated soon since most satellites have American components that are governed by tough U.S. export restrictions.

American start-ups like SpaceX -- brainchild of PayPal founder Elon Musk -- aim to poach business from Ariane and ILS using the Falcon rocket series, but are still in a test phase.

* Graphic on Galileo http://link.reuters.com/ram44s

* Graphic on the launch http://link.reuters.com/jer44s

(Additional reporting by Franck Leconte; Editing by Geert de Clercq, Tim Hepher and Peter Graff)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/science/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111018/sc_nm/us_space_europe_russia

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Hong Kong airport worker guilty in disguise ruse (AP)

HONG KONG ? A Hong Kong airport worker has been convicted of people smuggling for his part in helping a young Chinese asylum seeker board a flight to Canada disguised as an elderly Caucasian man.

The unidentified Chinese national boarded a flight from Hong Kong to Vancouver last October wearing a detailed silicone mask, then removed the disguise in a washroom during the flight.

The Hong Kong district court found Monday that airport ground services worker Chau Pak-kin was guilty of taking part in a conspiracy to smuggle people with false passports and boarding passes. Chau will be sentenced at a later date.

The disguised man was freed from detention in Vancouver in February on a $5,000 bond and has to report weekly to the Canada Border Services Agency.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111018/ap_on_re_as/as_hong_kong_disguised_passenger

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Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Shayne Lamas: Nude, Pregnant, Still Around


Shayne Lamas is very pregnant and all KINDS of nude in a set of black and white photos she had taken ... because that is just what you do when you're Shayne Lamas.

The former winner of The Bachelor, who was engaged to Matt Grant for like 12 hours back in the day and is now married to Nik Richie, leaves little to the imagination.

Their baby has yet to be born, but is already a nude photo star.

Shayne Lamas Preggers

Lamas is just weeks away from giving birth to her first child - who will be named Press, regardless of gender - but is already prepping the kid for what's to come.

Yes, that is correct. Press. They're accepting offers to represent Press in any future show business opportunities, if you happen to be interested. Hello? Anyone?

Follow the jump to see Shayne in her child-bearing, naked glory:

Shayne Lamas Nude, PregnantShayne Lamas NakedShayne Lamas Nude

[Photos: TMZ / Peter Baratti]

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/10/shayne-lamas-nude-pregnant-still-around/

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Thousands of protesters fill NYC's Times Square (AP)

NEW YORK ? Thousands of demonstrators protesting corporate greed filled Times Square on Saturday night, mixing with gawkers, Broadway showgoers, tourists and police to create a chaotic scene in the midst of Manhattan.

"Banks got bailed out, we got sold out!" protesters chanted from within police barricades. Police, some in riot gear and mounted on horses, tried to push them out of the square and onto the sidewalks in an attempt to funnel the crowds away.

Sandy Peterson of Salt Lake City, who was in Times Square after seeing "The Book of Mormon" musical on Broadway, got caught up in the disorder.

"We're getting out of here before this gets ugly," she said.

Sandra Fox, 69, of Baton Rouge, La., stood, confused, on 46th Street with a ticket for "Anything Goes" in her hand as riot police pushed a knot of about 200 shouting protesters toward her.

"I think it's horrible what they're doing," she said of the protesters. "These people need to go get jobs."

The Occupy Wall Street demonstrators had marched north through Manhattan from Washington Square Park earlier in the afternoon. Once in Times Square, they held a rally for several hours before dispersing. Over the course of the day, more than 70 people were arrested.

Police spokesman Paul Browne said 42 people were arrested in Times Square on Saturday night after being warned repeatedly to disperse, and three others were arrested while trying to take down police barriers.

Two police officers were injured during the protest and had to be hospitalized. One suffered a head injury, the other a foot injury, Browne said.

Five people wearing masks were arrested earlier in the day. It wasn't immediately clear what charges, if any, they may face.

Two dozen people were arrested on charges of criminal trespass Saturday morning when demonstrators entered a Citibank bank branch near Washington Square Park and refused to leave, police said. One protester also was arrested on a charge of resisting arrest.

Citibank said in a statement that police asked the branch to close until the protesters could be taken away. "One person asked to close an account and was accommodated," Citibank said.

Earlier in the day, demonstrators paraded to a Chase bank branch, banging drums, blowing horns and carrying signs decrying corporate greed. Marchers throughout the country emulated them in protests that ranged from about 50 people in Jackson, Miss., to about 2,000 in the larger city of Pittsburgh.

"Banks got bailed out. We got sold out," the crowd of as many as 1,000 in Manhattan chanted. A few protesters went inside the bank to close their accounts, but the group didn't stop other customers from getting inside or seek to blockade the business.

Police told the marchers to stay on the sidewalk, and the demonstration appeared to be fairly orderly as it wound through downtown streets.

Overseas, violence broke out in Rome, where police fired tear gas and water cannons at some protesters who broke away from the main demonstration, smashing shop and bank windows, torching cars and hurling bottles. Dozens were injured.

Tens of thousands nicknamed "the indignant" marched in cities across Europe, as the protests that began in New York linked up with long-running demonstrations against government cost-cutting and failed financial policies in Europe. Protesters also turned out in Australia and Asia.

Across the Atlantic, hundreds protested in the heart of Toronto's financial district. Some of the protesters announced plans to camp out indefinitely in St. James Park. Protests were also held in other cities across Canada from Halifax, Nova Scotia, to Vancouver, British Columbia.

In the U.S., among the demonstrators in New York withdrawing their money from Chase was Lily Paulina, 29, an organizer with the United Auto Workers union who lives in Brooklyn. She said she was taking her money out because she was upset that JPMorgan Chase was making billions, while its customers struggled with bank fees and home foreclosures.

"Chase bank is making tons of money off of everyone ... while people in the working class are fighting just to keep a living wage in their neighborhood," she said.

Other demonstrations in the city Saturday included an anti-war march to mark the 10th anniversary of the Afghanistan War.

Among the people participating in that march was Sergio Jimenez, 25, who said he quit his job in Texas to come to New York to protest.

"These wars in Afghanistan and Iraq were all based on lies," Jimenez said. "And if we're such an intelligent country, we should figure out other ways to respond to terror, instead of with terror."

Elsewhere in the country, nearly 1,500 gathered Saturday for a march past banks in downtown Orlando. About 50 people met in a park in downtown Jackson, Miss., carrying signs calling for "Health Care Not Warfare."

Some made more considerable commitments to try to get their voices heard. Nearly 200 spent a cold night in tents in Grand Circus Park in Detroit, donning gloves, scarves and heavy coats to keep warm, said Helen Stockton, a 34-year-old certified midwife from Ypsilanti, and plan to remain there "as long as it takes to effect change."

"It's easy to ignore us," Stockton said. Then she referred to the financial institutions, saying, "But we are not going to ignore them. Every shiver in our bones reminds us of why we are here."

Hundreds more converged near the Michigan's Capitol in Lansing with the same message, the Lansing State Journal reported.

Rallies drew young and old, laborers and retirees. In Pittsburgh, marchers also included parents with children in strollers and even a doctor. The peaceful crowd of 1,500 to 2,000 stretched for two or three blocks.

"I see our members losing jobs. People are angry," said Janet Hill, 49, who works for the United Steelworkers, which she said hosted a sign-making event before the march.

Retired teacher Albert Siemsen of Milwaukee said at a demonstration there that he'd grown angry watching school funding get cut at the same time that banks and corporations gained more influence in government. The 81-year-old wants to see tighter Wall Street regulation.

Around him, protesters held signs reading, "Keep your corporate hands off my government," and "Mr. Obama, Tear Down That Wall Street."

Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick visited protesters in Boston's Dewey Square for the first time. He said after walking through the camp that he better understands the range of views and was sympathetic to concerns about unemployment, health care and the influence of money in politics.

In Denver, about 1,000 people came to a rally in downtown Denver to support the movement.

The Rev. Al Sharpton led a march in Washington that was not affiliated with the Occupy movement but shared similar goals. His rally was aimed at drumming up support for President Barack Obama's jobs plan. Thousands of demonstrators packed the lawn in the shadow of the Washington Monument to hear labor, education and civil rights leaders speak.

___

Associated Press writers Kevin Begos in Pittsburgh, Eric Tucker in Washington, Jay Lindsay in Boston, Corey Williams in Detroit, Dinesh Ramde in Milwaukee and Jack Elliott Jr. in Jackson, Miss., Charmaine Noronha in Toronto, and Colleen Long, David B. Caruso and AP Radio correspondent Martin Di Caro in New York contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111016/ap_on_re_us/us_wall_street_protest

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Romney: Too unlovable to be inevitable? (Politico)

Mitt Romney has won every Republican presidential debate. He has outraised all of his primary opponents. Polls show he?s the most competitive candidate against President Barack Obama.

And most Republicans still don?t want to nominate him.

Continue Reading

For all the talk about his inevitability, after half a decade as a declared or undeclared presidential candidate, Romney can scarcely muster a fifth of the GOP primary vote. Republicans continue to cast about for an alternative ? looking to Michele Bachmann, then to Rick Perry and now to Herman Cain.

None of Romney?s opponents has been able to derail him for long. But the simple fact remains: Whether it?s because of Romney?s ideas, his history of flip-flops or his personal political style, much of the Republican Party just can?t embrace its frontrunner. The question now is whether the GOP is prepared to live with an unlovable nominee if that candidate has a good shot of defeating Obama.

?People, I think, are looking for more visceral, gut issues. Mitt Romney doesn?t make that appeal,? said New York Rep. Pete King, who is neutral in the GOP primary. ?His record in the past on health care and gay rights, obviously, are the opposite of where most Republicans are.?

King said he would probably end up endorsing Romney, whom the New Yorker said was winning the primary on a largely tactical, incremental level.

?There?s no one region and there?s no one issue where he really dominates, but he has the most overall points,? King said. ?He?s not the type whose supporters are going to fall on their sword for him.?

And that, more than anything, may be Romney?s most glaring weakness, both in the primary and as a potential general election nominee.

House Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) suggested that his party?s frontrunner would be helped with a ?moment? ? some pivot point in the race that will finally galvanize reluctant Republicans.

?When you get passion is when you get into a fight,? said McCarthy, when asked about the lack of fire for Romney. ?When did we get passion [for] Ronald Reagan in the fight? [It was] when he grabbed the microphone and said, ?I paid for this microphone.??

The Californian invoked John Kerry?s quick win in the 2004 Democratic primary ? citing another Massachusetts pol who failed to make activists? pulses quicken ? to make the case that Romney would end up stronger if he had a robust primary challenge.

?It collapsed too quickly,? McCarthy said of the opposition to Kerry. ?So those who were in the party never got to discuss and decide on the issues and the challenges [their nominee] has.?

Other GOP officials, however, believe the enmity Republicans feel toward Obama is even more profound than it was with Democrats and President Bush in 2004 ? meaning that the party will rally with fervor to whomever captures the nomination.

A Republican senator who has yet to endorse but is likely to back Romney acknowledged that ?some people on the conservative end are hesitant to weigh in? because of the former Massachusetts governor?s record, most notably his state health care law. But this senator argued those issues ?would not be a problem with the base in the general election? because of their intense desire to unseat Obama.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/politico_rss/rss_politico_mostpop/http___www_politico_com_news_stories1011_66113_html/43283779/SIG=11mdqv211/*http%3A//www.politico.com/news/stories/1011/66113.html

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Monday, October 17, 2011

Virgin Media's TiVos get updated with Spotify, iOS app support and more

Over in the UK, Virgin Media has given a lucky few (3,500 or so) access to a pilot update for their TiVo DVRs that adds many of the features we'd heard were on the way, plus some extras. Word out of Crawley and Cambridge is that multiroom streaming is enabled, there's faster performance and an official community post mentions compatibility with TiVo's iOS apps, BBC iPlayer integration and music streaming from Spotify. A wider rollout is expected before Christmas, for a full list of changes check out the links below.

Virgin Media's TiVos get updated with Spotify, iOS app support and more originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 17 Oct 2011 08:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceVirgin Media, Unofficial Virgin Media TiVo Blog  | Email this | Comments


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/CJ_k3qjqx2g/

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Romney's rise challenges tea party's clout in GOP (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Mitt Romney's early success in the Republican presidential race is challenging the tea party's clout. Will it continue to pull the GOP sharply right? Will it slowly fade? Or merge with mainstream Republican elements in a nod to pragmatism, something it's hardly known for?

On the surface, Romney's strength seems at odds with the tea party's fiery success in ousting Republicans seen as compromisers, and in making the House GOP caucus more ideological, even when its leaders plead for flexibility.

Romney defends the government's 2008 bank bailouts, plus the mandated health insurance he initiated as Massachusetts governor. He says he can work with "good Democrats." Although he later changed, Romney once supported abortion rights, gun control and gay rights.

These positions run counter to the beliefs and goals of many tea party activists scattered throughout the country. Yet Romney is faring better in polls, fundraising and debates than are contenders with stronger tea party credentials, including Michele Bachmann, Rick Santorum and Rick Perry.

Several Republican strategists, and even some tea party leaders, say they aren't surprised or alarmed. Their overarching goal is to defeat President Barack Obama next year, they say, and if Romney is best-positioned to do that, they'll endure his shortcomings.

"The perception that tea partyers are ideological purists is wrong," said Sal Russo, a long-time Republican strategist in California and a leader of the Tea Party Express. "We are a broad-based movement," he said, "and we are looking to win in 2012."

Danny Diaz, a Washington-based Republican strategist unaligned with any presidential candidates, agrees.

"The tea party movement is an anti-Washington movement," he said. While Perry and Herman Cain might make a more dynamic claim to that mantle, he said, Romney has never lived in Washington, and tea party activists won't rule him out.

"Many of them are pragmatists," Diaz said. They desperately want to oust Obama, he said, and "they need a candidate that's electable."

A CBS-New York Times poll found that tea partyers are more satisfied with the GOP presidential field than are Republicans in general. Cain was the top choice among tea party activists, with Romney second.

Some campaign veterans see bigger problems ahead for Romney.

Polls of Republicans show Romney holding steady at about 25 percent, while Bachmann, Perry and Cain take turns making surges. "That tells me that 75 percent of the primary voters would really rather have someone else," said GOP lobbyist and consultant Mike McKenna.

Many tea party activists have little or no loyalty to the Republican Party, and McKenna predicts big problems next year if they feel their conservative values were sacrificed for political expediency. "Romney would cause enormous numbers of tea party-type voters to simply not show on game day," he said.

The chief question, he said, "is whether one candidate will be able to aggregate the anti-Romney Republicans before it is too late." Perry seems the likeliest choice, McKenna said, "but the clock is ticking."

Jenny Beth Martin of Atlanta, who is active with Tea Party Patriots, said several groups are having informal talks about whether they should try to coalesce behind an alternative to Romney. Tea partyers cherish their independence, she said, and "over the next eight to 10 weeks, it'll be interesting to see how it all shapes up."

Conservative commentator Rush Limbaugh repeatedly criticized Romney on his radio show last week. "Romney is not a conservative," he said. "The Republican base doesn't want Romney."

For now, Romney seems willing to run some risks, hoping to attract independent voters who will be crucial in the 2012 general election.

In last week's debate in New Hampshire, Romney defended President George W. Bush's 2008 decision to spend billions to rescue banks teetering on collapse, partly because of disastrous home loans. The action was meant not just to save banks, Romney said, "but to keep the entire currency of the country worth something and to keep all the banks from closing and to make sure we didn't all lose our jobs."

Many conservatives despise the bailout, known as TARP, for Troubled Asset Relief Program. In one of their first political victories, tea party activists in Utah chanted "TARP, TARP" at then-Sen. Robert Bennett as they bounced him from the GOP ticket at a 2010 party convention. Bennett, a three-term senator with solid conservative credentials, had voted for the program.

Nonetheless, there was little commentary about Romney's TARP comments after Tuesday's debate, which focused largely on Cain's tax overhaul plan.

It may take hard-hitting TV ads to drive a bigger wedge between Romney and tea partyers, something the well-financed Perry might try soon. Such ads could go into detail, with heavy repetition, about Romney's Massachusetts health care plan, which was a partial model for Obama's 2010 federal overhaul.

Virginia-based Republican strategist Chris LaCivita says the tea party's deliberately decentralized nature makes it ill-suited to play a big role in presidential politics.

"The tea party's strength was always a state-driven or congressional district-driven level," he said. It can continue to influence targeted contests that draw comparatively small turnouts, such as the Utah GOP convention that drummed Bennett out of the party.

Moreover, LaCivita said, the tea party might choke on its own success. If it appears more like the Republican mainstream, he said, it's because tea partyers have shifted that mainstream to the right.

Largely because of their clout in the 2010 elections, LaCivita said, these activists have "changed the conversation, not only among Republicans, but everybody in Washington. Who'd have thought the Democrats would be leading with spending cuts" in deficit-reduction talks?

Those ongoing negotiations, however, could renew tensions between tea party-affiliated House Republicans and the party's more established leaders, including Speaker John Boehner. If presidential candidates are pressed for their views, Romney might find it difficult to keep appealing to independents without antagonizing tea partyers.

The Republican Party "still hasn't resolved all of its ideological internal conflicts," said John Feehery, a top aide to then-Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill. "But they have agreed that they don't like Obama," he said.

Their level of intensity may determine whether Romney can keep prospering against rivals who boast stronger tea party ties.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111016/ap_on_el_pr/us_tea_party_presidential_race

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HTC Titan review

We knew as soon as we first clapped eyes on this hulk of a phone that it'd make a brave purchase. It's not just the 4.7-inch screen that requires a leap of faith, but also the Windows Phone operating system, which is presented here in all its Mangofied glory but is still very much an early adopter's ecosystem. After all, if you love the Titan's hardware but prefer a more established OS, you can always wait for the Sensation XL, which is essentially the same phone running good ol' Android and which should have a similar £480 ($750 converted) SIM-free price tag. The question is, do you have the guts to make that jump to something more exotic? Yes? Maybe? Then read on before you begin your run-up.

Continue reading HTC Titan review

HTC Titan review originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 17 Oct 2011 14:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/0NKdD2LYhjs/

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Sunday, October 16, 2011

ScienceOnline2011 - interview with Richard Grant

Continuing with the tradition from last three years, I will occasionally post interviews with some of the participants of the ScienceOnline2011 conference that was held in the Research Triangle Park, NC back in January 2011. See all the interviews in this series here.

Today my guest is Richard P. Grant (blog, Twitter).

Welcome to A Blog Around The Clock. Would you, please, tell my readers a little bit more about yourself? Where are you coming from (both geographically and philosophically)? What is your (scientific) background? Tell us a little more about your career trajectory so far: interesting projects past and present?

Richard, on the right. Photo credit: Joe Dunckley

I?m a gypsy, both geographically and scientifically. My father was in the RAF (NCO), and so I?ve always moved around a bit. A lot, really. I read Biochemistry at Oxford and stayed for a DPhil, then a postdoc?both in cell/molecular biology/protein chemistry, looking at the machinery whereby cells stick down to a surface.

After that I had a brief spell in a small company you?ll never have heard of in Cambridge, making DNA extraction technologies. I was good at it, and everything I touched turned to gold?well, it would have if we?d have had a sales team that could actually sell anything. I left under a bit of a cloud, quite disillusioned, but having landed a postdoc at the MRC-LMB (the Nobel Factory) with Murray Stewart.

My plan there was to learn X-ray crystallography, something that had fascinated me since my doctorate. Because the protein I was working on refused to crystallize however, I ended up doing a brute force NMR attack with the incomparable David Neuhaus. Thence I was able to figure out how to get the thing to crystallize, and got a beautiful 1 ? crystal structure of my protein?part of the mRNA nuclear export pathway?combined with its ligand (a fragment of the nuclear pore). In my six years working for Murray, in addition to the nuclear export stuff I also did some work on cell motility, using nematode worm sperm as a model. These little guys crawl rather than swim, and the amazing thing is they have no actin. That was a great deal of fun, leading to me going round saying ?I yearn to learn how the worm sperm turns.? You have to get your laughs where you can in this business.

Then I had three years in Sydney, being the only cell biologist in a huge team of NMR types. That was fun in a number of ways, and was where I started writing a ?proper? blog. I?d kept a self-propelled online web-log and written various things for other labrats before that, most of which is unpublishable, but this was the first time I?d done it using authoring software and whatnot.

When that grant money wasn?t renewed, I decided that it was time to make a clean break (I never wanted to be a PI?) and left the lab, came back to the UK and took a job with Faculty of 1000. Where I did everything from running a website rebuilding project to writing for The Scientist magazine. Now I?m on the move again, having this week accepted an offer to be a Senior Writer at a medical education & publishing agency in London.

What is taking up the most of your time and passion these days? What are your goals?

My creativity has taken a bit of a beating recently, but I?m now coming out of what has been quite a dark patch for me. I?m trying to write again?I have two novels on the go, one lab lit, based on my experiences in Cambridge; the other fantasy?and a few short stories that need looking at. I haven?t written any poetry recently but it?s something I want to revisit.

I help Jenny (Rohn) very closely with Science is Vital, the grassroots campaign group set up to protect science funding in the UK. That trundles along for a few months and then we have a massive effort?recently on science careers for example?when we don?t get any sleep.

And of course, I run Occams Typewriter. I set it up a year ago when I finally got fed up with Nature Network, and the amazing thing is it?s pretty self-propelled these days. It?s a fantastic group of people writing there, and I?m very pleased with how things have turned out.

How does (if it does) blogging figure in your work? How about social networks, e.g., Twitter, FriendFeed, Facebook and others? How do you intergrate all of your online activity into a coherent whole? Do you find all this online activity to be a net positive (or even a necessity) in what you do?

Hah. Well, while at F1000 I?ve been running the blog as well as doing all the other social media engagement. It?s been quite difficult keeping my own ?brand? separate from that, and to be honest, I?ll be quite glad to go back to just being me next month!

When and how did you first discover science blogs? What are some of your favourites? Have you discovered any cool science blogs by the participants at the Conference? What was the best aspect of ScienceOnline2011 for you? Any suggestions for next year?

Science blogs as a separate entity first came real to me after I started blogging in Sydney. The thing is, the University asked its staff to keep blogs, and they had loads of humanities types doing it, but I was one of maybe two other scientists who showed an interest?and the only blog that anyone read. It was really successful, and I even made it into the national press. Then Nature Network came along, and I got into OpenLab (the only blogger to get the word ?fuck? into the anthology that year. I checked), and I realized there were loads of other people doing the same sort of thing.

The best thing about SO2011 was meeting all these people I only knew from their electrons. Some of them turned out to be really nice people?and to be frank that was quite a surprise! Amazing how online personas differ from real life. People are nearly always better in real life, in my experience. My life was enriched.

Thank you! I hope you can make it to ScienceOnline2012 in January.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=c8c6922bf4dbd477b2279ad8669cfcbd

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Contamination of mobile phones and hands revealed

Friday, October 14, 2011

One in six mobile phones in Britain is contaminated with faecal matter, according to new research released ahead of Global Handwashing Day.

Experts say the most likely reason for the potentially harmful bacteria festering on so many gadgets is people failing to wash their hands properly with soap after going to the toilet.

The findings of the UK-wide study by scientists from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and Queen Mary, University of London also reveal a tendency among Britons to lie about their hygiene habits.

Although 95% of people said they washed their hands with soap where possible, 92% of phones and 82% of hands had bacteria on them. Worryingly, 16% of hands and 16% of phones were found to harbour E. coli ? bacteria of a faecal origin. Harmful E. coli (Escherichia coli) is associated with stomach upsets and has been implicated in serious cases of food poisoning such as the fatal O157 outbreak in Germany in June.

Hygiene expert and UK campaign leader for Global Handwashing Day Dr Val Curtis, from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, said: "This study provides more evidence that some people still don't wash their hands properly, especially after going to the toilet. I hope the thought of having E. coli on their hands and phones encourages them to take more care in the bathroom ? washing your hands with soap is such a simple thing to do but there is no doubt it saves lives."

Peter Barratt, Technical Manager at Initial Washroom Solutions, which supports Global Handwashing Day, said: "Today's research is shocking and demonstrates the importance of effective hygiene. It is critical that people take hand hygiene seriously and that businesses offer their employees and customers a practical way of protecting themselves to help combat the spread of illness."

Researchers travelled to 12 cities and took 390 samples from mobile phones and hands which were analysed in the lab to find out the type and number of germs lurking there. They also asked participants a series of questions about their handwashing habits.

The largest proportion of contaminated phones was in Birmingham (41%) while Londoners were caught with the highest proportion of E. coli present on hands (28%). However, actual levels of bacteria increased the further north the scientists went, the dirtiest city being Glasgow, where average bacterial levels on phones and hands were found to be nine times higher than in Brighton, reinforcing a North/South divide. The scientists also found those who had bacteria on their hands were three times as likely to have bacteria on their phone.

Dr Ron Cutler, of Queen Mary, University of London, said: "Our analysis revealed some interesting results from around the UK. While some cities did much better than others, the fact that E. coli was present on phones and hands in every location shows this is a nationwide problem. People may claim they wash their hands regularly but the science shows otherwise."

Faecal bacteria can survive on hands and surfaces for hours at a time, especially in warmer temperatures away from sunlight; it is easily transferred by touch to door handles, food and even mobile phones. From there, the germs can be picked up by other people. Every year, 3.5m children under the age of five are killed by pneumonia and diarrhoeal diseases ? and the simple action of washing hands with soap is one of the most effective ways of preventing these illnesses. In developed countries, handwashing with soap helps to prevent the spread of viral infections, such as norovirus, rotavirus and influenza.

Global Handwashing Day - which is held on October 15 every year - aims to transform the action of washing hands with soap into an automatic behaviour, deeply set in our daily lives. Initiatives and events to promote the practice in homes, schools, workplaces and communities are held worldwide.

The UK Global Handwashing coalition involves GlaxoSmithKline, Initial Washroom Solutions, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Sanofi Pasteur MSD, School Councils UK, Queen Mary, University of London, The Ideas Foundation and Wellcome Trust.

###

London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine: http://www.lshtm.ac.uk

Thanks to London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 109 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/114319/Contamination_of_mobile_phones_and_hands_revealed_

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Sony Ericsson profits down in 3rd quarter (AP)

STOCKHOLM ? Mobile phone maker Sony Ericsson posted a break-even third quarter Friday ? blaming a drop in earnings on higher taxes and lower margins ? and announced that it is shifting its entire portfolio to smartphones next year.

The joint venture between Sweden's LM Ericsson and Japan's Sony Corp. said net profit fell to 0 from euro49 million ($67.26 million) in the same quarter last year, while sales dipped slightly to euro1.59 billion ($2.18 billion), from euro1.6 billion ($2.2 billion) a year earlier.

The company said its pretax profit was cut in half due to a lower gross margin, partially offset by lower operating expenses. Taxes grew to euro17 million from euro12 million.

Sony Ericsson said its Android-based Xperia smartphones now account for more than 80 percent of its sales. That was reflected in a 9 percent decrease in units shipped but an 8 percent hike in the average selling price of a Sony Ericsson phone.

"We will continue to invest in the smartphone market, shifting the entire portfolio to smartphones during 2012," CEO Bert Nordberg said.

Sony Ericsson estimated that it controls about 11 percent of the growing Android-based smartphone market. It maintained its forecast of modest industry growth in the global mobile phone market in 2011.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111014/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_sweden_earns_sony_ericsson

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Donald Trump to join Michele Bachmann for ???tele-town hall??? (Daily Caller)

Donald Trump, the??Celebrity Apprentice? host and GOP kingmaker ? or queenmaker, perhaps ? will join Republican presidential candidate Michele Bachmann on Monday for a nationwide tele-town hall, her campaign announced Saturday.

?During the call, Bachmann and Trump will discuss critical economic issues facing American families and businesses,? according to a release from the campaign, ?while taking questions from the listening audience.? (RELATED: Bachmann joins 3 others in threat to boycott Nevada caucus)

While most of the Republicans running for president have ventured to New York City to visit with Trump, Bachmann?s campaign said this is the first time he has joined a 2012 candidate on a tele-town hall.

The real estate mogul considered his own run for the Republican presidential nomination earlier this year.

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Read more stories from The Daily Caller

Donald Trump to join Michele Bachmann for 'tele-town hall'

Cain sings 'Impossible Dream' to adoring throng at Tenn. campaign stop [AUDIO]

Rep. John Lewis to 'Occupy Atlanta' rabble: No hard feelings

Barney and Occupy DC: 'Sharing is caring' [VIDEO]

Bill Maher bets $1 million that Cain will not be the GOP nominee

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/dailycaller/20111015/pl_dailycaller/donaldtrumptojoinmichelebachmannforteletownhall

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Saturday, October 15, 2011

CSN video: Ripping BoSox over Francona

Boston Red Sox Video | Comcast SportsNet - CSNNE.com

To view this site, you need to have Flash Player 9.0.115 or later installed. Click here to get the latest Flash player.

', friendSelectorUIConfig:'

', cid:'csnne_261', onSigninClick: function(eventObj) {ugcPopup('div:pflog~module:login_block~function:AJAX_login_block_gigya~w:auto');}, onRegisterClick: function(eventObj) {ugcPopup('div:pflog~module:login_block~function:gigya_csn_new_pop~w:auto');} }; setTimeout("gigya.services.socialize.showFeedUI(conf,v11_right_generic_24_gigyaParams)",400);

Source: http://www.csnne.com/pages/redsoxvideo?PID=uvXM2-gTkB0DfeUnXkjZDUXCoBjVOXaqPMTtE5

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Could Beyoncé Get in Trouble for Stealing Dance Moves?

Yes, but it depends on what you mean by dance. A whole work of set choreography?for example, Balanchine?s Swan Lake?is covered under intellectual copyright law and can certainly be stolen, but only if it meets three legal requirements: First, it must represent ?the composition and arrangement of dance movements and patterns usually intended to be accompanied by music?; second, it must be provably original (and not just a performance of someone else?s work); and third, it must exist in a fixed and tangible form. To satisfy this last requirement, dances are usually recorded on film or translated into some form of written notation. If a dance work passes these tests, then its ownership can be claimed by the original choreographer, the company that performed it, the organization that commissioned it, or anyone else who has an appropriate claim given the nature of its creation.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=f781bcc1a72485b48e9533dae6846dbf

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Gartner: Lenovo Replaces Dell As No. 2 PC Maker, HP Still On Top And Growing

hp-number-1What's that noise about living in a post-PC era? The personal computer market is actually growing per a new preliminary Gartner report. The research company found third quarter PC shipments as a whole are up 3.2% over the same period in 2010, totaling 91.8 million units. This number is slightly less than Gartner's earlier projections and the Western European market is partly to blame. But save Acer and Dell, computer manufacturers increased shipments from a year ago and Lenovo, thanks to several acquisitions and partnerships, overtook Dell and now trails just HP in the worldwide PC marketshare pie.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/rnJZHbkjZq0/

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US loosens strictures on traveling to Cuba

Despite its location 90 miles off the shores of Florida, Cuba remains, in the eyes of many Americans, one of the last great travel mysteries. Since 1961, when the U.S. government instituted a de facto Cuban travel ban, visits to the country by U.S. nationals have been problematic, if not impossible. American travelers without legal means of visiting the island have been compelled to choose other destinations or circumvent U.S. law by traveling via a third country.

Recent moves have widened the goalposts significantly. Since 2009, Cuban-Americans on family visits, plus any other interested parties traveling with a valid license, have been able to take advantage of less stringent Cuban travel restrictions when planning sorties to one of the world?s most unique, stoic and culturally vibrant societies. In January 2011, the license process became a lot easier with the re-introduction of government-sanctioned people-to-people trips that were discontinued in 2003.

But, before you iron the creases out of your guayabera shirt and get ready to reacquaint yourself with mambo dancing, Guantanameras and real cigars, it is important to do some pre-trip homework. To travel legally to Cuba, U.S. citizens must first be in possession of a valid license. The U.S. Department of the Treasury currently issues two types of license ? "general" and "specific" ? catering largely to academic institutions, religious organizations, journalists and people engaged in humanitarian work. "Specific" licenses must be applied for in writing and are dealt with on a case by case basis. Check the Treasury website to see if you qualify.

The recently reintroduced people-to-people program reflects efforts by the U.S. government to engage U.S. citizens in "purposeful travel" to Cuba by bringing them into contact with ordinary Cubans in the hope of bolstering trust and mutual understanding between the two countries. On these trips, authorized agents handle the license paperwork, leaving participants with fewer legal worries and more downtime to enjoy organized excursions in a similar way to vacationers from Canada and Europe.

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Story: Florida's Key West to offer Cuba flights

Already this year, the U.S. Treasury department has issued licenses to 35 travel companies to organize people-to-people trips, including travel pioneers Insight Cuba which first ran excursions to the country during the Clinton era and returned in September 2011 after an enforced seven-year hiatus. Insight?s guided trips focus on art, music, history and the outdoors, and prices start at around $3000 for seven-night itineraries.

Another recent development has been the introduction of more charter flights serving Cuba from the U.S. Prior to January 2011, only three U.S. airports (New York City, Los Angeles and Miami) ran regular Cuba charters, but in the last few months several new airports (including Chicago and Atlanta) have added authorized flights for licensed travelers.

Story: New Orleans airport approved for Cuba air service

To minimize disruption in a country which has no formal diplomatic relations with the U.S., various specialist organizations have grown up to smooth the way for first-time Cuba travelers seeking guidance and advice. One of the oldest and most trusted is Marazul, a travel agency founded in 1979 that helps both individuals and groups with license inquiries, flight bookings, hotel reservations and in-country transportation.

One of the most complicated issues for U.S. travelers in Cuba is money. U.S.-issued credit and debit cards are not accepted by Cuban banks and changing U.S. dollars incurs a 10 percent commission. Consequently, it is advisable to change sufficient cash funds into Canadian dollars or euros prior to your visit and store your money in a money belt and/or hotel safe-deposit box when in-country. Furthermore, licensed travelers are restricted to a State Department spending allowance set at $179 per day since 2008.

For most visitors the hassle of reaching Cuba is well worth it. Castro?s withered time-capsule promises to be like nowhere else you?ve ever visited: economically poor but culturally rich; visibly mildewed but architecturally magnificent; infuriating but at the same time strangely uplifting. Even better, most Americans are surprised to find that ordinary Cubans bear them no animosity. You will be welcomed with open arms ? and by some of the best music on the planet.

This story, US to Cuba travel: widening the goalposts, originally appeared on LonelyPlanet.com.

More from Lonely Planet

? 2011 Lonely Planet Publications Pty Ltd.? All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44862469/ns/travel-news/

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Friday, October 14, 2011

Conn. man convicted in deadly home invasion

A man was convicted Thursday of murdering a woman and her two daughters in a gruesome 2007 home invasion in which family members were tied up, molested, doused in gas and left to die in a fire. He now faces a possible death sentence.

Joshua Komisarjevsky, whose accomplice is already on Connecticut's death row, stood and faced the jury as they declared him guilty of all 17 charges he faced, including capital felony killing, kidnapping and sexual assault. After the verdict was read he sat back in his chair, rocked slightly back and forth and glanced briefly at the jury. He yawned as he was led out of the courtroom.

The only survivor of the attack, Dr. William Petit, bit his lip at times and closed his eyes as the verdict was read.

"I thought from the beginning that he was a lying sociopathic personality and probably at this moment he doesn't think he is guilty of anything," he told reporters outside the courthouse.

The New Haven Superior Court jury deliberated for about eight hours over two before delivering a verdict and will later decide whether Komisarjevsky should be executed or sentenced to life in prison.

The New Haven Superior Court jury deliberated for about eight hours over two days before delivering a verdict and will decide later whether Komisarjevsky, 31, should be executed or sentenced to life in prison. The penalty phase will conclude the second and final trial in a case that unsettled suburb dwellers across the country and bolstered efforts to retain the death penalty in Connecticut.

Story: Police release home invasion suspect's confession

Komisarjevsky's co-defendant, Steven Hayes, was sentenced to death last year after he was convicted of raping and strangling Jennifer Hawke-Petit and killing her daughters, 11-year-old Michaela and 17-year-old Hayley, who died of smoke inhalation.

The two paroled burglars spotted Hawke-Petit and her youngest daughter at a grocery store on July 22, 2007, and followed them back to the house where they beat Petit with a baseball bat and tied up his wife and daughters. The night of terror drew comparisons to Truman Capote's "In Cold Blood," which documented the brutal murders of a farmer and members of his family.

Hayes forced Hawke-Petit to withdraw money from a bank before he raped and strangled her in the family's home.

The girls, who had pillowcases placed over their heads, died after the house was doused with gas and set on fire.

During more than two weeks of testimony, prosecutors played an audiotaped confession in which Komisarjevsky spoke matter-of-factly and laughed occasionally. He admitted beating Petit and molesting his younger daughter and taking photos of her, but insisted Hayes wanted to kill the family because he was worried about his DNA at the scene.

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Prosecutor Gary Nicholson said in his closing argument that Komisarjevsky was motivated not just by money but by his interest in 11-year-old Michaela. He was convicted of sexually assaulting her.

"Michaela Petit, he was interested in her from the moment he saw her," Nicholson said.

Petit said he always felt the case was partly about sexual predation upon women, and the focus on Michaela made Komisarjevsky's trial particularly difficult.

"I thought a thousand times what would have been different if I had two sons instead of two daughters," he said.

He said he was sickened by claims Komisarjevksy made in his confession to police that he had a kind of connection with Michaela.

"She was incredibly shy around men," Petit said. "To hear a statement that they locked eyes and there was some kind of bond was really nauseating and beyond the pale."

Komisarjevsky said Hayes poured the gas and lit the fire, but test results showed he had gas on his clothes. They also showed the girl he molested had bleach on her clothes, undermining his claim that only Hayes was worried about DNA.

Story: Doctor: Home invasion victim took minutes to die

Jurors saw grim evidence, including charred beds, rope used to tie up the family and autopsy photos. Gas was poured on Hayley's bed and on her sister, according to testimony. Jurors also heard testimony that Hayley likely took up to several minutes to die and it was unclear if burns found on her body occurred before or after she died.

William Petit left the courtroom for some parts of the testimony but took the stand to describe how he fell, crawled and rolled in his frantic escape to a neighbor's house to get help.

Attorneys for Komisarjevsky said he never intended to kill anyone. They played a part of Komisarjevsky's confession in which he claims he told Hayes, "No one is dying by my hand today."

One of the attorneys, Walter Bansley III, said the defense hopes the verdict helps the family with their pain. He said they have confidence in the jury system as they shift their attention to sparing their client from the death penalty.

"We have no doubt the jury will view the evidence with compassion and mercy," he said.

Komisarjevsky was sexually abused as a child and suffered multiple concussions and later turned to drugs, according to defense lawyers. A psychologist hired by the defense said that history increased his likelihood of criminal activity ? an argument defense lawyers are likely to stress during the penalty phase, which is set for Oct. 24.

Connecticut's death penalty has only been implemented once in the past 51 years, when serial killer Michael Ross was executed in 2005.

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Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44894512/ns/us_news-crime_and_courts/

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