Saturday, December 31, 2011

Iran Test-Fires Long Range Missiles During Naval Exercise In The Gulf, Semi-Official Fars News Agency Reports

TEHRAN, Dec 31 (Reuters) - Iran test-fired long range missiles on Saturday during a naval exercise in the Gulf, the semi-official Fars news agency said, following a threat by Tehran to close shipping lanes if the West imposes sanctions on its oil exports.

The 10-day naval drill in the Gulf began last week as Iran showed its resolve to counter any attack by enemies such as Israel or the United States.

"Iran test-fired missiles including long range (missiles), surface to sea, ... in the Persian Gulf," Fars said.

Tehran threatened on Tuesday to stop the flow of oil through the Strait of Hormuz in the Gulf if it became the target of an oil embargo over its nuclear ambitions, a move that could trigger military conflict with countries dependent on Gulf oil.

Tensions with the West have risen since the U.N. nuclear watchdog reported on Nov. 8 that Iran appears to have worked on designing an atomic bomb and may still be pursuing research to that end.

Iran denies this and says it needs nuclear technology to generate electricity to meet growing domestic demand.

During military drills in 2009, Iran test-fired its surface-to-surface Shahab-3 missile, said to be capable of reaching Israel and U.S. bases in the Middle East.

Washington has expressed concern about Tehran's missiles, which include the Shahab-3 strategic intermediate range ballistic missile with a range of up to 1,000 km (625 miles), the Ghadr-1 with an estimated 1,600 km range and a Shahab-3 variant known as Sajjil-2 with a range of up to 2,400 km.

Iranian media have said the naval exercise differed from previous ones in terms of "the vastness of the area of action and the military equipment and tactics that are being employed". (Writing by Ramin Mostafavi; editing by David Stamp)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

Also on HuffPost:

'; var coords = [-5, -72]; // display fb-bubble FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, 'top', {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: 'clear-overlay'}); });

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/31/iran-test-fires-long-range-missiles_n_1177416.html

alabama vs lsu alabama vs lsu robert schuller guy fawkes day jesse ventura stevie williams steve williams

Dolphins' Taylor to retire after Sunday's game (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? Miami Dolphins linebacker Jason Taylor is to bring the curtain down on his 15-year NFL career after Sunday's season finale against the New York Jets.

The 37-year-old is the active leader in sacks with 139.5, which places him sixth on the all-time list, and also holds an NFL record six fumble returns for touchdowns.

Drafted by the Dolphins in 1997, Taylor spent 13 of his 15 seasons with the franchise.

"It's been a great run," Taylor told a news conference following Dolphins' practice on Wednesday.

"It's been a tough year, unfortunately. We've had some good times. This is the right time for me to go ahead and allow this organization to grow and improve."

Taylor, who spent most of his career at defensive end before switching to linebacker, rejoined the Dolphins in the off-season for the third stint of his career.

Miami have a disappointing 5-10 record this year despite seven sacks from Taylor.

Much of Taylor's career has been spent on underperforming Dolphins teams and his last playoff game with the franchise came in 2001. He did help the New York Jets get to the AFC Championship game last season but never reached a Super Bowl.

Taylor is a six-times Pro Bowler and was named the NFL Defensive Player of the Year in 2006.

(Writing by Jahmal Corner in Los Angeles; Editing by Peter Rutherford)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111229/sp_nm/us_nfl_dolphins_taylor

rick hendrick plane crash marco rubio marco rubio no shave november miranda lambert kim kardashian divorce generators

Friday, December 30, 2011

Richard's most-used Android apps of 2011

Android Central

Over the course of the last 12 months, I've lost count of the sheer amount of applications that I've downloaded, tried, deleted, and in some cases tried again. When all is said and done though, there's a select group of apps which I use a whole lot more than others to the point that they've become part of everyday life. Here's a little list of what's been getting me through the week.

Also: Phil's picks, Jerry's Picks, Chris' Picks

read more



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/0VfcA9-iEQw/story01.htm

heavy d funeral oklahoma state university osu football osu football christopher walken ok state ok state

Best broadband suburbs in South Africa

Rudolph Muller

Rudolph Muller is the editor at MyBroadband and covers telecoms and broadband news. Rudolph comes from an academic background, but left the University of...

Latest Net Index statistics reveal which suburbs in South Africa enjoys the highest average broadband speeds

Ookla?s Net Index shows that Parow is the suburb with the highest average broadband speed in South Africa, followed by Witbank and Sandton.

Ookla?s Net Index uses data from the web based speed test service Speedtest.net. The service ranks consumer download speeds around the globe using results from the past 30 days where the average distance between the client and the test server is less than 300 miles (482.8km).

Results for South African download speeds were obtained by analyzing data from 280,820 Speedtest.net tests which were performed between 13 November 2011 and 12 December 2011. City (suburb) rankings require at least 1,000 unique IP addresses for a given city.

  1. Parow 9.37 Mbps
  2. Witbank 5.02 Mbps
  3. Sandton 3.92 Mbps
  4. Pretoria 3.91 Mbps
  5. Midrand 3.86 Mbps
  6. Bellville 3.68 Mbps
  7. Randburg 3.62 Mbps
  8. Johannesburg 3.49 Mbps
  9. Cape Town 3.43 Mbps
  10. Rustenburg 3.29 Mbps

It should however be noted that the average speeds are calculated using all Speedtest.net results which may include speed tests from core networks and other non-commercial broadband links.

The high average speed in Parow of 9.37Mbps, for example, may well be a result of a high number of tests from high speed connections other than commercial broadband services.

Best broadband suburbs in South Africa

Best broadband suburbs in South Africa

Tags: broadband, Headline, ookla, speedtest.net

Source: http://mybroadband.co.za/news/broadband/39879-best-broadband-suburbs-in-south-africa-2.html

usc oregon breaking dawn part 2 breaking dawn part 2 big game jeremy london jeremy london butterball turkey fryer

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Rival Priests Brawl in Bethlehem Church Fight

A multisource video news analysis service that highlights nuances in reporting from media outlets around the world.

(Image Source: euronews)


BY ADNAN S. KHAN

ANCHOR CHRISTINA HARTMAN
?

Prayer and blessings were replaced with brooms and bats when some 100 priests got into a brawl in the Church of Nativity in Bethlehem.

?

The fight broke out between Greek Orthodox and Armenian Apostolic members over the boundaries of their respective jurisdictions within the church. As this Telegraph video shows the fight became quite intense and came to a stop only after baton-wielding policemen entered the fray.


The fight broke out while the church was being cleaned in preparation for Orthodox Christmas on January 7th. But USA Today says the incident is nothing new.
?

?Roman Catholic, Greek Orthodox and Armenian clerics share the administration of the church, which oftens leads to jurisdictional disputes.?
?

According to the BBC, the 1,700-year-old church is in deteriorating condition largely because the priests cannot decide how to divide the cost of upkeep. BBC also adds, similar incidents have plagued other holy sites as well.
?

"Jerusalem's Church of the Holy Sepulchre, built on the site where many Christians believe Jesus was crucified, has also seen similar incidents.?
?

No one was seriously injured according to authorities. Euronews notes being men of the cloth, also came in handy in the aftermath of the violence.
?

?Police separated the rival groups, and no arrests were made because they are all ?men of God? according to a lieutenant colonel in the city?s force.?
?

?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Newsy-world/~3/epOlvKj8trE/rival-priests-brawl-in-bethlehem-church-fight

michael buble michael buble teddy roosevelt kim richards rita hayworth rita hayworth lakers rumors

Same Sex Romance Comes to a Galaxy Far, Far Away (Newsarama.com)

Same-sex relationships are coming to the "Star Wars" universe, courtesy of video game developer BioWare and publisher Electronic Arts' new massively multiplayer online role- playing game (or "MMORPGs" or "MMOs" for short), "Star Wars: The Old Republic," and the decision is getting people talking.

MMOs are games that create immersive virtual environments in which millions of players can interact with computer-generated characters as well as characters created by fellow gamers. While this is BioWare's first MMO, the developer is known among fans for the emphasis they place on romantic relationships between characters in their single-player role-playing games. In the past, BioWare games have featured same-sex relationships between men and women, and in the case of the immensely popular sci-fi game "Mass Effect," relationships between men and women with an asexual alien.

BioWare originally announced that players and their companions in "Star Wars: The Old Republic" would only be able to experience mixed-gender romantic relationships. After many inquiries from fans asking the developer to explain the decision, earlier this week a new forum post by Stephen Reid, the senior online community manager for the game, showed up on the company's official website announcing that those fans had been heard and same-sex romance will be added to the game.

BioWare's statement explained that while the game will still launch with only male/female relationships, they will be adding same gender romance options in future updates.

"Due to the design constraints of a fully voiced MMO of this scale and size, many choices had to be made as to the launch and post-launch feature set. Same gender romances with companion characters in 'Star Wars: The Old Republic' will be a post-launch feature. Because 'The Old Republic' is an MMO, the game will live on through content expansions which allow us to include content and features that could not be included at launch, including the addition of more companion characters who will have additional romance options."

"Companion characters" are computer-controlled characters that follow player-created characters around the virtual world, aiding them as gamers maneuver through the story.

The response to BioWare's announcement has been massive. There are 326 pages of comments as of Friday afternoon on the official "Star Wars: The Old Republic" forum alone. They range from "thank you for listening to our requests" to "how dare you expose my children to this."

The game has no firm release date, only a release window of "holiday 2011." It has also already received an ESRB rating of "T for Teen," meaning the game is recommended for players 13 and older. Neither facts have stopped detractors from crying foul, such as John Nolte on the blog "Big Hollywood," who starts his post on the subject with "Say goodbye to your child's innocence," and ends with the inaccurate proclamation, "Announcing the gay relationships AFTER the game has been sold is pure bait and switch."

The game already has reportedly broken preorder records for publisher Electronic Arts.

Got a comment? There's lots of conversation on Newsarama's FACEBOOK and TWITTER!

Related Stories:

Newsarama.com is the go-to source for the latest comic book and genre entertainment news, reviews and commentary. Newsarama's passionate audience contributes to lively discussions ranging from classic and new comics to movies, TV, manga, anime and more. Watch previews, interviews and more on our video player, sneak peeks of new comics on our Comic Book Viewer and sign up for our RSS feeds. And be sure to join our community so you can voice your opinion on our articles and in our lively forums.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/videogames/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/newsarama/20111227/en_newsarama/samesexromancecomestoagalaxyfarfaraway

gone with the wind nba lockout news nba lockout news gifts for mom gifts for mom pepper spray storage auctions

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Apps for apes: Orang-utans want iPads for Christmas

Continue reading page |1 |2

Forget bananas. The biggest hit in zoos this year is an Apple, though orangs have more of a geek streak than gorillas

IT STARTED as a joke. On 1 April 2011, British newspaper The Sun ran a story claiming that an experiment to entertain captive gorillas using iPads had left them crazy for the game Angry Birds. "Planet of the Apps", as the April fool's story was headlined, quickly found its way to Scott Engel, a freelance photographer and volunteer at Milwaukee County Zoo in Wisconsin. Engel knew his 3-year-old niece loved using a finger-painting app, so why not a great ape? He had just bought a new iPad, and hearing the zoo's gorilla keeper was looking for ways to keep his charges entertained, Engel offered the zoo his old one.

It turned out that Milwaukee's gorillas lack the geek streak. Direct eye contact is a threat gesture, so faces on the gadget's screen may put them off, Engel suggests. However, the zoo's orang-utans went bananas for Apple's tablet and soon Engel had rustled up three more iPads to keep the apes busy.

Mahal, a 4-year-old male, and his 31-year-old adoptive mother MJ were fascinated from the start. The first time Mahal saw his own image on the screen - taken with the iPad's camera - he threw up his hands and clapped. A shy male named Tommy took a while to warm to his tablet, says Engel, "but now he's really into it".

Then Richard Zimmerman of Orangutan Outreach, a conservation group based in New York, heard about the experiment. He saw its potential for both entertaining apes and studying their behaviour. With a shrewd eye for publicity, he also spotted its value for raising public awareness of the precarious status of orang-utans in the wild. And then there were the networking opportunities - for the apes, that is. Put iPads in zoos across the US and they could be connected through the internet, using Apesbook perhaps, to offer bored orang-utans online "primate play dates". To help raise funds, Orangutan Outreach launched its Apps for Apes campaign in May.

Orang-utans are the obvious candidates for this kind of activity, says Trish Khan, Milwaukee zoo's head orang-utan keeper. These apes are known for their intelligence, curiosity and creativity (they're notorious escape artists, Khan says) but can quickly become bored and depressed in the monotonous confines of captivity. "Their world is really very small," she says, and that makes a computer a welcome distraction.

Khan's orang-utans aren't the first computer-gaming apes. Orang-utans at Atlanta's zoo have been using a concrete "tree" with an embedded touchscreen computer since 2008. The apes use it to play games in which they categorise, match and sequence images, which provides useful data on how orang-utans learn and think.

However the real IT crowd resides at the Smithsonian National Zoo in Washington DC. Since 1994 its orang-utans have used computers both for entertainment and to communicate with keepers using a simple symbol-based language. Currently their "dictionary" contains around 70 symbols including nouns such as food items as well as verbs and adjectives. Eventually syntax - the other building block of language - will be added to see if the orang-utans can construct sentences to communicate with their carers.

At Milwaukee the iPads are still considered tools for entertainment rather than for research. The keepers offer them no more than twice a week, and with no food rewards it's up to the apes whether they participate.

Engel, now the zoo's official iPad enrichment coordinator, shows the orang-utans videos through the glass facing the visitors' area. They're fascinated by clips of other animals; Mahal loves videos of Humboldt penguins, though "he's not too keen on rhinos", Engel says. MJ prefers David Attenborough's BBC documentary on apes. "I think she has a crush on him," Engel adds.

The orang-utans also use free or inexpensive drawing programs such as Doodle Buddy, music app Magic Piano and simple games like Koi Pond. The animated, interactive app The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr Morris Lessmore is also a favourite. "We're collecting information on their preferences and how they use the iPads, where they position their fingers and how much of the screen they use," Khan says. She would like to commission customised apps with larger buttons and more pictures, and hopes that visitors will be able to download the same apps and use them to compete with the orang-utans in games using their own mobile gadgets.

But first she and Engel must face a challenge of their own. At the moment Milwaukee's apes must reach through their enclosure's metal bars to touch the iPad screens. "If they got a hold of it, they'd take it apart," says Khan. To solve this, keepers at the Smithsonian National Zoo mounted their computers on walls and heavy carts and added transparent plastic covers to protect the screens. Each device then needed additional sensors to measure the position of an orang-utan's fingers. So Khan and her colleagues are looking for a simpler and cheaper way to make the iPad's wafer-thin screen ape-proof. They have begun by contacting industrial designers who specialise in computer casings. Zimmerman also plans to consult dolphin expert Jack Kassewitz for his experience using waterproofed iPads (see "Appiness for all"). "Orang-utans pee on everything," says Zimmerman.

Continue reading page |1 |2

If you would like to reuse any content from New Scientist, either in print or online, please contact the syndication department first for permission. New Scientist does not own rights to photos, but there are a variety of licensing options available for use of articles and graphics we own the copyright to.

Have your say

Only subscribers may leave comments on this article. Please log in.

Only personal subscribers may leave comments on this article

Subscribe now to comment.

All comments should respect the New Scientist House Rules. If you think a particular comment breaks these rules then please use the "Report" link in that comment to report it to us.

If you are having a technical problem posting a comment, please contact technical support.

Source: http://feeds.newscientist.com/c/749/f/10897/s/1b53b098/l/0L0Snewscientist0N0Carticle0Cmg212284410B30A0A0Eapps0Efor0Eapes0Eorangutans0Ewant0Eipads0Efor0Echristmas0Bhtml0DDCMP0FOTC0Erss0Gnsref0Fonline0Enews/story01.htm

wayne gretzky wayne gretzky occupy los angeles occupy los angeles comedian patrice o neal occupy philadelphia occupy philadelphia

ICSB Knowledge ? Blog Archive ? Car Insurance

That Website is outdated in this video i found better website that is just been updated in 2010 containing all the latest tips and ideas to get cheaper car insurance.To get latest? 2010 tips to save money on your car insurance today go to moneyexpertsteam.blogspot.com.It saved me nearly ?469.87.Go to moneyexpertsteam.blogspot.com now!! Save the pounds and notes now!!!

Source: http://www.icsbknowledge.com/car-insurance-2/

dan marino passing record ipad 2 cases movie times serene branson matthew mcconaughey golden state warriors to catch a predator

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

dcjohnson: RT @thinkprogress: FACT: Obama's job-crushing economic policies have created 1.67 million private sector jobs in 2011 #bestof11

  • Passer la navigation
  • Twitter sur votre mobile ? Cliquez ici m.twitter.com!
  • Passer cette ?tape
  • Connexion
Loader Twitter.com
  • Connexion
FACT: Obama's job-crushing economic policies have created 1.67 million private sector jobs in 2011 #bestof11 thinkprogress

ThinkProgress

Pied de page

Source: http://twitter.com/dcjohnson/statuses/150709663426547713

beef o bradys bowl the hobbit sopa the hobbit an unexpected journey dark knight rises trailer dark knight rises trailer latkes

Monday, December 26, 2011

DragonTat2: RT @pari_passu: The #GOP speaking on behalf of the American people is like Ted Bundy speaking on behalf of abused women. #p2 #p21 #tcot

Twitter / Casey: The #GOP speaking on behal ... Loader The speaking on behalf of the American people is like Ted Bundy speaking on behalf of abused women.

Source: http://twitter.com/DragonTat2/statuses/150989734636818433

florida state football fsu football fsu football do a barrelroll bérénice marlohe bérénice marlohe google offers

GoDaddy CEO: ?There Has To Be Consensus About The Leadership Of The Internet Community?

gduIn a brief interview with TechCrunch, GoDaddy's new CEO, Warren Adelman, did a little damage control relating to the company's highly public reversal of its position on SOPA. GoDaddy had previously issued a strong statement of support for the controversial bill, which you can find here. The last day has seen a growing grassroots rejection of the company and its position in the form of a boycott. But today brought a statement from the company apparently doing a complete about-face. Adelman noted that he had "been CEO of this company for all of one week," and that the complaints and feedback had grown just over the last 24 hours, and it is during this time that he became involved. He said that the feedback made him realize they should "take a step back and look at the current legislation." Of course, the outcry against SOPA and its twin in the Senate goes back much further.

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

marfan syndrome britney spears engaged craig smith craig smith eat to live eat to live ron paul money bomb

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Romney charity used for conservative donations

Republican presidential candidate, former Mass. Gov. Mitt Romney and his wife Ann Talk with another customer while shopping for "Toys For Tots" in The Toy Store in Concord, N.H. Friday, Dec. 23, 2011. (AP Photo/Winslow Townson)

Republican presidential candidate, former Mass. Gov. Mitt Romney and his wife Ann Talk with another customer while shopping for "Toys For Tots" in The Toy Store in Concord, N.H. Friday, Dec. 23, 2011. (AP Photo/Winslow Townson)

Republican presidential candidate, former Mass. Gov. Mitt Romney talks with a voter while campaigning in Concord, N.H. Friday, Dec. 23, 2011. (AP Photo/Winslow Townson)

Republican presidential candidate, former Mass. Gov. Mitt Romney signs baseballs while campaigning in Concord, N.H. Friday, Dec. 23, 2011. (AP Photo/Winslow Townson)

(AP) ? In the Republican primary struggle to define the most reliably conservative presidential candidate, Mitt Romney has put his money where his mouth is. Over the past six years and two presidential campaigns, Romney has donated at least $260,000 from his family charity foundation to GOP causes and influential conservative groups that could deepen his ties within the party and establish his credibility on the right.

Romney's campaign said there was no hidden motivation behind his contributions.

Romney gave $100,000 last year to the George W. Bush Presidential Library in Dallas, according to tax records of the Tyler Charitable Foundation, a multimillion dollar Boston-based charity headed by Romney and his wife, Ann. The former president has said publicly he will not endorse any candidate in the Republican primary, but the Romney campaign is studded with former Bush political veterans and appears to lead its rivals in financial support from former Bush fundraisers.

In 2008, Romney gave $25,000 to The Becket Fund, a religious rights legal aid group that is suing the Obama administration on behalf of a North Carolina Catholic college over federal rules requiring employer health plans to cover contraceptives and other birth control. Romney has also contributed tens of thousands of dollars to Massachusetts conservative groups and to core Washington-based conservative think-tanks and publications, among them the Heritage Foundation research institute, the Federal Society legal interest group and a gala dinner for the National Review magazine website.

Romney's gifts came with no strings attached, according to many of the groups, and the Romney campaign says the former Massachusetts governor was simply aiding well-established organizations. GOP strategists and other campaign observers say the moves are smart politics for a candidate trying to establish his conservative bona fides and who has scorned his latest rival, former House speaker Newt Gingrich, as an "unreliable conservative." But some caution that Romney's gift giving could raise questions inside the party about whether he is trying to use his vast personal wealth to buy support on the right.

"He knows he's not looked at as coming from the trenches of the conservative movement, so this is his way of making an appeal," GOP consultant Greg Mueller said. "The question is how it will play among the conservative faithful."

A Romney campaign spokeswoman, Andrea Saul, said the candidate's donations were made with no "hint of a quid pro quo." She called the groups "public charities with worthy missions."

Officials at the Bush library would not discuss details of Romney's donation. Bush's spokesman, Freddy Ford, waved off any speculation about Romney's political motivation. "The former president is going to support whoever the Republican nominee is, but as he's said, he doesn't want to wade into the swamp" during the primaries, Ford said.

Romney may not expect an early endorsement, but his campaign has already benefitted from Bush's top talent. Romney's campaign strategists, Stu Stevens and Russell Schriefer, worked with the Bush-Cheney team in 2000 and 2004, and his campaign manager, Matt Rhoades, was Bush's research director in the 2004 race. Washington lawyer Benjamin Ginsberg, who represented Bush during the 2000 recount, is a senior adviser, and numerous other former Bush staffers are on the Romney team.

Romney's campaign finance team has also out-dueled Gingrich, Texas Gov. Rick Perry and other rivals to win the favor of top Bush fundraisers, known as "Pioneers" and "Rangers," who gave in excess of $100,000 in past presidential campaigns. The Houston Chronicle reported that Romney's former Bush supporters had raised $350,000 compared to Perry's $213,000 by late fall.

In recent weeks, as Gingrich's star rose, Romney questioned his conservative credentials, citing his consulting work for mortgage lending giant Freddie Mac. Gingrich responded by slamming the role of Bain Capital, the private equity firm Romney once headed, in mass layoffs at some firms under its control.

Gingrich's own private charity, the Center for Health Transformation, has donated at least $167,000 since 2005 to traditional charities ? ranging from $10,000 to Red Cross relief for Hurricane Katrina victims to $3,000 to the Winn Feline Foundation, a group promoting cat health. But Gingrich made no contributions to conservative groups ? which Gingrich supporters say reflects his status as a lifelong conservative.

Gingrich's spokesman, R.C. Hammond, declined to comment on Romney's gifts to conservative groups, but was quick to stress Gingrich's pedigree on the right. "Every notable Republican achievement of recent years has either been driven by Newt or has his fingerprints on it," he said.

With a short history as a conservative political figure, Romney's largess to conservative causes is "definitely a smart move," said Bill Dal Col, former campaign manager for businessman Steve Forbes' two presidential tries. "He may be doing it with dollars but it gets him to the same level playing field as any conservative who has come up through the ranks."

Some diehard conservatives see Romney's gift giving as part of a measured effort to change his stripes. During his first presidential try in 2006, MassResistance, a Massachusetts group opposed to gay marriage, warned on its Internet blog of a "calculated effort by the Romney campaign to revise his history and portray the governor as far more conservative than the record indicates."

Presidential candidates are not normally known for using family charities to donate to interest groups within their political parties, but it has happened before. Dal Col said Forbes donated small amounts to some core conservative groups around the time he ran in GOP primaries in 1996 and 2000. Teresa Heinz Kerry was criticized by conservative groups for Heinz foundation donations to environmental groups in advance of Sen. John Kerry's 2004 presidential run as Democratic party nominee.

Romney's main outlet for charity is the Tyler foundation. It was originally called the Ann D. and Mitt Romney Charitable Foundation and renamed for a street where the couple once had a home in Belmont, Mass. The foundation, which listed $10 million in assets in 2010, has given more than $7 million in charity over the past decade.

Most of its assets come from direct grants from the Romneys or from Romney-owned stocks and other holdings. Until the most recent 2010 tax disclosure, the Tyler foundation had previously provided detailed lists of stock holdings the Romneys had bought and sold to increase the charity's funds. Earlier this year, an AP review of earlier Tyler holdings showed that some investments included companies whose interests conflicted with GOP positions ? including firms tied to the Chinese government, companies that did business in Iran and firms working in stem cell research.

Romney had earlier declared that the blind trust lawyer overseeing Tyler's finances would end such investments. A trust official indicated those investments are being eliminated, but the most recent tax filing does not include details of any specific investments and lists only total holdings.

Most of the Romneys' monetary gifts have gone to non-political causes, including more than $4.7 million to the Mormon Church, reflecting the family's faith, and hundreds of thousands more to research on cancer and multiple sclerosis (which afflicts his wife, Ann); academics (Harvard Business School and Brigham Young University) and athletics (a variety of Olympic and other sports groups).

Between 1999 and 2004, the Romneys' giving went almost exclusively to non-political charities. Their gifts helped Boston and Massachusetts-based charities aiding education programs, deprived children and the homeless ? although one $5,000 contribution to an AIDS relief group in 2004 was later criticized by conservative activists for supporting a gay rights agenda.

In 2005, around the time that Romney started laying plans for his first presidential campaign, Romney suddenly began directing contributions to influential conservative groups and programs. Late that year, Romney gave $25,000 to the Heritage Foundation and a similar sized donation to the Federalist Society. Tyler records show the Romney charity gave the groups $10,000 donations again the next year.

Both organizations are conservative think tanks that often act as incubators for the development of the GOP's political, legal and cultural ideas. Their boards include top names among conservative leaders and thinkers. Heritage trustees and managers include Steve Forbes, businessman Richard Mellon Scaife, former Reagan Attorney General Edwin Meese III and former Bush administration counsel David Addington. Federalist directors include Meese, former Bush Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey and C. Boyden Gray, former counsel to President George H.W. Bush.

John Van Kannon, vice president of development at Heritage, said the organization does not make presidential endorsements, but he praised Romney for his gift. "We did not solicit his check, but we certainly appreciated it," he said. Van Kannon said he could not speculate on Romney's motivation, noting: "I would like to hope that no one who runs for president does things for calculation, but on the other hand I live in Washington."

Heritage health care experts developed an early relationship with Romney during his term as governor, providing analysis as his administration developed its health care plan for Massachusetts, Van Kannon said. Romney spoke about his plan during a 2006 presentation and later invited Heritage experts to a signing ceremony. Heritage's experts supported rules mandating that all state residents had to buy health care coverage, but Van Kannon said they now consider mandates to be bad policy and oppose them as part of the Obama administration's health care law.

"We're proud of our work with Gov. Romney on health care but we've changed our views on mandates," Van Kannon said.

The Federalist Society does not endorse candidates. Officials there did not return calls from The Associated Press. Former Nixon administration official Robert Bork, who is on the Federalist Society's board of visitors, is a policy adviser to Romney's campaign.

Similarly, the executive director at the Becket Fund, Kristina Arriaga, said Romney's 2008 donation of $25,000 would not result in his political endorsement. "We specialize only in religious liberty not politics," Arriaga said.

Romney's donations also won favor among several Massachusetts conservative groups that worked with him when he was governor. Barbara Anderson, executive director of Citizens for Limited Taxation, said Romney's $10,000 check came "out of the blue" in 2007. The group also does not endorse candidates. Anderson said that despite Romney's financial help, she is personally uncertain whom she will vote for.

"I keep leaning toward him but I'm still on the fence," Anderson said. "He helped our cause a lot but as important as tax policy is, there's more to a presidential candidate that I have to consider. Whatever I decide, it won't be because he gave us $10,000."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2011-12-23-Romney%20Charity/id-4372a5843c3142e0a96d5d30185b973f

peter schiff matt holliday project runway winner project runway winner hunter s thompson hunter s thompson berkman

Weird wildlife: Real animals of Antarctica

Ask anyone to name an Antarctic land animal, and chances are the response will be, "penguin." Try again, says David Barnes, a scientist with the British Antarctic Survey.

"Penguins aren't really residents on land. All the species except for one ? emperor penguins ? spend most of their lives at sea," Barnes told OurAmazingPlanet.

"And likewise the other sea birds go north during Antarctica's winter," he added.

It turns out that the usual suspects ? penguins, seals ? don't actually live on the continent. They just visit.

"In order to see Antarctica's resident land animals, you have to have a microscope," Barnes said.

And one look reveals an outlandish cast of characters more suited to Lewis Carroll's fiction than a Disney movie, both in name and ability. The continent's natives ? rotifers, tardigrades and springtails, collembola and mites ? possess a bizarre array of physiological tools to survive on the coldest, windiest, highest and driest continent on Earth.

In addition, evidence is mounting that these weird Antarctic animals are remnants of a bygone age, the only survivors of a vanished world ? something once thought nearly impossible.

"The take-home message is that we think our animals survived the last ice age," said biologist Byron Adams, a professor at Brigham Young University.

Petite pachyderms
The largest of the continent's land animals, the so-called "elephants of Antarctica," are the collembola, or, as they are more commonly known, springtails. Unlike the majority of their neighbors, they are visible to the naked eye.

"They look like insects ? a little bit like an earwig," said Ian Hogg, a freshwater ecologist and associate professor at New Zealand's University of Waikato. "But they're a lot cuter than earwigs," Hogg added.

Typically under a millimeter long, the tiny, six-legged arthropods are similar to insects, but more primitive, and likely resemble the ancient ancestors of modern-day insects,? Hogg said. They live under rocks near coastal areas, and survive on a diet of fungus and bacteria. Hogg has found them as far south as 86 degrees latitude.

Although springtails are found all over the planet, those that live in Antarctica have a few tricks to survive the brutal conditions. They can slow down their metabolism to save energy, "and when it gets close to winter, they start to produce glycerol, which lowers their freezing point," Hogg said.

But even springtails can succumb in harsh Antarctic conditions. "If they get too cold they'll freeze solid, and that's the end of them," Hogg said.

They're aliiiive
Yet for Antarctica's most abundant land animal, tiny nematode worms, freezing is not fatal ? it's more like a neat party trick.

The hardy worms are one of the most abundant creatures on Earth, and in Antarctica's simple ecosystems, they are king.

"They're the rulers of the continent," said BYU's Byron Adams. "As far as animals go, you're more likely to find a nematode than anything."

The worms may be tiny ? a real whopper is almost as long as a dime is thick, Adams said ? but they have the combined biological powers of a MacGyver and a Lazarus.

First, the worms employ inventive physiological processes to stave off the effects of the extreme cold.

Like springtails, Antarctica's nematodes can lower their freezing point. They also have a mechanism to protect their cells from the dangers of frozen water, allowing them to survive in temperatures well below freezing.

Inside a cell, ice can be deadly. "Imagine a drop of water," Adams said. "It's smooth and round. When that turns into ice, it turns into a ninja-star type of thing, with all these sharp points. That causes the cells to burst ? it kills the cell," he said. This same process causes frostbite and its nasty effects. As cells die, tissue is destroyed.

To prevent this, nematodes produce proteins that act as packing peanuts, surrounding the sharp-edged ice crystals with tiny cushions to protect the cells from rupture and ensuing death.

When conditions get too dry (the worms require moisture to function), the worms have the ability to drop into a death-like state of suspended animation from which they can revive many months, even decades, later, when conditions improve.

"They pump all the water out of the bodies until they're dried out like a little Cheerio," Adams said ? a process similar to freeze-drying. The worms then literally just blow around in the wind until water returns ? often, not until the following summer, when melt from glaciers creates freshwater streams around the continent.

"When the water comes back, the nematodes suck the water back into their bodies and they're re-animated ? they come back to life," Adams said.

The strategy is not unique to Antarctica. Nematodes that live in hot, dry deserts do the same thing, he added.

It's still not clear just how long the worms can survive in this state, but nematodes have reawakened after 60 years in freeze-dried mode.

For all their toughness, the nematodes may have reason to envy one of their Antarctic colleagues ? tardigrades ? which are similarly rugged, yet have one thing nematodes just haven't got: good looks.

Brawny beauties
"They're really cute," Adams said.

Tardigrades look a bit like a bear crossed with a sweet potato. In fact, they look huggable ? a rare quality among microscopic animals. They have chubby bodies and eight legs, from which curved, bear-like claws protrude.

Like nematodes, these algae-eating water beasts can "freeze-dry" themselves, and have even survived a trip into low-Earth orbit.

"It was quite surprising to me that exposure to the vacuum of space, with its extreme desiccating effect, did not affect survival at all," said Ingemar J?nsson, a professor at Sweden's Kristianstad University, in an email. J?nsson orchestrated the tardigrade space trip aboard a European Space Agency craft in 2007.

Where'd you come from?
The two remaining major Antarctic residents are mites ? tiny arachnids that live alongside springtails under rocks ? and rotifers, microscopic, slinky-like creatures that dwell alongside nematodes and tardigrades in more moist environments. Although there are many species of each, it's astonishing to essentially be able to count the land animals of an entire continent on one hand.

And although these extreme organisms use a range of biological stunts to survive in Antarctica, they can't live in the ice itself, and it was long accepted that the animals were fairly new arrivals.

"The dogma is that in the last glacial, the continent was totally covered with ice and there was no life," Adams said. "That would mean that all the organisms that live there had to have moved back there since the last glacial maximum ? in the last 12 (thousand) to 20 thousand years." That's when retreating ice would have exposed bits of land fit for habitation.

"The problem with that is almost all the animals we find in Antarctica are indigenous to Antarctica," he said. "They're not found anywhere else in the world, and they're not closely related."

Genetic evidence suggests that the continent's residents must have stuck it out through the last glacial maximum. That, in essence, they've been there since 100,000 years ago, when the planet began to cool.

This, along with geological evidence, is changing some of the accepted thinking. Now many Antarctic scientists think the continent wasn't entirely icebound during the last glacial maximum. "We think that there were areas that were exposed, and that these animals survived in little pockets ? and once the ice sheets receded, they expanded their range."

Essentially, the crushing cold and lack of moisture killed off the continent's more delicate beasts, and left behind only the hardiest. With almost no competitors for the limited resources, Antarctica's tiny animals were suddenly the smartest guys in the room, able to move out and take over the continent.

Tense future
Even as researchers are learning more about the past of Antarctic wildlife, they are using the continent's residents to peer into the future.

"What is really fascinating about working in Antarctica, is that we can look at the effect of climate change on a single species in the soil," said Diana Wall, a soil ecologist at Colorado State University who has studied Antarctica's tiny animal life for more than two decades.

"We can't do that with a single species anywhere else ? the communities are so complex," she said.

Hogg agreed. "Antarctica is such a simple system. The springtails are the biggest things you have to worry about," he said. "And the changes down there happen much more quickly than they will in more temperate latitudes, so it makes it a really fascinating place to look at these changes and how things might respond."

The continent serves as a pristine, natural laboratory, Adams said.

"If you take a sample from a beach in Florida, and you get an anomalous reading, it could be due to anything" he said. "Where we're working in Antarctica, we don't have any of those variables."

Ironically, because Antarctica has no native human population (along with the inevitable environmental footprints we leave behind), it's one of the best places on Earth to study how changing climate will affect the places people do live, Adams said.

"Someone might say, 'Well, springtails aren't very exciting animals,'" Hogg said. However, he added, studying them and their Antarctic neighbors, which all play a role in cycling nutrients through the environment, can help illuminate how ecosystems closer to home might change with the climate.

  1. More science news from MSNBC Tech & Science

    1. Was Shroud created in a flash? Claims rise again
    2. Who's afraid of a 13-foot-tall walking robot?
    3. Ancient green grocer target of fiery curse
    4. You do the math ? because that pigeon can

"It can help us learn about agricultural systems and the places that we care about and rely on for our daily well-being," he said

"It's very appealing to those of us who are trying to get to the bottom of the fundamentals of the relationship between biodiversity and climate change," Adams said. "This is the one place where we can do these experiments in a natural system."

Reach Andrea Mustain at amustain@techmedianetwork.com. Follow her on Twitter @AndreaMustain. Follow OurAmazingPlanet for the latest in Earth science and exploration news on Twitter @OAPlanetand on Facebook.

? 2011 OurAmazingPlanet. All rights reserved. More from OurAmazingPlanet.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45766560/ns/technology_and_science-science/

cmas cmas world series of poker joe walsh zsa zsa gabor heavy d dead heavy d dead

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Wal-Mart pulls formula after baby dies in Missouri

This photo provided Thursday, Dec. 22, 2011, by the Holman Howe Funeral Home, shows Avery Cornett of Lebanon, Mo., who died Sunday, Dec. 18, 2011. Federal health agencies are testing samples of liquid and powdered infant formula and some distilled water used to prepare the powder by the Missouri parents of a 10-day-old boy who died from an apparent bacterial infection. Cornett died Sunday night after he was fed Enfamil Newborn powder bought at a Walmart store in Lebanon, Mo. The store has stopped selling the product, and the company pulled a batch of the infant formula from more than 3,000 of its stores nationwide. (AP Photo/Holman Howe Funeral Home)

This photo provided Thursday, Dec. 22, 2011, by the Holman Howe Funeral Home, shows Avery Cornett of Lebanon, Mo., who died Sunday, Dec. 18, 2011. Federal health agencies are testing samples of liquid and powdered infant formula and some distilled water used to prepare the powder by the Missouri parents of a 10-day-old boy who died from an apparent bacterial infection. Cornett died Sunday night after he was fed Enfamil Newborn powder bought at a Walmart store in Lebanon, Mo. The store has stopped selling the product, and the company pulled a batch of the infant formula from more than 3,000 of its stores nationwide. (AP Photo/Holman Howe Funeral Home)

FILE - This photo taken Nov. 14, 2011, shows the rain-soaked handle of a shopping cart outside the Wal-Mart store in Mayfield Hts. Wal-Mart has pulled a batch of powdered infant formula from more than 3,000 of its stores nationwide after a newborn Missouri boy who was given the formula became gravely ill with a suspected bacterial infection and died after being taken off life support, the retailer said Wednesday, Dec. 21, 2011. (AP Photo/Amy Sancetta, File)

(AP) ? Wal-Mart and health officials awaited tests Thursday on a batch of powdered infant formula that was removed from more than 3,000 stores nationwide after a Missouri newborn who consumed it apparently died from a rare infection.

The source of the bacteria that caused the infection has not been determined, but it occurs naturally in the environment and in plants such as wheat and rice. The most worrisome appearances have been in dried milk and powdered formula, which is why manufacturers routinely test for the germs.

Wal-Mart pulled the Enfamil Newborn formula from shelves as a precaution following the death of little Avery Cornett in the southern Missouri town of Lebanon.

The formula has not been recalled, and the manufacturer said tests showed the batch was negative for the bacteria before it was shipped. Additional tests were under way.

"We decided it was best to remove the product until we learn more," Wal-Mart spokeswoman Dianna Gee said. "It could be returned to the shelves."

Customers who bought formula in 12.5-ounce cans with the lot number ZP1K7G have the option of returning them for a refund or exchange, Gee said.

The product is not exclusive to Wal-Mart. The manufacturer, Mead Johnson Nutrition, declined to answer questions about whether formula from that batch was distributed to other stores.

"We're highly confident in the safety and quality of our products," said Christopher Perille, a spokesman for the company based in the Chicago suburb of Glenview.

A second infant fell ill after consuming powdered baby formula in the last month, but that child recovered, state health officials said.

Powdered infant formula is not sterile, and experts have said there are not adequate methods to completely remove or kill all bacteria that might creep into formula before or during production.

Preliminary hospital test results indicate that Avery died of a rare infection caused by Cronobacter sakazakii. The infection can be treated with antibiotics, but it's deemed extremely dangerous to babies less than 1 month old and those born premature.

The virus "is pervasive in the environment," Perille said. "There's a whole range of potential sources on how this infection may have got started."

A spokeswoman for the Food and Drug Administration said the agency is investigating the death, along with the Centers for Disease Control and the Missouri Department of Health. Investigators have collected samples from the family and are testing unopened formula purchased at stores.

Siobhan Delancey said the FDA gets four to six reports a year of infant infections related to formula and has not found a powder that tested positive since 2002.

The FDA is also investigating the other case of illness, which involved a baby from Illinois whose case was reported in neighboring Missouri. But the agency does not believe there is any connection between the two, Delancey said.

Public health investigators will look at the formula itself, as well as the water used in preparing it and at anything else the baby might have ingested, Perille said.

Only two to three cases a year are reported. New Mexico saw two in 2008, including one infant who died and another who suffered severe brain damage. A Tennessee infant died in 2001 after being infected.

It could be several days before test results are available.

The family submitted two types of infant formula for testing ? the powdered version and a pre-sterilized, ready-to-eat liquid ? as well as the distilled water used to prepare the powdered product.

"We're just trying to test anything that was consumed by the baby," Laclede County Health Director Charla Baker said.

Avery was taken to a pediatrician Dec. 15 ? a week after he was born ? after showing signs of stomach pain and lethargy. When the pain persisted the next day, his parents took him to an emergency room.

He died Sunday at a hospital in Springfield after being removed from life support.

The Missouri Department of Health advised parents to follow safety guidelines for preparing powdered infant formula, including washing hands, sterilizing all feeding equipment in hot, soapy water and preparing enough formula for only one feeding at a time.

A flood of calls from worried parents prompted state officials to clarify that the formula pulled by Wal-Mart is not being provided to participants in the Women, Infants and Children federal program for low-income parents.

___

Associated Press Medical Writer Mike Stobbe in Atlanta contributed to this report.

___

Alan Scher Zagier can be reached at http://twitter.com/azagier .

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2011-12-22-Wal-Mart-Infant%20Formula/id-6d7ee04d800e46a89096ad00ea02fbbd

blago mumia abu jamal mumia abu jamal pearl harbor alec baldwin alec baldwin rock and roll hall of fame

Frankincense, Christmas staple, 'doomed': Scientists

If fire, grazing and insect attack, the most likely causes of decline, remain unchecked, then?frankincense?production could be doomed altogether.

Trees that produce frankincense, a fragrant resin used in incense and perfumes and a central part of the Christmas story, are declining so fast that production could be halved over the next 15 years, scientists said on Wednesday.

Skip to next paragraph

In a study published in the British Ecological Society's Journal of Applied Ecology, ecologists from the Netherlands and Ethiopia looked at large-scale field studies and predicted that tree numbers could decline by 90 percent in the next 50 years.

If fire, grazing and insect attack, the most likely causes of decline, remain unchecked, then frankincense production could be doomed altogether, they warned.

Frankincense, best known in religious teachings as one of the gifts laid before the newborn Messiah, is obtained by tapping various species of Boswellia, a small, deciduous tree that grows across Africa from northern Nigeria to the highlands of Ethiopia and Eritrea.

Cutting the Boswellia's bark produces the frankincense resin, a white substance with a strong, sweet smell. The resin is burnt in churches, mosques and at ceremonies, as well as being used by the perfume industry and in herbal medicines.

Despite its economic importance, incense has been traded internationally for thousands of years, little is known about how tapping affects Boswellia populations.

Working in an isolated part of northwest Ethiopia near the source of the Blue Nile, a research team led by Frans Bongers of Wageningen University in the Netherlands studied 13 two-hectare plots, some where trees were tapped for frankincense and some where they were untapped.

Over two years, they monitored survival, growth and seed production of more than 6,000 Boswellia trees and used the data to build mathematical models to predict the fate of Boswellia populations in coming years. The forecasts suggest Boswellia populations are declining so dramatically that frankincense production could be halved in the next 15 years.

"Current management of Boswellia populations is clearly unsustainable," Bongers said in a statement. "Our models show that within 50 years, populations of Boswellia will be decimated, and the declining populations mean frankincense production is doomed."

The researchers found that all the Boswellia populations they studied are declining, not only those from tapped trees, a finding that suggests factors other than tapping are at the root of the problem.

Bongers said the main causes of the trees' decline are likely to be burning, grazing and attack by the long-horn beetle, which lays its eggs under the Boswellia's bark.

The scientists urged local authorities to introduce better management incentives to ensure farmers work harder to protect Boswellia trees. In the short-term this meant preventing fires and beetle attack, Bongers said, but in the longer-term, large areas should be set aside and protected for five to 10 years to allow Boswellia saplings to become established.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/0Y9G3Fx0E68/Frankincense-Christmas-staple-doomed-Scientists

kobe bryant wife bonjovi dead amber portwood sam shepard sam shepard san francisco 49ers san francisco 49ers

Thursday, December 22, 2011

It's a Small World: Kepler Spacecraft Discovers First Known Earth-Size Exoplanets

News | Space

NASA's planet-hunting observatory claims its smallest two finds yet, but neither looks hospitable to life


Kepler 20 planets alongside Venus and Earth for scaleLET'S GET SMALL: The newfound planets Kepler 20 e [far left] and Kepler 20 f [far right] alongside Venus and Earth, the comparably sized worlds in the solar system. In this artist's conception, the cooler planet Kepler 20 f is assumed to host an atmosphere. Image: Tim Pyle

NASA's Kepler spacecraft is starting to put the pieces together in its search for virtual Earth twins in other planetary systems. Kepler, which launched in 2009, is on the lookout for planets that are about the size of Earth and have temperate surface conditions. One half of that formula was realized on December 5 when mission scientists announced the discovery of a planet in the so-called habitable zone, called Kepler 22 b, a few times larger than Earth. Now Kepler has located its first two Earth-size worlds, and although neither are plausibly hospitable to life, it seems only a matter of time before the mission scores its ultimate goal.

The two new worlds orbit a sunlike star 950 light-years away called Kepler 20. One has dimensions almost identical to our own planet; the other is just 87 percent Earth's diameter. The planets, which by convention have been assigned the names Kepler 20 f and Kepler 20 e, respectively, are the smallest exoplanets for which diameters are known. Francois Fressin and Guillermo Torres of the Harvard?Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics and their colleagues announced the discoveries in a paper published online December 20 in Nature. (Scientific American is part of Nature Publishing Group.)

"For the first time, we've crossed the threshold of finding Earth-size worlds," Torres says. "The next step is having an Earth-size planet in the habitable zone."

Tens of millions of kilometers from Earth, the Kepler spacecraft carries out a relatively simple task. It tracks the brightness of more than 150,000 stars, watching for them to dim repeatedly as a planet passes in front of a star's face. For a planet as small as Kepler 20 e, that dimming is incredibly subtle; every six days, when Kepler 20 e completes an orbit, the starlight dips to 99.992 percent of its regular flux for just a few hours.

By tracking how much of a star's light a planet blots out, astronomers can make a careful estimate of the body's diameter. For larger worlds, they can also make a complementary estimate of the planet's mass by using ground-based telescopes that measure how much of a wobble the planet's motion induces on its host star. Witnessing such a wobble also confirms the presence of a real planet, as opposed to some other astrophysical phenomenon that causes regular fluctuations in a star's brightness. (One planet-mimicking phenomenon is a binary star system behind one of Kepler's target stars; when one member of the binary eclipses the other it causes a temporary dimming that can be mistakenly ascribed to the foreground star.)

But such mass measurements are not currently possible for planets as diminutive as Kepler 20 e and Kepler 20 f. So Torres and his colleagues used a relatively new software technique called Blender, which calculates the likelihood that what Kepler sees is caused by a planet. They concocted a range of false-positive scenarios to determine how many could produce the observed signal. With help from NASA's Pleiades supercomputer, the researchers analyzed close to a billion different scenarios, Torres says. The analysis found that Kepler 20 e is 3,400 times more likely to be a planet than a false positive; the planet-to-fake-out ratio for Kepler 20 f is 1,370.

Those numbers make a solid case for both objects as genuine planets. But in the absence of a measurement of the planets' masses, their compositions remain unknown. Given the comparable dimensions of both newfound planets and Earth, a similar composition of silicate and iron is a possibility for either world, the researchers say.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=854087cfb116f3623ff18f6fb321d28d

rick perry gaffe rick perry gaffe graham spanier graham spanier penn state board of trustees joe pa joe pa

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Giftiki Takes Social Gifting Platform Mobile With iOS App

giftCollaborative gifting startup Giftiki is launching its first mobile presence with a new iPhone App. Giftiki lets users send small amounts of money as gifts, allowing recipients join a pool in order to give their friends the perfect gift. And Giftiki leverages social ties and game mechanics to get users to contribute to the gifting process and add more money to the pool. Giftiki users can sign in via Facebook, which will automatically pull in friends and their birthdays. Givers choose a friend and decide on an amount to give. Giftiki now allows users to invite their friends to gift a specific individual. After selecting an amount to gift, wrapping, and sending a Giftiki, a pop up window will appear that shows the giver what friends they have in common with the individual they just gifted. Users can then choose friends and write a personal message that invites them to join and chip in. This message posts to Facebook allowing more people spread the love.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/W8xgSjU7eGM/

election day kawasaki disease joe frazier where do i vote wheel of fortune today show smokin joe

Vinton Cerf, other Net gurus protest piracy bill

Kevin Wolf / AP file

By Suzanne Choney

Vinton Cerf, one of the Internet's pioneers, and 82 other Internet inventors and engineers have signed an open letter to Congress protesting both a controversial piracy bill known as SOPA and related Internet legislation that they say would "create an environment of tremendous fear and uncertainty for technological innovation, and seriously harm the credibility of the United States in its role as a steward of key Internet infrastructure."

The first bill, the Stop Online Privacy Act (SOPA), scheduled to go? before the U.S. House Judiciary Committee Thursday, makes the streaming of unauthorized content a felony. But, as the Electronic Frontier Foundation warns, the bill's "vague language would create devastating new tools for silencing legitimate speech all around the Web."

The Protect-IP Act, a bill in the Senate, would do much the same thing. The Business Software Alliance ? which includes Microsoft, Apple, Intel and Adobe, and focuses heavily on anti-piracy efforts?? is opposed to SOPA, as are major players in tech, including Google, Apple and Facebook.

(Msnbc.com is a joint venture of Microsoft and NBCUniversal.)

SOPA would require websites and telecom service providers to monitor content and traffic across their networks for piracy, and let law enforcement actually seize a website and shut it down.

The letter, shared by the Electronic Frontier Foundation, (the full list of names is here), says, in part:

Regardless of recent amendments to SOPA, both bills will risk fragmenting the Internet's global domain name system (DNS) and have other capricious technical consequences. In exchange for this, such legislation would engender censorship that will simultaneously be circumvented by deliberate infringers while hampering innocent parties' right and ability to communicate and express themselves online.

All censorship schemes impact speech beyond the category they were intended to restrict, but these bills are particularly egregious in that regard because they cause entire domains to vanish from the Web, not just infringing pages or files. Worse, an incredible range of useful, law-abiding sites can be blacklisted under these proposals.

Cerf, who is also Google's chief evangelist, has been joined by Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt in opposing the legislation, which is supported by the Motion Picture Association of America, the Directors Guild of America, the Recording Industry Association of America and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which estimates the cost of online piracy at $135 million a year.

Rep. Lamar Smith, R-Texas, who chairs the House Judiciary Committee and is the lead sponsor of SOPA, said recently that claims that the law threatens Internet freedoms are "blatantly false."

Related stories:

Check out Technolog, Gadgetbox, Digital Life and In-Game on?Facebook,?and on Twitter, follow Suzanne Choney.

Source: http://technolog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/15/9472301-vinton-cerf-other-internet-gurus-protest-piracy-bill

narwhals gmail app gmail app phentermine port of oakland grand theft auto 5 grand theft auto 5

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Auburn defeats South Florida 52-40

Chris Denson and Frankie Sullivan scored 12 points each, and Varez Ward added 11 to lead Auburn over South Florida 52-40 Wednesday night.

Auburn (5-1) went on an 8-2 run to start the second half, increasing a one-point halftime advantage into a 29-22 lead on a pair of Ward free throws with 15:55 to go.

After South Florida (6-5) cut the lead back to two, 31-29, the Tigers went on a 14-3 run, culminating with a Denson teardrop in the lane, for a 45-32 advantage with 6:48 to go.

The run was enough to propel Auburn to the win, sealing its best start since the 2004-05 season.

"I liked the way we responded," Auburn coach Tony Barbee said. "I want to play a fast-paced game with this team. I want to score 80 points a night, but that always isn't going to happen. You have to win what I call a 'grind out' game, and tonight was one of those."

Ward and Sullivan, who both started the Tigers' first five games, came off the bench at the first timeout a little more than two minutes into the game. Barbee said the players started on the bench because nagging injuries had kept them out of practice for all but about two of the 11 days since their last game, an 81-59 loss to Seton Hall on Dec. 2.

Denson started in Sullivan's place, and Josh Wallace started at point guard for Ward.

"Guys who have practiced have earned their right to start. There's nothing more to that," Barbee said.

The Tigers, who entered Wednesday night in a tie for 337th out of 344 Division I teams with a 57.3 percent free-throw mark, made 15 of 18 (83.3 percent) from the line on the night.

Augustus Gilchrist led the Bulls with 10 points, as South Florida struggled to a 33.3-percent night from the field (14 of 42), 22.2 percent from 3-point range (4 of 18) and 50 percent from the free-throw line (8 of 16).

The Bulls were especially bad after the break, hitting only 5 of 19 (26.3 percent) from the field in the second half.

"It was a very frustrating night," South Florida coach Stan Heath said. "We couldn't pick and roll, we couldn't find the basket and we just couldn't score."

Gilchrist scored his 10 points in the first 14 minutes, then went scoreless for the rest of the game.

South Florida's 40 points were the lowest for an opponent against Auburn since Alabama A&M scored 40 on Dec. 29, 2008.

"All week we just focused on defense, and we just have to get better on the offensive end," said Denson, who also recorded three steals on the night. "That's what our main focus is on right now. I think we have the defense pat, but I think the layoff helped us a lot in that category."

South Florida jumped out to a 9-2 lead with 16:49 to go in the first half, thanks in large part to six points from Gilchrist, who hit two jumpers and added a put-back slam dunk.

Auburn missed its first five shots of the game before a breakaway dunk by Denson off a steal stopped the skid with 15:05 left.

The Bulls' lead stayed between one and five points until a Sullivan layup with 31 seconds left in the first half gave the Tigers their first lead of the game at 21-20, an advantage they'd take into halftime.

Both teams struggled to get anything going offensively in the first half. South Florida shot only 39.1 percent (9 of 23) from the field and committed seven turnovers, while Auburn shot 36.4 percent (8 of 22) and turned the ball over eight times.

Gilchrist led all scorers with 10 points in the first half for the Bulls. The senior shot 5 of 7 from the field, leaving the rest of his team to shoot 25 percent (4 of 16).

Ward scored seven in the first half for the Tigers, and Denson added six.

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/12/15/2547083/auburn-defeats-south-florida-52.html

rose bowl cotto vs margarito cotto vs margarito its a wonderful life its a wonderful life miguel cotto cotto