Sunday, March 31, 2013

Engadget Podcast 337 - 03.28.13

Missed us live at our new weekly livestream home on YouTube at 3PM ET last Thursday? Fret not, because we've got you covered here with the video and audio recordings as usual. So, listen on your own time as Tim, Brian and Peter talk everything from OUYA to Angry Birds hand sanitizer. Stream it below, or catch the subscription links and video embed after the break. Happy weekend!

Hosts: Tim Stevens, Peter Rojas, Brian Heater

Producers: James Trew, Joe Pollicino

Hear the podcast

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/31/engadget-podcast-337-03-28-13/

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Friday, March 29, 2013

Samsung Exynos Octa now rocking LTE, destined for Korean market

Samsung Exynos Octa now rocking LTE, destined to Korean market

When Samsung's Exynos 5 Octa was announced, it was believed to be compatible with 3G networks only. As such, the HSPA+ (global) version of the Galaxy S 4 was the only handset to feature the company's eight-core SoC -- the LTE model shipping with Qualcomm's 4G-capable, quad-core Snapdragon 600 instead. That's apparently changed, with the Korean giant tweeting that the Exynos 5 Octa now supports LTE on 20 bands. So why even make a Snapdragon 600 version of the Galaxy S 4, then? Perhaps Samsung can't produce as many chips as Qualcomm to meet the upcoming worldwide demand for its new flagship. This appears likely, with inews24 and new-samsunggalaxys4 reporting that the Exynos 5 Octa with LTE is currently reserved for Korean models only (SHV-E300S, SHV-E300K and SHV-E300L, to be exact). So, anyone fancy a trip to Seoul in the near future?

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Via: GSMArena

Source: SamsungExynos (Twitter)

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/AQM-acFnr4A/

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4th-Week-of-the-Month Blog Break! | Identity Renewed

March passed waaaay too quickly. I was sick for half of it, which made for just a weird month in general. So? now it?s time to do the 4th-Week-of-the-Month Blog Break! For those of you don?t know what that is?it?s a time where I share blogs posts/articles from others that have inspired me or challenged me this month.dog

I also post a random picture of a tired animal (symbolic of me, I guess?). Yeah, not sure where that idea came from?

So in no particular order, here are some great pieces that inspired, challenged, and encouraged me in the month of March?

1. Infatuation Makes Us Very Vulnerable ? This is a really good article on love and infatuation. I?ve been thinking about that a lot over the last few years. Infatuation is something our culture views as the epitome of love?when it?s not love at all, really. And it?s actually pretty harmful (I know because I?ve been infatuated/obssessed/controlled in the past by men, and let me tell you?it?s NEVER good). These things can read to serious issues and abuse. I?m also just concerned with the romantic stories of our day and age (Twilight, Shades of Grey) that teach infatuation/control as love and are sending really mixed messages to our girls.

2. New Buzz Word: The Hybrid ? I love publishing, and this is an interesting article about how many authors are becoming ?hybrid authors.? This means they publish traditionally and self publish. The publishing world has already changed immensely over the last few years. I?m excited to see what will happen. Writers have a lot more control over their books now, and there?s just a lot of cool things you can do with social media, etc.

3. An Intro to Social Media for the?Self-Publisher ? Speaking of social media, here?s a great article on social media and how writers can use these tools effectively. I have firsthand experience with Twitter?it has given me connections, guest blog opportunites, and all sorts of cool stuff. Social media is worth investing time into! One thing I haven?t really touched yet in Goodreads. Any authors/writers that have tips for this outlet?

4. Why Must I Forgive My Horrible?Parents??!! - This is a highly moving, emotional piece on a woman?s journey to forgiving her abusive parents. This piece spoke volumes to me. Family can sometimes hurt so much, and yet it?s so worth it to forgive. People in general can hurt like hell.? I?ll tell you, I struggle with forgiveness and bitterness a lot in my life. It?s something I?ve been working on for several years. If you are wounded and struggling to forgive, please read this article. Robin is a wise woman. She also has another moving follow-up piece here.

5. The Introvert Leader?s Survival Guide ? Okay, so I?ll confess. I?m an introvert! This is becoming a hot topic for some reason (has anyone read Quiet ? the NYT Best-Seller?). Laugh as you want, but America truly is an extroverted society. It?s hard to survive. No, I don?t hate people?I enjoy their company immensely. But for me, my alone time is the most essential part of my life because it?s when I write, draw, and carry on in creativity. I focus during this time. God made me this way for a reason?so leave us introverts alone! (Can you tell I?m just a tad bitter?). This is a great piece on introversion.

6. A Few Articles About Introverts (For Teryn) ? My friend and fellow writer, Boze, is also an introvert. He compiled a list of compelling and challenging articles on the topic for me. And he put my name in the title of the post, so when I was looking through my Reader feed, I saw my name?and it was a lovely surprise! These are all great articles (there?s also one on C.S.Lewis that is quite fascinating).

7. Lesbian and Gay Relationships ? a repost from the?archives - This is a very heated debate right now. As a Christian, I want to show love to all people ? even ones I might not agree with.? I appreciated this article. Enough said.

8. Is There Such a Thing as ?Girl?Books??? ? This article talks about boys and reading, which is alwasy an interesting topic. Some say it?s harder to get boys to read. Many boys are ashamed of reading (especially ?girl books?). It?s so sad to me that boys aren?t encouraged to be themselves, but a straightjacket version of masculinity that demands never showing feelings and beating people up all the time. Let?s encourage our boys to read ?and to be themselves!

9. Teenage Activist Who Was Shot by Taliban Signs $3 Million Book Deal ? This story just brings tears to my eyes. This young woman is facing all the oppression of a society (and religion) that is truly sexist and harsh toward women. This is why I stand up for women, this is why it is so important to me that they have a voice. This is why I support anti-human trafficking causes and mentor girls younger than me. So many girls feel like they have no true voice. So many are brutally treated. This 14-year-old girl is my hero for standing up for equality. I will read your book, Malala.

10. ?.

(You tell me what the 10th should be!)

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Source: http://identityrenewed.wordpress.com/2013/03/28/4th-week-of-the-month-blog-break-5/

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TSX weaker; dip in golds offsets BlackBerry jump

By Martyn Herman LONDON, March 28 (Reuters) - Whether by design, necessity, self-interest or because of all three, nurturing youngsters has become fashionable for England's elite with no expense spared in the hunt for the new Wayne Rooney or Steven Gerrard. The length and breadth of the country, scouts from top clubs are hoovering up promising footballers barely old enough to tie their bootlaces in a bid to unearth the 30 million pounds ($45.40 million) treasures of the future. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/tsx-may-open-higher-eye-volatile-blackberry-122723420--finance.html

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The Secret Republican Plan to Repeal 'Obamacare'

A few minutes after the Supreme Court issued its landmark decision upholding President Obama?s health care law last summer, a senior adviser to Mitch McConnell walked into the Senate Republican leader?s office to gauge his reaction.

McConnell was clearly disappointed, and for good reason. For many conservatives, the decision was the death knell in a three-year fight to defeat reforms that epitomized everything they thought was wrong with Obama?s governing philosophy. But where some saw finality, McConnell saw opportunity ? and still does.

Sitting at his desk a stone?s throw from the Senate chamber, McConnell turned to the aide and, with characteristic directness, said: ?This decision is too cute. But I think we got something with this tax issue.?

He was referring to the court?s ruling that the heart of the 2010 Affordable Care Act, the so-called individual mandate that requires everyone in the country to buy health insurance or pay a penalty, was a tax. And while McConnell thought calling the mandate a tax was ?a rather creative way? to uphold the law, it also opened a new front in his battle to repeal it.

McConnell, a master of byzantine Senate procedure, immediately realized that, as a tax, the individual mandate would be subject to the budget reconciliation process, which exempted it from the filibuster. In other words, McConnell had just struck upon how to repeal Obamacare with a simple majority vote.

The Kentucky Republican called a handful of top aides into his office and told them, ?Figure out how to repeal this through reconciliation. I want to do this.? McConnell ordered a repeal plan ready in the event the GOP took back control of the Senate in November ? ironic considering Democrats used the same process more than two years earlier in a successful, last-shot effort to muscle the reforms into law.

In the months that followed, top GOP Senate aides held regular strategy meetings to plot a path forward. Using the reconciliation process would be complicated and contentious. Senate rules would require Republicans to demonstrate to the parliamentarian that their repeal provisions would affect spending or revenue and Democrats were sure to challenge them every step of the way. So the meetings were small and secret.

?You?re going in to make an argument. You don?t want to preview your entire argument to the other side ahead of time,? said a McConnell aide who participated in the planning. ?There was concern that all of this would leak out.?

By Election Day, Senate Republicans were ready to, as McConnell put it, ?take this monstrosity down.?

?We were prepared to do that had we had the votes to do it after the election. Well, the election didn?t turn out the way we wanted it to,? McConnell told National Journal in an interview. ?The monstrosity has ... begun to be implemented and we?re not giving up the fight.?

Indeed, when it comes to legislative strategy, McConnell plays long ball. Beginning in 2009, the Republican leader led the push to unify his colleagues against Democrats? health care plans, an effort that almost derailed Obamacare. In 2010, Republicans, helped in part by public opposition to the law, won back the House and picked up seats in the Senate. Last year, GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney?s embrace of the individual mandate while Massachusetts governor largely neutralized what had been a potent political issue.

But, in the next two years, Republicans are looking to bring the issue back in a big way. And they?ll start by trying to brand the law as one that costs too much and is not working as promised.

Democrats will be tempted to continue to write off the incoming fire as the empty rhetoric of a party fighting old battles. But that would be a mistake. During the health care debate, the GOP?s coordinated attacks helped turn public opinion against reform. And in the past two years, no more than 45 percent of the public has viewed Obamacare favorably, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation?s tracking polls. Perhaps even more dangerous for Democrats, now-debunked myths spread by Republicans and conservative media remain lodged in the public consciousness. For instance, 40 percent of the public still believes the law includes ?death panels.?

During the legislative debate over the law, Democrats promised Obamacare would create jobs, lower health care costs, and allow people to keep their current plans if they chose to. Those vows, Republicans argue, are already being broken.

The Congressional Budget Office, the Hill?s nonpartisan scorekeeper, estimated that the health care law would reduce employment by about 800,000 workers and result in about 7 million people losing their employer-sponsored health care over a decade. The CBO also estimated that Obamacare during that period would raise health care spending by roughly $580 billion.

McConnell?s office has assembled the law?s 19,842 new regulations into a stack that is 7 feet high and wheeled around on a dolly. The prop even has it?s own Twitter account, @TheRedTapeTower.

?All you got to do is look at that high stack of regulation and you think, ?How in the world is anybody going to be able to comply with all this stuff?? ? GOP Sen. Orrin Hatch, told National Journal. ?And I?m confident that the more the American people know of the costs, the consequences, the problems with this law, then someday there are going to be some Democrats who are going to join us in taking apart some of its most egregious parts.?

In fact, just a few hours after that interview last week, 34 Democrats joined Hatch on the Senate floor to support repealing Obamacare?s medical-device tax. Though the provision passed overwhelmingly, it doesn?t have a shot at becoming law because the budget bill it was attached to is nonbinding. Still, Republicans see it as a harbinger of things to come.

?Constituent pressure is overriding the view that virtually all Democrats have had that Obamacare is sort of like the Ten Commandments, handed down and every piece of it is sacred and you can?t possibly change any of it ever,? McConnell said. ?When you see that begin to crack then you know the facade is breaking up.?

Of course, Republicans are doing their best to highlight and stoke the kind of constituent anger that would force Democrats to tweak the law. In fact, if Democrats come under enough pressure, Republicans believe they might be able to inject Obamacare into the broader entitlement-reform discussion they are planning to tie to the debt-limit debate this summer.

But that is a long shot. If Republicans hope to completely repeal the health care law, they have to start by taking back the Senate in 2014 and would likely need to win the White House two years later. Still, some Republicans think the politics are on their side.

?I?m not one of those folks who ... because I didn?t support something, I want it to be bad. I want good things for Americans. But I do think this is going to create a lot of issues and ? affect things throughout 2014 as it relates to politics,? Republican Sen. Bob Corker said. ?The outcome likely will create a better atmosphere for us.?

Republicans will need to win half a dozen seats to retake the chamber. So, what are the chances??

?There are six really good opportunities in really red states: West Virginia, North Carolina, Louisiana, Arkansas, South Dakota, and Alaska,? McConnell said last week. ?And some other places where you have open seats like Michigan and Iowa. And other states that frequently vote Republican, an example of that would be New Hampshire. So, we?re hopeful.?

And earlier this week, Democratic Sen. Tim Johnson put his home state of South Dakota in play when he announced he will not be running for reelection in 2014.

In addition to trying to win back the Senate, McConnell will have to protect his own seat in two years. McConnell has made moves to shore up his right flank to fend off conservative challengers. He?s hired fellow Kentucky Republican Sen. Rand Paul?s campaign manager, who helped Paul defeat the establishment candidate McConnell backed in the primary. ?

In the meantime, Republicans will continue to, as GOP Sen. John Barrasso put it, ?try to tear (Obamacare) apart.? And the GOP suspects it might get some help from moderate Democrats less concerned about protecting Obama?s legacy than winning reelection.

It?s just the latest act in a play that saw McConnell give more than 100 floor speeches critical of Democratic reforms and paper Capitol Hill with more 225 messaging documents in the 10 months before Obamacare?s passage. Away from the public spotlight, McConnell worked his caucus hard to convince them to unite against the law, holding a health care meeting every Wednesday afternoon. GOP aides said they could not remember a time before, or since, when a Republican leader held a weekly meeting with members that focused solely on one subject.

?What I tried to do is just guide the discussion to the point where everybody realized there wasn?t any part of this we wanted to have any ownership of,? McConnell recounted. ?That was a nine-month long discussion that finally culminated with Olympia Snowe?s decision in the fall not to support it. She was the last one they had a shot at.?

Indeed, some Republicans remember opposition forming organically as it became clearer where Democrats were headed, crediting McConnell for crystallizing the issue. Asked who unified Senate Republicans against Obamacare, Corker recalled, ?I think it happened over time.? As time moved on, it just seemed that this train was going to a place that was going to be hard to support.?

McConnell had finally won his long-fought battle to unite the conference against Obamcare. And some Republicans credit McConnell with being first to that fight.

?He had the Obama administration?s number before almost anyone else,? Hatch recalled. ?He began laying the groundwork for this fight very early, in private meetings and so forth, and really was the first one on our side in the ring, throwing punches just about how bad it was for families, businesses, and our economy.?

?There?s been no stronger fighter against this disastrous law than Mitch McConnell,? he added.

And as McConnell?s war continues, Democrats have begun positioning themselves for the next battle. Leading up to last week?s three-year anniversary of the law?s passage, Democrats held press events touting its benefits, claiming more than 100 million people have received free preventive services; 17 million children with preexisting conditions have been protected from being denied coverage; and 6.6 million young adults under 26 have been covered by their parents' plan.

Democrats wisely rolled out many of the easiest, most-popular Obamacare benefits first. The next few years will see the implementation of provisions that are both more complicated and controversial, like creating state-based insurance exchanges where people can buy coverage. Asked about the political ramifications of possible implementation problems, Democratic Sen. Max Baucus, a chief architect of Obamacare, sidestepped the question saying, "My job is to do my best to make sure this statute works to help provide health care for people at the lowest possible cost."

Far from a full-throated assurance that everything will run smoothly, Baucus?s answer hints at the dangers Democrats face as Obamacare comes online.

And with the law moving from the largely theoretical to the demonstrable, the health care debate is poised to return to intensity levels not seen since before the law passed.

For congressional Republicans, it?s probably their last, best chance to turn opposition into political gain.

And much of that job falls to McConnell, a brilliant defensive coordinator who will have to play flawless offense if he hopes to take control of the Senate next year.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/secret-republican-plan-repeal-obamacare-200403420--politics.html

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Thursday, March 28, 2013

Poultry probiotic cuts its coat to beat bad bacteria

Poultry probiotic cuts its coat to beat bad bacteria [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 27-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Andrew Chapple
andrew.chapple@ifr.ac.uk
44-016-032-51490
Norwich BioScience Institutes

A strain of probiotic bacteria that can fight harmful bacterial infections in poultry has the ability to change its coat, according to new findings from the Institute of Food Research.

The probiotic is currently being taken forward through farm-scale trials to evaluate how well it combats Clostridium perfringens a cause of necrotic enteritis in poultry and the second most common cause of food poisoning in the UK

The researchers at IFR, which is strategically funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council, had previously found that the probiotic Lactobacillus johnsonsii, when given to young chicks, prevents the colonisation of C. perfringens. Now, in research published in the journal PLOS ONE, they have found that the probiotic bacteria have the ability to alter their coat. They speculate that this could be one way in which the probiotic outcompete C. perfringens.

The researchers noticed when examining the bacteria that a small number of them appear smooth. They identified genes responsible for making a special coat, or slime capsule, which the bacteria surround themselves in. This protects the bacteria from stomach acids and bile salts, and helps them come together to form biofilms. It may also protect against drying out when outside the host. The natural appearance of smooth mutants could be a ploy used by the bacteria to introduce variation into its populations, making them able to take advantage of different environments.

By turning off one or more of the coat genes, they could see what effect this had on its ability to stick to gut tissues. "The next step is to understand the regulation of the genes involved in making the coat" said Dr Arjan Narbad, who led the studies. "We want to find out whether changing the coat affects the probiotic's fitness to colonise and inhabit the gut."

This in turn could prevent C. perfringens from colonising the gut. This competitive exclusion could be one reason why the probiotic strain prevents the growth of other harmful bacteria.

Understanding the role of the slime capsule coat will inform the commercial development of this strain as a preventative treatment for C. perfringens infection in poultry, especially in regard to how the probiotic is stored and produced. Through the technology transfer company Plant Bioscience Ltd, the strain has been patented and is now in large-scale farm trials to assess its efficacy. As these bacteria have previously been used in the food chain and are considered safe for human consumption, this probiotic strain could become new way of controlling C. perfringens.

As there is a growing pressure to reduce the use of antibiotics in farming, new products are needed to maintain animal welfare standards, reduce the huge costs of necrosis in poultry and help keep our food safe.

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Poultry probiotic cuts its coat to beat bad bacteria [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 27-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Andrew Chapple
andrew.chapple@ifr.ac.uk
44-016-032-51490
Norwich BioScience Institutes

A strain of probiotic bacteria that can fight harmful bacterial infections in poultry has the ability to change its coat, according to new findings from the Institute of Food Research.

The probiotic is currently being taken forward through farm-scale trials to evaluate how well it combats Clostridium perfringens a cause of necrotic enteritis in poultry and the second most common cause of food poisoning in the UK

The researchers at IFR, which is strategically funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council, had previously found that the probiotic Lactobacillus johnsonsii, when given to young chicks, prevents the colonisation of C. perfringens. Now, in research published in the journal PLOS ONE, they have found that the probiotic bacteria have the ability to alter their coat. They speculate that this could be one way in which the probiotic outcompete C. perfringens.

The researchers noticed when examining the bacteria that a small number of them appear smooth. They identified genes responsible for making a special coat, or slime capsule, which the bacteria surround themselves in. This protects the bacteria from stomach acids and bile salts, and helps them come together to form biofilms. It may also protect against drying out when outside the host. The natural appearance of smooth mutants could be a ploy used by the bacteria to introduce variation into its populations, making them able to take advantage of different environments.

By turning off one or more of the coat genes, they could see what effect this had on its ability to stick to gut tissues. "The next step is to understand the regulation of the genes involved in making the coat" said Dr Arjan Narbad, who led the studies. "We want to find out whether changing the coat affects the probiotic's fitness to colonise and inhabit the gut."

This in turn could prevent C. perfringens from colonising the gut. This competitive exclusion could be one reason why the probiotic strain prevents the growth of other harmful bacteria.

Understanding the role of the slime capsule coat will inform the commercial development of this strain as a preventative treatment for C. perfringens infection in poultry, especially in regard to how the probiotic is stored and produced. Through the technology transfer company Plant Bioscience Ltd, the strain has been patented and is now in large-scale farm trials to assess its efficacy. As these bacteria have previously been used in the food chain and are considered safe for human consumption, this probiotic strain could become new way of controlling C. perfringens.

As there is a growing pressure to reduce the use of antibiotics in farming, new products are needed to maintain animal welfare standards, reduce the huge costs of necrosis in poultry and help keep our food safe.

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-03/nbi-ppc032513.php

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Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Facebook Says VoIP Calling Will Be Added To Its Messenger iOS App In The U.K. Today

facebook messengerFacebook is slowly beefing up the capabilities of its Messenger app as it moves to combat the rise of free VoIP apps like Whatsapp, Viber and Line. Today it's taking another baby step by expanding VoIP calling to U.K. users of its iOS app, following its initial test of the feature in Canada in January, which was soon followed by a U.S. rollout.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/RYzrbTmGK5A/

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Monday, March 25, 2013

Catholic Church in Scotland has covered up culture of sexual bullying among priests, claims serving Father

[Another diocese in the clutches of a gay mafia (with the connivance of its bishop)?]

Catholic Church in Scotland has covered up culture of sexual bullying among priests, claims serving Father
FATHER Matthew Despard says sexual misconduct is rife throughout the church and a ?powerful gay mafia? bully and intimidate other priests

Kenny Anderson
24 Mar 2013

www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/scottish-news/catholic-church-scotland-covered-up-1782068

A SERVING priest has accused the Catholic Church in Scotland of covering up a culture of sexual bullying by a powerful gay mafia.

Father Matthew Despard, 48, says sexual misconduct has been rife in junior seminaries, where priests are trained, for decades.

And he claims that when he alerted Church authorities to inappropriate sexual conduct, nothing was done.

Fr Despard, the parish priest of St John Ogilvie church in High Blantyre, Lanarkshire, says he fears for the future of his Church if no action is taken to end the scandal.

He has taken the difficult decision to publish a book on his experiences, Priesthood in Crisis.

Yesterday, he admitted he had struggled with his conscience before going ahead with publication.

The book was first written in 2010 but he self-published it on Amazon?s Kindle store last week in the wake of the resignation of Cardinal Keith O?Brien.

In the bombshell book, Fr Despard writes: ?My concern is that if we don?t face up to what is happening in reality, the Church will suffer enormous damage.

?The accusations I have been making may appear intolerable to some and truly I have trouble making them.

?Over and over, I have to continue to convince myself to keep writing despite the prejudicial nature of what I have to say.

?But so much of the problematic state of the priesthood stems from the junior seminaries, where training took place cut off from the world, that were laws unto themselves, where abuse became so rife that many had to be closed.

?The Catholic Church here in Scotland, and I am ashamed to admit this, has justified itself to Catholic papers by telling lie after lie, denying charges that are true, and claiming they have been defamed when the facts reported in the press are quite simply true.?

The priest?s shocking revelations will be another blow to the Church hierarchy, already reeling from the claims that Cardinal O?Brien tried to seduce a number of trainee priests.

The 74-year-old quit as Archbishop of St Andrews and Edinburgh after the accusations by former and serving priests emerged.

Fr Despard says in his book that he was the victim of inappropriate approaches during his time as a seminarian.

And he claims that trainee priests who rebuffed the advances of others were frozen out and subjected to bullying.

He reveals that his his first brush with inappropriate behaviour came when he was a student at Chesters College ? later renamed Scotus College ? in Bearsden in the late 1980s.

He wrote: ?One or two students tried to kiss me when I was there. I did not know what to make of that, whether they were just playing with me or perhaps testing me.

?As it was, the only response I could make was that I was not of the inclination that would engage in that kind of behaviour.?

But he claims that after expressing his distaste, he became a victim of verbal abuse as well as bullying.

He said: ?I became much more aware of the types of individuals that were prodding me and I began to observe many explicit indicators of homosexual behaviours that shocked me. I could not help but notice there were cliques of students with homosexual leanings who had ways of manipulating heterosexual students, turning some against others.?

Fr Despard says he alerted authorities to his claims that he had been victimised because he did not accept the sexual approaches made towards him.

And he claims that after he made his complaint verbally to a senior Church figure, the man began to ?bluster? but did not investigate his complaint.

During his time at the college, Fr Despard says, he saw numerous trainees quit altogether.

He said one young man was told he had no vocation and asked to leave after making a complaint about an inappropriate advance.

He added: ?I learned that there had been a victimisation of another first-year seminarian.

?He refused to conform to their sexually ambivalent behaviour and was subjected to such an extent of ridicule that he lost all his confidence. He chose to leave rather than continue to endure the harassment.?

Fr Despard said a senior clergyman also targeted him during one of his placements as a priest in the west of Scotland.

He said the man was difficult to work with, and threatened him after he turned down a sudden attempt to kiss him.

He wrote: ?I was passing him in the corridor on my way to my room when he stopped suddenly and then embraced me.

?It was not the usual guy-on-guy companionable embrace that I was accustomed to but something much more intimate.

?At first I thought his mother had died ? But he moved as if to give me a kiss. I found this profoundly disturbing and put my hands on his shoulders and pushed him back.

?He was immediately furious, shouting and gesticulating. He said, ?So it?s true about you! Well don?t worry, Despard, we?ll soon sort you out. We?ll get you. We?ll destroy you and your family.?

?I could see real anger in his eyes and I was dumbfounded.

?Homosexuality had been rampant in the seminary and I had suffered more than my fair share of isolation and disrespect because I refused to countenance any advances.

?Here were identical behaviours but in my parish priest. He backed away and stomped up the corridor to his own room, leaving me standing there shocked and confused.

?After my rejection of the crude advances, life for me became a misery.

?In retrospect, it now seems to me that the moment in the corridor signalled the initiation of a campaign which, if not significantly overt, was psychologically brutal.?

Fr Despard added he thought there would be no point in going to the authorities for support, because his attacker was part of an ?inner circle? and would be protected.

In another chapel, he says, he was verbally and physically abused by the boyfriend of a priest.

Fr Despard insists he did not write the book to spread hatred of homosexuality.

He said: ?I have no problem whatever with priests whose natural orientation is homosexual. Where I draw the line is at the acting out of these inclinations, that is wrong.

?It is contrary to the rule of celibacy and brings great scandal to parishes where the activities of such priests have become known.?

But he added that cover-ups and corruption were detracting from the priesthood.

A spokesman for the Catholic Church in Scotland did not return calls asking for comment.

Source: http://angelqueen.org/2013/03/24/catholic-church-in-scotland-has-covered-up-culture-of-sexual-bullying-among-priests-claims-serving-father/

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Sunday, March 24, 2013

RG3 'superhuman' in recovery

Chip KellyAP

If anyone thinks new Eagles coach Chip Kelly is going to revolutionize the game of football by implementing an offense the likes of which the NFL has seen before, Kelly has some disappointing words.

?We don?t run some magical offense or defense,? Kelly said, via Sam Farmer of the Los Angeles Times. ?You?re talking about the best coaches in the world at this level. They see everything that we?ve done at the college level, and everything we?ll do, they?ve seen before.?

In fact, Kelly said that not only is the spread offense that he ran at Oregon ? aspects of which caught on in places like Washington, San Francisco and Seattle last year ? not new, but it?s actually as old as the game of football itself.

?I don?t think anybody?s inventing anything new,? Kelly said. ?It?s a very cyclical game. A lot of things that are being done with the Wildcat formation was the single-wing formation run way back when. Dick Kazmaier won the Heisman Trophy at Princeton [in 1951] running the single-wing offense. He would have been a good zone-read quarterback.?

Kelly said he?s less married to his schemes than most people would think, and more like Broncos coach John Fox, who showed over the last two years that he could dramatically change his team?s offense depending on the personnel.

?If you?ve got a good coaching staff, that?s what you do,? he said. ?The best example in the NFL is John Fox. A year ago, he had Tim Tebow and went to the playoffs. Now, he has Peyton Manning and runs an entirely different offense, and went to the playoffs. When you?re good, you adapt to who you have.?

And from what Kelly says, he?s ready to adapt to the NFL, rather than thinking NFL defenses will have to adapt to him.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/03/23/andrews-calls-rg3-superhuman-in-his-acl-recovery/related/

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Police: No hazardous material at Berezovsky site

LONDON (AP) ? Chemical and radiation experts found no hazardous materials in their search of the property where Boris Berezovsky's body was found, as British police on Sunday investigated the unexplained death of the self-exiled Russian tycoon who went from Kremlin kingmaker to fiery critic.

Berezovsky, who fled to Britain in the early 2000s after a bitter falling out with Russian President Vladimir Putin, was found dead Saturday at the property in Ascot, a town 40 kilometers (25 miles) west of London. He was 67, and Thames Valley police say his death is being treated as "unexplained."

Police said Sunday that officers specially trained in chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear materials have given the scene the "all clear."

"Officers found nothing of concern in the property and we are now progressing the investigation as normal," a statement from police said, adding that the majority of the cordon put in place around the property has now been lifted.

Berezovsky ? who had survived a number of assassination attempts ? amassed a fortune through oil and automobiles during Russia's chaotic privatization of state assets following the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s.

Once a member of Russian President Boris Yeltsin's inner circle, Berezovsky fell out with Yeltsin's successor, Putin, and fled Britain in the early 2000s to escape fraud charges that he said were politically motivated.

He became a strident and frequent critic of Putin, accusing the leader of ushering in a dictatorship, and accused the security services of organizing the 1999 apartment house bombings in Moscow and two other Russian cities that became a pretext for Russian troops to sweep into Chechnya for the second war there in half a decade.

Putin's spokesman acknowledged Sunday that the Russian president considered Berezovsky an enemy with clearly stated intentions to fight.

"We know for certain that he spared no expense in support of processes, within Russia and beyond, that could be said to have been directed against Russia and Putin," spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on the independent cable television channel Rain. "He definitely was Putin's opponent, and unfortunately not only his political opponent, but most likely in other dimensions as well."

In recent years, Berezovsky fended off legal attacks that often bore political undertones ? and others that bit into his fortune.

Russia repeatedly sought to extradite on Berezovksy on a wide variety of criminal charges, and the tycoon vehemently rejected allegations over the years that he was linked to several deaths, including that of slain journalist Anna Politkovskaya and ex-KGB agent Alexander Litvinenko.

Berezovsky won a libel case in 2010 against a Kremlin-owned broadcaster that aired a show in which it was suggested he was behind the poisoning of Litvinenko, who had fled Russia with Berezovsky's help after accusing officials there of plotting to assassinate political opponents.

He took a hit with his divorce from Galina Besharova in 2010, paying what was at the time Britain's largest divorce settlement. The figure beat a previous record of 48 million pounds ($73.1 million) and was estimated as high as 100 million pounds, though the exact figure was never confirmed.

Last year, Berezovsky lost a multibillion-pound High Court case against fellow Russian Roman Abramovich and was ordered to pay 35 million pounds ($53.3 million) in legal costs.

Berezovsky had claimed that Abramovich, the billionaire owner of Chelsea Football Club, cheated him out of his stakes in the oil group Sibneft, arguing that he blackmailed him into selling the stakes vastly beneath their true worth after he lost Putin's good graces.

But a judge threw out the case in August, ruling that Berezovsky was a dishonest and unreliable witness, and rejected Berezovsky's claims that he was threatened by Putin and Alexander Voloshin, a Putin ally, to coerce him to sell his Sibneft stake.

It also recently emerged that Berezovsky ran up legal bills totaling more than 250,000 pounds in just two months of a case against his former partner, Elena Gorbunova, with whom he had two children and who claimed the businessman owed her millions.

Earlier this week, The Times of London newspaper reported that Berezovsky was selling property ? including an Andy Warhol portrait of the former Soviet Union leader Vladimir Lenin ? to settle his debts and pay expenses owed to lawyers.

News of Berezovsky's death has prompted conspiracy theories along with speculation as to his state of mind, given his recent financial setbacks.

Ilya Zhegulev, a journalist with the Russian edition of Forbes magazine, said he spoke with Berezovsky the day before he died and discussed the tycoon's decision to flee Russia in 2000.

The journalist quoted Berezovsky as saying that during his years in London he had lost the meaning of life.

"I no longer want to be involved in politics," Zhegulev quoted Berezovsky as saying in a story published Saturday on the Forbes.ru website.

He said Berezovsky told him that he wanted nothing more than to return to Russia. The former oligarch said he had changed his views on Russia, saying he now understood that it should not look to Europe as a model.

"I had absolutely, idealistically imagined that it was possible to build a democratic Russia. And idealistically imagined what democracy was in the center of Europe. I underestimated the inertia of Russia and greatly overestimated the West. This took place gradually. I changed my understanding of Russia's path," he quoted Berezovsky as having said.

___

AP writer Lynn Berry in Moscow contributed to this report. Cassandra Vinograd can be reached at http://twitter.com/CassVinograd

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/police-no-hazardous-material-berezovsky-111027399--finance.html

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Saturday, March 23, 2013

95% West of Memphis

All Critics (105) | Top Critics (23) | Fresh (100) | Rotten (5)

A real-life horror story, made no less shocking by the familiarity of its early scenes.

While the "Paradise Lost" films captured events as they unfolded in the heat of battle, "West of Memphis" has the luxury of at least partial closure.

A true-crime story that begins with a notorious murder case and grows into a chilling indictment of the American justice system.

And justice for all? Hardly.

It tells the story of a terrible crime compounded by a grave injustice that's been remedied, but only in part, so it's impossible to have a single or simple response to the movie.

What sets this film apart from previous efforts to document the story is that Jackson and Walsh financed a private investigative team with legal and forensic experts who re-examined old evidence, conducted new interviews and found new witnesses.

We feel like we're watching an overlong true-crime television episode and not a movie.

I would have preferred Jackson's clinically-presented project display a bit more reverence for the three young lives that were brutally taken some twenty years ago.

Moving and gruesome, West of Memphis is an eloquent disquisition on the banality of evil.

"West of Memphis" re-examines evidence and retells the story in a methodical and procedural fashion in which even the false steps lead somewhere.

More a recap and appendix to the Paradise Lost trilogy... one can't help but feel that the celebrities involved needed this document of their efforts to appease their vanity.

The case is more intriguing than the film about it.

Isn't unnecessary, but it's often superfluous.

The film suggests these powerless, poorly educated young men were scapegoated because they would be missed by nobody of importance -- the justice system equivalent of the cannon fodder recruited from the same socioeconomic straits.

It's nice to have all the twists and turns of the iconic case contained tidily in one well-crafted film, although there are no real revelations here.

"West of Memphis" becomes a greatest-hits concert of prosecutorial misconduct, and you'll agree when the film asserts that prosecutors knew they had the wrong guys.

Incredibly, after three documentaries on the subject, there are still things to reveal about the West Memphis Three.

"West of Memphis" does nothing to displace its predecessor films as masterpieces of investigative filmmaking, but complements them as a riveting capstone to an epic and tragic tale.

West of Memphis is the real vindication - even if it is incomplete.

In the end it won't matter if this is the fourth movie about the same subject; you can never learn its lessons often enough.

West of Memphis caps off the Paradise Lost/West Memphis Three saga with a line up full of perpetrators including the media, the West Memphis PD, the legal establishment and suspect gift wrapped with a smoking gun.

Injustice in West Memphis, Arkansas

Berg lays out her case with the logic of a first-rate prosecutor and the theatricality of a born storyteller.

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Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/west_of_memphis/

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No. 15 seed Florida Gulf Coast stuns No. 2 seed Georgetown

PHILADELPHIA (AP) ? Florida Gulf Coast sure made an entrance at the NCAA tournament.

A school that hasn't even celebrated its first 20-year reunion busted a load of brackets with a 78-68 victory over second-seeded Georgetown on Friday night in the second round of the South Regional.

In just their second season of eligibility for Division I postseason, the Eagles used a 21-2 second-half run to pull away from the Hoyas and then held on in the final minute to become the seventh No. 15 seed to beat a No. 2.

Sherwood Brown scored 24 points and Bernard Thompson had 23 to lead Florida Gulf Coast, the champions of the Atlantic Sun Conference.

FGCU (25-10) will play the winner of the game between seventh-seeded San Diego State and No. 10 Oklahoma on Sunday.

"We didn't come here and have the attitude that we're just glad to be here," said FGCU point guard Brett Comer, who finished with 12 points,10 assists and just two turnovers. "We decided we can play with anybody and we did."

A night after America's oldest university, Harvard, pulled off a major upset over fourth-seeded New Mexico, one of its youngest ? FGCU's first student was admitted in 1997 ? got one that was even bigger.

The Eagles' monster run gave them a 52-33 lead with 12:28 to play. The Hoyas staged a furious rally to get within 72-68 with 52 seconds left but the Eagles went 6 of 10 from the free throw line to seal it.

"In the second half, we pushed the ball, we got out, we ran, we made shots, got some alley-oop dunks to energize the crowd. I'm very proud of our players," said coach Andy Enfield, whose wife ? supermodel Amanda Marcum ? was shown several times on the arena's big screen.

For those who don't know FCGU, and that was probably plenty of people as of Friday afternoon, Florida Gulf Coast is a state university in Fort Myers with an enrollment of about 12,000 students.

This is FGCU's first tournament and Georgetown's 29th, including the 1984 national championship. But the Eagles did beat Miami earlier this season.

It was another disappointing NCAA exit for the Hoyas (25-7), who have lost to a double-digit seed in their last four appearances. The last time they made it to the second weekend of the tournament was in 2007, when they reached the Final Four.

"I wish I could," Georgetown coach John Thompson III said when asked if he could figure out the losses to lower seeds. "Trust me, more than anyone on Earth, I've tried to analyze it. I don't know."

Markel Starks had 23 points for the Hoyas, a tri-champion of the Big East regular season and one of the top defensive teams in the nation.

That didn't seem to bother the Eagles much.

While Georgetown came in allowing 55.7 points per game, FGCU beat that number with 9:22 to play when it led 57-40. The Hoyas allowed opponents to shoot 37.6 percent from the field, fourth-best in the country. The Eagles shot 42.9 percent (21 of 49) and they held the Hoyas to 37.5 percent from the field (24 of 64).

The FGCU fans who made the trip to Philadelphia were loud all game. The rest of the crowd at Wells Fargo Center joined them during the big run and there's nothing to bring fans together like rooting against a heavy favorite.

"I don't think anybody on our team has ever played in front of that many people," said reserve forward Eddie Murray, who had nine points.

The Eagles charged at their fans when the game ended and ? after some of them shook hands with Hall of Famer and TV analyst Reggie Miller ? it was a celebration that could be felt all the way to back to campus.

Big East Player of the Year Otto Porter Jr. had 13 points on 5-of-17 shooting and 11 rebounds. On this night he couldn't match Brown, the A-Sun's player of the year.

"It feels really good to be in this position right now," Brown said after the game.

The Hoyas used an 8-0 run to take an 18-11 lead midway through the first half but that's where their offense went cold ? very cold.

The Eagles closed the half on a 13-4 run as Georgetown missed nine straight shots and committed five turnovers. FGCU took a 24-22 lead on two free throws by Eddie Murray with 26 seconds left. In another example of how out of synch Georgetown was offensively, the Hoyas passed the ball around as the halftime horn sounded, allowed the Eagles to keep their lead.

As the night wound down, one fan yelled at the Eagles to stick around Philly a couple of more days.

"Get a cheese steak, kid! Get a cheese steak!"

The crowd then paid Florida Gulf Coast the ultimate tribute: the E-A-G-L-E-S! Eagles! chant reserved for their favorite NFL team.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/florida-gulf-coast-stuns-georgetown-78-68-012239570--spt.html

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The numbers prove it: The GOP is estranged from America (Washington Post)

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/293903519?client_source=feed&format=rss

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NASA to restore Apollo engines found on ocean floor

The recovery of the Apollo 11 rocket engines by Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos is a historic find, say NASA officials, who say the agency plans to restore the engines.

By Nancy Atkinson,?Universe Today / March 22, 2013

The thrust chamber of one of five first stage F-1 rocket engines used to launch one of NASA's mighty Saturn V rocket on a historic Apollo moon mission is seen on the floor of the Atlantic Ocean in this Bezos Expeditions image.

Bezos Expeditions

Enlarge

Last year, Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos announced that he had located some of the Apollo F-1 rocket engines and planned to recover them. He and his Bezos Expedition team were successful in recovering engines that helped power Apollo astronauts to the Moon and have now brought ?a couple of your F-1s home,? Bezos said in a message to NASA. On the Bezos Expedition website, Bezos called the recovery ?an incredible adventure.?

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NASA was happy about the recovery as well.

?This is a historic find and I congratulate the team for its determination and perseverance in the recovery of these important artifacts of our first efforts to send humans beyond Earth orbit,? said NASA Administrator Charlie Bolden in a statement. ?We look forward to the restoration of these engines by the Bezos team and applaud Jeff?s desire to make these historic artifacts available for public display.?

There is no indication so far from Bezos of which flight these engines were from. Last year when Bezos made his announcement, he said they had found the engines from Apollo 11, but it may be been difficult to determine exactly which flight the ones found were from. In total, NASA launched 65 F-1 engines, five per flight, on 13 Saturn V boosters between 1967 and 1973. Supposedly there would be serial numbers to make the identification of which flight these engines were from. Bezos indicated on his blog they were still on the ship, so perhaps the identification will come later.

Five F-1 engines were used in the 138-foot-tall S-IC, or first stage, of each Saturn V, which depended on the five-engine cluster for the 7.5 million pounds of thrust needed to lift it from the launch pad. Each of the engines stands 19 feet tall by 12 feet wide and weigh over 18,000 pounds.

Bezos and his team spent three weeks at sea, working almost 3 miles below the surface. ?We found so much,? Bezos wrote. ?We?ve seen an underwater wonderland ? an incredible sculpture garden of twisted F-1 engines that tells the story of a fiery and violent end, one that serves testament to the Apollo program. We photographed many beautiful objects in situ and have now recovered many prime pieces. Each piece we bring on deck conjures for me the thousands of engineers who worked together back then to do what for all time had been thought surely impossible.?
See more images and descriptions at the Bezos Expeditions website.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/bouK2n0cLKk/NASA-to-restore-Apollo-engines-found-on-ocean-floor

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Friday, March 22, 2013

Amanda Bynes to Drake: Murder My Vagina!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/03/amanda-bynes-to-drake-murder-my-vagina/

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Cooled integrated circuit amplifies with lowest noise so far

Mar. 22, 2013 ? Researchers at Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, have demonstrated an integrated amplifier with the lowest noise performance so far. The amplifier offers new possibilities for detecting the faintest electromagnetic radiation, for example from distant galaxies.

A fundamental property for the first microwave amplifier in the radio receiver is its noise figure. This is normally given in decibel (dB). A typical noise figure for low-noise amplifiers in mobile communication systems is tenths of a decibel.

Last year, Chalmers reported a world record for a low-noise amplifier in the journal Electron Device Letters. The amplifier exhibited a minimum noise figure of 0.018 dB across a bandwidth of 4-8 GHz. However, since the low-noise amplifier was designed in a hybrid solution, scaling up to larger quantities turned out to be very difficult.

Chalmers has now in collaboration with a company called Low-Noise Factory published an article on an integrated ultra-low-noise amplifier. The scientists have developed a unique indium phosphide-based process for what is known as high electron mobility transistors (HEMT). Transistors and other semiconductor components have been fabricated on a monolithic chip on an indium phosphide wafer. All parts of the design such as semiconductor layers, components, process and circuit design have been optimised for the lowest noise performance.

As a result, an integrated 2.0 x 0.75 mm amplifier with an ultra-low-noise figure of 0.045 dB was demonstrated. The amplifier had a very large bandwidth of 0.5-13 GHz and a high gain exceeding 38 dB across the frequency band. In order to show such extreme performance, the amplifier was cooled to minus 260 degrees of Celsius.

"The combination of high gain, large bandwidth and ultra-low-noise figure makes this circuit very at-tractive for large multipixel arrays containing thousands of antennas," says Jan Grahn, research group leader at Chalmers.

"The integrated ultra-low-noise process enables the fabrication of thousands of amplifiers with identi-cal performance. One potential future application is in the world's largest radio telescope SKA (Square Kilometer Array) that is being planned, an international project where the Onsala Space Observatory at Chalmers is one of the acting members. In huge applications such as the SKA, even a small noise-figure reduction in the first low-noise amplifier in the receiver chain may potentially bring about major savings in the final system design."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Chalmers University of Technology.

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


Journal References:

  1. J. Schleeh, G. Alestig, J. Halonen, A. Malmros, B. Nilsson, P. A. Nilsson, J. P. Starski, N. Wadefalk, H. Zirath, J. Grahn. Ultralow-Power Cryogenic InP HEMT With Minimum Noise Temperature of 1 K at 6 GHz. IEEE Electron Device Letters, 2012; 33 (5): 664 DOI: 10.1109/led.2012.2187422
  2. Joel Schleeh, Niklas Wadefalk, Per-?ke Nilsson, J. Piotr Starski, Jan Grahn. Cryogenic Broadband Ultra-Low-Noise MMIC LNAs for Radio Astronomy Applications. IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, 2013; 61 (2): 871 DOI: 10.1109/TMTT.2012.2235856

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/yKLhU41CCIc/130322090744.htm

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Glasses-Free 3D Mobile Displays Are Finally Here (Almost)

A new advance by Hewlett Packard researchers, announced this week in Nature, could put 3D video in the palm of your hand within the next few years. The new tech is an autostereoscopic multiview 3D display. In English, that's glasses-free 3D imaging you can see from any angle.

Three-dimensional viewing works by making each eye see an image from a slightly different perspective, as we do when viewing real-life objects. Glasses make this easy, as they can filter out two simultaneously projected images so that each eye sees only one. But glasses-free 3D has been a goal of TV and mobile developers for a while now, because wearing 3D glasses at home is annoying, and relying on glasses to view 3D images on your tablet or cellphone would be downright ridiculous.

Current or glasses-free tech works by projecting two images in different directions?as opposed to 2D screens, which have pixels that send light in all directions at once. The problem with this is that the viewer needs to stand within a strict viewing field. If the viewer's nose isn't precisely where it needs to be, his or her eyes won't pick up the right images.

David Fattal, the HP researcher in charge of the project, believes HP's new display?which uses a multiview backlight to scatter light in precise directions, allowing for as many as 64 perspectives of the image?will be the next big thing in 3D tech.

"Unlike a lot of tech out there," he says, "this makes 3D images for the full parallax, meaning you can move your head in any direction and any angle and still see 3D?just like [looking at] Princess Leia's hologram."

Essentially, in a 64-bit display, the backlight produces 64 2D displays that merge together, each independently rendering images to suit one perspective in the 180-degree viewing field. HP actually demonstrated up to 200 views, but 64 is a balance between spatial resolution (the pixel size is comparable with that in a laptop) and the size of pixels in a liquid-crystal display. The team is looking for alternatives to liquid crystals, as smaller pixels will allow them to have more images in the display. However, Fattal says he "can't discuss it, because [he is] hoping you can read about it soon in another Nature paper."

The backlight is small enough to fit in mobile devices, and while it isn't great for TVs?you need to be within a meter of the backlight to see the image?Fattal believes that this ability to produce the illusion of continuous 3D animation as you move your position will be well-suited to cellphones, which people tend to move and rotate. Plus, he told PM, "The cherry on the cake is that we can make it completely transparent . . . It looks very cool."

Ray Beausoleil, leader of the Large-Scale Photonics research group that produced the research, hesitated to give an exact timeline for getting the technology on the market?as the research was done at HP, it'll be up to the company to decide how, if at all, to capitalize on the findings.

But Beausoleil says that the backlight is up to the task of producing small, static images right now and that animated 3D renderings for cellphones and tablets are definitely possible, though they'd require "a fairly significant investment and a lot of engineering." The takeaway, he says, is that they've found an alternative approach to 3D displays that they mocked up in only about a year and a half. With any luck, this means 3D displays on your phone and tablet are just around the corner.

Source: http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/digital/3d/glasses-free-3d-mobile-displays-are-finally-here-almost-15248684?src=rss

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Italy to return 2 marine murder suspects to India

Italian marines Massimiliano Latorre, left, and Salvatore Girone arrive at the military prosecutor's office in Rome Wednesday, March 20, 2013. A military prosecutor in Rome is questioning the two Italian marines India is insisting return to face trial in the deaths of two fishermen. India's Supreme Court barred the Italian ambassador from leaving the country after the Italian government refused to return the marines to India. The two have been charged in India with killing two Indian fishermen whom the marines say they mistook for pirates. (AP Photo/Riccardo De Luca)

Italian marines Massimiliano Latorre, left, and Salvatore Girone arrive at the military prosecutor's office in Rome Wednesday, March 20, 2013. A military prosecutor in Rome is questioning the two Italian marines India is insisting return to face trial in the deaths of two fishermen. India's Supreme Court barred the Italian ambassador from leaving the country after the Italian government refused to return the marines to India. The two have been charged in India with killing two Indian fishermen whom the marines say they mistook for pirates. (AP Photo/Riccardo De Luca)

Italian marines Salvatore Girone, left, and Massimiliano Latorre, arrive at a military prosecutor's office in Rome Wednesday, March 20, 2013. A military prosecutor in Rome is questioning the two Italian marines India is insisting return to face trial in the deaths of two fishermen. India's Supreme Court barred the Italian ambassador from leaving the country after the Italian government refused to return the marines to India. The two have been charged in India with killing two Indian fishermen whom the marines say they mistook for pirates. (AP Photo/Riccardo De Luca)

(AP) ? Italy said it would return two marines to India by Friday to face murder charges in the shooting deaths of two fishermen, reversing a decision that escalated diplomatic tensions.

The government said Friday it decided to return the men after receiving written assurance from Indian authorities that their "fundamental rights" would be respected. Friday had been the return date originally agreed upon when India permitted the pair to travel to Italy to vote in national elections last month.

Marines Massimiliano Latorre and Salvatore Girone agreed to the decision and were to leave immediately and will live in the Italian embassy in New Delhi, officials said.

The move overturns a March 11 decision by the Italian Foreign Ministry that the marines would not go back because the decision to try them in India violated their rights.

The Indian Supreme Court ruled earlier this year that the men should be tried by a special court to be set up by the central government in consultation with the chief justice. The decision removed the case from the jurisdiction of the southern state of Kerala, near where the shooting took place.

The case had turned into a full-blown spat between India and Italy, with the Indian Supreme Court banning the Italian ambassador from leaving the country. Italy insisted that any restrictions on its ambassador's movements violated conventions on diplomatic relations.

The marines were part of a military security team on a cargo ship when they fired at a fishing boat in February 2012, killing the two fishermen. The marines said they mistook the fishing boat for a pirate craft.

India contends the shooting happened in Indian waters, while Italy has insisted the shooting happened in international waters during an international anti-piracy mission and Italy should have jurisdiction.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-03-21-EU-Italy-India/id-ad35d35274e04179b228a5661df94699

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One in Three Americans Has No Confidence They Can Retire ...

Wednesday, March 20th, 2013
By Michael Lombardi, MBA for Profit Confidential

Three Americans Has No ConfidenceConsumer confidence is the key to any growth in the U.S. economy. If it declines, U.S. economic prosperity becomes questionable, as a lack of consumer confidence directly impacts consumer spending. My worry: the Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan?s preliminary consumer sentiment for the month of March plunged to its lowest level since December of 2011.

This popular consumer sentiment index?an indicator of consumer confidence?fell to a reading of 71.8 in March, compared to 77.6 in February. (Source: Chicago Tribune, March 15, 2013.)

The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan survey also showed Americans are turning pessimistic about their finances. Only 20% of Americans believe their finances will improve this year?a record low for the survey!

Similarly, 30% of consumers believe U.S. economic conditions will get worse. In February, only 22% of American consumers believed the U.S. economy will deteriorate.

But the misery for American consumers doesn?t just end here. According to a report released by the Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI), 28% of Americans have no confidence that they will retire comfortably. This was the highest amount of individuals with this belief in 23 years. (Source: Wall Street Journal, March 19, 2013.)

The EBRI report also showed that the number of Americans saving for retirement has plummeted. In 2009, 75% of American workers saved for their golden days; now, this number has declined to 66%?a decrease of 12%.

By no surprise, as consumer confidence is turning sour, companies operating in the U.S. are seeing its effects?to say the least, they are tired of bleak consumer spending.

The CEO of Dollar Tree, Inc. (NASDAQ/DLTR) said, ?the consumer is under pressure, burdened and concerned?? (Source: Tally, K., ?Retailers, Consumers Are Facing Difficult Times,? Wall Street Journal, March 1, 2013.)

Other retailers are experiencing pain due to bleak consumer spending as well. Look at Khols Corporation (NYSE/KSS), for example; the CEO of the company, Kevin Mansell, outright called 2012 a ?disappointing year for the company.? He also said, ?sales grew for the year in total, there were a number of categories where growth was not at the rate we planned and some where we lost market share.? (Source: Ibid.)

I wish I could say economic growth was in sight, but it?s not. The noise of a rising stock market and optimistic stock advisors is simply hiding the reality, as consumer spending can make or break U.S. economic growth. And right now, consumer confidence is running scared.

Michael?s Personal Notes:

According to data released by CoreLogic, at the end of 2012, 21.5% of all the homes with a mortgage in the U.S. had negative equity. This means that 10.4 million homes in the U.S. housing market are still underwater; their home prices are lower than the mortgages on them. (Source: Wall Street Journal, March 18, 2013.)

Those who are close to the U.S. housing market?home builders?are turning pessimistic. Home builders? confidence has been declining for three consecutive months. In March, the National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI) dropped two points from February?reduced to 44. Any reading below 50 indicates home builders are viewing the condition as poor, rather than good. (Source: National Association of Home Builders, March 18, 2013.)

With all this said, there is still optimism among the mainstream that the increase in home prices means that a housing market recovery is underway. It is true that home prices in the U.S. housing market have increased marginally; but let the truth be known: they are still down nearly 30% since the housing slump began in 2007.

For the 10.4 million homeowners living in their homes with negative equity, their home prices will have to go up, on average, by more than 40% for them to just break even.

As I have repeatedly been saying in these pages, an essential ingredient of a real housing market recovery is missing from the action: first-time home buyers.

Dear reader, we all know the reason behind why home prices are increasing in the U.S. housing market; it?s the institutional investors who are driving demand. They are buying homes and renting them out, because the returns from doing so are better than the returns big investors can get from the bond market or the risky stock market.

I?m still not convinced that there is any recovery in the U.S. housing market. I will consider the U.S. housing market to be in a rebound when I see first-time home buyers pouring in?and right now, that?s not the case. At the same time, I would consider it a recovery when we see a decline in the number of homes with negative equity.

Where the Market Stands; Where It?s Headed:

As I started writing in these pages back in 2009, the primary purpose of a Phase II secular bear market (what we are in now) is to lure investors back into stocks under the premise that the economy is improving and stocks are a safe bet again. That?s exactly where we are now. Caution is warranted.

What He Said:

?For the economy the message from retail stocks is quite clear: Consumers spending, which accounts for roughly 70% of U.S. GDP, is in jeopardy. After having spent like ?drunkards? during the real estate boom years, consumer spending is taking the same trend as housing prices, slowing down faster than most analysts and economists had predicted. As news of the recession continues to make headlines in the popular media, the psychological spending mood of consumers will continue to deteriorate, lowering earnings at most high-end retailers and bringing their stock prices down even further.? Michael Lombardi in Profit Confidential, January 28, 2008. According to the Dow Jones Retail Index, retail stocks fell 39% from January 2008 to November 2008.

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One in Three Americans Has No Confidence They Can Retire Comfortably, 10.0 out of 10 based on 1 rating

Source: http://www.profitconfidential.com/economic-analysis/one-in-three-americans-has-no-confidence-they-can-retire-comfortably/

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