Saturday, April 27, 2013

The Tesla Model S' Battery Is Now Covered By A Nearly Unconditional Warranty

Tesla_Model_S_Chassis_BatteryWithout proper care batteries can wither and die like a delicate tulip roasting in the bright sun from an unseasonably warm spring day -- a fact made exponentially worse when the battery in your $60k vehicle no longer functions properly. With that in mind, Tesla just unveiled an impressive new warranty for the Model S battery pack. With the notable exception of a vehicle accident or a curious owner opening the battery pack, under this new plan, Tesla will replace the battery pack for any reason including user error and improper maintenance.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/-F5_4cwNNmg/

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Anxiety, Disruptive, Mood, Psychotic Disorders - Mental Health and ...

Apologizes for the assumption. I do a lot of research in this area and? there is not a single person I know who on drugs who has a decent quality of life. They?re either zombies or hooked up to medical devices in a hospital. Their problems started off as minor then escalated through the medical system.

????? When did I say? anything about drugs I literally said that not all mental illnesses are caused by malnutrition or a lack of sunlight.
I?ve never been on anything in my life. I always went out as a kid and I was fed well.
I still have Asperger?s. As does my brother. Also, we?re both still depressed.
So I really fail to see your point. ALL drugs poison the body. Painkillers, etc. you name it. But some people need them to have a decent quality if life.

Those autism drugs, they will end up posoining the body. Drugs sold by multi-billion dollar companies are first and foremost a consumer product intended to make those companies money. Whether they work? or not or end up killing the patient is secondary. The first fiduciary duty of any public listed company is to make a profit for its shareholders, and that includes the drug companies.

Sorry to hear that but I have little control over? what ads are displayed. Yes, the pharmaceutical industry is posoining us with their toxic drugs, vaccines, and other chemicals.

Did you know that in New Zealand this comes with a pre-video? add to promote long acting anti depressant drugs ? Well it does, kinda makes me sick to my stomach eh

Not everyone? Jeeze you?re? such an idiot. Are you saying that if I went out as a kid, I wouldn?t be autistic anymore? lmfao.

i have many anxiety issues and will be bloggin my progress on my medication as well as recording anxiety attacks. its my attempt at recording and documenting my mental health. which isnt too good? right now. come see my blogs?

i have problem? with vitamin as soon i take it i was felling much better

Source: http://mental-health.fitnessthroughfasting.com/tips-to-manage-anxiety/mental-illness-in-children-anxiety-disruptive-mood-psychotic-disorders.php

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Everybody's doing it: Monkeys eat what others are eating

Just as human travelers often adopt the local cuisine, wild monkeys learn to eat what those around them are eating, new research finds.

A study of wild vervet monkeys (Chlorocebus aethiops) in South Africa provides proof that primates other than humans adopt and conform to cultural behaviors. Given a choice between two foods, infant monkeys ate only the foods that their mothers ate. And young males that ventured to other groups soon switched to the local diet, researchers report online today (April 25) in the journal Science.

"Some of the ways of learning that we have thought were distinctly human are more broadly shared across nonhuman primates," said study co-author Andrew Whiten, a cognitive biologist at the University of St. Andrews in the United Kingdom. [Image Gallery: Adorable Vervet Monkeys Conform to Peers]

Cultural learning and conformity play central roles in human life. Whereas many studies have documented cultural transmission in lab animals, few have shown this phenomenon occurs in the wild.

A team of researchers studied four groups of wild vervet monkeys, each containing 24 to 44 individuals (109 animals in total). The team gave each group a supply of maize corn dyed pink and another dyed blue. In two groups, the blue corn tasted bad, so the animals learned to eat only the pink corn. In the other two groups, the pink corn was unpalatable, so the animals favored the blue corn.

After four to six months, the researchers replaced the bad-tasting corn with normal-tasting stuff, but the monkeys continued to eat only the color to which they had become accustomed. In one exception, a low-ranking female ate the non-preferred type of corn, probably because she couldn't get access to the preferred type.

When baby monkeys that had never tasted either color corn were allowed to feed with their mothers, the little ones ate only the color of corn their mothers ate, which was almost always the color of corn preferred by the group. Even the infant of the female who ate the unpopular color of corn copied its mother's food choice.

The infants' behavior provides an example of "potent social learning," Whiten said. Despite having no prior experience with eating the two types of corn, the babies readily adopted their mothers' dietary preference.

Next, the researchers observed what happened when young-adult males from each group migrated to another group during the mating season ? a common practice that ensures genetic diversity in vervet populations. Of the 10 males that migrated to a group with a preference for the opposite food color from their native group, seven of them chose to eat the corn that the new group preferred. When no other higher-ranking males were present to intimidate them, nine of the 10 males ate the popular color of corn.

Basically, the migrant males were conforming to fit in with their new group, the observations suggest. The males' behavior was perhaps even more surprising than the babies' behavior, because they were abandoning their prior preference in favor of the prevailing one, Whiten said.

Frans de Waal, a primatologist at Emory University's Yerkes Primate Center who was not involved in the study, called the finding striking. "It is one of the very few successful controlled experiments in the wild," de Waal said, adding that "it hints at a level of conformism most of us, until now, held not possible."

Primates aren't the only animals to learn from their peers. For example, another new study shows that whales pick up feeding techniques from their friends. Collectively, these studies suggest that culture is more widespread in the animal kingdom than once thought.

Follow Tanya Lewis on Twitter?and Google+.?Follow us @livescience, Facebook?& Google+. Original article on?LiveScience.com.

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

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/everybodys-doing-monkeys-eat-others-eating-190249299.html

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Olivia Wilde Talks Bringing 'The Rider And The Storm' To Tribeca

For the third time in four years, Olivia Wilde, with her partners David Darg and Bryn Mooser, has brought a short-form documentary to the Tribeca Film Festival, but this year, their project has a special significance to the city of New York. "The Rider and the Storm" tells the story of Timmy Brennan, an avid [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2013/04/26/olivia-wilde-tribeca/

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Angry birds: Pair of eagles defy banishment in Southwest Alaska town

Friday, April 26 2013 @ 01:53 AM EDT

Contributed by: MaryF

Wildlife News

?

On an island along Alaska's southern coastline, sandwiched between the Pacific Ocean and the Bering Sea, the nation's largest fishing port is struggling with an unhappy pair of dive-bombing bald eagles.

?

The eagles in Unalaska have decided they're not going to let the island's people boss them around. They're intent on living in their neighborhood of choice. After their home was destroyed this winter -- an intentional act of demolition by Unalaska humans who'd had enough of this pair of eagles -- ?they recently came back and started to rebuild.

??

For the rest of the story click HERE

`

Source: http://www.hancockwildlife.org/article.php/EaglesDefyBanishmentInAlaskaTown

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Share Large Files Smartly, Swiftly, and Securely

Cave has a B.S. degree in Computer Science and holds other high level Computer Security certifications. His experience in Secure File transfer and sending of large files though the Internet are all well noted in other popular industry publications. More info visit http://www.VirtualDrive.com

View all articles by Cave Johnson

A few years back, the only easy way of exchanging business information was through e-mails. Businesses struggled as they needed to share large files. Sharing large files through emails is impossible and the only way one could do so was with the help of pen drives, CDs, among others to send it across. The process is definitely time-consuming in nature. Advanced technology in the form of secure cloud services wipes out such difficulties and provides us with an easy solution. These services are now actively engaged to share large files.

Secure cloud services provides the opportunity for its user to upload and do file share which are much bigger in size. File size doesn?t matter anymore. Files uploaded on cloud can be easily shared with multiple users simultaneously. You do not need to have any extra hardware or software to share large files. It not only saves the cost of purchasing new hardware, but also is very user friendly. Your employees do not need any special training to carry out the task of sharing large files through a remote server on cloud. Secure cloud services are secure for a fact that it automatically deletes the file after a certain period of time so this way there is no misuse of the information at any cost. These services have an ability to protect your data to an extent, which your own file server cannot perform sometimes.

Multiple PCs and computers can be synchronized with these file servers. People can use the secure cloud services from anywhere in the world. It has no unnecessary requirements. Imagine you are travelling on a holiday and suddenly remember that you have forgotten to give the file to your boss which is on a USB drive. Moreover, you do not have an official laptop. It is still fine, as you can use the web and simply upload the large file on the cloud and send the link to your boss in just few minutes. It works like a charm and allows you to collaborate instantly.

All thanks to the secure cloud services and the remote file server allowing an individual to use it smoothly. The overall efficiency of your organization will increase by reducing both money and time substantially.

Your crucial data is now more secure and you can share large files swiftly and smartly by relying on secure cloud services.

Source: http://www.articlesbd.com/articles/348670/1/Share-Large-Files-Smartly-Swiftly-and-Securely/Page1.html

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Wavii Confirms Google Buy, Shuts Down Its Service To Make Natural Language Products For The Search Giant

wavii announcementWavii, the natural language technology startup, has updated its home page, and its previously-monochromatic logo, to officially confirm that it has been acquired by Google -- a deal that we noted earlier this week was "north of $30 million." And to set speculation running about what might be coming next, Wavii CEO Adrian Aoun confirmed that it will be shutting down its service so that it can use "our natural language research at Google in ways that may be useful to millions of people around the world."

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

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Friday, April 19, 2013

Southwest Florida International Airport reports record traffic in March

During March, 1,115,937 passengers traveled through Southwest Florida International Airport, an increase of 8.9 percent compared to March 2012. Year-to-date, passenger traffic is up 7.5 percent from the same period last year.

"This March was the busiest month for passenger traffic at Southwest Florida International Airport since opening on May 14, 1983. I am proud of reaching this significant milestone during our anniversary year, which will mark 30 years of serving Southwest Florida," said Robert M. Ball, A.A.E., executive director of the Lee County Port Authority. "We thank our airline partners who added new service and increased flights in key markets, giving passengers more opportunity to travel during the winter season."

The traffic leader in March was Delta with 239,557 passengers traveling to and from Fort Myers. Rounding out the top five airlines were AirTran (185,938), Southwest (140,885), US Airways (112,912) and JetBlue (110,484).

Southwest Florida International Airport had 10,484 aircraft movements (takeoffs and landings), an increase of 5.2 percent compared to March 2012. Page Field saw 8,513 movements, a 4 percent decrease from March 2012. In addition, slightly more than 3 million pounds of air freight moved through Southwest Florida International Airport in March 2012, a decrease of 4.4 percent compared to March 2012.

Southwest Florida International Airport served more than 7.3 million passengers in 2012 and is one of the top 50 U.S. airports for passenger traffic. No ad valorem (property) taxes are used for airport operation or construction. For more information, log onto www.flylcpa.com.

Source: http://www.cape-coral-daily-breeze.com/page/content.detail/id/534634.html

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Wednesday, April 10, 2013

With Firepad, Firebase Adds Real-Time Text Collaboration To Its App Platform

Firepad-logoY Combinator-backed Firebase is expanding the infrastructure that it offers to app developers with its first module ? Firepad, a Google Docs-style text editor that allows you to collaborate with others. To a consumer, that might not sound very exciting. After all, we've already got Google Docs. However, co-founder and CEO James Tamplin said that those kinds of capabilities are limited to big companies with "a ton of Google-quality engineers." With Firepad, however, developers can add text editing and document collaboration to their own apps without too much extra work.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/MB3RUlQWNR0/

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China to vaccinate 90,000 pigeons against bird flu

BEIJING (AP) ? An association of pigeon enthusiasts plans to vaccinate up to 90,000 of the birds in eastern China to help ward off the spread of the latest avian flu.

Pigeons became a source of concern after one in Shanghai was found infected with the new H7N9 strain of bird flu. At least 24 people have been infected and seven of them have died in the outbreak.

The Hangzhou Carrier Pigeon Association said Monday that it will use a different flu vaccine in the vaccination drive since none exists for H7N9.

Beyond vaccines, the group announced the suspension of racing contests and told its members to prepare to keep their pigeons caged for one to two months.

Raising carrier pigeons, also called homing pigeons, is a common hobby in China.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/china-vaccinate-90-000-pigeons-against-bird-flu-051435447.html

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Trisha Yearwood shows off 20 lb. weight loss

By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, TODAY

Country star Trisha Yearwood, 48, looked notably slim at Sunday's Academy of Country Music Awards, and for good reason. The Grammy-winning singer, host of cooking show "Trisha's Southern Kitchen," has lost 20 pounds.

AP, Getty Images file

Trisha Yearwood is seen at left in 2010 and at right at the recent Academy of Country Music Awards.

"I've been dieting and exercising and I've lost about 20 lbs," she told People in February. She rarely eats sugar now, though does occasionally indulge in macaroni and cheese, the singer said.

"Trisha's Southern Kitchen" airs on the Food Network, and features Yearwood's family-inspired recipes. She is the author of two cookbooks, "Georgia Cooking in an Oklahoma Kitchen" and "Home Cooking With Trisha Yearwood."

Related content:

Source: http://todayentertainment.today.com/_news/2013/04/09/17672349-trisha-yearwood-shows-off-weight-loss-at-country-music-awards?lite

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Thatcher's funeral to take place on April 17

By Larry Fine AUGUSTA, Georgia, April 8 (Reuters) - Guan Tianlang answered questions about his readiness to play the Masters at the record-setting age of 14 when he gave two-times champion Ben Crenshaw a putting lesson at the 18th hole at Augusta National on Monday. The 61-year-old Crenshaw, whose career was built on his ability as a putter, mentored the precocious Chinese during their practice round, advising the Asia-Pacific Amateur champion about the notoriously fast, sloping greens of Augusta. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/thatchers-funeral-place-april-17-101329157.html

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Migraine triggers tricky to pinpoint

Apr. 8, 2013 ? Women often point to stress, hormones, alcohol, or even the weather as possible triggers for their migraines. But a new study from Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center found that it is nearly impossible for patients to determine the true cause of their migraine episodes without undergoing formal experiments.

The majority of migraine sufferers try to figure out for themselves what causes their headaches based on real world conditions, said lead author Timothy T. Houle, Ph.D, associate professor of anesthesia and neurology at Wake Forest Baptist.

"But our research shows this is a flawed approach for several reasons," he said. "Correctly identifying triggers allows patients to avoid or manage them in an attempt to prevent future headaches. However, daily fluctuations of variables -- such as weather, diet, hormone levels, sleep, physical activity and stress -- appear to be enough to prevent the perfect conditions necessary for determining triggers."

For example, said Houle, the simple act of drinking a glass of wine one day and not on the next could be complicated by inconsistencies in other factors. Similarly, a patient may drink wine for several days, but adding cheese to the mix one day could further skew results. In fact, a valid self-evaluation requires such perfect conditions that only occur about once every two years, he said.

"Many patients live in fear of the unpredictability of headache pain. As a result, they often restrict their daily lives to prepare for the eventuality of the next attack that may leave them bedridden and temporarily disabled," Houle said. "They may even engage in medication-use strategies that inadvertently worsen their headaches. The goal of this research is to better understand what conditions must be true for an individual headache sufferer to conclude that something causes their headaches."

Houle and co-author Dana P. Turner, M.S.P.H., also of the Wake Forest Baptist anesthesiology department, have published two related papers on the subject in the journal Headache, which were published online ahead of print this month.

For the study, nine women who had regular menstrual cycles and were diagnosed with migraine either with or without aura provided data for three months by completing a daily diary and tracking stress with the Daily Stress Inventory, a self-administered questionnaire to measure the number and impact of common stressors experienced in everyday life. Morning urine was also collected daily for hormone level testing. Houle and Turner also reviewed three years worth of weather data from a local weather station. Because of the difficulty in recreating identical conditions each time a patient evaluates a potential trigger, determining triggers proves difficult even for physicians, said Turner. "People who try to figure out their own triggers probably don't have enough information to truly know what causes their headaches," she said. "They need more formal experiments and should work with their doctors to devise a formal experiment for testing triggers."

The research was supported by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and of the National Institutes of Health (1R01NS06525701).

Co-authors include: Todd A. Smitherman, Ph.D., University of Mississippi, Donald B. Penzien, Ph.D., Head Pain Center, University of Mississippi Medical Center, and Vincent T. Martin, M.D., University of Cincinnati College of Medicine.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center, via Newswise.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Dana P. Turner, Todd A. Smitherman, Vincent T. Martin, Donald B. Penzien, Timothy T. Houle. Causality and Headache Triggers. Headache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain, 2013; 53 (4): 628 DOI: 10.1111/head.12076

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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/Lf9vXYhdVd8/130408084745.htm

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Friday, April 5, 2013

Roger Ebert dies after long cancer battle

Renowned Chicago Sun-Times film critic Roger Ebert died Thursday at age 70 after a long battle with cancer.

Ebert's struggle with thyroid cancer, chronicled in a 2010 cover story by Esquire, lost him part of his jaw and the ability to eat and speak. He communicated through a computer program, and reached his many fans through Twitter and his blog, gaining admiration for his relentlessly positive attitude about his disease.

"I was perfectly content before I was born, and I think of death as the same state," Ebert wrote in 2011. "I am grateful for the gifts of intelligence, love, wonder and laughter. You can?t say it wasn?t interesting."

Film critics are mourning Ebert's loss on Twitter, a medium Ebert avidly embraced. New York Times critic A. O. Scott wrote, "Ebert was singular. We are all in his shadow and his debt."

"For a generation of Americans?and especially Chicagoans?Roger was the movies," President Barack Obama said in a statement. "When he didn't like a film, he was honest; when he did, he was effusive?capturing the unique power of the movies to take us somewhere magical."

For 24 years, Ebert collaborated with fellow Chicagoan film critic Gene Siskel, until his death in 1999. The two were opposites, who fought like cats and dogs, according to Ebert himself.

"They were like a couple of ... cartoon characters," a friend said of them in an oral history of their partnership. "If you drew them, you couldn?t quite do the real thing justice?especially in the early days with those 1970s clothes. They didn?t look alike, they didn?t sound alike, and they didn?t think alike. They both had a much different delivery?Roger more contemplative and Gene kind of pushy."

Below, a clip of Ebert defending "Return of the Jedi" on Nightline in 1983:

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/beloved-film-critic-roger-ebert-dies-70-204629958.html

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Obama talks climate, regaining House for Democrats, at fundraisers (reuters)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/296582331?client_source=feed&format=rss

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North Korea unexpectedly closes entry to key industrial park, upping tensions

North Korea barred South Korean workers from crossing the border to go to work at a cluster of factories jointly operated by North and South, threatening the future of the last major institution of inter-Korean cooperation.

The move ratchets up tensions on the Korean peninsula another notch after near daily exchanges of hostile rhetoric. Though the North has not shut down operations at the factories, the act may signal a shift in North Korea?s behavior away from threats of retaliation and toward action. It is not known how long the suspension will remain in effect.

?I think it has something to do with comments by Western and South Korean observers who say that North Korea wouldn?t give up the Kaesong Complex no matter what, that North Korea needs the business too much. They took that as kind of insulting to their leadership,? says Moon Chung-in, a professor at Yonsei University in Seoul.

RECOMMENDED: Kim 101: How well do you know North Korea's leaders?

The complex is located in North Korea, just north of the demilitarized zone, about 6 miles from the border with South Korea. The industrial park is home to about 120 South Korean companies employing an estimated 53,000 North Koreans in factories. It was designed to be a mutually beneficial arrangement; South Korean firms take advantage of the cheap labor of North Korea workers, who get jobs that are well-paying by North Korean standards.

The complex produced $470 million worth of goods last year. North Korea earned about $80 million from the complex in 2012, according to South Korea?s Ministry of Unification. As such, it is an important source of revenue for the cash-strapped country with an expensive military and no tax base.

The South Korean workers already in the complex were allowed out, but those seeking to enter in the morning were not given access. This comes on the heels of a March 30 statement in which North Korea threatened to close the complex if there was ?any attempt to damage the dignity? of the country.

The last time South Korean workers were denied entry was in 2009, after North Korea?s second nuclear test. Operations have continued without major interruption in recent years, despite the flare ups between North and South Korea. When former South Korean President Lee Myung-bak's government cut off inter-Korean exchange after the deadly sinking of a navy warship in 2010, the Kaesong complex continued operating. It also stayed in business after the deadly shelling of Yeonpyeong Island later that year.

In a late morning press release, the South Korean Ministry of Unification expressed regret, saying North Korea?s entry suspension ?creates a barrier to the stable operation? of Kaesong and urged North Korea "to immediately normalize the entry and exit.?

'WE HOPE THIS SITUATION DOES NOT LAST'

Moon Sun-jong, the owner of a textile factory in the Kaesong complex, said he was concerned about the possibility of an extended halt to normal business, saying, ?We hope that this situation does not last.?

?I think we might be OK for a couple of days, but if it lasts for a week, we will have problems with production in our factory. For the time being all we can do is prepare to be allowed back in,? says Mr. Moon.

As of Wednesday morning, there were 861 South Korean nationals at the Kaesong industrial park, 446 of whom were scheduled to go back to South Korea. Some 484 were scheduled to enter Kaesong; 179 were held up at the border awaiting approval by North Korean authorities. Of the 446 who were scheduled to leave, only 46 went ahead, the rest staying behind because their replacements couldn?t get into the complex and their factories needed them to keep working.

The disturbance at the industrial complex comes the day after North Korea announced it would restart an idled nuclear reactor.

NUCLEAR REACTOR

As a key gain in the six-party talks on denuclearization in 2007, North Korea agreed to shut down the Yongbyon reactor, but yesterday it announced it would ?rearrange and reactivate the five-megawatt graphite-moderated reactor, along with all of the nuclear facilities in Yongbyon, including the uranium-enriching plant, which have been halted and disrupted based on the agreement at the six-party talks,? according to a statement carried by the state-run Korean Central News Agency.

North Korea recently said that the agreements reached during the six-party talks were no longer valid, so the move to restart the reactor is not surprising. It would require several months to get the reactor functioning again.

The entry suspension at Kaesong is the latest escalation in a war of words and gestures between the two Koreas that is showing no sign of abating. Many are asking how bad the inter-Korean relations will get, and whether military conflict is on the horizon. But analysts say that even with the continued deterioration in the security situation, all-out war is still unlikely.

?Not even North Korea wants a war,? says Jang Yong-seok, professor at Seoul National University.

?Kim Jong-un may be aggressive, but he will still calculate the costs and benefits before going to war," he says. "Considering the damage that would be caused, he?s very unlikely to initiate a war.?

RECOMMENDED: Kim 101: How well do you know North Korea's leaders?

Related stories

Read this story at csmonitor.com

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/north-korea-unexpectedly-closes-entry-key-industrial-park-145800972.html

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Minnesota hires FIU's Richard Pitino

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) ? Richard Pitino was regarded as one of the nation's up-and-coming young coaches at Florida International and comes with a last name that draws immediate respect in all corners of college basketball.

That combination was too good for Minnesota to pass up.

Pitino has agreed to take over for the fired Tubby Smith, the university announced on Wednesday evening. Athletic director Norwood Teague said the final terms of the contract would be worked out as the week goes on and Pitino was expected to be introduced by Friday.

In his lone season at Florida International, the son of Louisville coach Rick Pitino led the Panthers to an 18-14 record, the school's first winning season in 13 years. He turns 31 in September, fitting the profile of a rising star that Teague has preferred to hire in the past.

Smith, who was fired last week after six seasons at Minnesota, was hired at Texas Tech on Monday.

Finding a replacement for Smith, who brought the Golden Gophers to three NCAA tournaments and delivered the program's first tourney victory since 1997 with a win over UCLA this year, was a somewhat laborious task.

Many expected Teague and associate athletic director Mike Ellis ? two men considered to have strong contacts in the college basketball coaching world ? to go for a big name to bring a different energy into a program they felt had hit a wall.

But Shaka Smart, who was hired by Teague at VCU, and Iowa State's Fred Hoiberg parlayed interest from Minnesota into lucrative long-term deals to remain at their schools. Alum and former NBA coach Flip Saunders turned down an offer last weekend, and the Gophers reportedly swung and missed at several other candidates as well, including Butler's Brad Stevens.

In the end, Pitino's pedigree and connections to another top coach in Florida's Billy Donovan may have sealed the deal and assuaged any concerns about a relative lack of head coaching experience. Teague hired Smart off Donovan's staff, and the charismatic young coach took VCU to the Final Four. Before Smart, Teague worked with Anthony Grant, another former assistant of Donovan's.

In addition to working with his father at Louisville, Richard Pitino served briefly on Donovan's staff with the Gators.

"The great thing about Billy and my dad, they're always willing to give me advice," Pitino told The Associated Press in February. "They understand where I'm at. I call Billy every single day, almost like I call my dad, and I'm so appreciative that they give the time to try to teach me. It's so exciting. For me, I can't try to be Billy Donovan, I can't try to be Rick Pitino. I've got to be my own man and play my own style, and it's been fun trying to figure it out."

He also knows a little something about replacing a big-name coach.

Pitino was hired last year to take over the Panthers, who never got going under NBA Hall of Famer Isiah Thomas. He inherited a program that was short on talent and long on academic problems, but was credited with helping instill a renewed focus to performance in the classroom during his short run with the Panthers. They went 11-9 in the Sun Belt Conference, the most wins since joining the league in 1998-99.

Smith is greatly respected for his work at Tulsa, Georgia and, most notably, Kentucky, where he won a national championship in 1998, his first season after replacing Rick Pitino. He restored Minnesota to respectability, but was fired having never finished with a winning record in the Big Ten.

Just like he did at Florida International, Pitino will have plenty of work to do at Minnesota. The Gophers are losing seniors Trevor Mbakwe and Rodney Williams from an already thin frontcourt and the length of the search has already resulted in one of the top recruits from next year's class pulling out of his commitment. Alvin Ellis, a guard from Chicago, asked for a release from his letter of intent Wednesday morning. He could still sign with Minnesota.

The bigger priority will be playing catch-up with three of highly sought after high school juniors who all play in Minnesota. Apple Valley point guard Tyus Jones is considered one of the top five players in his class and has drawn interest from Michigan State, Duke and Kentucky. DeLaSalle's Reid Travis and Robbinsdale Cooper's Rashad Vaughn also are drawing interest.

___

AP Basketball Writer Tim Reynolds in Miami contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/minnesota-hires-fius-richard-pitino-231616238--spt.html

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Thursday, April 4, 2013

MarieGraceBerg's Attraction Marketing: Self Improvement Is Journey ...

TIP! With any good personal development goal, you should be able to see the distance between your current state and the one you want to achieve. This first step can start you on the way to reaching your goals.

Start by taking an honest inventory of things you'd like to change about yourself through self improvement. Every person's journey towards self improvement is unique and you should find methods that work best with your lifestyle and personality. Try the following tips to see which work

Read more ...

Source: http://mariegraceberg.blogspot.com/2013/04/self-improvement-is-journey-that-never.html

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Roger Ebert taking 'leave of presence' as cancer returns ? The ...

As he celebrates 46 years with the Chicago Sun-Times on Wednesday,? film critic Roger Ebert also reveals he's going to slow down ? or take a "leave of presence," as he calls it.

In an essay on his blog, Ebert explained he's facing a recurrence of cancer. The 70-year-old already lost his voice and much of his jaw after battling thyroid and salivary gland cancer.

Ebert suffered a hip fracture in December, and it recently led to the revelations about cancer, he said. The critic is receiving radiation treatment so he hasn't been able to go to as many movies as he usually does.

Ebert said he typically writes more than 200 reviews a year for the Sun-Times, and last year really ramped it up, producing 306 movie reviews, plus a blog post or two weekly in addition to other articles. He said he's not going away entirely, but he is going to slow down.

"My intent is to continue to write selected reviews but to leave the rest to a talented team of writers handpicked and greatly admired by me," he said. "What's more, I'll be able at last to do what I've always fantasized about doing: reviewing only the movies I want to review."

When not writing about film, he may "write about what it's like to cope with health challenges and the limitations they can force upon you," he said. "It really stinks that the cancer has returned and that I have spent too many days in the hospital. So on bad days I may write about the vulnerability that accompanies illness. On good days, I may wax ecstatic about a movie so good it transports me beyond illness."

Ebert details a variety of other projects on his plate, but his biggest focus likely will be Ebert Digital, under which he plans to relaunch Rogerebert.com.

"The fact that we're re-launching the site now, in the midst of other challenges, should give you an idea how important Rogerebert.com and Ebert Digital are to (my wife) Chaz and me," Ebert said. "I hope you'll stop by, and look for me. I'll be there."

Source: http://marquee.blogs.cnn.com/2013/04/03/roger-ebert-taking-leave-of-presence-as-cancer-returns/

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Exhaled breath is unique fingerprint

Compounds present in exhaled breath can act as a "fingerprint" for individuals, scientists say.

These "metabolites" represent the waste products of the body's chemistry - but their uniqueness had never been shown.

A study in PLOS ONE suggests they could be as useful to medical diagnosis as those found in urine or blood.

Because a breath test is non-invasive and the results are instantaneous, it could prove even more convenient for example in anaesthesia or doping tests.

"I don't understand why breath hasn't been a widely used [means of] medical science diagnosis," said the study's lead author Renato Zenobi of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in Zurich.

"In traditional Chinese medicine, they feel your pulse, look at your tongue and smell your breath," he told BBC News. "There are trained dogs who can sniff cancer with a fairly good hit-rate - but the dog doesn't tell you what the compounds are."

Prior work has shown that the precise type of bacteria responsible for lung infections or even the presence of stomach cancer could be discerned in the breath.

What remained to be seen was whether the breath's metabolic contents varied enough between people - and varied little enough within an individual - to be diagnostic - to act as a real and repeatable "breathprint".

"You need to show there is a core individual signal that is stable over time," Prof Zenobi said. "If it changes a lot during the course of the day or after you've had a coffee or smoked a cigarette, you can just forget about it."

Personalised medicine

The team acquired breath samples from 11 volunteers across four time slots of nine working days.

These samples were run through a mass spectrometer - a device that effectively measures all the masses of the chemical compounds in the breath.

Some, such as water vapour and carbon dioxide, were the same across all participants, but those that differed proved to be unique to individuals - and to stay the same for those individuals throughout the course of the experiments.

In the course of previous work, one of the collaborators' breath appeared to have one markedly different mass "peak" - which turned out to be connected to epilepsy medication he was taking.

When other patients on the same drug were tested, the same peak was found: a new metabolite of the drug that was subsequently published in the journal Chemical Communications.

It is the non-invasive and immediate nature of the test that makes it most promising.

It could for example help determine an appropriate dosage in anaesthesia, where an effective but safe dose is dependent on a patient's tolerance and metabolic rate - a small dose could be given to test how it is metabolised. A quick, at-the-starting-line test could be administered to check for doping in sport.

As the tests continue and the stability and uniqueness of each individual's breathprint is further verified, it could become a staple of the long-predicted "personalised medicine", tailored to each person's chemistry.

And the testing equipment - currently a large, laboratory-based system - is likely to be miniature.

For now the team is taking steps toward that goal, working with pulmonologists to detect signs of lung diseases such as asthma, sarcoidosis and cancer in the breath.

"We're at the onset of learning about what the compounds are. Just a small fraction of the peaks that we see are identified at this point, so there's a lot of footwork to be done," Prof Zenobi said.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-22013700#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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