Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Panasonic Photosynthesis System converts carbon dioxide to organic material with plant-like efficiency

Panasonic Artificial Photosynthesis System converts carbon dioxide to organic material with plantlike efficiency

Greenery may fulfill a superficial need to improve the landscape aesthetic, but plants play a much more critical role in regular life function, converting carbon dioxide to oxygen through a process called photosynthesis. Panasonic is among the companies attempting to replicate this natural procedure through artificial means, and it looks like the Japanese electronics maker is well on its way towards a viable solution. Presenting at the International Conference on the Conversion and Storage of Solar Energy this week, Panasonic announced the development of an Artificial Photosynthesis System, which uses a nitride semiconductor to convert water and carbon dioxide -- a byproduct of factories and power plants -- into an organic material called formic acid, which is used in the manufacturing of dyes and fragrances. Covering the planet in formic acid wouldn't necessarily represent progress, but assuming demand isn't exceeded, it certainly beats CO2. Best yet, Panasonic claims that the system converts the substances at plant-like efficiency rates, or 0.2 percent. Hit up the PR after the break for a more granular look at the company's creation.

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Getting travel insurance for your motorcycle tour - InsureMyTrip Blog

August brings the annual Sturgis Motorcycle Rally, an event which has been attracting tourism to the Black Hills of South Dakota as hordes of bike enthusiasts descend upon the location for a week of fun and festivities.? As famous as Sturgis has become, it?s not the only convergence of travel and tourism with motorcycles; our call center is accustomed to hearing from motorcycle fans who are planning to see the world from the seats of their bikes.? Travel insurance for motorcycle tours is certainly available, but as with any travel insurance purchase, it?s important to do some homework before you make a decision about which type of coverage will be best for you.

If you?re planning a motorcycle tour, whether in the continental U.S. or abroad, you may be chiefly concerned about three things: Cancellation of your trip (and the subsequent loss of any pre-paid, norefundable expenses you might have racked up securing the tour); injury; and damage or loss of property.? Travel insurance can address some, but not all of those concerns, and coverage for you will vary depending on your individual circumstances, the specifics of your trip, and the travel insurance plan and provider you ultimately choose.? Also, keep in mind that, as with many other sports and activities, if you?re engaged in a motorcycle activity as a professional, travel insurance will most likely not be available for that portion of your trip.

Cancellation of your tour. A travel insurance package policy works the same way for cyclists as it does for the average traveler.? If you have to back out of your planned trip for a covered reason ? such as unexpected illness or injury before you depart ? most package policies will likely reimburse you for your pre-paid, nonrefundable expenses.? That means any deposits you?ve paid for airfare, to secure your spot in a tour group,? to reserve lodgings, or to participate in any special activities that require advance reservations and payment should be covered by your travel insurance policy. If your tour is cancelled by the operator, while they will likely be responsible for returning any money you?ve provided to them for the experience, a package policy should also assist you by reimbursing you for any other nonrefundable expenses you?ve incurred for additional trip preparations.

Injury. Motorcycle riding is not considered by most travel insurance providers to be an especially hazardous activity, no matter what your mom might say.? If you have purchased a travel insurance package policy to cover your trip, it will most often include coverage for any injuries you might suffer as a result of your motorcycle tour.? We know it?s unlikely that you?ll get hurt ? but isn?t it nice to know that you can purchase a travel insurance plan that will cover you if you do?

Loss or damage to property. If your motorcycle is damaged while you?re on the road,? it?s not likely that a travel insurance policy will cover the damages.? That?s generally the responsibility of the company that insures your motorcycle on a regular basis.? However, we would recommend getting in touch with that insurance company to make sure that your bike will be covered as you expect no matter where you are in the world.

Sports and Hazardous Activity Riders. If you?re purchasing a travel medical plan, rather than a standard package policy, you should definitely ask a Customer Care representative about adding a sports rider to your insurance purchase.? Travel Medical insurance sometimes works slightly differently from package policies, and it?s common for companies providing travel medical plans to require that a special rider be purchased to insure you against any possible injuries you might sustain while on your trip.

Taking your motorcycle on vacation with you may sound like the perfect way to relax and see the world, but it?s a good idea to be prepared.? Before you make a travel insurance purchase, we recommend that you call our Customer Care Center at 800-487-4722 and speak to a licensed representative who can make sure that you get all the important travel insurance benefits you and your bike may need.

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activities, Before You Buy, coverage, customer care, medical, motorcycle, property damage, sports, sturgis, tours, travel, Travel Insurance, travel medical

Source: http://www.insuremytrip.com/blog/2012/07/30/getting-travel-insurance-for-your-motorcycle-tour.html

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Rochester gets $207K for criminal justice initiatives (Rochester Democrat and Chronicle)

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Monday, July 30, 2012

Colorado theater gunman charged with 24 counts of murder

[Updated at 1:00 p.m. ET]

Prosecutors on Monday charged James Holmes with two dozen counts of first-degree murder and more than 100 other violent offenses related to the recent deadly rampage at a Colorado movie theater.

Holmes, who appeared in court with the same cartoonish orange-red hair he had at the time of the shooting, said only one word during Monday's hearing.

"Yes," he answered when asked by the judge if he agreed to waive his right to a preliminary hearing in the next 35 days.

Police say Holmes, 24, blasted his way through a packed movie house during a premiere showing of Batman "The Dark Knight Rises" in Aurora.

Twelve victims died in the attack, 58 others were wounded. The melee is among the worst mass shootings in modern-day American history. Prosecutors filed a total of 142 criminal charges against him, including 116 counts of attempted murder. The 24 murder charges reflect dual charges (premeditated and without remorse) by the prosecutors.

During Monday's hearing, Judge William Sylvester carefully explained to Holmes that the charges carry a minimum sentence of life in prison and a maximum of death. The district attorney near Denver has not announced if she will seek the death penalty against the alleged gunman.

Holmes was clad in tactical gear and possessed four guns and a stockpile of ammo when he surrendered to officers behind the cinema shortly after the July 20 shooting spree. He did not resist arrest, but investigators have since described the former neuroscience doctoral student as uncooperative.

[RELATED: Suspect's former neighbors moving]

Police say Holmes legally purchased the guns in May and June, but allegedly began stockpiling ammo and other gear four months ago.

"This is not a whodunit. ... The only possible defense is insanity," Craig Silverman, a former chief deputy district attorney in Denver, told the Associated Press.

At Monday's hearing, attorneys are also expected to argue a defense motion to find out who leaked information to the news media about a package the former grad student allegedly sent to his psychiatrist at the University of Colorado Denver.

Authorities seized the package July 23, three days after the shooting, after finding it in the mail room of the medical campus where Holmes studied. Several media outlets reported that it contained a notebook with descriptions of an attack, but Arapahoe County District Attorney Carol Chambers said in court papers that the parcel hadn't been opened by the time the "inaccurate" news reports appeared.

On Friday, court papers revealed that Holmes was seeing a psychiatrist at the university. But they did not say how long he was seeing Dr. Lynne Fenton and if it was for a mental illness or another problem.

The University of Colorado's website identified Fenton as the medical director of the school's Student Mental Health Services. An online resume listed schizophrenia as one of her research interests and stated that she sees 10 to 15 graduate students a week for medication and psychotherapy, as well as 5 to 10 patients in her general practice as a psychiatrist, the Associated Press reported.

Under Colorado law, defendants are not legally liable for their acts if their minds are so "diseased" that they cannot distinguish between right and wrong. However, the law warns that "care should be taken not to confuse such mental disease or defect with moral obliquity, mental depravity, or passion growing out of anger, revenge, hatred, or other motives, and kindred evil conditions."

[RELATED: Should the movie theater reopen?]

Experts say there are two levels of insanity defenses. Holmes' public defenders could argue he is not mentally competent to stand trial, like Jared Loughner, who killed six people when he shot Arizona Rep. Gabrielle Giffords in Tucson in 2011. Loughner has pleaded not guilty to charges in the shooting. He has been diagnosed with schizophrenia and is undergoing treatment at a Missouri prison facility in a bid to make him mentally fit to stand trial.

If Holmes' attorneys cannot convince the court that he is mentally incompetent, and he is convicted, they can try to stave off a possible death penalty by arguing he is mentally ill.

Sam Kamin, a law professor at the University of Denver, said there is "pronounced" evidence that the attack was premeditated, which would seem to make an insanity defense difficult. "But," he told the Associated Press, "the things that we don't know are what this case is going to hinge on, and that's his mental state."

(The Associated Press and Yahoo! staffer Tim Skillern in Centennial, Colo., contributed to this report.)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/formal-charges-expected-today-suspected-colorado-movie-theater-101958196.html

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London Olympics: NBC gets reporter who criticized its coverage suspended from Twitter

Is NBC censoring a reporter that ridiculed its Olympics coverage? It sure seems that way. Guy Adams, The Independent's Los Angeles bureau chief, has been suspended from Twitter after NBC complained about him, Deadspin reported.

In the offending tweet, Adams criticizes NBC for getting exclusive rights to broadcast the Olympics in the US, only to then shut American viewers out from seeing the opening ceremony live: "The man responsible for NBC pretending the Olympics haven't started yet is Gary Zenkel. Tell him what u think! Email: Gary.zenkel@nbcuni.com," he wrote.

According to NBC, they only complained because Adams had published Zenkel's email address:?"We filed a complaint with Twitter because a user tweeted the personal information of one of our executives. According to Twitter, this is a violation of their privacy policy," an NBC spokesperson?told the Guardian.?

More from GlobalPost:?When the BRICs crumble

But NBC's allegation doesn't add-up. Since the email address ends with "@nbcuni.com," it appears to be a professional account, not a private one."I didn't publish a private email address. Just a corporate one, which is widely available to anyone with access to Google, and is identical [in form] to one that all of the tens of thousands of NBC Universal employees share," Adams wrote to Rachel Bremer, Twitter's head of European PR.?

Adams' theory is that NBC was actually just annoyed with his constant criticism of its coverage. "I have 1000 channels on my TV. Not one will be showing the Olympics opening ceremony live. Because NBC are utter, utter bastards," reads one tweet posted by The Independent. He also corrected some of NBC commentator Matt Lauer's geography and history knowledge.?

As the Guardian noted, Twitter may not be the most biased source to judge Adams' tweets, since it has struck a deal with NBCUniversal to be "the official narrator" of the games.?

"Matt Lauer would do well to shut up, wouldn't he?," Adams complained on Twitter. On that point, he's not alone.?

http://www.globalpost.com/dispatches/globalpost-blogs/world-at-play/london-olympics-nbc-gets-reporter-who-criticized-its-coverage

Source: http://www.globalpost.com/dispatches/globalpost-blogs/world-at-play/london-olympics-nbc-gets-reporter-who-criticized-its-coverage

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Family: Mom wounded in Aurora suffers miscarriage

Courtesy the family via KUSA

Veronica Moser-Sullivan, 6, was the youngest victim of the rampage.

By Gil Aegerter, NBC News

A woman who was shot in the Aurora, Colo., theater shooting rampage has suffered a miscarriage, her family said.

Ashley Moser, the?mother of the youngest victim killed in the shooting, was pregnant and was shot in the neck and stomach during the attack July 20. The family said the trauma that Moser sustained caused a miscarriage and that she underwent more surgery on Saturday morning.?

Moser, 25, is being treated at Aurora Medical Center.?


The family released the following statement:

Ashley Moser is recovering from an additional surgery she had this morning. Tragically, the extreme trauma she sustained also caused a miscarriage.

We want to send a special thank you to the courageous heroes of law enforcement, other first responders, paramedics, and doctors and nurses who have all gone beyond the call-of-duty in caring for our daughter, granddaughter and all of the other victims of this tragic event.

Our sincere appreciation goes out to all of those who have been sending well-wishes, prayers and good thoughts to Ashley. Her lifetime of care will be a long road. For those who wish to donate, please go to any Wells Fargo Bank and request the "Donation Account for Ashley and Veronica Moser". This is the only official donation account for the family.

Funeral arrangements for Moser's daughter, Veronica Moser-Sullivan, 6, are still pending.

Until recently, Moser and her daughter had lived with Moser's father -- Veronica's grandfather -- David Moser. But two months ago, David Moser, 65, died after a 10-month battle with leukemia.

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James Holmes, a 24-year-old former doctoral student studying neuroscience, is accused of opening fire in the theater, killing Veronica and 11 others, and wounding 58. He is due to be formally charged Monday in Colorado.?

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Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/07/28/13013173-wounded-mom-of-youngest-aurora-victim-suffers-miscarriage-family-says?lite

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Sunday, July 29, 2012

Michelle Obama Cheers on US Men's Basketball Team in London

Posted Sunday July 29, 2012 2:40 PM GMT

On hand to support the boys, Michelle Obama was spotted at the US Men's Olympics basketball tournament in London, England on Sunday (July 29).

Kevin Durant scored 22 points in his Olympic debut, Kevin Love added 14 and LeBron James had eight assists as the team overcame some sketchy moments with a 98-71 win over France.

"We know everybody else expects us to win by 40 points," said team member Carmelo Anthony. "For us, a win's a win. We expect every game to be like this one."

Team USA got a surprising congratulations from the First Lady as she passed out personal hugs to each player from her seat on the sidelines and also took time out to visit the US Olympic Training Facility where she met with America's finest athletes.

The White House proudly posted a picture of the moment on its Twitter page with a caption reading, ?Go #TeamUSA! The First Lady has her picture taken with athletes at the US Olympic Training Facility in London.?

Enjoy the pictures of First Lady Michelle Obama cheering on the USA Men's Basketball as they defeated France in London (July 29).

Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/michelle-obama/michelle-obama-cheers-us-mens-basketball-team-london-701488

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Romanians vote on whether to impeach president

(AP) ? Romania is holding a referendum on impeaching President Traian Basescu, part of a political battle that has raised questions about the rule of law in the fledgling EU member.

Basescu's rivals are seeking to impeach him for the second time in five years. They claim the 60-year-old populist violated the constitution by meddling in government business, coddling cronies and using the secret services against enemies.

Basescu says the impeachment process is a political vendetta carried out by opponents plotting to seize control of EU funds and the justice system. He has urged supporters to boycott Sunday's vote in order to nullify it by a low turnout.

The political turmoil has dented Romania's credibility, with the U.S. and the EU expressing doubts about the left-leaning government's respect for the judiciary's independence.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-07-29-EU-Romania-President-Referendum/id-3ead4000e9f34b1f8c2c10e506361154

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Rare Diseases: 5 Recent Reasons to Cheer

On Sunday morning, July 21, I faced a room of people from families with Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA), an inherited blindness caused by mutations in any of at least 18 genes. It was the final session of the Foundation for Retinal Research?s bi-annual LCA family conference, and I was there to discuss the history of gene therapy. But I zapped through that quickly, because the future is much more intriguing.

Exome sequencing identified the rare mutation that causes Gavin Stevens? hereditary blindness (Leber congenital amaurosis, or LCA). (Troy Stevens)

Exome sequencing identified the rare mutation that causes Gavin Stevens? hereditary blindness (Leber congenital amaurosis, or LCA). (Troy Stevens)

The excitement pervading the room that was palpable, following a day of scientific updates, and not only because those with young children were soon to visit Sesame World and the sights of Philadelphia.

Jennifer and Troy Stevens exemplified that hope. Two years earlier, at this conference, they?d learned that researchers had been unable to identify a mutation behind their toddler Gavin?s blindness. Now they know the name of their gene: NMNAT1. I?ll return to their story.

The star of the 2010 conference had been 10-year-old Corey Haas and an energetic young sheepdog, both cured of LCA with gene therapy. This weekend, the stars were the new programs and technologies that would allow other families to join Corey?s ? and not just those with blindness.

The rare disease community in the US collectively belies its name: at least 30 million people suffer from 7,000+ diseases, many so rare that they hover beneath the radar of big pharma. But maybe not for long, thanks to the following recent reasons to cheer:

#1: GENE THERAPY PENDING APPROVAL

On July 20, the European Medicines Agency (EMA) announced impending first approval of a gene therapy in the western world.

It?s for lipoprotein lipase deficiency (LPLD). The enzyme normally breaks down tiny triglyceride-packed globules called chylomicrons, and its absence causes episodes of very painful pancreatitis that can be fatal. LPLD is an ultra-rare disease, striking 1-2 people per million. And the only treatment is a diet so low in fat that most patients can?t stick to it.

The gene therapy, Glybera, consists of adeno-associated virus type 1 delivering an overactive variant of the LPL gene, injected into a leg muscle during a single day. But not many people have had it.

James Wilson, MD, PhD, developed the vector, AAV1, used in the lipoprotein lipase deficiency gene therapy. (University of Pennsylvania).

James Wilson, MD, PhD, developed the vector, AAV1, used in the lipoprotein lipase deficiency gene therapy. (University of Pennsylvania).

The research team, led by Daniel Gaudet, MD, PhD, a professor of medicine at the University of Montreal, with colleagues from Amsterdam Molecular Therapeutics (recently replaced by privately-held UniQure), reported a two-year follow-up of 14 adult patients receiving 100 billion to 1 trillion viruses. And it seems to have worked, depending upon how one assesses success.

?The triglycerides dropped, but after 60 days they trended back up. The primary endpoint had failed, but the secondary endpoint was recurring episodes of pancreatitis ? and they found a statistically significant, or close to it, decrease,? explained James Wilson, MD, PhD, editor-in-chief of Human Gene Therapy and professor of pathology and laboratory medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, who developed the vector. Tracking a few more patients, work not yet published, may have led the EMA?s Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use to finally recommend approval, after three rejections.

Tomas Salmonson, MD, acting chair of the committee, points to the new data as well as restricting use to the sickest patients in pushing the gene therapy forward. ?Our established ways of assessing the benefits and risks of Glybera were challenged by the extreme rarity of the condition and also by uncertainties associated with data provided.?

For the additional study, the researchers looked at what was happening in the chylomicrons in the blood, and found that triglyceride level can fluctuate, contrary to assumptions of steady change. And that means something is happening that might explain the decrease in the painful episodes ? a very real measurement. Summed up Jean Bennett, MD, PhD, leader of one of the LCA2 clinical trials at Penn, ?It?s a huge vote of confidence for the entire field of gene transfer.?

Dr. Wilson agrees. The repercussions won?t be at the FDA, where scientists make decisions based on data, he said, but on the willingness of big pharma to invest in gene therapy. Despite recent successes ? LCA2, hemophilia, adrenoleukodystrophy ? the pharmaceutical industry has been hesitant to fund gene therapy because it has lacked an approval. ?So-called regulatory uncertainty has been the biggest problem, and if there?s no precedent, they can continue to say no. Biopharma is not interested in the ultra orphans. But I have a feeling we?ll be seeing some activity,? he added.

#2: FINDING HOMES FOR STALLED DRUGS

By August 14, researchers can submit pre-applications to the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS) Discovering New Therapeutic Uses for Existing Molecules program. The idea is simple yet brilliant: match compounds that are languishing on company shelves to diseases with newly-discovered mechanisms. Such candidate drugs have passed initial safety tests but were dropped for business reasons, such as a tiny market, or because they didn?t treat what they were intended to.

Corey Haas and Hannah Sames are ambassadors for the rare disease community, here signing their photos in ?The Forever Fix: Gene Therapy and the Boy Who Saved It.? Corey has LCA2, successfully treated with gene therapy, and Hannah, awaiting hers, is one of 54 people in the world who has giant axonal neuropathy. (Sandy Andersen)

Corey Haas and Hannah Sames are ambassadors for the rare disease community, here signing their photos in ?The Forever Fix: Gene Therapy and the Boy Who Saved It.? Corey has LCA2, successfully treated with gene therapy, and Hannah, awaiting hers, is one of 54 people in the world who has giant axonal neuropathy. (Sandy Andersen)

Since the announcement in June, eight industry leaders have signed on, offering an initial 58 compounds to find new therapeutic homes. And the need is compelling: of the 4,500+ diseases with recently-revealed mechanisms, only about 250 have treatments. ?If researchers funded through this effort can demonstrate new uses for the compounds, they could significantly reduce the amount of time it takes to get a treatment to patients in need,? said Kathy L. Hudson, PhD, NCATS acting deputy director.

Everyone wins.

#3: SPEEDING FDA APPROVAL

On July 9, President Obama signed into law the FDA Safety and Innovation Act, which updates the 1983 Orphan Drug Act. The new law provides $6 billion over the next 5 years to assist the agency in evaluating new drugs and medical devices. The Act will speed access to new treatments and development of especially promising ones, and the Humanitarian Use Devices program will target those that treat rare diseases, giving priority to diseases of children. ?Treatments are desperately needed because most are serious, many are life-threatening, and about two-thirds of the patients are children,? said Peter L. Saltonstall, president and CEO of the National Organization for Rare Disorders (NORD), which was critical in developing both acts.

The Act may be a lifesaver for people such as 8-year-old Hannah Sames, one of 54 people in the world known to have giant axonal neuropathy. The gene therapy trial that she will take part in is nearing phase 1, but the sponsoring not-for-profit, Hannah?s Hope Fund, is about to run out of money.

#4: EASING INSURANCE ACCESS

When the Supreme Court upheld the Affordable Care Act on June 28, I scrolled through the relieved statements from various rare disease organizations. Thanks to the ACA, children like Hannah Sames and Gavin Stevens will not be penalized for their pre-existing conditions, nor face annual or lifetime insurance caps.

#5: IDENTIFYING DISEASE GENES

Exome sequencing can identify mutations when single-gene tests don?t. The strategy sequences the protein-encoding part of the human genome in individuals, usually young children, whose syndrome has evaded recognition, searching for mutations passed silently from parents, with functions that could explain the symptoms. Once that?s known, researchers can develop new treatments, or repurpose existing ones.

New exome-derived discoveries are being reported nearly weekly, some appearing in the media before the technical papers are published. A recent news release about a 4-year-old named Maya with a neurological disease, for example, made its way into many news reports and blogs, with a touching story and accolades. Yet none named the gene or its precise function ? the part I?m most interested in.

In contrast to the incomplete Maya story, when John Chiang, PhD, director of the Molecular Diagnostics Laboratory at the Casey Eye Institute in Portland, Oregon told me he?d discovered Gavin Stevens? mutation among nearly 2,500 gene variants in the blind boy?s exome, he asked that I not report it. That was 8 months ago ? the mutation is unveiled in a quartet of papers in the current Nature Genetics, after something of a turf war among four research groups.

Gavin?s parents had heard about Dr. Chiang at the Foundation for Retinal Research meeting two years ago, where Jennifer had called him, distraught, after learning that single-gene tests couldn?t explain their son?s blindness. Dr. Chiang, who described his skill as ?I do the dirty work, I find the mutations,? had helped several families after existing tests had fruitlessly, but expensively, probed the most common parts of only the most common genes. Dr. Chiang had first developed larger gene testing panels, and when those still didn?t identify some families? mutations, quietly sent their DNA off to the Beijing Genome Institute for whole exome sequencing.

Now that exome sequencing is commercially available in the U.S., Dr. Chiang cautions that it still doesn?t help all families, and that costs can greatly exceed the oft-mentioned $1,000 pricetag when considering analysis. ?I would only recommend it as the last resort when all known genes are ruled out,? he advised.

CODA

Karen Poulakos has Leber congenital amaurosis, and does quite well in her world of shadows. Gene therapy may return the vision that she remembers from her childhood. (Ricki Lewis)

Karen Poulakos has Leber congenital amaurosis, and does quite well in her world of shadows. Gene therapy may return the vision that she remembers from her childhood. (Ricki Lewis)

On Saturday at the retinal research conference last weekend, I watched Jennifer and Troy beam as Eric Pierce, MD, PhD, director of the Ocular Genomics Institute in Boston and co-author of one of the Nature Genetics papers, talked about their mutation. Discovery of the gene, which affects cellular energy (NAD synthesis), is a starting point for gene therapy, and this particular candidate is a great target. ?The gene is small, and encodes an enzyme,? said Dr. Pierce.

The next day, as my talk about the history of gene therapy wound down, I took stock of my audience. Two young women with canes sat in the front row. A few rows back sat Karen Poulakos, also with a cane, whom I?d chatted with earlier.

Karen has Corey?s disease, LCA2, but, at age 63, had been deemed too old for the gene therapy clinical trial two years ago. But things had changed, she?d learned at the meeting, and she just might be eligible for the phase 3 trial coming up. Karen has lived a full life in her world of shadows, barely remembering when she could see better, and she?s now contemplating what it might be like to see again.

As I collected my things, I marveled at the hope radiating from the faces in the room, sighted as well as not. And I thought that this is science at its very best. This is what it is all about, the molecules, the mice, the deciphering of nature?s mechanisms: helping people.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=eaea537b8f67ae32fe8b5a6982030cc1

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Saturday, July 28, 2012

Danish mission to amass data for North Pole claim

COPENHAGEN | Fri Jul 27, 2012 12:12pm EDT

COPENHAGEN (Reuters) - Denmark will dispatch a scientific expedition to the Arctic Ocean at the end of the month to gather data before it submits a formal claim to a vast tract north of Greenland that includes the North Pole.

Such a claim would be made under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), setting up a possible clash of interests with fellow Arctic coastal states Russia and Canada that are making their own claims.

"We need the data that we plan to acquire on this cruise," said Christian Marcussen, the expedition's chief scientist from the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland. "But ... we are quite confident that we will be able to make a submission."

Denmark admits it is interested in staking a claim to a part of the planet believed to be rich in untapped oil and gas, but rules out a unilateral "land grab" or being drawn into confrontation over competing claims.

"I reject the confrontation scenarios that have been presented in the media and academic circles," Klaus Holm, Denmark's Arctic ambassador, said.

"If there is any area where every party has an interest in cooperating, it is the Arctic. The challenge is so huge and the areas are so vast."

The expedition will sail from Svalbard off northern Norway on July 31 aboard the Swedish icebreaker "Oden" and will gather seismic and depth data to substantiate a future possible claim, for which the deadline for Denmark is November 2014.

DANISH FLAG AT POLE?

Denmark has identified five potential claim areas off the Faroe Islands and Greenland - both parts of the Kingdom of Denmark.

Copenhagen has already submitted claims for areas north and south of the Faroes and for two areas south of Greenland to the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf (CLCS) which assesses the scientific validity of such claims.

Any dispute would, however, need to be resolved through negotiations between states, and not by the CLCS.

The other area Denmark has identified - likely to be the most sensitive part of any future claim - is roughly 150,000 square kilometers (58,000 sq miles) extending north from Greenland and including the North Pole.

For that claim to be credible, much depends on whether the expedition is able to gather data to prove that the Lomonosov Ridge, an underwater formation spanning 1,800 kilometers (1,118 miles) across the pole, is an extension of Greenland's land mass.

Russian scientists claim that the ridge is an extension of Russia's land mass, but that does not exclude that it could also be an extension of Greenland and Canada, Marcussen said.

Under the U.N. convention, a country can extend its 200- nautical-mile economic zone if it can prove that the continental shelf is a natural extension of its land mass.

Russia caused controversy in 2007 when a mini-submarine took the Russian flag to the seabed at the North Pole, sparking accusations of imperialism.

Marcussen said he didn't rule out stopping at the pole to plant a Danish flag on the ice, as his team did in 2009, if it happened to be on the icebreaker's route.

But he said that was not the goal of the 45-day expedition and that any flag would be removed after such a ceremony.

(Editing by Andrew Osborn)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/scienceNews/~3/XCBd2M1u-fQ/us-denmark-greenland-northpole-idUSBRE86Q10O20120727

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Top Self Improvement Tips To Propel You Forward

Improving your life through personal development can make you feel more confident and capable. Meeting your goals in life takes patience and hard work. There is no better time to start the rest of life than now, but you need some ideas. Read on for some such ideas to help you on your way.

Begin a special savings for emergencies. It appears as though every time something unexpected happens, we charge more to our credit cards. If you take a few dollars and put them into an emergency fund every week, you will build a nice amount of money to use whenever something unexpected arises. This fund will help you stay out of debt if you have to face an emergency.

Work more efficiently to get the most out of your effort. This trick involves taking more breaks when working. Although this seems counterproductive, taking regular breaks is good because it gives you the chance to recharge your mind, so when you resume work, you?ll be able to get more done.

No matter what, you must adhere to one rule. You need to participate in life and not watch from the sidelines. Watching life go by, without participating, cuts you off from the world, and humans were meant to get out there and live life.

Stay in top physical condition to maximize your personal development success. Getting enough sleep, having a healthy diet, and exercising regularly are simple activities that keep energy high, and it gives you a better chance at being successful with your personal development. While it may sound simple, this is sometimes one of the most difficult things to do.

Determine the things that you value so that you can better come up with an excellent personal development strategy for your needs. Working against these values will lead to frustration and failure. Spend your time on things that are in line with your values. Doing this will help you make changes throughout your life that can benefit you.

Is it hard for you to meet that special someone? Have you considered online dating? Surprisingly, forty percent of today?s couples met online. You may find one that is looking for someone like you. Each has its good and bad points.

Select one important part of yourself that you would like to improve, and focus on that. There are probably many things that you are wanting to change, but focusing on one will make success more likely. This also helps ensure long-term change in your personality, as it will be easier for you to maintain new habits if they are introduced slowly.

Read books that promote your sense of well-being. Some people find strength through religious text, others, within inspirational quotes. These materials are a good source of support during stressful situations.

These tips are here to help you plan successful projects on the path of personal development. Although this can be hard work, you?ll be able to work with peace of mind by knowing you now have excellent advice that can assist you.

Source: http://independent-solution.net/top-self-improvement-tips-to-propel-you-forward/

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Helpful Advice For Planning A Trip Without Any Hitches ...

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Source: http://articlereference.net/travel-leisure/helpful-advice-for-planning-a-trip-without-any-hitches.html

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Friday, July 27, 2012

Change Management: The hammer and `tongues' approach ...

Sandeep RaizadaMost change programs in an organization start with a bang. Direction is identified; execution plans are chalked out, followed by next steps including the decision on who will run this program. There is an articulation of the change for the company in its market positioning?beat the competition or recover lost ground. Most programs have a board backing and a buy in from key stakeholders prior to rolling them out. The reason for such programs is best defined by what Jack Welch said ?Change before you have to?. Yet, quoting a research from John P Kotter, only 30 per cent of the change programs succeed. So is this proving Woodrow Wilson right when he said ?If you want to make enemies, try to change something??

Does the high failure rate mean that the right questions were not answered before the program started? Was there a derailment or a lack of focus? Should change programs be abandoned? Certainly not. I am with Jack Welch on this one.

Change management in an organization has a programmatic life cycle. My view of a Hammer and Tongues approach to change management is about bringing focus to the business priorities right at the beginning. The priorities need to be hammered down to provide a clear focus for the program and the execution plan. The entire program including the execution plan should be driven by the set of people who seek the change. The people part, which is the most critical element of the plan, is normally addressed through activities like communication, collaboration and training. However, is this adequate considering that people are the most complex part of the change management jigsaw puzzle?

While a change program is supported by technological changes, new ways of working or new processes, it is important for us to understand that all these are run by people. The aspect of increasing sales and reducing costs are business realities; but these normally send out a fear signal to the human pre-frontal cortex. The Neurological Roots of Resistance to Change by Schwartz and Rock speaks of the resistance to change as an initial human reaction due to change in state (future not being the same as current). Are we addressing this in change programs?

The Tongues part of the approach addresses the people aspect including planning and communication with a regular feedback mechanism. People going through this journey need a plan that provides them regular updates on their individual status. At times changes lead to loss of control, thereby leading to uncertainties and increased stress levels resulting in more disengaged employees. Alternatively, having employees understand their ?future state? brings down stress levels and gets them involved in the program. The feedback loop should provide the ?outlet for emotions?. Without such mechanisms, high stress levels may have some people acting strangely, potentially undermining teamwork.

There are new KPIs defining new performance measures but does there exist a ?do not do list?? Such a checklist helps the executives running the change program understand that it is not merely more things to do, but also the things that we stop doing in lieu of new ways of working. Another important aspect of a successful change program involves letting people know what we ?preserve from the past?. Not defining what we preserve from the past implies rubbishing the past, as this is bound to make employees uncomfortable.

As academician and management thinker Peter Senge points out, people don?t resist change. Instead, they resist being changed! The hammer and tongues approach enables people to understand and adapt to change while dramatically increasing the chances of a change management program?s success.

I am very keen on hearing from you on how you have setup your standalone plans that target the people aspect and your experiences with implementing and tracking this feedback loop.

Sandeep Raizada is a senior management professional who has held key positions in leading global and Indian companies including HP, Asea Brown Boveri and Siemens. He is currently the Global Application Enhancement Manager with Logica

Source: http://www.cxotoday.com/story/change-management-the-hammer-and-tongues-approach/

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Some in Charlotte Lowering Expectations Ahead of DNC

CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- The city's been abuzz the past few days. Emmy-nominated actress Ashley Judd was in Charlotte on Sunday stumping in various locations for Obama, saying, "I love my president." She is a delegate from Tennessee and will be back for the Democratic National Convention in early September.

Good thing Judd's not running for office, though, as Nancy Pelosi recently suggested that missing the DNC this year wouldn't be a big deal: "I'm not encouraging anyone to go to the convention," she said.

Instead, she wants those running for office to stay home and use their resources to get re-elected. Anthony Foxx, Charlotte's Democratic mayor, certainly looking to boost the economy in the city he heads, said he wasn't concerned with delegates staying home to campaign for themselves as "tens of thousands of Americans will be here?and we will put on a great event."

Rumors that DNC organizers are still struggling to raise the funds needed for the convention dog the Democrats. When questioned, Mayor Foxx sidestepped the answer, finally saying the fundraising is "right on track."

Local restaurants are wondering if the organizers really are on track for funding. "I was going to have everything done by now, staffed and planned," said Jill Marcus of Halcyon and Something Classic catering said. "There are still people coming in here and looking at china, and when you ask their budget, they say they don't have sponsors yet."

I have spoken with two restaurant managers (both requested anonymity) who say they have set their sights much lower for the DNC then first planned.

"Nothing seems to be firm as this point," said one.

Meanwhile, South Park Mall, the Queen City's premier shopping center, unceremoniously dumped massive amounts of water on unsuspecting shoppers during a rain storm last Friday. The mall's roof collapsed in two places, with debris filled water rushing past fleeing shoppers and employees. The mall closed immediately (partially reopening this week) with engineers surveying the damaged roof. Blame has not yet been assessed. Hopefully, the roof collapse wasn't the result of a design flaw and the soon to be here delegates will be able to shop without worry.

Charlotte Bachelorette Emily Maynard has been in the news for months while she's been wined and dined in her national search for a husband. Sunday night was the television finale with Maynard selecting the man of her dreams, Jef Holm, and accepting an engagement ring from him. Inquiring minds will be happy to know that Holm, from Utah, is living in Charlotte while he and Maynard contemplate their next step.

Stay tuned for more fun facts from Charlotte.

Karen D. Scioscia writes for the Charlotte Observer in North Carolina.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/charlotte-lowering-expectations-ahead-dnc-214700932.html

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EQ Computer Services Round Rock, Texas

We created EQ Computer Services to offer a new standard of residential and small business computer repair and information technology support in Round Rock, and the greater North Austin area. We are locally owned and operated and proudly work to provide our customers with the highest standard of In-Home Computer Repair and Small Business Information technology consulting services. We come to your home or office and repair your computers or servers with expert skill, timeliness and affordability.

Our company offers the following services:

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Gaming console support (Xbox 360, PS3, Wii, etc!)

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Source: http://www.discoverroundrock.com/eq-computer-services/

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Thursday, July 26, 2012

Tiki Taka Barcelona analysis | Travel and Leisure

Jul 12

25

Posted by admin on 2012/07/25
Posted in Leisure Video? | Tagged With: analysis, Barcelona, Taka, Tiki | 49 Comments

COPYRIGHT STATEMENT: This video is property of FC Barcelona, Mediapro, RTVE, Sky Sports, AL Jazeera, LaSexta FIFA and UEFA. This video is not being used to make money in any way and is for entertainment and leisure purposes only. This is an act of fair usage as described by the Copyright Offices, therefore, a dispute should not occur over this video. Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for ?fair use? for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use
Video Rating: 4 / 5

COPYRIGHT STATEMENT This video is property of Warner Bros. This video is not being used to make money in any way and is for entertainment and leisure purposes only. This is an act of fair usage as described by the US Copyright Office, therefore, a dispute should not occur over this video.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Source: http://www.easterna.com/2012/07/tiki-taka-barcelona-analysis/

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Teen fleeing cop dies after plunge near Niagara Falls

An 18-year-old who was running from police died after he jumped over a wall at Niagara Gorge in Canada. NBCNews.com's Alex Witt reports.

By NBC News and wire reports

Updated at 1:01 p.m. ET: A teenager was killed when he leaped over a waist-high wall to evade a pursuing police officer, only for both to?plunge more than 30 yards into?Niagara Gorge.

Ryan Dube, 18, was killed and the officer with the Niagara Regional Police Service suffered a broken leg in the incident at about 5 p.m. on Tuesday, authorities said.


During the chase, both of them mistakenly hopped a retaining wall and Dube fell to his death, they said.

His body was found about three hours later after a massive rescue effort that focused on Niagara Gorge less than a mile downstream from the famed falls, authorities said.

'The kid went off the ledge'
Dube fled from the officer who stopped him for questioning regarding violations of his curfew that was a condition of his probation, said JoAnne Turner, director of the Boys and Girls Club of Niagara, Canada.

"Apparently in an effort to flee the police officer, he went over and the police officer went right after him," she said.

Full international coverage on NBCNews.com

Witnesses told news outlets they saw the police officer jump out of his vehicle to pursue the young man on foot.

"The kid went off the ledge, and the cop went with him," the?Canadian Broadcasting Corp.?quoted?witness Logan Tremblay as saying.

"I ran over the ledge to see if I could grab the cop or if the cop was still on the ledge, and as I looked, the cop was going. Like I saw part of his uniform and then it disappeared," Tremblay added.

"He was pursuing the suspect but for some reason, and this is probably strange to most people around here, is why the officer would have jumped over the wall too knowing how dangerous it is there. It?s kind of a mystery,"?local resident Ermanno Ceniccola told Toronto's National Post newspaper.

According to Canadian law enforcement officials, the officer suffered a broken leg and was airlifted to a nearby trauma center.

The Toronto Star said Niagara police identified the officer as Const. Jacob Smits.?The National Post said Smits remained hospitalized in serious condition.

"It's a very treacherous little stretch," Turner said, recalling incidents in which tourists straddle the wall for a better view of the falls before realizing the danger.

From?May:?Man becomes third to survive plunge at Niagara Falls

An independent investigation into the police's role in the incident will be conducted by Ontario's Special Investigations Unit, which was contacted by local police following the death in accordance with provincial law.

Dube was originally from??St. Catharines, Ontario, local reports said.

Father: He was trying to turn his life around
Turner said Dube had been staying at a local youth home, where staff said he had no behavioral trouble other than occasionally missing curfew.

"He was very well-liked by staff and residents," she said. "He was making good progress."

She said she did not know why Dube was on probation.

"It's just tragic," she said. "There's no other word to describe it."

Dube's father, Jean Paul Dube, told the Star that his son had been troubled and was in and out of jail, but was trying to turn his life around.

"He was making some good changes until this happened," he told the newspaper.

Reuters contributed to this report.?

More world stories from NBC News:

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Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/07/26/12962604-teen-fleeing-cop-dies-after-plunge-into-niagara-gorge?lite

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Brangelina due to kick off Olympic party season

FILE - In this Sunday, Feb. 26, 2012 file photo, actress Angelina Jolie, right, and actor Brad Pitt arrive before the 84th Academy Awards, in the Hollywood section of Los Angeles. At the London Olympics, away from the track and field, Hollywood royalty such as Pitt and Jolie will be rubbing shoulders with diplomats and businessmen at the city's glitziest clubs and grandest historic buildings. (AP Photo/Amy Sancetta, File)

FILE - In this Sunday, Feb. 26, 2012 file photo, actress Angelina Jolie, right, and actor Brad Pitt arrive before the 84th Academy Awards, in the Hollywood section of Los Angeles. At the London Olympics, away from the track and field, Hollywood royalty such as Pitt and Jolie will be rubbing shoulders with diplomats and businessmen at the city's glitziest clubs and grandest historic buildings. (AP Photo/Amy Sancetta, File)

(AP) ? The Olympic athletes' parade is two days away, but the celebrity parade has already begun in London.

Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie are among the stars expected at London's Victoria & Albert Museum on Wednesday night for a charity gala honoring boxing great Muhammad Ali.

The 70-year-old boxer is expected to attend the Sports for Peace event, while other rumored guests include David Beckham.

Tickets started at 2,500 pounds ($3,900) and will raise money for the educational Muhammad Ali Center and for research into Parkinson's disease.

British newspapers are reporting that Ali, who has battled the degenerative condition for almost 30 years, will have a role in the Olympics opening ceremony on Friday.

Ali won gold at the 1960 Rome Olympics when he was known as Cassius Clay.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-07-25-Celebrities/id-7ed07cb760bf493581da94e57f9b0094

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Hal Herzog: Are Humans The Only Animal That Keep Pets?

Wild animals don't keep pets.

Oh, I can already hear the howls of objections. What about Koko's Kitten, you ask, referring to the well-known case of the American Sign Language-trained gorilla who fell in love with a kitty cat? What about Owen, the 600 pound baby hippo who became fast friends with Mzee, a 160 year old giant tortoise in a Kenyan game preserve? How about Tarra, the Asian elephant, at the Elephant Sanctuary in the hills of Tennessee, whose BFF for eight years was a dog named Bella?

You are right. There are scads of examples of long-term attachments between animals of different species. The problem is that all these cases have occurred among captive or semi-captive animals in zoos, wildlife parks, or research labs. True, there is the occasional article in primatology journals which describe instances in which wild chimpanzees "played" with small animals like hyraxes. But in each case, the relationship soon went south when the chimps killed their new pals and proceeded to toss their corpses around like rag dolls.

In his book Stumbling On Happiness, Harvard's Dan Gilbert claims that every psychologist who puts pen to paper takes a vow to someday write a sentence that begins, "The human being is the only animal that...." I was so convinced that pet-keeping did not occur in other species that I took up Gilbert's challenge by confidently writing in my book on human-animal relationships, Some We Love, Some We Hate, Some We Eat: Why It's So Hard To Think Straight About Animals, "The human being is the only animal that keeps members of other species for extended periods of time purely for enjoyment."

The Exception That Proves the Rule?

But then, just days after I sent the last copy-editing changes to my publisher, I received an e-mail from my friend James Serpell, director of the University of Pennsylvania's Center for the Interaction of Animals and Society. James, who knows that I view pet keeping as a uniquely human phenomenon, cryptically wrote, "Hal, I came across this and thought you'd be interested." Attached was an article from the American Journal of Primatology.

Arggggh. It was bad news for my only-humans-keep-pets theory. I could almost hear James chuckling. The article described a group of a dozen or so bearded capuchin monkeys who were caring for a baby marmoset, another species of monkey. One of the authors of the article was Dorothy Fragaszy, a University of Georgia primatologist who was studying the capuchins at a private nature preserve in Brazil. The article also included a series of photographs by Jeanne Shirley, a California hospital epidemiologist and a serious amateur naturalist who regularly visits the tropics to photograph the wild things. Jeanne came across the group of capuchins by accident and was astounded to see them carrying around and even giving food to the little marmoset.

The researchers found that the capuchins treated the marmoset, who they named Fortunata, just like an infant capuchin. They regularly fed the baby monkey and talked to her in capuchinese. They cradled Fortunata, carried the monkey around and let her ride on their backs during the day. And when they played with their little friend, they carefully adjusted the force of their movements so they wouldn't injure the much smaller marmoset.

Most importantly, the friendship between Fortunata and the capuchins was not just a transient hook-up. The monkeys raised the marmoset from infancy to about the age she would have been an adult. One day, however, she suddenly disappeared, and Dorothy does not know if she left the capuchin group voluntarily or was killed by a predator.

Why I Am Sticking To My Guns...

So, has this case caused me to throw in the towel and abandon the theory that humans are the only species to keep pets? I have to admit that the capuchin-marmoset relationship has caused me moments of doubt. I am not, however, ready to give up the idea for a couple of reasons. First, while the capuchins were not confined, the situation was not completely natural as they were given food every day as part of a program designed to promote ecotourism at the research site. Second, it is unclear whether this is pet-keeping or adoption. In their article, the researchers called it adoption, but in an e-mail Dorothy agreed that there is an obvious parallel between the relationship that the capuchins had with Fortunata and that I have with my cat Tilly, who I also play with, feed, and converse with in baby-talk.

Finally, Fortunata may be the exception that proves the more general rule that non-human animals don't keep pets. Capuchins are among the smartest of monkeys and have been referred to as "the New World Chimpanzee." Like chimps, they live in complex societies, use tools, eat meat, and have large brains in comparison to their body size. But, if capuchins can manage to bring a stranger into their lives and keep it as a pet for well over a year, why don't chimps?

James Serpell has defined pets as animals we live with that have no obvious function. I like this definition because it excludes "mutualistic" relationships such as seen between some ant and aphid species. I suspect that human-style pet love requires a combination anthropomorphism and learned cultural values found in only one species -- ours. Anthropomorphism enables us to empathize with non-human creatures, and cultural values give us permission to fall in love with some types of animals. (The form and frequency of pet-keeping vary tremendously between cultures. Some societies are completely devoid of pets.)

Whatever the reason, I don't know of any other animal whose members commonly form deep emotional relationships with members of other species with no apparent payoff. If you do, let me know!

Hal Herzog is professor of psychology at Western Carolina University and author of Some We Love, Some We Hate, Some We Eat: Why It's So Hard To Think Straight About Animals.

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Follow Hal Herzog on Twitter: www.twitter.com/herzoghal

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/hal-herzog/are-humans-the-only-anima_b_1692004.html

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Noisy Nookie Makes Flies Bat Food

60-Second Science60-Second Science | More Science

Frisky male flies flutter their wings, producing sounds that bats use to locate the distracted prey. Amy Kraft reports.

More 60-Second Science

How does a Venus flytrap know when to snap shut? Can it actually feel an insect?s tiny, spindly legs? And how do cherry blossoms know when to bloom? Can they...

Read More??

Here?s one way bats might get their next meal: by eavesdropping on flies having sex.

Bats eat a lot of seemingly undetectable flies. To find out how the winged mammals find the insects, researchers set up a video camera inside a cowshed that was home to a bat colony and lots of bugs.

The video showed that bats rely on their echolocation skills to detect flies at a specific time: when they?re engaged in rather noisy sex.

Flies are usually quiet in bat territory and sit on cluttered ceilings in caves where background noise masks the echoes from their movement.

But when flies are feeling frisky, males can?t help but flutter their wings, emitting a burst of click sounds that the bats pick up on. During more than one thousand sexual encounters caught in the act on video, five percent of the insects were caught in the act by bats. The research is published in the journal Current Biology. [Bj?rn M. Siemers et al, Bats eavesdrop on the sound of copulating flies]

The study shows that ignorance can be safer than carnal knowledge when predators are on the prowl.

?Amy Kraft

[The above text is a transcript of this podcast]


Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=1bd05db41179cbcffd5f069a3464a0d6

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Tuesday, July 24, 2012

30 Days In The Secret World: Oh No, Here it Comes - The MMO Gamer

I don?t like being the guy who sits around waiting for the other shoe to drop, so to speak. But from the moment that The Secret World was introduced into my conciousness, I?ve been worried. There are, of course, fans of Funcom who love the games they make, and there is nothing wrong with that. For many gamers, however, there is always a question of quality and consistency when it comes to some of their titles. For many this small shred of doubt originated with Age of Conan. With plenty of hype and excitement, AoC launced to the cheers of MMO fans. Sadly, it wasn?t long before players began to cry foul at constant bugs, performance issues, and what appeared to be an unfinished game. Your opinion may vary, and that?s fine as well. That doesn?t change the fact that a Funcom game can make some of us a bit nervous.

The last two weeks have seen a pretty hefty amount of coverage for The Secret World, with reviews and gameplays consuming bandwidth in every corner of the internet. The MMO Gamer has no less than two writers currently playing and writing impressions of the game. The overall feeling I get from the gaming community so far has been overwhelmingly positive towards this game. I too have written a pair of positive pieces for the game in the form of the first two ?30 Days In The Secret World? articles.?The first few hours of the game were quite enjoyable, and the level of fun being had heavily outweighed any small issues there might have been. At this point you probably know where this is going. Here comes that other shoe.

Oddly enough, The Secret World really began to wear on me beginning Friday the 13th. The day before that I had made may way through the first first few quests in The Savage Coast area, then made my way back to run the Polaris instance, which I enjoyed a great deal, as it did its job in being an introductory dungeon for the game, giving players a chance to see some simple fight mechanics and work out their own ability set-ups and rotations. So I logged in last Friday ready to continue my adventures, and looking forward to making my way through a new zone.

It wasn?t a game bug, or client performance issues, or even the poor combat that began rubbing me the wrong way that Friday. ?It was the quests I was picking up. After the initial investigation of the Overlook Motel, there began what seemed a never ending cycle of what can only be described as ?kill ten rats? quests. Whether that was all that was available, or through some streak of bad luck picking up quests, my play time turned into hours of grinding out monster kills. Tier after tier of quests were having me kill 10 of those. Kill 8 of that. Now kill 15 more of the exact same mob with a different name floating above its head. It came so suddenly and unexpectedly that I ended up logging out with a migraine. I had just spent hours playing every MMO ever, after spending two weeks playing something that felt so different quest-wise, that I didn?t even care if the combat was terrible.

After having played The Secret World every single day during the week, I left it untouched over the weekend, giving myself a chance to recharge, and come back Monday refreshed and ready to move past this horrific incident.

Now let me clear this up right now. I know The Secret World is an MMO, and I know that all MMO?s are going to contain grind quests, but during the entire Kingsmouth zone the devs did such a great job of either not including, or disguising these quests in such a way that off the top of my head, I can?t remember a single quest in Kingsmouth where I thought, ?Oh, here?s a kill ten rats quest?. It just wasn?t an issue. Now suddenly I?m in the Savage Coast, and the vast majority of the questing consists of grindy kill quests, and this is why I referenced Age of Conan in the beginning. Anyone who has played AoC can tell you that after the initial area of Tortage, AoC is nearly a totally different game. My week in the Savage Coast has me currently drawing the same conclusions about The Secret World. Kingmouth seems to have been polished to a nice shiny finish, and loaded down with great quests and interesting characters. After you leave this first zone however, things seem to be heading towards the same ol?, same ol? of every other game out there.

The problem is exaserbated by the fact that more and more bugs are becoming prevelant as I venture further into the game, and the game client now crashes at least once for every couple of hours I spend in-game. When lone creatures are attacked, suddenly two more appear out of thin air. When I pull a large group, another group randomly aggroes from across the map. Fights with more difficult monsters reset themselves with more and more regularity, suddenly bringing both myself and my target back to full health, but now the mob evades or blocks a large portion of incoming damage, leaving me with yet another corpse run due to game problems. I?ve had several monsters reach zero health points, at which point instead of dying, they become unkillable while at the same time every ability on my bar fails to activate, leaving me to run across the entire zone trying to reset the mob, only to die and have yet another corpse run.

To say that these issues are?aggravating?would be a pretty severe understatement. In just a few days I?ve gone from enjoying my time in game, to wondering what ridiculous situation is going to leave me at nerd rage code red as I try to make my why through these lack-luster quests and game performance issues just hoping that something better is waiting for me on the other side of this dark place I am in.

This is me RUNNING AWAY from a monster with zero health.

Another major issue right now is the gear management system. While problems with game clients and enemy mobs can effect some players more than others, the gear management system has been a broken mess that seems to have caused frustration with a very large portion of the player population. Switching between gear sets can cause items to end up in your inventory instead of equipped, the wrong items to get equipped, and some have reported gear just flat out dissapearing when using the system. The ability builds also seem to randomly change themselves when switching between saved gear sets, and there is often no telling what combination of abilities you will end up with on your action bars after a few swaps, or which abilities you will have to go find and put back on your bar.

This week hasn?t been a good one for me in The Secret World, but I?m not going to let that hold me back. This is the third article of a four article series, and the first two were pretty positive, so I?m willing to suck it up and work my way through this rut I seem to have found myself in and try to find my way back to The Secret World that I was having fun with. Hopefully it is still out there, and all I have to do is find it. I have to admit, however, that I was very happy to leave The Secret World unplayed this past weekend, and get away from all the issues that I have encountered lately. Here?s hoping that this week is better, and that The Secret World can win me back.

If you want to follow along with this week?s adventures head over to Twitch.tv/TheInnerGeekZone Mon-Fri at 2pm CST.

Source: http://www.mmogamer.com/07/23/2012/30-days-in-the-secret-world-oh-no-here-it-comes

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