Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Sponsored By:

We were unable to forward you to the advertisement you clicked on.

The likely cause for this is that your browser, feed reader, or email application is configured to not accept cookies, or your reader may launch an external browser to view links without sharing cookies.

  • If you're using Internet Explorer, make sure your privacy setting is at medium or below.
    • Select 'Internet Options' from the 'Tools' menu in your browser window
    • Click the Privacy tab
    • Adjust your privacy setting if necessary
      ?
  • If you're using a reader that embeds Internet Explorer (examples: Microsoft Outlook, Outlook Express, Feed Demon), you'll also need to select Internet Explorer as your default web browser.
    • Open Internet Explorer
    • Select 'Internet Options' from the 'Tools' menu in your browser window
    • Click the 'Programs' tab and check the box for Internet Explorer to check if it is the default browser and save your change
    • Close your browser, re-open it, and when prompted, select Internet Explorer as your default
    • You can then click on an ad in your newsletter and visit the site you wish to view

Source: http://ads.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=0a29c78e88476763685875f21f12c970&p=4

david stern david stern julian beever appeasement ian stewart ian stewart odom

Marshall Goldsmith: Stop Doing Business In the Dark!

So much has changed at the workplace today. Which business practices hold? Which don't? I recently spoke with Alexandra Levit, author of Blind Spots: The 10 Business Myths You Can't Afford to Believe on Your New Path to Success. In her book, she explains the business myths that are even more dangerous and less reliable than ever given today's changing business climate and severe competition. This is a fascinating account of what works, what doesn't, and the myths we don't want to propagate! Following is my brief interview with Alexandra:

MG: What is the premise of Blind Spots?

AL: The recent recession has toppled and transformed our ideas about just about everything. Massive change is afoot and many of us are still reeling from the work-force bloodletting that began three years ago and the downfall of companies we thought we all respected.

If we take the time to examine the world that's rising out of the ashes, we see that a major paradigm shift is occurring. We have realized that money and manipulation will only go so far, and we've come 180 degrees from the backbiting and dirty politics that characterized the dog-eat-dog 1980s. Inside the business world, organizations and individuals are looking inward and seeking a return to traditional human values like honesty, trust, moderation, open communication, and one-on-one relationship building.

Those who wish to be gainfully employed for the foreseeable future must take this transformation seriously and adapt new ways of doing things. In Blind Spots, I explore the 10 biggest myths of business success that people believe to be true even though they don't work for 98 percent of all truly successful people.

If adhering to these myths didn't get you places before, it really won't today, when employers want to hire people with Puritan work ethics, people who want to do their jobs well without rocking the boat too much and who are strong representatives of the organization's culture.
If you want to get ahead in this values-driven environment, putting on blinders is not an option and you can't afford to waste time. You must throw away these myths, determine what will work in their place, and immediately put it to use. That's what I'm trying to help people do in Blind Spots.

MG: In Blind Spots, one of the myths you explore is that generating controversy can get you into trouble due to the ethical scrutiny now pervasive in the business world. What do you recommend people do keep their noses clean?

AL: Employees use all kinds of excuses for unethical behavior, including "everyone does it this way," "I'm under so much pressure," "I have to get results," and "If I don't do it, someone else will, and then he'll get ahead and I won't."

The tendency to slip up starts in academic life, and few of us are able to say that we never cheated on a test or homework assignment in school. Yet most of us escaped unscathed. In the business world, however, the stakes can be much higher, especially now that several CEOs have been carted off to jail and everyone is paying more attention. Strong professional ethics involves more than just telling the truth or avoiding activities that are morally wrong. So what if you're not certain if an action is unethical? Here are some questions to ask yourself:

  • Are there any potential legal restrictions or violations that could result from the action?

  • Does my company have a Code of Ethics (formalized rules that describe what a company expects of employees) or a policy on the action?

  • Would I like to see my action published on the front page of the New York Times?

  • Will this action reflect badly on the company or on me personally?

  • Will my action withstand open discussion with coworkers and managers and survive untarnished?

MG: One of the biggest challenges facing business world employees today is dissatisfaction with their roles, but you suggest that far too often, people incorrectly blame their unhappiness on the organization. How can business world employees take ownership of their work frustration?

AL: A key ingredient for frustration is the lack of control that a person perceives for the outcome of their work. In psychology, this is called Locus of Control, a concept that was originally developed by Julian Rotter in the mid twentieth century. One has an internal locus of control if he believes that he controls his own destiny, and he has an external locus of control if he believes that his destiny is controlled by other forces like authority figures, fate, or God.

In general, having an internal locus of control is viewed as more desirable, since these individuals tend to be more achievement-oriented. They are more persistent and work longer and harder to get what they need or want. It's better from a mental health perspective too, because when you feel that you can affect the outcome of your work, you are more satisfied and have a greater sense of accomplishment.

If you are a person who is prone to an external locus of control, this could be a major cause of your dissatisfaction at work. Fortunately, there are things that you can do to develop an internal locus of control, and I go into more detail about what these are in Blind Spots. I hope everyone will read it!

?

Follow Marshall Goldsmith on Twitter: www.twitter.com/coachgoldsmith

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/marshall-goldsmith/stop-doing-business-in-th_b_1240329.html

justin beiber dia de los muertos dia de los muertos david arquette lionfish lionfish conjoined twins

Monday, January 30, 2012

Syria troops push back in fight on Damascus edges (AP)

BEIRUT ? Syrian forces heavily shelled the restive city of Homs on Monday and troops pushed back dissident troops from some suburbs on the outskirts of Damascus in an offensive trying to regain control of the capital's eastern doorstep, activists said.

President Bashar Assad's regime is intensifying its assault aimed at crushing army defectors and protesters, even as the West tries to overcome Russian opposition and win a new U.N. resolution against Syria's crackdown on the 10-month-old uprising. Activists reported at least 28 civilians killed on Monday.

Russia insists it won't support any resolution that could enable foreign military intervention in Syria. Instead, it said Monday it is seeking to mediate talks in Moscow between Damascus and the opposition.

It said Assad's government has agreed to participate. The opposition has in the past rejected any negotiations unless violence stops, and there was no immediate word whether any of the multiple groups that make up the anti-Assad camp would attend.

In London, British Prime Minister David Cameron's office urged Moscow to reconsider its stance. "Russia can no longer explain blocking the U.N. and providing cover for the regime's brutal repression," a spokeswoman for Cameron said, on customary condition of anonymity in line with policy.

The British and French foreign ministers were heading to New York for U.N. talks set for Tuesday as they and Arab countries push for a resolution backing an Arab League peace plan. The proposal calls for Assad to hand his powers over to his vice president and allow the creation of a unity government. Damascus has rejected the proposal.

The United Nations estimated several weeks ago that more than 5,400 people have been killed in Syria's crackdown since the uprising against Assad's rule began in March. The bloodshed has continued since ? with more than 190 killed in the past five days ? and the U.N. says it has been unable to update the figure.

Regime forces on Monday heavily shelled the central city of Homs, which has been one of the cities at the forefront of the uprising, activists said. Heavy machine gun fire hit the city's restive Baba Amr district.

The Syrian Human Rights Observatory reported that 14 were killed in the city on Monday. Another activist group, the Local Coordination Committees, put the number at 15. Both also reported the discovery of a family of six ? a couple and their four children ? who had been killed by gunfire several days earlier in the city's Karm el-Zeitoun district.

The past three days, pro-Assad forces have been fighting to take back a string of suburbs on the eastern approach to Damascus where army defectors who joined the opposition had seized control.

Government troops managed on Sunday evening to take back two districts closest to Damascus, Ein Tarma and Kfar Batna, said Rami Abdul-Rahman, the London-based head of the Observatory.

On Monday, the regime forces were trying to take the next suburbs farther out, with heavy fighting in the districts of Saqba and Arbeen, he said.

At least five civilians were killed in the fighting in the Damascus suburbs, the Observatory and LCC said. The Observatory also reported 10 army defectors and eight regime troops or security forces killed around the country.

The reports could not be independently confirmed. Syrian authorities keep tight control on the media and have banned many foreign journalists from entering the country.

The wide-scale offensive near the capital suggested the regime is worried that military defectors could close in on Damascus, which has remained relatively quiet while most other Syrian cities have slipped into chaos since the uprising began in March.

The violence has gradually approached the capital. In the past two weeks, army dissidents have become more visible, seizing several suburbs on the eastern edge of Damascus and setting up checkpoints where masked men wearing military attire and wielding assault rifles stop motorists and protect anti-regime protests.

Their presence so close to the capital is astonishing in tightly controlled Syria and suggests the Assad regime may either be losing control or setting up a trap for the fighters before going on the offensive.

State media reported that an "armed terrorist group" blew up a gas pipeline at dawn Monday. The pipeline carries gas from the central province of Homs to an area near the border with Lebanon. SANA news agency reported that the blast happened in Tal Hosh, which is about five miles (eight kilometers) from Talkalakh, along the border with Lebanon.

Further details were not immediately available.

There have been several pipeline attacks since the Syrian uprising began, but it is not clear who is behind them.

Assad's regime has blamed "terrorists" for driving the country's uprising, not protesters seeking democratic change.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120130/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_syria

occupy philadelphia occupy philadelphia conrad murray conrad murray jack del rio jack del rio heaven is for real

Glitzy new AU headquarters a symbol of China-Africa ties (Reuters)

ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) ? Standing on what was once Ethiopia's oldest maximum security prison, the new African Union headquarters funded by China is a symbol of the Asian giant's push to stay ahead in Africa and gain greater access to the continent's resources.

Critics point to an imbalance in what they see as the new "Scramble for Africa." But the prospect of growing Chinese economic influence is welcomed by African leaders, who see Beijing as a partner to help build their economies at a time when Europe and the United States are mired in economic turmoil.

And Africans are hoping for more Chinese largesse.

"The future prospects of our partnership are even brighter," Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi said Saturday at the new headquarters' multi-storey amphitheatre, where an African heads of states' summit will take place Sunday and Monday.

"China - its amazing re-emergence and its commitments for a win-win partnership with Africa - is one of the reasons for the beginning of the African renaissance," he said.

The brown marble and glass monolith was fully paid for by China, right down to the office furniture, and cost $200 million. The office complex and almost 100 metre (330 foot) tower is Addis Ababa's tallest building by far.

For the past decade, Africa has recorded economic growth of an average of 5 percent but its under-developed infrastructure has in part hindered its capacity to develop further.

Chinese companies are changing that. They are building roads and investing in the energy sector, and are active in areas such as telecoms technology.

China's most senior political adviser, Jia Qinglin, said trade between the two partners had grown to $150 billion, and the unveiling of the headquarters was a "milestone" in the ties between China and Africa.

As the biggest consumer of iron-ore, China has a relentless hunger for African minerals and energy.

Beijing now appears keener to flex its diplomatic muscle in the continent. It has also contributed $4.5 million for the African Union peacekeeping force battling Islamist militants in Somalia.

Outside the complex, hundreds of Chinese support staff, delegates and officials snapped pictures of their country's most ostentatious presence yet in Africa.

Critics point to land grabs and mistreatment of African workers on Chinese-funded projects. Even when it comes to job opportunities, in some instances China brings in teams of workers and technical experts.

Yet African officials insist they aren't being manipulated by China, and say the relationship is not based on aid but on trade and development.

"There are people who still consider Africans like children who can be easily manipulated. The good thing about this partnership is that it's give and take," the Democratic Republic of Congo's ambassador to Washington, Faida Mitifu, told Reuters.

(Editing by James Macharia and Alessandra Rizzo)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120128/wl_nm/us_africa_china

monday night football bonjovi bonjovi kim jong un antonio brown lil kim martial law

Sunday, January 29, 2012

After Homelessness, Honors From a National Science Fair

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Samantha Garvey, an 18-year-old senior in Long Island, was named a semifinalist in the Intel Science Talent Search for her work with mussels.

Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=da9db2ba112a7b3ff4ac524eee9162ec

miracle andy whitfield taxes kennedy demi moore roy oswalt pro bowl 2012 roster

Saturday, January 28, 2012

Lunch With Phil Discussing Automotive Advertising Agencies 01/30 ...

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/adagencyonline/2012/01/30/lunch-with-phil-discussing-automotive-advertising-agencies

padma lakshmi juelz santana juelz santana greg halman greg halman dancing with the stars results ucla basketball

More seek unemployment aid, claims fall in Ohio (AP)

WASHINGTON ? The number of Americans seeking unemployment benefits rose last week to a seasonally adjusted 377,000, after a nearly four-year low the previous week.

The Labor Department also said Thursday that Ohio earlier in the month had one of the largest drops in new applications. They fell by more than 2,800 during the week that ended Jan. 14 because of fewer layoffs in manufacturing.

Claims for unemployment insurance have trended downward over the past few months. The national average has fallen about 9 percent since Oct. 1.

Unemployment applications have been particularly volatile this month because employers have cut temporary workers hired for the holidays. The department adjusts for seasonal trends. But doing so accurately can be difficult. .

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120126/ap_on_bi_ge/us_unemployment_benefits_ohio

ashton kutcher twitter sandusky barbados raiders chargers latin grammys latin grammys ogopogo

Friday, January 27, 2012

Iran is ready to return to nuclear talks (AP)

TEHRAN, Iran ? Iran is ready to revive talks with the U.S. and other world powers, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Thursday, but suggested that Tehran's foes will have to make compromises to prevent negotiations from again collapsing in stalemate.

Iran's insistence that it will never give up uranium enrichment ? the process that makes material for reactors as well as weapons ? scuttled negotiations a year ago and still looms as a potential deal breaker even as tougher Western sanctions target Iran's critical oil exports.

Ahmadinejad added his voice to proposals by Iranian officials to return to talks Thursday at a rally in the southeastern city of Kerman, saying a nation that is in the "right" should not be worried about holding dialogue.

Iran indicated earlier this week that it was ready for a new round of talks with the five permanent U.N. Security Council members plus Germany. Ahmadinejad ? the highest-ranking official so far to make the offer ? gave no further details about a potential timetable or venue.

The European Union's foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton had welcomed the proposals to restart talks ? possibly in Turkey ? but urged Tehran to bring "some concrete issues to talk about."

"It is very important that it is not just about words. A meeting is not an excuse, a meeting is an opportunity and I hope that they will seize it," she said Monday in Brussels as the 27-nation bloc adopted its toughest measures yet on Iran with an oil embargo and freeze of the country's central bank assets.

That followed U.S. action also aimed at limiting Iran's ability to sell oil, which accounts for 80 percent of its foreign revenue.

In the past, Iran has angered Western officials by appearing to buy time through opening talks and weighing proposals even while pressing ahead with its nuclear program.

Britain's Foreign Office said that the six world powers were awaiting a response to a letter sent to Tehran by Ashton in October.

"The door is open, if Iran is willing to talk about its nuclear program in a serious and meaningful manner, without preconditions. The ball is in Iran's court," a spokesman for the ministry said, speaking on condition of anonymity in line with policy.

The United States and its allies want Iran to halt uranium enrichment, which they worry could eventually lead to weapons-grade material and the production of nuclear weapons. Iran says its program is for peaceful purposes ? generating electricity and producing medical radioisotopes to treat cancer patients.

Negotiations between Iran and the international envoys fell apart in January 2011, and Iran later rejected a plan to send its stockpile of low-enriched uranium abroad in exchange for reactor-ready fuel rods.

Ahmadinejad tried to turn the tables, accusing the West of claiming to seek talks but preferring failure as a way to further punish Iran with what the Islamic Republic has called "economic warfare."

"It is you who come up with excuses each time and issue resolutions on the verge of talks so that negotiations collapse," Ahmadinejad said. "It is evident that those who resort to coercion are opposed to talks and always bring pretexts and blame us instead."

A U.N. nuclear agency team is expected to visit Tehran on Saturday, the first such mission since a report in November that alleged Iran had conducted secret weapons-related tests and that Tehran was on the brink of developing a nuclear weapon.

The delegation from the International Atomic Energy Agency will be led by Deputy Director General Herman Nackaerts, who is in charge of the Iran nuclear file.

Iran began uranium enrichment at a new underground site built to withstand possible airstrikes earlier this month, in another show of defiance against Western pressure.

Centrifuges at the bunker-like Fordo facility near the holy city of Qom are churning out uranium enriched to 20 percent. That level is higher than the 3.5 percent being made at Iran's main enrichment plant at Natanz, central Iran, and can be turned into warhead material faster and with less work.

Iran says it won't give up its right to enrich uranium and produce nuclear fuel, but it has offered to allow IAEA inspectors to visit its nuclear sites to ensure that the program won't be weaponized.

Ahmadinejad also claimed the sanctions and oil embargo will backfire because it has minimum trade with the EU.

"Americans have not purchased Iranian oil for 30 years. Our central bank has had no dealings with them ... our (total) foreign trade is about $200 billion. Between $23 billion to $24 billion of our trade is with Europeans, making up about 10 percent of our total trade ... Iran won't suffer," Ahmadinejad said in comments posted on state TV's website.

The EU had been importing about 450,000 barrels of oil a day from Iran, making up 18 percent of Iran's oil exports.

In China, a major buyer of Iranian oil, the official Xinhua News Agency quoted the Foreign Ministry as opposing the latest EU measures on Iran.

"To blindly pressure and impose sanctions on Iran are not constructive approaches," the statement said.

Beijing has pressed for the nuclear standoff to be resolved through dialogue and consultation.

Oil prices ? which rose about $100 a barrel Thursday ? have been nudged higher this week on Western naval buildups in the Gulf and Iran's threats to close the oil tanker lanes through the Strait of Hormuz, the route for about one-fifth the world's crude.

On Iran's southern coast, a fighter jet crashed after a technical malfunction, the semiofficial Fars news agency reported. The U.S.-made F-14 went down outside Bushehr, a port city that is also the site of Iran's first nuclear power plant. Iran has an aging warplane fleet that includes many American-made aircraft, including F-14s, purchased before the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

Meanwhile, a 22-year-old Afghan man has been sentenced to 16 years in prison for spying on his country for neighboring Iran, an Afghan official in Herat said Thursday. The two countries have significant cultural and economic ties, and Iran maintains a consulate in the western city.

Photographs of foreign and Afghan military installations and notebooks containing the phone numbers of Iranian intelligence officials were seized when Mahmood, who uses only one name, was arrested four months ago in his native Herat, according to the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive case.

Mahmood, who shouted his innocence during an hour-long trial Tuesday in Herat, has said that he plans to appeal his sentence to a higher court, the official said.

___

Murphy reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Associated Press writers Deb Riechmann in Kabul, Afghanistan, and David Stringer in London contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iran/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120126/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iran_nuclear

survivor north korea news north korea news patrick willis team america snow day snow day

Miley Cyrus Having Oral Sex With A Penis Cake

Miley Cyrus has come under fire from conservative campaigners in America after she was photographed posing suggestively with a phallic birthday cake. The former child star hit headlines this week after pictures from her boyfriend Liam Hemsworth’s 22nd birthday party emerged online. The snaps showed Cyrus simulating oral sex with Hemsworth’s penis-shaped chocolate cake, and [...]

Source: http://www.celebritymound.com/miley-cyrus-having-oral-sex-with-a-penis-cake/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=miley-cyrus-having-oral-sex-with-a-penis-cake

antonio gates antonio gates challah oxford comma oxford comma elisabetta canalis lord howe island

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Stat Alert: More connected phones than computers in key markets, says Google (updated)

There are obvious stats, bizarre ones, and then the good old informative ones. New data from Google revealed by Ad Age, falls into the latter category. According to Goog's numbers, more people have a mobile internet-capable device than a PC or laptop in the five key markets it tested (US, UK, Germany, France and Japan). In the US, this figure is nearly 10% more, some 76% against 68%. The numbers were taken in September and October last year, which means any impact Christmas may have had won't be taken into account. The trend away from feature phones towards smartphones is also drilled home, but that won't be news to many people 'round these parts. No matter how you connect these days, any savvy netizen will tell you: it's quality, not quantity that counts anyway.

Update: The complete report is now up online and, while smartphone and tablet use is skyrocketing, it doesn't appear to be eating into PC sales. Check out the more coverage link for all the slides.

Stat Alert: More connected phones than computers in key markets, says Google (updated) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 25 Jan 2012 09:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Textually  |  sourceAdage  | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/01/25/stat-alert-more-connected-phones-than-computers-in-key-markets/

hp ceo hp ceo r e m gurney gurney

'Open for business': Ind. House OKs right-to-work (AP)

INDIANAPOLIS ? Indiana is poised to become the first right-to-work state in more than a decade after the Republican-controlled House passed legislation on Wednesday banning unions from collecting mandatory fees from workers.

It is yet another blow to organized labor in the heavily unionized Midwest, which is home to many of the country's manufacturing jobs. Wisconsin last year stripped unions of collective bargaining rights.

The vote came after weeks of protest by minority Democrats who tried various tactics to stop the bill. They refused to show up to debate despite the threat of fines that totaled $1,000 per day and introduced dozens of amendments aimed at delaying a vote. But conceding their tactics could not last forever because they were outnumbered, they finally agreed to allow the vote to take place.

The House voted 54-44 Wednesday to make Indiana the nation's 23rd right-to-work state. The measure is expected to face little opposition in Indiana's Republican-controlled Senate and could reach Republican Gov. Mitch Daniels' desk shortly before the Feb. 5 Super Bowl in Indianapolis.

"This announces especially in the Rust Belt, that we are open for business here," Republican House Speaker Brian Bosma said of the right-to-work proposal that would ban unions from collecting mandatory representation fees from workers.

Republicans recently attempted similar anti-union measures in other Rust-Belt states like Wisconsin and Ohio where they have faced massive backlash. Ohio voters overturned Gov. John Kasich's labor measures last November and union activists delivered roughly 1 million petitions last week in an effort to recall Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker.

Indiana would mark the first win in 10 years for national right-to-work advocates who have pushed unsuccessfully for the measure in other states following a Republican sweep of statehouses in 2010. But few right-work states boast Indiana's union clout, borne of a long manufacturing legacy.

Oklahoma, with its rural-based economy that produces comparatively fewer union jobs than Indiana, passed right-to-work legislation in 2001.

Hundreds of union protesters packed the halls of the Statehouse again Wednesday, chanting "Kill the Bill!" and cheering Democrats who had stalled the measure since the start of the year.

"We did better than anybody ever expected," House Minority Leader Patrick Bauer told The Associated Press before debate began on the issue, adding that outnumbered Democrats fought the best they could in the divisive labor battle.

Republicans foreshadowed their strong showing Monday when they shot down a series of Democratic amendments to the measure in strict party-line votes. Democrats boycotted again for an eighth day

Republicans handily outnumber Democrats in the House 60-40, but Democrats have just enough members to deny the Republicans the 67 votes needed to achieve a quorum and conduct any business. Bosma began fining boycotting Democrats $1,000 a day last week, but a Marion County judge has blocked the collection of those fines.

The measure now moves to the Indiana Senate which approved its own right-to-work measure earlier in the week. Gov. Mitch Daniels has campaigned extensively for the bill and said he would sign it into law.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/democrats/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120125/ap_on_re_us/us_indiana_right_to_work

yvette prieto hypertrophic cardiomyopathy kaye stevens michael jordan engaged kid cudi kasey kahne notre dame football

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Can Europe Oil Embargo Force Iran to Back Down on Nuclear Program? (Time.com)

The European Union has raised the takes in the standoff over Iran's nuclear program. E.U. foreign ministers on Monday adopted the most far-reaching package of sanctions yet on the Islamic Republic, including an embargo on the oil exports that are Iran's economic lifeline, and measures against the country's central bank that will restrict its ability to engage in international trade. European governments have now adopted an immediate ban on all new oil contracts with Iran, and a gradual phase-out of existing contracts between now and July 1. The measures also ban trade in all petrochemical products, gold, precious metals, diamonds, banknotes and coins.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague said the oil embargo was part of "an unprecedented set of sanctions," and he urged Iran to "come to its senses" and resume negotiations on its nuclear program. German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said the concern underlying the new measures was "not a question of security in the region, it is a question of security in the world." And E.U. foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said the sanctions aimed to "make sure that Iran takes seriously our request to come to the table". Although Iranian officials have signaled a readiness to hold new talks, Ashton says Tehran has yet formally responded to the?letter she sent in October calling for a new meeting between Iran and the group known as the P5+1, comprising the U.S., Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China.

Adopting the new measures carries a significant cost for Europe. The top European customers for Iranian oil are also those currently facing the most serious financial crises: Greece buys about one third of its oil imports from Iran, while Italy and Spain each rely on Tehran for a little over 10% of their own supply. Although Saudi Arabia and other suppliers are expected to fill any shortfall in available output, the International Energy Agency has warned that replacing Iranian oil will not be an easy task for Europe.

(MORE: Amid New Sanctions, Obama Confronts the Challenges of Diplomacy With Iran)

But the key question is the effect sanctions will have on Iran. Oil accounts for around 90% of all Iranian exports to the E.U., and European countries together make up Tehran's second largest market after China. More broadly, oil makes up over three-quarters of Iran's total economic output, and the country sells roughly 2.5 million barrels a day, with Europe accounting for about one quarter of it last year. Indeed, Iran is already suffering from the existing European and American sanctions: the Iranian rial has fallen about 40% against the dollar since December, inflation is at 40%, and youth unemployment is at around 50%.?

One way Iran may try to offset the impact of the European embargo is by selling more oil to China, India and other Asian countries, inducing them by offering major discounts -- a possibility made easier for Iran while the price remains above $100 per barrel. For that reason, Western powers hope to persuade Asian countries to reduce their own purchases from Iran.?

Yet all this effort may still fail to dissuade Iran from pursuing its nuclear ambitions. Sanctions are often a blunt political instrument: Even if they succeed in imposing significant costs on the regime and exacerbating public frustration over economic hardships, they could further entrench Tehran's regime and its intransigence. Says Paul Stevens, a Senior Research Fellow at the London-based Chatham House think tank,? "Given the crucial role of oil in Iran's deepest political DNA, the E.U. embargo would put the population solidly behind the current regime. It would greatly strengthen the Ahmadinejad regime at a time when it is under considerable pressure, especially with parliamentary elections looming in March."

(PHOTOS: Iranian Protesters Storm British Embassy)

The new sanctions come just as a US naval flotilla accompanied by British and French warships is patrolling the Strait of Hormuz, inevitably ratcheting up tensions. Two Iranian lawmakers on Monday responded to the E.U. decision by threatening to close the Strait, through which some 40% of the world's oil shipments pass en route to market. Despite the new sanctions, however, some analysts maintain Tehran is more likely to heed the threat of military action. European Council on Foreign Relations policy fellow Richard Gowan warns, "It's hard to believe that these sanctions will cause Iran to discard its nuclear ambitions. Iran will remain much more focused on decision-making in Israel and the U.S. over the possibility of a military strike this year."

E.U. officials accept that sanctions are no silver bullet. But coupled with robust diplomacy and a credible military presence in the region, they believe economic pressures can create diplomatic leverage. The problem for the West is what happens if Iran fails to buckle as sanctions reach their peak.?

J?rg Himmelreich, a senior fellow with the German Marshall Fund in Berlin says the measures can only buy time. "At best, sanctions might force a change of regime, but not the nuclear program, which reflects a widely-shared sense national pride and self-consciousness," he says. "It may be pessimistic, but I see the next step as accepting Iran as a nuclear power." If that is the way the Iran conundrum is heading, Europe's sanctions may simply be the last throw of the dice.

PHOTOS: Smuggling Between Iran and Iraq

View this article on Time.com

Most Popular on Time.com:

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iran/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/time/20120125/wl_time/08599210515300

kennedy assassination kennedy assassination jfk assassination pie crust recipe heritage foundation dancing with the stars results 2011 ali fedotowsky

Video: Avalanche nearly buries snowmobiler alive

An avalanche in Washington State Sunday nearly buried a snowmobiler alive. Luckily, his friends were nearby and rushed to dig him out. TODAY?s Natalie Morales reports.

>> this could have ended badly for snowmobilers in washington state sunday. an avalanche buried one alive and immediately the group of friends rushed to get him out. they were able to dig out his head and grabbed shovels to dig him out completely. luckily, everyone is doing okay. that's a frightening situation. 7:17 now. back

Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/46114833/

music awards music awards giants eagles bcs rankings week 13 bcs rankings week 13 philadelphia marathon rhodes scholar

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Heavy fighting in Somali capital kills 9 (Reuters)

MOGADISHU (Reuters) ? Somali militants firing vehicle-mounted anti-aircraft guns clashed with African Union forces for a second night in Mogadishu, killing at least nine people including women and children, an ambulance official said Sunday.

African Union (AU) troops launched a new offensive against al Shabaab Friday, seizing rebel positions just outside the capital for the first time.

The insurgents, however, have launched counter attacks.

Saturday night they struck a government military checkpoint known as 'Ex-control' in a northwest suburb of the coastal city. Soldiers with the AU's AMISOM force repelled the assault, an AMISOM spokesman said.

Caught in the crossfire were Somalis seeking refuge in camps for displaced people, victims already of the anarchic country's two-decade civil war, or famine.

"At least nine displaced people, mostly women and children died in the camps near the former American embassy Friday and

Saturday night," Ali Musa, coordinator of the city's ambulance services, told Reuters.

Ex-control is a strategically important checkpoint. On the outskirts of Mogadishu, it is the final government-controlled roadblock on the road that bends south to Afgoye, a rebel stronghold about 30 km (17 miles) from the capital.

"These (two) nights al Shabaab came close with anti-craft guns mounted on lorries, but we repulsed them," Ndayiragije Come, spokesman for the AU's Burundian contingent, said.

AIR STRIKE INSTALLS FEAR

Camp resident Mohamed Sidow buried his mother Sunday morning in a shallow grave, hours after a stray round killed her.

"A bullet hit her in the head as she slept in front of our shelter last night," Sidow told Reuters.

Panic engulfed the camp through the night, he said, as shells pounded the area and bullets fizzed through the air. Trapped, Sidow and others were unable to take the wounded to hospital.

"We could not carry my mother to hospital last night. Al Shabaab's anti-aircraft fire forced us to stay put. My mother died from blood loss," he said.

Meanwhile, scores of families fled Elasha town and the surrounding area after al Shabaab said a missile fired by a U.S. drone had hit a car in the town, about 13 km from Mogadishu, killing one of its senior foreign militants.

In a statement emailed late Saturday, the insurgents said the militant was British passport holder Bilal el Berjawi, also known as Abu Hafsa, of Lebanese descent. The statement said Berjawi had grown up in west London and joined Somalia's Islamist militants in early 2006.

"Hafsa ... took on a distinguished role in the fight against the warlords that terrorized the city of Mogadishu at the time," the statement said.

But a British foreign office official denied Berjawi was a British national. No other details were immediately available.

Asha Ibrahim, a mother of five, said she and her children were fleeing the town of Lafole, close to Elasha.

"Mogadishu is no paradise, but we believe air strikes are more destructive than the shelling in Mogadishu," she told Reuters."In Lafole, al Shabaab is everyone's neighbor, so we are vulnerable to the bombs intended for al Qaeda."

(Editing by Richard Lough and Maria Golovnina)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120122/wl_nm/us_somalia_conflict

yu darvish pipa keystone xl sopa and pipa sopa bill piracy paula deen

Sony Ericsson ST25i 'Kumquat' pic leaks, is Mini-Me to Xperia S's Dr. Evil

Sony Ericsson ST25i. Image courtesy of XperiaBlog.

We saw plenty of the Xperia S before it officially surfaced at CES, and we've already seen leaked photos of the MT27i "Pepper", along with a purported leaked roadmap for other Sony phones. Today, though, XperiaBlog has the first image of at what is reportedly the Sony (Ericsson) ST25i "Kumquat", a mid to high-end Android phone with a 3.5-inch display and a familiar industrial design.

The "Kumquat", which according to the leaked roadmap is due this April at a ~€260 price point, is apparently powered by a 1GHz dual-core processor, with a 5MP camera and a qHD (960x540) display. If the rumored specs and price are correct -- and admittedly that's still a pretty big "if" -- this device could be very tempting for those looking for a smaller, more portable smartphone with high-end specs.

Hopefully we'll see more of the "Kumquat" at Sony's Mobile World Congress presentation in just a few weeks, where the manufacturer looks set to reveal more of its 2012 line-up.

Source: XperiaBlog



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/QgxSIJrw0d4/story01.htm

michael dyer meteor shower bachmann bachmann dan savage iowa caucus results sickle cell trait

Monday, January 23, 2012

Thyssen, Outokumpu discuss stainless steel tie-up (Reuters)

DUESSELDORF, Germany/HELSINKI (Reuters) ? Germany's ThyssenKrupp (TKAG.DE) and Finland's Outokumpu (OUT1V.HE) are in early talks over a stainless steel tie-up, moving towards the long-awaited consolidation of a sector that has struggled to battle overcapacity and cheap Chinese imports.

ThyssenKrupp, a steelmaking conglomerate whose business stretches from submarines to lifts, is in the throes of a radical restructuring that will see it shed non-core assets with revenues of 10 billion euros ($12.7 billion) to slash debt.

The sale of all or part of Thyssen's stainless steel unit, renamed Inoxum, would mark a key step forward in the slimming down of Germany's largest steelmaker -- and would also provide welcome good news for its shareholders, still reeling from cost overruns that pushed the company into the red last year.

Outokumpu, itself battling losses, said in a statement on Monday that the two sides were evaluating "potential strategic options, including a potential business combination".

A spokesman for ThyssenKrupp, still officially considering all options for Inoxum, confirmed the company was in talks with its Finnish rival.

A deal to tie up two of Europe's largest players could be worth as much as 3 billion euros ($3.9 billion), creating a producer that could control more than 60 percent of the European market.

Analysts said it was not possible to precisely value a combined stainless entity without more detail on the shape of the potential tie-up, venture or sale, or on likely synergies. Most said the deal was unlikely to include all Thyssen's assets.

"I see it as some kind of fusion or joint venture, it is difficult to see that Outokumpu would buy (ThyssenKrupp's stainless arm), because the price tag would be around one to two billion euros and Outokumpu does not have means for that," Pohjola analyst Jari Raisanen said.

NATURAL PARTNER

Outokumpu, which has fought spiraling losses by selling non-core assets, cutting costs and slashing one in six jobs, has long been seen as a natural partner for Thyssen, given its geographical spread of clients and products.

"They would strengthen each other as Outokumpu has own chrome mine and ferrochrome production..., which is an important raw material, while...Inoxum could improve Outokumpu's distribution in central Europe. And they have production offering that would somewhat complement each other," Raisanen said.

The stainless steel sector, which produces the metal used for everyday items like cutlery, nuts, bolts and surgical instruments, has been battling competition from Asia and the consequences of a global economic downturn.

ArcelorMittal (ISPA.AS), the world's largest steelmaker, spun off its Aperam (APAM.AS) unit through an IPO last year.

ANTITRUST WORRIES?

Outokumpu shares soared over 12.6 percent by 1145 GMT to 7.6 euros, touch their highest levels since July. Thyssen was up 0.6 percent at 21.3 euros, marginally underperforming the sector.

Outokumpu and analysts cautioned that it was too early to be sure of success, as the two sides have talked before.

ThyssenKrupp and Outokumpu held informal discussions back in 2009. A Thyssen source later told Reuters that the steelmaker had balked at the idea of a strategic alliance that would have involved a significant writedown of some German assets. It has since, however, taken an 800 million euro writedown.

A full merger between Inoxum and Outokumpu would likely face significant antitrust concerns in Brussels. That could mean a subsequent sale of part of Thyssen's stainless assets, analysts said, possibly its coveted Terni operation in Italy, or including only some of Thyssen's assets in any venture.

"Only the German assets of ThyssenKrupp are likely to merge with Outokumpu," analyst Alexander Haissl at Cheuvreux said, arguing antitrust problems were unlikely to arise as a result, with capacity reductions and closures also seen after a tie-up.

Analysts have said any stainless deal would have to address the issue of excessive production in Europe, where the industry is operating at around 15 percent overcapacity.

A source on Thyssen's supervisory board said labor representatives on the board, however, would block any deal that did not provide long-term security of jobs at all factories.

"We want a long-term industrial concept that will secure the future of the manufacturing facilities. Otherwise we will not approve it," the source said.

Two people close to the talks told Reuters ThyssenKrupp was aiming for a complete sale of its stainless steel unit, valued at between 1 billion and 2 billion euros.

(Additional reporting by Marilyn Gerlach and Alexander Huebner in Frankfurt, Jussi Rosendahl in Helsinki and Silvia Antonioli in London; Writing by Clara Ferreira-Marques and Maria Sheahan; Editing by Mark Potter, Hans-Juergen Peters and Jodie Ginsberg)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120123/bs_nm/us_thyssenkrupp_outokumpu

floyd mayweather kate upton winter solstice r. kelly x factor finale pro bowl voting kindle fire update

AdWatch: Obama's new TV ad, 'Unprecedented' (AP)

WASHINGTON ? TITLE: "Unprecedented."

LENGTH: 30 seconds.

AIRING: On national cable and broadcast and cable stations in Iowa, Michigan, North Carolina, Ohio, Virginia and Wisconsin.

KEY IMAGES: The ad opens with the words, "Secretive oil billionaires attacking President Obama," showing a small image of an ad aired by GOP-leaning outside group Americans for Prosperity that criticizes Obama's connection to the Solyndra bankruptcy. The Obama ad hits back, claiming the other ad is "not tethered to facts."

Obama is then shown sitting in the Oval Office, speaking with two advisers. "President Obama's record on ethics ... Unprecedented," the ad says, citing Common Cause and the League of Women Voters. The ad scrolls through images of workers wearing hard hats installing solar panels and electric wind turbines rotating at dusk.

The words "2.7 million clean-energy American jobs" are superimposed on solar panels, citing a report by the Brookings Institution followed by the words "expanding rapidly." A woman is shown pumping gasoline into a nondescript gray car and an offshore oil platform is blanketed by a setting sun. The ad then says American dependence on foreign oil has fallen below the 50 percent mark, citing data from the Energy Information Administration in May 2011.

The ad cuts back to Obama sitting at his desk in the Oval Office, with the words, "President Obama `kept a campaign promise to toughen ethics rules,'" citing fact-checking organization Politifact from Jan. 21, 2009. Obama is then shown in a field of solar panels, talking to two men.

ANALYSIS: "Morning in America" this is not. The first ad of President Barack Obama's re-election campaign avoids the typical sunny re-introduction of an incumbent president, instead offering a stern defense of Obama's record on energy and ethics.

The spot, airing in the days surrounding Obama's State of the Union address on Tuesday, responds to a hard-hitting ad accusing the president of overseeing pay-for-play politics with bankrupt energy company Solyndra. That ad was aired by Americans for Prosperity, a group with ties to the billionaire energy moguls Charles and David Koch, in the same states where Obama's ad is appearing.

By citing "secretive oil billionaires" attacking the president, the ad aims to drum up Obama's most ardent supporters who have assailed the Koch Brothers' bankrolling of conservative causes. The $2.5 million ad buy is running in six states Obama carried in 2008 and remain critical to his re-election prospects.

California solar panel manufacturer Solyndra imploded last year even though it had received a $528 million federal loan guarantee from the Obama administration under a 2009 stimulus law. More than 1,000 jobs were lost in the bankruptcy. House Republicans have questioned the connection of two major Obama donors to Solyndra, one with a large investment in the company and another who helped monitor the loan guarantee program.

Obama's ad aims to recast the Solyndra storyline by touting the administration's work to bring more transparency to government and develop renewable energy jobs and cut the nation's dependence on imported oil.

Yet some of the citations listed in the ad could be misleading.

Politifact initially found that Obama kept his campaign promise on toughening ethics rules, but later updated its verdict because of concerns over former lobbyists receiving waivers to return to government under Obama's watch. Politifact changed its rating to a "Promise Broken," yet the ad simply cites the first finding.

The Brookings Institution study refers to 2.7 million workers currently employed by the clean economy ? not the number of jobs created by Obama, which a viewer might interpret from the ad. The report found that "clean economy establishments" added half a million jobs between 2003 and 2010, comprising six years of the Bush administration.

The report said the industry was "expanding rapidly at a time of sluggish national growth" but found the growth of the clean energy economy had been "depressed by significant policy problems and uncertainties."

Lastly, the Energy Information Administration's report found that U.S. dependence on foreign oil had dropped below 50 percent ? but it said there was "no single explanation for the decline." It attributed the trend to a "significant contraction in consumption" that "partly reflects the downturn in the underlying economy after the financial crisis of 2008."

If viewers were expecting a feel-good start to Obama's campaign on the airwaves, this is not the ad. In a new age of super PACs spending millions on advertising, they could see campaigns playing more defense on TV throughout the campaign.

___

Analysis by Associated Press writer Ken Thomas.

___

Follow Ken Thomas on Twitter at http://twitter.com/AP_Ken_Thomas

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120120/ap_on_el_pr/us_obama_adwatch

living social nelson mandela champions online champions online mezzanine mezzanine jules verne

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Experts Weigh Changes to Definition of Autism (HealthDay)

FRIDAY, Jan. 20 (HealthDay News) -- The number of people diagnosed with autism will likely decrease if a new definition of the disorder is adopted by mental health experts later this year.

Doctors aren't sure what the implications of the changes will be, but they agree there will be an impact on the lives of people with autism and the professionals who treat them. The changes could affect the number of people eligible for health, educational and social services.

But some experts contend that a clearer definition of autism is needed because the current definition is too hazy and may have contributed to an exaggerated number of people with the developmental disorder.

"This is not an academic exercise," said Geraldine Dawson, the chief science officer for Autism Speaks, an advocacy organization, and a professor of psychiatry at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. "These changes in the diagnostic criteria will have a real impact on people's lives and we have to be very careful as we begin to implement the new criteria that we monitor how this is affecting people's ability to obtain services."

The new definition would create just one diagnostic category -- autism spectrum disorder -- that would replace the three subtypes that are used now. Those subtypes are Asperger syndrome, autism spectrum disorder and pervasive developmental disorder-not otherwise specified (PDD-NOS).

The revised definition of autism is being drafted by a panel of experts appointed by the American Psychiatric Association. The new definition will be part of the psychiatric association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), the "bible" for psychiatric diagnoses. The manual is currently in its fourth edition, which was released in 1994, but the much-anticipated fifth edition should be final by the end of this year.

Although the new definition of autism isn't final, it's "very likely," Dawson said. "They [the expert panel] are extremely close, so any changes at this point will probably be relatively minor."

Estimated rates of autism in the United States have surged since the 1980s, with some recent figures running as high as one in every 110 children. Some experts say there has been a bona fide increase in the number of cases, while others contend that the lack of clear-cut diagnostic guidelines is to blame.

Autism is a complex neurodevelopment disorder with typical symptoms that include difficulty communicating with others, the inability to form social relationships, and repetitive movements such as rocking and twirling, or even self-abusive behavior such as biting or head-banging, according to the U.S. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.

The cause of autism remains unknown.

Under the new definition of autism, Asperger syndrome, which generally describes a higher functioning individual, would be eliminated, as would PDD-NOS, a sort of catch-all category.

A study presented Thursday at a meeting of the Icelandic Medical Association estimated that less than half (45 percent) of 372 children and adults diagnosed with autism in a 1993 paper would qualify under the new criteria, The New York Times reported.

A previous study came to a similar conclusion, Dawson said, with both papers appearing to identify fewer people with autism.

"In particular, they're identifying fewer individuals who are higher functioning, for example, Asperger [syndrome patients]," she said.

From a scientific point of view, the changes in diagnostic criteria make sense, Dawson said. The subcategories don't have any meaning in terms of etiology, or what causes autism. Nor do they necessarily differentiate recommended treatments, she added.

And clinicians don't always agree on diagnoses for particular individuals.

But science aside, Dawson said, "We have to keep in mind the real-world implications. In particular, we have to be very careful that through this process that we're not excluding people from receiving services that they need and deserve."

Dr. Andrew Adesman, chief of developmental and behavioral pediatrics at the Steven and Alexandra Cohen Children's Medical Center of New York in New Hyde Park, said the new definition is "trying to lend some greater precision" to the diagnosis of autism.

But, so far, experts aren't even sure if the recent estimates of autism's prevalence are correct, he said. "There are differences of opinion," he added.

"Only time will tell what kind of impact this will have," Adesman said.

More information

The U.S. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke has more on autism.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/diseases/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20120121/hl_hsn/expertsweighchangestodefinitionofautism

dexter mccluster dexter mccluster david beckham tyche tyche jejune jejune

Saturday, January 21, 2012

AP: Prof to seek dismissal of NJ child porn case (AP)

EAGLESWOOD TOWNSHIP, N.J. ? An architecture professor arrested after firefighters battling a blaze at his Jersey shore home found a 1970s magazine depicting naked prepubescent girls plans to seek dismissal of the child endangerment charge though a pretrial intervention program, his lawyer said Friday.

Attorney Hal Haveson told The Associated Press that Gamal El-Zoghby acknowledges the magazine found by firefighters Tuesday was his. But the 76-year-old professor at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, N.Y., bought it decades ago and hasn't looked at it since, the attorney said.

"It was stuff he had discarded from his mind, just not from his home," Haveson said.

El-Zoghby is charged with child endangerment as a result of the discovery of the magazine in question.

It is but one of a collection of 60 or 70 adult magazines found by firefighters who responded to a blaze at El-Zoghby's waterfront home just before noon Tuesday, Haveson said. State police said only one magazine contained images of naked prepubescent girls.

The vast majority of the magazines were Playboy and Hustler magazines from the 1970s, which the attorney said are much tamer than what is generally considered to be pornography today.

"And the fact that it was all from the 1970s reinforces my client's contention that this is stuff he hadn't seen in decades," Haveson said. "If this were someone who was into this, you'd expect to find a lot more, newer stuff."

The attorney wouldn't directly address why El-Zoghby had originally obtained the magazine in question, other than to say, "He had a reasonable, non-prurient explanation for that. It was not because he enjoyed child pornography." He declined to comment further.

The lawyer also said he's not sure that what's in the magazine meets the legal definition of child pornography. A lot depends on whether the images are intended to appeal to prurient or sexual interests, he said.

"My client doesn't know because he hasn't seen this in decades," he said.

The architect had intended for years to throw away the magazine but never did, his attorney said.

El-Zoghby is due in Eagleswood municipal court on Wednesday for a brief hearing, at which the judge is expected to refer the case to state Superior Court, Haveson said.

Ultimately, El-Zoghby will apply for New Jersey's pretrial intervention program, which lets certain first-time offenders charged with nonviolent crimes have their criminal record wiped clean if they complete the program and stay out of trouble. Prosecutors would have to agree to let him enter the program in order to avoid a trial.

El-Zoghby's request to enter the program is not expected to be made until the case reaches the Superior Court level.

The professor is on a leave of absence at Pratt while the school investigates. A spokeswoman said Friday his status had not changed.

"This is all stuff from the 1970s; that's really important," Haveson said. "What someone does in their younger years does not define the man. He is not a collector of child pornography. My client had not paid any attention to this in decades."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120120/ap_on_re_us/us_fire_child_pornography

vlad the impaler michael lohan fiddler on the roof rally squirrel rally squirrel scumbag steve scumbag steve

Nasdaq rises 1 percent (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) ? The Nasdaq advanced more than 1 percent while the Dow and S&P 500 added to gains on Wednesday as optimism about potential help from the International Monetary Fund for Europe.

Technology shares led the rise on the S&P 500, with the S&P technology index (.GPST) up 1.5 percent.

The Dow Jones industrial average (.DJI) was up 79.58 points, or 0.64 percent, at 12,561.65. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index (.SPX) was up 10.66 points, or 0.82 percent, at 1,304.33. The Nasdaq Composite Index (.IXIC) was up 32.55 points, or 1.19 percent, at 2,760.63.

(Reporting By Caroline Valetkevitch; editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120118/bs_nm/us_markets_stocks

wall street protesters att new york yankees pittsburgh penguins westboro baptist church kurt warner kurt warner

Friday, January 20, 2012

Seafarers outraged that captain jumped ship (AP)

STOCKHOLM ? Seafaring tradition holds that the captain should be last to leave a sinking ship. But is it realistic to expect skippers to suppress their survival instinct amid the horror of a maritime disaster? To ask them to stare down death from the bridge, as the lights go out and the water rises, until everyone else has made it to safety?

From mariners on ships plying the world's oceans, the answer is loud and clear: Aye.

"It's a matter of honor that the master is the last to leave. Nothing less will do in this profession," said Jorgen Loren, captain of a passenger ferry operating between Sweden and Denmark and chairman of the Swedish Maritime Officer's Association.

Seamen have expressed almost universal outrage at Capt. Francesco Schettino, who faces possible charges of manslaughter, causing a shipwreck and abandoning his crippled cruise ship off Tuscany while passengers were still on board. The last charge carries a possible sentence of 12 years in prison.

Jim Staples, a captain for 20 years, who spoke Wednesday from the 1,000-foot (300-meter) cargo vessel he was captaining near New Orleans, said captains are duty-bound to stay with the ship until the situation is hopeless. When they bail early, everything falls apart.

"I'm totally embarrassed by what he did," Staples said of Schettino. "He's given the industry a bad name, he's made us all look bad. It's shameful."

Schettino should have remained on board "until the last passenger was accounted for," agreed Abelardo Pacheco, a Filipino captain who was held hostage for five months in Somalia and now heads a seafarers' training center in Manila.

"That is the responsibility of the captain. That's why all privileges are given to him. But he has together with that an equal burden of responsibility," Pacheco said.

The Costa Concordia, carrying more than 4,200 passengers and crew, slammed into a reef on Friday, after Schettino made an unauthorized detour from the ship's programmed route. A recording of his conversation with the Italian coast guard shows he left the ship before all passengers were off, and resisted repeated orders to go back, saying the ship was tipping and it was dark.

Schettino said he ended up in a life raft after he tripped and fell into the water. He is being held under house arrest as prosecutors prepare criminal charges.

Even if he's not convicted, it is highly unlikely he'll ever command a cruise or cargo ship again because of the damage to his reputation, said Craig Allen of the U.S. Coast Guard Academy in New London, Conn.

"Some people panic, but a short time later they collect their senses and do the right thing," Allen said. "In this case there was more than enough time for the moment of panic to pass. It was abject cowardice."

The tradition of a captain standing by his ship isn't established in international maritime law, though some countries, like Italy, have included it in national laws.

Still, it is respected as "an unwritten rule or law of the sea," said Capt. Bill Wright, senior vice president of Marine Operations for the Royal Caribbean International cruise line.

A captain's responsibilities and authority are laid out in the International Safety Management Code, which is part of a larger convention adopted by the U.N. body in charge of safety and security of shipping. It was passed in 1914 as a direct result of the sinking of the Titanic, and has been amended many times since.

The code doesn't specifically say when a captain can leave a stricken ship, though it stresses his "overriding authority and responsibility to make decisions with respect to safety." It also says the ship owner must clearly define a captain's duties and assure he is "properly qualified for command."

Both literature and real life offer plenty of examples of shipmasters who paid the ultimate sacrifice to protect their passengers and crew.

The most famous, perhaps, is Capt. Edward Smith of the Titanic, who helped evacuate the ship ? women and children first ? until there were no lifeboats left, and then perished with it.

A more recent example is Robert Royer, the captain of a fishing vessel that sank off Alaska in 2010. As water rushed into the ship and the three other crew members jumped overboard, Royer stayed in the wheelhouse to make a frantic mayday call and give the ship's position to the Coast Guard. The crew said that likely saved their lives, because the ship's emergency beacon didn't work.

After more than three hours in the water, they were rescued by a Coast Guard helicopter. Royer, however, died after suffering a head injury when he finally left the ship.

Maritime experts say such manifestations of courage at sea far outnumber incidents in which captains save themselves and leave their passengers behind.

Those who did earned instant infamy, like the captain of the Greek luxury liner Oceanos, which sank in rough seas off South Africa in 1991.

The 402 passengers and 179 crew members all survived, but Capt. Yiannis Avranas and other officers left the ship while some passengers were still on board.

A magician who had been performing on the ship took over the bridge, monitoring rescue calls as a fellow entertainer kept passengers calm by playing Beatles songs on his guitar. Avranas defended his actions, saying he left the ship to direct rescue operations.

"When I order abandon ship, it doesn't matter what time I leave," Avranas said at the time. "Abandon is for everybody. If some people like to stay, they can stay."

A Greek board of inquiry found Avranas and four officers negligent in their handling of the disaster.

In 1965, the captain and several other crew members were among the first to abandon ship after the Yarmouth Castle caught fire and started sinking off the Bahamas, killing 90. Fleeing in a lifeboat, they were told by the captain of a rescue ship to go back and help their passengers.

Captains accused of leaving prematurely often claim they can manage the situation better from the safety of a lifeboat, rescue vessel or on shore.

Allen dismissed that idea, saying the captain's knowledge of his ship is crucial in an emergency.

"Shoreside rescue people can do all the shoreside coordination efforts needed," he said. "You need someone on the ship to communicate with them, to command the people who are on the ship, to help get the passengers off and to guide the rescuers."

Rear Adm. Richard Gurnon, president of the Massachusetts Maritime Academy, called Schettino's actions "abhorrent" and a violation of an unwritten code.

"It isn't just a maritime code, it's a code of leadership," Gurnon said. "If you are leader, you have responsibility for your people. They put their lives in your hands."

Steen Brodersen, a retired Danish captain, said that every single crew member, from the chief mate to the cooks, has a designated role in an emergency on a cruise ship. Regular drills ensure everyone knows what to do.

The captain must first ensure the safety of his passengers, then of his crew and, finally, of the ship, though the notion that he's supposed to go down with it is more legend than fact.

Brodersen, 60, said he never had to deal with that kind of situation, though he has sometimes thought about when his survival instinct would trump the hope of salvaging a doomed ship.

"There must be a point at which I would think that now it is time to jump into the water so I don't die," he said.

"But that would come after the ship has been evacuated," he added. "It is my responsibility. I am the captain."

__

Jay Lindsay in Boston, Jan M. Olsen in Copenhagen, Cassandra Vinograd in London and Teresa Cerojano in Manila contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120119/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_cowardice_at_sea

texas killing fields burzynski pete seeger gazelle gazelle pumpkin carving patterns pumpkin carving patterns

Apple launches iBooks 2 e-Textbook platform

We're here at Apple's education-flavored event at the Guggenheim museum in New York City. Phil Schiller has just taken to the stage and announced the first half of Apple's platform that's going to "reinvent the textbook:" iBooks 2. Saying that there were 1.5 million iPads currently in use in Education (using 20,000 specific apps), the revamped book-stand now includes education-specific features to help the budding students of the world.

You'll be able to paw through content, stopping to flick through detailed 3D animated models of elements within, access video and definitions without leaving the page. VP of Productivity Applications, Roger Rosner said that "Clearly, no printed book can compete with this:" given the constantly-updated data available, that's kinda obvious. Still, you'll be able to read in a text-heavy portrait or picture-biased landscape mode and there's also the option to have random pop-quizzes appear to keep you on your toes. Annotations is an integral part of the system: you can add stickies to individual pages and aggregate them into virtual 3 x 5-inch note-cards for revision during finals. You'll also get the same purchase, download and re-download rights you enjoy in the company's other stores.

The company's partnered (initially) with textbook makers Pearson, McGraw Hill and Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, as the trio are responsible for 90 percent of all textbooks sold -- as well as DK and the E.O. Wilson Foundation. Phil was gushing, saying that he couldn't "overemphasize the importance of these partners working with us." Pearson's High School Science, Biology, DK's Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Life, Natural History Insects, Animals and My First ABC as well as the first two chapters of E.O. Wilson's Life on Earth will be available at launch -- the latter is free. You'll be able to download iBooks 2 from the app store free of charge, whilst textbooks themselves will cost $14.99 or less : a far cry from the $80 dead-tree textbooks we shelled out for in college.

Gallery: iBooks 2

Continue reading Apple launches iBooks 2 e-Textbook platform

Apple launches iBooks 2 e-Textbook platform originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 19 Jan 2012 10:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/01/19/apple-ibooks-2/

psa test real steel real steel iphone 4 cases dean ornish dean ornish yom kippur

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Four-Wheeled Personal Rover: A Segway For Cheapskates [Transportation]

I still think the Segway has a lot of potential, but not until it reaches a reasonable price point. So in the interim, this Personal Rover could fill the gap, providing similar functionality at a fraction of the cost. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/ZwO3DdofUV0/four+wheeled-personal-rover-a-segway-for-cheapskates

girl with the dragon tattoo hes just not that into you hes just not that into you monta ellis kawasaki disease mega millions emma stone

Camera Genius 4.2 (for iPhone)


We last looked at Camera Genius over two years ago, when the iPhone's built-in camera was fair to middling at best. The latest version of iOS added some nifty camera capabilities, so it's a good time to revisit Camera Genius, now at version 4.2, to see whether you still need third-party software to get the most out of your iPhone photos. The app's capabilities fall into three main categories?shooting, editing, and sharing. As we'll see, this mature and capable app still adds to what iPhone's native Camera app can do in all three of these areas. But is it the best choice?

Shooting
Several of Camera Genius's shooting features add ways to snap the camera's shutter. Before Apple iOS 5, there was a bevy of apps that would enlarge or turn the whole screen into a shutter button, so that you could snap a picture while holding the phone away from your face, as when you take a picture including yourself. Camera Genius still offers this, but since iOS 5 added the ability to shoot with the Volume Up button and the iPhone 4 and 4S's front camera made it less critical. If you're using a 3GS or? lower, this app holds more value. One thing Genius offers that its rival Camera+ doesn?t: It lets you trigger the shutter with noise or as soon as the camera focuses on the spot your finger touches. Both offer timers.

Anti-Shake is another shooting assist. This doesn't actually add any stabilization technology to the iPhone's camera, but instead delays the shutter from going off until you're holding the smartphone still. In my testing, this worked quite well. The iPhone 4S's between-shot time is already pretty excellent, but Camera Genius lets you shoot three photos in as rapid succession as the camera allows, with one tap of the shutter. I found Camera+'s burst mode even more useful, though: Because it lowers the image resolution, it can take more pictures faster, but with, of course, lower-res resulting images.

One of the cleverer tools in Camera Genius's kit is the ability to separate the point of focus from the point of exposure, though I can't think of when this would be useful, and the capability is matched by Camera+. In fact, most of what I've mentioned before this, and much of the edits and effects I'll mention later, can also be found in the competing Camera+ app, which has an even more appealing design.

Finally, for the organizers, you can also stamp images with date, time, and location. The timestamp looks a lot nicer that what point-and-shoots are known for, with an attractive, understated white font. It's something not offered by the competition we tested, so if this appeals to you, Camera Genius is a good choice.

One shooting option that the built-in iPhone Camera app can boast but Camera Genius lacks is HDR. Though the Apple version of HDR is far from ideal, often making photos blurrier and seldom yielding and impressive result, it's still an omission on CodeGoo's part. CG does have an after-the-face Pseudo HDR effect, but that didn't do much for my test images.

Editing
Camera Genius brings all the image adjustment options we've come to expect from even rudimentary photo-editing software?cropping, brightness, contrast, colors. But it lacks more sophisticated options you find in Snapseed ($4.99, 4 stars), such as sharpening, saturation, straightening, and white balance control. Nor does Genius offer localized editing on just certain areas of a photo.

When it comes to blinging up your photo with striking effects, Camera Genius can nearly hold its own against the likes of Instagram and Hipstamatic, with options like Grime, Cracked, Lomography, Wild, and Goth. And those are just options in the Adjust settings: You get 24 more in the Effects set, including Aged, Cross Process, and Grunge. Camera+ goes it a little better in the effect department, with 27 options.

Sharing
Camera Genius offers a generous selection of sharing options. You can send photos directly to Flickr, Facebook, Picasa, Twitter, or Tumblr (Camera+ subtracts Picasa and Tumblr from that list). But when I posted a picture to Flickr, it arrived with a long ugly number as the photo title.? Nevertheless, these sharing capabilities alone could make Camera Genius worth buying: The native iPhone Camera app only lets you e-mail or send to Twitter, which is hardly the top online photo sharing option. But for sharing, it's hard to beat Instagram, which boasts its own immersive social network and links to the other major ones.

Is Camera Genius a Smart Choice?
What I really wish a camera app would do for the iPhone is let you set ISO, aperture, and shutter speed. Then it could really be a point-and-shoot replacement. Apple apparently hasn't made these settings available to app developers. Pity. Till these come, Camera Genius can definitely add to the process of shooting photos and fancying them up afterwards. On the latter step, though, our Editors' Choice, Snapseed from Nik, offers more options and more control, as does Camera+, which offers nearly all the shooting features of Camera Genius in a slightly better interface and more embellishment choices.

More iPhone App Reviews:

??? Camera Genius 4.2 (for iPhone)
??? Lookout for iPhone
??? StumbleUpon (for iPhone)
??? Adaptu Wallet for iPhone
??? Snapseed
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/rEUMtxB2kxc/0,2817,2398979,00.asp

coraline jacqueline laurita mcfadden mcfadden ponder ponder extract