Sunday, January 27, 2013

Trove of ancient skulls found in Mexico

Archaeologists have unearthed a trove of skulls in Mexico that may have once belonged to human sacrifice victims. The skulls, which date between A.D. 600 and 850, may also shatter existing notions about the ancient culture of the area.

The find, described in the January issue of the journal Latin American Antiquity, was located in an otherwise empty field that once held a vast lake, but was miles from the nearest major city of the day, said study co-author Christopher Morehart, an archaeologist at Georgia State University.

"It's absolutely remarkable to think about this little nothing on the landscape having potentially evidence of the largest mass human sacrifice in ancient Meso-America," Morehart said.

Middle of nowhere

Morehart and his colleagues were using satellite imagery to map ancient canals, irrigation channels and lakes that used to surround the kingdom of Teotihuacan (home to the Pyramid of the Sun), about 30 miles (50 kilometers) from Mexico City. The vast ancient kingdom flourished from around A.D 200 to 650, though who built it remains a mystery. [In Photos: Amazing Ruins of the Ancient World]

In a now drained lake called Lake Xaltocan, around which was essentially rural farmland at the time, Morehart stumbled upon a site with evidence of looting.

When the team investigated, they discovered lines of human skulls with just one or two vertebra attached. To date, more than 150 skulls have been discovered there. The site also contained a shrine with incense burners, water-deity figurines and agricultural pottery, such as corncob depictions, suggesting a ritual purpose tied to local farming. [See images from the grisly excavation ]

Carbon dating suggested that the skulls were at least 1,100 years old, and the few dozen analyzed so far are mostly from men, Morehart told LiveScience. The researchers did not release photos of the skulls because the sacrifice victims may have historic ties to modern-day indigenous cultures.

The findings shake up existing notions of the culture of the day, because the site is not associated with Teotihuacan or other regional powers, said Destiny Crider, an archaeologist at Luther College in Iowa, who was not involved in the study.

Human sacrifice was practiced throughout the region, both at Teotihuacan and in the later Aztec Empire, but most of those rituals happened at great pyramids within cities and were tied to state powers.

By contrast, "this one is a big event in a little place," Crider said.

The shrines and the fact that sacrifice victims were mostly male suggest they were carefully chosen, not simply the result of indiscriminate slaughter of a whole village, Crider told LiveScience.

Many researchers believe that massive drought caused the fall of Teotihuacan and ushered in a period of warfare and political infighting as smaller regional powers sprang up, Morehart said.

Those tumultuous times could have spurred innovative ? and bloody ? practices, Crider said.

"Maybe they needed to intensify their activities because everything was changing," she said. "When things are uncertain you try new strategies."

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

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

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mass-human-sacrifice-pile-ancient-skulls-found-152724186.html

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Saturday, January 26, 2013

Video: GOP splits as some push for Electoral College changes

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/hardball/50592870/

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Daily Mobile Computing Feed ? Jan 24, 2013

  • Companies Warming to BYOD | Fox Small Business Center
  • Companies have grown to embrace the bring-your-own-device (BYOD) trend, new research has found. (more)

  • How a Big Financial Services Firm Faced BYOD iPads
  • CIO Magazine Blackstone spent a lot of time and energy finding ways to secure confidential documents on BYOD iPads, even looking at possibly purchasing iPads for employees. The company leveraged two main technologies-MobileIron and WatchDox-to solve the ? (more)

  • Non-profit cuts costs with BYOD
  • Computerworld Australia Compassion Australia has saved thousands of dollars since shifting to a bring-your-own-device (BYOD) mobile strategy, according to the non-profit organisation?s systems administrator of projects, Blessing Matore. Compassion is a Christian non-profit ? (more)

  • Big changes ahead for the military?s BYOD strategy
  • Defense Systems The Defense Department?s game plan of allowing mobile devices in the workplace includes exploring mobile device management (MDM), a strategy that could potentially turn some defense employees off to the Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) concept, DOD ? (more)

  • IT Managers Embrace BYOD ? Business Insider
  • By Heather Leonard
    What You Need To Know About BYOD (Dell) How does bring your own device (BYOD) work best? How can companies ensure that their employees are happy and working productively on their own devices? To answer these questions, Dell ? (more)

  • BYOD + cloud swinging pendulum from content to collaboration ? AIIM
  • By Steve Weissman
    Much time and effort has been spent over the years improving the quality of the information we use to get our work done: we?ve invested in the deskewing and despeckling of images, subjected documents to version control, and striven to ? (more)

  • BYOD gaining traction, cutting costs and increasing efficiency
  • iTWire Enterprises are cutting business costs and increasing efficiency through the continued use of Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) programs, according to secure enterprise mobility vendor, Good Technology, which says there is an increasing adoption and support ? (more)

  • How a Big Financial Services Firm Faced BYOD iPads
  • CIO With BYOD iPad security under control, financial services firm Blackstone looks toward tough challenges ahead, including the possibility of company-owned iPads and opening up its BYOD program to Android and Windows 8 devices. By Tom Kaneshige ? (more)

  • Understanding The Bring-Your-Own-Device Landscape ? By Invitation Only
  • Mondaq News Alerts (registration) The rising use of personal technologies for work-related activities has coined the phrase Bring-Your-Own-Device (BYOD). It is a trend that has potential to bring substantial benefits to enterprises, but can equally present considerable risks and ? (more)

  • The Future of Mobile Computing
  • ***Editor?s Note*** RIM is really big on pushing the concept of mobile computing. So much so in fact, that the author of this post, @Lombaki, has been requested ? (more)

  • High Performance Laptops GeneralMobileComputing MobileComputing
  • Hi, I?m currently looking at all the manufacturers high performance laptops as a desktop replacement / mobile workstation. I?m looking at machine with ? (more)

  • New BYOD Threat: Email That Self-Destructs
  • InformationWeek As the BYOD movement infiltrates the enterprise, IT managers have more to worry about than ever. The latest challenge: Employees who use apps to send messages that ?self-destruct.? The possibility of employees dropping company secrets into Dropbox ? (more)

  • Bring Your Own Device Policies Are Changing The Way We Work Across The ?
  • Business Insider Eighty-nine percent of IT departments worldwide support bring your own device (BYOD) practices, according to a Cisco Internet Business Solutions Group survey on mobile device usage. Overall, BYOD tends to be a more popular trend in Asia, Latin America ? (more)

  • 5 Ways To Manage BYOD And Protect Sensitive Healthcare Data
  • CRN Employees are buying smartphones and tablets in record numbers and in some cases are insisting that they can use their personal devices to connect to corporate systems. According to the federal government?s HealthIT.gov website, healthcare ? (more)

  • Enterprises increasingly supporting BYOD
  • Computer Business Review Good Technology?s Bring Your Own Device survey revealed that BYOD continues to gain traction. Companies not supporting a BYOD scheme are increasingly becoming a minority. ?This is no surprise to us since we hear every day from our customers how ? (more)

  • VMware: Tackling BYOD? Here?s Some Food for Thought
  • DABCC.com Looking to support bring your own device within your company? You?re not alone. Today over 65% of organizations are exploring how to embrace BYOD. In fact, it seems as though most customers I talk to have some sort of BYOD initiative in play or at the ? (more)

  • 5 Alternatives to BlackBerry Balance: Where BYOD Coexists with IT
  • DABCC.com Whether you believe BYOD is headed to its death or not, the current market is still investing a great deal into this consumer-driven trend. The droves of iPads carried into the office, under the arms of executives and sales teams alike, has created ? (more)

  • Dell Survey: Impact of BYOD
  • UCStrategies According to a Dell Quest Software survey, IT executives are able to gauge the level of organizational maturity with BYOD strategies already being used, and are also able to realize and plan for problems and benefits. The findings from the survey ? (more)

  • The Ten Commandments of Bring Your Own Device
  • CIO It?s as if a voice boomed down from the mountain ordering all of the employees you support to procure as many devices as possible and connect them to corporate services en masse. Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) was born and employees followed with ? (more)

    Source: http://cloudfeed.net/daily-mobile-computing-feed-jan-24-2013/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=daily-mobile-computing-feed-jan-24-2013

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    Thursday, January 24, 2013

    Translation Envy: Can Latin Americans Win Over English Readers ...

    The fastest route for Spanish-language publishers to grow their global audience is through translations into English.

    By Andr?s Delgado Darnalt

    Andr?s Delgado Darnalt

    LONDON: The English-language translation of a novel that traces the origins of Colombian drug trafficking, from the early marijuana trade of the 1970?s to the drug wars embodied by reckless drug lord Pablo Escobar, was granted the English PEN Award in 2012 for outstanding writing in translation. The Sound of Things Falling (El ruido de las cosas al caer), by Colombian writer Juan Gabriel Vasquez, published in the UK by Bloomsbury and translated by award-winning translator Anne McLean, was one of 2012?s English PEN Writers in Translation Programme Awards.

    The novel, winner of the prestigious Alfaguara Novel Prize in 2011, is not the first one of Vasquez?s works to reach the English-speaking market: his two previous novels, The Informants (Los Informantes) and The Secret History of Costaguana (La Historia Secreta de Costaguana), were both published by Bloomsbury and received positive reviews in UK newspapers.

    ?English-speaking readers? impressions of Colombia? ? says McLean ? ?are likely to be steeped in the magical realism of Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez and the nasty, tragic realism of news reports of drug trafficking, kidnapping, guerrillas and paramilitaries.? The obscure atmosphere of the novel appealed to Bloomsbury?s Senior Commissioning Editor, Bill Swainson, who supported the publication of Vasquez?s translated works from the beginning: ?It reminded me of a novel by Irish writer Dermot Healy and its description of Northern Ireland?s struggle with the IRA, when people used to phone up their homes to check if their loved ones had arrived safely,? said Swainson at the book launch in Daunt Books Marylebone, London.

    English Translation as a Bridge

    The award underscores the ongoing question of access of foreign literature to what is increasingly becoming the international language of commerce and literature. In a recent article for Spanish organization Real Instituto Elcano, Cartagena Hay Festival director?Cristina Fuentes?affirmed that an estimated 250-500 million people across the world speak English as their first language and an estimated 1 billion as a second language.

    This preponderance renders it the gateway to translation for other languages. Edith Grossman, renowned for her translations of Cervantes? Don Quixote and Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez, stated in an article for Foreign Policy that English often serves as the linguistic bridge for books aiming to reach a number of Asian and African languages: for a book written in Spanish to enter the Chinese market, it must often be translated into English first. (For further exploration of this topic, see??Edith Grossman Frowns: The Challenges of Translation in America.?)

    In Europe, statistics show literary translations surpass those in many other segments of publishing. A 2012 survey of European publishers carried out by Literature Across Frontiersrevealed that the majority of translated titles are fiction, more than 75% of translations for all publishers surveyed. Earlier, the organization had carried out a study on trends across the continent between 1990 and 2005, which revealed that as of 1996, English as a source language for translations represented double the share in translated literature titles of the next 25 most important European languages together. As of 2005, English was followed ?and the gap was wide ? by French, German, Spanish, Italian, Swedish, Japanese and Russian.

    The panorama, though, for translations into English is quite the opposite. Figures from Literature Across Frontiers reasserts the well-trafficked statistic that 3% of the books published annually in America and Britain are translated, while in France and Germany the share in 2008 was 14% and 8%, respectively. And more recently, that number has jumped even higher.

    However, Julian Evans, writer and former chair of the English PEN Writers in Translation Committee, writing for a 2011 Global Translation Initiative Report, argues that although during the 1980?s and 1990s translated literature recorded low levels in the UK, its ?linguistic insularity? has been overcome following a revival of interest in political historical events around the world. In order to challenge this 3% figure, Literature across Frontiers is currently analyzing the latest translation data sourced from the Index Translationum?and will release in January 2013 a report on translated literature in the UK and Ireland. So far, according to Alexandra Buchler, Directo of LAF, the figures reveal that ?the absolute number of translated literature?in the UK is growing, although as a percentage the increase has been marginal because of the growing volume of UK publishing.?

    Translation Grows, But Only as Publishing Grows

    ??one simple rule seems to apply across the board: every title has to make a profit.?

    The barriers to translation in English-speaking countries were the subject of a study carried out by Dalkey Archive Press and the Global Translation Initiative, which found that almost 91% of respondents from media organizations in Anglo countries perceived a bias against translated literature in the review media in their country. One respondent, in particular, clearly described this bias as a vicious circle: publishers believe translations do not sell, meaning that they less get marketing and publicity than books in English, and, in this sense, get less coverage in newspapers. ?That is what we are beginning to question,? says Emma Cleave, Manager of Translations Program at English PEN, ?whether these barriers are real or whether they have more to do with perception.?

    Emma Cleave, PEN Translation Program

    In the current economic crisis facing UK consumers, with recession having a major influence on consumer?s decision in spending for non-essential items, the quest for publishers to reap profits from books is fierce. In the case of translated authors, unless they are well established figures, the routes to reach foreign markets are being hampered. As Cristina Fuentes states, ?the ethos has changed at the very core of the publishing business and one simple rule seems to apply across the board: every title has to make a profit. In a market the size of the UK or US this means selling at least 20,000 copies, while most foreign titles, unless they are established names, are published with a print run of approximately 2,000 copies.?

    Is There a Way to Sell More Translations?

    UK publishers could take advantage of the rising sales of ebooks and the advent personal branding to publicize translated foreign writers. On one hand, the latest figures from the Publishers Association reveal that although the invoiced value of UK publishers? sales fell in 2011, digital formats accounted for 12% of the total invoiced value of fiction sales in 2011, up from 3% in 2010 and 1% in 2009. On the other hand, the 2012 KeyNote report on book publishing in the UK showed that 23% of consumers were most persuaded to buy a book dependent on the subject and author, which signals that loyalty lies more with an author than with a publisher.

    However, English publishers are increasingly having more opportunities to access translation funds and specialist events. In a 2012 survey among European publishers, Literature Across Frontiers reported that English publishers had been less dependent in government funds since they could also rely in private foundations. Presently, the Independent Prize for Foreign Fiction and English PEN are spearheading the cause of support for translated literature in the UK, with the last one having provided grants to more than 60 translated titles since 2004. Also, specialist events such as the Literary Translation Centre at the London Book Fair and the International Translation Day are offering opportunities for books professionals to network and keep abreast of trends in the industry.

    How Does Spanish-language Literature Fit into the Anglo Market?

    And how does literature in Spanish in Anglo markets fit in? Far from being a common language in the UK, Hispanic publishers rely on translations to reach English-speaking readers. A popular adagio in Spanish goes ?si no puedes contra ellos, ?nete a ellos? (?if you cannot beat them, join them?). That is what New Spanish Books did. Launched in 2007 by the Spanish Embassy in London with the support of government offices, the Spanish Publishers Association and local industry professionals, the platform seeks to increase awareness of literature from Spain in the UK.

    Jorge Postigo

    ?It all started in London in 1997,? says Jorge Postigo, Director of Creative Industries at the Spanish Embassy?s Economic and Commercial Office in London. ?We knew sales of books in Spanish was limited in the UK restricted by the number of people capable of reading in the original language, so we decided to support literature in translation as the other logical route for the Spanish publishing industry into the UK market.?

    The online guide, which publishes two editions per year, coinciding with the London Book Fair and the Frankfurt Book Fair,?lists books published in Spain (not only in Spanish but also in Catalan, Euskera and Gallego) with available rights for translation. A panel of local experts, put together by the Spanish Embassy, chooses the works. The latest figures show that a total of 117 Spanish titles were translated and published in the UK in 2011, a 45% increase on 2010 and the highest figure recorded since 2004. Fiction (specially modern and contemporary fiction and classics) stands out as the most popular genre with 72 titles, more than 50% of the works.

    Alexandra Buchler

    This surge in English translations of Spanish works in the UK is also backed up by recent findings of Literature Across Frontiers, to which Publishing Perspectives was given access. Figures from their December 2012 report reveal that for three sample years (2000, 2005 and 2008) Spanish was the third most translated language in the country behind French and German.

    Small Boom in Latin American Lit

    However, there are presently no projects of this kind in Latin America with the task of showcasing what Pilar Reyes, Editorial Director of Alfaguara in Spain, calls a new ?small boom? of Hispanic authors from Latin America being translated in England, United States, France and Italy. Websites such as Palabras Errantes, which displays excerpts of works from Latin American writers with little or no exposure in their countries to Anglo readers, and magazines such as Granta, with its ?Best? series of Young Spanish Language Novelists (2010) and Young Brazilian Novelists (2012), are showcasing Latin American literature to a wider public, far beyond the limitations of print and mutual cooperation.

    The former initiatives could well be carried out in Latin America, in which governments and publishers could pull together by providing opportunities for contact between foreign and local book professionals in order for Latin American literature to reach international markets. ?Weeks for foreign publishers to meet writers and translators could also be beneficial to help national literatures take off, taking the example of what the Nordic countries have done to promote their literature after the Stieg Larsson phenomenon. These initiatives, coupled with a very rich literature, have resulted in many translations into Spanish.?

    With a wide pool of writers to choose from, Latin American publishers should pursue their efforts in exporting their literature abroad through a combination of government support for publishers in showcasing national literatures. For Swainson, part of the value of Vasquez?s novel lies in the way it bears witness to a difficult yet prevalent period in Colombian history: ?If you look at which books have really taken off and become interesting, it?s because they hit on some element of truth: truth to experience, truth to emotion, and truth to life.? That well could be a hint for Latin American publishers in their quest for courting language markets abroad.

    Andr?s Delgado Darnalt?is a Colombian journalist who has worked with the Colombian Book Chamber, the Iberoamerican Publishers Association, the Museum of Fine Arts ? Houston and the Fundaci?n Gilberto Alzate Avenda?o. He lives in London.

    DISCUSS: Selling Spanish, Translated Titles Still Tricky in the US

    Source: http://publishingperspectives.com/2013/01/translation-envy-can-latin-americans-win-over-english-readers/

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    Egypt to vaccinate after polio found in sewer

    CAIRO (AP) ? Egypt's Health Ministry will carry out a vaccination campaign for children in several Cairo areas after polio was recently found in the capital's sewage.

    The World Health Organization says a wild poliovirus was discovered in samples taken from sewage in the impoverished Cairo districts of Ezbet el-Haggana and Dar el-Salam and is believed to have been transmitted from Pakistan.

    The Egyptian Health Ministry's head of preventive medicine says the ministry will start vaccinating children under 5 in those neighborhoods on Feb. 3. The campaign will be broadened around Cairo in the first week of March, Amr Qandil said Thursday.

    Egypt was declared polio free after its last case in May 2004, and Qandil said no new cases have been reported.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypt-vaccinate-polio-found-sewer-170027617.html

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    Deal of the Day: Ventev Fusion Case for Galaxy Note 2

    Deal of the Day The Jan. 23 ShopAndroid.com Deal of the Day is the Ventev Fusion Case for Galaxy Note 2.This hybrid style case provides double layer protection for your Galaxy Note 2 with a silicone gel and a strong polycarbonate. The interior silicone gel provides shock-absorbent protection, while the hard shell polycarbonate exterior with soft touch finish guards against everyday wear and tear. This combination also adds multi-color style to your device!

    The Ventev Fusion Case is available for just $11.00, over 60% off today only. Grab yours while supplies last!

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    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/8uTKZ3FRKTA/story01.htm

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    Wednesday, January 23, 2013

    HBT: Halladay already throwing at Phillies complex

    Good news today out of Clearwater, Florida.

    According to Jim Salisbury of CSNPhilly.com, right-hander Roy Halladay threw 30 pitches off a mound Tuesday afternoon at the Phillies? spring training complex. The workout, which was overseen by pitching coach Rich Dubee, reportedly went well.

    Halladay missed time last year because of a shoulder issue and posted his worst ERA (4.49) since 2000. But he didn?t need surgery, has not experienced any sort of issues so far this winter and is capable of bouncing back in a big way in 2013.

    The 35-year-old must reach 225 innings this summer to trigger a $20 million vesting option for 2014. If the option doesn?t vest, Halladay will become a free agent.

    Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/01/22/roy-halladay-already-throwing-at-phils-spring-complex/related

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    Scientists find gene interactions that make cocaine abuse death 8 times more likely

    Scientists find gene interactions that make cocaine abuse death 8 times more likely

    Wednesday, January 23, 2013

    Scientists have identified genetic circumstances under which common mutations on two genes interact in the presence of cocaine to produce a nearly eight-fold increased risk of death as a result of abusing the drug.

    An estimated one in three whites who died of cocaine exposure is a carrier of variants that make cocaine abuse particularly deadly.

    The variants are found in two genes that affect how dopamine modulates brain activity. Dopamine is a chemical messenger vital to the regular function of the central nervous system, and cocaine is known to block transporters in the brain from absorbing dopamine after its release.

    The same dopamine genes are also targeted by medications for a number of psychiatric disorders. The researchers say that these findings could help determine how patients will respond to certain drugs based on whether they, too, have mutations that interact in ways that affect dopamine flow and signaling.

    The scientists had previously identified a total of seven mutations on two dopamine-related genes, some of which were linked to the risk for cocaine abuse death. Years of molecular genetics studies showed that the mutations had specific functions ? a single variant alone was associated with an almost three-fold increase in risk of dying of cocaine abuse ? and led researchers to hypothesize that the variants probably interacted because the genes themselves relied on each other for proper function.

    A statistical analysis that dissected the complex interactions among the variants combined with cocaine exposure revealed gene-gene-environment interactions that would dramatically increase the risk of death from cocaine abuse.

    "Finding an impact factor of 8 just blew us away," said Wolfgang Sadee, professor of pharmacology and director of the Program in Pharmacogenomics at Ohio State University and senior author of the study. "Beyond that, this represents a new paradigm. Going forward, we can ask whether such interactions do exist between variants that may be a normal variation in the population. These kinds of interactions may underlie the genetics of behavior."

    These specific findings apply primarily to whites. The researchers found that a different combination of variants affect the risk of cocaine abuse death in African Americans, and that in this population, some of the variants had protective properties.

    The research is published in the online journal Translational Psychiatry.

    The mutations are mostly single-nucleotide polymorphisms, or SNPs (pronounced "snips"). Each gene contains two alternative forms ? called alleles ? that are functionally identical in most people. However, in some cases, the activity level, or expression, of an allele can differ from its partner allele in a single gene.

    The SNPs described here are on two genes: the dopamine receptor D2, which is a target for antipsychotic drugs, and the dopamine transporter DAT, the main target of cocaine and amphetamines.

    The variants' clinical relevance was determined in earlier work led by Sadee that analyzed human brain autopsy tissues of people who had died of cocaine overdose and from age-matched drug-free controls.

    The variants identified in this work are harder to detect and analyze than many mutations because these variants have no role in making protein; they exist in deeper and often overlooked regions of genes. Sadee's lab has designed a technique to predict and determine their functions based on measurements of how much messenger RNA, a carrier of genetic information, each specific allele expresses.

    Having a defined set of a manageable number of variables then made a statistical analysis both possible and a critical step to more fully understanding the effects of these variants. First author Danielle Sullivan, a doctoral student in biostatistics at Ohio State, built logistic regression models to search for the main effects and interactions among the variants associated with the higher risk of cocaine death.

    "A combination of variants turned out to have a high effect on the risk of dying. That is called epistasis ? a gene-gene-environment interaction that is seen only when there is that extra stimulus, in this case the cocaine," Sadee said. "It's a three-way system, which is incredibly complex unless you know beforehand that these variables are all related to each other."

    Sadee said consideration of how gene-gene-environment interactions affect the impact of single genes could help solve the mystery of "missing heritability." Scientists know that genes are behind the causes of many diseases and conditions, but to date have been unable to document the complete genetic history of any given disease.

    More immediately, what he has discovered about these variants is likely to increase understanding of numerous psychiatric disorders and improve the effectiveness of medical therapies for these problems. Dopamine-related conditions include attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder, bipolar disorder, phobias, anxiety and schizophrenia.

    "The gene-gene interaction that we've reported here, eliciting what might be a 'perfect dopamine storm' under cocaine stimulation, could well contribute to other conditions and affect response to drugs such as antipsychotics and amphetamines," Sadee said.

    Clinical studies led by his lab so far suggest that gene-gene interactions occurring without an environmental stimulus such as cocaine do appear to help predict response to certain medications.

    He is also extending the research to a handful of other genes that affect signaling in the brain.

    "Each gene gives us new combinations, each one has novel variants that can be tested in this way. And they may be considered normal variations ? they're not associated with a disease process, but if there are multiple variants together, they may push this whole system in the direction that makes disease more likely or influences individual response to circumstances like stress or drugs," Sadee said.

    ###

    Ohio State University: http://researchnews.osu.edu

    Thanks to Ohio State University for this article.

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

    This press release has been viewed 36 time(s).

    Source: http://www.labspaces.net/126410/Scientists_find_gene_interactions_that_make_cocaine_abuse_death___times_more_likely

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    Celebrities with Parkinson's Disease: A Three-Part Series

    Parkinson?s disease is a degenerative disorder of the central nervous system that impairs motor skills and speech.? Parkinson?s is characterized by muscle rigidity, tremors, a slowing of physical movement and, in extreme cases, a loss of physical movement. There is currently no cure for Parkinson?s, but medications or surgery can provide relief from the symptoms.

    Despite its debilitating effects, many sufferers of Parkinson?s have enjoyed considerable achievement in a wide variety of fields. They include award-winning actors and actresses, champion athletes, acclaimed singers and musicians, respected authors and artists and prominent heads of state.

    Examples of celebrities with Parkinson?s include Michael J Fox, Muhammad Ali, and Janet Reno. ?In this series, we will explore these celebrities, their battles with Parkinson?s and their notable contributions to helping fund research to develop a cure and a vaccine.

    Part 1: Spotlight on Michael J. Fox

    ??Parkinson?s is a perfect metaphor for lack of control. Every unwanted movement in my hand or arm, every twitch that I cannot anticipate or arrest, is a reminder that even in the domain of my own being, I am not calling the shots.?
    ? Michael J. Fox, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Future?: Twists and Turns and Lessons Learned

    Born in 1961, Michael J. Fox is a Canadian-American television and screen actor.? He first became famous in 1982, when he starred as Alex P. Keaton on the popular television sitcom Family Ties.? He also had enormous success on the big screen, playing Marty McFly in Back to the Future and starring in other films such as Teen Wolf, The Secret of My Success, Doc Hollywood, and Bright Lights, Big City.

    Michael J. Fox was diagnosed with early-onset Parkinson?s disease in 1991 at the age of 30.? In late 1999, he made the public announcement that he had been battling Parkinson?s disease. ?He continued acting until he retired from the hit TV show ?Spin City?, to spend time with his family, and to concentrate on raising money and awareness for Parkinson?s.

    In May 2000, Fox launched the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson?s Research. It is now the largest private foundation for Parkinson?s research, having invested $313 million into research to date.

    The goal of Michael J. Fox?s Foundation is to accelerate the best ideas in Parkinson?s disease research toward clinical testing and practical relevance for patients. The Foundation constantly builds and refines their understanding of the therapeutic needs of Parkinson?s patients and they use their research to develop tools and resources that will help accelerate the development of Parkinson?s disease treatments.

    Fox wholeheartedly believes that if there is a concentrated effort from the Parkinson?s community, researchers can pinpoint the cause of Parkinson?s and uncover a cure.? He has used his celebrity status to bring much needed attention to the fight to cure Parkinson?s Disease.?

    Today, Fox is as famous for his Parkinson?s advocacy as he is for his acting. He sits on the Board of Directors for his foundation and serves as its inspirational leader.? He travels and speaks frequently about his experience with Parkinson?s and authored three books including his own memoir, Lucky Man: A Memoir.

    In recent news, in an effort to cope with the demands of his public appearances, Fox had been taking more of his medication than he was prescribed.? Unfortunately, this over use of medication resulted in a side effect known as tardive dyskinesia, characterized by uncontrollable shaking and repetitive movements. Fox changed his drug regimen to help control his tics and will be returning to television this year.

    Are you or a loved one suffering from Parkinson?s Disease?

    At The Fairfax Elder Law Firm of Evan H. Farr, P.C., we are dedicated to easing the financial and emotional burden on those suffering from Parkinson?s Disease and their loved ones.? If you or a loved one are suffering from Parkinson?s disease, we can help you prepare for your future financial and long-term care needs.? We help protect your hard-earned assets while maintaining your comfort, dignity, and quality of life by ensuring your eligibility for critical government benefits.

    How can we help?

    A diagnosis of Parkinson?s disease means adjusting to decreased mobility and other burdens of the disease. To alleviate problems later, it is important to plan now for the worst to ensure your wishes are carried out and your family protected.

    The first and most essential legal document is a Power of Attorney. Parkinson?s disease can be very disruptive, and there may come a time with the illness that you would prefer others make choices for you. Many married couples assume that they are allowed to make legally binding decisions on behalf of their spouses. Unfortunately, this is not the case unless you sign a power of attorney.?

    In addition, part of lifetime planning is to ensure that you or your loved one gets the best possible care and maintains the highest possible quality of life, whether at home, in an assisted living facility, or in a nursing home. Life Care Planning and Medicaid Asset Protection can be started any time after a person enters the ?long-term care continuum,? meaning that a person is starting to need assistance with Activities of Daily Living (eating, dressing, bathing,?toileting, transferring, and walking) or Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (such as cooking,? cleaning, caring for pets, paying bills and managing finances).? This type of planning can be started while you are still able to make legal and financial decisions, or can be initiated by an adult?child acting as agent under a properly-drafted Power of Attorney, even?if you are already in a nursing home or receiving other long-term care assistance.? In fact, the majority of our Life Care Planning and Medicaid Asset Protection clients come to us?when?nursing home care is already in place or is imminent.? Read more about Life Care Planning and Medicaid Asset Protection.

    Our next article in the series will explore Muhammad Ali and his fight against Parkinson?s Disease. If you or a loved one have Parkinson?s Disease, plan for your future. Call The Fairfax Elder Law Firm of Evan H. Farr, P.C. at 703-691-1888 today to make an appointment for a no-cost consultation.

    Source: http://blog.virginiaelderlaw.com/2013/01/celebrities-with-parkinsons-disease-a-three-part-series/

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    Monday, January 21, 2013

    McCaskill takes to Twitter to lampoon Supreme Court Justice's hat

    ? January 21, 2013Posted in: U.S. Senate

    ? U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill took to Twitter after President Obama?s inauguration ceremony Monday afternoon to lampoon the unique headwear dawned by Antonin Scalia, an associate justice of the Supreme Court.

    ?Four years ago today I began tweeting. One of my first tweets was a comment on Scalia?s weird hat.Will he wear it again? Stay tuned,? McCasill said ahead of the ceremony.

    After the ceremony, McCaskill gleefully reported back:

    Brian Walsh, a former spokesman for the National Republican Senatorial Committee, noted that the headwear was a replica of a hat worn by St. Thomas More, given to Scalia during 2010 by the St. Thomas More Society of Richmond, Virginia.

    This year?s inaugural ceremony marked four years since Missouri?s senior senator became a pioneer in the use of the social media platform by lawmakers.

    (Printer friendly)

    Source: http://politicmo.com/2013/01/21/mccaskill-takes-to-twitter-to-lampoon-supreme-court-justices-hat/

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    Inside job, 2 Canadian militants in Algeria siege

    Algerian firemen carry a coffin containing the body of a person killed during the hostage situation in a gas plant at the morgue in Ain Amenas, Monday, Jan. 21, 2013. At least 81 people have been reported dead, including 32 Islamist militants, after a bloody, four-day hostage situation at Algeria's remote Ain Amenas natural gas plant. (AP Photo/Anis Belghoul)

    Algerian firemen carry a coffin containing the body of a person killed during the hostage situation in a gas plant at the morgue in Ain Amenas, Monday, Jan. 21, 2013. At least 81 people have been reported dead, including 32 Islamist militants, after a bloody, four-day hostage situation at Algeria's remote Ain Amenas natural gas plant. (AP Photo/Anis Belghoul)

    This image taken from Algerian TV broadcast on Sunday Jan. 20 2013, shows what it said to be the aftermath of the hostage crisis at the remote Ain Amenas gas facility in Algeria. Algerian special forces stormed the plant on Saturday to end the four-day siege, moving in to thwart what government officials said was a plot by the Islamic extremists to blow up the complex and kill all their captives with mines sown throughout the site. (AP Photo/Algerie TV via Associated Press TV)

    Undersecretary Raul Hernandez, Spokesman of the Department of Foreign Affairs, briefs newsmen on the Algerian hostage crisis Monday Jan. 21, 2013 in Manila, Philippines. Hernandez said six Filipino workers, who were working at the sprawling oil field in Algeria which was attacked by terrorists, were killed, four more unaccounted for and four were wounded in the attack. (AP Photo/Bullit Marquez)

    Joseph Balmaceda, center, one of the four Filipino oil field workers who was wounded but survived the terrorist attacks of an oil field in Algeria, limps to his waiting vehicle after talking to the media at the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration in Manila, Philippines, Monday Jan. 21, 2013. In a separate briefing by the Department of Foreign Affairs, Spokesman Raul Hernandez said six Filipino workers were killed and four more are still unaccounted for. (AP Photo/Bullit Marquez)

    Joseph Balmaceda, one of the four Filipino oil field workers who was wounded but survived the terrorist attacks of an oil field in Algeria, talks about his ordeal shortly upon arrival at the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration in Manila, Philippines Monday Jan. 21, 2013. In a separate briefing by the Department of Foreign Affairs, Spokesman Raul Hernandez said six Filipino workers were killed and four more are still unaccounted for. (AP Photo/Bullit Marquez)

    (AP) ? The Islamist militants who attacked a natural gas plant in the Sahara wore Algerian army uniforms, memorized the layout of the vast complex and included two Canadians and a team of explosives experts ready to blow the place sky-high, Algeria's prime minister said Monday.

    The operation also appeared to have help from the inside ? a former driver at the plant, he said.

    Algeria offered a grim toll in the attack, saying that 38 hostages and 29 militants died in four days of mayhem. The dead hostages included seven Japanese workers and three energy workers each from the U.S. and Britain.

    Three of the attackers were captured and five foreign workers remain unaccounted for, the prime minister told reporters at a news conference in Algiers, the capital.

    Monday's account offered the first Algerian government narrative of the four-day standoff, from the moment of the attempted bus hijacking to the moment when the attackers began to prepare to explode bombs across the massive gas plant that sprawled over 5 square kilometers ( 2 square miles).

    All but one of the dead hostages ? an Algerian driver ? were foreigners. The prime minister said three attackers were captured but did not specify their nationalities or their conditions or say where they were being held.

    He said the Islamists included a former driver at the complex who was from Niger and that the militants "knew the facility's layout by heart."

    The militants had said during the standoff that their band included people from Canada, and hostages who had escaped recalled hearing at least one of the militants speaking English with a North American accent.

    In addition to the Canadians, the militant cell included men from Egypt, Mali, Niger, Mauritania and Tunisia, as well as three Algerians.

    "You may have heard the last words of the terrorist chief," Algerian Prime Minister Abdelmalek Sellal told reporters. "He gave the order for all the foreigners to be killed, so there was a mass execution, many hostages were killed by a bullet to the head."

    A total of three Americans died in the attack and seven made it out safely, a U.S. official in Washington said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly. Their bodies have been recovered, the official said.

    The attack began early Wednesday with the attempted hijacking of two buses filled with workers outside the complex. Under assault from Algerian forces, the militants moved on the main complex, armed with missiles, mortars and bombs for their three explosives experts, Sellal said.

    He praised the quick wits of a guard who set of an alarm that stopped the flow of gas and warned workers of an imminent attack.

    "It was thanks to him that the factory was protected," he said.

    Five foreigners remained unaccounted for, Sellal said. Japan's prime minister said Monday seven Japanese citizens were killed and three others are missing.

    Sellal said the facility had 790 Algerian workers and 134 foreigners from 26 countries. The Algerians were freed early in the standoff ? former hostages said the attackers immediately separated out the foreigners, forcing some to wear explosive belts.

    The prime minister said the heavily armed militants came from Mali carrying a great deal of explosives and mined the facility. They had prepared the attack for two months.

    Sellal justified the helicopter attack Thursday on vehicles filled with hostages out of the fear the kidnappers were attempting to escape.

    The Algerian special forces assault on the refinery on Saturday that killed the last group of militants and hostages came after the kidnappers attempted to destroy the complex.

    In a statement, the Masked Brigade, the group that claimed to have masterminded the takeover, has warned of more such attacks against any country backing France's military intervention in neighboring Mali, where the French are trying to stop an advance by Islamic extremists.

    Sellal said the militants had expected to return to Mali with the foreign hostages. Seven French citizens taken hostage in recent years are thought to be held by al-Qaida linked groups in northern Mali.

    "Their goal was to kidnap foreigners," Sellal said. "They wanted to flee to Mali with the foreigners but once they were surrounded they started killing the first hostages."

    The operation was led by an Algerian, Amine Benchenab, who was known to security services and was killed during the assault, he added. Sellal said negotiating was essentially impossible.

    "They led us into a real labyrinth, in negotiations that became unreasonable," he said.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Bradley Klapper contributed to this report from Washington.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-01-21-Algeria-Kidnapping/id-50953b1c48034b87827a68610f033643

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    Photos: Virginia Inaugural Ball

    Patch:

    This year's Virginia Inaugural Ball was Sunday night at the Westin Arlington Gateway.

    Read the whole story at Patch

    "; var coords = [-5, -72]; // display fb-bubble FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, 'top', {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: 'clear-overlay'}); });

    Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/20/photos-virginia-inaugural_n_2517876.html

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    Sunday, January 20, 2013

    Understand the Complex Legal Stuff When Building Your Home ...

    Real Estate Law

    With new government grants encouraging buyers to build new homes with different incentives across each state, the legal process can be especially daunting for the first time owner or builder.

    Most builders (especially the big ones) have contracts already prepared, but that doesn?t mean you can?t alter them for your requirements.

    We have put together a checklist to get you started on ensuring your contract is in order with the builder and hopefully make the process a little smoother. Naturally you should seek your own legal advice before you enter into a contract and not rely solely on this checklist:

    • Regardless of the size of the project, it is best to have a written contract with your builder but it is essential to have a ?major domestic building contract? for any projects valued at more than $5000.
    • You should not pay more than 10% deposit for work valued at $20k or less and not more than 5% for work valued at more than $20k.
    • Make sure your builder is licensed and registered for the job you need. You can check this through www.buildingcommission.com.au or ring 1300 815 127
    • Check the builder?s name and number in the contracts match their registration card.
    • Under the Domestic Building Contracts Act 1995, you need to specify everything you need the builder to do, and that includes finishes materials and appliances. You also need to outline every variation you may have made to the project (for example changed tiles etc.)
    • All variations to a building project should be outlined in writing in a ?Variation Notice? and signed by both parties.
    • All plans should be attached to the contract as they form part of the contract
    • Contract should specify commencement, completion and number of days it will take, and should outline the process for delays, including compensation if necessary.
    • Does it include all costs? This includes government fees and levies and lodgement costs, building fees, planning permits fees, asset protection and inspection fees.
    • You should ensure there is a legal right to reasonable access the building site. Delete any clauses that restrict your access unduly.
    • When the cost is over $12,000, it is the builder?s duty under the Domestic Building Act to have domestic building insurance to cover you if they go bankrupt, die or vanish, leaving you with an incomplete house.
    • Check the legal requirements in your state? for progress payments, how much and how frequently they need to be paid

    Above all, seek your own legal advice with all contracts as a house is one of the biggest investments that you can ever make and you need to protect your rights.

    This is a general guideline only and is not to be to be taken as legal advice or be relied upon in place of legal advice. As individual circumstances will vary, the legal requirements may change and we recommend that you obtain legal advice suitable to your individual circumstances.

    Source: http://blog.aussie.com.au/complex-legal-stuff/

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    Is the high street ruining the Internet? ? Reflections on Digital Media ...

    Someone asked on BBC?s Question Time this week, ?Is the Internet ruining the high street?? as customers abandon retail chains such as HMV, Jessops, and Blockbuster, preferring to buy online. What about the reverse question: Is the high street ruining the Internet?

    I remember the time before e-commerce when the Internet was a people?s medium for intellectual exchange, the fomenting of new ideas, the promotion of radical self-help activism, risk-taking entrepreneurs, and small-scale businesses and freelancers who wanted to operate internationally. It maneuvered?below the radar of regular commerce, challenged convention, and was a fringe medium for the quirky, the experimental and the curious. It?s still all of that ? but with advertisements. Web innovators race to exploit the Internet?s mass media potential, but is anyone else annoyed by all those pop-up ads, intrusive slow-to-load side bar animations, and email spam?

    Sliding grille blocking off empty mallImproved online?advertising is a major avenue of Internet innovation. Content management providers examine the content of web pages automatically and position advertisements relevant to the presumed interest of the person viewing the page. This is contextual advertising. Ads are also tailored to the geographical location of the viewer.

    More sophisticated conversational analysis examines the flow of words on chat lines, social media sites, discussion forums, and blog comments and directs ads towards the social context of some discussion or other. So if there?s animated discussion in an online forum on how to stop dry itchy skin in winter, then ads may start to appear for skin creams.

    But the more sophisticated style of ad interventions comes from web-based behavioural advertising, which focusses not on web page content, but rather the profile of the user. So if you?ve been searching around the web for a property to buy, then later on, when you turn to a book publishing site, you may be presented with advertisements for publications about home improvement, interior design, furniture or how to finance a house purchase.

    These and other online marketing techniques are explained in a helpful book by Andrew McStay, called The Mood of Information: A Critique of Online Behavioural Advertising. There?s a good side to these advertising tactics. Sponsorship provides revenue to keep online services running, and advertising does work, in that it enlivens competition, keeps prices low and provides information to consumers ? kind of.

    If advertising is a necessary evil then we consumers would rather be exposed to ads about things that interest us and are relevant to our life circumstances. I want fewer ads about cosmetic surgery and more about health foods and electronic gadgets please.

    Mind mining

    Consumers and critics have reservations about advertising in general ? the manufacture of an acquiescent and consumer-oriented population, the hegemony of major global corporations, materialism, and the elevation of image and appearance over substance. In the case of online advertising we can add concerns about privacy, and the idea of mining not only one?s personal online histories, but a general mining of interiority.

    When it works, behavioural advertising is a kind of emotional pillage, from the inside, getting inside people?s heads, or at least the private world of likes and preferences. Neither are we consumers necessarily happy with these invisible processes. At least when I see a billboard in the high street or on a tv commercial for Mercedes Benz I know that I?m not being singled out due to my personal browsing and consumption behaviour. There?s something democratic and open about high street and mass media advertising clutter. Behavioural advertising algorithms subvert that transparency under the ruse of personalisation.

    McStay positions behavioural advertising in a kind of autopoietic (self making or reproducing) system of engagement with environment: ?Behavioural advertising reproduces itself in that users and observers of advertising browse, data is harvested, relevant advertising is served, users browse further, more data is harvested, more relevant advertising is served and so on. After a time it matters little when and where the starting point began? (p.111).

    Audience engagement

    Were it not that this quote is about advertising, it sounds like audience engagement: laudable interactions between performers, content providers, publishers and audience communities,?and the making of audiences,?a hermeneutical circularity that produces understanding. It?s even the sustaining of a mood: ?These moods disclose and belie how we are, and in autopoietic systems engender the mood of information, that is, the tone of interaction defined through our general orientation to the world and everyday life mediated through networked systems? (p.118).

    But then McStay offers a warning. Behavioural advertising only offers a resemblance (?passing off?) of comprehension and insight. To my mind this makes online advertising even more insidious. Advertising brings the problems of data mining, profiling and putative online intelligence into sharp relief. There?s already a mood of suspicion hanging over the advertising business. But maybe the dubious relationship between computers and emotions pervade all aspects of networked computing that purport to make our devices more personable, intelligent and emotionally responsive.

    Screen snapshot, at an angle. The word looked up is 'mood'. There's an add promoting New Zealand, and a film ad.

    Reference

    • McStay, Andrew. 2011. The Mood of Information: A Critique of Online Behavioural Advertising. New York, NY: Continuum.

    Notes

    • Andrew McStay?s blog?http://advertising-communications-culture.blogspot.co.uk/
    • McStay?s book has long sections on the social, legal and moral ramifications of online advertising, and provides a useful history, as well as explanations of the technologies deployed.
    • Also see my blog posts tagged mood.
    • For evidence that there was an Internet before e-commerce see our report on Computers in Practice in the early 1990s. None of the architectural practitioners interviewed about their innovative uses of the Internet and computer-mediated communications raised issues about making purchases or trading business-to-business online (though they were on to it within a few years after that report). See What?s a modem?
    • So is the high street ruining the Internet? It?s certainly influenced by it. Also see posts on?Electronic commerce, philosophy and the Greek city?and No way logo. Also see?Coyne, Richard. 2005. Cornucopia Limited: Design and Dissent on the Internet. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. 284 pages. At least there?s a transparency to high street operations less evident in online advertising tactics.
    • The ?high street? is simply the shopping precinct in the centre of a town, a term used especially in the United Kingdom.

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    The cultural, social and spatial implications of computers and pervasive digital media spark my interest ... enjoy architecture, writing, designing, philosophy, coding and media mashups.

    Source: http://richardcoyne.com/2013/01/19/is-the-high-street-ruining-the-internet/

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    Explorer's rare Scotch returned to Antarctic stash

    SCOTTBASE, Antarctica (AP) ? Talk about whisky on ice: Three bottles of rare, 19th century Scotch found beneath the floor boards of Antarctic explorer Ernest Shackelton's abandoned expedition base were returned to the polar continent Saturday after a distiller flew them to Scotland to recreate the long-lost recipe.

    But not even New Zealand Prime Minister John Key, who personally returned the stash, got a taste of the contents of the bottles of Mackinlay's whisky, which were rediscovered 102 years after the explorer was forced to leave them behind.

    "I think we're all tempted to crack it open and have a little drink ourselves now," Key joked at a ceremony handing over the bottles to Antarctic Heritage Trust officials at New Zealand's Antarctic base on Ross Island.

    The whisky will be transferred by March from Ross Island to Shackelton's desolate hut at Cape Royds and replaced beneath the restored hut as part of a program to protect the legacy of the so-called heroic era of Antarctic exploration from 1898 to 1915.

    Bottled in 1898 after the blend was aged 15 years, the Mackinlay bottles were among three crates of Scotch and two of brandy buried beneath a basic hut Shackleton had used during his dramatic 1907 Nimrod excursion to the Antarctic. The expedition failed to reach the South Pole but set a record at the time for reaching the farthest southern latitude. Shackelton was knighted after his return to Great Britain.

    Shackelton's stash was discovered frozen in ice by conservationists in 2010. The crates were frozen solid after more than a century beneath the Antarctic surface.

    But the bottles were found intact ? and researchers could hear the whisky sloshing around inside. Antarctica's minus 22 Fahrenheit (-30 Celsius) temperature was not enough to freeze the liquor.

    The bottles remained unopened as they were returned Saturday ? if Shackelton couldn't have a dram, no one could ? but their contents nevertheless formed the basis for a revival of the blend.

    Distiller Whyte & Mackay, which now owns the Mackinlay brand, chartered a private jet to take the bottles from the Antarctic operations headquarters in the New Zealand city of Christchurch to Scotland for analysis in 2011.

    The recipe for the whisky had been lost. But Whyte & Mackay recreated a limited edition of 50,000 bottles from a sample drawn with a syringe through a cork of one of the bottles. The conservation work of the Antarctic Heritage Trust has received 5 British pounds for every bottle sold.

    The original bottles had flown in two combination-locked containers with Key to Antarctica in a U.S. Air Force transport plane from Christchurch on Friday.

    Antarctic Heritage Trust manager Lizzie Meek, who was part of the team that found the whisky, recalled its pleasant aroma.

    "When you're used to working around things in that hut that perhaps are quite decayed and some of them don't have very nice smells, it's very nice to work with artifacts that have such a lovely aroma," Meek told the ceremony by radio from explorer Robert Scott's Antarctic hut which she is restoring.

    "And definitely the aroma of whisky was around very strongly."

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2013-01-19-New%20Zealand-Antarctica-Shackelton's%20Whisky/id-ae06e8f17d98493297ee32cda05c2749

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    Tuesday, January 15, 2013

    Golf : Rory McIlroy and Nike confirm sport?s worst-kept secret

    IT was a fitting production for a boy from Hollywood. His first image sporting the Nike Swoosh appeared as a spectacular water show, for which the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque in the UAE capital provided a stunning backdrop.

    This was confirmation of golf?s worst-kept secret. No, make that sport across the board. We?d known for weeks that Rory McIlroy, having ended his association with Achusnet, parent company of Titleist, at the end of last year, was set to sign join Tiger Woods (and Scott Jamieson and Marc Warren) on the Nike staff.

    All sorts of crazy figures had been banded about. No information was offered about the fine details of what they eventually agreed on, though it is being claimed McIlroy has signed a ten-year contract worth as much as ?150 million. ?I don?t play golf for the money ? I think I?m well past that,? declared McIlroy, who is now one of the biggest earners in sporting history. ?I?m a major champion, which I always dreamt of. I?m the world No 1, which I always dreamt of. I play for titles and this year I feel I can go to a new level.

    ?Hopefully I can do even better than last year, which was a big season for me winning my second major and also getting to world No 1. Hopefully there are more majors in store and I can consolidate myself as the world?s best golfer.?

    He was welcomed in pre-recorded clips to the ?Nike Family? by Wayne Rooney, Roger Federer and Tiger Woods. An audience that included McIlroy?s dad, Gerry, also saw an amusing advert featuring McIlroy and Woods, the world No 1 and No 2 respectively, that will be rolled out around the world as from tomorrow.

    Entitled ?No Cup is Safe?, it involves the pair indulging in a spot of friendly competition as well as poking a bit of fun at each other. ?I?m just trying to keep up with the old guy,? says McIlroy at one point, with Woods retorting with: ?Dude, is that your real hair??

    Whether the pair will still be as friendly when they play together in the first two rounds of this week?s HSBC Abu Dhabi Championship remains to be seen. McIlroy, though, is confident changing equipment when he was flying won?t stop him adding to his major haul. ?I think it has been seamless,? he insisted. ?I?ve been testing the clubs through Christmas and everything feels great. I?ve been hitting the ball really well.?

    He denied signing a mega-deal with a new sponsor will bring added pressure. ?Not at all,? he added. ?The pressure I feel is put on myself and when I go out there I want to win as badly as anyone. That definitely won?t change and, if anything, being with this company will make me a better player and win even more.?

    McIlroy is particularly excited about playing with Nike?s new cavity-backed driver, which is allowing one of the game?s biggest hitters to boom it even further down the fairway. ?My ball speed is up to 180 from the mid 170s and it is carrying almost 300 yards,? he reported with glee.

    The one awkward moment in McIlroy?s Q&A session involved his new putter, having been asked if he was able to go back to his trusty Scotty Cameron model if it didn?t work nearly as well. ?I?m not here to go into specifics of the contract,? he replied to that being posed to him twice by the same man.

    Even this early in the year, McIlroy has one eye on the season?s first major and is planning to play five tournaments in his build up to The Masters. ?I?m confident that I?m ready to go,? he said. ?Abu Dhabi has been a great place for me, having come close to winning a couple of times, and hopefully I can get off to another good start this year.?

    Introducing the company?s new star, Nike Golf president Cindy Davis described McIlroy as an ?extraordinary young athlete?. The world will now be watching to see if McIroy connects with his new clubs.

    Source: http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/33846/f/610141/p/1/s/77930c70/l/0L0Sscotsman0N0Cgolf0Erory0Emcilroy0Eand0Enike0Econfirm0Esport0Es0Eworst0Ekept0Esecret0E10E273740A4/story01.htm

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    Bank of America capital markets co-head to lead commercial banking

    (Reuters) - Bank of America Corp has named capital markets co-head Alastair Borthwick as its head of commercial banking, in a shuffling of veteran executives.

    Borthwick, a former Goldman Sachs Group Inc executive who joined the bank in 2005, replaces Laura Whitley, who will take a position in consumer banking, according to a memo sent to employees. Commercial banking has been a bright spot for Bank of America, whose profits have been dragged down by mortgage-related losses since the financial crisis.

    Borthwick will report to Tom Montag, the co-chief operating officer who runs global banking and markets operations. Lisa Carnoy remains the head of global capital markets.

    Whitley, who has been with the bank more than 25 years, will become head of consumer services, operations and unsecured credit, reporting to David Darnell, the bank's co-chief operating officer who focuses on consumer and wealth management businesses. She will preside over call centers, consumer product operations, unsecured credit and collections, according to the memo.

    Bank of America is under pressure to increase revenue in its signature consumer banking business, which is grappling with low interest rates and new regulations that have cut into income from fees. Revenue in consumer and business banking through the first nine months of 2012 fell 14 percent to $21.8 billion from the same period in 2011.

    The bank is also recovering from a flap in late 2011 over a proposed $5 monthly debit card fee that it later canceled. Bank of America last month received the lowest customer satisfaction score among four big U.S. banks in the latest report by the American Customer Satisfaction Index, which interviewed customers across the United States.

    Whitley's new role includes duties that were previously handled by two other executives. Long-time consumer banking executive Susan Faulkner has become the bank's enterprise risk executive, reporting to chief risk officer Terry Laughlin, and Tim Huval left the company to become chief human resources officer at insurance company Humana Inc.

    Borthwick will be the bank's third head of commercial banking since the fall of 2011, when Darnell was promoted out of the spot to become co-chief operating officer, and Whitley took over the position.

    Bank of America reports fourth-quarter earnings on Thursday. The bank's shares turned in the best performance in the Dow Jones Industrial Average in 2012, rising 109 percent. They are down 0.5 percent so far in 2013.

    (Reporting By Rick Rothacker in Charlotte, North Carolina; Editing by Leslie Adler and Tim Dobbyn)

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bofa-names-capital-markets-executive-head-commercial-banking-192737931--sector.html

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    Writebox


    The race to the cloud continues, with more and more services moving online, enabling users to access and utilize them from nearly anywhere. When writing is one of those things you'd like to be able to do from anywhere, any time, on virtually any device, the Web app and Chrome app Writebox (free) offers a quick and elegant solution by saving anything you write in its distraction-free text editor to a connected Dropbox account.

    Writebox has a minimalist interface and very little else, but that's all by design. Distraction-free writing apps by necessity strip away all manner of excess features to keep you focused on your words rather than how they look on the page, and Writebox delivers on that promise but does add a few essential customizations.

    When you first visit the Writebox site or launch the Chrome app, there's a button at the top to sign in. I thought it would have me create a Writebox account, but, instead, it's a Dropbox sign-in that authorizes the two services to connect. Any time you use Writebox, you can just sign in with your Dropbox credentials and not worry about creating another login. That's simplicity and minimalism at their finest.

    In the window is a small top-line menu bar with three buttons on the left?New, Open, and a clock-face icon for "recently opened" items?and three on the right?a trash bin, Account, and Options. You'll also find a Sync button to force your document changes to Dropbox, and an info button with some details about the app.

    Other than that, you'll see a big, blank screen, where you can type. At the very bottom of the screen are real-time counts for lines, words, and characters, which you can turn off if you like. The customization options are minimal, but some quite necessary, like being able to change the colors of the text and background, increase or decrease the point size and line spacing, and adjust the typeface.

    From the Open button in Writebox, you can navigate your entire Dropbox folder structure, but only .txt files will appear, as it's the only file type supported by the simple app. My data primarily include Word docs, images (JPGs, mostly), PDFs, and Excel files, and I could see none of them.

    While typing in the text editor within the Chrome browser, the menu bar at the top disappeared, creating a wholly distraction-free environment. You can boost the view even more hiding your browser's address bar or otherwise maximizing the window. Mousing back to the top of the page causes the Writebox menu to come back into view.

    The app claims that it automatically saves every keystroke as you, but you do have to hit "sync" or the keyboard shortcut Ctrl+s to push changes to Dropbox.

    Although the Web and Chrome app are free, iOS users have to pay $1.99 for an installed app on their devices, and an Android app isn't on the menu at all. While some might be peeved to pay for an app that's otherwise free, at least the price is reasonable and in line with other apps of its ilk, such as PlainText iPad app ($1.99 for the ad-free version, 2.5 stars).

    As far as distraction-free text editors go, Writebox certainly holds its own, although it would be a much more useful app if it supported the .doc format, as well as more syncing and storage solutions, in addition to Dropbox.

    More Productivity?Software Reviews:
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    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/FmSyCERuACM/0,2817,2414099,00.asp

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    Monday, January 14, 2013

    Zeppelin Over Washington

    By Lori Spencer


    Led Zep came to the White House by ThisCantBeHappening

    When Led Zeppelin attended a reception at the White House in advance of the Kennedy Center Honors, they were just as shocked to find themselves there as most everybody else was. Being personally roasted by the President of the United States -- along with fellow Kennedy Center Honorees Dustin Hoffman, David Letterman, Natalia Makarova, and Buddy Guy -- was an experience Zeppelin's Jimmy Page could later only describe as "surreal."?

    Page, Plant, and John Paul Jones also enjoyed getting the royal treatment during a weekend of festivities in Washington, D.C., including a State Department dinner on December 1 hosted by Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and former president Bill Clinton.

    Secretary Clinton described the honorees as "a group of legends and icons as diverse as they are talented. We have in our group of honorees tonight a broad cross section of talent and energy from comedian to chameleon, ballerina to bluesman, and three men so synonymous with rock and roll they need no more description than Page, Plant, Jones," Clinton said.

    "Now, in my line of work, we often talk about the art of diplomacy," she added. "I really like saying that because so many of the building blocks for art and diplomacy are the same. We have to be willing to try new things, occasionally take big risks. " So the arts and diplomacy actually do go hand in hand. They play out on world stages and reflect our common need to build bonds of understanding with others."

    (Now, if only Secretary Clinton would listen to more Led Zeppelin, perhaps she could manage to tone down the warmongering and actually live up to her words about building bonds of understanding with others. But I digress...)

    The Kennedy Center Honors take place at the Opera House in the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. The Honorees and their guests sit in the front of the Box Tier with the President and the First Family. In keeping with Kennedy Center tradition, the Honorees are not allowed to speak to or interact with members of the audience.

    Zeppelin's three surviving members, Robert Plant, John Paul Jones and Jimmy Page, sat down the row from President and Michelle Obama in the balcony. All of the honorees wore the Kennedy Center Honors rainbow-colored sash and medal.

    Naturally, the show's producers at CBS saved the Led Zeppelin tribute segment for last and pulled out all the stops. The Foo Fighters kicked it off with Dave Grohl behind the drum kit again and Taylor Hawkins tackling Robert Plant's screams on "Rock and Roll." Kid Rock did "Babe, I'm Gonna Leave You" (which was unfortunately cut from the CBS telecast Dec. 26) and "Ramble On." Next up was Lenny Kravitz and his band funking up "Whole Lotta Love."

    "It was quite exhilarating to hear the different approaches that people had to the songs," Page said later. He and his fellow Zeppelin bandmates could be seen throughout the entire tribute tapping their feet in rhythm, watching the musicians' hands closely; seeming to be genuinely intrigued by how their songs were being interpreted.

    Finally, Ann and Nancy Wilson of Heart -- two girls that grew up idolizing Led Zeppelin -- walked onstage and repaid the inspiration. As the duo"s sparse, acoustic "Stairway to Heaven" reached the song's middle section, an orchestra joined in. Then came the 80-voice Joyce Garrett Youth Choir. The effect of so many voices singing the final chorus was overwhelmingly powerful. Tears could be seen in Robert Plant's eyes when Jason Bonham suddenly materialized behind the drum kit, wearing his father"s old signature bowler hat.

    None of the members of Led Zeppelin had been told in advance that Jason was going to be there. They were clearly astonished -- and deeply touched -- when they saw him take his place onstage. Even Jimmy Page, a man not easily overwhelmed by emotion, had a tear rolling down his cheek.

    That moment was just one of many in recent months that Plant and Page appeared to be closer and more in sync with one another than they had been in 15 years, since their last studio album together ("Walking Into Clarksdale"). Although the pair did two solo tours together in the 1990s, John Paul Jones was not included in those creative endeavors, which deepened friction within the Zeppelin family.

    Jones was invited to join them at the O2 Arena in London for the 2007 reunion, which eventually became "Celebration Day." During their many public appearances together this fall, it was readily apparent that the trio had re-established the chemistry and friendship of years past. All seemed to be forgiven. Jones, Page, and Jason Bonham have stated quite categorically that they would be in favor of a reunion album and tour. But for the past five years, Plant has been the last holdout.

    Based on the band's renewed camaraderie and recent public comments by Robert Plant, that may be about to change.

    Source: http://www.opednews.com/articles/Zeppelin-Over-Washington-by-Lori-Spencer-130114-509.html

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