Friday, December 30, 2011

eFax (for Android)


One would think that e-mail, FTP, instant messaging, and other methods of transferring files would have killed the fax machine, but the antiquated tool is still alive and kicking, especially in the business sector. Fortunately, you no longer need a dedicated fax machine (and the associated phone line and ink) to send and receive paperwork. eFax (Various prices 4 stars), an Internet-based fax service available in over 3,500 cities and 46 countries worldwide, gives you a real fax number that you can use to send and receive faxes?using your smartphone. The electronic faxing service's new Android app keeps most of the desktop version's functionality by letting the business-minded send messages from their Google-powered smartphones. ?You may not be able to apply digital signatures as you can with the desktop version, but it's a competent and capable business-friendly mobile app.

Simple Setup
eFax' Android app has a simple set up process for those who are new to the service. You simply input your name, email address, area code, phone number, check the Customer Agreement box, and tap Start Faxing. I inputted it into the app so that I could log in after receiving the fax number and pin in an email. I then arrived at the home screen that featured four main sections: "View Inbox," "View Folders," "Search Faxes," and "Send A Fax." Each section's function is self-explanatory. Naturally, existing eFax users can simply log in with their credentials.

Cost
There are three different types of eFax accounts: Free, Plus, and Pro. The free account lets you receive (not send) just 10 faxes per month, so it's a good match for those who very rarely fax. Next up the ladder is eFax Plus ($16.95 per month), which includes 150 pages of incoming and outbound faxes, and a 15-cent per page coverage fee (there's also a $10 one-time set up charge). eFax also offers a Pro model ($19.95 per month, $220 per year) designed for large businesses and individuals with heavy faxing needs. There's a $19.95 one-time set up fee, but with the higher cost comes 200 pages of incoming faxes and a cool voicemail feature that sends left messages to your inbox. There's also a 10-cent per page overage charge, which is five cents cheaper than the basic plan.

The Plus and Pro accounts are relatively expensive compared to Send2Fax' Home Office and Small Business plans which are $8.95 per month and $12.95 per month, respectively. MyFax has three plans, one of which starts of $10 per month for 100 faxes sent and 200 received.

The eFax Experience
Firing off a fax required that I tap "Send A Fax," key a phone number into the address field, and optionally fill in cover letter information. At the moment, eFax for Android only allows you to send photos snapped with the phone's camera or stored within the image gallery?no other file types. So, if you want to send a document, you'd have to shoot it with your phone's camera and then send it (which is what I did to test the service). You can, however, use eFax' email-to-fax capabilities (outside of the mobile app) to send files of any type.

The recipient contacted me stating that he received the fax five minutes after it was sent. When he responded with a fax of his own, it arrived in my inbox seven minutes later?not bad considering the money I saved on a dedicated machine, ink, and paper. Faxes can be tagged and archived, or forwarded as faxes or email messages, but you can?t add digital signatures as you can with the desktop version. Note: Fax quality may vary depending on your phone's camera.

Should You Subscribe to eFax?
eFax for Android works because it makes the fax process simple?you don't need to own a machine or visit Kinkos. All that's needed is a Web connection, which means you can fax from nearly any location. eFax for Android may only let you fax photos , and it doesn't support digital signatures, but there's an extremely high convenience factor. All in all, eFax is a solid companion for the for business customers who want to save on paper and ink.

More Android Apps Reviews:
??? CSI globalVCard
??? eFax (for Android)
??? McAfee Family Protection Android Edition
??? OnLive (for Android)
??? LogMeIn Ignition (for Android)
?? more

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ArkCR: RT @skotcovert Arkansas College Republicans welcome @CRNC national Secretary @NickMaddux to Arkansas! #crnc

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Earn More Than 10% Yield Backed By The Ford Motor Company

Ford Motor Company (F) is probably among the most well-known auto makers in the world. Established in 1903 by Henry Ford, Ford Motors has become a truly global company. The company has near 16% market share in the U.S. and 8% market share in the Europe. Ford has several manufacturing plants around the globe. The Focus, Fiesta and several other brands are produced in the plants distributed across continental Europe. Ford stopped automotive production in the U.K., but it still produces several parts and commercial vehicles within this country. The Transit and Transit Connect models are primarily produced within Ford's Turkish plant in Kocaeli, Turkey.

This plant in Turkey named Ford Otosan (FOVSY.PK), is a joint venture between the Ford Motor Company and the Koc Holding (KHOLY.PK). While its parent company, Ford, was going through tough times, the Ford Otosan company has been an outperformer. Turkey is a pretty dynamic country with comparative advantage in the automotive production. The labor costs are much reasonable compared to the Europe and the U.S. Besides, the domestic tax system has favorable codes for autos and commercial vehicles produced within the country.

There is a strong convergence between the European Union and Turkey in terms of economic power, as well as, social welfare. The vehicle ownership in the country is only 200 per 1000 individuals, which is one third of the European average. The same vehicle ownership number arises to almost 600 in many EU member states. Thus, there is still a large potential for growth. Ford brands have been very popular in the country. According to official statistics, Ford has the third largest share in the Turkish market. Ford company owns 41.04% of Ford Turkey. Ford's Turkish production plant has been a blockbuster among Ford's global factories in terms profitability and dividends. Here is a brief historical comparison of fundamentals:

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011/3Q

Revenues

Ford

$172.45

$146.27

$118.31

$128.95

$101.5

Ford - TR

$6.20

$4.58

$3.73

$4.95

$3.96

Net Profit

Ford

-$2.72

-$14.67

$2.72

$6.56

$6.55

Ford - TR

$0.41

$0.28

$0.22

$0.32

$0.27

Yield

Ford

0.00%

0.00%

0.00%

0.00%

1.83%

Ford - TR

8.80%

14.60%

15.10%

9.70%

10.3%

Source: Is Yatirim

Due to the desperate cash need of its parent company during tough times, Ford Turkey has been an outstanding dividend payer. Last year, company paid $310 million in dividends, 41.04% of which is taken by Ford. While it may not be a huge number, given Ford's gigantic size, the payments were particularly helpful during Ford's critical conjecture.

I think Ford Company is pretty cheap, but compared to its parent company, Ford's Turkish branch looks like a better deal. Even after losing near 35% in 2011, Ford Motor is trading at a P/B ratio of 7, and debt/equity ratio of 15.9. On the other Ford Otosan is trading at a P/B ratio of 2.7, and debt/equity ratio of 1.1. Actually, the company has near $1.6 billion in liquid assets which pretty much covers its short-term debt of $880 million and long-term debt of $260 million. Compared to its parent company's gigantic debt load, Ford Otosan can be considered as almost debt-free, since all debts are more than covered by cash and inventory at hand.

Similar to other emerging markets, the Turkish exchange market was among 2011's losers. The Turkish (TUR) ETF lost near 40% in this year. However, thanks to its record profits, Ford Otosan was an outperformer, returning 30% in local currency, and 6% in terms of USD. The company has a policy of 100% dividend payout ratio. As of December 27, it is trading at a trailing P/E ratio of 7.6, which translates into an expected yield of 13% for 2012.

Surely, investing in a foreign country has its own risks. The fluctuations in exchange rates can make a huge difference in returns. This year, Turkish Lira lost near 25% against USD, and is trading at a 52-week high exchange rate of 1.90. A year ago that rate was between 1.4 - 1.5. Nothing significant has changed in between -- other than 10% inflation in Turkey. Therefore, I think that the TL/USD exchange rate is primed for a normalization to a 1.6 - 1.7 range. So, even if the stock does not perform well in 2012, you are very likely to make some profit due to appreciation in the local currency.

Summary

I think Ford is great, and is primed for a rebound in 2012. Income-oriented investors might also consider Ford Otosan as it offers a strong dividend. It can be great long-term play for dividend lovers. Note that, individual shareholders are subject to 15% dividend-income tax which may or may not be claimed for tax credits.

Disclosure: I am long FOVSY.PK.

Source: http://seekingalpha.com/article/316408-earn-more-than-10-yield-backed-by-the-ford-motor-company?source=feed

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

6 Game-Changing Digital Journalism Events of 2011 (Mashable)

The year 2011 brought extraordinary progress for online journalism. From breaking news curation to new revenue models, many an organization put its best digital foot forward. Social media became more tightly integrated into reporting and overall strategy, while mobile app creation and content optimization were no longer a nice-to-have, but a must.

[More from Mashable: Man Uses Google+ Game to Propose to Girlfriend [VIDEO]]

These trends are quickly shaping the young and agile web news industry. As journalists redefine themselves with new tools and skill sets, they're reinvigorating a business that just a few years ago was written off as doomed.

Here's a look at six moves with the biggest impact on digital journalism this year.

[More from Mashable: Osama bin Laden?s Death is AOL?s Top Story of 2011]


1. Paywalls Find Their Footing


If 2010 was the year of the paywall, 2011 was the year the paywall worked. News organizations stopped using "our content is worth paying for" as a sole rationale, and began strategically providing value for their online content.

While the The New York Times's strategy was much-criticized when it launched in March, it has since turned a profit. The Minneapolis Star Tribune made an estimated $800,000 in digital circulation revenue during its first month of having a paywall, despite a 10-15% decline in web traffic. For both papers, tying online access to print subscriptions has been key to success. The Strib saw nearly 20% of its new digital subscribers also buy a Sunday subscription, while The Times said 800,000 print subscribers have linked their accounts for digital access.

These paywall models have shown the potential for creating dedicated digital subscriber bases that advertisers could eventually pay more for.


2. Andy Carvin Becomes an Icon


The Arab Spring was undoubtedly one of 2011's biggest news events -- and its main newsman comes in right behind it. When the Tunisian uprisings began last winter, Andy Carvin's duties as NPR's senior strategist took a backseat while his Twitter account became a one-man newswire dedicated to the culminating situation in the Middle East. He paired his knowledge of and contacts in the region to curate the best and most accurate information tweeted from the ground.

What set Carvin apart was not only his volume of tweets -- his record is 1,200 tweets in 48 hours, according to The Guardian -- but also his recognition of fellow Twitter users as experts. He wouldn't hesitate to tweet unverified information and ask his Twitter followers to help him determine its accuracy.

For the journalism community, Carvin proved the value of social newsgathering and its ability to complement rather than replace traditional reporting.


3. Journalists Flock to Google+


Google kickstarted digital journalists' biggest love affair of 2011 when it launched social network Google+ in June. Many were quick to sign on and explore the platform's potential for news gathering, reporting and audience building.

New Jersey newspaper The Trentonian was lauded as the first to use Google+ for breaking news after its producers found a key source in a breaking news story via her comment on the paper's Google+ page. For Missouri's KOMU-TV, it was a social breakthrough when reporter Sarah Hill began integrating Hangouts into live TV broadcasts. She would give Hangout viewers a behind-the-scenes look at the newsroom and then interview Hangout participants on-air.

While interest in Google+ has waned since its launch, news organizations' initial enthusiasm shows a desire to expand to communities beyond Twitter and Facebook. As the social media landscape continues to grow, this early adopter mentality will be crucial to web journalism success.


4. Mobile Gets Competitive


Though the necessity for a mobile presence was recognized far before 2011, news organizations showed a new commitment to smartphone and tablet apps this year.

News Corp took its chances with a mobile-first strategy when it launched iPad-only newspaper The Daily in February, while Betaworks's News.me came on the scene in mid-April. Both much-hyped efforts flopped, in part because free social news reading apps, such as Flipboard and Pulse, were already widely used on tablets.

In arguably the biggest mobile move by a news organization, CNN acquired iPad app Zite in August. KC Estenson, CNN?s general manager of digital, told Mashable that Zite's technology would help improve CNN's digital properties and help it serve more personalized content.

There are now so many news apps, Apple felt compelled to launch Newsstand, a digital repository for magazine and newspaper apps. With an increasingly massive pool of apps, news organizations will need to find their own competitive edge in the mobile news market.


5. Facebook Makes Personal Branding Easier


Since Facebook Subscribe rolled out in September, journalists have been using the tool as a personal branding and content distribution opportunity. While Facebook fan pages have long been common for recognizable names like Nicholas Kristof, Subscribe gave lesser-known journalists a way to connect with readers on a larger scale.

For some journalists, the switch from using Facebook as a personal network to a public forum has been a challenge. Others are embracing the platform's change by openly offering subscribers a look at not only their work but their lives.

Establishing a bonafide web presence is becoming essential for journalists who aim to become thought leaders in their coverage areas. Taking it beyond professionalism and showing personality adds to journalists' appeal because it makes them more relatable. Moving forward, they'll become more open about what they share on social networks, showing that they're not just journalists, but people too.


6. The Pulitzer Goes Digital


The Pulitzer Board announced earlier this month it had revised its Breaking News category criteria to emphasize real-time reporting. This is the ultimate recognition that web journalism has come into its own.

Under the new set of guidelines, ?it would be disappointing if an event occurred at 8 a.m. and the first item in an entry was drawn from the next day?s newspaper,? said to the board. In other words, the web is crucial to alerting a community about a breaking news event.

The Pulitzer Board's gesture sets a precedent for future breaking news coverage. The recognition of web reporting's importance by such a well-respected journalism entity will inspire more news organizations to invest in digital reporting -- if they haven't already.


What This Means for 2012


After an incredible year of news events and milestones, online journalism in 2012 has a tough act to follow. We can certainly expect more successes and more failures when it comes to business models and mobile strategies. News organizations will clamor to be the first on new social networks -- they're already flocking to pinboard site Pinterest. Journalists will connect further with their individual followers, and the 2012 Breaking News Pulitzer winner will have done a great service to its community via the Internet.

While we can only guess what the future of digital journalism holds, 2011 paved a strong path, leaving us hopeful and confident that the best has yet to come.

Image courtesy of Flickr, personaldemocracy

This story originally published on Mashable here.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/internet/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/mashable/20111228/tc_mashable/6_gamechanging_digital_journalism_events_of2011

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Raspberry Pi, a Pocket-Sized 1080p-Capable Computer for $25

The Raspberry Pi is a tiny, bare-bones computer that is capable of playing back 1080p H.264 video. It runs Linux on its 700MHz ARM CPU, has 128MB RAM and it will cost just $25. A $35 version doubles the RAM and adds an ethernet port.
The little computer has been in the pipeline for some years, [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GearFactor/~3/USeOziwNEbk/

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Microsoft to wave bye-bye to CES

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Source: www.pcauthority.com.au --- Monday, December 26, 2011
The Redmond giant says January isn't a good month for it to release products, so it won't play a major role at CES anymore. ...

Source: http://www.pcauthority.com.au/News/285357,microsoft-to-wave-bye-bye-to-ces.aspx?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=PC&TA+News+Feed

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Dirk, Kidd help Mavs raise championship banner

(AP) ? With a tug from Dirk Nowitzki, Jason Kidd, Jason Terry and others, the Dallas Mavericks unveiled their championship banner minutes before opening this season against the team they knocked off in the NBA finals ? LeBron James and the Miami Heat.

The ceremony was supposed to have been held Nov. 1, but the lockout pushed it back. So after waiting until their 31st season to become champions for the first time, the Mavericks and their fans waited another 54 days.

"Thirty-one years you waited ? 31 years! ? to call your team a champion, ladies and gentlemen," Terry said. "A champion!"

The Heat were in their locker room while clips of last year's postseason were shown, followed by brief comments from NBA Commissioner David Stern, Mavs owner Mark Cuban, coach Rick Carlisle, Terry and Nowitzki.

Nowitzki rocked nervously foot to foot at the start of the ceremony, while Cuban smiled and bit his lip, hands jammed in the pockets of his jeans. Once Cuban received the trophy, he held it above his head and turned slowly for everyone to see. He thanked fans and behind-the-scenes members of the organization, then handed the microphone to Carlisle. He started by naming the two coaches and six players no longer with the team.

"All of these guys will forever be part of Mavs history and the Mavs' family," Carlisle said.

Carlisle then introduced the returning players, all wearing their new warmup outfits featuring the words "2011 NBA Champions" and the trophy logo on the back. Cheers built with each introduction, capped by roars of "M! V! P!" for Nowitzki.

"This is a special, special day for all of us," Nowitzki said.

Franchise founders Don and Linda Carter watched from their usual courtside seats. With straps for everyone to yank, a dark curtain was peeled away, showing off the banner. It features a huge trophy, the team's logo and has the last name of each player printed around the border. The signatures of Cuban and Carlisle are in the two bottom corners.

Before the ceremony, Carlisle said he wanted it to end quickly so the game could begin, and Cuban it would mean more to fans. Judging by the looks on their faces, they were either downplaying their emotions or enjoyed it more than they expected. Carlisle's daughter went on the court with him, and Cuban was later joined by two of his kids.

Nowitzki and Kidd certainly seemed awed as they watched the banner rise to the rafters. They couldn't take their eyes off it ? or just didn't want to. It hangs directly over the free throw line on the end of the court in front of the Mavs' bench.

The Mavericks will have one more chance to savor their title ? they get their rings later this season. The lockout messed up the timing of that, too, because Cuban wanted to let Nowitzki, Kidd, Terry and Marion help with the design and he wasn't allowed to talk to them while the season was on hold.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-12-25-BKN-Mavericks-Banner-Raising/id-4bcc14fc518f422c8197434ce64ac9bd

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Monday, December 26, 2011

sengineland: Weekend Review: New Dilbert Comic Mocks Google Employee 20% Time http://t.co/E6zYSZuy

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7 people shot dead in Texas home, motive unclear

Grapevine police investigate the scene where they found seven people dead outside Dallas in Grapevine, Texas, Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011. Four women and three men who police believe to be related were found apparently shot to death, and authorities said they believe the shooter is among the dead. (AP Photo/Mike Fuentes)

Grapevine police investigate the scene where they found seven people dead outside Dallas in Grapevine, Texas, Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011. Four women and three men who police believe to be related were found apparently shot to death, and authorities said they believe the shooter is among the dead. (AP Photo/Mike Fuentes)

Police tape hangs in front of an apartment complex where 7 people were found dead, Sunday Dec. 25, 2010, in Grapevine, Texas. Four women and three men who police believe to be related were found apparently shot to death, and authorities said they believe the shooter is among the dead (AP Photo/Mike Fuentes)

Police tape stretches through a Grapevine, Texas, apartment complex where police found seven people dead in an apartment on Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011 in Grapevine, Texas. Four women and three men who police believe to be related were found apparently shot to death, and authorities said they believe the shooter is among the dead. (AP Photo/Mike Fuentes)

Police line tape lines the scene where police found seven people dead in an apartment on Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011 in Grapevine, Texas. Four women and three men who police believe to be related were found apparently shot to death, and authorities said they believe the shooter is among the dead. (AP Photo/The Dallas Morning News, Scott Goldstein) MANDATORY CREDIT; MAGS OUT; TV OUT; INTERNET OUT; AP MEMBERS ONLY

Grapevine police investigate the scene where they found seven people dead outside Dallas in Grapevine, Texas, Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011. Four women and three men who police believe to be related were found apparently shot to death, and authorities said they believe the shooter is among the dead (AP Photo/The Dallas Morning News, Michael Ainsworth) MANDATORY CREDIT; MAGS OUT; TV OUT;

(AP) ? Investigators believe that seven people who were found dead Christmas Day were cleaning up holiday wrapping paper when they were shot inside a suburban Fort Worth apartment, but a motive remains unclear.

All of the victims appeared to be related, and Grapevine police said they believe the shooter was among the dead. Investigators were meticulously searching the apartment, along with three vehicles parked outside, and didn't expect to finish until dawn on Monday.

"It appears they had just celebrated Christmas. They had opened their gifts," Grapevine Police Sgt. Robert Eberling said, adding that the apartment was decorated for the holiday, including a tree.

The four women and three men, aged 18 to 60, were found dead in an adjoining kitchen and living room area when police arrived midday Sunday, shortly after receiving a 911 call in which no one was on the other line, Eberling said. Two handguns were found near the bodies, he said.

None of the victims has been identified, but Eberling said it appears they all died of gunshot wounds. He said authorities still don't know what sparked the incident.

Grapevine Police Lt. Todd Dearing said investigators believe that the victims were related, though some were visiting and didn't live in the apartment. He said police are looking for other relatives to inform of the deaths.

"Seven people in one setting in Grapevine, that's never happened before. Ever," Dearing said.

Police and firefighters first rushed to the Lincoln Vineyards complex after receiving the open-ended 911 call at about 11:30 a.m., Eberling said.

"There was an open line. No one was saying anything," he explained.

So police went into the apartment, located in the middle-class neighborhood of Grapevine, not far from the upscale Fort Worth suburb of Colleyville. The apartment was at the back of the complex, overlooking the athletic fields of Colleyville Heritage High School.

But many of the nearby apartments are vacant, and police said no neighbors reported hearing anything on a quiet Christmas morning when many people were not around.

Jose Fernandez, a 35-year-old heavy equipment mechanic who moved to the complex with his family about six months ago, said he always felt safe in the area, but is now afraid to let his 10-year-old son play freely outside.

"This is really outrageous especially on Christmas," said Fernandez, who was visiting family for the holiday and returned to find several police cars parked outside his home.

"This has shocked everybody. It has scared everybody. I guess something like this can happen anywhere, but seven people dead. It's just very scary," he added.

Eberling agreed the area is fairly quiet, noting this would be the first homicide in Grapevine since 2010.

Christy Posch, a flight attendant who moved to the complex about six months ago so her son could attend the high school, said she lives a few buildings away and did not hear any gunshots.

"It's all families. That's why I moved here. No burglaries, no nothing," Posch said.

___

Associated Press writer Ramit Plushnick-Masti in Houston contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-12-26-US-Texas-Seven-Dead/id-5c148c6490ff435b9b9b32db1322ae45

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Serie B?s Farina rewarded for honesty by Italy coach

Dec 23 (Reuters) ? A second-tier Italian soccer player has been called up to train with the national team as a reward for turning his back on a match-fixing scam, Italian media reported on Friday.

Defender Simone Farina, who plays for Serie B side Gubbio, has been invited by Italy coach Cesare Prandelli to join his squad in the new year.

Farina, 29, told police he had refused a 200,000 euro ($261,300) offer to fix an Italian Cup match between Cesena and Gubbio on Nov. 30.

?I loved what he did, he has shown great courage and extraordinary inner strength,? Prandelli was quoted as saying by Gazzetta dello Sport.

However, Gubbio club president Marco Fioriti warned against treating Farina as a hero.

?His behaviour was normal, a normal person who has sound principles in mind,? he said on the club website (www.asgubbio1910.com).

?So he is to be admired for the courage he has shown and for the honesty, but let?s not make him a hero.? ($1 = 0.7654 euros)

?

Source: http://football.thestar.com.my/2011/12/24/serie-bs-farina-rewarded-for-honesty-by-italy-coach/

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Black Mayors Travel To Africa To Build Alliances

African American mayors from across the country have traveled to Africa for the The 2011 World Summit of Mayors Leadership Conference in Dakar, Senegal.

The summit will feature mayors from Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean. The mayors will discus ways to build alliances and trade ideas.

The Huffington Post reports:

The goal: to build alliances with local leaders from across the planet and exchange a world of ideas and information that they hope will impact communities both on a local, national and international level. ?All politics really is local?? insists Omar Neal who is mayor of Tuskegee, Alabama ? a notable city that boasts a population of about 11,000. And that was the general consensus of the delegation which convened in the glitzy Hotel Meridien President Conference Hall faintly resembles the United Nations, save for its rich wooden structures and distinct architecture which pays homage to the African continent.

Read More At The Huffington Post

Source: http://rnbphilly.com/national/newsone/black-mayors-travel-to-africa-to-build-alliances/

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cyberterrorist: i?m sick of the cold. i want to live in california, texas, or florida but my mommy...

cyberterrorist:

i?m sick of the cold.

i want to live in california, texas, or florida but my mommy says no. i want to live in LA because idk it?s warm and looks awesome, but my mom says it?s too hot. i want to live in miami because it?s warm and idk cuban boys but my mom says it?s too hot.

but most of all, i would kill to go live in el paso.

my mommy says no because ju?rez and drug war and murder and mexico and it?s too warm for her tastes.

i just want to leave milwaukee, god.

LA rules sometimes, just don?t complain when it hits 110 degrees and the smog starts setting in haha

Source: http://atomicsocialist.tumblr.com/post/14603386701

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Friday, December 23, 2011

BOJ keeps policy steady, offers bleaker view on economy (Reuters)

TOKYO (Reuters) ? The Bank of Japan kept monetary settings unchanged on Wednesday but offered a bleaker view on the economy than last month on mounting evidence of the pain Europe's debt crisis is inflicting on global growth and Japan's recovery prospects.

Slowing exports, worsening business sentiment and soft capital spending are challenging the central bank's view that the world's third-largest economy will recover early next year.

In a sign of the growing damage from the global slowdown, Japan's exports fell at their fastest annual pace in six months in November with shipments to Asia declining on weak demand for semiconductor chips and digital cameras.

The BOJ held off on offering additional monetary stimulus, as widely expected, but cut its economic assessment to say that the pickup in economic activity was pausing due to the effect of slowing overseas growth and the yen's strength.

It also revised down its view on export and output growth to say it is flattening, and sounded slightly more gloomy on the outlook, warning that the economy will resume recovery only after a brief period of stagnation.

"Japan's economy will remain more or less flat for the time being" before resuming a moderate recovery, the central bank said in a statement announcing the policy decision.

<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Global interest rates http://link.reuters.com/myt65s

BOJ, Fed balance sheets http://link.reuters.com/nyt65s

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

MORE EASING SOON?

Japan's economy rebounded from a recession triggered by the March earthquake and tsunami, but is expected to slow sharply this quarter as the initial spurt driven by companies restoring supply chains and production facilities tails off.

Many in the bank are counting on support for growth from fiscal spending for reconstruction from the March disaster, but that may not be enough to offset weakening overseas demand.

"The bleaker economic assessment is no surprise given slumping exports that show weakness not only in Europe but Asia as well. The BOJ's longer-term forecast of a moderate recovery is subject to skepticism," said Masamichi Adachi, senior economist at JPMorgan Securities Japan.

Analysts say the BOJ may ease policy again by March next year with the most likely trigger a renewed spike in the yen or market turmoil caused by Europe's crisis.

"We expect the BOJ to implement additional easing steps in January-March as there is a chance the yen will appreciate further during that period," said Takahide Kiuchi, chief economist at Nomura Securities.

"Another trigger could be a credit rating downgrade for European sovereign debt. If that happens and causes financial market turmoil, coordinated monetary easing with U.S. and European central banks could be a possibility."

Central banks are flooding markets with liquidity as markets remain on edge about Europe's ability to put a floor under a bond market selloff that is pushing borrowing costs for countries such as Italy and Spain towards unsustainable levels.

The Fed has pledged to keep interest rates near zero until mid-2013 and the ECB cut its main interest rate to a record low this month, as the fallout from Europe's debt crisis stoked fears of a global economic slump.

The BOJ, too, has kept rates virtually at zero and eased policy in October by topping up its asset buying scheme to ease the pain from sharp yen rises on the export-reliant economy.

It stood pat since then but has expressed its readiness to inject huge amounts of liquidity in market operations and loosen monetary policy to fend off any contagion from Europe as it sees a global credit crunch as a real potential risk.

(Additional reporting by Rie Ishiguro, Kaori Kaneko and Tetsushi Kajimoto; Editing by Joseph Radford and Chris Gallagher)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/japan/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111221/bs_nm/us_japan_economy_boj

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Probing the Passions of Science: An Interview with Carl Zimmer on the Art of Science Writing

Click here for Part Two: Carl Zimmer Delves Beneath the Surface of Science Writing

"Carl Zimmer" by Nathaniel Gold

??"Carl Zimmer" by Nathaniel Gold

Carl Zimmer is one of the most insightful and trenchant science writers working today. Whether he is delving into the soul of the scientific revolution or exposing the precise horror of parasites to reveal our relationship with the natural world, he evokes a passion for his subject with a graceful clarity of style. Unlike his literary icon, Herman Melville, he doesn?t adorn his writing with ornate flourishes or complicated scaffolding. His approach is simple, elegant, and potent, much like the microscopic lifeforms he so often examines. And, like these microorganisms, he is a marvel of adaptability and innovation. He is a Kavli award-winning journalist, Yale University instructor, blogger, and author of twelve books. But that?s only skimming the surface.

For those who are professional science writers, or enthusiastic readers of the latest science news, the name Carl Zimmer is well known. But what may not be as widely known is his incredible generosity and the passion he feels for his subject. He has the ability to turn complicated scientific topics into engaging stories that uplift a reader who might otherwise feel intimidated. At the same time he makes scientists familiar by revealing their own passion for the subject and bringing readers closer to them through a shared curiosity. Quite appropriately, given the topic he often writes about, the result is infectious.

I first met Carl in 2007 at the annual ScienceOnline conference and have learned a great deal from him both through his written work and our scattered correspondence. While all writers are natural observers, Carl is someone who listens. It is this combination of a keen eye for detail and the generous patience of a good teacher that makes his work such a pleasure to read. I had the opportunity to talk with Carl last week to probe his own passion for the art of science writing. It is my hope that others can learn from him as I have so that, together, we may continue to push ourselves and find innovative ways of communicating our shared passion for scientific discovery.

Carl Zimmer at the Koshland Science Museum, Washington, DC

Carl Zimmer at Koshland Science Museum, Washington, DC / Chris Suspect 2010, Flickr

Eric Michael Johnson: The National Book Award-winning novelist Joyce Carol Oates has written that one of the most important influences on a writer is their early failures. What was one of your most meaningful failures while you were learning to be a science writer?

Carl Zimmer: When I first started out I got a job at Discover magazine. I was very young and one of the first things they had me do was fact checking. I was given a story about the potential health risks of power lines, something that was a big controversy at the time. Someone had written an article for us and it was my job to make sure that it was right. I thought I had done a good job, but it turned out there was one detail I had overlooked. It was a number on some figure about cancer rates. This was about fifteen years ago so some of the memories are a little fuzzy.

But what?s not fuzzy is my memory of what happened next. The editor-in-chief, Paul Hoffman, called a staff meeting for the sole purpose of raking me, and the senior editor on the story, over the coals. He wrote the number on a big white board behind his desk and went completely ballistic about allowing those sorts of mistakes into his magazine. It was quite humbling. This was not calculus, it was just a simple number that I should have made sure was correct. The mistake cast a stain on the whole story because people knew it couldn?t be right and it caused them to question everything that came afterwards. That, for me, was a pretty big stumble and it was an incredibly important lesson. It showed me just how easy it is to make mistakes and for errors to creep into articles, especially articles about science. You have to take that extra step and double check everything. My experience at Discover really drilled that into me.

Johnson: Part of what I love about your writing is the infectious enthusiasm you display for the topic. Had you always known you wanted to write about science? At what point did it strike you that this is how you wanted to spend your life?

Zimmer: I definitely did not know early on that I wanted to be a science writer. I didn?t even know I wanted to be a science writer when I was actually working as a science writer. I knew I wanted to write when I got out of college, but I didn?t have a clear idea of what I would be. I was always very interested in science and would have taken many more science classes if they hadn?t all been at eight in the morning. Fortunately, science turned out to be a very good fit. I haven?t considered writing about anything else ever since.

Yale University, Linsly-Chittenden Hall

Linsly-Chittenden Hall, Yale University where Zimmer received his degree in English, 1987 / GK tramrunner229, Wikimedia Commons

Johnson: When you were first developing your voice as a writer, who were some of your most important influences? I know you were particularly fond of Melville and Faulkner as an undergrad at Yale. What did studying literature offer for developing your own style compared to the work of other science writers?

Zimmer: At the time I was reading Melville, Faulkner, or Mark Twain, I had vague ideas about writing fiction. That was my initial impetus for reading them. Gradually I realized that I was actually more interested in the natural world. It was at that point I began to appreciate really good science writing. I was reading people like Jonathan Weiner, John McPhee, or David Quammen, writers who could construct a sentence that left you breathless. But it was very important for me to have had that different experience in reading beforehand. It taught me how important it is to tell a story when you?re writing as well as all the different ways you can tell that story. These are elements you can bring into science writing to great effect.

Moby Dick by Herman Melville

The fact is there is a lot of science writing in great literature. I?m a big fan of Moby Dick, for example. Melville?s novel is probably a quarter to a third science writing. It?s the story of an obsessed captain going after a whale interspersed with long passages about marine biology, paleontology, even consciousness. It?s all science. But he writes about it in a style that can be quite humbling. When you read it you see how beautiful someone can make these descriptions of the natural world. I?ve always been frustrated with the flatness of a lot of science writing. I think that science writers should try to aim high rather than going for a lot of these clich?s you often see both in magazines and in books.

Johnson: That brings up a very interesting point. Communicating science offers some unique challenges for a writer. In fiction the exposition is usually hidden and the reader comes to understand a character through their actions. We?ll emotionally bond with that character and this pulls us into the story. But for so much of science writing, the science itself is the character. How do you effectively connect with a reader emotionally and, at the same time, provide the necessary scientific background to bring a reader up to speed?

Zimmer: That?s a great question. It?s really hard to articulate an answer to that because I tackle that challenge almost by a sense of touch or intuition. In terms of techniques for communicating that passion, I think part of what you have to do is make sure the beginning is completely captivating. You can?t start a piece with a lot of inside baseball. You have to remember that when you are writing about science you are ultimately writing about inherently fascinating and compelling things.

I just started reading a piece in the latest New Yorker about desertification called ?The Great Oasis? by Burkhard Bilger. He could have gotten into a lot of technical detail right off the bat describing the various debates about the causes of desertification. But what he starts with is a beautiful account of what it?s like when it rains in Oman. He just describes how the rain rushes over the dry, stony surfaces in this relatively obscure country in the Middle East. It?s absolutely gorgeous writing. He simply provides the reader with an image. What he?s basically saying is, ?Picture this. This is what I?m going to be telling you about.? Once you have people?s attention like that they will be willing to go with you a long way. It?s so important to bear in mind that big picture and not to get lost in the details. The details matter but they have to be fit into this larger scaffolding.

Johnson: Is it a matter of finding the emotional core of the story and opening with that feeling?

Zimmer: Yes. I don?t mean that you should be mawkish or sensationalistic, but every story about science has something that is truly absorbing. I think that?s what motivates the scientists themselves. Sometimes you can discover the way to frame a piece just be pushing scientists to explain why their research is so interesting. These are investigations that they?ll sometimes be doing for decades. Perhaps a few of them do it simply because it?s a job. But I think, for the most part, scientists are doing this work because they themselves have this intense passion and because they themselves find these things marvelous. You can sometimes find a way to frame your own story just by understanding the scientists? passion for the subject.

Johnson: When mapping out a book or feature article how much attention do you pay to the structure? Do you have a system for organizing the flow of ideas or do you rely largely on what feels right?

Zimmer: I try to see the story in my head. I approach stories visually, I?m not sure why. If it?s too big to see it all in my head I will get out a piece of paper and draw a bunch of boxes with arrows and so on. Because you have to have the structure. One of the reasons that?s important is it prevents you from making the story too tangled up and complex. I teach a class at Yale and when I?m teaching students I often find myself saying to one of them, ?You?re making the story too complicated. What is the one really important point that you want us to understand and how are you going to get us there?? Mapping out a story, either mentally or on a piece of paper, is incredibly important for getting that structure right.

Carl Zimmer and David Dobbs

Carl Zimmer and David Dobbs discuss their craft, ScienceOnline2011 / Ryan Somma, Flickr

Johnson: Who are some of the science writers working today that you think do this most effectively?

Zimmer: It depends on the genre. In books, for example, Rebecca Skloot and Joshua Foer have each come out with a book that does a fantastic job of mixing together hardcore science with personal experience in a way that is original and very compelling. [Editor's Note: See David Dobbs' piece "How Rebecca Skloot built The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks"]. In terms of magazine writers, I mentioned Burkhard Bilger and David Quamman. I?ve also been impressed with a guy named John Colapinto who also writes for The New Yorker. He did a piece on this linguist in Brazil called ?The Interpreter? that I thought was fantastic. It was so deeply reported and so sweeping in exploring a scientist?s whole life, including his science. I was very impressed by that. There are also bloggers who are doing so many interesting things out there. I?ve read Ed Yong?s stuff from close to when he started and have watched him develop his own personal genre at his blog Not Exactly Rocket Science. In the very best sense he?s been making up the rules as he goes along. He?s got an approach that?s all his own.

Johnson: You?re a strong advocate of incorporating history into your science writing. My favorite book of yours, perhaps one of my favorite popular science books of all time, is Soul Made Flesh about the origins of neuroscience in 17th century England. But most of your writing focuses on contemporary research. What does the history of science offer when writing about the biology of fireflies or the viruses that kill thousands of people every year?

Zimmer: I think there a couple of good things that come out of utilizing history when you?re writing about new science. One is that, if you explore history it can make journalism more exciting. You can show how the work that people are doing today is helping to address questions that people have been struggling with for decades or even centuries.

One good example of this is the sequencing of the Neanderthal genome. It?s pretty cool when you read about what people have done in the last couple of years by putting together a genome based on ancient DNA extracted from fossils. But it?s much more profound when you look back at the 150 years or so of research about Neanderthals. When these fossils came out of the ground people were struggling desperately just to make sense of what they were. Were they human beings? Were they some other species? Were they our ancestors? Could they talk? Did we humans kill them off? Now we have an entirely new way of addressing those questions. Understanding this history just makes it so much more exciting and more profound.

The other way that history can be useful is that it can make you as a journalist more skeptical about the importance of new results. The fact is that people will come out with an experiment and then send you a press release announcing that it?s the greatest thing ever. But, if you know your history, you?ll realize that scientists knew this thirty years ago and that this latest experiment is just rehashing old results but with new technology. I think that the more journalists know about the history of science the better.

Jad Abumrad and Robert Krulwich

Jad Abumrad and Robert Krulwich discuss their award-winning RadioLab in New York / Pete Jelliffe 2006, Flickr

Johnson: As a writer who is constantly entering into new fields, where are you going to push yourself next?

Zimmer: One of the things I like is to get involved in projects where the medium seems very different from what I?ve been dealing with before. For example, I?ve been working with Jad Abumrad and Robert Krulwich at the radio show RadioLab and it?s just been fantastic. The way they turn science into sound and find a way to work within their medium is astounding. Twitter may limit you to 140 characters, but radio limits you to just your ears. You have to figure out how to work within these constraints and turn them to your advantage.

The weirdest experience I had was when I spent one long afternoon talking with Jad and Robert about the evolution of the eye. I was explaining all the new research on how eyes evolved on a molecular level. It?s truly amazing research. Then they took that, teamed up with the dance company Pilobolus, and incorporated it into a live performance. I was able to see the show in Berkeley recently. I was literally watching dancers on stage playing the part of photoreceptors in the retina, and they got it right. It was great! They managed to get across the molecular biology quite well. Afterwards, I was talking with one of the dancers and he was excited about how they could do more dances based on science. There are so many different ways of doing this job. It?s a very exciting time to be communicating science.

Click here for Part Two: Carl Zimmer Delves Beneath the Surface of Science Writing

Previous Interviews at The Primate Diaries:

? Frans de Waal on Political Apes and Building a Cooperative Society
? Lee Alan Dugatkin on Peter Kropotkin, Anarchism, and Cooperation in Nature

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=1ef323907c3eb2c10151705f42ea5f14

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Mint Automated Floor Cleaner Review

OK, I’ll admit to a fascination with robotic floor cleaners.? I’ve owned a Roomba since 2006, so when I had the opportunity to review the Mint Automated Floor Cleaner from Evolution Robotics, I eagerly volunteered.? The Mint would address a limitation of the Roomba, because it is targeted specifically at hard surface floors, something the [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2011/12/22/mint-automated-floor-cleaner-review/

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Official: US limits intel value of drones

In this picture taken on Sept. 11, 2011, Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi, talks during a press conference in Tehran, Iran. Iran deliberately delayed its announcement that it had captured an American surveillance drone to test U.S. reaction, Salehi said Saturday, Dec. 17, 2011. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)

In this picture taken on Sept. 11, 2011, Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi, talks during a press conference in Tehran, Iran. Iran deliberately delayed its announcement that it had captured an American surveillance drone to test U.S. reaction, Salehi said Saturday, Dec. 17, 2011. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)

In this picture taken on June 21, 2011, Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi attends a meeting in Tehran, Iran. Iran deliberately delayed its announcement that it had captured an American surveillance drone to test U.S. reaction, Salehi said Saturday, Dec. 17, 2011. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)

(AP) ? A U.S. official says Iran will find it hard to exploit any data and technology aboard the captured CIA stealth drone because of measures taken to limit the intelligence value of drones operating over hostile territory.

The official also said Saturday that despite Iran's latest claims to have hijacked the RQ-170 Sentinel and brought it down near the eastern Iranian city of Kashmar, the U.S. is convinced that the drone malfunctioned.

"The Iranians had nothing to do with it," the official said.

The official, who could speak about classified matters only on condition of anonymity, did not provide details. But independent experts say the data and communications of the unmanned aircraft are heavily encrypted, making it difficult for Iran to harvest much intelligence from them. U.S. officials previously have said the drones have no self-destruct mechanism.

The RQ-170 was nicknamed "the Beast of Kandahar" because it was first spotted over Afghanistan. It was used to conduct surveillance of Osama bin Laden's Pakistani compound before he was killed in a U.S. raid.

The Christian Science Monitor on Thursday quoted an unidentified Iranian engineer as saying that Tehran seized control of the drone by exploiting a key vulnerability in its navigation system, its reliance on GPS technology to guide it home when it loses contact with U.S. controllers.

The engineer said Iran's electronic warfare specialists jammed the RQ-170's satellite communications link and tricked its autopilot into thinking that it was landing at its base in Afghanistan when it touched down in Iran.

"The GPS navigation is the weakest point," the engineer was quoted as saying. "By putting noise on the communications, you force the bird into autopilot."

U.S. officials say Iran merely picked up a drone ? or large pieces of one ? that had lost contact with its controllers and landed inside Iranian borders relatively intact.

What appears to be an Air Force Scientific Advisory Board report on drone warfare, posted on a website, found that communications links are a "primary target of the adversary" in robotic aircraft operations.

The April 2011 report added: "Small, simple GPS noise jammers can be easily constructed and employed by an unsophisticated adversary and would be effective over a limited RPA (remotely piloted aircraft) operating area," the report said.

The website, Public Intelligence, describes itself as an international consortium of independent researchers dedicated to providing access open-source intelligence materials. Some independent U.S. experts confirmed that the document accurately describes a well-known potential vulnerability in drones.

But Ted?Beneigh, an expert on unmanned aircraft systems at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Florida, said it was "highly unlikely" that the Iranians have a system that could interfere with the RQ-170's GPS navigation system.

The U.S. drone, Beneigh wrote in an email, would have used "military GPS frequencies, whose timing and code sequence is classified. Commercial GPS repeaters operate on civilian frequencies."

House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers said this week that even if Iran can reverse-engineer the captured technology by the time they finish it may be obsolete.

Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi on Saturday told IRNA, Iran's official news agency, that Tehran had delayed announcement of the captured drone, which it displayed on Iranian television Dec. 8, to test U.S. reaction to the loss.

After initially saying only that it had lost a drone operating near the Afghan-Iran border, U.S. officials eventually confirmed that Iran had captured a drone sent to monitor Iran's military and nuclear programs.

President Barack Obama on Friday said the U.S. planned to keep up the pressure on Iran to prevent it from acquiring nuclear weapons.

"And that's why, rest assured, we will take no options off the table," he said. "We have been clear."

The phrase "no options off the table" is meant to signal that the U.S. is prepared to take any measure up to and including a military strike against Iran's nuclear facilities.

While the U.S. and many other countries suspect Iran is engaged in a clandestine effort to build nuclear weapons, Tehran insists that it is interested only in the peaceful uses of atomic energy.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-12-18-US-Drone/id-852edab1631b493c8a9ac1174933ff71

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Remote wilderness polluted by humans

Remote wilderness polluted by humans [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 16-Dec-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Sofia Holmgren
Sofia.Holmgren@geol.lu.se
46-709-289-778
Lund University

The research is based on studies of sediment from 36 lakes in the USA, Canada, Greenland and Svalbard, Norway. The researchers have analysed how the chemical composition of the sediment has changed over the centuries. Twenty-five of the lakes all show the same sign that biologically active nitrogen from human sources can be traced back to the end of the 19th century.

The nitrogen analyses of the lake sediments show that the changes began around 1895. The results also show that the rate of change has accelerated over the past 60 years, which is in agreement with the commercialisation of artificial fertiliser production in the 1950s. Sofia Holmgren, a researcher in Quaternary Geology at Lund University, Sweden, is the only Swede to take part in the comprehensive study.

"I have studied lakes on Svalbard, where the effects of the increased nitrogen deposition are clearly visible in the algal flora", says Sofia Holmgren.

She explains that both the species composition and production of diatoms microscopic siliceous algae have changed dramatically in the lakes on Svalbard since the start of the 20th century, with the most significant changes over the past decades.

Combustion of fossil fuels and use of fertiliser are the main sources of the increasing amount of nitrogen in the atmosphere. The nitrogen is transported with air currents and reaches the ground in rain or snow. It can travel thousands of kilometres and the nitrogen thus reaches even the most remote lakes and ecosystems.

Nitrogen is an important nutrient for plants, but overuse in more intensive farming can lead to pollution of watercourses, smog and acid rain in urban environments. However, little is known about the effects in more remote areas. An increasing number of studies of Arctic lakes are now showing major changes to the ecosystems.

###

For more information, please contact:

Sofia Holmgren, Department of Earth and Ecosystem Sciences, Lund University

Tel. 46-709-289778, Sofia.Holmgren@geol.lu.se



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Remote wilderness polluted by humans [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 16-Dec-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Sofia Holmgren
Sofia.Holmgren@geol.lu.se
46-709-289-778
Lund University

The research is based on studies of sediment from 36 lakes in the USA, Canada, Greenland and Svalbard, Norway. The researchers have analysed how the chemical composition of the sediment has changed over the centuries. Twenty-five of the lakes all show the same sign that biologically active nitrogen from human sources can be traced back to the end of the 19th century.

The nitrogen analyses of the lake sediments show that the changes began around 1895. The results also show that the rate of change has accelerated over the past 60 years, which is in agreement with the commercialisation of artificial fertiliser production in the 1950s. Sofia Holmgren, a researcher in Quaternary Geology at Lund University, Sweden, is the only Swede to take part in the comprehensive study.

"I have studied lakes on Svalbard, where the effects of the increased nitrogen deposition are clearly visible in the algal flora", says Sofia Holmgren.

She explains that both the species composition and production of diatoms microscopic siliceous algae have changed dramatically in the lakes on Svalbard since the start of the 20th century, with the most significant changes over the past decades.

Combustion of fossil fuels and use of fertiliser are the main sources of the increasing amount of nitrogen in the atmosphere. The nitrogen is transported with air currents and reaches the ground in rain or snow. It can travel thousands of kilometres and the nitrogen thus reaches even the most remote lakes and ecosystems.

Nitrogen is an important nutrient for plants, but overuse in more intensive farming can lead to pollution of watercourses, smog and acid rain in urban environments. However, little is known about the effects in more remote areas. An increasing number of studies of Arctic lakes are now showing major changes to the ecosystems.

###

For more information, please contact:

Sofia Holmgren, Department of Earth and Ecosystem Sciences, Lund University

Tel. 46-709-289778, Sofia.Holmgren@geol.lu.se



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-12/lu-rwp121611.php

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"Whatever" deemed most annoying word: poll (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) ? Do you want to kill a conversation? Try saying "whatever."

Words like "you know" and "like" might be irritating to hear, but for the third year in a row, it's "whatever" that holds the most power to annoy, according to an annual survey by the Marist College Institute for Public Opinion.

Nearly four in ten adults named "whatever" as the most annoying verbal filler in casual conversation, while one in five adults had similar disdain for "like" and 'you know."

"Just sayin'" and "seriously" were more forgiving to the ears, though still quite irritating, Marist found.

The telephone survey of 1,026 adults nationally had a margin of error of three percentage points.

(Reporting by Edith Honan; editing by Patricia Reaney)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/oddlyenough/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111216/od_nm/us_words_whatever

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Dana White gives female fighting another shot

Dana White gives female fighting another shotAs shocking as it was to hear a fired up Dana White talk about the long-range future of Strikeforce on Showtime, it was nothing compared to his attitude shift on women's MMA.

The women's divisions will remain in tact in the new Strikeforce/Showtime deal announced yesterday. In the middle of 2011, it appeared female fighting was going to take step back when Strikeforce was dissolved. By popular demand, women's fighting will still be showcased at close to the highest level of the sport. .

"Every weekend you guys are asking me about the women's division ... and women and women and women, and the fans are always terrorizing me on twitter about the women's division. The women's division is very popular. We're gonna keep it," White said during a teleconference (7:45 mark).

Stars like Cristiane "Cyborg" Santos, Miesha Tate, Sarah Kaufman and Ronda Rousey still have a home where they can get major exposure. White is sticking to guns about the issues he has with women's MMA. It needs work, but he's willing to give it a chance saying both the 135 and 145 pound divisions will stay.

"Again you guys hear me talk about this all the time. The depth in some of these divisions. 'Cyborg's' division has that problem. She's a huge star. She's a champion. We're gonna keep that division. People are excited to her fight. We're gonna keep it," said White (9:40 mark).

Zuffa management may lean toward some crossover fights between the divisions while the depth issues is being worked on.

"If you look at Cyborg's division, it's not a very deep division with a lot of talent. You can stack the other division deep with talent because that's what you have to do," said White comparing it to the early days of UFC when there were no lightweight, bantamweight and featherweight divisions in the promotion (20:15 mark). "In order to run a show and establish champions with great contenders you gotta go deep in every one of those weight divisions."

So as big as the news was for the elite male fighters at 205, 185, 170 and 155, yesterday's announcement benefited female fighting more than anything. With the might and money of Zuffa/UFC plus the ability to talent evaluate, the talent pool in female fighting at the highest levels should explode. Then the question is, will fans want to pay to see it and will it bring eyes to the TV sets? That's a debate for another day. At least right now, women get the opportunity.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/mma/blog/cagewriter/post/Dana-White-gives-female-fighting-another-shot?urn=mma-wp10812

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