Thursday, January 31, 2013

Eventbrite Registration Gets Even Easier With One-Click Sign Ups For Free Events

eventbrite one clickIt's already pretty darn easy to sign up to attend an event on Eventbrite, but I have to admit that there are still times when I grumble about having to fill out a short form. And if you're an event organizer, you probably want to eliminate any obstacles for potential attendees. That's why Eventbrite is starting to roll out an even faster sign-up process.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/xSLBG6XzDv0/

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Delwyn Uni Blog: Inanimate Education

Delwyn Uni Blog: Inanimate Education

Inanimate Education


In this week?s blog I am going to look at the use of an interactive, digital novel called Inanimate Alice and if it could work in our national school curricular. Inanimate Alice is a multimedia, interactive fiction novel that engages its audience with the story of a girl called Alice. Inanimate Alice is described as ?proven to be popular across a broad range of ages as well as with a broad range of viewers, including both book-lovers and gamers.?-reference from: http://www.inanimatealice.com/teach.html. Inanimate Alice is definitely unique in its presentation of each story that it tells, and will leave an impression on you whether its good or bad it?s truly up to you to decide. ?Designed originally as entertainment, Inanimate Alice has been adopted by teachers eager to develop their students? digital literacy skills. Available in French, German, Italian and Spanish and created around a high-quality robust text, the story provides the ideal context for teaching global citizenship and for learning across the curriculum.?- Reference from http://www.inanimatealice.com/about.html. Inanimate Alice seems to be a very use learning resource for all types of languages and maybe even teach a new language, as you could re-run the story again in a different language and understand what it means, as you had already completed it in English. In terms of being a multi-media program is great as most people today would probably prefer to watch, listen and interact with a story to make them feel more involved and understand it easier rather than just reading off a computer screen. ?To progress with the story you have to click on the two arrows move on to the next stage, of the story. That to me happens to be a good feature as it then in turn, allows the student to ?drive the action forward at their own pace?-reference from http://www.inanimatealice.com/about.html.
In the screenshots presented you can see a sample of what Inanimate Alice has to offer. You can see that in the first screenshot there is text on the screen along with short video clips that interchange with each other and, move across the bottom of the screen. This is a very different approach compared to conventional teaching methods which, seem to just have either video or text not really merging the two together. The second screenshot is a preview of how the interactivity is used in the program as, you are presented with a mobile, and you have to click on one of the icons as if you were using the mobile yourself to progress. The whole idea of Inanimate Alice is an interesting idea it is really like marmite you either love it or hate it, I say this because of the feedback I receive about it. People either think it?s a genius idea and completely ?revolutionary. On the other hand, people including myself find it a bit weird and not so easy to understand. Saying that though I don?t take anything away from Inanimate Alice, as it does have a great concept of trying to teach it adds to its unique visualisation of storytelling. And as for thinking if I would add it to the national curriculum here, I would say yes because it seems to have great success in the United States and Australia. In the US Inanimate Alice?s website was awarded ?Best website for Teaching & Learning 2012? which obviously shows that actually could work here. Check it out for yourself and see what you think: http://www.inanimatealice.com/index.html.

Source: http://delbeds.blogspot.com/2013/01/inanimate-education.html

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Wednesday, January 30, 2013

New research will help shed light on role of Amazon forests in global carbon cycle

New research will help shed light on role of Amazon forests in global carbon cycle

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

The Earth's forests perform a well-known service to the planet, absorbing a great deal of the carbon dioxide pollution emitted into the atmosphere from human activities. But when trees are killed by natural disturbances, such as fire, drought or wind, their decay also releases carbon back into the atmosphere, making it critical to quantify tree mortality in order to understand the role of forests in the global climate system. Tropical old-growth forests may play a large role in this absorption service, yet tree mortality patterns for these forests are not well understood.

Now scientist Jeffrey Chambers and colleagues at the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) have devised an analytical method that combines satellite images, simulation modeling and painstaking fieldwork to help researchers detect forest mortality patterns and trends. This new tool will enhance understanding of the role of forests in carbon sequestration and the impact of climate change on such disturbances.

"One quarter of CO2 emissions are going to terrestrial ecosystems, but the details of those processes and how they will respond to a changing climate are inadequately understood, particularly for tropical forests," Chambers said. "It's important we get a better understanding of the terrestrial sink because if it weakens, more of our emissions will end up in the atmosphere, increasing the rate of climate warming. To develop a better estimate of the contribution of forests, we need to have a better understanding of forest tree mortality."

Chambers, in close collaboration with Robinson Negron-Juarez at Tulane University, Brazil's National Institute for Amazon Research (Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amaz?nia [INPA]) and other colleagues, studied a section of the Central Amazon spanning over a thousand square miles near Manaus, Brazil. By linking data from Landsat satellite images over a 20-year period with observations on the ground, they found that 9.1 to 16.9 percent of tree mortality was missing from more conventional plot-based analyses of forests. That equates to more than half a million dead trees each year that had previously been unaccounted for in studies of this region, and which need to be included in forest carbon budgets.

Their findings were published online this week in a paper titled, "The steady-state mosaic of disturbance and succession across an old-growth Central Amazon forest landscape," in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

"If these results hold for most tropical forests, then it would indicate that because we missed some of the mortality, then the contribution of these forests to the net sink might be less than previous studies have suggested," Chambers said. "An old-growth forest has a mosaic of patches all doing different things. So if you want to understand the average behavior of that system you need to sample at a much larger spatial scale over larger time intervals than was previously appreciated. You don't see this mosaic if you walk through the forest or study only one patch. You really need to look at the forest at the landscape scale."

Trees and other living organisms are key players in the global carbon cycle, a complex biogeochemical process in which carbon is exchanged among the atmosphere, the ocean, the biosphere and Earth's crust. Fewer trees mean not only a weakening of the forest's ability to absorb carbon, but the decay of dead trees will also release carbon dioxide back into the atmosphere. Large-scale tree mortality in tropical ecosystems could thus act as a positive feedback mechanism, accelerating the global warming effect.

The Amazon forest is hit periodically by fierce thunderstorms that may bring violent winds with concentrated bursts believed to be as high as 170 miles per hour. The storms can blow down many acres of the forest; however, Chambers and his team were able to paint a much more nuanced picture of how storms affected the forest.

By looking at satellite images before and after a storm, the scientists discerned changes in the reflectivity of the forest, which they assumed was due to damage to the canopy and thus tree loss. Researchers were then sent into the field at some of the blowdown areas to count the number of trees felled by the storm. Looking at the satellite images pixel by pixel (with each pixel representing 900 square meters, or about one-tenth of a football field) and matching them with on-the-ground observations, they were able to draw a detailed mortality map for the entire landscape, which had never been done before.

Essentially they found that tree mortality is clustered in both time and space. "It's not blowdown or no blowdown?it's a gradient, with everything in between," he said. "Some areas have 80 percent of trees down, some have 15 percent."

In one particularly violent storm in 2005, a squall line more than 1,000 miles long and 150 miles wide crossed the entire Amazon basin. The researchers estimated that hundreds of millions trees were potentially destroyed, equivalent to a significant fraction of the estimated mean annual carbon accumulation for the Amazon forest. This finding was published in 2010 in Geophysical Research Letters. Intense 100-year droughts also caused widespread tree mortality in the Amazon basin in 2005 and 2010.

As climatic warming is expected to bring more intense droughts and stronger storms, understanding their effect on tropical and forest ecosystems becomes ever more important. "We need to establish a baseline so we can say how these forests functioned before we changed the climate," Chambers said.

This new tool can be used to assess tree mortality in other types of forests as well. Chambers and colleagues reported in the journal Science in 2007 that Hurricane Katrina killed or severely damaged about 320 million trees. The carbon in those trees, which would eventually be released into the atmosphere as CO2 as the trees decompose, was about equal to the net amount of carbon absorbed by all U.S. forests in a year.

Disturbances such as Superstorm Sandy and Hurricane Katrina cause large impacts to the terrestrial carbon cycle, forest tree mortality and CO2 emissions from decomposition, in addition to significant economic impacts. However, these processes are currently not well represented in global climate models. "A better understanding of tree mortality provides a path forward towards improving coupled earth system models," Chambers said.

Besides understanding how forests affect carbon cycling, the new technique could also play a vital role in understanding how climate change will affect forests. Although the atmospheric CO2 concentration has been rising for decades, we are now only just starting to feel the effects of a warming climate, such as melting glaciers, stronger heat waves and more violent storms.

"But these climate change signals will start popping out of the noise faster and faster as the years go on," Chambers said. "So, what's going to happen to old-growth tropical forests? On one hand they are being fertilized by some unknown extent by the rising CO2 concentration, and on the other hand a warming climate will likely accelerate tree mortality. So which of these processes will win out in the long-term: growth or death? Our study provides the tools to continue to make these critical observations and answer this question as climate change processes fully kicks in over the coming years."

###

DOE/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory: http://www.lbl.gov

Thanks to DOE/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory for this article.

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

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/126510/New_research_will_help_shed_light_on_role_of_Amazon_forests_in_global_carbon_cycle

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Six weeks of free PlayStation Mobile gaming ? update 3 ...

PlayStation Mobile

Hi everyone. This week?s PlayStation Mobile giveaway title is Cubixx. Use your laser to cut away the surfaces of a mysterious cube and free the energy within. It?s a classic action puzzle game requiring split second decisions.

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Download it today from PS Store on PS Vita or PlayStation Certified Devices now, and we?ll see you back here next Wednesday for another complimentary PS Mobile game!

To find out more information about PlayStation Mobile, please visit http://eu.playstation.com/playstation-mobile/

Source: http://blog.eu.playstation.com/2013/01/30/six-weeks-of-free-playstation-mobile-gaming-update-3/

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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Compensation for Philippine dictatorship victims

MANILA, Philippines (AP) ? Almost four decades after he was arrested and tortured and his sister disappeared into a maze of Philippine police cells and military houses, playwright Bonifacio Ilagan is finally seeing his suffering officially recognized.

A writer for an underground communist newspaper, Ilagan and thousands like him were rounded up by dictator Ferdinand Marcos' security forces after he placed the Philippines under martial law in 1972. Detentions, beatings, harassment and killings of the regime's opponents continued until Marcos was toppled in 1986.

Even though democracy was restored, it would take another 27 years for the Philippine Congress to vote on a bill awarding compensation and recognition to martial law victims. The ratification is expected Tuesday or Wednesday, said Rep. Neri Colmenares, one of the bill's authors.

"More than the monetary compensation, the bill represents the only formal, written document that martial law violated the human rights of Filipinos and that there were courageous people who fought the dictatorship," said a statement from SELDA, an organization of former political prisoners that campaigned for the passage of the bill.

Ilagan's story is more of a rule than exception among leftist activists of his generation.

"The torture started in the house. We were beaten up, punched and kicked," he said, recalling a police raid on his residence in April 1974 and the beginning of his two-year detention ordeal. He said he vomited blood after being kicked in the thighs with a bottle and had the soles of his foot burned by an iron.

"The one episode in my torture that I cannot forget was when they ordered me to remove my pants and underwear and they inserted a piece of stick into my penis. 'Oh my God,' I said, this is one torture I could not bear,'" the 61-year-old said in an interview. He said that interrogators wanted him to decode documents and identify people in pictures that were seized from suspected communist activists.

"Compared to others, mine was not the worst torture," he said. "The others were electrocuted and injected with truth serum. ... But the threats continued."

Ilagan's sister, Rizalina, disappeared in 1976 along with nine other activists, many of them students involved in anti-Marcos publications, he said. One of the women arrested by the same government unit that he suspected was involved in his sister's abduction had escaped to recount her rape and torture. Ilagan said he has no doubt that his sister went through the same abuses.

His parents died still hoping his sister would turn up alive, but the family has found no closure, Ilagan said.

Lawmakers in two chambers of the Congress last week agreed on a text of the compensation bill, which is set to be officially ratified this week and signed by President Benigno Aquino III. The president is the son of an assassinated anti-Marcos activist and a mother who led the 1986 "people power" revolt that ousted Marcos and sent him into U.S. exile, where he died three years later without ever facing prosecution for human rights abuses.

Many of Marcos' men reinvented themselves as powerful politicians or businessmen, and not one was successfully prosecuted for any of the crimes allegedly committed during the martial law years.

Two of the key martial law figures, former Defense Secretary Juan Ponce Enrile and the deputy military chief of staff, Fidel Ramos, led a mutiny against Marcos as part of the 1986 revolt. Ramos later served as president from 1992 to 1998, and Enrile is currently the president of the Senate.

Despite cases filed by former political prisoners, "there have been no convictions of perpetrators," Marie Hilao-Enriquez, chairwoman of SELDA, said Monday.

The Marcos family, meanwhile, had returned from exile in 1990s and again wields influence: former first lady Imelda Marcos as a lawmaker, son Ferdinand "Bongbong" Marcos a senator, daughter Imee a provincial governor.

"Governments after Marcos did not move or did not do anything to go after Marcos seriously, so we filed a case in Hawaii," Hilao-Enriquez said.

In 1992, victims won a class action suit against the Marcos estate in Hawaii.

Under the Human Rights Victims Reparation and Recognition Act of 2013, the 9,539 victims will be awarded compensation using $246 million that the Philippine government recovered from Marcos' ill-gotten wealth. But all claims will still have to evaluated by an independent commission and the amount each will receive will depend of the abuse suffered.

"Finally, over two decades after the fall of the dictatorship, we will have a law that puts the responsibility of human rights abuses square on the shoulder of Marcos and provides justice for all those who suffered under his reign," said Rep. Walden Bello, a member of a congressional committee that drafted and approved the bill.

___

Associated Press writers Oliver Teves and Hrvoje Hranjski contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/compensation-philippine-dictatorship-victims-080551110.html

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Woods makes short work at Torrey Pines

Tiger Woods poses with the trophy after winning the Farmers Insurance Open golf tournament at the Torrey Pines Golf Course, Monday, Jan. 28, 2013, in San Diego. Woods closed with an even-par 72 for a four-shot victory. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

Tiger Woods poses with the trophy after winning the Farmers Insurance Open golf tournament at the Torrey Pines Golf Course, Monday, Jan. 28, 2013, in San Diego. Woods closed with an even-par 72 for a four-shot victory. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

Tiger Woods sends divots flying as he tees off on the eighth hole of the South Course at Torrey Pines during the final round of the Farmers Insurance Open golf tournament which he won Monday, Jan. 28, 2013, in San Diego. (AP Photo/Lenny Ignelzi)

Tiger Woods watches his ball head toward the the 14th green on the South Course at Torrey Pines during the final round of the Farmers Insurance Open golf tournament Monday, Jan. 28, 2013, in San Diego. The ball came up short and fell into the bunker and Woods bogeyed the hole but won the tournament for the seventh time. (AP Photo/Lenny Ignelzi)

Tiger Woods poses with a surfboard after winning the Farmers Insurance Open golf tournament at the Torrey Pines Golf Course, Monday, Jan. 28, 2013, in San Diego. Woods closed with an even-par 72 for a four-shot victory. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

Tiger Woods waves his cap to acknowledge applause as he walks to the 18th green during the fourth round of the Farmers Insurance Open golf tournament at the Torrey Pines Golf Course, Monday, Jan. 28, 2013, in San Diego. Woods closed with an even-par 72 for a four-shot victory in the tournament. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

(AP) ? Tiger Woods never looked so irritated winning a golf tournament so comfortably.

His record eighth victory at Torrey Pines was all but over when Woods ripped a 5-iron from 244 yards over the corner of a bunker and onto the green at the par-5 13th hole, setting up a two-putt birdie that gave him an eight shot lead in the Farmers Insurance Open.

At least he had plenty of time to savor this victory. The final five holes felt like they took forever.

Woods twirled his club on the tee and leaned on it in the fairway as the final round dragged on. He lost rhythm and appeared to lose interest, and it showed. A bogey from the bunker on the 14th. A tee shot that caromed off a eucalyptus tree on the 15th hole that led to double bogey. A tee shot he popped up on the 17th hole that left him 50 yards behind the other players and led to another bogey.

"It got a little ugly at the end," Woods said. "I started losing patience a little bit with the slow play."

No matter. It only affected the margin, not the outcome. Woods had to settle for an even-par 72 that gave him a four-shot win over defending champion Brandt Snedeker and Josh Teater, who each had a 69.

For a tour that has been criticized for slow play, this wasn't an ideal start to the network portion of its schedule. With Woods virtually a lock to win, CBS Sports wanted the final round to resume Monday later than normal so that it could be televised in late afternoon on the East Coast. Play was so slow that CBS went over its allotted time.

Woods, meanwhile, had the ideal start to his tour season.

Only a week earlier, he missed the cut in Abu Dhabi, in part because of a two-shot penalty assessed after his second round for taking an illegal drop. Woods had never missed the cut on the European Tour, and he had never started his season with the weekend off.

He might have been the only one who didn't panic.

Woods seized control with a 65 on the North Course at Torrey Pines, the spent the rest of the week pulling away from the field until no one could catch him.

"I don't know if anybody would have beaten him this week," said Nick Watney, who got within five shots of Woods when the tournament was still undecided until making three bogeys on his next five holes. "He's definitely on his game."

It's still too early to figure out the state of his game, especially in relation to Rory McIlroy, who also missed the cut in Abu Dhabi.

Torrey Pines is a public course that Woods treats like his private domain. He won the tournament for the seventh time, one short of the PGA Tour record for most wins in a single event. Sam Snead won the Greater Greensboro Open eight times. Woods won for the eighth time at Torrey Pines, including the 2008 U.S. Open, and that's a PGA Tour record that Woods previously shared with ... himself. He also has won seven times at Firestone and Bay Hill.

"I think he wanted to send a message," said Hunter Mahan, who shares a swing coach with Woods. "I think deep down he did. You play some games to try to motivate yourself. There's been so much talk about Rory. Rory is now with Nike. That would be my guess."

And it was his 75th win on the PGA Tour, seven short of the record held by Snead. Woods has won 23 of those tournaments by at least four shots.

"I'm excited the way I played all week," Woods said. "I hit the ball well ? pretty much did everything well and built myself a nice little cushion. I had some mistakes at the end, but all my good play before that allowed me to afford those mistakes."

Woods mostly had reason to be excited about his short game.

In the third round Sunday, he was furious with himself for going long on the par-3 eighth green, without much green between his ball and the hole. Woods hit a chip solidly, with just enough loft, to leave himself a tap-in par. In the conclusion of the final round Monday, he pulled his tee shot into a bad spot in the bunker on the par-3 11th. The lie was good, but he had to aim well left, meaning his legs were spread wide on the slope of the sand.

He blasted it out with his 60-degree wedge to a top shelf, and then watched it feed down a slope to the right. It lost pace at the end or it might have gone in.

It looked good for television. It was a difficult shot, but not impossible.

But Woods believes those are the shots he wasn't converting a year ago. And that's one reason his outlook was so bright on the rest of the year, even after having to cope with so much fog along the Pacific bluffs.

He played the par 5s in 12 under for the lead ? that alone would have been enough to win ? and attributed that to his short game.

"My short game was back to how I know it can be," Woods said. "My shots that I hit, especially out of these nasty little lies, I hit some really good ones this week. And that allowed me to save some pars, make some birdies, and move my way up the board. And basically, that's what I did."

Woods figures his swing change under Sean Foley took root at some point last year, but that he had devoted so much time to the swing that he neglected his wedges. Now that he is practicing more on his short game, he expects better results ? turning a 74 into a 70, and not losing leads at the majors, like he did twice last year.

Still, the season is young.

Any measure of Woods likely will have to wait until the road to the Masters gets going during the Florida Swing. Woods headed home to Florida on Monday night and is not expected to return until the Match Play Championship in Arizona a month from now. McIlroy also isn't expected to play until then, and match play being such a fickle format, the better gauge could come in the Honda Classic and at Doral.

Woods, however, likes where he is headed.

Torrey Pines is a good omen for the rest of his year. Whenever he starts a PGA Tour season with a win at Torrey, he tends to have big years ? eight wins and two majors in 2006, seven wins and a major in 2007, four wins in only six starts in 2008.

Where will this lead?

"Does it feel good? Yes. Does it give me confidence? Absolutely," Woods said. "But as far as the other stuff, as I said, I'm excited about this year. I'm excited about what I'm doing with Sean and some of the things that I've built. This is a nice way to start the year."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-01-29-GLF-Farmers-Insurance-Open/id-40a58d64cb4a4af89d2da511db35c022

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OBAMA JOINS NRA | Weekly World News

President Obama shocked Americans today by announcing that he has joined the National Rifle Association.

President Obama shocked Americans today by announcing that he has joined the National Rifle Association.

Amid conservative anger over President Obamas?proposals to ban assault weapons as part of a drastic overhaul of US gun control laws, the president said that he was going to join the NRA.

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?I?ve always loved guns and I have a over twenty guns in my personal collection,? the President reportedly said.

A White House aide showed WWN the President?s gun collection:

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Asked in a magazine interview whether he had ever fired a gun, Mr Obama said he fires a gun regularly.

?Up at Camp David, we shoot all the time,? he reportedly said. ?And I have a profound respect for the traditions of gun owners that trace back in this country for generations.?

The announcement shocked both Republicans and Democrats. ??I?m confused. ?I thought he was trying to ban guns,? said Arizona Senator John McCain.

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Democrats were angry. ??This is a serious blow to our cause,? said Senator Diane Feinstein, who introduced gun legislation in the house.

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Wayne LaPierre, the President of the NRA, said he was proud to have President Obama as a member. ??We are going to present him with a signed 9mm gun when he comes to our meeting in Las Vegas next month.?

This man also welcomed President Obama to the NRA:

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Mr Obama?s plans for tighter firearms regulations were drawn up by Joe Biden, his vice-president. ?Vice President Biden said that he was against guns, until Barack Obama said he was for them. ??I?m going to join the NRA as well,? ?Biden told WWN.

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Source: http://weeklyworldnews.com/headlines/54258/obama-joins-nra/

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Monday, January 28, 2013

6-Month Homebuyer Countdown | Bankrate.com

6-month homebuyer countdown
6-month homebuyer countdown

If one of your New Year's resolutions is to buy a home this summer, early in the year is the perfect time to get started.

Shopping for a home, a neighborhood and the financing to make it all possible can take time.

Sometimes you hit a glitch, such as an error on a credit report, or an agent who doesn't seem to understand that $300,000 doesn't mean $450,000.

Sometimes you just get tired of driving through neighborhoods you sort of like, only to find out you can't afford even the least expensive houses. Or you're convinced that if you see one more kitchen remodel with black granite countertops and untouched professional-grade appliances, you'll lose it.

Instead, space it out. Give yourself six months between now and the day you're ready to make an offer, and take a few steps each month. Then you'll have a six-month homebuyer countdown.

6 months out: Start a financial file
6 months out: Start a financial file

If you haven't bought a house in the last few years, you're in for a rude surprise. To get financing, buyers have to provide a lot more paperwork these days, says Ron Phipps, principal with Warwick, R.I.-based Phipps Realty and past president of the National Association of Realtors.

Start a pre-qualification file, he recommends. Whether you'll use your computer scanner or a plain manila folder, include your 1099s, pay stubs (at least your last three), copies of your last three tax returns, and a list of your liabilities and assets.

While some experts advise waiting until you're about three months out, the six-month mark can be a good time to get yourself vetted for financing, too. If you qualify, it gives you an idea of how large a loan you can get (as opposed to how much you can comfortably afford). And if any problems pop up, you should have time to fix them.

Whether you want to be pre-qualified (less stringent) or preapproved (more rigorous), at this point is up to you. "The transition from pre-qualified to preapproved is fairly quick," Phipps says.

6 months out: Research mortgage options
6 months out: Begin researching mortgage options

Especially if you're a first-time buyer, this is a good time to get advice, says Katie Severance, co-author of "The Complete Idiot's Guide to Selling Your Home." "First-time buyers don't know what goes into a mortgage payment, and that can be very valuable."

This can be a good time to look at what a point either way will mean in terms of your loan. And you can also calculate the difference between options such as a 15- or 30-year mortgage, she says.

Look at what a house will cost you each month -- not only what goes into the note (besides the principal and interest), but the costs of ongoing homeownership, she says.

Examine how much you can comfortably afford each month, and what price range that will equal, Severance advises. "Very often, what the lender says you can afford is different than what you thought you could afford."

One more factor: If you're selling a house, find out if the lender will require you to close on that transaction before you buy, she says. And what are your options if the timing doesn't work the way you planned?

6 months out: Check your credit, look at fees
6 months out: Examine closing costs and your credit

"Take stock of the financial resources you'll need to close a transaction," says Eric Tyson, author of "Home Buying for Dummies."

How much will you need for a down payment? Closing costs? Fees and other expenses? "And if you talk with mortgage people, they can certainly help you with those numbers," he says.

At this stage, you still have six months to put away additional savings, if you need it.

How much of a down payment will you likely need? What are closing costs in your area? If you know what you'll need, you have at least six months to make sure you have enough.

Pull your credit reports. (You can get them free at AnnualCreditReport.com.)

And, unless you have little or no credit, don't open any new accounts until after you close on your new home. When you apply for new credit, it can shave a few points from your credit score for the next year.

Few or no accounts on your credit report? Talk to a few different lenders about your options. Also, the National Foundation for Credit Counseling has certified housing counselors who can offer advice.

6 months out: Let the search begin
6 months out: Let the search begin

Scout communities. "I would encourage people to cast a fairly broad net in the beginning," Tyson says. "Go out and actually see what's on the market and consider different areas."

Attend a few open houses. You're in "the tire-kicking stage," says Phipps. "Talk to people at open houses, and ask what's going on in the market. Inquire about housing trends (like energy efficiency or green building) in the area, mass transit, schools or anything you find particularly important," he advises.

Begin compiling information on agents. At this point, you can keep it casual. "I would start looking at the Web to see what's out there," Phipps says.

You can also take it a step further if you're ready. "I personally would interview a couple of them to see that I'm getting what I need."

5 months out: Draft your 'wish list'
5 months out: Draft your 'wish list'

By now you've seen a few homes, both in person and online. So what appeals and what doesn't?

Phipps eschews calling it a "wish list." Today's buyers, he says, are becoming "more strategic" and more deliberate.

So put pen to paper and actually write down what's vital to you.

Quality of life is especially important to buyers these days, he says. That can be anything from commuting times to the true caliber of the local schools. (No, they're not all "excellent.")

If you're like most buyers, you'll revisit and revise the list a few times before you buy.

4 months out: Narrow your search
4 months out: Narrow your search

By now, you may be focusing on specific neighborhoods or areas. At this point, you can study comparables to get an idea of prices and features, Phipps says. If you find something you really like, "don't hesitate to make an offer," Phipps says.

On the other hand, if you find out that your search has stalled or you're not seeing anything you like, it might be time to revise your search, he says. One big question: Are you being realistic? You may need to consider different areas or revise your list of criteria.

And deep-six any deadlines or duress, Phipps says. "You shouldn't feel pressured."

3 months out: The homestretch
3 months out: The homestretch

Get that financing finalized. If you haven't gotten your financing in place, now's the time. You have a few months to correct any mistakes. Plus, walking through the door with your own financing at the ready makes you a lot more attractive to sellers.

Hire an agent. "Get someone on your team who's working exclusively for you," says Severance.

Get your agent to put you on "automated email," she says. That way, when something that meets your needs hits the multiple listing service, it will be instantly forwarded to you.

Review that criteria list. Square footage, condition and location are critical at this stage, Severance says. Rank them, realizing that when you sacrifice one, you often get more of another.

1 month out: Pick a winner, recheck finances
1 month out: Pick your winner(s), recheck finances

At this point, you have identified a couple of good prospects, Phipps says. You should have a good idea of what's common in those areas, as far as prices and amenities.

It's also a good time to double-check your financial records. One recent new twist with regard to financing: Lenders want to see where almost every penny you're using comes from. So if you get a gift or a loan from Mom or Dad, you'll need a letter (and likely a few copies of their bank statements), to support it, says Phipps.

Any four-figure cash deposits to your account? Be prepared to explain them with paperwork, he says.

Now is the time to factor the cost of insurance. "Some properties have a CLUE (Comprehensive Loss Underwriting Exchange) score," Phipps says. It's basically a house's record when it comes to insurance claims. While not all homes have them, if your prospective home does, you want to see it, he says.

Last but not least: The offer
Last but not least: The offer

These days, offers are typically more than just a dollar figure.

Offers should be written, Severance says, and should include not only the price you're offering, but the terms (for instance, the fact that you're already qualified for financing or how quickly you can close).

Some buyers like to include a personal note to the seller, she says. To some sellers, it doesn't matter, Severance says, while to others, that personal touch can make the difference.

Source: http://www.bankrate.com/finance/real-estate/6-month-homebuyer-countdown.aspx

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Future Disasters: 10 Lessons from Superstorm Sandy

NEW YORK ? For most in the New York City area, life has returned to normal since Superstorm Sandy wrought devastation last fall. Now, the city and other communities must attempt to glean lessons from the storm, as well as other disasters, and use them to plan for the future.

These disastrous natural events are not isolated anomalies; there's reason to expect more in the future. Natural records, such as those contained in sedimentary cores from lakebeds and in tree rings, indicate massive floods and droughts occurred in the distant past, when little human infrastructure existed in North America. And human-caused climate change is expected to exacerbate some extreme weather, causing, for example, heavy precipitation and heat waves.

A panel of experts gathered at the New York Academy of Sciences on Thursday (Jan. 24) evening to discuss how cities and other communities can better prepare for these disasters. Here are 10 lessons from Sandy the experts said cities should heed in preparing for future disasters, particularly those linked with climate change.

1. Beware sea level rise: The sea level in the New York City area has risen about a foot (0.3 meters) over the last century, said Radley Horton, a climate scientist at Columbia University. Sandy brought a record storm surge to the southern tip of Manhattan, and that surge received a boost from the increase in sea levels, Horton said. Because of these rising sea levels, "even weaker storms in the future can cause more devastating flooding," he said. [On the Ground: Hurricane Sandy in Images]

2. Skepticism of storm barriers: The devastation caused by Sandy's storm surge prompted discussion of installing a barrier system in the waters surrounding New York. But a barrier system, which uses a gate to let ships, fish and water in and out, wouldn't address the real problem ? sea-level rise, said Klaus Jacob, a geophysicist at Columbia University who has studied the impact of climate change on coastal cities.

A short-term cost-benefit analysis does favor a storm barrier system, because the city could avoid improving its infrastructure. But a barrier would not provide a long-term solution and would allow the city to procrastinate in dealing with the inevitable, Jacob said.

3. Discuss retreat: People can adapt to the increasing threat of storms in different ways, Jacob said. They can seek protection through measures like storm barriers; they can accommodate the risk by, for example, elevating buildings to reduce flood risk; or they can move when risks become too high, a strategy called managed retreat, he said.

"I think that needs to be much more aired in the public, because it is obviously the hardest to do," Jacob said.

4. Consider ways to make retreat possible: Cities and communities in the United States need new tools to deal with situations in which it is unrealistic for people to stay in a particular place, said James Russell, architecture critic for Bloomberg News and author of "The Agile City: Building Well Being and Wealth in an Era of Climate Change" (Island Press, 2011).

For example, a legal tool called land re-adjustment has shown success in the Netherlands, where a portion of land lies below sea level. When a community is threatened, its land is re-allocated elsewhere and property lines redrawn, he said. [MD1]?Tools used by the Nature Conservancy to protect land could also be helpful, Russell said. For instance, conservation easementslimit how land can be used, particularly by prohibiting development.?

5. Re-envision the city: A version of New York City better adapted to the threat of hurricanes and storms would look different from today's city, Jacob said. The altered metropolis would have a "slightly smaller footprint, [and] we will have to change our density pattern accordingly," he said. "We will have more parks on the waterfront as buffers, and we will have to change our infrastructure radically." [Hurricanes from Above: See Nature's Biggest Storms]

Changes to infrastructure could include modifying the electrical grid, emptying out the lower basements of skyscrapers and using them for parking, and halting vulnerable development, such as housing, along the waterfront, Jacob said.????????

6. Think natural: As a result of development over the centuries, New York City and its surrounding area have lost wetlands and oyster reefs, natural features that once protected the coast from storms, said Nicole Maher, the senior coast scientist with The Nature Conservancy on Long Island. Restoring these features could help make the coast more resilient, by, for example, reducing wave velocity and erosion. Wetlands and oyster reefs also provide other benefits, such as the removal of contaminants from the water, Maher said.

7. Reconsider costs: On average, every $1 spent to make infrastructure more resilient against pounding storms saves $4 in costs later on, but human nature tends not to acknowledge this math, Jacob said.

8. Don't fight the last war: After a disaster like Sandy, the natural tendency is to discuss how to protect our shoreline, "but other things are going to matter," said Robert McDonald, senior scientist for sustainable land-use with The Nature Conservancy. McDonald pointed out that heat wavesand disease are also major threats associated with climate change.

9. Keep uncertainty in mind: By allowing greenhouse gas emissions to accumulate in the atmosphere, humans are conducting a giant experiment with the planet, McDonald said. "Yes, there are a lot of fancy models," that is, computer models used to project future climate. "But there will be huge surprises and things cities have to adapt to that we cannot predict."

10. Disasters bring equity issues: In response to audience questions, moderator Andrew Revkin, of The New York Times, pointed out that both poor and rich neighborhoods are exposed to risks associated with extreme events and climate change, because of where they are located. Sandy, for instance, inundated wealthy lower Manhattan as well as the Rockaways in Queens, the site of public housing projects.

As a result, it is important to avoid pitting these interests against one another in battles for resources needed to adapt, since poorer neighborhoods have less political clout, McDonald noted. He also pointed out that while cities in the developed world, such as New York, have the resources to make changes, others in the developing world, such as in Bangladesh, do not.

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

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

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/future-disasters-10-lessons-superstorm-sandy-191039318.html

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J.J. Abrams And 'Star Wars': What Do 'Star Trek' Fans Think?

'Some fans are upset,' TrekToday.com's Bonnie Malmat tells MTV News about Abrams' other 'Star' franchise.
By Josh Wigler


J.J. Abrams
Photo: Getty Images

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1700868/jj-abrams-star-wars-star-trek-fan-reactions.jhtml

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Sunday, January 27, 2013

Filibusters, Women in Combat, and the Feline Menace

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid

Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images

??Fili-busted: Democrats pull back from the nuclear option on filibuster reform. Did they get a bum deal?? by David Weigel. The Senate finally reached a compromise deal on filibuster reform. Weigel assesses whether the rule change is a win for the Democratic majority or an inconsequential tweak.

?Our Boots Have Been on the Ground: Ten years ago my fellow soldiers would have balked at having women serve in combat. After Iraq and Afghanistan, the policy is finally catching up to reality,? by Kayla Williams. Former U.S. Army sergeant Williams reflects on the Pentagon?s decision to lift the ban on servicewomen in combat. For those women who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan, she argues, the change is an acknowledgment of sacrifices already made.

?Did Chernobyl Cause the Soviet Union To Explode?: The nuclear theory of the fall of the USSR,? by Mark Joseph Stern. The 1986 Chernobyl disaster wasn?t only an unmatched environmental catastrophe, but also a critical moment in the unraveling of the Soviet Union. In the midst of Gorbachev?s glasnost, Stern explains, Chernobyl went a long way toward shaking many Soviets? confidence in their leaders and political system. ?

??Cats Are Evil: Why New Zealand is right to consider banning them in order to save its wildlife,? by Laura Helmuth. In response to a New Zealand economist?s call for the elimination of cats from his country, Helmuth offers her own thoughts on this ?globally invasive species.? She asserts that despite their cuteness, cats are essentially murderous, species-eradicating parasites whose numbers ought to be reduced.?

?Girl Drinks: A history of sweet cocktails for ladies, on the occasion of the Cosmopolitan?s 25th anniversary,? by Troy Patterson. Patterson makes sense of today?s complicated array of female-friendly cocktails and recounts the milestones in their birth and evolution. From the elaborate Pink Lady to the humble vodka tonic, there?s more to the girl drink than you previously thought.

?Apple Is Stronger Than Ever: Don?t let the company?s stock slump fool you,? by Farhad Manjoo. Apple?s stock has taken a beating despite a strong quarter. Still, Manjoo argues that pessimism about the company?s future is misplaced and that the tech firm remains at the top of its game.

?The Blind Hiker: How one man used technology to conquer the 2,000-mile Appalachian Trail,? by Sarah Trankle. As part of the ?Doers? series, Trankle profiles Mike Hanson, the blind man who hiked the Appalachian Trail in 2010 with only a GPS device to guide him. Hanson wants other visually impaired people to pursue their dreams and thinks that high-tech devises may be the key.

??Waiting for Bardot: Have the French lost their je ne sais quois?? by Simon Doonan. In the absence of exciting and sexy cultural exports, the French have relinquished their onetime artistic superiority, laments Doonan. Is this nation of supercilious snail-eaters poised for a revival or destined for obscurity?

?Schizophrenic?Is the New Retarded: The word doesn?t mean what you think it means, and that matters,? by Patrick House. So you think someone or something is behaving schizophrenically? You?re probably wrong, argues House, or at the very least politically incorrect. He sets the record straight regarding the term?s proper usage, explaining that the popular understanding of the disease has little to do with its actual symptoms.

?Porn Fans Aren?t What They Used To Be: Reporting from the Adult Entertainment Expo, where the gun-owning, flip-phone-carrying demo reigns and James Deen just wants to talk about pandas,? by Amanda Hess. Hess relates the current state of the porn industry in the age of the Internet and the iPhone, examining such trends as the ?hipster? consumer and the humanization of porn stars. Hess writes, ?Now that porn is a normal, everyday thing, typical viewers are less likely to see porn performers as objects to either venerate or degrade.?

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=66250729e7ca04c22e28201be1df8e78

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Study: Distant rural areas may feel cities' heat

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Heat rising up from cities such as New York, Paris and Tokyo might be remotely warming up winters far away in some rural parts of Alaska, Canada, and Siberia, a surprising study theorizes.

In an unusual twist, that same urban heat from buildings and cars may be slightly cooling the autumns in much of the Western United States, Eastern Europe and the Mediterranean, according to the study published Sunday in the scientific journal Nature Climate Change.

Meteorologists long have known that cities are warmer than rural areas, with the heat of buildings and cars, along with asphalt and roofs that absorb heat. That's called the urban heat island effect and it's long been thought that the heat stayed close to the cities.

But the study, based on a computer model and the Northern Hemisphere, now suggests the heat does something else, albeit indirectly. It travels about half a mile up into the air and then its energy changes the high-altitude currents in the atmosphere that dictate prevailing weather.

"Basically, it changes the flow." said Guang Zhang of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, Calif. He wrote the paper with Aixue Hu at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo.

This doesn't change overall global temperature averages significantly, unlike man-made greenhouse gases that cause global warming. Instead it redistributes some of the heat, the scientists said.

The changes seem to vary with the seasons and by region because of the way air currents flow at different times of the year. During the winter, the jet stream is altered and weakened, keeping cold air closer to the Arctic Circle and from dipping down as sharply, Hu explained.

The computer model showed that parts of Siberia and northwestern Canada may get, on average, an extra 1.4 degrees to 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit (0.8 to 1 degree Celsius) during the winter, which "may not be a bad thing," Zhang said. The effect isn't quite as much in northern North Dakota and Minnesota, where temperatures might be about half a degree warmer (0.3 degrees Celsius), and even less along the East Coast.

In contrast, Europe and the Pacific Northwest are cooled slightly in the winter from this effect. The jet stream changes prevent weather systems from bringing warmer air from the Atlantic to Europe and from the Pacific to the U.S. Northwest, thus cooling those areas a bit, he said.

The biggest cooling occurs in the fall, but Hu said he's not quite sure why that happens.

Several outside scientists said they were surprised by the study results, calling the work "intriguing" and "clever." But they said it would have to be shown in more than one computer model and in repeated experiments before they could accept this theory.

"It's an interesting and rationally carried out study," said David Parker, climate monitoring chief of the United Kingdom meteorology office. "We must be cautious until other models are used to test their hypothesis."

___

Online:

Nature Climate Change: http://www.nature.com/nclimate

___

Seth Borenstein can be followed at http://twitter.com/borenbears

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/study-distant-rural-areas-may-feel-cities-heat-180509317.html

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US may give $32M to train African troops in Mali

SEVARE, Mali (AP) ? The Obama administration is seeking an additional $32 million to train African troops to fight Islamic extremists in Mali.

State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland told reporters Friday the request had been made to Congress.

The United States is not providing any direct aid to the Malian government because the democratically elected president was overthrown in a coup last year.

However, it has been providing aid to the French-led mission, transporting French troops and equipment to Mali.

France has some 2,400 forces in the West African nation but says it wants African nations to take the lead in fighting the extremists who rule northern Mali.

The French-led operation began on Jan. 11 after the militants surged southward from their strongholds and took the town of Konna, later recaptured by government forces.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-may-32m-train-african-troops-mali-085310169.html

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Saturday, January 26, 2013

'Cool' kids in middle school bully more

Friday, January 25, 2013

Bullying, whether it's physical aggression or spreading rumors, boosts the social status and popularity of middle school students, according to a new UCLA psychology study that has implications for programs aimed at combatting school bullying. In addition, students already considered popular engage in these forms of bullying, the researchers found.

The psychologists studied 1,895 ethnically diverse students from 99 classes at 11 Los Angeles middle schools. They conducted surveys at three points: during the spring of seventh grade, the fall of eighth grade and the spring of eighth grade. Each time, students were asked to name the students who were considered the "coolest," the students who "start fights or push other kids around" and the ones who "spread nasty rumors about other kids."

Those students who were named the coolest at one time were largely named the most aggressive the next time, and those considered the most aggressive were significantly more likely to be named the coolest the next time. The results indicate that both physical aggression and spreading rumors are rewarded by middle school peers.

"The ones who are cool bully more, and the ones who bully more are seen as cool," said Jaana Juvonen, a UCLA professor of psychology and lead author of the study. "What was particularly interesting was that the form of aggression, whether highly visible and clearly confrontational or not, did not matter. Pushing or shoving and gossiping worked the same for boys and girls.

"The impetus for the study was to figure out whether aggression promotes social status, or whether those who are perceived as popular abuse their social power and prestige by putting other kids down," she said. "We found it works both ways for both 'male-typed' and 'female-typed' forms of aggression."

The research is published online in the prominent Journal of Youth and Adolescence and will be appear in an upcoming print edition of the journal.

The study implies that anti-bullying programs have to be sophisticated and subtle to succeed.

"A simple message, such as 'Bullying is not tolerated,' is not likely to be very effective," Juvonen said, when bullying often increases social status and respect.

Effective anti-bullying programs need to focus on the bystanders, who play a critical role and can either encourage or discourage bullying, said Juvonen, who has conducted research on bullying since the mid-1990s and serves as a consultant to schools on anti-bullying programs. Bystanders should be made aware of the consequences of spreading rumors and encouraging aggression and the damage bullying creates, she said.

Juvonen's current research is federally supported by the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health's National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.

Juvonen and her colleagues reported in 2003 that bullies are popular and respected and are considered the "cool" kids.

The rumors middle school students spread often involve sexuality (saying a student is gay or sexually promiscuous) and family insults, she said.

Like middle school students, Juvonen noted, non-human primates also use aggression to promote social rank (although gossiping is obviously limited to humans).

Co-authors of the new study are former UCLA psychology graduate student Yueyan Wang and UCLA psychology doctoral student Guadalupe Espinoza.

In previous research, Juvonen and her colleagues have reported that nearly three in four teenagers say they were bullied online at least once during a recent 12-month period, and only one in 10 reported such cyber-bullying to parents or other adults; that nearly half of the sixth graders at two Los Angeles?area public schools said they were bullied by classmates during a five-day period; that middle school students who are bullied in school are likely to feel depressed, lonely and miserable, which in turn makes them more vulnerable to further bullying incidents; and that bullying is pervasive.

"Bullying is a problem that large numbers of kids confront on a daily basis at school; it's not just an issue for the few unfortunate ones," Juvonen has said. "Students reported feeling humiliated, anxious or disliking school on days when they reported incidents, which shows there is no such thing as 'harmless' name-calling or an 'innocent' punch.'"

Juvonen advises parents to talk with their children about bullying before it ever happens, to pay attention to changes in their children's behavior and to take their concerns seriously.

Students who get bullied often have headaches, colds and other physical illnesses, as well as psychological problems.

###

University of California - Los Angeles: http://www.newsroom.ucla.edu

Thanks to University of California - Los Angeles for this article.

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

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/126462/_Cool__kids_in_middle_school_bully_more

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Video: Collection of JFK photos, belongings on auction



>>> we want to move on to decades of kennedy history that are about to hit the auction block. personal collection of photos, artifacts and mementos from one of president kennedy 's most trusted advisers. erica hill has that story.

>> fascination that america has with the kennedys, especially president kennedy , nearly 50 years after his death. hundreds of items that once belonged to the 35th president is creating major buzz. simple moments forever frozen in time, like these photos from 1963 , given to president kennedy 's best friend and special assistant, dave powers .

>> this was given to dave from jackie kennedy . this was given -- it says to dave powers , who gave the president so many of his happiest hours.

>> reporter: powers was jfk 's confidante for many years and remained loyal to the kennedy family until he died in 1998 .

>> mind blowing when you think how close this person was, how close this relationship was.

>> this is the actual schedule that was given to dave powers for the november of '63 trip to texas. 12:52 , parkland hospital . 1:00, my president is dead.

>> reporter: after kennedy's assassination, powers went on to head the kennedy library . the items more than 700 were part of powers' estate. among the pictures and memorabilia up for auction next month, jfk 's famed air force one bomber jacket .

>> this is a president whose presidency affects us still half a century later and everyone is very much aware of and, in many cases, mystified by the circumstances of his death.

>> reporter: each piece tells an intimate story, of a president, a husband, a friend, a father.

>> this is the birthday card that we have that was given to president kennedy from his son, john, which would have turned out to be the president's last birthday. and there it's signed john, xx.

>> and a piece of history just being told. that happens next month in boston just in time for president's day. savannah?

>> we'll have some of those items, including jfk 's bomber jacket here in the studio, monday on "today." look forward to showing you that.

Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/50585524/

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Friday, January 25, 2013

Wolfram Alpha expands Facebook analytics, takes a closer look at your social relationships

Wolfram Alpha expands Facebook analytics, takes a closer look at your social relationships

Have you ever wanted to know if you're the most popular amongst your group of friends? Or which of your pals lives the furthest from you? These are questions that can't be answered by Facebook's latest Graph Search, but they're perfect for the stats geeks over at Wolfram Alpha. The group started mining Facebook for data last year, but have recently expanded its analytics to include a closer look at your social relationships. Namely, they've identified five "network roles:" social insiders, outsiders, neighbors, gateways and connectors. Insiders share the same friends while outsiders don't, neighbors don't have a lot of buddies outside of your network while gateways do, and connectors are those that bridge two networks together, like a college buddy who went to the same high school. Combined with location, age and other info, this data unlocks an array of potential visualizations color-coded by different categories, letting you see patterns you might not have noticed before. If you think the analysis ends there, think again; by enabling a "Historical Analytics" feature, you'll be allowing Wolfram Alpha to continually collect your info so you can see how your Facebook profile changes over time. If you're not creeped out by that notion, jump on over to the rightmost source link and fill in the appropriate details to see just how well you know your "friends."

Note: It seems that Facebook has limited Wolfram's API calls, so you might get an error when accessing the tool for now.

DNP Wolfram Alpha expands Facebook analytics, takes a closer look at your social relationships

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Source: Wolfram Alpha Blog, Wolfram Alpha

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/-sfbGXyt9uc/

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Senator Feinstein's assault-weapon ban: How would it work? (+video)

Sen. Dianne Feinstein's proposed bill would not ban assault-weapon ownership, but it would ban the manufacture, sale, transfer, or importation of new assault weapons, as well as ban high-capacity magazines.

By Peter Grier,?Staff writer / January 24, 2013

Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D) of California speaks in favor of legislation to ban new assault weapons and high-capacity magazines at a briefing on Capitol Hill on Thursday.

Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP

Enlarge

Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D) of California on Thursday introduced long-promised legislation aimed at controlling assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition magazines. As critics note, ?assault weapon? is a category of firearm that?s difficult to define. Millions of assault weapons and high-capacity magazines are already in the hands of private citizens. So how would Senator Feinstein?s new restrictions work?

Skip to next paragraph Peter Grier

Washington Editor

Peter Grier is The Christian Science Monitor's Washington editor. In this capacity, he helps direct coverage for the paper on most news events in the nation's capital.

Recent posts

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First, a general definition: assault weapons are small-caliber, high-powered rifles, pistols, or shotguns that are styled to appear as if they belong in a military or law enforcement arsenal. They are semiautomatic, meaning that each pull of the trigger fires one bullet and then chambers the next round.

True military rifles, such as the M16A2, are automatic, capable of firing multiple bullets with one pull of the trigger. But civilian ownership of automatic weapons has been tightly controlled in the US since the 1930s.

Feinstein?s bill is not a flat ban on assault-weapon ownership. Instead, it would ban the manufacture, sale, transfer, or importation of new assault weapons, as well as all ammunition feeding devices capable of holding more than 10 rounds. The legislation grandfathers in existing weapons and high-capacity magazines in private hands as legal.

The legislation bans more than 150 firearms by name. According to the bill, these include all AR-15 types, which are civilian derivatives of the military M-16; all AK-47 types, which are derivatives of the famous Soviet assault rifle of the same name; and MAC weapons, Thompson weapons, and Uzis, among others.

Beyond that, the legislation would restrict weapons according to their characteristics. Falling into this category would be semiautomatic rifles that can accept a detachable magazine, and have at least one military-style feature from this list: pistol grip; forward grip, folding, telescoping, or detachable stock; grenade launcher or rocket launcher; barrel shroud; or threaded barrel.

Pistols and shotguns with similar features would also be covered by the legislation?s restrictions.

These restrictions are somewhat tougher than those contained in the assault weapons ban that was the law of the land from 1994 to 2004. Under that law, a weapon had to have two of the military style features, instead of one, to be categorized as an ?assault? weapon. The new bill would also ban some of the stylistic workarounds that manufacturers used to get around the previous legislation, such as thumbhole stocks, which mimic a pistol grip.

?One criticism of the ?94 law was that it was ... too easy work around. Manufacturers would simply remove one of the characteristics, and the firearm was legal. The bill we are introducing today will make it much more difficult to work around,? said Feinstein at a Thursday press conference.

However, in some ways, the bill is most different than the old not for the way it categorizes new assault weapons, but for the manner in which it treats existing assault weapons and magazines in private hands.

If a current assault weapon owner wishes to sell or otherwise transfer the firearm, for instance, the new bill requires that the transferee undergo a background check carried out either by the FBI or a state-level agency. It is difficult to see how the federal government could enforce this provision without a registry of existing assault weapons ? something gun-rights groups vehemently oppose as government intrusion on Second Amendment rights.

As for existing high-capacity ammunition feeding devices, the bill would prohibit their further sale or transfer, according to Feinstein?s summary of the legislation. That means they would remain lawful to own for those who already have them, but not to get rid of, except to destroy.

The bill would establish a safe storage requirement for grandfathered assault rifles. Feinstein has yet to specify exactly what this would entail, though in the past she has talked about wanting to require trigger locks for such weapons.

Finally, the new legislation would also allow states and localities to use certain federal funds to hold voluntary buy-back programs for grandfathered assault weapons and high-capacity magazines.

Gun owner groups said they would oppose all aspects of the proposed reinstatement of assault weapon and high-capacity magazine restrictions.

?Senator Feinstein has been trying to ban guns from law-abiding citizens for decades,? said the National Rifle Association in a statement.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/5GMJIoSe56s/Senator-Feinstein-s-assault-weapon-ban-How-would-it-work-video

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