Thursday, February 28, 2013

Songbirds' brains coordinate singing with intricate timing

Thursday, February 28, 2013

As a bird sings, some neurons in its brain prepare to make the next sounds while others are synchronized with the current notes?a coordination of physical actions and brain activity that is needed to produce complex movements, new research at the University of Chicago shows.

In an article in the current issue of Nature, neuroscientist Daniel Margoliash and colleagues show, for the first time, how the brain is organized to govern skilled performance?a finding that may lead to new ways of understanding human speech production.

The new study shows that birds' physical movements actually are made up of a multitude of smaller actions. "It is amazing that such small units of movements are encoded, and so precisely, at the level of the forebrain," said Margoliash, a professor of organismal biology and anatomy and psychology at UChicago.

"This work provides new insight into how the physics of producing vocal signals are represented in the brain to control vocalizations," said Howard Nusbaum, a professor of psychology at UChicago and an expert on speech.

By decoding the neural representation of communication, Nusbaum explained, the research may shed light on speech problems such as stuttering or aphasia (a disorder following a stroke). And it offers an unusual window into how the brain and body carry out other kinds of complex movement, from throwing a ball to doing a backflip.

"A big question in muscle control is how the motor system organizes the dynamics of movement," said Margoliash. Movements like reaching or grasping are difficult to study because they entail many variables, such as the angles of the shoulder, elbow, wrist and fingers; the forces of many muscles; and how these change over time" he said.

"With all this complexity, it has been difficult to determine which of the many variables that describe movements are the ones that are represented in the brain and used to control movements," he said.

It's difficult to find a natural framework with which to analyze the activity of single neurons. The bird study provided us a perfect opportunity," Margoliash said. Margoliash is a pioneer in the study of brain function in birds, with studies that include how learning occurs when a bird sleeps and recalls singing a song.

For the current study, he worked with Ana Amador, a post-doctoral researcher at UChicago, and University of Buenos Aires scholars Yonatan Sanz Perl and Gabriel Mindlin. The four are co-authors of the Nature paper "Elementary Gesture Dynamics are Encoded by Song Premotor Cortical Neurons."

For the study, the team studied zebra finches while the birds sang and while they slept (when songs were broadcast through a speaker). Researchers recorded the activity of single neurons through tiny wires connected to the birds' brains.

Mindlin, professor of physics at the University of Buenos Aires, and his students have created a mathematical model of the mechanics of the movement of the syrinx, the avian vocal organ. The team used that information to track the connections between brain responses and the physical actions needed to produce a song.

They reduced the description of a song to only two variables?the pressure pushing air through the syrinx and the tension of the vibrating membranes of the syrinx that are needed to produce the song. They also compared the timing predicted by the model with the timing of responses of the neurons in the bird's "song system."

The study revealed how activity at higher levels of the brain tracks basic motor functions. The team also avoided a problem scholars previously encountered. In the past, investigators did not know how to relate song with the variables of pressure and tension, and so they had an incomplete understanding of how neurons controlled song, Margoliash said. For example, a previous theory of song control contended that these complex movements are governed by a clock in the brain that runs independent of the song.

By looking at the physiological variables that the bird uses to control singing, the team was able to find something others had not noticed before: the precise timing between the firing of the neuron and the action connected with it.

"One fascinating observation we made really surprised us: that the forebrain neurons fire precisely at the time a sound transition is being produced," Margoliash explained. "But it takes far too much time for the activity in the forebrain to influence the bird's sound box in the periphery," Margoliash continued. The neurons that the team investigated are tracking and encoding particular moments in song but are not directly controlling them. "Lower levels of the brain are controlling the sound output, but the timing of these neurons suggest that they are helping to evaluate feedback from the produced sound."

Similar feedback plays an essential role in coordinating human speech, and in the skilled performance of athletes and musicians. Now, for the first time, there is a mathematical description that matches brain activity for highly skilled behavior, in the beautiful songs of birds.

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University of Chicago: http://www-news.uchicago.edu

Thanks to University of Chicago for this article.

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

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127052/Songbirds__brains_coordinate_singing_with_intricate_timing_

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5 books that explore medical treatment, from conventional to ...

Whether you?re curious about alternative medicine, or looking for ways to lessen your dependence on prescriptions and conventional medical interventions, the following five books will provide ample food for thought. Is there a rational middle ground between a completely ?natural? approach to health and the techno-medical model of care? How can we improve communication with our doctors and become partners in our care, rather than passive recipients? What kind of medicinal cures are growing right in our own backyards, or available literally at our fingertips? These are just some of the questions explored and answered by the thought-provoking books that follow.

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Why, even as technological medicine advances, are we becoming less healthy? Why are more American women dying in childbirth? Why do we grow fatter the more we diet? Why have so many attempts to save the environment backfired? How can humans be a functional, helpful part of nature rather than destroying it? These are some of the riddles that journalist Nathanael Johnson strives to solve in ?All Natural.? Raised by parents dedicated to a "natural" lifestyle, and now grappling with the best way to raise his baby daughter, he lovingly and rigorously scrutinizes his parents? all-natural mindset, a quest that brings him into the worlds of an outlaw midwife, radical doctors, renegade farmers and one hermit forester. In ?All Natural,? Johnson teases apart the complicated tangle of feelings and assumptions surrounding nature, technology and control. With an open-minded, nonideological approach, he explores various perspectives on movements both for organic practices and technological advancement in diet, childbirth, healing and the environment. Readers grappling with the flood of conflicting information about how to live a healthy, nondestructive life will appreciate this book?s nuanced attitude and its often-surprising conclusions. Thought-provoking and timely, ?All Natural? is a blend of reportage and memoir that offers a rousing and original vision for a rational middle ground between the natural and the technological. A great read for those alienated by the extreme, polarizing views on both sides and seeking a research-led middle ground.

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Benjamin Franklin?s famous saying ?An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure? was actually firefighting advice, but the maxim rings true for health too. With health problems such as obesity, diabetes?and heart disease continuing to plague America, looking for alternatives to mainstream diet and healthcare options makes good sense. Integrative wellness is an approach to health that acknowledges and utilizes the natural healing capacity of human beings and emphasizes prevention above treatment. Dr. Jim Nicolai, author of ?Integrative Wellness Rules: A Simple Guide to Healthy Living,? is the medical director of the Andrew Weil, M.D. Integrative Wellness Program at Miraval. A board-certified family practitioner and a graduate of the Integrative Medicine Fellowship at the University of Arizona in Tucson, Nicolai has a special interest in whole-person medicine. He works with both conventional medicine and complementary and alternative therapies, including herbs and other botanicals, vitamins and supplements, lifestyle management and stress reduction when treating his patients, whom he regards holistically. With ?Integrative Wellness Rules,? Nicolai offers simple, useful keys to healthier living that will guide readers in eating better, choosing the vitamins and supplements that are best for them, managing stress more effectively, and getting in touch with their spiritual sides. His quick and easy health tips are presented in a relatable, conversational style, perfect for those looking for healthy, natural, balanced strategies to better manage their fast-paced lives. Easy to follow, practical to implement, and effective when put into practice, the tips in ?Integrative Wellness? can help readers begin to select a set of strategies and action steps that will take them toward their ideal selves, the health they seek, and the lives they truly want to live. In learning and implementing these integrative wellness rules, readers can take charge of their well-being and enjoy increases in energy, motivation, life resilience and, ultimately, longevity.

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Trying to navigate, stay healthy, or heal within the contemporary mainstream, Western model of medical care can be frustrating. For some it?s so frustrating that they opt out of the system altogether, choosing to work with naturopaths and other alternative practitioners. But for those who choose to use the techno-medical model of care, taking an active role is essential. ?Most of us have spent so long thinking of medical care as a passive process that it takes time to change our mindset to put ourselves in the driver?s seat,? write Drs. Leana Wen and Josh Kosowsky in their new book, ?When Doctor?s Don?t Listen.? The two emergency physicians examine the doctor-patient relationship, arguing that diagnosis, once the cornerstone of medicine, is fast becoming a lost art, with grave consequences. Together, they provide a raft of anecdotal stories that double as scenarios many patients encounter: being rushed, doctors downplaying concerns, having close-ended "cookbook medicine" questions determine the course of the interaction, and other situations leading to reductive diagnoses. The doctors offer actionable steps readers can take toward being "better patients" as well as working to pressure doctors into providing better care ? steering the conversation away from close-ended questions, insisting on both explanations for recommended tests and exploring alternatives, and making yourself an active partner in reaching a differential diagnosis. In addition to detailed guidance on how to avoid misdiagnosis, the doctors condense their suggestions into what they call the ?8 Pillars to Better Diagnosis,? a list that they recommend patients study and practice working from before they visit the doctor?s office, emergency room or hospital. Finally, the appendices include exercises, worksheets and a glossary of key terms to further empower patients. By encouraging patients to engage with their doctors as partners in their diagnosis and giving them the tools to do so, this essential guide enables patients to speak up and regain control of their health care.

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Since ancient times, people have used plants to heal themselves, and using plants to treat disease continues to be widespread in most cultures to this day. Many herbal remedies can be found growing near your home ? maybe even in your own garden. "Backyard medicines" are not only cheap, they are free, and using local plants for herbal remedies saves on imports and air miles. Learning to make your own herbal remedies can be both pleasurable and practical ? especially if you have the right guide. Originally published under the title ?Hedgerow Medicine? in Great Britain, this popular book has been rewritten for North Americans and updated to reflect the North American distribution of the featured plants. "Hedgerows" in Britain are an integral part of the landscape, and the word conveys a sense of countryside and the often-forgotten traditional harvesting and use of plants ? there are miles of public footpaths with rights of access. For the North American version, wife-and-husband authors Julie Bruton-Seal and Matthew Seal wanted to suggest the same sense of self-sufficiency in using the plants that grow "on your doorstep." All of the plants featured are found on both sides of the Atlantic, some being native in the New World and others brought over from Europe by settlers. Trained in herbal medicine, iridology and energy medicine, Bruton-Seal runs a natural health practice in Norfolk, England, where she grows and collects many of her own herbs and makes her own essences. Together with her husband, she also teaches workshops on herbal medicine making, and leads herb walks. This book provides the couple?s clear instructions about which plants to harvest to make over 120 recipes for teas, vinegars, oils, creams, pillows, poultices and alcohol-based tinctures. An excellent and beautiful guide for the budding herbalist.

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By Nick Ortner

Nick Ortner, creator and executive producer of the documentary ?The Tapping Solution,? has written a practical reference for harnessing the healing benefits of EFT (emotional freedom technique). Slated to be published by Hay House in April, ?The Tapping Solution: A Revolutionary System for Stress-Free Living? describes not only the history and science of tapping but also its hands-on applications. Ortner lays out easy-to-use practices, diagrams and worksheets that will teach readers, step-by-step, how to tap on a variety of issues. With chapters covering everything from the alleviation of pain to the encouragement of weight loss to fostering better relationships, Ortner opens readers? eyes to just how powerful this practice can be. Throughout the book, readers will see real-life stories of healing ranging from easing the pain of fibromyalgia to overcoming a fear of flying. Tapping has been shown to provide relief from chronic pain, emotional problems, disorders, addictions, phobias, post-traumatic stress disorder, and physical diseases. While tapping is still a new technique, the healing concepts that it's based upon have been in practice in Eastern medicine for over 5,000 years. Like acupuncture and acupressure, Tapping utilizes the body's energy meridian points. You can stimulate these meridian points by tapping on them with your fingertips ? literally tapping into your body's own energy and healing power. The simple strategies Ortner outlines in this book will help readers release their fears and clear the limiting beliefs that hold them back from creating the life they want.

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Related stories on MNN:

Source: http://www.mnn.com/health/fitness-well-being/stories/5-books-that-explore-medical-treatment-from-conventional-to

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Local, Organic Food Delivery Service Good Eggs Launches In SF To Bring The Farmer?s Market To You

good eggsGood Eggs is a new service that delivers organic and sustainable meats, produce, and other goods from locally sourced farms and vendors. There are lots of delivery services that will bring groceries to you, and there are lots of Community Supported Agriculture programs around to connect residents with produce from local farms. But neither does a great job of getting users the stuff they want.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/3z2Y6kqYRrk/

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Hands-on with the Samsung Galaxy Grand

Galaxy Grand.

With devices like the Galaxy S3 and Galaxy Note, Samsung has been an integral part of the push towards bigger screens on smartphones. But traditionally these larger, higher-resolution devices have been aimed towards the high-end, carrying expectedly high-tier price tags. Today at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, we saw a device that aims to defy that convention.

Android Central at Mobile World CongressThe Galaxy Grand is a mid-range smartphone with high-end ambitions. Its 5-inch screen and Galaxy Note-like aesthetic give it the appearance of a premium handset, though like most Samsung smartphones it’s bright, white shiny and plasticky. There’s no ‘S-Pen’ stylus to be found, but aside from that the Grand offers a fairly complete Samsung software experience. You’re getting the latest version of the company’s TouchWiz UI, which runs on top of Android 4.1.2 Jelly Bean. The software package even includes newer additions like multi-window support -- Samsung’s method for running more than one app on-screen at a time.

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Arm-in-arm, Ohio students commemorate slain classmates

CHARDON, Ohio (AP) ? One day after a teen gunman pleaded guilty in the deadly school shooting in northeast Ohio, students marked its one-year anniversary Wednesday with hugs, supportive messages and a somber march through town.

The march by Chardon High School students, walking arm-in-arm in the damp cold from the school to the town square, was an emotional highlight during the day's commemoration.

Photos of the three slain students were displayed, onlookers applauded marchers and firefighters hung a large American flag from an aerial ladder.

The march ended at the courthouse where the shooter, T.J. Lane, 18, had pleaded guilty Tuesday to all charges. Lane could face life in prison at his sentencing March 19.

The observance honored Daniel Parmertor and Demetrius Hewlin, both 16, and Russell King Jr., 17, who were killed in the Feb. 27, 2012, rampage. Three others were injured.

Students arriving for classes passed an outdoor school sign with the names of the victims and the message: "2-27 A Day of Remembrance." Across the street, a heart-shaped sign in the school colors of red and black had the message: "One Heartbeat."

The slain students' relatives on Wednesday sued Lane and his family, seeking damages and alleging negligent supervision by his parents and grandparents. Attorneys who filed the case said the families want to ensure Lane never profits from his crimes.

"Hopefully this lawsuit will help answer a lot of questions that still remain and help bring closure for the families and the community," attorneys Peter Marmaros and W. Craig Bashein said.

In Columbus, the Ohio House observed a moment of silence. Rep. John Patterson, who represents Chardon, said he planned to introduce a bill to designate highways in the names of the three victims.

Patterson told his colleagues that they couldn't control tragedies or fully prevent them. And the Jefferson Democrat encouraged parents to tell their children they love them.

The anniversary of the student deaths marks another year of mass shootings around the country ? 12 people gunned down at a Colorado movie theater; six killed at a Sikh Temple in Wisconsin; and 26 Connecticut first-graders and educators slain in Newtown during the Christmas season.

The march in Chardon rekindled memories of the walk taken along the same route by grieving students as they returned to classes three days after the shooting.

A senior student leader, Jessica Mysyk, said the past year has been a time of emotional healing.

"It was hard to even imagine setting foot back into the building where such a tragedy occurred," she told classmates gathered in the square.

Another senior leader, Will Porter, said nothing satisfactorily explains the violent attack.

"There are no explanations I can give that can help any of us understand," he said.

The day's activities in Chardon highlighted the anniversary but served to keep students busy with projects including writing messages of support, artwork, memorial wreaths and making security blankets for future victims of tragedies.

Rachel Loder, 16, who was a sophomore at the time of the Chardon shootings, received such a security blanket and cried and embraced it at difficult times during the past year, her father George Loder said.

"There have been many tears throughout the year," he said.

Loder said his daughter and her classmates have reciprocated by meeting weekly to make blankets, including more than 150 delivered to Newtown.

Counselors and therapists and about a dozen students from Virginia Tech, where a 2007 massacre left the gunman and 32 students and faculty dead, were available throughout the day to meet with students, Chardon principal Andy Fetchik said.

The Virginia Tech students have visited Chardon more than a half dozen times over the past year to promote healing, said Fetchik, wearing a lapel ribbon in the school's red and black colors.

"That's what our kids have been trying to do as they work with that group, is to send that message that one small act of kindness can go a long way," Fetchik said.

Prosecutors say Lane took a .22-caliber pistol and a knife to the school and fired 10 shots at students in the high school cafeteria. Lane was there waiting for a bus to an alternative school he attended.

Lane pleaded guilty to three counts of aggravated murder, two counts of attempted aggravated murder and one count of felonious assault. Charged as an adult, Lane cannot get the death penalty because he was 17 at the time of the crimes.

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Associated Press writers Ann Sanner and Kantele Franko in Columbus contributed to this story.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ohio-students-commemorate-classmates-slain-teen-185926606.html

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Pope in final address: I'm not abandoning the church

Some 50,000 were invited and thousands more came to Pope Benedict XVI's final audience. NBC's Keir Simmons reports.

By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

Pope Benedict XVI assured a huge, cheering crowd at the Vatican Wednesday that he was not abandoning the Catholic Church, saying he would remain at its service through prayer.

"I ask each of you to pray for me," he told tens of thousands who gathered in the sunshine to watch his?final general audience before Thursday's abdication.

Greg Burke, a spokesman for the Vatican who was with Pope Benedict XVI just hours ago, talks about the pope's final audience and his upcoming abdication.

Referring to the many turbulent moments of his papacy, he acknowledge its moments of joy but also difficulty when "It seemed like the Lord was sleeping."

"There were moments when the waters were choppy and there were headwinds," he said.

He said he was not "coming down from the cross" despite renouncing his office, saying his decision was taken "in full awareness of its gravity and rarity but also with profound serenity of spirit."

Earlier, pilgrims and onlookers from around the world cheered as Benedict arrived and made a circuit of the square on his "popemobile."

Benedict waved as he swept through the crowd, pausing briefly several times to bless babies, before heading to a platform in front of St. Peter?s Basilica to make his address.

Among the audience was New Yorker Elise O'Donnell-Tixon, who is now living in Rome. "I'm sad because this will likely be the last time I see him," she said. "I was lucky, because my husband and I were blessed by the pope at an audience last Christmas. We got front-row seats."

At the end of the speech, the crowd stood to applaud.

Vatican communications adviser Greg Burke told TODAY that Pope Benedict had appeared to be calm during the speech, despite the emotion of the occasion.

"He has always been very serene," Burke said. "Above all else, he showed he has faith. His message was that it's not our church, it's not my church, it's the church of Christ."

Vatican organizers said?more than 50,000 had applied for official tickets for Wednesday?s event ? eight times the usual number of applications. An estimated total of 200,000 were expected in square and surrounding streets.

Pope Benedict XVI delivered a short English-language reprise of his final audience in English at St. Peter's Square in Vatican City.

The size of the event means there was not expected to be any kissing of the pontiff?s hand as is traditional after papal audiences.

Young members of the Catholic group Opus Dei served as stewards at the entrance to the square, managing the queues of people filing in past metal detectors, AFP correspondent Gildas Le Roux reported.

Not all of them supported Benedict's resignation, Le Roux said, quoting one of the stewards, Leonardo Rossi, as saying: "I do not share the pope's decision to step down. It is not a fitting time, with all the problems the church is going through."

Many in the crowd waved flags and banners wishing the pope well, although the overall tone of the event remained sombre.

Sister Carmela, who lives north of Rome, traveled to the square with her fellow nuns and members of her parish, Reuters said.

"He did what he had to do in his conscience before God," she told Reuters. "This is a day in which we are called to trust in the Lord, a day of hope. There is no room for sadness here today. We have to pray, there are many problems in the Church but we have to trust in the Lord."

Tens of thousands had been in the square since early Wednesday in the hope of securing a good place from which to see the audience.

Among them was a marching band from Pope Benedict?s native Germany. Balthasar Bauer, 23, from Bavaria, who was in traditional dress, lederhosen, said: "This will likely be the last Bavarian pope, so I had to come here to see him for one last time."

After the address, the Pope's Twitter account, @Pontifex, posted a message that said: "If only everyone could experience the joy of being Christian, being loved by God who gave his Son for us!"

Pope Benedict's full 17-minute sermon in Italian, with English translation.

Pope Benedict will leave his residence inside the Vatican and travel by helicopter to his summer residence at Castel Gandolfo, about 15 miles south-east of Rome at about 4.55 p.m. local time (10:55 a.m. ET) Thursday. His papacy will officially end at 8 p.m. local time (2 p.m. ET).

After stepping down, the pope will keep his name, His Holiness Benedict XVI, but get a new official title, "Emeritus Pope." The Vatican on Tuesday said he would wear a simple white cassock and swap his traditional red shoes for a pair of brown leather loafers he was given on his trip to Leon in Mexico last year.

Meanwhile, the Vatican said Wednesday that the date of the conclave to elect Benedict's successor may not be known until after Monday.

Father Federico Lombardi told the Catholic News Service that cardinals eligible to take part cannot set a start date for the conclave until they have met at the Vatican, and that invitations for them to meet will not be sent out by Cardinal Angelo Sodano, dean of the College of Cardinals, until Friday.

NBC News' Carlo Angerer and Andy Eckardt and Reuters contributed to this report.

Related:

Papal historian: Cardinals likely to choose an 'extrovert'

'Amateur hour': Vatican conclave drama is one for the history books, experts say

Pope says Vatileaks probe will stay secret

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Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/27/17113318-pope-benedict-tells-cheering-crowd-i-am-not-abandoning-the-church?lite

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ZTE Launches 5.7? 720p Grand Memo Smartphone With Quad-Core CPU And Android 4.1

Screen Shot 2013-02-25 at 1.23.42 PMZTE has just introduced the Grand Memo flagship smartphone at MWC in Barcelona. The Grand Memo has top-shelf specs including a 5.7-inch 720x1280 TFT display, a quad-core Qualcomm 800 processor, a 13-megapixel rear-facing camera and a front-facing camera for video chat. ZTE is marketing this as its phablet experience, as competitors like Huawei, Samsung, and most recently Asus bet big on extra-large screens. Considering how much data and texting overpower our smartphone usage, it seems to be paying off.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/fGM0oc2Vz2o/

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Rand holds near 1-week high vs dollar before GDP data

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - The rand held near a one-week high and above a key resistance point in early Tuesday trade and looked likely to break that level if economic growth data overshot market expectations.

South Africa releases fourth quarter GDP data at 0930 GMT, the final piece of the economic growth jigsaw for 2012.

Economists expect growth to have picked up to 1.6 percent on a quarter-on-quarter basis, from 1.2 percent in the third quarter.

The statistics agency will also give the preliminary overall growth rate for 2012, a figure that is likely to influence the Treasury's growth and budget deficit calculations ahead of the 2013 budget speech on Wednesday.

By 0651 GMT, the rand was at 8.8590 to the dollar, not far off its close in New York on Monday.

"Any move in the rand is reflected in the euro. The Italian elections are causing real chaos in the forex markets. Expect volatility in the major currencies, reflected on the rand through our crosses," said Jim Bryson of Rand Merchant Bank, referring to Italy's apparent election gridlock.

However, the rand is unlikely to shift out of its 8.80-9.0 range unless GDP data is so far from expectations that investors start to factor in a local interest rate move next month.

"If it's that bad that we can start factoring in an interest rate cut, then that GDP data will move things," Bryson said.

The R186/R157 bond yield spread rose to a week high of 197 basis points. Dealers see the curve staying at elevated levels because of expectations of increased issuance from government, normally at the longer end of the yield curve.

"The view of subdued growth and in turn widening pressure on the budget deficit implies the risk that a higher borrowing requirement will be priced in in coming weeks," Tradition Analytics said in a note.

The yield on the 2026 issue dropped 4 basis points to 5.21 percent, while that on the 2015 issue gave up 2.5 basis points to 7.19 percent.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rand-holds-near-1-week-high-vs-dollar-070711559--finance.html

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Samsung announces SAFE with Knox, details plans to secure the enterprise Galaxy (hands-on)

Samsung outs SAFE with Knox, details plans to secure the enterprise Galaxy handson

BlackBerry has Balance, and no more than a month after the company once known as Research in Motion debuted its first BB 10 handset, Samsung has a dual-workspace solution of its own: SAFE with Knox. Unlike SAFE, which stands for Samsung for Enterprise, Knox, which was named for the Army outpost where America stores much of its gold, was not crafted into an acronym (though we imagine marketers dedicated at least one meeting to the cause). It's appropriately named, given the company's plans to dominate the enterprise industry with what's soon to be "the most comprehensive mobile security solution."

So what will you find within the Fort Knox of the smartphone world? It's an IT manager's pipe dream, of sorts. A comprehensive collection of features that include Security Enhanced (SE) Android, secure boot, TrustZone-based Integrity Monitoring (TIMA) for protecting the kernel, Single Sign On (SSO) and that application container concept made famous by BlackBerry, just to name a few. Best of all, Knox will ship preinstalled on select devices, all sold as one SKU -- in other words, consumers and enterprise customers alike will be taking home identical handsets, simplifying the process significantly for BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) businesses. We'll explain in a bit more detail in our hands-on video after the break.

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

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Monday, February 25, 2013

Ronda Rousey and Liz Carmouche worked harder to prove themselves, teaching me to do the same

?Women always have to work harder to prove themselves.?

When Liz Carmouche said this at the UFC 157 open workouts on Wednesday, I couldn?t help but smile. Carmouche served in the Marines, is a lesbian, and is now a fighter in the UFC. She understands like few others that a woman?s work of proving herself is never done.

UFC bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey gets this, too. She had to work harder than few other fighters in UFC history in not just preparing for her fight but in selling it. During the run-up to her main event bout with Carmouche, the first ever UFC women?s fight, Rousey trained three times a day and was interviewed by everyone from Time Magazine to Larry King. Camera crews for the UFC?s ?Primetime? and ?Countdown? shows, as well as HBO's ?Real Sports,? followed her. Rousey joked after she won the fight with a first-round armbar that she wants a week off from talking about herself.

As a woman working in the male-dominated world of covering sports, I know this, too. I?ve been covering MMA for six years, five for Yahoo! Sports. But I am still questioned, dismissed and sometimes even attacked because I dare cover a ?man?s sport.? Whenever I am confronted with sexism, whether subtle or vulgar, I have to take a deep breath and consider my response. As a woman, I have to work harder to prove myself, and remember one slip of the tongue can wreck it for me and other women who want to cover MMA.

UFC president Dana White complimented Rousey and Carmouche for dealing with so much media attention like professionals, and said he wished every fighter would be such a pro. But there?s something as a man that White could never understand about the work Carmouche and Rousey put into their preparation for the bout.

They had to work like professionals and show up and be engaging at every single press appearance. Women have to work harder to prove themselves, and the last thing female fighters need is a reputation for being difficult with the media. Their hard work paid off, as they brought more attention to this fight than anyone ? even White ? ever expected.

But their ability to handle all of the attention, both negative and positive, taught me something, too. Rousey and Carmouche showed me exactly how to act when confronted by those who question us because of our gender. They didn?t worry about what doubters or misogynists or homophobes had to say. They worried about working harder to prove themselves.

When Rousey escaped Carmouche?s neck crank, the Honda Center became the noisiest building I had ever stepped foot in. The 15,525 fans stood and cheered at the top of their lungs for two women. Women had arrived in the UFC, and Carmouche and Rousey showed what two women who worked harder to prove themselves could accomplish.

Thank you, Ronda and Liz. Thank you for finally busting through that glass ceiling. Thank you for showing young women that they can do any sport ? even ones that involve bruised faces and busted teeth. Thank you for working harder to prove yourselves, and reminding me to do the same.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/ronda-rousey-liz-carmouche-worked-harder-prove-themselves-155118812--mma.html

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Nikki Haley slams Washington after meeting with Obama

South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

During President Barack Obama's meeting with U.S. governors at the White House Monday, the president dismissed members of the press to hold a private, hourlong discussion with the visiting state executives. Whatever was said after the cameras left the room especially incensed South Carolina Republican Gov. Nikki Haley.

Haley went across the street to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce after the meeting, where she joined fellow Republican Govs. Bobby Jindal of Louisiana and Scott Walker of Wisconsin in berating both Congress and the Obama administration for failing to agree to an alternative to the looming across-the-board federal budget cuts set to trigger March 1.

"I could not be more frustrated than I am right now," Haley told reporters after the meeting. She said that when she asked Obama if he would consider a last-minute plan to shave about 2 percent from the annual federal budget without increasing taxes, the answer was "no."

"My kids could go and find $83 billion out of a $4 trillion budget," Haley said. "This is not rocket science."

As part of a budget agreement passed in 2011, the federal budget will automatically be reduced on March 1 by about 2.4 percent if a deal isn't reached. Lawmakers had hoped to avoid the reductions by agreeing to more specific cuts from the budget, but talks between Republicans and Democrats have largely fallen apart due to a disagreement over whether tax increases should be part of the package.

Haley also made no effort to spare congressional Republicans, who took last week off with only a few days left before the sequestration process was set to begin.

"There is no leadership. There is no confidence. There is nothing that shows us that they actually care about what they're doing," Haley said. "What they're doing is playing games, and we as the taxpayers are having to cover for their games. We're not going to do it anymore."

Haley also noted that "no one should be going home. No one should be playing golf. No one should be taking vacations."

She later added, "There is something very wrong in this town."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/nikki-haley-slams-washington-meeting-obama-215206938--politics.html

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Jennifer Kim Pole Performer Instructor Dancer ? Pole Dancing World ...

Published on February 24th, 2013

Jennifer Kim is a professional pole dancer, competitor and principle dancer of the Girl Next Door Cast. She credits Leigh Ann Reilly and Kelly Yvonne for helping her to become the pole artist that she is today. With a sweet personality and beautiful dance skills, Jennifer Kim captivates her audiences and leaves them begging to see more. Her championship titles include USPDF Pro, PPC 2012 Runner up, and IPM 2012 Runner Up, Doubles Division.

Comments are closed.

Source: http://www.poleworldnews.com/jennifer-kim-pole-performer-instructor-dancer/

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Video: Afghan president orders U.S. forces out of Wardak province

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/50933137/

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PFT: Chiefs interested in Eagles' Foles? |? Unlikely

Sam Montgomery, AJ McCarronAP

Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te?o wasn?t the only high-profile college star creating as many questions as he answered Saturday.

LSU defensive end Sam Montgomery detailed hundreds of dollars worth of bets with teammate Barkevious Mingo while they were in college, and a $5,000 bet on which one is drafted higher (which he?s almost certainly going to lose).

But the thing NFL teams will want to know about was his admission that he took plays and games off while at LSU.

?You know, some weeks when we didn?t have to play the harder teams, there were some times when effort was not needed,? Montgomery said. ?But when we had the big boys coming in, the ?Bamas or the South Carolinas, I grabbed close to those guys and went all out.

?Of course, this is a new league, the NFL and there are no small teams, small divisions, it is all Alabamas and LSUs every week. It?s definitely something I have to get adjusted to, but I?m sure with the right coaching I will be fine.?

Asked if NFL teams might be concerned about his ability to flip the switch from not trying all the time, Montgomery said he has matured in the months since he left LSU.

?When you are a young, you do things as a boy, but when you grow, you do things as a man,? he said. ?From a maturing standpoint, and from everything going into this league that I have learned so far, I was a boy in college, and now that I am going

into the league, I?ve become a man.?

Montgomery said he and Mingo (who many expect to be a top-10 pick, while Montgomery is projected as a late-first) had a $500 bet on who had more sacks in the final game, $1,000 on season sacks along with the big wager on draft status.

?Here?s the thing: Hard work, and betting like that, pushes greatness,? Montgomery said. ?That?s actually motivating me and Mingo. It?s not about the money, it?s about pushing us, at the combine and the drills in between. That?s what is pushing us to be the best.

?It?s always been competitive for me and Mingo and it makes us better in the end. He?s a fast defensive end, I?m more physical. We have to switch over in those realms, so putting big stakes on it makes us more dominant players in the end.?

Setting aside the friendly bets, teams are going to wonder what they have to do to motivate Montgomery once they?re the ones paying him.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/02/23/report-eagles-chiefs-talked-foles-no-progress-toward-trade/related/

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

Daytona put to work again after accident at track

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) ? Not long after a horrific crash caused carnage in the main grandstand of Daytona International Speedway, workers swept in to hurriedly make repairs.

Rest assured, NASCAR's biggest race will go on.

The green flag is set to drop Sunday for the Daytona 500 less than 24 hours after a last-lap crash injured at least 30 spectators and ripped apart a chunk of fencing that protects the mammoth seating areas at stock car racing's most famous track.

Large chunks of debris, including a tire, landed in the stands after Kyle Larson's car launched into the fence about 200 feet from the finish line during a race in the second-tier Nationwide series.

Speedway President Joie Chitwood declared the track will "be ready to go racing," and there were no plans to move fans who have those same seats where the wounded were strewn about Saturday.

This was the third time in four years the track has needed major repairs on Daytona 500 weekend. The 2010 race was interrupted for more than two hours because of a pothole in the track. Juan Pablo Montoya slammed into a jet dryer in last year's race, igniting a raging inferno that caused another two-hour delay.

"We're very confident that we'll be ready," said Steve O'Donnell, NASCAR's senior vice president of racing operations. "As with any of these incidents, we'll conduct a thorough review and work closely with the tracks as we do with all our events, learn what we can and see what we can apply in the future."

Chitwood said there where wasn't enough time to replace a gate in the damaged section of fencing, which allows fans to walk from the grandstands to the infield. Otherwise, it might be difficult to find any evidence of where the wreck occurred.

The speedway president stressed that all safety protocols were met, perhaps preventing a more tragic result.

"Our security maintained a buffer that separates the fans from the fencing area," he said.

NASCAR and track officials didn't know how much fencing would need to replaced or repaired. Sections of the impact-absorbing soft walls had to be fixed, too.

But the track's recent history with expediting repairs was expected to speed along the process.

"You try to prepare for as much as you can," NASCAR spokesman Kerry Tharp said. "You also take away and learn from every incident."

The horror in the stands marred what had been a week of celebration that kicked off with Danica Patrick becoming the first woman to win a pole in the premier series.

Wreckage flew into both the upper and lower decks, and emergency crews treated fans on both levels. There were five stretchers that appeared to be carrying fans out.

A forklift was used to pluck Larson's engine out of the fence. There was a tire in the stands.

Across the track, fans pressed against a fence and used binoculars trying to watch. Reporters were ordered to leave the area.

Hours after the wreck, the fence was down and soft walls were being repaired as TV news helicopters hovered above the track.

Elsewhere, it was business as usual as the track underwent its makeover for "The Great American Race." The stages for driver introductions and the pre-race concert were already in place, as were the generators on pit road. The Daytona 500 logo was being painted on the grass and other track signage got a touch up. If not for the steady buzz from the welding done on the fence, it would have looked like any other late Saturday night before the 500.

Fans seated in the area of the wreck uploaded videos on YouTube that showed fans fleeing in horror and covering their heads as tires and an engine hurled their way. Most of the videos were soon removed from the video-sharing site.

NASCAR chief marketing officer Steve Phelps said the removal was ordered "out of respect for those injured. Information on the status of those fans was unclear and the decision was made to err on the side of caution with this very serious incident."

The scene was similar to a 2009 race at Talladega Superspeedway ? Daytona's sister track in Alabama ? when Carl Edwards' car went sailing into the fence on a last-lap accident.

O'Donnell said NASCAR and track officials would continue to strengthen safety standards as needed.

"We'll evaluate the fencing and see if there's anything we can learn from where gates are," he said. "I think we need to take the time to really study it and see what we can improve on, if we can. Certainly, the safety of our fans is first and foremost and we'll make that happen."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/daytona-put-again-accident-track-001743456--spt.html

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Video: NYPD Creates Team to Find Stolen Apple Products

Police from NYPD and other major cities have teamed up with Apple to track down stolen idevices, ... ?More??

Police from NYPD and other major cities have teamed up with Apple to track down stolen idevices, following a spike in thefts. ???Less

Tags

apple, stolen iphone, stolen apple produ..., nyod, new york, nypd apple theft, nypd apple tehft d..., icrime, tech news, News

Source: http://www.clipsyndicate.com/video/playlist/8178/3953567?cpt=8&wpid=208

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The lifetime journeys of manure-based microbes

Feb. 22, 2013 ? Studies at the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) are shedding some light on the microbes that dwell in cattle manure -- what they are, where they thrive, where they struggle, and where they can end up.

This research, which is being conducted by Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists at the agency's Agroecosystems Management Research Unit in Lincoln, Neb., supports the USDA priority of ensuring food safety. ARS is USDA's chief intramural scientific research agency.

In one project, ARS microbiologist Lisa Durso used fecal samples from six beef cattle to identify a core set of bovine gastrointestinal bacterial groups common to both beef and dairy cattle. She also observed a number of bacteria in the beef cattle that had not been reported in dairy cows, and identified a diverse assortment of bacteria from the six individual animals, even though all six consumed the same diet and were the same breed, gender and age.

In another study, Durso collaborated with ARS agricultural engineer John Gilley and others to study how livestock diet affected the transport of pathogens in field runoff from manure-amended soils. The scientists added two types of manure to experimental conventional-till and no-till fields at 1-, 2-, or 4-year application rates. The manure had been collected from livestock that had consumed either corn or feed with wet distillers grains.

After a series of simulated rain events, the team collected and analyzed samples of field runoff and determined that neither diet nor tillage management significantly affected the transport of fecal indicator bacteria. But they did note that diet affected the transport of bacteriophages -- viruses that invade bacteria -- in field runoff.

Gilley also conducted an investigation into how standing wheat residues affected water quality in runoff from fields amended with 1-, 2-, or 4-year application rates of manure. The scientists found that runoff loads of dissolved phosphorus, total phosphorus, nitrates, nitrogen, and total nitrogen were much higher from plots with residue cover. The team also observed that runoff from fields amended with 4-year application rates of manure had significantly higher levels of total phosphorus and dissolved phosphorus than fields amended with 1-year or 2-year manure rates.

Results from these studies have been published in Foodborne Pathogens and Disease, Applied and Environmental Microbiology, and Transactions of the ASABE.

Read more about this research in the February 2013 issue of Agricultural Research magazine: http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/AR/archive/feb13/cows0213.htm

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by USDA/Agricultural Research Service. The original article was written by Ann Perry.

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


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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/qfSF_hrZ_QU/130222143227.htm

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

China officially admits the existence of ?Cancer Villages? for the first time.

AFP -?China?s environment ministry has acknowledged the existence of ?cancer villages?, several years after widespread speculation first began that polluted areas were seeing a higher incidence of the disease.

The use of the term in an official report, thought to be unprecedented, comes as authorities face growing discontent over industrial waste, hazardous smog and other environmental and health consequences after years of rapid development.

Read more:

http://www.france24.com/en/20130222-china-admits-pollution-linked-cancer-villages

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/EnvironmentalHealthSafety/~3/2bdX44skVGo/china-officially-admits-existence-of.html

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Israel Okays Cheney-Murdoch Firm to Drill in Occupied Golan

In what is certain to be an enormously controversial decision, the Israeli government has issued a permit to the Genie Energy company to begin drilling for oil in the occupied Golan Heights, despite it still be internationally recognized as part of Syria.

Genie Energy International?s President is retired Israeli General Effi Eitam, a former Likud Housing Minister and MP who has repeatedly called for Israel to ?cleanse? the occupied territories of all Arabs, and predicting in a New Yorker interview that eventually ?we will have to kill them all.?

Before his successful political career Eitam was investigated for war crimes in the Gaza Strip, after men under his command testified he ordered them to ?break the bones? of Palestinian civilians. He was reprimanded after one of the beaten men died.

Genie is well politically connected beyond Eitam, with a special Strategic Advisory Board that includes former Vice President Dick Cheney, News Corporation Head Rupert Murdoch, and several other high profile figures.

Israel ?annexed? the Golan Heights in 1981, 14 years after the occupation began, but that is not recognized by any other nation. Israel had refused to grant any oil permits for 20 years, as negotiations were ongoing which were liable to return Golan to Syria as part of a peace deal.

Genie?s experts say they believe a large amount of oil is available under the heights, and that it is in ?relatively tight formations.? Energy Minister Uzi Landau allowed the first bids for Golan permits last year, and this gives Genie an ?exclusive? license for nearly 400 square kilometers of Syrian territory.

The decision to allow drilling seems certain to start an international incident since it will have major ramifications on any future peace settlement between Israel and Syria.

Last 5 posts by Jason Ditz

Source: http://news.antiwar.com/2013/02/21/israel-okays-cheney-murdoch-firm-to-drill-in-occupied-golan/

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Friday, February 22, 2013

GOP senators are treading carefully with tea party

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Twice burned, Republicans are treading carefully around tea party groups as they pursue a Senate majority that slipped through their fingers in 2010 and 2012.

"You'd have to be an idiot not to prepare" for primary election challenges from the right, no matter the state, says Rob Jesmer, who was executive director of the GOP Senate campaign committee when flawed, conservative candidates captured primaries, only to lose winnable races in the fall.

While incumbents work to ward off or repel challenges from within their party, a Republican tempest already is flaring in Georgia, where GOP Sen. Saxby Chambliss is stepping down. Party officials also look apprehensively toward Iowa, where Sen. Tom Harkin's decision to retire down opens up a seat long in Democratic hands.

The developments come at a time the Republican Party nationally is involved in a well-chronicled period of introspection after failing to win the White House last fall. President Barack Obama's support reached 53 percent among women who cast ballots, 60 percent among voters under 30, some 71 percent among Hispanics and 93 percent among blacks. Numerous officials have said the party must find a way to broaden its appeal rather than continue to steer rightward.

Brad Dayspring, a spokesman for Republicans, said consternation about a replay of recent politically damaging primaries "at least for the moment, doesn't seem to be an issue" for the GOP. Sen. Jerry Moran of Kansas, who chairs the campaign committee, declined a request for an interview.

Yet the divisions that pit the party establishment against insurgents and self-styled grass-roots groups show no signs of abating.

Karl Rove, a prominent strategist with deep ties to the Republican establishment, recently disclosed creation of a Conservative Victory Fund with the stated goal of backing electable conservatives in party primaries.

But when Rep. Tom Price of Georgia, a longtime conservative and possible Senate contender, was quoted in the National Review as saying he didn't oppose the objectives espoused by Rove's group, he drew a slap from a rival organization with close tea party ties.

"The Republican establishment is becoming increasingly hostile to the conservative movement, and Congressman Price should openly and aggressively oppose their efforts, not defend them," blogged Matt Hoskins, head of the Senate Conservatives Fund, an organization founded by former South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint.

Price's office declined comment.

Steven Law, head of the Conservative Victory Fund, said it was too early to predict which races it would become involved in. He said the organization hopes to "work with other groups that share that mission to see if we can ensure more rigorous evaluation of candidates, find consensus where possible and perhaps most importantly prevent the Democrats from picking our nominees for us."

Incumbent Republicans seem eager to avoid antagonizing groups that have helped elect tea party favorites such as Sens. Mike Lee in Utah, Rand Paul in Kentucky, Marco Rubio in Florida and Ted Cruz in Texas in recent years.

Even before the beginning of the year, the party's Senate leader, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, hired the campaign manager who guided Paul to his establishment-upending victory in 2010.

The party's second-ranking leader, Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, was one of only three Senate Republicans to oppose John Kerry's confirmation as secretary of state. He has said he expects a primary challenge and Democrats recently accused him of being on "Cruz control," as he seeks a new term.

Megan Mitchell, a spokeswoman for Cornyn disputed the claim while stressing the second-term lawmaker "is proud to have Ted Cruz in the Senate."

Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, a veteran senator with an independent streak, has been at the forefront of efforts to derail several of Obama's high-level nominees. He is preparing to face voters in a state where the tea party has notched numerous triumphs.

In all, Republicans must gain six seats to win a majority in the 100-member Senate in 2014, and can ill afford the sort of turmoil that led to unexpected defeats in Nevada, Colorado and Delaware in 2010 and in Missouri and Indiana last year.

In four of those races, tea party-based insurgents defeated establishment candidates for the party nomination, only to lose the general election. In Missouri, then-Rep. Todd Akin won his primary with an assist from Democrats, then lost in the fall after saying women's bodies were able to avoid pregnancy in cases of "legitimate rape."

The promising news for Republicans is that Democrats must defend 21 of the 35 Senate seats on the ballot next year. Alaska, Arkansas, Louisiana, Montana and North Carolina are among them, states that Obama lost and where incumbents will be seeking new terms.

Much of the early attention has focused on Iowa and Georgia.

Georgia last elected a Democrat to the Senate nearly two decades ago, and the party is in search of a top-rank contender. At the same time, officials claim renewed interest.

Among Republicans, Rep. Paul Broun has announced he will run, and Price and other members of the state's delegation are also considering candidacies.

All are conservatives, although Broun in particular has drawn attention for some of his remarks since coming to Congress five years ago.

He has said that evolution and the Big Bang theory are "lies straight from the pit of hell," and said before Obama took office he feared the then president-elect would establish a Gestapo-like security force to impose a Marxist dictatorship.

Broun's target voters are plain as he embarks on his statewide campaign. In a poke at potential primary challengers, his campaign website says that since 2007 the congressman has sponsored "more legislation to reduce federal spending that any other member of Congress from Georgia." It adds he has never voted to raise taxes or the government debt ceiling, never supported earmarks, opposed all bailout deals and authored a balanced budget amendment.

In Iowa, a political swing state, public opinion polls indicate Republican Rep. Tom Latham would be the stronger Republican candidate in a fall matchup with Rep. Bruce Braley, the only announced Democrat so far.

But early surveys also suggest a second Republican, Rep. Steve King has an advantage among potential primary voters.

Latham is a low-key congressional veteran, a close friend of Speaker John Boehner and the chairman of an Appropriations Committee panel that sets spending for transportation programs.

With an outspoken style, King is best known for his strenuous opposition to citizenship for illegal immigrants and his penchant for incendiary remarks.

Neither man has announced plans to run, but King has staked out his ground.

"I'm no stranger to outlandish attacks like this," he said in an emailed request for donations after officials with Rove's group cited some of his past comments as possibly problematic.

"Nobody can bully me out of running for the U.S. Senate, not even Karl Rove and his hefty war chest."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gop-senators-treading-carefully-tea-party-212823538--election.html

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Apple v. Samsung: What are the most reliable smartphones on the market?

What is the most reliable smartphone currently on the market?

most reliable smartphones on market apple samsung nokia motorola fixya report
Credit: FixYa

Samsung's Galaxy models? Apple's iPhone 5? Or how about a Nokia or Motorola offering? According to FixYa, a community-based body that regularly breaks down gadgets and issues repair reports about consumer products, smartphones may be useful, but with the rapid product cycle and constantly changing expectations of consumers, problems can emerge with the hardware.

Most of us have preferences when it comes to smartphones and tablet models, whether you look for security and encryption, speed, battery life or camera features. However, no model is perfect -- FixYa finding that Motorola tends to bloat their products with unnecessary software, Samsung smartphones are dogged by microphone issues, Nokia has a "laggy" interface, whereas Apple's iPhone comes equipped with a number of battery issues.

Pitting Apple, Samsung, Motorola and Nokia head-to-head, the FixYa team have compared the Apple iPhone, Motorola Droid, Samsung Galaxy, and Nokia Lumia smartphone lines. The report says that Apple's iPhone is three times more reliable than its closest rival, Korean firm Samsung, as well as being 25 times more reliable than Motorola's Droid.

The information below compares the most persistent problems with each device. By combining and analyzing data from 722,558 combined problem impressions -- in other words, consumer problems which have been posted either through the organization's website or mobile app and then adding marketshare data from StatCounter, the "Smartphone Reliability Report" has assigned each manufacturer a reliability score, relative to their market share and reported gadget problems.

All in all, FixYa has given Apple a reliability rating of 3.47 and Samsung 1.21, whereas Nokia and Motorola fall behind with ratings of 0.69 and 0.13 respectively. The main trends for each smartphone model are documented below:

Apple

most reliable smartphones on market apple samsung nokia motorola fixya report

Apple dominated the reliability tests with the fewest number of problems in relation to the iPad and iPhone maker's estimated marketshare, although most were related to battery life. However, the interface, camera and app store still make sure that Apple remains a key favorite for smartphone users. A recent report?by Strategy Analytics which suggested the iPhone 5 managed to become the top selling model in Q4 2012.

Reports suggested that iPhone users enjoyed the "sleekness and simplicity" of the Apple interface, and although complaints cropped up, most technical issues rarely became a roadblock for longer than a week or so.?

However, many consumers still seeking ways to help conserve their iPhone's battery life, a complaint which took hold after the launch of the iPhone 4S. ?

Samsung

most reliable smartphones on market apple samsung nokia motorola fixya report

Samsung, on the other hand, came in behind its rival with the second-highest reliability score. Users approved the Samsung Galaxy's interface across all models, but hardware issues including the microphone and speakers remained cause for complaint.

One element which raised very few complaints, however, was the battery life of Samsung Galaxy SIII smartphones, although the Samsung Galaxy Nexus performed far more poorly in this category. ?

Nokia, who was granted the third lowest reliability score, tended to be slower to load than other smartphone models, according to 35 percent of consumers. In addition, 20 percent of consumers were frustrated at the sparse application ecosystem with Windows Phone, although this is slowly improving. 15 percent of users reported failures when it came down to battery life, and 15 percent found that Nokia's Lumia smartphone sometimes becomes too hot.

However, Nokia uses did report that they appreciated the durability of the Nokia Lumia's screen, and the "Live tiles" feature on the homescreen was a great addition.?

Motorola has the lowest marketshare of these smartphone manufacturers and also was given the lowest reliability score. Users of Motorola products have been dogged by a plethora of issues -- with 136,436 problem impressions reported on FixYa -- ranging from the audio hardware to software. 30 percent of users reported problems with preinstalled apps, or "bloatware" which cannot be removed, 25 percent said they experienced issues with Motorola touchscreens, and 20 percent complained about speaker quality. In addition, 15 percent of users reported problems with the quality of Motorola's Droid camera.

However, Motorola shone in terms of battery life as well as the overall phone's design.?

"Smartphones are consistently being compared on a case by case basis, but no one has looked at the overall trends across a manufacturers? entire smartphone line," said FixYa CEO and founder Yaniv Bensadon. "The result is an accurate and fair method, and a scaled approach to fairly compare these top companies to truly see who is the most reliable, and who is barely even competing."

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zdnet/thebigquestion/~3/J05t3Zy94BY/

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Video: Car bomb rocks Damascus near ruling party HQ

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Vote: What Would You Name Squirrelly Mammal Ancestor?

What do you name the ancestor of almost all living mammals?

According to LiveScience readers, "Ralph" wouldn't be a bad bet.

Ralph topped LiveScience's poll results as of Feb. 21, beating out "Protosorex mammaliensis" and "Little Mama," after scientists announced earlier this month that they'd traced back the features of the hypothetical forerunner to all placental mammals. The animal looks a bit like a modern shrew with a dash of squirrel.

Scientists didn't give this mammal mama a nickname ? it is, after all, a composite rather than a real creature. However, the American Museum of Natural History, where much of the research was based, plans to team up with NPR's RadioLab to host a naming competition for the hypothetical ancestor.?

Everyone's ancestor

It may seem odd to announce the discovery of an animal that never existed. But the origins of placental mammals ? mammals that nourish their young in utero via the placenta, which accounts for nearly all living species ? are foggy. The fossil record suggests that mammal diversity exploded after the dinosaurs died out about 65 million years ago at the end of the Cretaceous period, but genetic studies indicate a longer evolution for mammals dating back before the end of the Cretaceous.

The goal of the ancestral mammal project was to marry fossil and genetic evidence, piecing together the DNA and physical changes to trace the lineage back to the beginning, or at least an approximation of the beginning. The result was an insect-eating four-legged creature that weighed less than half a pound. From these humble beginnings arose everything from elephants to bats. The researchers reported their findings on Feb. 8 in the journal Science. [6 Strange 'New' Species Hiding in Museums]

Naming names

A survey of the researchers involved in the project turned up no consensus on what, if anything, this hypothetical ancestor should be named. Michael Novacek, a study researcher and a paleontologist at the American Museum of Natural History, said that a Latin scientific name wouldn't be appropriate.

"The hypothetical ancestor is not represented by a real specimen, something that is required?for Latinized names, or, as they are known in taxonomy,?Linnaean names," Novacek wrote in an email to LiveScience.

So much for "Protosorex mammaliensis," the runner-up in the LiveScience poll. Other reader suggestions, contributed via Facebook, included "Timba" after Timon and Pumba from the movie "The Lion King," because "they like grubs, too!" and "yomama" ("obviously").

"These nicknames for the common ancestor are all very creative," said study researcher Maureen O'Leary, a scientist at Stony Brook University in New York. "It's great to see that this animal has inspired so much interest in science and is encouraging people to know about past life on Earth."

Editor's Note: If you have a great naming idea for this shrew-squirrel ancestor, please email Jeanna Bryner at jbryner@livescience.com.

Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas?or LiveScience @livescience. We're also on Facebook & Google+.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/vote-name-squirrelly-mammal-ancestor-210038586.html

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Storm drops tree limb on Texas mobile home, 1 dead

One woman is dead after savage winds whipped through rural East Texas and weather officials say a team will be sent to determine if a tornado struck the area.

Sabine County Sheriff Tom Maddox says the storm streaked across the southwestern corner of the county on the Louisiana border about 1:30 p.m. Thursday. Maddox says the storm dropped a tree limb onto a mobile home about 145 miles northeast of Houston, fatally injuring 74-year-old Louise Pillow Stringer.

Maddox says 25 homes were damaged and debris patterns look like those left behind by a tornado, rather than straight-line winds.

National Weather Service meteorologist Jason Hansford in Shreveport, La., says the agency has no conclusive evidence of a tornado, but a survey team will be sent to investigate the area Friday.

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/02/21/3246851/storm-drops-tree-limb-on-texas.html

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Thursday, February 21, 2013

With 9B Games Played Each Month, King.com Grabs No.1 Slot On Facebook With Candy Crush Saga And Moves Into Japan And Korea

candy crush sagaKing.com, the casual social games maker, today is announcing a couple of milestones in its growth: the company's Candy Crush Saga is now the number-one overall app on Facebook, on the back of 9 billion monthly gameplays across all of King.com's titles -- news that it has released at the same time that it has announced that Candy Crush Saga and another hit game, Bubble Witch Saga, would be going Japan and Korea with localized versions for iOS, Android, web and Facebook.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/tsiEXKj91E8/

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