Thursday, January 31, 2013

Some US bishops ready to defy HHS mandate, risk jail : News ...

CWN - January 30, 2013

In interviews with LifeSite News, three American Catholic bishops said that they were prepared to go to jail rather than accept implementation of the contraceptive mandate in the Obama administration?s health-care reform policy.

Bishop Alexander Sample of Marquette, Michigan (recently named to become Archbishop of Portland, Oregon); Bishop David Zubik of Pittsburgh; and Archbishop Samuel Aquila of Denver said that they would risk prison rather than accept the terms of the Obama mandate.

When he was asked the same question, Cardinal Donald Wuerl of Washington, DC, declined to give a direct response. Saying that he still hoped for an agreement with the Obama administration that would defuse the conflict, the cardinal said: ?We take this one day at a time, and I'm hopeful that we're going to be able to resolve this.?

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Source: http://www.catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=16948

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Transportation secretary to leave administration

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood, the only Republican still in President Barack Obama's first-term Cabinet, said Tuesday he plans to leave the Obama administration.

LaHood, a former congressman from Illinois, pushed for greater safety on the highways and in the air. He led the Transportation Department throughout Obama's first term and helped steer a number of safety measures and highway projects, including steps to curb distracted driving, promote high-speed rail and repair roads and bridges. Under his watch, the department demanded tougher fuel efficiency requirements for automakers and took steps to address airline pilot fatigue.

LaHood said in an interview with The Associated Press that he told Obama a week after the November election that he needed to move on but said he was still "conflicted" by his decision because he liked working for Obama and considered it the "best job I've ever had in public service."

He said he plans to remain at the department until his successor is confirmed by the Senate, which he expected in about two months. The only other Republican who was in Obama's first-term Cabinet was Defense Secretary Robert Gates, who stepped aside and was replaced by Democrat Leon Panetta earlier.

LaHood said he would not run for public office in his home state of Illinois and said he did not have any specific plans.

"I have had a good run. I'm one of these people who believe that you should go out while they're applauding," he said. LaHood said he was content to watch from the sidelines as his oldest son, Darin, serves in the Illinois state senate.

Obama is remaking his Cabinet at the beginning of his second term with the departures of Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, Panetta and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner. In addition to LaHood, the heads of the Interior and Labor departments also have announced their resignations in recent weeks.

The Transportation Department has carried a bipartisan imprint in recent years and been the place for a president to ask a member of the opposing party to serve. Former Rep. Norman Mineta, a California Democrat, served as Transportation secretary during the administration of President George W. Bush. Obama has nominated former Nebraska Sen. Chuck Hagel, a Republican, to serve as defense secretary to succeed Panetta.

Possible replacements for LaHood include Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, who has pushed for increased rail service in Los Angeles and served as chairman of last year's Democratic National Convention, and Debbie Hersman, the chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board. The name of former Rep. Jim Oberstar of Minnesota, who led the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, has also been mentioned.

LaHood, 67, served seven terms in Congress representing a central Illinois district that includes his hometown of Peoria, Ill., and overlapped with Obama in the state's delegation during the last four years of his career.

At the department, LaHood provided a bipartisan voice during the first term, helping implement billions of dollars in transportation projects from the 2009 economic stimulus bill and promoting the plan to wary Republicans. The department pushed forward thousands of infrastructure projects to improve roads and bridges and LaHood worked with Congress last year to pass an overhaul of highway and transit programs that gives states more flexibility in how they spend federal money.

He tackled a number of regulations that had been mired in gridlock. LaHood worked with auto makers and environmentalists to develop tougher fuel efficiency standards for new cars, with the goal of providing environmental benefits and reducing fuel consumption.

Guarding against airline pilot fatigue, the Federal Aviation Administration set new rules under LaHood's watch that would limit the maximum time a pilot can be scheduled on duty and place limits on scheduled flying time and hours for pilots flying overnight. The action was prompted by a deadly plane crash near Buffalo, N.Y., that raised concerns about pilot fatigue.

LaHood also has taken on major transportation companies during his tenure, slapping Toyota Motor Co. with record fines for delaying safety recalls and failing to promptly report problems to federal regulators.

He recently ordered United Airlines to ground its Boeing 787 Dreamliner following mishaps with the aircraft's batteries. The FAA is investigating the cause of the problems to the Dreamliner, which uses lithium ion batteries and is the world's first airliner whose structure is made mostly from lightweight composite materials.

Perhaps LaHood's most passionate work has involved distracted driving, which he has called a "national epidemic." He has launched a national media campaign to end texting and cellphone use by drivers, an awareness campaign that has drawn comparisons to efforts to promote seat belt use more than a generation ago.

The grandfather of 10, LaHood has often emphasized the toll that deaths and injuries from distracted driving can inflict on families.

"Safety will be something that people will remember us for in all modes of transportation," LaHood said.

___

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

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/transportation-secretary-leave-administration-143315594.html

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Carbon backup app launches on Google Play [updated]

Android Central

Update: Whoops. Koush sends word that Carbon wasn't quite ready to go when we posted and that the folks in the forums spotted it early. It's not "live" live, so make sure you have the most recent version.

After a couple of weeks in beta, Koushik Dutta -- aka Koush -- has released his Carbon backup app on Google Play. The app uses Android's built-in backup feature to sync apps -- and crucially, app data -- to the SD card or cloud storage. If you're rooted, you just need the app itself. If not, there's an accompanying desktop app that can help you sync an unrooted phone.

A word of warning for Motorola users -- the app isn't available for Moto devices due to a bug in these phones which prevents Android's backup features from working correctly. A manual download link is provided on the Play Store listing for those running custom ROMs, or anyone who just wants to try anyway.

Carbon comes in two flavors -- there's a free version, which offers an basic ad-supported service. Then there's an ad-free premium version, which costs $4.99 and adds in more advanced stuff like Android-to-Android sync and cloud storage sync.

Both apps are available for phones running Android 4.0 or above -- hit the Google Play link above to grab the basic version, or head over here for the premium version.

via Android Central forums



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/ZGsRiLq-WLc/story01.htm

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Wednesday, January 30, 2013

U.N.'s Ban says aid response for Syria "very limited"

KUWAIT (Reuters) - The United Nations is receiving only limited support for its aid to millions of Syrians, Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said in published remarks, adding its humanitarian work needed "generous" help from a donor pledging conference on Wednesday.

The gathering in the Gulf Arab state of Kuwait will seek $1 billion of aid for Syria's neighbors sheltering 700,000 registered refugees, and another $500 million to bankroll humanitarian work for 4 million Syrians inside their country.

So far, the United Nations has received pledges covering just 18 percent of the target, unveiled last month as the scale of Syria's humanitarian crisis escalated sharply, and which aims to fund operations for the first half of this year.

Ban was quoted by the official Kuwait News Agency (KUNA) as saying what while the need for humanitarian aid was rising "the level of response the U.N. is receiving is very much limited."

"That is why I am appealing to the whole international community to render their generous support."

Some 4 million Syrians inside the country need food, shelter and other aid and more than 700,000 more have escaped to neighboring countries since the 22-month-old conflict began, according to the U.N.

KUNA reported Ban as saying that on a visit to refugee camps in Jordan and Turkey six weeks ago he heard stories of refugees who had fled Syria "and particularly stories from children, who were very much concerned about their own future."

"That really saddened and humbled me."

Robert Watkins, U.N. humanitarian coordinator in Lebanon, which has seen the biggest influx of refugees from the Syrian bloodshed, told Reuters that the United Nations had received promises of major donations at the Kuwait conference.

"We have every reason to be optimistic that there will a very good presence and new pledges that will be coming up at this conference," he said.

U.S. President Barack Obama announced an additional $155 million, bringing the total U.S. humanitarian aid to the Syrian crisis to some $365 million, the State Department said.

Watkins said the fact that the conference was being held in Kuwait could encourage other wealthy Gulf Arab states, who have led regional opposition to President Bashar al-Assad, to support the international aid effort.

In New York, U.N.-Arab League mediator Lakhdar Brahimi warned the U.N. Security Council on Tuesday that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad may be able to cling to power for now but the country is "breaking up before everyone's eyes," diplomats told Reuters.

Brahimi suggested that attempts to end the 22-month-old conflict, which has claimed more than 60,000 lives according to U.N. figures, had not progressed in the last two months. He said it was up to the Security Council to end its impasse.

(Reporting by Sylvia Westall, Writing by William Maclean; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-n-ban-says-aid-response-syria-very-062658569.html

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UK watchdog not keen on cash for whistleblowers

LONDON (Reuters) - The prospect of cash rewards won't prompt more bankers to step forward and blow the whistle on wrongdoings that could put their institution at risk, a top UK enforcement official said.

Tracey McDermott, director of enforcement at the Financial Services Authority, came under heavy attack from lawmakers for failing to send a top banker or board member to jail after taxpayers had to rescue lenders in the 2007-09 financial crisis.

"In relation to large institutions, it has proved extremely difficult to get at the people at the top," McDermott told the parliamentary commission looking into banking standards.

"We need to ensure people do not only get the upside but suffer some of the downside. We have not been able to hold them to account ... We are in for the long haul."

The commission will recommend legal changes to make it easier to pin the blame for bank failures on individuals.

"We want individuals prosecuted," the commission's chairman Andrew Tyrie told McDermott, adding that the "big fish" were simply swimming past the regulators.

"Is there regulatory deference to senior executives and board members?" asked Susan Kramer, another commission member.

The commission pointed out that U.S. financial regulators gave whistleblowers cash rewards but McDermott said this practice was relatively new.

"We don't think there is a case made out for giving financial incentives for whistleblowers," McDermott said.

The FSA has begun requiring banks to name an individual who will be responsible for making changes it has requested.

"We want somebody to be on the hook for taking remedial action. It is a step towards making people more personally accountable," McDermott said.

The watchdog could also put far more pressure on people to fulfil their existing duty to tell regulators if they see a problem, she added.

The FSA wants powers to impose interim bans on people they believe are not "fit and proper", so they cannot continue working for years until the case against them is completed.

McDermott also wants to be able to fine any employee of a bank - a power currently limited to "approved" staff in key jobs. Other changes could include reversing the burden of proof so that a banker would have to prove they were not culpable.

The FSA is being scrapped and its powers divided between two new regulators on April 1 - a standalone Financial Conduct Authority where McDermott will head enforcement, and a Prudential Regulation Authority at the Bank of England.

Graham Nicholson, the bank's chief legal adviser, said the PRA will be ready "on day one" to take enforcement actions.

He rejected suggestions the bank could be subject to "regulatory capture", meaning it is too close to the industry it supervises. McDermott rejected a similar charge against the FSA.

"The culture of the bank is pretty robust in that regard," Nicholson told the commission.

(Reporting by Huw Jones; Editing by Helen Massy-Beresford)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/uk-watchdog-not-keen-cash-whistleblowers-194355352--finance.html

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Monday, January 28, 2013

Philharmonic Society unveils 2013-2014 schedule | orchestra ...

The Philharmonic Society of Orange County announced its 2013-2014 concert schedule today, the 60th season for the presenter and the last for president and artistic director Dean Corey, who will retire in June 2014. A number of events will offer tribute to Corey, who has led the Society since 1993, including a Dean Corey Legacy Concerts series that features a return visit by the Vienna Philharmonic and the publication of a book by Corey, "Beethoven: The Late Great, 33 Personal Essays." The season also includes the performance of a complete opera in concert.

The Vienna Philharmonic, one of the world's most celebrated, returns to Segerstrom Concert Hall on March 3 (2014), with Italian conductor Daniele Gatti leading a program of Schubert's "Unfinished" Symphony and Mahler's Symphony No. 4 (with soprano Juliane Banse as soloist).

Pianist Yuja Wang will perform a recital in October for the Philharmonic Society.

ROLEX, FADIL BERISHA

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Other orchestras on the schedule include the Irish Chamber Orchestra, conducted by JoAnn Falletta and featuring flutist James Galway; the Boston Pops Orchestra conducted by Keith Lockhart; the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, featuring violinist Pinchas Zukerman as both conductor and soloist; the period-instrument English Concert led by Harry Bicket in a performance of Handel's "Theodora," with countertenor David Daniels; the Haifa Symphony Orchestra of Israel; and the annual visit from the Los Angeles Philharmonic, this time conducted by St?phane Den?ve and featuring violinist Gil Shaham.

Three student orchestras also appear on the subscription series. Los Angeles Opera music director James Conlon will lead the Colburn Orchestra and the USC Thorton Symphony in a performance of Britten's "War Requiem" (honoring the composer's centenary), with choirs from USC, Cal State Fullerton and Cal State Long Beach as well as the Los Angeles Children's Chorus.

The season ends with a performance by the Orange County Youth Orchestra under Daniel Alfred Wachs, who will lead a program that includes a new commission (entitled "Frieze") from progressive British composer Mark-Anthony Turnage and Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, with choirs from UCI, Cal State Fullerton and Chapman University.

Recitals by pianists Olga Kern and Yuja Wang are scheduled as well as chamber concerts by Camera Lucida, the Madelring Quartet, the Scharoun Ensemble Berlin and the Myriad Trio.

Subscriptions ranging from four to 12 concerts go on sale Monday. For more information call 949-553-2422 or visit www.philharmonicsociety.org.

Contact the writer: 714-796-6811 or tmangan@ocregister.com


Source: http://www.ocregister.com/entertainment/orchestra-409429-philharmonic-symphony.html

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Sunday, January 27, 2013

AP Interview: CERN chief firmer on 'God particle'

Director General of CERN, Rolf-Dieter Heuer, gestures as he speaks during an interview with The Associated Press at the World Economic Forum, WEF, in Davos, Switzerland, Saturday, Jan. 26, 2013. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)

Director General of CERN, Rolf-Dieter Heuer, gestures as he speaks during an interview with The Associated Press at the World Economic Forum, WEF, in Davos, Switzerland, Saturday, Jan. 26, 2013. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)

Director General of CERN, Rolf-Dieter Heuer, gestures as he speaks during an interview with The Associated Press at the World Economic Forum, WEF, in Davos, Switzerland, Saturday, Jan. 26, 2013. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)

Participants leave the Congress Center the last day of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum, WEF, in Davos, Switzerland, Saturday, Jan. 26, 2013. (AP Photo/Keystone/Laurent Gillieron)

(AP) ? The world should know with certainty by the middle of this year whether a subatomic particle discovered by scientists is a long-sought Higgs boson, the head of the world's largest atom smasher said Saturday.

Rolf Heuer, director of the European Organization for Nuclear Research, or CERN, said he is confident that "towards the middle of the year, we will be there." By then, he said reams of data from the $10 billion Large Hadron Collider on the Swiss-French border near Geneva should have been assessed.

The timing could also help Scottish physicist Peter Higgs win a Noble Prize, Heuer said in an interview with The Associated Press in the Swiss resort of Davos.

CERN's atom smasher helped scientists declare in July their discovery of a new subatomic particle that Heuer calls "very, very like" a Higgs boson, that promises a new realm of understanding the universe.

The machine, which has been creating high-energy collisions of protons to investigate dark matter, antimatter and the creation of the universe, is being put to rest early this year. The data from it, however, takes longer to analyze.

"Suppose the Higgs boson is a special snowflake. So you have to identify the snowflake, in a big snowstorm, in front of a background of snowfields," Heuer said by way of analogy. "That is very difficult. You need a tremendous amount of snowfall in order to identify the snowflakes and this is why it takes time."

He said the standard model of particle physics describes only 5 percent of the universe, which many theorize occurred in a massive explosion known as the Big Bang.

To explain how subatomic particles, such as electrons, protons and neutrons, were themselves formed, Higgs and others in the 1960s envisioned an energy field where particles interact with a key particle, the Higgs boson.

The idea was that other particles attract Higgs bosons and the more they attract, the bigger their mass will be. But a big question remains: Is this new particle a variation of the Higgs boson, or the same as the Higgs boson that was predicted?

The phrase "God particle," coined by Nobel Prize-winning physicist Leon Lederman, is used by laymen, not physicists, more as an explanation for how the subatomic universe works than how it all started.

"Now, if there is a deviation in one of the properties of this Higgs boson, that means we open a new window, for example, hopefully into the part of the dark universe, the 95 percent of the unknown universe," said Heuer.

"If you find the deviation," he added, "that means if it is not the ? but a ? Higgs boson, then we might find a fantastic window into the dark universe so we would make another giant leap from the visible to the dark."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-01-26-EU-Davos-Forum-God-Particle/id-0b997fa7e2724b42814b1d85bbf3b2ff

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Interview: Adam Kolbrenner (Madhouse Entertainment) ? Part 6 ...

This week, we are fortunate to have as our guest manager-producer Adam Kolbrenner from Madhouse Entertainment, an L.A.-based production and literary management company that works with screenwriters and writer/directors in the areas of film, television and new media.

I will be posting the whole interview over the course of the week. Today in Part 6, Adam reveals what he is looking for when he reads a script and in a prospective writer client.

Now let?s look at what you do through the eyes of an aspiring screenwriter. How do you go about the process of surfacing a new talented writer?

It?s all about that one script that?s a calling card.? If you don?t have it but ask to meet people or just ?get out there? Madhouse is not the right representative.? I think you might require something more like a dating service.? If you can?t fundamentally write the script that will define you, perhaps you should choose another profession.? When we do have that script, the world is yours.

What specifically are you looking for when you read a script from a potential writer client?

Voice.? Characters.? Plot that we did not see coming.? Dialogue that is not derivative of what we?ve seen on screen before.? If I?m on page 1 of a cop thriller and the cliches start to pop up, say a character gives me: ?I?m too old for this shit? or ?The Mayor is on my ass already? I?ll be putting your script down on the ground.? Have you heard this line of dialogue in a movie from years ago?? You probably have, and it?s not yours to write again.

Let?s say you read a terrific script by a new writer. What?s your process in checking them out as a potential client? Are there certain types of personality traits or skill sets you?re looking for in addition to their writing talent?

Yes as I mentioned, great writing is 99% of what this business is.? But the other 99% is how hard are you willing to work for it.? (99+99 adds up right?).? If I meet a writer and he tells me how great that script is I just read and he asks me what I?m going to do to get it made, and THEN he?ll figure out what he?ll write next, I end the meeting there.? Don?t worry about what I?m going to do, worry about what YOU will do for your career as writer.? Go write.

Okay, so let?s further hypothesize you agree to represent this writer and they have this one great spec script they?ve written. It doesn?t immediately sell, but it?s a strong writing sample. How might you approach guiding this writer through their first six to twelve months in Hollywood? What opportunities might you be focusing on? How closely would you be working with them and what would that work look like?

Madhouse Boot camp.? For both of us actually.? We certainly look at opportunities out there in the marketplace that are realistic.? But, the reality is our boot camp is working together to determine what is going to be the next spec.? Why didn?t the first one sell?? Who knows.? But put it behind you and move on to the next.? Now people know your name.? What are you going to give them next?? That?s all they care about.

Does Madhouse Entertainment accept unsolicited submissions? Can writers submit loglines to you by email?

We get dozens of unsolicited emails a day.? It?s not cool and now I just delete them because while it might seem to a writer that sending an email first thing in the morning for representation is the best time to get a response, I get up in the morning and have at least 50 emails to start going through from clients and others around the world.? Delete.? So, Madhouse?s system can be found out online at our website:? www.madhouseent.net ? we look at every email there, all log lines, determine what sounds interesting and we go from there.? Lots more info and updates on twitter:? @madhouse_ent ? the website link is there as well to submit.

A few subjects that come up again and again. First what?s your advice on whether a writer should relocate to LA or stay where they are and write from there?

We represent plenty of writers that live all over the country.? When you?re starting out, working from anywhere is fine to an extent.? But, in order to be constantly in the game you need to be in Los Angeles.? It shows a more serious commitment to the craft. You meet plenty of other writers here, more opportunities open up and you feel connected.? You want to work on Wall Street, live in NYC.? You want to work in Hollywood, live in Hollywood.? If you don?t want to live in Los Angeles, at least move to Burbank.

Next would you generally advise aspiring writers to focus on one genre or to write whatever stories they want to pursue?

I think it?s vital for a writer to write in the lane that they want to write in for a long time.? I hear from new writers they have a comedy and a drama and a horror film and my head explodes.? Know who you are.? Look at the best screenwriters in the world.? Does David Koepp write the next Will Ferrell movie?? Does John August write Paranormal Activity 6?? They don?t cross genres, why should you?

One more: Should an aspiring screenwriter be more concerned about writing for the market or writing stories about which they are truly passionate, even if their content may fly in the face of Hollywood conventional wisdom?

This sort of wraps around to our whole conversation.? Good writing will rise to the top.? No matter what the story is. ?On the 2012 Black List Madhouse had everything from a 14th Century? movie about whaling, to a slave escape film, to a multi-generational road trip comedy, to a teen time travel adventure and more.? Passion is great.? But great storytelling and great writing wins.

If you had to estimate how many scripts you read a year, what would that total be? After reading so many scripts, do you still get excited about the possibility that this next one could be great? How do you sustain that positive energy?

Madhouse recently ran a contest that was basically a jelly bean count on all the scripts that were stacked behind my desk over a two year period.? (There?s a photo in Screenplay Magazine by Tom Benedek from a year or so ago).? I print every script and read them all.? The number in the script contest was exactly 2,897.? We read everything we can get my hands on.? I stay positive because I have to.? I substitute a classic novel or the great screenwriters (August, Koepp, etc) work in there from time to time to keep perspective.? Every time someone recommends a new writer to me, whether i?ve heard the name or not, I get excited.? I read everything by the following monday.? Always.? I don?t sit around.? Energy?? The Coffee Bean across the street from the Madhouse office and constant flow of interns running over there.

What?s the single most satisfying aspect of what you do as a literary manager?

Building lives and careers.?? Seeing our clients cash checks.? Seeing clients get married, have kids, build houses.? Seeing movies get made.

Finally what?s the one biggest piece of advice you can give to aspiring screenwriters?

Read everything.? Write more than everyone else.? Stay focused.? Don?t quit.? Don?t expect results from others, the only results come from when you type ?THE END? and send that script to the universe.? The universe will decide on the great ones.? Tip your bartenders and the valet guys because they might just have a great story idea for you.

That concludes this great interview with one of Hollywood?s most notable managers Adam Kolbrenner.

Please stop by comments to thank Adam for taking the time for the interview and post any follow-up questions you may have as he has agreed to answer them.

Source: http://gointothestory.blcklst.com/2013/01/interview-adam-kolbrenner-madhouse-entertainment-part-6.html

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Italy central bank approves Monte Paschi bailout request

ROME/MILAN (Reuters) - Italy's central bank on Saturday gave its approval to a request by scandal hit bank Monte dei Paschi di Siena for 3.9 billion euros ($5.3 billion) of state loans, the latest step in the battle to revive the ailing bank.

The Bank of Italy's backing was the final stage required to free up the financial help for Italy's third biggest lender, which this week revealed loss-making derivatives trades that could cost it about 720 million euros.

After a meeting that lasted most of Saturday, the central bank issued a brief statement to say its board had given "a favorable opinion" on the bailout. It gave no further details.

The scandal surrounding Italy's oldest bank has hit its share price and prompted questions about how the risky deals could have been hidden from regulators.

The issue has shot to the center of the campaign for a February 24-25 national election and politicians have blamed the Bank of Italy (BOI), led by current European Central Bank President Mario Draghi at the time of the deals, for failing to spot them.

At Saturday's meeting the BOI's four member board, chaired by Governor Ignazio Visco, had to judge whether the bank's current and future capital adequacy and stability were sufficient to receive the loans.

The Tuscan bank was forced to seek state aid last year for the second time since 2009 after becoming one of just four European lenders that failed to meet tougher capital requirements set by regulators.

Under the loan scheme the bank will issue 3.9 billion euros of bonds to the Italian Treasury, with just under half of these replacing 1.9 billion euros of existing state help.

The lender's new management, appointed last year to turn it around, said on Friday the situation was "completely under control".

The bank will pay a hefty 9 percent coupon on the bonds, which are worth more than its current market capitalization of 3 billion euros. The coupon will increase by 0.5 percentage point every two years up to a maximum of 15 percent.

At a stormy meeting at Monte Paschi's Siena headquarters on Friday, shareholders approved two capital increases for 6.5 billion euros to be carried out if needed in the next five years, which are a condition of the state bailout.

That raises the prospect of possible nationalization, because if the bank cannot repay the state bonds or the coupons attached to them, it will have to issue shares to the Treasury.

Prime Minister Mario Monti said late on Friday he considered nationalization a "remote hypothesis".

TAXPAYERS' MONEY

Monti, bidding for a second term in the election, defended his government's decision to rescue it with taxpayers' money. "It's a loan, with a high interest rate," he said.

At the World Economic Forum in Davos on Friday Visco sought to deflect accusations the BOI had not done its job properly.

"It is wrong to insinuate that there was a lack of supervision by the Bank of Italy," he said, adding the BOI would cooperate with prosecutors investigating the lender.

Draghi, also in Davos, took no questions from reporters.

Visco's task was made more difficult by a report in the Corriere della Sera daily which included excerpts of a document drafted by six BOI inspectors expressing concerns over the two main trades under scrutiny as long ago as 2010.

That document would have been sent to the BOI's head of bank supervision at the time, Anna Maria Tarantola, who has since left the bank to become president of state broadcaster RAI.

Visco sidestepped questions about whether Draghi knew about the 2008-09 derivatives trades, which involved Japanese bank Nomura and Deutsche Bank.

Internal auditors at Monte Paschi had detected anomalies at the bank's finance department responsible for derivative trades three years ago, daily Il Sole 24 Ore said on Saturday.

Monte Paschi was already under investigation over its 9-billion-euro cash acquisition of smaller lender Antonveneta from Spain's Santander in 2007.

Santander had bought Antonveneta for 6.6 billion euros in a three-way break-up bid for Dutch bank ABN AMRO, and almost immediately sold it on to Monte dei Paschi netting a hefty gain.

(Additional reporting by Danilo Masoni; Editing by Andrew Heavens and Jason Neely)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bank-italy-board-meets-assess-monte-paschi-crisis-120432200--finance.html

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Saturday, January 26, 2013

#SciAmBlogs Friday - Glassfrogs, Age of Miracles, bad smells, Rotifer in Motion, chemophobia, Geodesign and more.

Bora ZivkovicAbout the Author: Bora Zivkovic is the Blog Editor at Scientific American, chronobiologist, biology teacher, organizer of ScienceOnline conferences and editor of Open Laboratory anthologies of best science writing on the Web. Follow on Twitter @boraz.

The views expressed are those of the author and are not necessarily those of Scientific American.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=f237aa8901fac5f214c78172e7891aea

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Thursday, January 24, 2013

Deep freeze to continue to weekend in East

PORTLAND, Maine (AP) ? A teeth-chattering cold wave with sub-zero temperatures is expected to keep its icy grip on much of the eastern U.S. into the weekend before seasonable temperatures bring relief.

A polar air mass has prompted the National Weather Service to issue wind chill warnings across upstate New York and northern New England.

In northern Maine, the temperature dipped to as low as 36 degrees below zero Wednesday morning. The weather service is calling for a wind chills as low as minus-45.

In Frenchville, Maine, restaurant owner Keith Pelletier says it's so cold that even snowmobilers are staying inside. He says his customers are dressed in multiple layers of clothing and keep their cars running in his parking lot while they're eating lunch.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/deep-freeze-continue-weekend-east-181908335.html

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Wednesday, January 23, 2013

The Books I Read in 2012 ? Technology, Innovation, Education

Inspired by Tony Haile I have decided to write a yearly post in which I list the books that I have read for the year. This year I managed to read 57 books (still 18 books short on my seemingly unattainable goal of reading 75 books a year. Please note that the categories are quite arbitrary, but mean something for me. Having a Goodreads account really helped me with this exercise.

Some people ask me how I manage to read this much. I?ll give away my secret recipe: don?t have children, do not watch any TV and make sure you commute by train (45+ minutes in each direction) every day. That is all there is to it.

Innovation

Doorley?s book showed me how simple changes in the physical space can change people?s behavior and Dyer showed how being innovative is just a set of behaviour. I will put those two together in the next year. Checklist have stopped me forgetting things after reading Gawande?s book.

  • Make Space: How To Set The Stage For Creative Collaboration ? Scott Doorley (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • The Innovator?s DNA: Mastering the Five Skills of Disruptive Innovators ? Jeff Dyer (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • Sustainism Is The New Modernism ? Michiel Schwarz (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • Abundance: The Future Is Better Than You Think ? Peter H. Diamandis (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right ? Atul Gawande (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • The Rainforest: The Secret to Building the Next Silicon Valley ? Victor W. Hwang (Goodreads/Amazon)

Philosophy

French has showed me that corporations are the best positioned lifeforms to show sustained moral behaviour. Illich was truly enlightening, I expect to read more of him in 2013 (Deschooling Society!). I will continue to explore McLuhan?s thinking with a reading group on Understanding Media. Sandel?s book on the moral limits of market is chockfull of incredible examples of things that can be gotten with money nowadays (e.g. prison cell upgrades). The three weirdest books I?ve read this year are also in this category: Stone, Burrell and Goertzel, all thanks to Daniel Erasmus. The book which made me think the most per page must have been Eagleman?s.

  • Corporate Ethics ? Peter A. French (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • Tools For Conviviality ? Ivan Illich (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • Justice: What?s the Right Thing to Do? ? Michael J. Sandel (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • What Money Can?t Buy: The Moral Limits of Markets ? Michael J. Sandel (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • The Medium Is the Massage : An Inventory of Effects ? Marshall McLuhan (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • The War of Desire and Technology at the Close of the Mechanical Age ? Sandy Stone (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • Pandemonium: Towards a Retro-Organization Theory ? Gibson Burrell (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • A Cosmist Manifesto ? Ben Goertzel (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • In Praise Of Love ? Alain Badiou (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives ? David Eagleman (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • You Kant Make It Up!: Strange Ideas from History?s Great Philosophers ? Gary Hayden (Goodreads/Amazon)

Technology

The anthology edited by Zerzan was probably my favourite book of the year and I was amazed to see how relevant the Cluetrain Manifesto is, 12 years after it has been written.

  • Questioning Technology: A Critical Anthology ? John Zerzan (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • The Cluetrain Manifesto: The End of Business as Usual ? Rick Levine (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • WikiLeaks and the Age of Transparency ? Micah Sifry (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • Dreaming in Code: Two Dozen Programmers, Three Years, 4,732 Bugs, and One Quest for Transcendent Software ? Scott Rosenberg (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • Total Recall: How the E-Memory Revolution Will Change Everything ? C. Gordon Bell (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • Consent of the Networked: The Worldwide Struggle For Internet Freedom ? Rebecca MacKinnon (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • Alone Together: Why We Expect More from Technology and Less from Each Other ? Sherry Turkle (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • Delete: The Virtue of Forgetting in the Digital Age ? Viktor Mayer-Sch?nberger (Goodreads/Amazon)

Learning

Postman?s book was full of provocative thinking. It made me wonder why we don?t seem to have this kind of insight into education nowadays (and are being put up with Ken Robinson).

  • Teaching As a Subversive Activity ? Neil Postman (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • Beyond the Hole in the Wall: Discover the Power of Self-Organized Learning ? Sugata Mitra (Goodreads/Amazon)

Business/Management

I will use Osterwalder?s canvas in an upcoming workshop on business models for learning. Rodgers defies management orthodoxy by showing how we need (mostly informal) conversation to do sensemaking in this complex world.

  • Business Model Generation: A Handbook for Visionaries, Game Changers, and Challengers ? Alexander Osterwalder (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • The Shareholder Value Myth: How Putting Shareholders First Harms Investors, Corporations, and the Public ? Lynn Stout (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • Informal Coalitions: Mastering the Hidden Dynamics of Organizational Change ? Chris Rodgers (Goodreads/Amazon)

Lifehacking/Self-Improvement

Berkun?s book on speaking is probably the most useful on the topic that I?ve come across. Zinsser is a well deserved classic. The Pomodoro technique has increased my productivity tremendously and has given me an idea of being in control of the work that I do.

  • On Writing Well: The Classic Guide to Writing Non-Fiction ? William Knowlton Zinsser (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • Pomodoro Technique Illustrated: Can You Focus ? Really Focus ? for 25 Minutes? ? Staffan Noteberg (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • The Pomodoro Technique ? Francesco Cirillo (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • Verslaafd aan liefde ? Jan Geurtz (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • Confessions of a Public Speaker ? Scott Berkun (Goodreads/Amazon)

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Together with four other nerds I started a book club where we will read technology related books. Holiday?s book was irritating as hell but did lead to a great discusion. Expect ten books or so in this category next year.

  • Trust Me, I?m Lying: Confessions of a Media Manipulator ? Ryan Holiday (Goodreads/Amazon)

Fiction

I didn?t read a lot of fiction this year. Thompson was long overdue (and didn?t disappoint). Stephenson was a bit disappointing (although also mindblowing at times). I thought Scott Card was morally despicable.

Other

Some great books don?t fit in the above categories. DeKoven wrote down how I intuitively taught physical education a few years back. I had a wonderful few days with MacGregor. The picture in MacArthur?s book are the opposite of Doorley?s book in the innovation category. Laties made me want to quit my job and start a book store.

  • The Well-Played Game: A Playful Path to Wholeness ? Bernie DeKoven (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • A History of the World in 100 Objects ? Neil MacGregor (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • The Soccer War ? Ryszard Kapu?ci?ski (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • Richard Ross: Architecture of Authority ? John F. MacArthur (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • A General Theory of Love ? Thomas Lewis (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • The Psychopath Test: A Journey Through the Madness Industry ? Jon Ronson (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • Rebel Bookseller: Why Indie Businesses Represent Everything You Want To Fight For From Free Speech To Buying Local To Building Communities ? Andrew Laties (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • A Life with Books ? Julian Barnes (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • Bezeten: Ton Boot, de winnaar & het laatste seizoen ? Igor Wijnker (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • the Science of Love and Betrayal ? Robin Dunbar (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • How to Be Black ? Baratunde R. Thurston (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • Arcosanti: An Urban Laboratory? ? Paolo Soleri (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • Radical Evolution Radical Evolution Radical Evolution ? Joel Garreau (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • Hanging Out, Messing Around, and Geeking Out: Kids Living and Learning with New Media ? Mizuko Ito (Goodreads/Amazon)
  • Don?t Tell Mum I Work On The Rigs: (She Thinks I?m A Piano Player In A Whorehouse) ? Paul Carter (Goodreads/Amazon)

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Source: http://blog.hansdezwart.info/2013/01/22/the-books-i-read-in-2012/

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Monday, January 21, 2013

PM says Libya will not be base for attacking neighbors

TRIPOLI (Reuters) - Libyan authorities will not allow the country to be used as a launch pad for attacks that threaten the security of its neighbors, Prime Minister Ali Zeidan said on Saturday.

In the chaos since Muammar Gaddafi's fall in 2011, Libya's vast desert south has become a smuggling route for weapons which have reached al Qaeda militants deeper in the Sahara.

"Libya will not allow anyone to threaten the safety and security of its neighbors," Zeidan told reporters.

Libya shares a border with Algeria where an attack on a desert gas complex this week swiftly turned into one of the biggest international hostage crises in decades, pushing Saharan militancy to the top of the global agenda.

The Algeria crisis marks a serious escalation of unrest in northwestern Africa, where French forces have been in Mali since last week fighting an Islamist takeover of Timbuktu and other towns.

Zeidan denied media reports the southwestern Al-Waigh military base, close to Libya's border with Niger, had been used "to launch attacks on neighboring countries" but did not give further details.

Plagued by violence, drugs, weapons trafficking and an influx of illegal immigrants, Libya's new rulers last month announced they would temporarily close its borders with Algeria, Niger, Chad and Sudan to clamp down on lawlessness in its vast desert south.

(Reporting by Ali Shuaib; Editing by Sophie Hares)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pm-says-libya-not-attacking-neighbors-174519208.html

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On the Terrorist Attack In Algeria (Powerlineblog)

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Sunday, January 20, 2013

Dot Earth Blog: Obama's Second-Term Options on the Environment

As President Obama prepares to embark on his second and final term, it?s worth exploring what he can do to foster progress on environmental issues and the nation?s, and world?s, energy and climate challenges. In November, I sought reader input as I reported a piece on this question for Men?s Journal. The focus is on steps that can be taken even with tight budgets and polarized politics.

The article was posted online on Friday. Here are some excerpts.

From the introduction:

The temptation is to focus on issues that inflame the public, like the?Keystone XL pipeline, but the president would do better to take a wider perspective. Keystone, for one, would pump only 830,000 barrels of oil from tar sands a day, about a third of the 2.3 million barrels of oil Canada already sends us, and a mere fraction of our heavily subsidized 19-million-barrel-a-day habit. We spoke to scientists, economists, and policy advisers, who recommended the most impactful environmental measures, ones that can be achieved over the course of the next four years. Here?s their nine-point plan to protect the planet.

Speed the shift from coal:

The best tool Obama has to reduce coal use is to implement the EPA?s existing?Mercury and Air Toxics Standards, which place limits on mercury, arsenic, chromium, nickel, and other toxic emissions associated with coal. But the coal industry has been pressuring the EPA to reconsider the standard, pushing to weaken regulations that could affect dozens of decades-old, heavily-polluting coal plants like Indianapolis? Harding Street Station, which has been in operation for 54 years.

For those who think cutting coal is too expensive in a recession, we must recognize the massive, $60 billion annual?health costs associated with burning this fossil fuel?? everything from cardiovascular and respiratory illness to premature death. ?You could pension off all the 80,000 workers in the coal industry for a tiny fraction of the medical bills due to burning coal,? says Burton Richter, a Nobel laureate in physics. [The rest.]

Bring more oversight to the gas age. The administration can move forward with planned rules requiring the industry to stem leaks of natural gas into the air (which is easily doable, often at a profit) and can intensify work with China and other gas-rich countries to advance gas extraction without environmental regrets. Here?s another move I outlined in the magazine piece:

Seventeen?environmental groups have petitioned the EPA?to require disclosure of chemicals used in fracking under the Toxics Release Inventory, an effective, decades-old program that already applies to most industries (including the coal industry). Likewise, contaminated water generated in fracking can be tightly regulated under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act and Toxic Substances Control Act. ?Our job isn?t to promote natural gas ? the market is doing that because the stuff is so cheap and abundant,? says Fred Krupp, president of the Environmental Defense Fund and an adviser to the Secretary of Energy. ?Our job is to protect air and water supplies.? [The rest.]

Cut carbon dioxide from power plants:?

President Obama can do for power plants what the administration has done for vehicles: require reductions in CO2. The EPA has proposed a?Carbon Pollution Standard for Future Power Plants, which would restrict the emission of greenhouse gases, requiring coal plants, in particular, to be more efficient and cleaner. It?s up to the president to move on this proposal and use his executive power to set limits on the amount of carbon pollution new power plants can emit. ?There are no indications that the new Congress will be receptive to effective climate legislation,? says Daniel Lashof of the?Natural Resources Defense Council. ?But [Obama] can do these things without waiting for Congress.? [The rest.]

Getting corn out of gas tanks:

The Renewable Fuel Standard, passed in 2005, may sound like a high-minded environmental program. But pressing U.S. farmers to grow corn for ethanol fuel use is not good green policy. This past year, 40 percent of domestic corn crops have gone into gas tanks, even as a rise in global food prices has hurt the poorest families. And while the idea of growing fuel is a solid one, many scientists argue that turning corn into fuel has proved to be as water- and energy-intensive as drilling for oil. ?It is time to take a hard look at the carbon benefits of corn ethanol and its impacts on food prices around the world,? says Jonathan Foley, the director of the?Institute on the Environment?at the University of Minnesota. [The rest.]

I also discuss restoring bison, provisions in the farm bill that could benefit the environment, tightening control of offshore oil drilling and pressing forward ? for a host of reasons ? on United States ratification of the Law of the Sea convention.

Here?s the concluding point:

Stop subsidizing the building boom in danger zones:

The president and Congress should?cut federal subsidies?that keep the price of insurance in some high-risk zones (flood plains, coastal areas threatened by rising seas, and regions prone to wildfires) artificially ? and disastrously ? low.

?If we had never created the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP), the private market would be charging much higher premiums and it would be much more of a deterrent for people living in these places,? says Eileen Fretz, director of flood management at the non-profit,?American Rivers. While we?re not likely to completely end government-backed insurance, last June?Congress passed legislation?that cut NFIP funding for businesses, second homes, and repeat beneficiaries (that is, homes that flooded multiple times). This is a good start, but we need to do more: stop giving taxpayer protection, and indirectly encouraging development, to communities behind levees. We also need to actively protect our most valuable flood protection infrastructure ? wetlands, barrier islands, and dune beaches.

Similar opportunities lie in the nation?s wildfire ?red zones,? where the government is spending $3 billion a year on wildfire protection. ?We ain?t seen nothing yet,? says Ray Rasker, an economist and director of?Headwaters Economics. Only 16 percent of private wildland now has homes, he says. ?Put climate change on top of new development, and you have a crisis.? He suggests cutting support for construction of at-risk homes, doing away with breaks like the federal mortgage tax deduction. [The rest.]

Here?s a bit more on this last point that didn?t make it into the piece but is worth adding here:

Given the disastrous impact of wildfires on communities from Texas to Colorado, President Obama can order a reexamination of forest management practices on federal lands that have resulted in huge accumulations of fuel for conflagrations. He can insure that federal agencies responsible for developing codes for construction and materials move ahead with plans for national codes and standards for building in what?s called the ?wildland-urban interface.? The standards would tighten depending on level of hazard determined through a ?fire exposure severity zoning system.?

Finally, Nicholas Pinter, a Southern Illinois University scientist studying flooding disasters, says Obama should consider broader shifts in the budget and bureaucracy at the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which still is mainly focused on responding once a disaster has struck ? with only 15 percent of its spending in such instances devoted to steps that can cut known vulnerability the next time around.

?The lessons of Katrina have been learned well, at least in terms of disaster response,? Pinter says, noting that FEMA was well prepared and acted aggressively after Hurricane Sandy struck. ?The same lessons need to be applied to preparing for the next disaster,? he says. ?Cut away the unbelievable red tape ? typically three to five years of it for approval of even the most meritorious FEMA disaster mitigation project.?

There?s plenty more he can do, of course, including making the case for boosted investments in basic science, basic research by industry and programs that foster youth and public understanding of science and the environment.

If you had an ?Obama moment,? what would you say to the president?

Here are some ideas from previous posts on this administration?s energy choices

In November, I proposed initiating a Twitter discussion on the president?s environmental policies around the hashtag #ObamaEnv. I?ll do so again. Here?s the feed:

Source: http://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/01/19/obamas-second-term-options-on-the-environment/?partner=rss&emc=rss

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Friday, January 18, 2013

Homeland Security still says no to Java

11 hrs.

The Department of Homeland Security says despite some fixes to Java, it continues to recommend users disable the program in their Web browsers, because it remains vulnerable to attacks that could result in identity theft and other cyber crimes.

The Computer Emergency Readiness Team, part of the DHS, first took the unusual step last week?of issuing an alert, warning users to disable Java, saying the program could be manipulated by criminals to trick users into visiting malicious websites that could infect their computers with malware, or allow criminals to steal personal financial data on users' PCs.

Oracle, maker of Java said on its security blog Sunday that it updated Java 7 for Web browers, fixing two vulnerabilities. The company also switched Java's security settings to "high" by default, which should make it more difficult for malware to run without the user knowing it.

Even so, security experts have since warned that?several critical security flaws?remain.

"All versions of Java 7 through update 10 are affected. Web browsers using the Java 7 plug-in are at high risk," said the Computer Emergency Readiness Team on its website:

This and previous Java vulnerabilities have been widely targeted by attackers, and new Java vulnerabilities are likely to be discovered. To defend against this and future Java vulnerabilities, consider disabling Java in web browsers until adequate updates are available. As with any software, unnecessary features should be disabled or removed as appropriate for your environment.

For information on how to disable Java, you can learn more here.

Java is a computer language that lets software be written using one set of code that can run on any computer, no matter the operating system. "It?s required by some Web sites that use it to run interactive games and applications,"?writes?security?expert?Brian?Krebs?on?his?Krebs?on?Security?blog.

"Java is not as widely used as it once was, and most users probably can get by without having the program installed at all. I have long recommended that users remove Java unless they have a specific use for it. If you discover later that you really do need Java, it is trivial and free to reinstall it."

Sophos Security notes?that?understandably, some users mistakenly?think?turning off Java also turns off JavaScript, which controls the look and feel of Web pages.?

"Most modern websites make heavy use of JavaScript, so these people are worried that sites such as Facebook, Twitter ... will be pretty much useless if they follow our 'turn Java off'?advice," writes Paul Ducklin of Sophos Security on the company's blog?Wednesday.

"Turning off Java will not turn off JavaScript," he says.

Check out Technology, GadgetBox, Digital?Life and InGame on?Facebook,?and on?Twitter, follow Suzanne Choney.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/homeland-security-still-says-no-java-1B8000547

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EE closing 78 overly cozy stores, keeps related staff

EE closing 78 overly close stores, keeps related staff

Merging two carriers' efforts invariably creates at least some kind of redundancy, no matter how much the two sides try to avoid it. In EE's case, it led to stores that were suddenly too close to each other -- so close that some were very literally next door. Rather than perpetuate the inadvertent comedy, EE says it's shuttering 78 stores that it believes are just wasting space. The provider doesn't want to put added strain on the remaining shops, however. It plans to move all affected staff to existing locations, and it's hoping to repurpose managers rather than oust them. The scaled-back retail operations theoretically "maintain momentum" while keeping customers and workers happy, EE tells us. When we see genuinely absurd situations like the photo above, we're inclined to agree.

[Image credit: Lazygamer, Flickr]

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Comments

Source: ZDNet

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/17/ee-closing-78-overly-close-stores-keeps-related-staff/

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Top web hosting companies in India offer enough bandwidth for ...

HTML Ready Article. Click on the "Copy" button to copy into your clipboard.

By: Ramakrishna GV

There are numerous companies engaged in the hosting business and you should select them taking into consideration some key factors such as the technology they use, space provided, the security over internet transactions, reliability, quality and hosting fees, etc. Security over internet has become one of the most important requirements in the present day environment, since the outsourcing business gaining momentum and security threats are also increasing day by day, especially to those companies engaged in ecommerce. For your business to show its web presence, you shall need to hire the services of the best web hosting firm that you can afford and one who offers a great range of features.

The selection of this firm is very important as the one where you selected one of the top web hosting companies in India, in terms of professional website designing. Web hosting service providers assign the customers, a fixed amount of space on their servers. You must ensure that this space meets all the requirements of your website and your e-commerce business. Make sure that there is always scope of expansion, as a growing online presence or business requires a growing amount of space. Moreover, a sufficient amount of space is definitely required if your site is rich in multimedia content. Herein, it is very important that you have FTP access, as only then can you upload new pages or update, or modify content.

These are the three essential components that make for the best web hosting services that you are looking for. The three, are a pre-requisite for the success of any online business. Reliability includes various facets such as, site availability, updating a site in good time, proper and regular site and server maintenance amongst various other things. This can be easily explained by way of an example. Suppose your site is at the top of a search engine listing, but when the online visitor clicks on the link, he/she finds that the site is down. The visitors will go to some other site, meaning you have lost a potential customer. Fast websites are usually in great demand amongst potential customers. This is because sites that are slow to load are frustrating and irritating. Moreover, it's important to business is web hosting, that the chosen hosting company in India makes sure that your site is secure from virus attacks, or unauthorized use.

Good maintenance and support are not only important for professional website designing, but are also an important component of good web hosting services. Choose a web hosting company that provides maintenance support 24 hours, everyday of the week. Also, on offer must be skilled technical support that is able to tackle all kinds of problems. Price is an important parameter, which you have to consider when thinking about hiring a business web hosting company. Top web hosting companies in India offer enough bandwidth for efficient and fast data transfer. This is another important criterion, while you decide upon the best service provider to do business with.

There are several web hosting services such as Free hosting service, dedicated server service and hosting services, shared service, Reseller service, Managed service, Co-location hosting services, the new type of hosting services such as Cloud Hosting, Clustered hosting, grid hosting, home server services, etc. All in all, both web design services and choosing great hosting services from the best hosting company in India, whether for business web hosting or any other, is a crucial part of promoting the online identity of your company and establishing a successful e-commerce business. So, do both with due care and thought. Also go for affordable seo services that plays a vital role in any business and in driving quality business leads.

Author Resource:->??CtrlS one of the top web hosting companies in India has partnered with Intel for Open Data Center Alliance (ODCA) as a step toward 'Cloud 2015' initiative. While the Alliance Steering Committee members from India are CtrlS and Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE), the others include BMW, Deutsche Bank (NYSE:DB), J.P. Morgan Chase,Marriott International (NYSE:MAR), National Australia Bank (PINK:NABZY), Shell, Terremark (NASDAQ:TMRK) and UBS (NASDAQ:TMRK).

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Article From Freebie Articles


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Source: http://www.freebie-articles.com/Art/212362/128/Top-web-hosting-companies-in-India-offer-enough-bandwidth-for-efficient-and-fast-data-transfer.html

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Customized Bride & Groom Sports Fans Wedding Cake Topper by mudcards

This listing is for a bride and groom wedding cake topper, which starts at $115 and made to fit your description (attire, hair and eye color, bouquet etc.)
All images are just an example and prices may vary according to your needs.

Additional costs:
? cats / dogs - $15
? children - $15-$20 (depending on size and attire)
? hats / helmets - $5
? Vespa /bike - $30
? plaque with name and date - $3
? music instruments - $15
? drums - $30
? piano - $30
? books - $7
? Other additional props and themes will be priced on a case by case base.

Shipping:
? regular shipping costs $17.5 and takes about 3 weeks
? express shipping to the US costs $35 and takes about 1 week
? express shipping everywhere else costs $45 and takes about 1 week
? once the item is shipped you will be provided with a tracking number which you can use to track your package via your country?s local post office website.

Please contact me for further information and specify wedding date

Thanks


Have any questions? Contact the shop owner.

Source: http://www.etsy.com/listing/120544521/customized-bride-groom-sports-fans

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Thursday, January 17, 2013

Catholic Journalist to Run News at Cardinal Newman Society | Daily ...

MANASSAS, Va.? The Cardinal Newman Society has named veteran journalist and author Tim Drake as its senior editor and director of news operations to help advance the group's work in following Catholic education.

?I am absolutely delighted to be utilizing my talents and experience on behalf of the Cardinal Newman Society,? Drake said Jan. 14.

?I am fully aware of their critical support for the Church and all that they do to promote and strengthen Catholic identity on college and university campuses.?It?s vital work for the future of our campuses, the Church and our country.?There's no other organization like it.?

Patrick Reilly, president of the Virginia-based Cardinal Newman Society, said the organization has worked to inform Catholic families who have ?a right to authentic, faithful Catholic education.?

?I can?t think of a single person who is better qualified and prepared to improve and expand our operations than Tim Drake," Reilly said.??We are thrilled to have him on our team.?

Drake has worked for the National Catholic Register for 13 years as features correspondent, editor, staff writer and senior writer. He authored a series of articles on the implementation?of the canon-law requirement that Catholic theology professors receive a mandatum from their local bishop affirming that they teach authentic Catholic doctrine. The Cardinal Newman Society awarded Drake its 2003 Ex Corde Ecclesiae Award for the series.

In his new position, Drake will edit the Cardinal Newman Society?s online reporting and member communications.

Drake is the author of six books on topics such as the Catholic Church, Catholic saints and the movie Bella. He contributed to the Cardinal Newman Society?s Newman Guide to Choosing a Catholic College.

He has published articles in Our Sunday Visitor, Catholic World Report, Catholic Digest, Columbia Magazine, Gilbert! Magazine, This Rock Magazine and other publications. He has been a guest on Vatican Radio, Fox News, Relevant Radio, EWTN and The Catholic Channel on Sirius XM Satellite Radio. He co-hosted the EWTN weekly radio program Register Radio.

Drake is a former educator who has worked in both Catholic and public secondary schools.

The Cardinal Newman Society was founded in 1993 to promote faithful Catholic education. It is supported by more than?20,000 individuals, businesses and foundations.

Source: http://www.ncregister.com/daily-news/catholic-journalist-to-run-news-at-cardinal-newman-society/

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History?s Lens: How to Look at China "China is a land power situated amid weake...

History?s Lens: How to Look at China

"China is a land power situated amid weaker, nervous neighbors. To compound matters, it has set out to make itself a sea power."

http://thediplomat.com/the-naval-diplomat/2012/12/17/historys-lens-how-to-look-at-china/

Source: http://www.facebook.com/diplomatmagazine/posts/10151258139972979

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Former Marine freed from Mexico jail speaks out

(CBS News) CBS News first reported last month the story of a former U.S. Marine, Jon Hammar, arrested in Mexico after bringing an antique shotgun across the border.

Mexico frees ex-Marine jailed for bringing in gun
Parents of former Marine imprisoned in Mexico fighting for his release

His parents told a harrowing story of abuse and violence by drug gangs inside that prison.

Now he is free, and for the first time, he's speaking for himself. CBS News spoke with the 27-year-old Monday.

Hammar returned home to Florida two weeks ago -- after spending more than four months in solitary confinement in a Mexican prison. His case is a sensitive topic for the diplomats who helped negotiate his release -- and a source of controversy among lawmakers who claim he was unjustly imprisoned.

In his first interview since his release, Hammar shared some painful memories.

Last August, Hammer and a friend decided to drive from Florida through Central America. Hammar told CBS News, "We wanted to experience the whole, you know, migration from Mexico -- to Panama, really."

Hammar, who had just completed three tours of duty in Afghanistan and Iraq, had recently been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. He planned on camping and surfing, a key part of his recovery. He said, "I can leave everything, all my problems on land and kind of go out on the water and enjoy myself."

Hammar also packed his great-grandfather's shotgun. He says it was a standard part of his camping equipment. "It's a .410 bolt action shotgun," he said. "You know, it's for hunting small birds."

He declared the weapon at the U.S.-Mexico border and bought a gun permit from a U.S. Customs agent. But when he crossed the border, Mexican officials detained him. Transporting a firearm or even a single round of ammunition is a federal crime in Mexico.

Asked why he thinks he was arrested, Hammar said, "Well, because I had a shotgun with me. And I don't think that the rules are as clear to, not only me, but to everyone else in Mexico. And I think it was really a big misunderstanding on everyone's part."

After four days in a holding cell, he was transferred to one of the country's largest prisons, and his family began receiving threatening phone calls. Hammar said, "There were threats made to me and my family. And the American consulate got involved and told the jail, you know, 'You can't -- we can't have this'."

Hammar refuses to reveal the identities of the individuals who made those threats, but his mother Olivia Hammar told CBS News that she believes her son was being beaten by inmates who are members of a powerful drug cartel.

Olivia Hammar said in December, 2012, "When he was initially put into the general population, we started receiving calls from members of the cartel that were saying, you know, 'We have your son and we're going to kill him'."

Those inmates threated to hurt and even behead her son unless she paid them thousands of dollars. After Hammar's mother reported the calls to U.S. officials, the threats stopped. At that point, Hammar was removed from the general population and placed in solitary confinement.

The room he was confined in was "basically like an electrical room, kind of like a garage," Hammar said. "There were three walls, a ceiling, and a floor," he added. "It's normally where the guards would keep like, their book bag or something ... in the corner of the room. They put a bunk in the corner and put me in the corner in the back of this room."

Hammar said he was chained to the bed by his foot. Hammar said some days he wasn't given food. He doesn't speak Spanish, so he rarely spoke to guards. He made occasional calls to his parents and received infrequent visits from U.S. Consulate officials.

He remained behind bars for more than four months. Mexican officials dropped the case days before Christmas without an explanation. Hammar's family credits the press and U.S. lawmakers for pressuring Mexican authorities.

Hammar said of the ordeal, "Some people get thrown fastballs and you get dealt a hand in life. And you have to play with that hand."

Asked if this was a fastball, Hammar replied, "Yeah, it happened pretty fast."

Hammar says he takes responsibility for his actions. He's a quiet guy, very reluctant to talk about himself, but he wanted to share his story because his family believes that the public attention was responsible for pressuring Mexican authorities into releasing him.

Hammar had health issues right after he was released. He was hospitalized for five days because of stomach issues, lung infections. But he's recovering. He says he's trying to work out and get healthy.

Mexican authorities dropped the case. However, it sounds like there may be future litigation. Hammar said Customs authorities on the U.S. side told him what he was doing was legal. That paperwork hasn't been recovered. So it's unclear whether that case can be made.

Hammar wants to urge other veterans to seek therapy for PTSD. For more information on The Pathway Home, a non-profit program that veterans attend for free to receive PTSD treatment go to their website here.

For Margaret Brennan's full report, watch the video in the player above.

Source: http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~r/CBSNewsGamecore/~3/h9aCa4VrBoM/

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