সোমবার, ৩১ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

UFC 137 on tap: Odds update and final picks from Iole, Cofield and Trigg

Listen above to Frank Trigg and Kevin Iole analyze UFC 137 shortly after the weigh-in.

Before the fights, Iole joined me on Skype to breakdown the big fights.

UFC 137 betting odds:

Top plays in bold

Nick Diaz (+105) vs. B.J. Penn (-125) - Welterweight

Cheick Kongo (+110) vs. Matt Mitrione (-130) - Heavyweight

Mirko "Cro Cop" Filipovic (+175) vs. Roy Nelson (-220) - Heavyweight

Hatsu Hioki (-335) vs. George Roop (+275) - Featherweight

Jeff Curran (+375) vs. Scott Jorgensen (-550) - Featherweight

Donald Cerrone (-325) vs. Dennis Siver (+250) - Lightweight

Tyson Griffin (-320) vs. Bart Palaszewski (+260) - Featherweight

Eliot Marshall (+325) vs. Brandon Vera (-400) - Light heavyweight

Danny Downes (+150) vs. Ramsey Nijem (-180) - Lightweight

Chris Camozzi (-130) vs. Francis Carmont (+110) - Middleweight

Dustin Jacoby (-125) vs. Clifford Starks (-105) - Middleweight

Watch UFC 137 right here on Yahoo! Sports

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/mma/blog/cagewriter/post/UFC-137-on-tap-Odds-update-and-final-picks-from?urn=mma-wp8690

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Ask the Commenters Roundup [Hive Mind]

Oct 30, 2011 2:00 PM 2,508 2
  • How do you study? For me it depends on the subject being studied... whether it is just memorization, reading, or practice.
  • I'd like to record some audio on my computer, primarily people talking like an interview or 'Star Trek Personal Log Stardate...." or podcast. The problem is I need a program to do the actual recording and saving. A little bit of simple editing would be nice as well. Can anyone recommend one to me?
  • Anyone know how I could set up a NAS at a friend's house, and allow my computers to back up to it?
  • Maybe I'm just an idiot, but is there a way to set up Android sync so that only Calendar automatically updates?
  • My dream is to have everything on my NAS and be able to watch/listen on all of my devices both on an off my home network. I realize I may need to do some converting of the movie files. I just don't know what format would be best for all devices (or maybe there's not?)
  • How can I download an Ubuntu file on my work computer (Windows 7, if that matters), transfer it to my thumb drive, and then install it in the Ubuntu partition of my home computer?
  • My parents need a new monitor for their computer, but 1920x1080 (which seems to be all monitors sold nowadays) is too high a resolution for them. I know that if you scale down the resolution from native it creates blur, so what are people with bad eyes to do??
  • I need a really simple budget/money tracking app for iOS. I've looked at some of the "budget" apps in the App Store but I'm not sure what to try, really. Any suggestions?
  • Does anyone else have an issue with Lifehacker on Chrome where links for the site are not clickable?
  • Does anybody have any experience with a single serve hot beverage maker? I think it would be a great gift for my wife, since she's the only one in the house that drinks coffee or tea.
    Are they terrible?
Related Stories

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/Bt4rMxzTfqc/ask-the-commenters-roundup

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Man dies after being pulled into industrial dryer (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? A worker at a uniform cleaning company in Louisville, Kentucky died on Friday after he was pulled into an industrial dryer, police said.

The worker died from blunt force trauma to his body, Louisville police Lieutenant Barry Wilkerson said in an interview on WLKY, a local television station.

"It appears safety mechanisms were not in place, and it appears the dryer did start, which actually pulled him into the dryer," Wilkerson said.

"It does appear to be an industrial accident."

Cintas Corp, which owned the uniform rental facility where the man worked, issued a statement saying: "Cintas is devastated to have learned about the accident that took the life of one of our employee-partners."

"A thorough investigation has begun to determine the cause of this accident," Cintas said.

(Reporting by Roy Strom: Editing by Mary Wisniewski and Greg McCune)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111029/us_nm/us_dryer_death

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রবিবার, ৩০ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

NY sculptor seeks home for terror victims tribute (AP)

GARDEN CITY, N.Y. ? After her son, Alexander, was killed along with 269 others in the 1988 Libyan bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, artist Suse Lowenstein spent the next 15 years capturing the anguish of women whose relatives died in the terrorist attack.

Having experienced the grief herself, she created 76 larger-than-life-sized figures of nude women grimacing, tearing at their hair, crying in rage or collapsed in agony at the moment they learned of their loved one's loss.

Lowenstein, who lives in Montauk, N.Y., on the far eastern tip of Long Island, has the massive sculpture, called "Dark Elegy," on display in her backyard garden. Visitors, including children on school trips, stop to visit from time to time. But she yearns for her artwork to have a more public home.

The Germany-born artist and her husband received $10 million from Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi's government as compensation for their son's death. She said she's willing to use it to cast the sculpture ? now made of synthetic stone over a welded steel armature ? into bronze so it can be shared with the world. She estimates it would cost about $4 million to bronze the artwork, which is about 65 feet in diameter.

"It just needs a home," she said this week. "These are the actual victims of terrorism, created by someone who was part of it. I am not someone looking into their grief. I am in it."

Gadhafi was killed two weeks ago, apparently by revolutionary forces, two months after being ousted following 42 years in power, and Lowenstein confessed she was surprised she wasn't more emotional when she learned of his death.

"I was very glad that it was his own people who took care of it," she said. "I think it was a very appropriate end for him."

In 2008, Lowenstein sought to have the sculpture placed in Washington as a memorial to victims of all types of terrorism. But an advisory board overseeing memorials there unanimously rejected the idea; commission members unanimously said they feared the nude statues might offend some people's sensibilities, invite coarse vandalism and might be too specific to Lockerbie.

"It was very sad that any individual felt that it would be lewd," Lowenstein said. "It's not sexually explicit. It's just not there."

The figures, she insisted, are intentionally unclothed.

"When terrorism strikes and it kills your son, or your husband or your wife, everyone is stripped truly to the same level. There is no skin color; there are no rich people or poor people. All people are stripped to the same level of humanity," Lowenstein explained.

She said when schoolchildren visit and see the nudes, there is a bit of nervous laughter at first. "But as soon as we explain the meaning, they absolutely understand."

The idea for the sculpture grew out of meetings of Pan Am 103 survivors following the 1998 crash, Lowenstein said. "There was one woman who was always so dignified in grief. I asked if she would participate and she really liked the idea. Then another woman overheard us and wanted to join in. It dawned on me that it would be incredible to get as many people as possible to participate."

She declined to identify her models, seeking to protect their privacy.

"These were mothers, grandmothers and sisters; everyone was invited but only the women responded," she said.

She said that the men might have had a harder time showing their emotions and were more concerned with seeking justice.

"It was never my choice to make it just about women, but it turned out that way," she said.

Finally, on Sept. 11, 1991, Lowenstein decided to formally dedicate the still-unfinished sculpture as a memorial to terrorism. Ten years later to the day, of course, terrorist attacks killed thousands in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania.

"Little did I know on that day in 1991 how many more like me there would be," she said.

Lowenstein recalls her son Alexander, a 21-year-old English major at Syracuse University who was traveling home after a semester studying in London when he died. She remembers him as a "very `sunshiney' kid, a very positive young man." She said he enjoyed surfing in his seaside community in Montauk. "He was always in the water."

Only after his death did she learn that he had worked as a volunteer delivering food to the elderly and that he had decided while in London to study psychology.

"He had a gift with young people; they had no trouble opening up to him. He was a good listener," she said.

A few weeks before he was to return home, Lowenstein said she felt she needed to see her son, so she packed a suitcase and spent "an incredible week" seeing the sights of London, visiting theaters and a museum. Finally, she took him to her hometown of Hamburg and introduced him to relatives.

They parted at the airport in Hamburg. He returned to London and she came home to New York.

"He was dead a week later," she said.

Her memorial sculpture has been displayed temporarily on Long Island, in New Jersey and at her son's alma mater in Syracuse, but Lowenstein longs for it to find a permanent home. Her preference is New York City "because it is such an international place and this would be an international statement," but she understands there is much bureaucracy to overcome. She declined to be specific on discussions she has had on finding a permanent site, but emphasized she would finance whatever costs associated with placing it somewhere.

The city's parks already have more than 1,000 monuments, including commemorative tablets, historic markers, decorative fountains, memorial flagstaffs, statuary and architectural ornament, according to the parks department. Most were donated to the city. Artists must go through a thorough approval process, starting first with the parks department. Then an art commission reviews all projects and grants approval or disapproval.

Factors including the appropriateness of the subject, the compatibility with the landscape, aesthetic merit, as well as safety and maintenance are considered before approval. No trademarked or commercially licensed displays are permitted.

"Any sculptor would love to have their work on display in the New York City area, so I understand that this can be a difficult thing to accomplish," Lowenstein said. "We're looking for a public site in which all people have access. This sculpture is universal. It needs no language. My hope is to find such a place."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/terrorism/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111030/ap_on_re_us/us_terrorism_victims_memorial

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Owners Insurance coverage ? Ceaselessly Asked Questions And ...

It would happen that you?re a new home-owner and need to insure your home however do not learn about Homeowners insurance. You would possibly take advice of an insurance coverage broker, but at the similar time you also needs to have some elementary data as well.

Here are some incessantly requested questions and their solutions which may give you some tips about Owners Insurance.

Q.1 How can I find the appropriate householders insurance?

Reply: Internet is the best option to get the right homeowners insurance. You could find on-line owners insurance quote and might make a comparative examine to get the very best deal.

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Reply: To find a proper dwelling insurance charge you should shop around. You?re really useful to contact all local insurance coverage brokers or brokers to know their norms and terms relating to their space of coverage. You can even request for an internet home insurance coverage quote. A comparability of all collected info will aid you great to search out greatest homeowners insurance coverage rates.

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Answer: A number of the house insurance coverage companies are related to security companies. In the event you install in your house trendy safety amenities like burglar alarms, home video digital camera, hearth alarms and deck-bolt locks to assure further security, the insurance companies offers you discount on the house insurance rates.

Q 4. How smoking is said with premiums?

Answer: Smoking is the one of the essential causes for residential fires. If all the members of the family are non-people who smoke then some insurance companies provide to reduce premiums.

Q 5. Can I get discount, if I?m pensioner?

Reply: Yes, in fact you can. Some dwelling insurance coverage corporations present low cost for senior citizens of the country. In case your age is more than fifty five and you are a pensioner, then you might be qualified for a discount of 10 to 15 percent.

Q 6. Can buying more than one insurance coverage policy from the identical firm assist me?

Reply: Buying householders insurance coverage coverage and auto coverage from the same insurance will certainly aid you getting low price insurance.

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Source: http://seening.org/owners-insurance-coverage-ceaselessly-asked-questions-and-solutions.aspx

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PFT: Choice cut by 'Boys 6 days after start

Green Bay Packers v Minnesota VikingsGetty Images

We?re trying to look in-depth at every team during their bye week.

The Bears, Jets, Bucs, and Raiders got the treatment earlier this week. Now up: The Packers.

Better than the champs

The Packers offense is better than it was during their Super Bowl season. To put it more precisely: The Packers? 2010 playoff offense has carried over into the 2011 regular season.

Pete Doughtery of the Green Bay Press-Gazette?asked the question?of?the Packers season this week. Do Green Bay?s defense issues matter when the offense is this ridiculous? ?The answer so far is no.

Rodgers easily the MVP?

It?s early, but Aaron Rodgers has been the best player in the league. ?He?s throwing for 9.9 yards-per-attempt. That would tie Kurt Warner for the highest number since the 1950?s. ?Rodgers? accuracy, decision-making, and play-making under duress has been epic.

Yes, the schedule set up well for Green Bay early. Few teams faced an easier early slate. But Rodgers is having a historical season.

More weapons

Jermichael Finley is healthy and catching touchdowns. It says a lot about this offense that Rodgers doesn?t need Finley to be a huge factor each week. ?Jordy Nelson consolidated his playoff success; he?s on pace for 1,000 yards. Randall Cobb isn?t a consistent threat, but he brings a new dimension to the offense. ?Greg Jennings and James Jones are who they have always been.

This is simply a better group than a year ago. Only the Saints have scored more points. ?Almost all the receivers are in their prime and know Mike McCarthy?s system well. Donald Driver?s decline barely matters; he?s the fourth or fifth wideout.

Line has held up

There were concerns in the preseason about the offensive line, but it has held up fairly well despite tackle Chad Clifton?s injury. Marshall Newhouse played well on the left side until facing the Vikings. The interior is strong. There may not be a better guard-center combo in the league than Scott Wells and Josh Sitton. Bryan Bulaga has continued to develop at right tackle.

More of the same from run game

This is not a great running team, but they aren?t as bad as the numbers indicate. The Packers rank 26th in yards?per-carry at 3.8. They were 25th last year. ?But the two key runners are better than that.

James Starks is at 4.5 yards-per-carry and Ryan Grant is at 4.0. Grant isn?t quite his old self and Starks could be more consistent, but it?s not a terrible group. Starks impressively closed out the win over Minnesota.

Defense takes step back

Green Bay?s defense gives up a lot of yards, but they rank tenth in points allowed. Points matter, not yards. ?The Packers are a good red zone defense team. They could stand to get better play from some of their young core cuys.

Clay Matthews has been good so far, but not to his 2010 level. ?The same is true for B.J. Raji. Tramon Williams hasn?t been 100%. Get that trio playing at a higher level, and the Packers defense could surge late in the year like in 2010. So far they have been ordinary.

Schedule gets much tougher

The Packers have benefited from one of the easiest schedules in the league. It gets tougher with road dates against the Chargers, Chiefs, Lions, and Giants. ?The Packers only face one team the rest of the way that currently has a losing record.

An undefeated season is very unlikely, but something around 14-2 sounds about right. That would result in the No. 1 seed in the NFC, a great spot from which to try to win another championship.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/10/29/cowboys-cut-tashard-choice/related/

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শনিবার, ২৯ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

HP Pavilion dm4-2180us (Office Depot)


The HP Pavilion dm4-2180us ($799 list at Office Depot), a mainstream laptop, will last you seven hours when you're on the road. Its Intel Core i5 CPU and 6GB of RAM are a powerful combination; whether your work involves day-to-day office tasks or something as strenuous as photo editing, the dm4-2180us has you covered. But there are other laptops out there that have more features and better performance for the price.

Design
The dm4-2180us's steel grey aluminum chassis has a brushed lid, like the Samsung QX411-W01 ($799.99 list, 4 stars). The design adds sophistication to what would otherwise be a metallic brick. The dm4-2180us weighs 4.33 pounds, which puts it on the lighter side of other 14-inch laptops. It's lighter than the Asus U46E-BAL6 ($899.99 list, 4 stars) (4.9 pounds), Samsung QX411-W01 (5.11 pounds), and Toshiba Satellite L745-S4210 ($639.99 list, 3.5 stars) (4.5 pounds).

The 14-inch widescreen has standard 1,366-by-768 resolution, which amounts to 720p HD viewing for online videos and downloaded content. The chiclet keyboard is full-size, but with a shortened Shift key to make room for the arrow buttons. As far as typing experiences go, it's no Lenovo ThinkPad (one of the best typing experiences around), but it will satisfy. The multi-touchpad has a light textured finish, and the right and left mouse buttons were easy to click.

Features
The dm4-2180us has an impressive offering of features, considering the price. It comes with the standard ports: three USB 2.0, HDMI and VGA video, audio and mic jacks, Ethernet, and SD/MMC card reader. The standout features are a fingerprint reader, which will serve to further protect your data from possible intruders, and WiDi 2.0, which is a wireless solution you can use to stream 1080p HD content from your laptop to your HDTV (provided that you have a Netgear Push2TV receiver, a $99 option). The Asus U46E-BAL5 also has WiDi 2.0 as well as a faster USB 3.0 port and WiMAX, a 3G mobile broadband technology that will keep road warriors connected wherever they are. The dm4-2180us may not have WiMAX, but it does include 802.11n Wi-Fi, as well as a DVD-RW drive.

The dm4-2180us has a 640GB, 5,400rpm hard drive, which is the second largest hard drive you could hope to have in this category and at this price. However, the Asus U46E-BAL6 has it beat, providing 750GB of storage space. That said, 640GB should be enough to store a music library, documents, and any other downloadable content you might want to hoard away?only the most enthusiastic downloaders will require more space.

There's some bloatware on the drive, namely a few of HP's own proprietary programs. But with the bloatware comes some useful programs, which includes a free version of Microsoft Office (with ads), Adobe Photoshop Elements 9, and Adobe Premiere Elements 9.

Buyers wanting more peace of mind may want to take advantage of Office Depot's several extended protection and service plans. Their basic two-year protection plan ($169.99) extends this warranty for another year, and includes 24/7 tech support. Adding premium coverage for drops and spills, and extending battery coverage for a second year costs $259.99, and a four-year plan, offering all of the same warranty and accident coverage, including 24/7 tech support, can be had for $349.99.

Performance
HP Pavilion dm4-2180us (Office Depot) With its 2.4GHz Intel Core i5-2430M CPU and 6GB of RAM, the dm4-2180us made quick work of media benchmark tests, like our Handbrake video encoder (1 minute 49 seconds) and Photoshop CS5 (4:03). It beat out the Asus U46E-BAL5 (1:53 on Handbrake; 4:10 on CS5) and Dell Inspiron 14z (Core i5) ($750 direct, 4 stars) (1:58 on Handbrake; 4:10 on CS5) by insignificant margins on both tests.

I saw similar results on our PCMark 7 test of day-to-day tasks. The dm4-2180us (2,316) scored 105 points higher than the Asus U46E-BAL5 (2,215) and beat out the Dell Inspiron 14z by a slim margin (2,308)?again not a huge difference. Both systems will be able to open applications and browse the Web equally as fast.

Because the dm4-2180us is equipped with Intel integrated graphics, it's not going to give you much in the way of gaming performance. Its 21 frame per second (fps) score on Crysis (DirectX 10) alone indicates that this system isn't going to the Steam market. However, it will lend itself to some less-intensive titles, like Team Fortress 2, World of Warcraft, and Limbo. If you're looking for a machine that can handle more advanced titles, you might have to go for something much more expensive and geared toward gaming, like the Alienware M11xr3 ($1,099 direct, 4 stars).

Battery performance was solid; the dm4-2180us's 55Wh, 6-cell battery lasted 7 hours 50 minutes on our MobileMark 2007 test. It lasted 31 minutes more than the Asus U46E-BAL5's 74WH battery, but couldn't beat out the 8:38 garnered by the Dell Inspiron 14z (Core i5) (65Wh).

The HP Pavilion dm4-2180us is a great all-around performer and has added features, like a fingerprint reader and WiDi 2.0 that make it well worth its price. However, the Asus U46E-BAL5 has more to give? and not only in hard drive space. Travelers will get much needed use out of the WiMAX broadband on the Asus, and USB 3.0 will help transferring data at faster speeds than USB 2.0 can offer. But if you have no use for advanced wireless features, then the Editors' Choice Dell Inspiron 14z has a backlit keyboard, USB 3.0, and a battery life that's hard to beat.

BENCHMARK TEST RESULTS:

COMPARISON TABLE
Compare the HP Pavilion dm4-2180us with several other laptops side by side.

More laptop reviews:
??? Asus K53E-RBR4
??? HP Pavilion dm4-2180us (Office Depot)
??? HP Pavilion dv6-6173cl
??? HP Pavilion dv6-6123cl
??? HP Pavilion dv6-6163cl
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/3lXkHkTsX6k/0,2817,2395375,00.asp

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Report says security improved in Afghanistan (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Despite improvements to security in Afghanistan, militants operating from safe havens in Pakistan and chronic problems with the Kabul government pose significant risks to a "durable, stable Afghanistan," according to a Pentagon progress report released Friday.

More than a decade since the Sept. 11 terror attacks and the start of the Afghan war, the U.S. and its allies have reversed violent trends in much of the country and the transition to Afghans taking charge of security has begun in seven key areas, including major cities such as Kabul and Herat.

"Security gains during (the past six months) have provided a firm foundation for the transition of security responsibilities to the Afghan government" and its security forces, the report said.

However, cross-border attacks have increased in recent months due to insurgents' safe havens in Pakistan and the support they received from within its borders.

"The insurgency remains resilient and, enabled by Pakistani safe havens, continues to contest" Afghan security forces throughout the country, especially in the east, according to the semi-annual report sent to Congress.

The report also identified chronic problems with the Afghan government, including widespread corruption, delays in reforms and political disputes, as obstacles to U.S. and coalition efforts to get Kabul to take over security for the country.

The Unites States has some 100,000 troops in Afghanistan and plans to bring most forces home by the end of 2014. President Barack Obama announced this past summer that 10,000 troops will be redeployed by the end of the year. The 33,000 troops that Obama sent as a surge force will be out by the end of September 2012, leaving about 68,000 troops.

"Transition remains on track with no demonstrated effort by the insurgency to target the process," the report said.

Overall, the report gives a more upbeat assessment of the military strategy and its future prospects. For the first time in several years, the report does not describe the progress in Afghanistan as "fragile and reversible" ? an omission that a senior defense official said Friday was deliberate.

Instead, the report focused on the continuing risk areas, such as the safe havens in Pakistan and weak governing in Kabul.

The defense official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not allowed to speak publically on the issue, said that U.S. and coalition forces will be turning more attention to the eastern border region. But the official could provide no details on what that would look like, or if it will mean a substantial shift in U.S. troops to the embattled region.

The latest progress report ? the last one was in April ? strikes a more critical tone than previous Pentagon reports about Pakistan's failure to crack down on safe havens for militants along the border with Afghanistan, arguing that these havens enable insurgents considered the greatest threat to American troops.

The report said the relationship between Afghanistan and Pakistan had improved early on, but several events severely strained those ties. Most notably was the May 2 U.S. raid deep inside Pakistan that led to the death of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden.

Cross-border attacks diminished in August, but high-profile attacks in September, including the assault on the U.S. embassy in Kabul, were a significant setback.

The report said these attacks "were carried out by the Haqqani network and directly enabled by Pakistani safe haven and support."

U.S. Army Lt. Gen. Curtis Scaparrotti, who directs day-to-day military operations in Afghanistan, told reporters on Thursday that the attacks are about four times more frequent than they had been in the past year.

The United States in recent weeks has stepped up criticism of Pakistan and its counterterrorism cooperation but has at the same time sought to cajole the increasingly angry and resistant Pakistanis into doing more. As tensions rose between Washington and Islamabad, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton delivered an unusually blunt warning to the Pakistanis, saying during a visit to Kabul last week that they "must be part of the solution" to the Afghan conflict.

Clinton said the Obama administration expects the Pakistani government, military and intelligence services to "take the lead" in not only fighting insurgents based in Pakistan but also in encouraging Afghan militants to reconcile with Afghan society. She said the U.S. would go it alone if Pakistan chose not to heed the call.

After leaving Kabul, Clinton made the same points to Pakistani officials in Islamabad, where she led a high-level U.S. team, including CIA director David Petraeus, seeking to repair badly strained ties. Those meetings appear to have dulled the intensity of Pakistan's anger but there has not yet been any clear sign that the crisis is over.

Last month, then-Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Adm. Mike Mullen said the Haqqani network, which is affiliated with the Taliban and al-Qaida, "acts as a veritable arm" of Pakistan's intelligence agency. Mullen accused the network of staging an attack against the U.S. Embassy and NATO headquarters in Kabul on Sept. 13 as well as a truck bombing that wounded 77 American soldiers. He claimed Pakistan's spy agency helped the group.

___

Associated Press reporters Matthew Lee and Lolita C. Baldor contributed to this story.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111028/ap_on_go_co/us_us_afghanistan

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Video: Are high heels killing you?

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Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/45077010#45077010

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শুক্রবার, ২৮ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

Watch: Herman Cain Says States Should Control College Aid (ABC News)

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

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100 Years Ago: Marie Curie Wins 2nd Nobel Prize

Marie Sklodowska Curie Immortalized by her researches on radium. Image: Scientific American

From Scientific American, November 25, 1911, Volume 105

FEMINISM very nearly won a great victory in the French Academy of Sciences on January 23rd, 1911, when, in the election of a successor to the deceased academician Gernez, Marie Sklodowska Curie was defeated by two votes. At a joint meeting of the five academies which compose the Institut de France, a majority had opposed the admission of women, as contrary to tradition, but each academy was left to decide the question for itself.

The Academy of Fine Arts had a few women members long ago but the Academy of Sciences has never admitted a woman. It was, perhaps, the opposition of the anti-feminists that induced Mme. Curie to apply as a candidate for the chair in the section of physics left vacant by Gernez, and formerly occupied by her husband and collaborator, Pierre Curie. In the preliminary grading of candidates Mme. Curie was placed alone, in the first grade, while her competitors, five eminent men of science, were assigned to the second grade. Mme. Curie, however, received only 28 of the 65 votes (the Academy consists of 66 members), while 30 votes were cast for Edouard Branly. There were good reasons for this choice, entirely apart from considerations of sex. Branly is a physicist of world-wide celebrity who, unlike Mme. Curie, has received few honors and emoluments. He invented the coherer for the detection of electric waves and to him Marconi?s first wireless message was addressed. Many of the academicians naturally desired to recognize the very important part played by their compatriot in the development of wireless telegraphy. Moreover, Branly is sixty-four years old and this was his third candidacy, while Mme. Curie is only forty-three and had never before applied for admission. It is not customary to admit a candidate on the first application, and Mme. Curie?s chance of living until the next vacancy shall occur is greater than Branly?s.

Who is this remarkable woman who so nearly surmounted these formidable obstacles? The dry and formal account of herself and her work which she submitted with her application, according to custom, is perhaps more eloquent than an exhaustive biography. Marie Sklodowska was born in Warsaw November 7th, 1867. She became a student in the University of Paris where she attained the degrees of licentiate in physics in 1893 and licentiate in mathematics in 1894. In 1896 she received a certificate of fitness for the secondary instruction of girls, and in 1900 became lecturer in physics in the Ecole normale superieure for girls in Sevres. In 1903 she received the degree of doctor of physical science, in 1906 she became lecturer in general physics in the University of Paris, and in 1909 s he was promoted to the professorship of general physics, as successor to her lately deceased husband, Prof. Pierre Curie, to whom she was married in 1895.

She is an honorary or foreign member of the Royal Institution of Great Britain, the London Chemical Society, the American Philosophical Society, the American Chemical Society, the Imperial Academy of Sciences in St. Petersburg, the Royal Swedish Academy and other learned bodies, and has received the honorary title of Doctor from the universities of Geneva and Edinburgh. In 1898 Mme. Curie, then thirty-one years of age, received the Gegner prize from the French Academy of Sciences, nominally for her extensive researches relating to the magnetic properties of iron and steel, although the report of the awarding committee also alludes, in terms of the highest commendation, to the researches in radio-activity which she had already begun, in co-operation with her husband, and to their recent discovery of the radio-active element which Mme. Curie named Polonium, in honor of her native country.

The Gegner prize was awarded to Mme. Curie again in 1300, and a third time in 1902, together with the Berthelot medal. In 1903 the Nobel prize for physical science was awarded, half to Mons. and Mme. Curie and half to Henri Becquerel, whose discovery of the spontaneous radio-activity of uranium ore formed the basis of all subsequent researches in radio-activity. Only a few days ago we heard the news that Mme. Curie has been honored with the Nobel prize a second time, on this occasion in the division of chemistry. The list of medals and prizes which have been awarded to Mme. Curie in foreign countries is too long to quote.

In addition to the numerous researches in radioactivity which she made in collaboration with her husband, Mme. Curie has published a great many independent papers, and a volume, ?Investigations of Radio-active Substances,?; in which the results of their co-operative researches, including the epoch-making discovery of radium, are set forth.

Radium and polonium are not the only fruits of this ideal marriage, which was blessed by the birth of two children who already give evidence of inheriting the genius of their parents. After the shocking and untimely death of Pierre Curie, who was killed by a truck on a Paris bridge, in 1906, at the age of fifty-seven, a large majority of his colleagues recommended to the ministry of public instruction the appointment of his widow and coadjutor as his successor. The result is that this gifted woman, the only one of her sex who has ever received this high honor, is now a full professor in the venerable Sorbonne.

All who have seen Mme. Curie at work in her laboratory, or have listened to her lectures, have been impressed by her undemonstrative zeal, her abstraction from external disturbances and her aversion to sensational effects.

The early life of Marie Sklodowska Curie is less well-known to the general public than the later phase, in which she has become famous. And yet there is a peculiar romantic, and indeed pathetic interest attached to the incidents of her youth. Her father was a distinguished physicist, and professor of chemistry at Warsaw, Poland. Her mother died when the child was yet quite young. Marie grew up in her father?s laboratory, imbibing the spirit of scientific research, and acquiring that sureness of eye and skill of hand which is so indispensable to the worker in experimental science. It is no doubt largely to her very early initiation into the technique of laboratory work that her extraordinary ability in this direction must be ascribed. Marie?s apprenticeship was, however, brought to a rather early close by the pressure of necessity. As the daughter of an impecunious college professor, the eighteen-year-old girl set out to earn her own living as governess to the daughters of a Russian nobleman. But Providence had destined her for another fate. In one of those agitations which have been so common in the history of Russia, a patriotic society of students at Warsaw was brought under the scrutiny of the ever-suspicious government, and for fear of being compelled to testify against some of her father?s pupils, Marie migrated from her home country and took up her abode in Paris. There she lived for a time a life of the utmost privation. Her repeated efforts to obtain employment in one of the laboratories seemed to avail her nothing. Finally she was allowed to perform some of the trivial offices in connection with the preparation of laboratory experiments. And once this meager foothold was gained, it was but a matter of days before the extraordinary faculties of the new assistant had attracted the attention and caused the amazement of the head of the department, Prof. Lippmann. The eminent scientist befriended the girl, and incidentally also introduced her to one of his most promising pupils, Pierre Curie, with whom she became associated in research, and later, in the bonds of wedlock. It was she who fanned to new endeavor the fagging spirits of her husband, in those moments of discouragement which are apt to come to all engaged in intense scientific research. And together they gained the undying trophies of fame, when, with the isolation of radium salts, the name of Curie suddenly rose to international renown. And then, not many years later, fell that terrible blow, separating the two who together had faced the hardships of everyday life, and in strangely perfect union had toiled, against much discouragement, to reap the precious harvest of scientific research. While crossing the street Prof.. Curie tripped and fell, and was instantly killed by a passing truck. Thus in an evil hour France was bereft of one of her greatest physicists, the world of a genius, and Madame Curie If her life companion and husband. Her composure, upon receiving the terrible news, is commented upon by the Gaulois: ?Nothing could have been more characteristic of the wonderful Madame Curie, than the coolness with which she received the news of her bereavement. There were no tears, no traces of grief. Over and over she repeated : ?Pierre is dead.??? One fee1s that here perhaps the Frenchman, with his demonstrative temperament, somewhat misjudges this great woman. The deepest emotions are not always those that can find their vent through the common channels of physical expression. To us there seems something infinitely pathetic in the monotonous repetition of that simple and sad formula, as the mind that with the insight of a genius has successfully grappled with some of the most abstruse problems presented to the science of to-day in the realm of inanimate matter, is brought face to face with the great problem of life and death. Here all men are on a level, and impartially fate has dealt to this great genius as to us all life?s share of human sorrow. Yet with unbroken spirit, and with renewed devotion she turns to continue now in loneliness, her great life work, her priceless gift to humanity.

One can not help reflecting on the retribution dealt by fate to the Eastern monarchy-that makes life unendurable to the scholar of independent thought-in taking from her the woman who would have added the brightest laurel to Russia?s wreath of scientific ?attainment.


Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=ac601c101e722ba31a48e17f9917700a

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Grim news on consumers, Europe boosts Treasurys (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Demand for Treasury securities rose sharply Tuesday after U.S. consumer sentiment weakened and talks to solve Europe's debt crisis appeared to splinter.

Consumers' views about the economy worsened in October to the lowest level since early 2009, when the U.S. was in a deep recession, the Conference Board said. Its index of consumer sentiment was the weakest since March 2009 and was much lower than analysts had expected.

European leaders appeared far from agreeing on a plan to prop up banks and prevent the crisis from spreading. A meeting among European finance ministers, planned for before a Wednesday summit, was canceled. Heads of European states still plan to convene late Wednesday, but it is not clear whether they will have a detailed agreement to present.

The price of the 10-year Treasury note rose 88 cents for every $100 invested, pushing its yield down to 2.14 percent at 3:07 p.m. Eastern time from 2.23 percent late Monday.

Treasurys have wavered in a narrow range for the past two weeks as traders awaited clearer signals about Europe's plans to stem its debt crisis. French and German leaders had promised a plan by month's end. They said last week that the plan would be unveiled Sunday. On Friday, the announcement was postponed until Wednesday.

During that time, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note remained between 2.09 percent and 2.28 percent. It stayed within that range during Tuesday's rally.

The latest delay made traders nervous that Europe's debt problems will spread into a wider financial crisis. They bought ultra-safe Treasurys and sold riskier investments, such as stocks, which could lose value more quickly if a crisis spread.

Bond yields fall when demand for them increases, pushing their prices higher. By paying higher prices, traders are agreeing to accept an even tinier return in exchange for holding an investment that is perceived as safe.

Separately Tuesday, a Treasury Department auction of two-year notes drew strong interest. The Treasury Department auctioned $35 billion in notes to yield 0.281 percent, compared to the 0.290 percent yield for two-year notes trading on the open market. That means traders' bids were higher than the market prices of similar investments.

The ratio of dollars bid to Treasurys sold was 3.64, compared to an average of 3.36 in the last four auctions, according to data from CRT Capital Group LLC. The higher bidding ratio also reflects strong interest in the auction.

The 30-year Treasury bond leaped $2.37 per $100 invested, pushing its yield down to 3.15 percent from 3.27 percent late Monday.

The yield on the 2-year Treasury note fell to 0.25 from 0.29 late Monday.

The yield on the three-month Treasury bill was unchanged at 0.01 percent. Its discount wasn't available.

____

Daniel Wagner can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/wagnerreports.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111025/ap_on_bi_ge/us_credit_markets

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Nokia Lumia 800 hands-on (video)

Oh, Nokia. Earth mother and founding father of the mobile industry. At last, we have your newest creation nestled amidst our clammy palms: a 3.7-inch slab of polycarbonate Windows Phone wonderment, fronted by a ClearBlack AMOLED display. Has that sweet breeze off the Nokianvirta River worked its special magic? Or is this just another Windows Phone? Well, first impressions are that it... feels just like an N9. Read on for our detailed impressions.

Continue reading Nokia Lumia 800 hands-on (video)

Nokia Lumia 800 hands-on (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Oct 2011 05:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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US, Swedish researchers crack 250-year-old cipher (AP)

LOS ANGELES ? Scientists in California and Sweden said they have used computer translation techniques to solve a 250-year-old mystery by deciphering a coded manuscript written for a secret society.

The University of Southern California announced Tuesday that researchers had broken the Copiale Cipher, a 105-page, 18th century document from Germany.

The handwritten, beautifully bound book didn't contain any sort of Da Vinci Code but rather a snapshot of the arcane rituals practiced by one of the many secret societies that flourished in the 1700s.

It also recorded rites for some apparent sects of Freemasonry that showed political leanings.

"This opens up a window for people who study the history of ideas and the history of secret societies," USC computer scientist Kevin Knight, who was on the deciphering team, said in a statement. "Historians believe that secret societies have had a role in revolutions, but all that is yet to be worked out, and a big part of the reason is because so many documents are enciphered."

The handwritten Copiale Cipher was discovered in East Berlin after the Cold War and is now in a private collection. Most of the book was written in a cipher of 90 characters that included abstract symbols and Roman and Greek letters.

Knight and Beata Megyesi and Christiane Schaefer of Sweden's Uppsala University went to work cracking it earlier this year. They used a computer program to automate a key code-breaking procedure ? tallying the frequency and grouping of the letters and symbols ? then automated the process of comparing the cipher to known languages.

It's a method used by many automated translation programs.

The researchers tried the Roman letters first, comparing them to some 80 languages.

"It took quite a long time and resulted in complete failure," Knight said.

Eventually, they determined that the abstract symbols, not the unaccented Roman letters, bore the message. The first words deciphered were German for "ceremonies of initiation" and "secret section."

The initiation rites were for an "ocular society" that used a lot of eye-based symbolism.

For example, a candidate was supposed to look at a blank piece of paper and be asked if he can see writing. If he answers no, he is given eyeglasses, tries again, and then his eyes are washed with a cloth.

"If nothing helps, he (the master of ceremonies) will announce that they have to proceed with the operation," which consists of plucking a hair from the candidate's eyebrow, according to the text.

Knight is working on cracking other ciphers, including one that San Francisco's Zodiac Killer used in messages to police during his spree; the last section of "Kryptos," a coded sculpture at CIA headquarters, and the Voynich Manuscript, a famous work from the 1400s.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/science/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111026/ap_on_sc/us_copiale_cipher

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Young, apparently healthy -- and at risk of heart disease: New study pinpoints hidden thickening of the arteries in young adults

ScienceDaily (Oct. 25, 2011) ? Atherosclerosis -- or buildup of fat in the walls of arteries ? is thought of as a disorder of older people but it affects a large number of young men and women, according to a new Heart and Stroke Foundation study.

"The proportion of young, apparently healthy adults who are presumably 'the picture of health' who already have atherosclerosis is staggering," says Dr. Eric Larose, an interventional cardiologist at the Institut universitaire de cardiologie et de pneumologie de Qu?bec and an assistant professor at Universit? Laval.

Atherosclerosis can eventually lead to serious problems including heart disease, stroke, or even death.

The study enrolled 168 young adults (age 18 to 35) -- half male and half female -- who had no known cardiovascular disease or risk factors such as family history of premature heart disease, diabetes, smoking, high blood cholesterol, or high blood pressure.

The team took complete body measurements, including height, weight, body-mass index and waist circumference. They also measured, through magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), various body fat deposits including subcutaneous fat (fat under the skin that you can measure with calipers) as well as fat within and around the abdomen and chest including the amount of intra-abdominal or visceral fat. Ultimately, they measured atherosclerosis volumes of the carotid arteries by MRI.

The researchers found that although a large proportion of subjects didn't have traditional risk factors for atherosclerosis, they did have discrete signs: greater waist circumference, and visceral fat covering the internal organs within the chest and abdomen. Visceral fat is difficult to detect because it surrounds the organs deep inside the body, unlike the fat under our skin than can be easily detected in the mirror or with a pinch of the fingers.

"We know obesity is a bad thing," says Dr. Larose "but we're dropping the ball on a large proportion of young adults who don't meet traditional measures of obesity such as weight and BMI."

He says their message is that beyond simple weight and BMI, measures of fat hidden within (visceral fat) are greater predictors of atherosclerosis. The people with greater visceral fat will have greater atherosclerosis, even if they are young and apparently healthy ? and could benefit from preventive lifestyle measures.

Dr. Larose adds thatdespite having normal weight and BMI, young adults with greater visceral fat have greater atherosclerosis burden, therefore greater risk for clinical events including heart attack and stroke in the long run. "We were encouraged to find that in this young and apparently healthy population, an easy way to measure risk in the doctor's office is through waist circumference," he says.

At any given BMI, an enlarged waist circumference measured with a simple tailor's ribbon was predictive of increased visceral adiposity and of premature atherosclerosis. The prediction of visceral adiposity and of atherosclerosis was almost as precise as by MRI.

Dr. Larose's study verifies earlier research that found that as many as 80 percent of young Americans killed in war or in car accidents had premature and subclinical (hidden) atherosclerosis.

The strength of the present findings is in measuring atherosclerosis in live individuals instead of waiting for an autopsy, and in finding a simple office-based solution in waist circumference.

These results may improve our ability to identify early individuals in need of more robust preventive support to slow the progression of their atherosclerosis.

Heart disease and stroke are leading causes of death in Canada, says Heart and Stroke Foundation spokesperson Dr. Beth Abramson. "Someone in this country dies from heart disease or stroke every seven minutes," she says. "The good news is that heart disease and stroke are largely preventable by undertaking heart healthy behavior."

She says that the results of this Canadian study form a critical piece of the puzzle. Many of us have risk factors for heart disease and stroke, even if they aren't immediately evident, and it is important to start early in preventing disease.

"You can think of it as a ticking time bomb inside your body that might explode later in life," says Dr. Abramson. "There is a lot you can do to defuse the explosion."

Dr. Abramson recommends that all Canadians follow a healthy diet, be physically active, know and control your blood pressure and cholesterol levels, maintain a healthy weight, be tobacco-free, reduce stress, manage diabetes and limit alcohol consumption. She says that Canadians can ask their healthcare providers to help them reach their goals.

"My message to young adults is that you are not superhuman, you're not immune to risk factors," says Dr. Abramson. "It's important to manage your risk factors at all ages. Lifestyle will eventual catch up with you. You are never too young to prevent heart disease."

The study was presented today at the Canadian Cardiovascular Congress 2011, co-hosted by the Heart and Stroke Foundation and the Canadian Cardiovascular Society.

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Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/10/111025091636.htm

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Obama to promote new steps to make it easier for homeowners to refinance, avoid foreclosure (Star Tribune)

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Wall Street advances on Caterpillar results, M&A (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) ? Stocks rose on Monday, adding to three weeks of gains for the S&P after strong earnings from Caterpillar and some proposed acquisitions boosted investor appetite for risky assets.

Equities have climbed recently as optimism over a possible resolution to Europe's sovereign debt crisis and better-than-expected corporate results and economic data seemed to lessen the probability of another U.S. recession.

Caterpillar Inc (CAT.N) jumped 5.7 percent to $92.39 and led the Dow higher after the heavy equipment maker reported a quarterly profit that topped estimates on record revenues.

"When a big-name company like this reports numbers like these, that will help turn around talk about another recession," said Andrew Bodner, president of Double Diamond Investment Group in Parsippany, New Jersey.

"News like this, along with the turnaround we've seen in some economic indicators, is why the markets have moved up like they have."

Equities were also boosted by a number of proposed acquisitions, with Oracle Corp (ORCL.O) agreeing to buy RightNow Technologies Inc (RNOW.O), which provides cloud-based customer services software, for $43 per share. Also, Cigna Corp (CI.N) will acquire HealthSpring Inc (HS.N), a Medicare health provider for $55 a share.

RightNow gained 19 percent to $42.85 while HealthSpring jumped 33.6 percent to $53.66.

The Dow Jones industrial average (.DJI) advanced 101.65 points, or 0.86 percent, at 11,910.44. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index (.SPX) was up 15.56 points, or 1.26 percent, at 1,253.81. The Nasdaq Composite Index (.IXIC) put on 54.42 points, or 2.06 percent, at 2,691.88.

The S&P has climbed almost 14 percent since October 3, and recent gains have pushed the broad index to the top of its trading range between 1,230 and 1,250, where it has struggled to advance due to conflicting headlines from Europe.

Many investors looked for progress in Europe before good earnings reports can push equities much higher. Light volume suggested investors weren't entirely convinced of the move as uncertainties related to Europe continued making investors cautious.

By midday, nearly 3 billion shares had traded on the New York Stock Exchange, the American Stock Exchange and Nasdaq, putting the market on track for a lighter-than-average session.

European policymakers deferred a final decision on a strategy to fight a sovereign debt crisis as they neared agreement on bank recapitalization and on how to leverage a rescue fund to try to stop bond market contagion. The leaders were due to meet again Wednesday.

Google Inc (GOOG.O) has spoken to at least two private equity firms about help in financing a deal to buy Yahoo Inc's (YHOO.O) core business, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing a source. Yahoo shares rose 2.7 percent at $16.55.

(Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111024/bs_nm/us_markets_stocks

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The Big Business of 'Big Data' - NYTimes.com

Is Big Data a Bubble?

In case you?re in a hurry: Of course it is. And that is good.

Longer version: Last week there were several events that convinced me that one of the great tech bubbles inflating right now is around what people have agreed to call ?Big Data.? Basically the term reflects the fact that its now so easy to digitize and put on the Internet all kinds of information ? things as diverse as the measurements of passive sensors,? most or all the world?s books, 200 million tweets a day and most of the world?s significant financial transactions ? that the data is growing enormously.

Big Data is really about, however, the benefits we will gain by cleverly sifting through it to find and exploit new patterns and relationships. You see it now in things like Facebook ads, which are put in front of you because the posts you have read and contributed to (which Facebook?s algorithms get to examine as the price of this ?free? service) indicate you might be ready to buy the advertised good.

Other companies look at air and soil data to write insurance about crop production. Further out, people want to seek patterns in raw medical data for possible causes and cures for disease, bypassing much of the old hypothesis-experiment model; this article from Wired tells of how the Google co-founder Sergey Brin used this in Parkinson?s research.

Last week?s gathering of the tech tribes, the Web 2.0 conference, focused heavily on the benefits of the ubiquity of Big Data ? ad placement at Google, Coca-Cola vending machines that develop a personal relationship with the buyer, or what Facebook algorithms are doing to the cultivation of our souls. Microsoft held a one-hour session for developers on all the big, reliable databases it would offer them to make new products.

Sometimes there were overreaching conclusions.

In a memorable 10 minutes, Alex Rampell, the chief executive of TrialPay, made a case that credit card companies should not charge their 2 percent fees on a transaction, since ?the value of the transaction isn?t in the fees, it?s in the data that is generated.? When you know what someone has purchased, you can make a case of what ad to put in front of them next. Citing Amazon.com?s relentless upselling approach (?people who bought X also bought Y?), Mr. Rampell said, ?There?s an Amazon.com for everything, it?s called Visa, it?s called American Express.?

Mr. Rampell may be right, but there was no proof in his admittedly brief talk that this is actually true. Is it really easier and better to move a 2 percent business, with relatively fixed costs of technology and insurance, over to a much more variable ad-based business? If all advertising heads toward this model, and we don?t purchase particularly more stuff, doesn?t the value of the technology start to diminish, and simply turn from a competitive edge into a must-have?

This is not to pick on TrialPay, but to point up a common problem in the Big Data proposition: Often people won?t know exactly what hidden pattern they are looking for, or what the value they extract may be, and therefore it will be impossible to know how much to invest in the technology. Odds are that the initial benefits, as it was with Google?s Adwords algorithm, will lead to a frenzy of investments and marketing pitches, until we find the logical limits of the technology. It will be the place just before everybody lost their shirts.

This is a common characteristic of technology that its champions do not like to talk about, but it is why we have so many bubbles in this industry. Technologists build or discover something great, like railroads or radio or the Internet. The change is so important, often world-changing, that it is hard to value, so people overshoot toward the infinite. When it turns out to be merely huge, there is a crash, in railroad bonds, or RCA stock, or Pets.com. Perhaps Big Data is next, on its way to changing the world.

Another Web 2.0 speaker was Josh James, who founded Omniture, a Web click-tracking and ad placement service that is now part of Adobe?s Big Data play. Mr. James, a somewhat pragmatic Mormon who lives in Utah, far from Silicon Valley, has started a company called Domo. Rather than search for new patterns in the big piles of data, Domo will focus on delivering to a top executive simple existing data, like how large a bank?s deposits are on a given day, or how many employees a company has, that are still hard to locate. ?Everyone is saying that the team with the best data analysts will win,? he said.

?We have all the data we need. The focus ought to be on good design, and telling the vendors the simple things you really need to see.?

Big Data is clearly big business, adding a new level of certainty to business decisions, and promoting new discoveries about nature and society. That is why over the past two years I.B.M., E.M.C. and Hewlett-Packard have collectively invested billions of dollars in the field. This past week, Oracle bought Endeca, a company to manage and search through large volumes of things like e-mail, for a rumored $750 million. H.P. paid $10.3 billion for Autonomy, which does a much bigger version of the same thing. The first H.P. products with Autonomy technology, along with pattern-finding algorithms from an outfit called Vertica, which H.P. bought earlier this year, will most likely be out next month.

There are an uncountable number of data-mining start-ups in the field: MapReduce and NoSQL for managing the stuff; and the open-source R statistical programming language, for making predictions about what is likely to happen next, based on what has happened before. Established companies in the business, like SAS Institute or SAP, will probably purchase or make alliances with a lot of these smaller companies.

Expect to see a lot more before it all gets sorted out.


This post has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: October 24, 2011

An earlier version of this post misstated the price Hewlett-Packard paid for Autonomy. It was $10.3 billion, not $10.3 million.

Source: http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/10/24/big-data/

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Boyz II Men Celebrate Twenty Years With New Album

'We're trying our best to transcend time,' Wanya Morris tells MTV News.
By Jocelyn Vena


Boyz II Men
Photo: Sandy Young/ Getty Images

Boyz II Men came on the scene 20 years ago with their debut album, Cooleyhighharmony. That's right: 20 years ago. To put that in a pop-culture timeline: that's three years before Justin Bieber was born, and seven years before Destiny's Child released their first album.

That's important to note because this year not only are the guys releasing a new album, the aptly titled Twenty, they also appear on Beyoncé's "Countdown" and will be featured on Justin Bieber's Christmas album, Under the Mistletoe. In addition to all the love from this new crop of pop stars, Boyz II Men enthusiasts should enjoy their latest endeavor.

Twenty is a mix of eight old-school classics, like "End of the Road," as well as 12 new tracks. That's 20 songs, for those keeping count.

"Twenty is our latest effort," Wanya Morris explained to MTV News. "It consists of the span of 20 years of our career. It's been seven years since we did an album with our own music; it felt like it was time to put our efforts and our maturity and all of the things we gained through the 20 years on this album. We're trying our best to transcend time, but at the same time maintain our integrity and allow people to see the maturity as well."

Nathan Morris admits that while they're not the fresh-faced kids they were two decades ago, they aren't that different from the rookies who declared "Motownphilly" a thing. Or, at least their music hasn't strayed much from that R&B sound that made them famous.

"Music is who we are. Our concepts may be different; obviously, it's 20 years later, [and] we've grown. But the music itself is the constant," Nathan said. "It's the only thing that has really kept us here for 20 years. The concept of music is still the same, but what we write about and what we think about nowadays is a little different. We're a little older, but the main objective is still all about love."

In the end, the men, who know a thing or two about performing love songs both happy and sad, hope to capture that spirit again. "I think we're most excited for people to hear the whole album," Wanya added. "We have a lot of different new songs and styles that will actually show the growth of Boyz II Men. At the same time, we still kept the same vibrations, the same integrity. Nate's idea, and all of our idea, is just keep it love and try and be ambassadors. We might not do it all that well, but we love love."

What's your favorite classic Boyz II Men jam? Tell us below!

Related Artists

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1673094/boyz-ii-men-twenty.jhtml

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মঙ্গলবার, ২৫ অক্টোবর, ২০১১

Nurse to recount Jackson's pleas for anesthetic

Dr. Conrad Murray listens during cross examination of propofol expert Dr. Steven Shafer in Los Angeles Superior Court during his involuntary manslaughter trial in Los Angeles, Calif. Oct. 24, 2011. Murray has pleaded not guilty and faces four years in prison and the loss of his medical licenses if convicted of involuntary manslaughter in Michael Jackson's death. (AP Photo/Paul Buck, Pool)

Dr. Conrad Murray listens during cross examination of propofol expert Dr. Steven Shafer in Los Angeles Superior Court during his involuntary manslaughter trial in Los Angeles, Calif. Oct. 24, 2011. Murray has pleaded not guilty and faces four years in prison and the loss of his medical licenses if convicted of involuntary manslaughter in Michael Jackson's death. (AP Photo/Paul Buck, Pool)

Cheryln Lee, a nurse who treated Michael Jackson for sleep disorder in early 2009, testifies during the Dr. Conrad Murray involuntary manslaughter trial at the Los Angeles Superior Court in Los Angeles, Calif. Monday, Oct. 24, 2011. Murray has pleaded not guilty and faces four years in prison and the loss of his medical licenses if convicted of involuntary manslaughter in Michael Jackson's death. (AP Photo/Paul Buck, Pool)

Dr. Allan Metzger, Michael Jackson's former physician, takes the witness stand during the Dr. Conrad Murray involuntary manslaughter trial at the Los Angeles Superior Court in Los Angeles, Calif. Monday, Oct. 24, 2011. Murray has pleaded not guilty and faces four years in prison and the loss of his medical licenses if convicted of involuntary manslaughter in Michael Jackson's death. (AP Photo/Paul Buck, Pool)

Judge Michael E. Pastor presides over the Dr. Conrad Murray involuntary manslaughter trial at the Los Angeles Superior Court in Los Angeles, Calif. Monday, Oct. 24, 2011. Murray has pleaded not guilty and faces four years in prison and the loss of his medical licenses if convicted of involuntary manslaughter in Michael Jackson's death. (AP Photo/Paul Buck, Pool)

(AP) ? Jurors hearing the case against the doctor charged in Michael Jackson's death are getting another look at the singer's life as defense attorneys try to portray him as desperate for sleep and eager to obtain the powerful anesthetic that authorities say killed him.

The panel will hear Tuesday from Cherilyn Lee, a nurse practitioner who has said Jackson repeatedly asked her for propofol to help him sleep, but she refused. Lee began her testimony Monday, the sixth witness that Dr. Conrad Murray's attorneys called to try to shift the blame for Jackson's death to the singer himself.

Murray's team plans Tuesday to call other witnesses who they think may support that theory, including Randy Phillips, the president and CEO of concert promoter AEG Live, and Jackson's makeup artist and hairstylist, Karen Faye. They will also call several expert witnesses who will try to rebut the testimony of prosecution experts who said Murray was reckless and at fault in Jackson's unexpected death on June 25, 2009.

Murray has pleaded not guilty to involuntary manslaughter.

The defense's case now appears to hinge on their claim that Jackson gave himself a fatal dose of propofol. In a court filing Monday, Murray's attorneys argued that they should be allowed to show jurors the agreement between Jackson and AEG Live to show that Jackson had much to lose if he couldn't perform 50 comeback concerts planned for London's O2 arena.

AEG would have been allowed to recoup its investment in the shows and advances paid to Jackson if he couldn't perform, the filing states.

Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor will consider whether to allow the agreement and testimony about it by Phillips, although he has previously excluded any evidence of Jackson's financial hardships.

"This evidence directly supports the defense theory of the case ? that Mr. Jackson self-administered propofol due to the enormous pressure and stress placed on him pursuant to the agreement," the defense filing states. "Mr. Jackson's mental state on June 25, 2009 is highly relevant to the defense in this case."

Murray's attorneys expect Faye will testify that Jackson was distraught about completing the comeback shows.

One of the initial defense witnesses, Dr. Allan Metzger, supported prosecutors' contentions that Murray acted recklessly by giving Jackson propofol as a sleep aid and that the singer was looking forward to the show.

"He was excited," Metzger said of Jackson's demeanor during conversations and a house call in the months before the singer's death. "He was talking to me about some creative things that he was thinking about. He spoke to me about his excitement and his fear about the tour."

Metzger said Jackson felt the shows were a big obligation and he wanted to deliver stellar performances.

The doctor, who knew and treated Jackson for more than 15 years, testified the pop superstar asked him about IV medications during his house call.

On cross-examination, Metzger said he told Jackson that using any IV drugs or anesthetics to sleep was unsafe.

"You explained to him that it that was dangerous, life-threatening and should not be done outside of a hospital, correct," prosecutor David Walgren asked the doctor.

"That's correct," he replied.

"Was there any amount of money that would have convinced you to give him intravenous propfol in his house?" Walgren asked.

"Absolutely not," Metger said.

Lee was similarly against Jackson taking propofol to help him sleep. She told The Associated Press in 2009 that the singer repeatedly asked for the drug while she was treating him for nutrition and sleep issues.

"I said, 'Michael, the only problem with you taking this medication' ? and I had a chill in my body and tears in my eyes three months ago ? 'the only problem is you're going to take it and you're not going to wake up,'" she recalled telling Jackson.

Lee kept detailed notes of her treatments on Jackson, which she flipped through repeatedly while testifying Monday.

According to prosecutors, Murray kept no notes on his treatments on Jackson after signing on as his personal physician for the London shows.

Defense attorneys expect to conclude their case Thursday, but even if they do, jurors won't begin deliberations until next week. A judge told attorneys that he would give them the weekend to craft their closing arguments and finalize jury instructions.

___

AP Special Correspondent Linda Deutsch contributed to this report.

___

McCartney can be reached at http://twitter.com/mccartneyAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-10-25-Michael%20Jackson-Doctor/id-9048c1abfeca4ffa97c2679d4f12a8d3

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