Monday, July 1, 2013

The 'Internet of Things' pits?George Jetson vs. George Orwell

Red Tape Chronicles

22 hours ago

A model poses in an LED dress in Tokyo. The dress, with light-emitting diode devices installed inside, was designed by Swarovski and Hussein Chalayan ...

Kim Kyung Hoon / Reuters file

A model in Tokyo poses in an LED dress designed by Swarovski and Hussein Chalayan. One day soon, electronic clothing like this will even be connected to the Internet.

Doors that magically unlock as you approach. Clothes that advise you when they're out of style, then tell your car how to get to the nearest sale. Cough medicine that tells you when it's time to go to the doctor. This magical, futuristic world now called the "Internet of Things" is coming straight from science fiction into your home. Like "the cloud," the "Internet of Things" is largely a marketing term designed to create buzz around a series of not-yet-ready-for-prime time technologies, and also like the cloud, you won't be able to avoid hearing about it soon.

But this time, the stakes are much higher. It?s a full-on cage match between George Jetson and George Orwell.

Maybe it's a miracle to think about high-tech insulin pumps that patients never need to touch, while doctors control them from thousands of miles away. But what happens when a hacker hijacks that insulin pump ? or simply threatens to hijack it, and messages the patient that he'd better pay a ransom to keep it functioning properly? Those runaway gadgets from "The Jetsons" cartoon might not be such a laughing matter in real life.

We already have an Internet of Things ? your PC, laptop, tablet, everything already connected to the Internet. What the "IoT" crowd means by "things" is "everything." They want to attach tiny computers and sensors to just about every object in the world, and make them all talk to each other.

"We have everyday objects we've been interacting with for years, and many of these objects are now gaining intelligence and connectivity," said Jason Johnson, leader of the IoT consortium. "We will create this fabric of connected devices."

The back story
The idea of putting little connected computers everywhere, even floating in the air around us, isn't new. You'll find popular references to "ubiquitous computing" nearly 20 years ago. Since then, there has been one failed effort after another to bring James Bond-like automation to our lives. Take the hobbyist X-10 technology, which let users turn off household lights via remote control ? X-10 gadgets had trouble competing with The Clapper, much less "The Jetsons."

Today, continually shrinking sensors and processors put us on the threshold of the Internet of Things. In fact, some of this futuristic wizardry already has a devoted following. Members of the burgeoning Quantified Self movement use iPhones and wearable sensors like Fitbit to measure their heart rate, blood pressure and sleep patterns, upload that data into spreadsheets, sometimes even share it automatically via Twitter and Facebook. They use the data to find the optimal temperature to go for a run, or the best humidity conditions in which to sleep.

Fitbit system combines wireless trackers, a Wi-Fi smart scale, smartphone apps

Fitbit

The Fitbit system combines wireless trackers, a Wi-Fi smart scale, smartphone apps and cloud-based information management to help people keep in shape.

Advanced medicine also already employs many of these technologies. For instance, probes with cameras work their way through our circulatory systems into our hearts, sending back detailed pictures to doctors who can make repairs in minutes in situations that would previously proved fatal.

When that kind of technology inevitably gets cheap ? when our pens, cars, toilets and everything else can see and hear us ? many exciting notions become possible. You might never run out of toilet paper, for example. At the same time, you might share uncomfortably up-to-date health information with your doctor.

What could go wrong?
But anyone who's every suffered a dropped phone call, gotten bad directions from a GPS, or even had a printer jam will realize that technology lets us down as often as it lifts us up. So aren't we setting ourselves up for gadget failure hell?

No, says Johnson, for two reasons. First, stepping on the shoulders of other futuristic failures, Internet of Things entrepreneurs know they have to prioritize substance over glitz. And second, the gadgets they sell must have an old-fashioned backup system.

"You must solve a real problem for people," he said. "We have to make sure our products and services aren't just gizmos that will shortly outgrow the gee-whiz factor. We have to have a positive impact on people's lives, making them simpler and more relaxed."

One such gadget, Johnson hopes, is the August Smart Lock ? making it is his day job. The front door lock recognizes who is approaching your home and lets you open the door on command. No need to give the dog walker a spare key; Smart Lock users can grant access to certain people at certain times, even during emergencies.

"It lets you rethink what it means to give access to your home," he said.

Smart Lock has a second important feature: If the power goes out, the homeowner can use an old-fashioned key to get in. For the Internet of Things to work, there must be a plan B when it doesn't work, Johnson says. Anyone stuck in a car with a dead battery and electric windows can appreciate that.

 August Smart Lock installation diagram

August

The August Smart Lock, which installs over a standard deadbolt, lets you unlock your door over the Internet.

Big Brother
Potentially comical failures ? what if your toilet paper sensor battery goes dead? ? are not the biggest potential obstacle for the Internet of Things, however.

The NSA is.

If you are even the slightest bit worried about the federal government reading your email, how concerned will you be that it could create a database of every bowel movement? Far fetched? Imagine what the National Institute of Health could do with such data.

Every one of these computer things will collect data that could end up in the hands of law enforcement, marketing companies, or even hackers, and at the moment, there is little to stop that. This worries Kevin Mahaffey, who runs mobile security company Lookout Inc.

"There are two possible ways this works. A world where everything you do is surveilled, and everything is potentially hacked by someone,? Mahaffey said. "But the alternative way is a world where you as an individual can control this data. And that's a pretty exciting world, a world where you can have the benefit of the technology, but not some Orwellian dystopia, where even in your own home you aren?t safe from the Internet-connected pen."

One privacy nightmare ? the reselling of bathroom data to drug companies, an insulin pump hacker attack, or a law enforcement incident involving home automation or monitoring ? could derail the Internet of Things for years, Mahaffey warns.

Johnson acknowledges this, but he believes companies in his space can rise to the challenge of balancing convenience with privacy.

?All the Internet of Things companies, we're capturing a lot of data about users,? Johnson said. Government regulations and industry policies should restrict usage of the data, but communication with consumers will also be key. ?We need to be very cognizant of the sensitivity of that data and how we make users aware of how this data can be used ? It's important they understand what?s going on.?

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Sunday, June 9, 2013

Belmont Stakes 2013: Will it be Orb, Oxbow, or another horse?

O, for a horse race Saturday when the 145th Belmont Stakes takes off from the starting gate near the Big Apple.

Orb, winner of this year's Kentucky Derby, meets Oxbow, the Preakness winner, and 12 other horses in the mile and a half race at Belmont Park, just outside New York City.

Orb will start from post position No. 5. Trainer Shug McGaughey, whose thoroughbred racing office is located at Belmont, feels like his horse will be in a good position to handle whatever might come his way.

?I think, on paper, there is going to be a bit of a pace, so he?ll be able to kind of drop out of it and dictate what he wants to do. If there isn?t, and they?re going in :49 and some change, then he can be laying up there. I just hope he has some place to go when the time comes," McGaughey told NYRA.com Wednesday.

RECOMMENDED: Triple Crown quiz: Test your knowledge of thoroughbred horse racing's 'Big Three'

As Tropical Storm Andrea moves over and exits the northeastern US Saturday, there's a good chance the New York track will be wet, a possibility all trainers will factor into their pre-race preparations. Orb won the Derby five weeks ago on a sloppy Churchill Downs track.

"It doesn't really matter whether it's sloppy or fast, you just don't want it to be sticky or heavy," trainer Todd Pletcher said, referring to the track condition. He added that his horses "all have enough pedigree on wet tracks so it won't compromise them too much."

Just two spots to Orb's right will be the Preakness champion in the No. 7 post position. Oxbow is trained by multiple Belmont-winner D. Wayne Lukas, who's more concerned about the competition than the media's interest in starting spots.

" ... at a mile and a half with that long run and the sweeping turns, we have a tendency to overanalyze the post position draw. I?m more concerned about who is around me and what they?re going to do than what gate we got," the Hall of Fame trainer said Wednesday.

Another horse to keep an eye on will be Freedom Child, who has some familiarity with this track. The three-year-old won the Peter Pan Stakes, run at a rainy Belmont Park one week after the Kentucky Derby.

Former Belmont-winning trainer Pletcher leads the field with five horses entered, including Revolutionary, who finished third in the Kentucky Derby. Other Pletcher Derby horses entered in the Belmont are Overanalyze and Palace Malice.

Pletcher will also saddle the only filly, or three-year-old female horse, entered in the race. Unlimited Budget will start one spot from the outside in post position No. 13. Midnight Taboo rounds out Pletcher's starting five.

?We were kind of hoping Unlimited Budget would draw toward the outside. I think Palace Malice, maybe, will show some speed, so we?re happy to be outside of Freedom Child and Oxbow," Pletcher said after the post position draw on Wednesday. ?I think [the 1 ?-mile distance] will suit [Revolutionary] well. He?s a horse who turns off really easily. I think he?ll settle in the first part of the race. That?s important if you?re going to get the mile and a half.?

Post time for the Belmont is scheduled for 6:36 p.m. Eastern time. NBC will televise the third leg of the Triple Crown series of races.

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/belmont-stakes-2013-orb-oxbow-another-horse-140003394.html

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South Africa: Mandela taken to hospital

JOHANNESBURG (AP) ? Former South African President Nelson Mandela is in "serious but stable" condition after being taken to a hospital to be treated for a lung infection, the government said Saturday, prompting an outpouring of concern from admirers of a man who helped to end white racist rule.

Mandela, who is 94 years old, was treated in a hospital several times in recent months, with the last discharge coming on April 6 after doctors drained fluid from his lung area after diagnosing him with pneumonia. He has been particularly vulnerable to respiratory problems since contracting tuberculosis during his 27-year imprisonment under apartheid.

"During the past few days, former President Nelson Mandela has had a recurrence of lung infection," said a statement from the office of President Jacob Zuma. "This morning at about 1.30a.m., his condition deteriorated and he was transferred to a Pretoria hospital."

It said Mandela was receiving expert medical care and "doctors are doing everything possible to make him better and comfortable."

Zuma wished Mandela a quick recovery on behalf of the government and the nation and requested that the media and the public respect the privacy of the former leader and his family, the statement said.

"We need to hold our thoughts and keep him in our minds," said Mac Maharaj, the president's spokesman. "He is a fighter, he has recovered many times from very serious conditions and he will be with us. Let's pray for him and help him to get better."

The African National Congress, the ruling party that has dominated politics in South Africa since the end of apartheid, said it hoped Mandela, known affectionately by his clan name Madiba, would get better soon.

"We will keep President Mandela and his family in our thoughts and prayers at this time and call upon South Africans and the peoples of the globe to do the same for our beloved statesman and icon, Madiba," the party said in a statement.

On April 29, state television broadcast footage of a visit by Zuma and other ANC leaders to Mandela at his Johannesburg home. Zuma said at the time that Mandela was in good shape, but the footage - the first public images of Mandela in nearly a year - showed him silent and unresponsive, even when Zuma tried to hold his hand.

"Nelson Mandela is a father to South Africa and South Africans; every time he is admitted to hospital we feel saddened along with the rest of our country," the Democratic Alliance, the main political opposition party, said in a statement.

South Africans expressed hope that Mandela would recover from his latest setback.

"He is going to survive," said Willie Mokoena, a gardener in Johannesburg. "He's a strong man."

Another city resident, Martha Mawela, said she thought the former president would recover because: "Everybody loves Mandela."

Mandela was robust during his decades as a public figure, endowed with charisma, a powerful memory and an extraordinary talent for articulating the aspirations of his people and winning over many of those who opposed him.

In recent years, however, he has become more frail and last made a public appearance at the 2010 World Cup soccer tournament, where he didn't deliver an address and was bundled against the cold.

In another recent hospitalization, Mandela was treated for a lung infection and had a procedure to remove gallstones in December. In March, he spent a night in a hospital for what authorities said was a scheduled medical test.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/south-africa-mandela-taken-hospital-060610820.html

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Saturday, June 8, 2013

Nokia Chat 1.1 beta sends contacts to other Lumias through NFC

Nokia Chat 11 beta lets friends send contacts through NFC

While chat apps excel at adding contacts from the online world, they don't cope so well with real life -- reciting and typing screen names isn't very elegant. Nokia is bringing back some of those social graces with its Nokia Chat 1.1 beta, which revolves around NFC transfers. If both friends own NFC-equipped Lumia phones, they can tap to exchange their own details, other contacts or even the app itself. It's also easier to share locations: contacts with Lumias will see a Here Maps-based preview of any given place. These additions don't make as much sense outside of an all-Nokia ecosystem, but there's certainly enough for existing users to upgrade at the source link.

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Via: Nokia Beta Labs, WMPoweruser

Source: Windows Phone Store

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/07/nokia-chat-1-1-beta/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Nabi Headphones


I'm not a parent, but as a guy who spends his life reviewing audio gear, I'm particularly interested in people protecting their hearing, both because I love music, and because I like getting paid. Too few companies are pursuing the lanes that Nabi, a consumer tech manufacturer geared at kids (and parents) is. The Nabi Headphones are $99.99 (direct), and they're the first headphones I'm aware of that are made for both parents and kids. The child listening mode tops out at 80dB, so your kid won't ruin his or her hearing at an early age?something that is happening at an alarming rate since the entrance of iPods into our lives. In adult mode, the headphones reach higher decibel levels and achieve a more dynamic sound. They look cool enough that a kid will want to wear them and not so childish that you'll be embarrassed. And oh, yeah?they sound pretty great, so we're happy to give them our Editors' Choice award.

Design
The Nabi Headphones'?bright red plastic shell and quilted underside of the black padded headband provide a modern look. The logo is probably going to appeal more to your kid than you, but at least it's not SpongeBob. An inline remote control adjusts volume only, not playback or track navigation, but there's a microphone, too, for taking and making phone calls?just no button on the remote for answering them. (Call clarity is fine.)

A switch atop the left earcup toggles between parent and child mode?child mode is cleverly labeled only with the Nabi logo, so hopefully it takes your kid a little longer to catch on. To reduce the volume for your child, press the button on the lower edge of the earcup to turn the headphones on, and slide the switch into Nabi mode. Brilliantly, it is hard to switch the headphones out of one mode and into another when wearing them, as the position of the earcup in relation the headband more or less blocks the switch from sight, and also from fingers?you'd likely have to take them off to switch modes.?Nabi Headphones inline

When the earcup rings glow in white, you know you're in "Nabi" mode. When they glow red, you are in parental rock-out mode. If your kid ever figures this out, the jig is pretty much up, but at least you'll know whether Tommy or Suzie has switched out of kid mode by monitoring the color of the illuminated band.

Those lights don't happen on their own?you'll need to put the included AAA battery in the compartment on the right earcup. A rechargeable option would have been a better idea here, and more environmentally-friendly, but the headphones at least output audio in passive mode, though the child and parent modes disappear and they become plain old headphones.

Nabi gets so many things right with the design?even the cable is detachable, which could add to the lifespan of the product. (Replacing a cable is a lot cheaper than replacing the whole thing, and cables are often the culprit when headphones start malfunctioning.) Limitations with the remote and the use of a AAA battery aside, the Nabi headphones benefit from a comfortable, well-thought out design.

Performance
So, here's the real surprise: These headphones don't suck. In fact, in adult mode, they can hang with some of the better models in the same price range. They deliver tracks with powerful sub-bass content, like the Knife's "Silent Shout", without a hint of distortion (though they do vibrate a lot at top volumes) and with plenty emphasis on the track's throbbing bass.

Switch to kids mode, and the volume lowers dramatically, and the treble seems to be toned down a bit, along with the deep bass response. The sound is a bit duller?less crisp and dynamic, but it doesn't sound awful, and unless you're raising the next Steve Albini, your child probably won't really think it sounds dull or wildly different from what he or she is used to. At maximum volume, it's still fairly loud, but not nearly as loud as 99 percent of the headphones I test can get?this really will help protect your kid's ears.

When playing less bass-heavy genres, the Nabi headphones adjust well enough. In child mode, Bill Callahan's "Drover" sounds way too muted and the drums manage to sound too bass-heavy without the headphones dishing out a ton of low-end, but again, this sound is adjusted for kids who have far more sensitive hearing than you do at this point in your life. In adult mode, things get a lot louder (but you can always turn it way down!) and crisper?Callahan's vocals and guitar get the treble edge they need for this track to sound dynamic and balanced.

Classical tracks sound a tad tinny in parent mode, but the added bass response at least balances this out. John Adams' "The Chairman Dances" gets both a heavy dose of extra low end for the lower register strings and a tad too much brightness for the higher register strings and brass. But nothing here sounds egregiously off?and for a $100 headphone pair, this is often the case anyway. In kids mode, if your kids listen to classical music (then bless you), the overall sound is pretty flat?not a ton of bass, nor treble.

What does Barney sound like through the Nabi headphones? Sorry, guys?until I have kids, I invoke my privilege to never listen to Barney or SpongeBob and leave that testing to you. But you should have enough information based on the descriptions in this review to draw your own conclusions.

We haven't tested too many kid-focused headphones?in fact, the two models that come to mind are in-ear options. Both are solid products, but they aren't exactly new on the scene?the Etymotic ETY Kids5 and the Ultimate Ears Loud Enough. Of the three, the Nabi Headphones are the standout?you can just do a lot more, in terms of design, with the added real estate a larger pair of headphones provides. The headphones sound pretty darn good for what they are, the design is clever, and the entire product concept addresses an important issue. The Nabi Headphones are competing in a thin but necessary field, and they easily win our Editors' Choice award.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/TQiT3_EGOE4/0,2817,2419797,00.asp

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Is This Nokia's Full-On PureView Windows Phone in Action?

Earlier this week a series of leaked photos showed off what could be Nokia's full-on EOS 41-megapixel camera. Now, a video from the same source shows the thing in action?and it looks pretty serious.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/_lgwkjMDH1E/is-this-nokias-full-on-pureview-windows-phone-in-actio-511851960

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Friday, June 7, 2013

Video: Crowborough lad taking it to the extreme to follow dreams ...

A WHEELY talented boy from Crowborough has his eyes firmly set on being world champion of his sport, even if it means having to take extreme risks.

The scooter is the ride of choice for 12-year-old Jake Lorimer but unlike most people who use the humble mode of transport, he enjoys flinging his equipment and body through the air to pull off breath-taking tricks.

  1. 12-year-old Jake Lorimer doing extreme scootering at Jarvis Brook Skate Park in the recreation ground on Tuesday afternoon, June, 4. TWSL20130604E-001_C

  2. 12-year-old Jake Lorimer, centre, doing extreme scootering at Jarvis Brook Skate Park in the recreation ground on Tuesday afternoon, June, 4. He is pictured with friends, Tom Pelling, left, who photographs him in action and Danny Gibbs who films him. TWSL20130604E-009_C

  3. DEFYING GRAVITY: Jake Lorimer, 12, at Jarvis Brook Skate Park TWSL20130604E-003_C

The Beacon Community College pupil took up the activity around two-and-a-half years ago but only in the last few months has he honed his skills to land some amazing stunts.

He spent hours watching extreme sport stars on YouTube before going out on the streets to see if he can emulate his heroes.

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The fearless youngster from Gillridge Lane said he wanted to keep progressing in the sport.

He said: "I practice a lot at the skate parks in Crowborough and Jarvis Brook. They are both different, because one has bowls and the other is more of a street park with rails to grind.

"I can do things like a Bri, where you flip the scooter over and land back on it. I also like doing a Flair Backflip, which is basically where you go up a quarter pipe and do a twisting backflip and land back on the scooter.

"It is scary because you don't want to fall on your face but for the flair I tried to do it really hard and pulled the bars up so if anything went wrong I would land on my feet."

Last week he spent the half term visiting ten parks around Birmingham with other scooter enthusiasts to develop his talent.

He now wants to compete at events and is looking for a local company to sponsor him.

"If I had a sponsor and something broke on my scooter and it needed replacing they would pay for it and I would ride for them and represent them."

He tries to ride his ?400 custom scooter as much as he can and practices multiple times a week.

His dream is to ride at the X-Games ? the Olympics for extreme sports ? or join up with a team like the Nitro Circus, which is a troupe of extreme sport athletes who tour the world.

"I'm going to keep going and not give up.

"You can make a career out of it. I would like to compete at X-Games or the International Scooter Association World Championships.

"I think it just takes a lot of practice and if you keep doing it you get better then you go onto different tricks."

He lives on a thin line between success and failure, which he only knows too well.

Recently he ended up in A&E after a trick went wrong.

His mum, Carla Sacre, said she is worried every time he goes out but would never stop him from doing it.

She said: "He faceplanted and ended up in hospital and got his mouth glued. As a mother it is hard and you do think of the risks but I support him 100 per cent because it's his passion.

"I am very proud of him. It's nice to know Jake is outside getting exercise and not stuck on the X-Box indoors."

Source: http://www.thisissussex.co.uk/Crowborough-lad-taking-extreme-follow-dreams/story-19215508-detail/story.html

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Doctors in Ontario use emergency CT less than in U.S

By Trevor Stokes

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Emergency patients received nearly twice as many CT scans in the U.S. as in Ontario in recent years, according to a new study that also found use of the high-powered X-rays is rising in both countries.

Doctors use CT scans to get a clearer image of the interior of the body than regular X-rays can provide, but the imaging is costly and exposes patients to higher levels of radiation - raising concern about cancer risks from repeated CTs, especially in children.

"Our study wasn't able to look at whether this was a good thing or a bad thing for patients in terms of patient outcome, but I think it does beg the question: Since the technology is available in both countries, why is it being used twice as often in the U.S.?" said study author Dr. Carl Berdahl, emergency medicine resident at Los Angeles County University of Southern California Medical Center.

He and his colleagues compared 699 million U.S. emergency department medical records to 26 million from Ontario, covering the years 2003 to 2008.

Overall, nearly 1 out of every 9 U.S. emergency patients received a CT scan, compared with 1 in 17 Ontario emergency patients.

Patients being treated for trauma - for instance to the head or abdomen - received CT scans nearly four times as often in the U.S. compared with Ontario, according to the results published in the Annals of Emergency Medicine.

However, in both the U.S. and Ontario, an equal proportion - 45 percent - of the sickest non-trauma emergency patients received CT scans.

During the study period, CT scans of children aged 10 and younger increased in the U.S. while at the same time decreasing in Canada.

The researchers focused on how often emergency doctors used CT scans to assess patients with abdominal pain, headache, chest pain or shortness of breath.

The U.S. data came from estimates from national surveys, whereas the Ontario data came from the provincial registry that closely tracks emergency medicine.

"We use the technology in the U.S. a lot more and expose more children to radiation; but we're not sure at this stage whether one strategy may be better than the other," said Berdahl.

Dr. Keith E. Kocher, an expert in emergency use of CT scans and instructor of emergency medicine at the University of Michigan, wasn't surprised with the results, and said the study could help sharpen the focus on what is driving differences between the U.S. and Canada in the use of CT for diagnosis.

While the study could not discern whether the U.S. overtested or Ontario undertested, Kocher said evidence from other studies suggests that U.S. doctors scanned emergency patients excessively.

Based on those studies, several factors may drive ER doctors in the U.S. to overuse CT: lack of time for well-thought-out decisions, unfamiliarity with patients, fear of litigation and the technological imperative that a doctor is more likely to use a CT scanner if the machine is nearby.

Nearly all U.S. patients (97 percent) had access to a CT scanner, while 80 percent of Ontarians had access.

Physicians and others may come to realize that they're overtesting and also at some point, CT scan use will stop growing because of the finite number of eligible patients, he said.

Non-radioactive alternatives to CT scans include ultrasound and MRI. Ultrasounds, like those used for expecting mothers, give less information and are not available in ERs in small hospitals. MRIs give detailed information, but are very costly and not available in most ERs, experts noted.

Berdahl and colleagues are looking into the feasibility of using radiation-free ultrasound and MRIs to help diagnose appendicitis in children.

Regardless of the disparities between the U.S. and Ontario, "in both places, they're doing too many studies (CT scans)," said Howard Forman, health economist at Yale University and practicing emergency/trauma radiologist.

Other research has found unnecessarily repeated CT scans, patients who didn't meet the criteria to have a CT scan and, more rarely, CT scans that get ordered because of miscommunication, noted Forman, who was not involved in the current study.

"In some instances, the appropriate study (CT scan) is done, but waiting an extra three or six hours may have avoided the need for doing the study," he told Reuters Health. "Sometimes we're so quick to want to image problems that we're not willing to wait to see if the symptoms resolve on their own."

The U.S. system also depends on high throughput of patient and in many cases, fee for service, which can give doctors incentives to scan patients instead of waiting symptoms out, experts said.

"In the U.S. system, there are strong incentives to get the CT scan done now and send the patient home or to the operating room," Forman said.

SOURCE: bit.ly/17EcP8t Annals of Emergency Medicine, online May 16, 2013.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/doctors-ontario-emergency-ct-less-u-205431402.html

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Thursday, June 6, 2013

Casio Signature XJ-M155


The Casio Signature XJ-M155 provides good data image quality, and video suitable for typical business or classroom presentations. This 3D-capable projector has a good range of connectivity choices, including the ability to project via Wi-Fi or from a USB thumb drive. Although you can buy high-quality XGA data projectors for considerably less, the XJ-M155's light source should last the lifetime of the projector, saving you from having to replace the lamp every few years.

The projector is rated at 3,000 lumens and has XGA (1,024 by 768) native resolution. It uses the same hybrid LED/laser light source that we've seen in the Casio Signature XJ-M255 and other models in the company's Signature and Slim projector lines. Instead of producing red, green, and blue using a standard lamp and a color wheel, it produces red with LEDs, blue with lasers, and green by shining the blue laser light on a phosphor. Its optical system directs the red, green, and blue light to the DLP chip, and out the front lens.

A key advantage of this system is the lamp's 20,000-hour expected lifetime, which means it should last for the life of the projector. The lifetime of standard lamps typically ranges from 2,000 to 5,000 hours, and replacement bulbs can cost several hundred dollars.

Size and Connectivity
The XJ-M155 measures 3.3 by 12.2 by 9.6 inches (HWD) and weighs 8.6 pounds. Although it's most appropriate for use on a cart, or even permanently installed, it's light enough to take with you on the occasional trip. It comes with a soft carrying case, complete with a pocket for cables.

The XJ-M155 can read JPG and AVI files from a USB memory key, so you can run a presentation from the USB key and leave your laptop at home. When you plug in a USB key, the projector will automatically switch to it and give you a menu of options to find the files on the key and show them. Casio includes a Casio-specific version of ArcSoft MediaConverter to move most common formats to JPG or AVI.

The XJ-M155 is Wi-Fi enabled, and can run presentations from Android, iOS, and Windows Mobile smartphones and computers running MobiShow software.

Other connectors include an HDMI port for a computer or video source; a VGA port for a computer, which doubles as a component video port; S-Video, 3 RCA jacks for composite audio/video; audio-in, audio-out, a serial port, and an Ethernet LAN connection.

Image Quality
The XJ-M155 is bright enough to throw a fairly large image even in a brightly lit room. I did most of the still and video image testing under theater-dark conditions with the projector about 8 feet from the screen, projecting an approximately 6 foot diagonal image.

The projector in general did well on our suite DisplayMate tests. Colors were a little dull in Graphics mode; some images with white or gray backgrounds showed a trace of green tinting. The image was brighter and colors were bright and well saturated in Standard mode, though there was also more tinting. Some yellows looked mustardy. The XJ-M155 did well on our text tests, with type readable if a bit blurry at our smallest white-on-black size.

The XJ-M155, like all single-chip DLP projectors, has the potential for showing a rainbow effect in which light areas break up into little red-green-blue flashes when you shift your gaze or in moving images, particularly ones with bright areas against a dark background. Though I saw the effect in data images, it was not severe enough to be an issue, even to people who are sensitive to it. This projector's image quality should be fine for typical data presentations for businesses or classrooms.

The XJ-M155 is adequate for shorter video clips as part of a presentation. I frequently saw rainbow artifacts in video scenes, more so than in a typical DLP projector, and people sensitive to the effect will likely be distracted by it. Even if you're not sensitive to it, it may be an issue for your audience.

The XJ-M155's 5-watt mono speaker puts out decent-quality audio that's loud enough to fill a smallish conference room. The XJ-M155's warranty is three years for the projector itself, plus 6,000 hours for the light source, a lot longer than the usual 90-day lamp warranty. It's likely that the light source will outlast the projector.

The XJ-M155 is 3D capable, though it requires active-shutter DLP-link compatible 3D glasses. Casio sells its own branded glasses for $129.99 (direct) per pair, and active-shutter DLP-link glasses are available from other manufacturers for considerably less. It could still prove pricey if you're trying to outfit a classroom for 3D viewing.

The XJ-M155 is priced lower than the higher (WXGA) resolution Casio Signature XJ-M255, but otherwise is very similar, with slightly better text quality. They both have the same generous set of connectivity choices. On the downside, both showed significant rainbow effect in video.

The Casio XJ-M155 is not as bright as the Editors' Choice Epson PowerLite 1835 XGA 3LCD Projector, which is rated at 3,500 lumens. As an LCD projector, the Epson 1835 is free from the rainbow effect, and it has above-par video and great data image quality. Both the XJ-M155 and Epson 1835 let you run presentations from a USB thumb drive and offer WiFi connectivity, though Epson 1835's is through an optional ($99) dongle. The XJ-M155 is 3D capable, while the Epson 1835 is not.

The BenQ LX60ST, a short-throw data projector, also uses a laser-based light engine, but unlike the Casio projectors, which combine lasers and LEDs, it uses lasers for all three colors. It has excellent data image quality and passable video, though it's relatively dim at 2,000 rated lumens.

The Casio Signature XJ-M155 is a good projector for classrooms and conference rooms, able to handle most any data presentation and show passable video. Its light source should last the lifetime of the projector, saving money in the long term over projectors with conventional lamps that may need to be replaced every few years. It's 3D capable, and has a good selection of connectivity choices, including the ability to run presentations via Wi-Fi or from a USB thumb drive.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/-1WnEbFIP98/0,2817,2387955,00.asp

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Star astronaut Chris Hadfield's future up in the air

NASA

Canadian Space Agency astronaut Chris Hadfield, Expedition 34 flight engineer, floats freely in the Unity node of the International Space Station in this photo taken on Dec. 31, 2012.

By Elizabeth Howell
Space.com

With star astronaut Chris Hadfield recently back on planet Earth after five months in orbit, many are wondering what he will do next.

Will Hadfield stay with the Canadian Space Agency? Bring his outreach skills to politics or business? Or do something different altogether?

"Chris will have people knocking onhis door from every single possible area of work imaginable, and I'm sure that there are already probably 1,000 requests to come and speak," said three-time space shuttle flyer Marc Garneau, who became Canada's first astronaut in space in 1984. [Astronaut Chris Hadfield's 8 Most Amazing Space Moments]

"It'll be fun, but also tough for him to make a decision," Garneau said. "I have no idea what his plans are. We are very good friends, but I've never asked. It'll be interesting to see."

Hadfield's wife, Helene, speaking from Houston on May 14 just hours after her husband's landing, told Space.com that the subject of a post-flight career didn't come up in their hours of ground-to-space phone conversations.

"We're always thinking about the next step, but really, at this point, all I know is anything Chris does is always an adventure," she said. "No matter what he does, he really likes what he's doing. It'll grow organically, but right now all he's thinking about is this mission."

'It's like asking an infant if they're ready for their Ph.D.'
Hadfield's stay on the International Space Station ?? which included commanding the Expedition 35 mission ? made headlines worldwide. The astronaut, in between running a productive science mission, found time to play mini-concerts, chat with celebrities from orbit and post hundreds of pictures on Twitter.

NASA / Carla Cioffi

Expedition 35 commander Chris Hadfield of the Canadian Space Agency, left, Russian flight engineer Roman Romanenko of the Russian Federal Space Agency, center, and NASA flight engineer Tom Marshburn sit in chairs outside the Soyuz capsule just minutes after they landed in a remote area outside the town of Dzhezkazgan, Kazakhstan, on May 14.

Hadfield has shied away from talk about his future in the weeks since landing.

In a news conference three days after he returned to Earth, Hadfield told reporters he was too busy focusing on recovering from microgravity's effects to think about what to do after the mission.

"I'm trying to stand up straight, and I have to sit down in the shower so I don't faint and fall down," Hadfield said May 16. "It's like asking an infant if they're ready for their Ph.D. yet. I'll get there, but it's too early to say."

So far, Hadfield has debriefings and a few public appearances on his schedule, as well as extensive medical checkups. He's scheduled to play in a concert on July 1 ? Canada's national holiday ? on Parliament Hill in Canada's capital of Ottawa. [Hadfield?Hits: How To Shave In Space | Video]

It's questionable that Hadfield would go to space again as a government astronaut, experts say. There are two rookie Canadian astronauts ? Jeremy Hansen and David Saint-Jacques ? who are in training and awaiting flights themselves.

Commercial direction unlikely at this time
Canada is?entitled to only a small number of flights compared to the larger contributors to the space station: NASA, Roscosmos (Russia's space agency), the European Space Agency and JAXA (Japan's space agency).

Canada's "credits" for spaceflight come through its science and its robotics contributions to the station, CSA interim President Gilles Leclerc told Space.com in May. Canada's 2.3 percent utilization right of the orbiting laboratory entitles the country to a send another astronaut to space around 2018, but Leclerc said he is negotiating for an earlier date ? perhaps 2016.

Commercial spaceflights might be possible for Hadfield, who is a former NORAD fighter pilot. In May, Virgin Galactic hired four-time space shuttle astronaut C.J. Sturckow?to conduct flight training and testing with SpaceShipTwo, a suborbital spaceship under development.

Still, Helene Hadfield said it was premature to talk about her husband piloting a commercial ship.

"It's not the time to go into a commercial company," she said, citing the months of debriefing, rehabilitation, touring and other post-flight activities Hadfield faces. "Maybe in the future, but he's so happy (with the CSA). He has nothing against that, but the timing is not really right for right now."

Contrast between space and politics
After his third spaceflight, Garneau, Canada's first astronaut, chose to leave space traveling for the management echelons of the Canadian Space Agency, where he later served as president for four years.

His reasoning for leaving was it would be a long wait for a fourth flight, Garneau told Space.com. Additionally, Garneau wanted to bring his young children, who had been living in Houston, back to Canada.

If Hadfield did turn to politics, Garneau ? now a Montreal-area member of Parliament for Canada's Liberal party ? pointed to a change between an astronaut's public persona and that of a politician.

As an astronaut, he said, "you're a fairly popular figure in the sense that people like to hear from astronauts and to hear about space."

Garneau, in fact, partially made a living as a speaker in between an unsuccessful attempt at winning a seat for the Liberals in 2006, and his successful election in 2008.

"But when you enter politics," Garneau added, "you identify yourself with a particular party, particular values, particular policies. At that point, you're open to being criticized by people."

Hadfield's next journey will be to Russia in early June, as the astronaut begins debriefings at various space agencies that contributed science to the mission.

Follow Elizabeth Howell @howellspace, or Space.com @Spacedotcom. We're also on Facebook and Google+.

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

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653377/s/2ce23fef/l/0Lscience0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A60C0A50C187767590Estar0Eastronaut0Echris0Ehadfields0Efuture0Eup0Ein0Ethe0Eair0Dlite/story01.htm

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Pandora Ditches PS3 and Xbox 360 Apps For a Special HTML5 TV Interface

Pandora Ditches PS3 and Xbox 360 Apps For a Special HTML5 TV Interface

Starting today, you don't need to use a standalone application to access Pandora through your Playstation 3 or Xbox 360. The company has built a new HTML5 home for its services that's specially tailored for your TV. Simply point your console's browser to tv.pandora.com, login, and you'll be good to go.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/CYMWKhF0_io/pandora-ditches-ps3-and-xbox-360-apps-for-a-special-htm-511411349

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Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Vodafone looking at Kabel Deutschland again - paper

FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Vodafone is looking at a possible takeover of Germany's biggest cable company Kabel Deutschland again, the Wall Street Journal Deutschland reported, citing several people familiar with the matter.

In an article published on its website late on Monday, it cited the people as saying Vodafone had not yet decided whether to make an offer, or when it might make a decision.

Vodafone owns some fixed-line assets in Europe, including Germany where it offers mobile and fixed lines to private and business customers, but it has so-called quad-play services with TV, fixed and mobile calls on superfast networks only in Portugal.

Investors had feared the trend for quad-play could force Vodafone to go on a Europe-wide spending spree for fixed-line assets, and sources told Reuters in February that it was weighing a 10-billion-euro bid for Kabel Deutschland.

But analysts had expected talks to die down after Vodafone last month struck a deal with Deutsche Telekom allowing it to offer pay-TV over high-speed broadband to its German customers.

Vodafone Germany declined to comment. Kabel Deutschland declined to comment.

(Reporting by Maria Sheahan and Peter Maushagen; Editing by Mark Potter)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/vodafone-looking-kabel-deutschland-again-paper-063027661.html

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Easy Payments WebSite Starting an Online Business from Scratch

One advantage of doing business online is that you can start from scratch without investing much money. Here is a 27 Step Action Plan to help you get started...

1. List 5 hobbies, interests or areas of expertise. If you want to start a new business, you'd better choose a subject that you like and a subject where you can show expertise. You will have more fun and you will be more competitive.

2. Brainstorm a list of keywords and phrases related to those hobbies and interests. For example, if you are going to sell small airplane collectibles, some possible keywords could be: airplanes, aeronautics, war airplanes, etc.

3. Research those keywords in Wordtracker.com to locate problem statements that have high search results and low competition. Wordtracker.com is a web page that helps you find out how many times your keywords are searched online, how popular your keywords on search engines are. Those keywords may represent problem statements. Wordtracker shows you how many people are buying traffic on those keywords and how much are they paying. You need to find popular statements with low competition.

4. Research those problem statements further to determine if you can develop a product to solve the problem stated. You may use search engines to see how many people are offering products that can help to solve those problems. If you find a popular problem and there are not many people offering solutions online, you've got it!

5. Find or create a product based on previous research for you to sell. Once you found a hungry market, you just need to find the food that your customers want and they will eat from your hands. You may find companies online that can manufacture the products for you or you may find a different way to create the product yourself. If the product is an e-book, you may write it yourself or you may hire someone else to do it.

6. Write a long copy sales letter for that product. The experience of the most important internet marketing gurus reveals that long copies sell much more than short copies. It is also recommendable that you try to sell only one product on your web site. Focus on one product unless the solution you are providing is the offer of a wide catalogue.

7. Register a domain and set up a hosting account. There are many places online where you can register a domain and set up a hosting account in minutes.

8. Register for a merchant account (to set up quickly use PayPal.com). If you don't want to register a merchant account that will allow you to take credit card payments online, go to PayPal.com and sign in. It can be a little bit more expensive, but it is a simple way to take credit card payments online very quickly.

9. Set up a simple web site using an automatic site builder or pay to have someone set it up for you. Do not try to design your own web site unless you are educated on html. Do not waste your time. Hire someone else to do it or buy automatic web site builder software. There are many of these you can buy online.

10. Set up an opt-in form on your web site to collect e-mail addresses. You need to start collecting e-mail addresses for your newsletter. The major part of your business will come from the emails that you will send to your customer list.

11. Build an extensive keyword list based on the initial list of keywords you developed. Use Overture.com. For each keyword on the initial list, Overture can help you find different combinations with other words that you may find interesting. Check the popularity of each term and write down on a spread sheet your final keyword list.

12. Submit those keywords to Overture.com to start driving traffic right away. You need to start driving some traffic immediately in order to test your web site. The best way to do that is to buy this traffic at overture.com

13. Optimize and submit your web site to organic search engines (Google, Altavista, etc...). Once you have proved that your web site works and sells, you will be ready to make the business bigger. It is then time to start working on building free traffic to your site.

14. Continue to test and tweak your web site until target conversion rate is met. Your conversion ratio should be that 1-2% of your visitors should buy from your web site, and 11% should subscribe to your newsletter. Continue testing until you get those stats.

15. Set up an affiliate program on your web site. Affiliate programs can double your business with no additional effort. Others will make the job for you. But you cannot set up an affiliate program before you are sure that your web site can produce results. If your site does not work, you will loose your affiliates and they will never come back to you again.

16. Approach complimentary web sites to sign up as affiliates to promote your product. Get in contact with people that can promote your product and ask them to be your affiliates. Just try to find your first 100 affiliates, and your affiliate list will boom alone.

17. Start publishing a monthly newsletter. You have started collecting e-mail addresses much earlier, but it is not the time to start working the newsletter until you can prove that everything else works.

18. Submit articles to related newsletters and e-zines on a regular basis. In the articles you should always have a link to your site, so that you can get more traffic and you can get more people joining to your newsletter.

19. Continue the development of a content rich web site to further increase search engine rankings. Search engines love content. You must have many web sites which are rich on your keywords and which have links to your main page. A good way to do this is to add as many articles as you can related to your business and link them to your home page.

20. Once keywords have been tested in Overture, roll out in Google Adwords. It works similar to Overture, you bid for traffic. But do not go to Google Adwords first. You must first prove your success with Overture and then go to Google Adwords.

21. Roll out tested keyword list in other major PPCs. When you are sure about your stats, and you know how much money you collect per visitor, you must buy as much traffic as you can get as far as your income per visitor is higher than your bids.

22. Create a viral e-book to generate more leads. Create a free e-book that you can promote and which sells your product or service. Give it for free, and this will bring more traffic to your web site.

23. Have an expert review and critique your web site. Even if your site works, you can always improve. Listen to others and learn from their experiences.

24. Survey your existing customers to find out what other products or services they are looking for. Once you have a big list of customers, use it to find out what other problems do they have. Try to find or create a solution for them and you will boost your sales instantaneously.

25. Create and find back-end products and market them through your e-mail list. Continue finding more products that meet your customer demands and promote them via e-mail.

26. Continue to test and tweak your web site and offers. Nothing is perfect the first time and can always be improved. It is very important that you take action, even if you make mistakes. Learn from your errors and improve your skills.

27. Repeat process to create "Multiple Streams of Income". Once your business is working on automation, then you can start the process again with a new business. Build as many businesses as you can, and reduce your risks. If one business fails, but you have another 5 working businesses, who cares about it?

If you have read up to this point, you are probably asking yourself how much it will cost to get started? The answer is very simple; it depends on how much time and money you have available to invest! If you have a lot of time, you can do everything yourself. On the other hand, if you don't have time, you will have to pay other people for building your website and/or for optimizing your site on search engines.

If you can do nothing else...just launch a web site and start promoting online...

About the author: Rachael Willis is the webmaster of http://www.infoproductscentral.com and the publisher of "The Genuine Truth" newsletter. "The Genuine Truth" newsletter is full of freebies,articles and reviews of the hottest products. If you are tired of spending money on bad products then you need "The Genuine Truth". Join us today and let me spend my money to test these products so you don't have to.

Author: Rachael Willis

Source: http://easypayments.ws/956187-Starting-an-Online-Business-from-Scratch.html

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Never forget a face? Researchers find women have better memory recall than men

June 4, 2013 ? New research from McMaster University suggests women can remember faces better than men, in part because they spend more time studying features without even knowing it, and a technique researchers say can help improve anyone's memories.

The findings help to answer long-standing questions about why some people can remember faces easily while others quickly forget someone they've just met.

"The way we move our eyes across a new individual's face affects our ability to recognize that individual later," explains Jennifer Heisz, a research fellow at the Rotman Institute at Baycrest and newly appointed assistant professor in the Department of Kinesiology at McMaster University.

She co-authored the paper with David Shore, psychology professor at McMaster and psychology graduate student Molly Pottruff.

"Our findings provide new insights into the potential mechanisms of episodic memory and the differences between the sexes. We discovered that women look more at new faces than men do, which allows them to create a richer and more superior memory," Heisz says.

Eye tracking technology was used to monitor where study participants looked -- be it eyes, nose or mouth -- while they were shown a series of randomly selected faces on a computer screen. Each face was assigned a name that participants were asked to remember.

One group was tested over the course of one day, another group tested over the course of four days.

"We found that women fixated on the features far more than men, but this strategy operates completely outside of our awareness. Individuals don't usually notice where their eyes fixate, so it's all subconscious."

The implications are exciting, she says, because it means anyone can be taught to scan more and potentially have better memory.

"The results open the possibility that changing our eye movement pattern may lead to better memory," says Shore. "Increased scanning may prove to be a simple strategy to improve face memory in the general population, especially for individuals with memory impairment like older adults."

The complete study, published in the journal Psychological Science, can be found at this link.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/qZFujkTeHG8/130604113957.htm

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Mammoth Oklahoma tornado was widest ever recorded ? almost strongest, too

The tornado that ripped through El Reno, Okla., on Friday was the widest tornado ever recorded and had winds that hit nearly 300 miles per hour, close to the highest wind speed ever measured, the National Weather Service reported Tuesday.

The record-setting twister was 2.6 miles wide at its maximum and carved a 16.2 mile path across mostly rural land west of Oklahoma City. It tops the previous record-holding tornado, which hit Hallam, Neb., on May 22, 2004, and was 2.5 miles wide.

For comparison, USA Today notes that Manhattan is 2.3 miles wide at its widest point.

RECOMMENDED: Can you outsmart a tornado? Take our quiz

The National Weather Service also upgraded the tornado to its most powerful class, an EF-5 ranking, on Tuesday. The agency upgraded the ranking from an EF-3 after surveying damage from the twister. The tornado and subsequent flooding killed 18 people, including four storm chasers.

El Reno now joins the Moore, Okla., tornado as the second EF-5 to hit Oklahoma in less than two weeks, another record for the state, according to the National Weather Service?s Norman, Okla., office.

But Friday's massive tornado avoided the highly populated areas around Oklahoma City, and forecasters said that likely saved lives. When the winds were at their most powerful, no structures were nearby, said Rick Smith, chief warning coordination meteorologist for the weather service's office in Norman.

?The impacts were horrible of what happened, where it hit, and what happened to people and structures,? Mr. Smith told the Oklahoman. "But we are so fortunate that this did not impact densely populated areas. This would have been ... I don't even want to imagine what it would have been.?

El Reno is about 25 miles west of Oklahoma City and has a population of about 17,000, according to its website. Moore has more than 55,000 residents, according to 2010 census data.

Winds during Friday?s giant twister also nearly broke records.

A mobile doppler radar at the University of Oklahoma measured winds greater than 295 miles an hour at several times and locations within along the south side of the tornado, according to the Oklahoman.

Howard Bluestein, a University of Oklahoma professor, told The Washington Post that two of his graduate students clocked wind speeds as high as 296 miles per hour on their mobile doppler unit while observing the storm from the east.

The World Meteorological Organization requires direct measurements from anemometers for official wind speeds, meaning the strongest wind gust on record is officially 235 miles per hour in tropical cyclone Olive at Barrow Island, Australia, in 1996. Yet during a 1999 tornado in Moore, the team of Joshua Wurman, director of the Center for Weather Research, measured wind speeds of 301 miles per hour.

For observers of Friday?s super-tornado, the 2.6-mile path may have been difficult to identify as a tornado.

"A two and a half mile wide tornado would not look like a tornado to a lot of people," the National Weather Service?s Smith said.

On average, more than 1,000 tornadoes hit the US each year, and only one might be an EF-5, reports National Climatic Data Center.

? Material from the Associated Press was used in this report

RECOMMENDED: Can you outsmart a tornado? Take our quiz

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mammoth-oklahoma-tornado-widest-ever-recorded-almost-strongest-212645516.html

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Tuesday, June 4, 2013

6,500 Silk Worms Spin One Heck Of A Cloud

6,500 Silk Worms Spin One Heck Of A Cloud

Honestly, it seems like silk pajamas are on a downswing in popularity. Which is a damn shame. But the Mediated Matter Research Group (part of the MIT Media Lab) recently put thousands of silkworms to work on an architectural project that combines the worms' natural talent with computer modeling.

Silk Pavilion consists of 26 silk polygons which act as the structure of the piece. Made of silk thread laid by a Computer-Numerically Controlled (CNC) machine, the polygons were a template on which to place 6,500 silkworms which produced natural, unprocessed silk patches. The silkworms worked until the whole structure had been covered.

The CNC used an algorithm that had analyzed the patterns in worm-generated patches of silk, and then produced the first level of structure. The silkworms themselves created the second level, working as a sort of natural 3D printer. This gets to the heart of the piece as an interplay between natural and digital construction. The next trend in interior design should definitely be loosing thousands of silk worms on your house and letting them redecorate. [Creative Applications]

6,500 Silk Worms Spin One Heck Of A Cloud

Source: http://gizmodo.com/6-500-silk-worms-spin-one-heck-of-a-cloud-510908939

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Monday, June 3, 2013

Mars spacecraft celebrates 10 years

The European Space Agency (Esa) is celebrating the 10th anniversary of its Mars Express mission.

Launched on 2 June 2003, the probe went into orbit around the Red Planet in the December of that year.

Its most significant discovery is probably the detection of water-altered minerals at the surface.

A sample of these, clay minerals, were recently drilled and analysed for the first time by the Americans latest rover, Curiosity.

MEx retains a full suite of working instruments and has sufficient fuel to keep operating deep into this decade, although hardware failure in the harsh environment of space is an ever-present threat.

Two years ago, engineers were challenged to find a new way to operate the satellite when it developed a serious memory glitch.

"It was our first mission to Mars. We actually planned for a two-year lifetime at the planet with a possible extension of another two years; and now here we are at 10 years and counting," said Alvaro Gimenez, Esa's science director.

"It's been a great success from an engineering point of view, but also from a science perspective because of the extraordinary global view it has given us of Mars," he told BBC News.

MEx's seven instruments allow it to study the atmosphere, the surface and sub-surface of the planet.

Its German-led camera system has imaged over 95% of Mars, with two-thirds mapped at a resolution of 20m per pixel or better. Much of this has been done in stereo, which has allowed scientists to build remarkable 3D views of the surface.

Key observations have included the detection of methane in Martian air, a potential signature of biology; and the identification of vast landforms cut by glacier activity in the distant past.

MEx has also seen evidence of relatively recent, geologically speaking, volcanic activity; and it has probed the polar caps with its radar to determine the presence of huge deposits of water ice.

At the south pole alone, there is enough water locked up in ice to cover the entire planet with a layer of liquid 11m deep.

But it is the mapping of clays and other hydrated minerals that is most frequently cited by Mars researchers as the probe's major contribution to their field of study.

Esa released new maps from MEx on Monday that detail not only the location of the clays, or phyllosilicates as they are often called, but other mineral types as well, including pyroxene, olivine, haematite (iron), and the weathered materials - the ubiquitous dust - that give Mars its red hue.

The information contained in these maps has allowed MEx scientists to construct a probable history for the planet.

This describes a very early wet phase when water was stable at the surface followed by a drying out as the Martian climate abruptly changed about four billion years ago.

It provides a guide to where Europe should send its 2018 ExoMars rover, says Prof Jean-Pierre Bibring, the principal investigator on MEx's Omega instrument.

"[The maps] give the prediction of where on Mars to find the relics that might have been habitable," he told a 10th anniversary MEx conference in Darmstadt, Germany.

"If life started elsewhere than on Earth, we know where to go to. We know the places; they have been identified. We have got to go to the Phyllosian, and ExoMars should do that."

The "Phyllosian" is the period in Mars history, some 4.2-4.5 billion years ago, when the clay beds seen by MEx are thought to have been formed.

Mars Express has some spectacular observations planned in the months ahead.

In December, it will attempt an extremely close flyby of the planet's moon Phobos, skimming 47km from the surface. And then in early 2014, it will turn its instruments on Comet C/2013 A1 (Siding Spring), which is passing within just a few hundred thousand km of the Red Planet.

The one major blemish on this European venture to Mars remains the loss of the Beagle2 lander.

The small British-built surface probe was carried to the planet by MEx and released just a few days before the scheduled touch-down. A picture of the disc-shaped Beagle2 disappearing into the distance is the last contact Esa had with the lander.

Jonathan.Amos-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk and follow me on Twitter: @BBCAmos

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-22754128#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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Schumer offers optimistic outlook for immigration bill in Senate

Senator Chuck Schumer, a members of the bipartisan Gang of Eight who drafted the Senate's immigration bill, said he thought the legislation would pass the Senate overwhelmingly by July 4. Members of the House have pledged to draft their own measure, which will likely differ from the Senate's priorities.

By Philip Elliott,?Associated Press / June 2, 2013

Members of the bipartisan immigration 'Gang of Eight,' a group of four Democrats and four Republicans in the Senate, participate in a Capitol Hill news conference in Washington April 18. Together they crafted a bill to address the dominant immigration questions, which Senator Chuck Schumer D-N.Y., (second from left) says will pass the Senate by July 4.

Charles Dharapak/AP/File

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A lawmaker who helped negotiate a bipartisan bill to overhaul immigration predicted on Sunday that comprehensive legislation would overwhelmingly pass the Senate by July 4 while House Republicans cautioned that they would write their own version, one piece at a time.

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Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said he anticipates as many as 70 of the 100 senators will vote for the measure heading to the full Senate on June 10. Even if it passes there, the proposal faces tough prospects in the Republican-led House, where lawmakers are at work on their own piecemeal approach that could stall a pathway to citizenship for the estimated 11 million immigrants living in this country illegally.

"We are moving forward because we believe in a bipartisan way this is so vital for America, and we'll have a good bill," Schumer said, pledging to allow colleagues to amend the legislation.

Not so fast, House lawmakers cautioned.

"That Senate bill is not going to move in the House," said Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Fla.

For months, four Democratic senators met with four Republican colleagues behind closed doors and developed a proposal that would enact new border controls and enforcement mechanisms in the workplace, allow tens of thousands of workers into the country legally for high- and low-skilled jobs and create a 13-year path to citizenship for those already living here illegally. It passed through the Senate Judiciary Committee last month by a vote of 13 to 5; three Republicans joined the Democratic majority.

House lawmakers, though, have pledged to put together their own measure ? likely taking components of the comprehensive Senate plan one at a time and adding their own priorities.

"We think it's better to do it with a step-by-step approach," said House Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte, R-Va.

"We'll continue down that path, but the final outcome in terms of the form of the legislation is not yet known," he added.

Democrats and Republicans alike recognized the political potency of the issue. The Senate, led by Democrats, is putting added pressure on the House, led by Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio.

"Congressman Boehner is in a box. There are about 60 or 70 of his people who are against any immigration reform. But at the same time, he knows that the Republican Party will be consigned to a minority party for a generation if they're anti-immigration," Schumer said.

In 2012, President Barack Obama won re-election with 71 percent of Hispanic voters and 73 percent of Asian voters backing him. A thwarted immigration overhaul could send those voting blocs more solidly to Democrats' side.

"We are hard at work on this problem. We have a broken immigration system in the country, it needs to be fixed, our legal immigration, our enforcement and figuring out the appropriate legal status for people who are not lawfully present in the United States all need to be addressed," Goodlatte said.

But it is unlikely to be a sweeping answer in the House, lawmakers said.

"I don't know if we'll have comprehensive reform or we will have it piece-by-piece. But that Senate bill may not even pass the Senate itself," Ros-Lehtinen said.

Schumer spoke to NBC's "Meet the Press." Ros-Lehtinen was interviewed on CNN's "State of the Union." Goodlatte was on "Fox News Sunday."

Follow Philip Elliott on Twitter: https://twitter.com/Philip_Elliott

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/EKU-X4DyvLE/Schumer-offers-optimistic-outlook-for-immigration-bill-in-Senate

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