Friday, November 30, 2012

Men and women explore the visual world differently

ScienceDaily (Nov. 30, 2012) ? Everyone knows that men and women tend to hold different views on certain things. However, new research by scientists from the University of Bristol and published in PLoS ONE indicates that this may literally be the case.

Researchers examined where men and women looked while viewing still images from films and pieces of art. They found that while women made fewer eye movements than men, those they did make were longer and to more varied locations.

These differences were largest when viewing images of people. With photos of heterosexual couples, both men and women preferred looking at the female figure rather than the male one. However, this preference was even stronger for women.

While men were only interested in the faces of the two figures, women's eyes were also drawn to the rest of the bodies -- in particular that of the female figure.

Felix Mercer Moss, PhD student in the Department of Computer Science who led the study, said: "The study represents the most compelling evidence yet that, despite occupying the same world, the viewpoints of men and women can, at times, be very different.

"Our findings have important implications for both past and future eye movement research together with future technological applications."

Eye movements are a tool used to collect visual information, which then colours an individual's perception of the world. Equally, when individuals have different interpretations of the world, this in turn affects the information they seek and, consequently, the places they look.

The researchers suggest that men and women look at different things because they interpret the world differently. The pictures preferred by women were the same pictures that produced the most distinct 'looking patterns'. Similarly, the pictures with the largest scope for a difference in interpretation -- those with people -- also produced the largest differences between where men and women looked.

One perceptual sex difference in particular -- women's increased sensitivity to threat -- may explain a further finding. People's eyes are drawn to the most informative regions of an image while also being repelled from areas that carry possible threat or danger, for example the sun. Faces are a paradoxical example of a region that is both highly informative and potentially threatening, particularly if eye contact is made.

While men made direct eye contact with faces in the pictures; especially when primed to look for threat, women averted their gaze downward slightly towards the nose and mouth of these faces. The researchers claim that this may be due to women being more sensitive to the negative consequences of making direct eye contact and will, therefore, shift their gaze downward, towards the centre of the face.

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Story Source:

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

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Felix Joseph Mercer Moss, Roland Baddeley, Nishan Canagarajah. Eye Movements to Natural Images as a Function of Sex and Personality. PLoS ONE, 2012; 7 (11): e47870 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0047870

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/living_well/~3/qC0CKuFSV7E/121130222243.htm

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NASA: Curiosity Has Found Plastic On Mars

Laughter and derision swept across our fair red world today as the Council of Elders confirmed the success of an intelligence coup against the green diagonally-tilted controlling intelligences (and their accompanying green spherule-shaped periodic functions) who continue to operate from undisclosed locations on the sinister blue planet.

K'Breel, Speaker for the Council, spoke thus:

Today marks another victory in our ongoing psyops campaign against the blueworlders. Renjoice, podmates, at the consternation of our enemies! On the homefront, our forces continue to track and monitor the intruder's activity. Laser-resistance is not the only means we have to defeat the intruder. Late-breaking news indicate great results achieved through our psychological operations division.

When an elder member of the press corps suggested the psyops campaign in question consisted merely of deceiving "Editing Unit #5 [slashdot.org]" into linking to http://nasaupdatecenter.us/press.html [nasaupdatecenter.us] instead of http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/newsroom/pressreleases/20120928a.html [nasa.gov], K'Breel had the young reporter's gelsacs slashed, after which the small, rounded particles were first catalyzed into plastic, and upon further heating, reduced to volcanic lapilli.

(An audio recording of Reporter #54550 screaming "Sorry, samzenpus, you put your foot in it today, I swear to CmdrTaco it wasn't me! No hard feelings! Don't devitrify me, 'bro!" as he was led away to the thermal polymerization chamber, has not been authenticated.)

Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/L3W3kIeQFXM/story01.htm

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Breakthrough Gotye hit is Spotify song of the year

FILE - In this April 15, 2012 file photo, Australian artist Gotye performs during the first weekend of the 2012 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in Indio, Calif. Gotye?s smash hit ?Somebody I Used to Know? is Spotify?s top song of the year. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello, file)

FILE - In this April 15, 2012 file photo, Australian artist Gotye performs during the first weekend of the 2012 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in Indio, Calif. Gotye?s smash hit ?Somebody I Used to Know? is Spotify?s top song of the year. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello, file)

FILE - In this April 15, 2012 file photo, Australian artist Gotye performs during the first weekend of the 2012 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in Indio, Calif. Gotye?s smash hit ?Somebody I Used to Know? is Spotify?s top song of the year. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello, file)

(AP) ? Gotye's smash hit "Somebody I Used to Know" is Spotify's top song of the year.

The digital music service said Wednesday that the multiplatinum pop song is the most streamed track globally this year. Carly Rae Jepsen's "Call Me Maybe" and "We Are Young" by fun. are second and third, respectively.

"Somebody I Used to Know" was also most streamed in the United States and most shared globally, on platforms like Twitter and Facebook.

French DJ-producer David Guetta's "Nothing But the Beat" was the most streamed album globally. It includes hits like "Titanium" with Sia and "Turn Me On" with Nicki Minaj. Guetta is also the year's most streamed male artist.

Rihanna and Coldplay top the list of most streamed females and groups, respectively.

Spotify is available in 17 countries.

___

Online:

http://www.spotify.com

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-11-28-Music-Spotify-2012%20Most%20Streamed/id-8f940b6dae6647788393f9381957cbde

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Accountant (District Service Center) - HigherEdJobs

Position Number: 111210025
Position Type: Professional Support Staff
Exempt or Non-Exempt: Exempt
Appointment Type: Full Time
Is Grant Funded?: No
Salary: $2678.42/Monthly, Range C07
Work Days/Hours: Monday - Friday / 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Posting Number: 01587
Close Date: 12/12/2012
Open Until Filled: No

Job Description Summary/Essential Duties:
Performs complex and responsible accounting functions requiring the exercise of independent judgment, initiative and exercise of knowledge of the organization, accounting, and policies and procedures of the DCCCD and external agencies. Performs reconciliations and analyses of assigned general ledger accounts. Independently researches records and prepares adjusting journal entries. Audits and/or reconciles reports and documents for compliance with policies and procedures of the DCCCD and external agencies. Resolves differences and initiates corrections. Develops and maintains a variety of spreadsheets and files utilized to provide up-to-date information to management in decision-making and to provide documentation for accounting transactions. Contacts other DCCCD staff or external agencies or individuals to obtain, supply or explain data and to identify additional information. Incumbents may be assigned responsibilities including accounts payable, accounts receivable, bank reconciliation, purchasing, functions, etc. working around stringent deadlines and confidential information related to student/departmental accounts. Acts as a resource to the department in interpreting business office procedures, DCCCD policies and procedures and rules and regulations of external agencies. May develop office procedures and recommend changes in existing procedures to supervisor. May run ad-hoc reports utilizing specific software programs (e.g. Colleague), download data, and manipulate data for reports as requested. May select, train and evaluate assigned staff. May perform designated duties of the supervisor in his/her absence. Performs related duties as assigned.

Minimum Qualifications:
Bachelor's degree or higher in business or accounting plus two years of general accounting experience in a computerized multi-cost center environment or Associate's degree or higher plus four years of general accounting experience in a computerized multi-cost environment. Ability to utilize computer technology to access data, maintain records, generate reports and communicate with others. Ability to communicate effectively with individuals from diverse backgrounds. The ability to provide quality customer service. Official transcripts will be required. *Will be subject to a criminal background check.*

Physical Demands:
Works with light, easy to handle materials requiring little physical effort.

Posting Specific Questions:

Required fields are indicated with an asterisk (*).

  1. * I meet at least one of the minimum requirements stated below. Please indicate by making a selection which statement best describes how you meet the minimum requirements for the position.
    • I have a Bachelor's degree (or higher) in business or accounting plus 2 years of general accounting experience in a computerized multi cost center environment
    • I have an Associate's degree (or higher) plus 4 years (or more) of general accounting experience in a computerized multi cost center environment
    • I do not meet at least one of the minimum requirements stated above.
  2. * Please describe your experience reconciling financial transactions. Which positions did you utilize this experience?

    (Open Ended Question)

  3. * Please describe your experience generating cash receipts. Which positions did you utilize this experience?

    (Open Ended Question)

  4. * Please describe your experience preparing and maintain spreadsheets and files. Which positions did you utilize this experience?

    (Open Ended Question)

  5. * Please describe your experience preparing query reports. Which positions did you utilize this experience?

    (Open Ended Question)

  6. * Please describe your experience preparing refund requests for financial aid and non-financial aid students. Which positions did you utilize this experience?

    (Open Ended Question)


Applicant Documents:
Required:
  1. Resume
  2. Undergraduate Unofficial Transcripts

Source: http://www.higheredjobs.com/details.cfm?JobCode=175697108

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Eat,drink+be Kerry: Gallery One, new at Westfield Carindale


Who would have believed that Westfield Carindale would be the perfect home for a slick new Italian restaurant with a $1.5 million fit out?

Brisbane shopping centres are better known for food courts with techno colour sauces and dodgy coffee than full flavoured food but all that has changed with the opening of Gallery One


Enter Tony Di Vincenzo, a first generation Aussie with a passion for great food and shared dining and gun chef Trent Robson, ex Pier Nine, 1899 Enoteca, Belle Epoque and Pescatore with a restaurant concept that could have been lifted from any of Brisbane's innovative restaurant dining precincts.
The doors to Gallery One have been open less than two weeks but already locals are loving the authentic Italian cuisine and crisp based pizzas. And what's not to love about six metre long refrigerated cabinet groaning with pasticceria, tortes and patiserrie ready to go or served with a cappuccino made with their own hand crafted special blend of quality Arabica beans.?



With most food offerings made in house, from the sour dough bread to the pasta and with dishes decorated with garnishes grown in Trent's own garden, there's lots to enjoy.

The wood fired pizza oven fires up daily with charry, hand spun bases topped with buffalo mozzarella, house made sugo, San Danielle prosciutto, swiss browns, salami and much more.? There are several inspired salads as well as pasta dishes and mains that follow the time honoured Italian style of simplicity and the restrained use of great flavours like ripe tomatoes, fresh Australian garlic, aromatic herbs, quality seafoods, meat and poultry. Most dishes are priced between $15 and $25.

I like the specially designed ?work tables? where you can plug in your devices to charge and get some work done using the free wifi while sitting on funky, old-man-face stools.? Check out the shiny black chairs as well and you'll see they are replica Him & Her Chairs crafted from polyethylene and modelled on male and female derrieres by Fabio Novembre.? Tony says they are strictly for inside the restaurant in case they 'frighten or offend ' shoppers.



Breakfast is all served daily and includes choices like a hotel-style ?Continental? ? ham and gruyere on sour dough, croissant and honeycomb yoghurt and fresh fruit with preserves or more indulgent choices of truffled egg, housemade gravadlax and toasted brioche with stracchino or? and buttermilk pancakes with ricotta, strawberries and maple/rum syrup.

Owner Tony Di Vincenzo is a first generation Aussie with a passion for great food and shared dining.? After a successful career in IT, the Italian in him took over and he created the Gallery Group ? Gallery Soho at Coorparoo and Gallery Cafe at Westfield Chermside and now Gallery One at Carindale.? With the extension of the Carindale site, Tony decided to upgrade his caf? bringing a strong Italian flavour to the menu and a multi-awarded chef to execute his vision.

Trent Robson has vast experience in both the UK and Brisbane and it shows on the plate.? Together these Italo-philes are bringing a new level of dining for the increasingly discerning tastes of shoppers at these centres.?

"Most shoppers are blown away by the fit out and the food," Trent says.



The restaurant seats 180 in two areas, inside the slick intimate restaurant space has cosy booths and a line of banquettes and out in the mall atrium, encircled by delicate custom designed iron work, white upholstered chairs make for extra comfy dining without any restaurant noise.



Bottom line: Restaurant quality food in a shopping centre.
Best tip: Go, experience, and you'll be a believer too. Try Gallery One pre movies when it opens soon on Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights.

Gallery One, Carindale shopping centre, Carindale (find it outside the Myer entrance in the mall)

Disclaimer: Ed+bK was a guest of Gallery One.

Source: http://eatdrinkandbekerry.blogspot.com/2012/11/gallery-one-new-at-westfield-carindale.html

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Investor Toolkit: The right number of stocks for successful investors ...

Stock ticker

Every Wednesday, we publish our ?Investor Toolkit? series. Whether you?re a new or experienced investor, these weekly updates are designed to give you specific advice on investing in the stock market and other investment topics. Each Investor Toolkit update gives you a fundamental piece of our investment strategy, and shows you how you can put it into practice right away.

Tip of the week: ?Starting out with a handful of good stocks and adding steadily to them as your portfolio grows in value is the way most successful investors reach their goals.?

The right number of stocks to have in your portfolio will vary over time. The number should grow as you advance in your investing career.

  • The beginning investor: When they start out, most investors have only modest amounts of money to invest. Even so, you should invest at least several thousand dollars at a time, even if this means you buy only a handful of stocks. Otherwise, your broker?s minimum commission will work out to too high a percentage of your investment on each purchase.
  • Pick at least one stock from each of the 5 sectors. At the outset, you should aim to invest in a minimum of four or five stocks. Our advice is to pick one from each of the five main economic sectors (Manufacturing & Industry; Resources; Consumer; Finance; and Utilities). If you cannot manage to buy a stock in each one, you should still look to cover most of them.

    You can buy them one at a time, over a period of months or even years, rather than all at once. After that, you can gradually add new stocks to your portfolio as funds become available, taking care to spread your holdings across sectors in line with our advice.

"Canadian Stock Market Basics: How to Trade Stocks and Make Good Investments in Canada": In this special report, Pat McKeough gives you his time-tested advice on how you can make more money from your investments and save thousands on brokers' fees and other expenses. Best of all, you can get a copy absolutely FREE. Click here to claim yours now.
  • Add new stocks as your portfolio?s value increases. When your portfolio gets into the $100,000 to $200,000 range, you should aim for perhaps 15 to 20 stocks. If you?re married, it?s best to treat your family holdings as one big portfolio, even if you and your spouse keep your money separate (for our advice on treating all your investments as a single portfolio see last week?s Toolkit: View the article here). That way, you can be sure you aren?t operating at cross purposes, or investing too much of the family fortune in a single area.

  • Use our 3-part advice as a guide. When you get above $200,000 or so, you can gradually increase the number of stocks you hold. When your portfolio reaches the $500,000 to $1 million range, 25 to 30 stocks is a good number to have.

    Of course, you may fall a few stocks short of that range, or go a few above it, particularly when you?re making changes in your holdings. That won?t matter if you follow our three-part approach to investing: invest mainly in well-established companies; spread your money out across the five main economic sectors, and downplay stocks that are in the broker/media limelight.

Our upper limit for any portfolio is around 40 stocks. Any more than that and even your best choices will have little impact on your personal wealth.

COMMENTS PLEASE?Share your investment experience and opinions with fellow TSINetwork.ca members

Do you have many more stocks now than you had during the first few years you were investing? Was there a period during which you added a large number of stocks? Was there a period when you made significant cuts in your stock portfolio? Let us know what you think.

Be the first to comment

.

Source: http://www.tsinetwork.ca/daily/investing-for-beginners/investor-toolkit-number-stocks-successful-investors/

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Thursday, November 29, 2012

Get Business Bankruptcy Help And Retake Financial Control ...

Bankruptcy Petition

Some of the biggest names in the global business industry have suffered due to the ongoing economic crisis. Unfortunately, no company is entirely safe and far too many small to medium business owners are finding themselves with a very negative financial outlook. This is part of the reason the number of business bankruptcy filings has grown so rapidly this side of the decade and you need to understand that you are not alone. There are many businesses faced with this tough decision and, more importantly, there is help out there for anyone who is willing to accept it.

The business usually has to hire a attorney who will help them through the bankruptcy process. Preferably, the business will have to file the process under Chapter 11.

How do I choose the right Chapter for my case?

Your attorney will inform you about the process. Chapter 11 is the most popular code used by businesses to change their resources so that they can pay off their financial obligations. For larger companies and businesses, Chapter11 is probably the best way to declare bankruptcy. It is also referred to as corporate bankruptcy and helps companies to continue running while they restore their cost-effective financial obligations repayment plans.

Seeking Help When You Need It

There are ways to deal with your current financial situation that will not cause the weight of it to crush you. For instance, there are solutions that you may not have explored. On top of all this, if bankruptcy really is your only option there are ways to make the procedure a lot less tedious than it is when going it alone. Remember

1. It is likely that small/non corporate business debt could be seen as a personal liability so you need to understand what to expect.

2. Filing for business bankruptcy may affect your personal credit depending on

a) Your type of company

b) The amounts and types of taxes owed

c) How the debts were guaranteed

3. The results of your proceedings could affect your ability to borrow as a business in the future.

4. You have choices when filing (Chapter 7, 11 and 13), but each depends on eligibility and have strict rules to follow.

5. Most solutions will have optimal times to take advantage of so you should start seeking assistance now.

6. The longer you do nothing the bigger the problem is likely to get.

Make a Decision to Get Help Now

The position you are currently in is no doubt scary so why go it alone? Get help from people who know what you are going through, have experience in finding the best solution for you and are passionate about helping business owners like you break free. We, at http://www.cheapbankruptcyhq.com/ can help you:

Tags: Bankruptcy Help

Category: Bankruptcy

Source: http://www.financecategory.com/get-business-bankruptcy-help-and-retake-financial-control.html

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Obama: Pass my tax plan (CNN)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/267064364?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Photo Blog: PHOTOS: Tornado Rider at Golden State Theatre

Photo Blog

Photo Blog

PHOTOS: Tornado Rider at Golden State Theatre

November 27, 2012

Cello rocker Rushad Eggleston has a strong local following of friends and fans.

The Carmel Valley-native played a near-two hour show on Friday at Monterey's Golden State Theatre with his fast rock trio Tornado Rider.

Eggleston's long-time friend Nico Georis made a guest appearance for the set to play keyboards.

VIEW MORE PHOTOS FROM TORNADO RIDERS' SHOW IN MONTEREY.

Source: http://www.montereycountyweekly.com/weblogs/photo-blog/2012/nov/27/photos-tornado-rider-at-golden-state-theatre/

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Xerox DocuMate 4830


The Xerox DocuMate 4830 ($2,495 direct) isn't just more expensive than most desktop document scanners. It's different too. First, it offers both an automatic document feeder (ADF) and a flatbed, so you can scan bound pages and originals you don't want to risk damaging. And second, both the flatbed and ADF are big enough to handle cut sheets up to U.S. tabloid size (11 by 17 inches) or ISO A3 size (11.69 by 16.54 inches). Not everyone needs to scan at these large sizes. But for those who do, the combination of the large format, a flatbed, and an ADF make the 4830 well worth the price.

You can find less expensive large-format scanners, although there aren't a lot of them. The Plustek OpticPro A320 ($599 street, 3 stars) comes to mind, for example. However, the Plustek A320 doesn't have an ADF, and for most document scanning, an ADF is a must-have convenience that can easily pay for itself in time saved. Beyond that, the ADFs on some scanners, including the 4830, will let you scan far larger sheets of paper than can fit on the flatbed.

The maximum paper size for the 4830 is 11.69 by 118 inches. (At least, that's what the spec sheet says. I didn?t have any paper that long to test with.) However, it's also worth noting that the flatbed cheats a little on size by being not quite big enough for a full tabloid-size sheet (or ledger-size sheet, which is the same size in landscape orientation). I measured the platen at 12 inches by just a little short of 17 inches, which means you can't quite scan a tabloid-size page edge to edge. This shouldn't be a problem with documents, however, since virtually any document will have at least a small margin.

Setup and Scanning
Aside from needing more than the usual amount of flat space for the 7.6 by 22.9 by 19.6 inch 4830, setup is standard fare. Put the scanner in place, unlock it, connect a USB cable, and run the installation program.

In addition to a scan utility, the 4830 comes with two application programs: Nuance OmniPage Professional 17 for optical character recognition (OCR) and Nuance PDF Converter Professional 7 for managing PDF files. Both are excellent programs and are good choices for document scanning needs. However, the installation program also installs Twain, ISIS, and WIA drivers, which will let you scan directly from almost any Windows program that includes a scan command.

For most of my tests, I used the scan utility, which lets you define up to nine scan profiles, with settings for resolution, paper size, color mode, the format to save the file in, and more. You can also easily redefine the presets as needed, as well as store alternatives to the current settings for easy retrieval. Also very much worth mention is Visioneer's Acuity digital enhancement module, which is built into the utility, and lets you control settings like whether to straighten the image, automatically rotate pages to the right orientation, or drop out a given color to make the image more readable.

As with too many other scanners, the only way to pick a scan preset from the scanner's front panel is by number. However, the utility's pop-up screen on the computer shows enough information to make it easy to pick the right preset from the computer screen without having to memorize which number does what.

Performance
The official speed rating for the 4830 is 30 pages per minute (ppm) for simplex (scanning one side) and 60 images per minute (ipm) for duplex (scanning both sides) at 200 pixels per inch (ppi) and black and white scan mode. In my tests using letter-size paper and scanning to image PDF format, however, I measured it at 25.0 ppm in simplex and 51.7 ipm in duplex. As with the Editors' Choice Kodak i2600 , which is rated at 100 ipm but came in at 76.9 ipm on our tests, that's a little short of the claimed speed, but within a reasonable range of the claim.

Because the text in the PDF image files looked a little ragged at 200 ppi, I also tried scanning at 300 ppi. As expected, the image quality improved considerably, with much more easily readable text. Even better, with simplex scans, the speed at 300 ppi was essentially the same as at 200 ppi. With duplex scans, however, the speed dropped considerably, to just 26.1 ipm. More precisely, the scan itself took about the same amount of time, but it took far longer to transfer the larger amount of data to the computer, which slowed down the total time for the scan.

Scanning to searchable PDF format, which is generally the more useful choice for document management applications, took relatively little extra time for the text recognition step. Using a 25-page document, I timed the scanner at 1 minute 44 seconds at 200 ppi and at 2:34 at 300 ppi. Scanning a single ledger-size page to searchable PDF format took 16 seconds for simplex mode and 19 seconds for duplex mode.

Text Recognition and Other Issues
The scanner turned in a high score for OCR accuracy, reading both our Times New Roman and Arial test pages at sizes as small as 6 points without a mistake. It also did notably well with an assortment of other fonts that we don't usually report the performance for, because it's a given that few scanners can read them well. Most impressively, with two highly stylized fonts that most scanners fail to read without mistakes at any font size, the 4830 managed to read our test pages at sizes as small as 8 points without a mistake.

Unfortunately, I also ran into some issues that make the scanner a little less attractive than it could be. To begin with, the predefined settings in the scan utility don't include any for tabloid, ledger, or A3 paper sizes. The largest is for legal size. Another oversight is that some of the default definitions in the utility seemed designed for other scanners. In one case, the front and back of pages came out upside down relative to each other until I dug into the settings and set the utility to automatically rotate pages.

The good news is that these issues are more annoyances than serious problems. Once you get past them, by creating new scan definitions or modifying the default settings to match your needs, the scanner can do its job reasonably well.

Also worth mention is that for the setting issues I ran into there are at least two known fixes that Xerox is considering at this writing. The company says it should have decided on one and put it in place by the time you read this. Even without the fix, however, if you need to scan at tabloid or A3 size, and you need to scan multipage, duplex documents, the Xerox DocuMate 4830 is a more than reasonable choice and well worth a close look.

More Scanner Reviews:
??? Xerox DocuMate 4830
??? Kodak ScanMate i940
??? VuPoint Solutions Magic Wand PDS-ST441-VP
??? Ambir ImageScan Pro 940u
??? Ambir ImageScan Pro 930u
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/IV8cOPgctic/0,2817,2412436,00.asp

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Johansson: Watching 'Psycho' 'petrified me'

By Randee Dawn, TODAY contributor

It's Scarlett Johansson Tuesday on TODAY! And having tackled the weather (due to Al Roker's laryngitis) and otherwise utterly charmed everyone on the show, the four-time Golden Globe nominee sat down with Matt Lauer to address the real reason she was hanging out -- her new film, "Hitchcock."

In the film, Johansson plays actress Janet Leigh, star of Alfred Hitchcock's movie "Psycho," and said it was a real treat to work alongside Oscar-winning stars Anthony Hopkins and Helen Mirren (who play Hitchcock and his wife Alma respectively). There was no need for "Sir" or "Dame" on the set, she noted: "They're incredibly casual; it's 'Tony,' of course ... and Helen, we just called her, 'Hey you.'"

Less pleasant was actually seeing "Psycho" at a very young age, she recalled: "I was raised on Hitchcock films," she said. "My mother is a huge film buff and I saw 'Psycho' probably when I was too young, I mean I was like 7 or 8 and it was incredibly traumatizing. ... It petrified me."

Evan Agostini / AP

As an adult, however, she was probably equally traumatized by re-enacting the famous shower scene from the film. In "Hitchcock," the director isn't convinced by Leigh's screams, so he steps in to terrify her properly -- and it worked, on both Leigh and Johansson, who flashed back to another of Hopkins' iconic roles.

"When you have Tony Hopkins there stabbing at you with a completely frenzied psychotic look on his face, you don?t need (the film's classic soundtrack to get in the mood)," said Johansson. "Seeing his ("Silence of the Lambs" character) Hannibal Lecter from also way too young was enough to give me that naturalistic feeling."

Fortunately, ScarJo appears to have recovered nicely, even if she is exploring her options as weather lady.

"Hitchcock" opened in limited U.S. theaters on Nov. 23.

Related content:

Source: http://todayentertainment.today.com/_news/2012/11/27/15481084-hitchcock-star-scarlett-johansson-watching-psycho-at-age-7-petrified-me?lite

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Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Kratom Comes to Florida: Is the Next Big Drug Craze Dangerous?

The busty clerk at Grateful J's head shop in Boca Raton holds out a small brown vial. The label reads "Lucky," and she promises the stuff packs a punch.

"You'll want to throw it to the back of your throat," she suggests. "I'd say drink the whole thing. Maybe drink half, wait a little bit, and see how you feel."

One of the many brands of powdered kratom capsules available at South Florida head shops.

One of the many brands of powdered kratom capsules available at South Florida head shops.

The potion is kratom, and it's taking center stage in America's next big drug scare. In recent months, MSNBC reported that kratom has sent users to the ER, the Daily called it a "hallucinogenic drug" with "potentially fatal side effects," Forbes asked if it was the next bath salts, and ABC Action News in Tampa claimed that "it can be more difficult to get off than heroin." Kratom is legal and supported by a vocal community touting its health benefits, but in the wake of bath salts and synthetic pot ? drugs tied to scores of gruesome crimes this year, including (probably erroneously) the "Miami Zombie" attack ? lawmakers are eager to ban the next big thing.

"It's not a safe high by any means," Frank LoVecchio, director of Phoenix's Banner Good Samaritan Poison and Drug Information Center, says. "If you take enough of it, it has opiate-like activities. It makes people high kind of the same way morphine or heroin would make them high."

But is kratom actually a youth-menacing brain-destroyer or merely another victim of Reefer Madness-like hysteria? That question has become important as the drug finds its way to South Florida and lawmakers debate whether to prohibit it. New bans, after all, cost taxpayers, prosecutors, and cops thousands of dollars and countless hours.

"Every time a new drug is criminalized, it puts more pressure on law enforcement, the courts, our jails, and it criminalizes more people," says Grant Smith, federal policy coordinator for the Drug Policy Alliance. "Asking law enforcement to add this to the long list of things they have to deal with... could be wasteful."

To figure out whether kratom is a dangerous threat, a medical miracle, or just a fun way to get stoned, I forked over $45 for one vial of "Lucky" liquid kratom and one packet of capsules called "Floories Exotics Jackacock" and prepared to experiment.

Before ingesting the stuff, though, I researched its background. Kratom products are made from the leaves of Mitragyna speciosa, a tree that grows in Southeast Asia. Until a few decades ago, it was used mostly in remote places such as rural Malaysia and Thailand, where locals prescribed it for pain relief, sometimes substituting it for opium.

Indeed, scientists have found that kratom leaves contain naturally occurring chemicals that stimulate opioid receptors in the brain, similar to the effects of prescription painkillers. Researchers have studied the plant's potential to alleviate a variety of ailments, from arthritis and diabetes to depression and alcoholism. In 2010, scientists from Malaysia's Center for Drug Research wrote in the International Journal on Drug Policy that kratom "merits serious scientific investigation" as a therapy for heroin withdrawal.

As word of kratom's potential benefits has spread, a worldwide kratom community has blossomed over Internet message boards. Fans talk up both its medicinal uses ? including its ability to curb anxiety and reduce pain ? and its recreational highs.

Take Daniel, a 23-year-old kratom enthusiast from the Tampa area who asked that his last name not be used. He first tried kratom two years ago as an alternative to pharmaceutical painkillers while suffering through painful kidney stones. Now he buys bulk orders of the crushed leaf and brews a lemon tea he drinks every day. Even though the pain from his kidney stones is long gone, he says the drink helps with depression.

"It can be mildly addictive," he concedes. "It does cause dependence when you take it daily. But it's more like coffee. I don't miss work or go out and commit crimes to get more of it."

Others, such as Kelly Lay, have switched from addictive opiates to kratom without experiencing the nasty effects of withdrawal. "Three years ago I gave up the daily use of opiates and switched myself to kratom effortlessly, without withdrawal... I was extremely depressed while taking opiates, and I was not obtaining them legally," the 50-year-old organic farmer from Sarasota says in an email. "I have absolutely no shame in using an herb to deal with what would otherwise be a debilitating case of degenerative disc disease. I am missing two discs in my spine."

And some people use the plant purely for enjoyment. Adam, a 22-year-old personal trainer from Lake Worth who asked to use a pseudonym, says he used to abuse Roxicodone ? a powerful narcotic ? weed, and booze before discovering kratom.

"You get nice, pleasurable effects ? physical and mental," he says. "I've pushed the limits with some very large doses, like 50 grams or something. I'd liken it to a waking dream state. My head got fuzzy and I nodded off. But it's not a hallucinogen or deliriant."

Yet as both medical and recreational interest have picked up in recent years, law enforcement has taken notice. A few countries have already outlawed kratom, including Australia in 2003 and Denmark in 2009. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration has classified it as a "drug of concern," the first step toward eventually prohibiting it.

Source: http://www.miaminewtimes.com/2012-11-29/news/kratom-comes-to-florida-is-the-next-big-drug-craze-dangerous/

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A big disconnect as 'fiscal cliff' clock ticks

FILE - In this Nov. 21, 2012, file photo, President Barack Obama speaks about the Thanksgiving holiday in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington. The White House said Tuesday, Nov. 27, that the president plans to make a public case this week for his strategy for dealing with the looming fiscal cliff, traveling to the Philadelphia suburbs Friday as he pressures Republicans to allow tax increases on the wealthy while extending tax cuts for families earning $250,000 or less. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

FILE - In this Nov. 21, 2012, file photo, President Barack Obama speaks about the Thanksgiving holiday in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington. The White House said Tuesday, Nov. 27, that the president plans to make a public case this week for his strategy for dealing with the looming fiscal cliff, traveling to the Philadelphia suburbs Friday as he pressures Republicans to allow tax increases on the wealthy while extending tax cuts for families earning $250,000 or less. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nev. speaks with reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Nov. 27, 2012, following a Democratic strategy session. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

(AP) ? Republicans' newfound willingness to consider tax increases to avert the "fiscal cliff" comes with a significant caveat: larger cuts than Democrats seem willing to consider to benefit programs like Medicare, Medicaid and the president's health care overhaul.

The disconnect on benefit programs, coupled with an impasse between Republicans and the White House over raising tax rates on upper-bracket earners, paints a bleak picture as the clock ticks toward a year-end fiscal debacle of automatic spending increases and harsh cuts to the Pentagon and domestic programs.

Democrats emboldened by the election are moving in the opposite direction from the GOP on curbing spending, refusing to look at cuts that were on the bargaining table just last year. Those include any changes to Social Security, even though President Barack Obama was willing back then to consider cuts in future benefits through lower cost-of-living increases. Obama also considered raising the eligibility age for Medicare, an idea that most Democrats oppose.

"I haven't seen any suggestions on what they're going to do on spending," a frustrated Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said Tuesday. "There's a certain cockiness that I've seen that is really astounding to me since we're basically in the same position we were before."

Well, says Obama's most powerful ally on Capitol Hill, the Democrats are willing to tackle spending on entitlement programs if Republicans agree to raise income tax rates on the wealthiest Americans ? a nonstarter with Republicans still in control of the House.

"We hope that they can agree to the tax revenue that we're talking about, and that is rate increases, and as the president's said on a number of occasions, we'll be happy to deal with entitlements," Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said Tuesday.

But Reid speaks only in the most general terms, wary of publicly embracing specific ideas like boosting Medicare premiums or raising the program's eligibility age.

At the White House, Obama met with a group of small business owners. Participants described the hour-long meeting as a listening session for Obama, with the business owners urging him to reach an agreement.

"They had one message for the president, which is they need certainty. Please get this deal done as soon as possible. They very much want consumers out there knowing that they're going to have money in their pockets to spend. That's why it's so important to pass the extension of the tax cuts for 98 percent of consumers, 97 percent of all small businesses," said Small Business Administration head Karen Mills.

Obama planned to meet Wednesday with more than a dozen leaders from large corporations, including Lloyd Blankfein of Goldman Sachs, Marissa Mayer of Yahoo!, Brian Roberts of Comcast and Arne Sorenson of Marriott.

Obama hits the road on Friday, visiting a Pennsylvania toy factory and broadcasting his case to extend current tax rates for all but those families making more than $250,000 a year.

Private White House negotiations with top aides to House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and others are cloaked in secrecy, with no evidence of headway.

"There's been little progress with the Republicans, which is a disappointment to me," Reid, a key negotiator, told reporters on Tuesday. "They talked some happy talk about doing revenues, but we only have a couple weeks to get something done. So we have to get away from the happy talk and start talking about specific things."

Republicans say it's Obama and his Democratic allies on Capitol Hill who are holding back, and they point to a balance of power in official Washington that is little changed by the president's re-election. Republicans still control the House, despite losing seats in the election. Democrats control the Senate.

"Democrats in Congress have downplayed the danger of going over the cliff and continue to rule out sensible spending cuts that must be part of any significant agreement to reduce the deficit," said Michael Steel, spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio.

Just last year, Obama and top Democrats were willing during budget negotiations with Republicans to take politically risky steps such as reducing the annual inflation adjustment to Social Security retirement payments and raising the eligibility age for Medicare, which provides health care coverage to the elderly.

Now, with new leverage from Obama's election victory and a playing field for negotiations that is more favorable to Democrats than during the talks of the summer of 2011, Democrats are taking a harder line, ruling out any moves on Social Security and all but dismissing ideas like raising the eligibility age for Medicare from 65.

"The election spoke very strongly about the fact that the American people don't want to cut these programs that actually really sustain the middle class in America and allow people to become part of the middle class," said Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa.

"I think they feel somewhat emboldened by the election," said GOP Rep. Tom Price of Georgia. "How could you not when your president is re-elected after running four straight years of trillion dollar-plus deficits?"

Indeed, Obama could be in position to blame Republicans if an impasse results in the government going over the fiscal cliff. Democrats already are portraying GOP lawmakers as hostage-takers willing to let tax rates rise on everyone if lower Bush-era tax rates are not extended for the top 2 percent to 3 percent of earners ? those with incomes above $200,000 for individuals and $250,000 for joint filers.

"One thing Republicans have to realize ? we're in much better shape in January," said Harkin, referring to a time when taxes would have already risen and Democrats would be offering to cut taxes for all but the wealthiest Americans. "Fiscal cliff? I don't care."

Obama's opening position in the negotiations calls for $1.6 trillion in higher taxes over the coming decade, balanced by just $340 billion in cuts to rapidly growing health care programs, generally taken from health care providers instead of beneficiaries. That balance would have to change for Republicans to sign onto any agreement.

Given the crunch of time and the complexity of issues such as tax reform and wringing savings from programs like Medicare, negotiators are working on a two-track process: an initial "down payment" of deficit cuts next month, coupled with work next year on overhauling the tax code and curbing entitlement programs.

Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., a leading Senate liberal and a member of Obama's special 2010 deficit panel ? which drafted a bold deficit reduction plan blending painful entitlement cuts with $2 trillion in higher tax revenues ? weighed in with a demand that any short-term down payment avoid politically sensitive safety net programs.

"Progressives should be willing to talk about ways to ensure the long-term viability of Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, but those conversations should not be part of a plan to avert the fiscal cliff," Durbin said in a speech at the liberal Center for American Progress think tank in Washington.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-11-27-Fiscal%20Cliff/id-2d9e276a407546ffa64d43cad00b1e6e

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Nintendo?s Wii Mini Tipped By Best Buy Canada For December 7 Release

nintendo-wii-miniSony's PlayStation 3 and the Microsoft Xbox 360 have both seen physical hardware design changes in their many years on the market, but the Wii has remained mostly the same Wii since its launch, with a minor update last year that made it slightly smaller. Now that Nintendo has released the Wii U, however, it looks like a bigger change is on the way for its older console, called the Wii Mini.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/RfGVQ0nmGnE/

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3 ways to avoid surgery and eliminate pain | Natural Health 365

Tue. Nov. 27, 2012 by Jonathan Landsman

Safe Body Detoxification(NaturalHealth365) Modern society has been brainwashed into believing that toxic drugs and risky surgical procedures are the only way to alleviate pain. But, the truth is, there are literally dozens of highly-effective, natural ways to eliminate pain fast without harming the body. Given the proper tools ? the human body has tremendous power to heal itself.

Promote pain relief by sleeping at the right time ? every night

The best time for your body to repair itself is between 10 pm and 2 am. Typically, after sunset, you will begin to feel sleepy as melatonin levels begin to rise within the body. This is your opportunity to get ready for sleep. Here are some great sleeping tips ? especially if you suffer with physical aches and pains:

Avoid watching T.V. or working on your computer past 9 pm (8 pm would be even better)

Remove all electronic devices from your bedroom (including T.V.?s) to make your sleeping area a place of relaxation. Keep in mind, electromagnetic pollution (EMF) has a intense (negative) effect on our neurochemistry.

Watch the sunset or, better yet, take a 10 minute walk around sunset to promote melatonin production and relaxation.

Stop drinking caffeine or eating too much food ? late at night. If your stomach is busy digesting food ? you will have a difficult time going to sleep.

Adjust your sleep habits. If you go to sleep past 10 pm and wake up later than 6 am ? make 10 ? 15 minutes adjustments (each week) until you reach the goal of 10 pm bedtime and 6 am wake up time.

Improve your range of motion to eliminate pain

With my background in exercise science, I am often asked, ?what can I do to get rid of this physical pain?? My answer is always the same ? ?do you stretch?? I?m simply amazed how many people go to doctors and physical therapy facilities without learning a thing about how to improve their muscular flexibility. For example, if you suffer from low back pain, it?s a great idea to loosen up your butt, upper leg and calf muscles.

Tight muscles put a tremendous strain on the body ? so loosen up! If you need help ? I suggest hiring a qualified personal trainer or studying the programs offered by Gray Cook, Mark Verstegen and Michaelle Edwards.

Use the power of the mind to heal the body

Now don?t get me wrong ? what you?re about to read does not give you the license to eat heavily processed foods that promote inflammation; forget about nutritional supplements or other healthy lifestyle habits. But, what I am suggesting is that you believe in the power of consciousness. In other words, believe in yourself!

If you want to improve the quality of your life ? never underestimate the power of prayer, faith and love. If you doubt these words ? watch the video (below) to forever change your perspective on what is truly possible.

About the author: Jonathan Landsman is the managing director of NaturalHealth365.com and host of the NaturalNews Talk Hour ? a free, weekly health show sponsored by NaturalHealth365.com and NaturalNews.com. Jonathan is helping millions of people worldwide create health and physical fitness through a variety of educational and entertaining articles, teleconference calls, live shows and special events.

SUBSCRIBE TODAY! Click here to join the NaturalNews Inner Circle ? a monthly (online) subscription offering exclusive audio interviews, video events, natural health product discounts, free gifts plus much more!

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Source: http://www.naturalhealth365.com/natural_healing/eliminate-pain.html

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Johansson: Watching 'Psycho' 'petrified me'

By Randee Dawn, TODAY contributor

It's Scarlett Johansson Tuesday on TODAY! And having tackled the weather (due to Al Roker's laryngitis) and otherwise utterly charmed everyone on the show, the four-time Golden Globe nominee sat down with Matt Lauer to address the real reason she was hanging out -- her new film, "Hitchcock."

In the film, Johansson plays actress Janet Leigh, star of Alfred Hitchcock's movie "Psycho," and said it was a real treat to work alongside Oscar-winning stars Anthony Hopkins and Helen Mirren (who play Hitchcock and his wife Alma respectively). There was no need for "Sir" or "Dame" on the set, she noted: "They're incredibly casual; it's 'Tony,' of course ... and Helen, we just called her, 'Hey you.'"

Less pleasant was actually seeing "Psycho" at a very young age, she recalled: "I was raised on Hitchcock films," she said. "My mother is a huge film buff and I saw 'Psycho' probably when I was too young, I mean I was like 7 or 8 and it was incredibly traumatizing. ... It petrified me."

Evan Agostini / AP

As an adult, however, she was probably equally traumatized by re-enacting the famous shower scene from the film. In "Hitchcock," the director isn't convinced by Leigh's screams, so he steps in to terrify her properly -- and it worked, on both Leigh and Johansson, who flashed back to another of Hopkins' iconic roles.

"When you have Tony Hopkins there stabbing at you with a completely frenzied psychotic look on his face, you don?t need (the film's classic soundtrack to get in the mood)," said Johansson. "Seeing his ("Silence of the Lambs" character) Hannibal Lecter from also way too young was enough to give me that naturalistic feeling."

Fortunately, ScarJo appears to have recovered nicely, even if she is exploring her options as weather lady.

"Hitchcock" opened in limited U.S. theaters on Nov. 23.

Related content:

Source: http://todayentertainment.today.com/_news/2012/11/27/15481084-hitchcock-star-scarlett-johansson-watching-psycho-at-age-7-petrified-me?lite

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Does human transformation of land threaten future sustainability?

ScienceDaily (Nov. 27, 2012) ? Social and physical scientists have long been concerned about the effects of humans on Earth's surface -- in part through deforestation, encroachment of urban areas onto traditionally agricultural lands, and erosion of soils -- and the implications these changes have on Earth's ability to provide for an ever-growing population. The December 2012 GSA Today science article presents examples of land transformation by humans and documents some of the effects of these changes.

Researchers Roger Hooke of the University of Maine, USA, and Jos? F. Mart?n-Duque and Javier Pedraza of Complutense University, Spain, examine factors such as available agricultural land area and discuss some of the implications of their findings in light of human population growth and its relationship to planetary resources.

Overall, they find that just over 50% of Earth's total land surface has been modified by human activity. Because many of these modifications also result in reduction of land available for agriculture -- either by degradation of land quality by processes such as soil erosion, or by transforming agriculture lands to urban uses -- Hooke and colleagues argue that these changes to our planet's land surface also influence the ability of these same lands to sustain local, regional, and, ultimately, global population.

Comparing projections of future changes in land-use with projections of population growth leads them to also suggest that human population may be entering, or already in, a state of "overshoot" -- where the needs of the present population exceed the long-term carrying capacity of a region. Solutions may not be easy to arrive at, but would need to involve a combination of efforts aimed to reduce demand for resources, develop new technical solutions to resource limitations, and to reduce the rate of growth of population.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Geological Society of America.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Roger LeB et al. Land transformation by humans: A review. GSA Today, 2012 DOI: 10.1130/GSATG151A.1

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/LQkCUiVLfRw/121127154209.htm

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Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Social Media Ad Revenues to Double By 2016 [REPORT]

growth
Good news for those who believe social media advertising revenues will be crushed by mobile: A researcher is estimating that the category will double by 2016 to become a $9.2 billion business, in the U.S. at least.

BIA/Kelsey projects a 19.2% annual growth rate for the next four years for social media ads. The researcher believes that so-called native ads like Facebook?s Sponsored Stories and Twitter?s Promoted Tweets will lead the growth. Such native social advertising will grow from $1.5 billion in 2012 to $3.9 billion in 2016 for a 26% annual growth rate. BIA/Kelsey predicts that Facebook, Twitter and others including StumbleUpon and Tumblr will be able to command higher prices for the formats.

Even the oft-derided social display ads ? the ads you see on Facebook?s right-hand column or the banners on YouTube ? will also grow from $3 billion in 2012 to $5.4 billion in 2016, which amounts to a compound growth rate of 15.2%.

The report?s sunny take contrasts a bit with a pervasive belief that the growth of mobile will torpedo overall ad revenues. For instance, Facebook?s stock fell as low as $17.55 after the company went public at $38 as investors punished the company for its perceived lack of ability to monetize its growing mobile audience. But even Google, which has anticipated the mobile revolution, has seen its average cost-per-click fall as mobile takes a bigger slice of the overall pie.

SEE ALSO: What Is ?Native Advertising?? Depends Who You Ask
For its part, BIA/Kelsey estimates social-mobile ad revenues will jump from $500 million in 2012 to $1.5 billion in 2016 as the category grows at an annual compound rate of 28.5%. ?We?re pretty clearly placing a bet that mobile ads will perform,? says Jed Williams, a senior analyst with BIA/Kelsey. ?Obviously, mobile ad economies are not very good, but as demand goes up, hopefully the prices will go up.? Early indications are that Facebook?s native mobile ads are performing well. The company?s ability to grow the business, though, will be constrained by screen size and a more limited tolerance for ads, Williams says. But ?a better, more robust ad unit can be a driver,? he says.

Thumbnail image courtesy of iStockphoto, akinbostanci

Source: http://mashable.com/2012/11/26/social-media-ad-revenues-double/

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Video: ?Haunted? elevator prank terrifies passengers

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/49978076/

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With Ban on Drilling Practice, Town Lands in Thick of Dispute

Matthew Staver for The New York Times

Voters in Longmont, Colo., approved a ban on the drilling practice known as hydraulic fracturing, prompting legal threats. "People really didn't think through this too well," the mayor said.

LONGMONT, Colo. ? This old farming town near the base of the Rocky Mountains has long been considered a conservative next-door neighbor to the ultraliberal college town of Boulder, a place bisected by the railroad and where middle-class families found a living at the vegetable cannery, sugar mill and Butterball turkey plant.

But this month, Longmont became the first town in Colorado to outlaw hydraulic fracturing, the oil-drilling practice commonly known as fracking. The ban has propelled Longmont to the fiercely contested forefront of the nation?s antifracking movement, inspiring other cities to push for similar prohibitions.

But it has also set the city on a collision course with oil companies and the State of Colorado.

?People really didn?t think through this too well,? Mayor Dennis L. Coombs said, sounding weary at the prospect of an onslaught of lawsuits. ?We are where we are. I guess you have to respect the people.?

In a way, Longmont?s fracking ban is in a position similar to Colorado?s ballot measure legalizing small amounts of marijuana for recreational use. Both are lessons in the promise and peril of populism: both initiatives sailed through on Election Day despite opposition from the authorities, and both now face legal scrutiny and fights at all levels of government.

Gov. John W. Hickenlooper, a Democrat, has warned Longmont residents that the ban is likely to mean a lawsuit from the state, which insists that only it has the authority to regulate drilling. Already this summer, Colorado sued Longmont over earlier city rules that limit drilling near schools and homes.

Local leaders are also bracing for more lawsuits as they tell energy companies they can no longer frack their wells ? a process that involves injecting thousands of gallons of pressurized water, sand and chemicals deep into the earth to fissure the rock and extract the oil and gas locked inside.

The ban does not outlaw all drilling, only the specific practice of hydraulic fracturing within the city limits, as well as the storage and disposal of waste created by the process.

?We?re going contrary to state laws,? said Bill Swenson, one of seven former mayors of Longmont who fought the ban. ?We are, in effect, taking your property.?

Fracking has allowed drillers to unlock huge new reservoirs of oil and natural gas over the past few years, and has kick-started economies from North Dakota to western Pennsylvania to here in northern Colorado. The industry says the practice is environmentally safe, but opponents have raised concerns about water contamination and air pollution while objecting to islands of well pads and forests of drilling towers in their communities.

The Colorado Oil and Gas Association, the main lobbying group for the energy industry here, criticized the ban as confrontational and encroaching on the private property of companies that have rights to oil and gas buried deep beneath Longmont?s streets, parks and reservoirs.

?Are the taxpayers of Longmont prepared to provide fair compensation to all of the oil and gas lease holders in Longmont?? said Tisha Schuller, the group?s president.

Supporters of the ban call it a ?citizen uprising? against a rush of drilling that has spread like brush fire through towns across the plains of northern Colorado.

In nearby Firestone, wells sit within a few hundred feet of libraries, schools and subdivisions. In Greeley, herds of tanker trucks line up at city fire hydrants at dawn to load water for fracking. Earlier this year, a federal scientist reported finding elevated levels of propane and benzene in the air around Erie. City officials and environmental advocates have even led fracking tours of communities where drilling is at its peak.

When people learned of plans to sink wells in Longmont near the Union Reservoir and a playground and recreational area on the east end of town, a response began to coalesce: not here. Supporters said the state?s decision to sue over Longmont?s regulations stiffened their resolve.

At the start, the ban seemed like a doomed idea.

The energy industry poured money and resources into fighting it, raising more than $500,000 to send out mailers and buy advertisements saying the ban would drive away businesses and incite expensive court battles. The major newspapers in Denver, Boulder and Longmont all urged voters to reject the proposal.

?I had no idea we could upset an entire state government and a trillion-dollar industry,? said Michael Bellmont, an insurance agent who helped gather thousands of signatures and knocked on doors to persuade voters.

Advocates of the ban focused less on climate change and environmental concerns than on hitting voters where they lived: Do you want oil wells venting near your backyard? Do you want drilling near your schools?

The industry said the arguments were based on fear-mongering, deception and antifracking hysteria, but they resonated with voters. The ban passed 60 percent to 40 percent, with broad bipartisan support.

One recent afternoon, a few supporters who helped get the ban passed drove through town to visit some of the ?red sites? ? areas that had been leased for drilling, or could be in the future. They drove past public parks, open spaces and golf courses and stopped at the Union Reservoir, still and limpid under a cloudy sky.

?There?s a swim beach, there?s sailing, and there will be eight well pads,? said Kaye Fissinger, a supporter of the ban, pointing out potential drilling sites in the distance. ?You come out here to relax. You don?t come out here to have your air polluted.?

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/26/us/with-ban-on-fracking-colorado-town-lands-in-thick-of-dispute.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

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Monday, November 26, 2012

Sylvan and Otter Lakefront Real Estate- You're Buying a Lifestyle ...

Sylvan and Otter Lakes Lakefront Real Estate Sales Sylvan Otter Lake is a 530 acre all sports lake located in Waterford and West Bloomfield Townships and the Village of Sylvan Lake- south of Highland Rd (M-59), north of Orchard Lake Rd, east of Cass Lake Rd and west of Telegraph. Weed control is taken care of by the Sylvan Otter Lake Association. There is a state licensed water ski course on the south side of Otter Lake running along the edge of the swamp. Oakland County Boat Club is a private not for profit social club and marina located in Sylvan Lake since 1912 and is usually in charge of the Fourth of July fireworks.

Sylvan Otter Lake Association

Oakland County Boat Club

Sales for lakefront home sales in 2012, so far, have been much improved. Unit sales are up from 2011, average and median sale prices are up, and so far there has been over $3 million more in sales on Sylvan and Otter Lakes.

If you are considering buying or selling a home on Sylvan Otter Lake please don?t hesitate to contact me.

There are currently 7 active listings on Sylvan and Otter Lake- all normal sales ranging in asking price from $329,900-$559,000.

Compliments of Jackie Hawley of the JHawley and Associates Real Estate Team at ReMax Encore in Clarkston MI.

www.MiRelocation.com???? ? www.LakeOaklandHomes.com???? ? www.MacedayLake.com

Sylvan and Otter Lake

www.SearchMichiganMLSListings.com

Cell: (248)736-6407

Jackie@JackieHawley.com

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Source: http://southeastmichiganrealestate.wordpress.com/2012/11/25/sylvan-and-otter-lakefront-real-estate-youre-buying-a-lifestyle/

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These Tiny Pyramids Are Microscopic Cages For Cells

Cells are three-dimensional so it makes sense to study them in a three-dimensional context, right? That's what researchers from the University of Twente in the Netherlands thought, which is why they made these little cages for studying live cells, instead of using a flat petri dish. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/p-Dk27jLAF4/these-tiny-pyramids-are-microscopic-cages-for-cells

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