Friday, October 19, 2012

Extreme global warming caused devastating die-off

As much as 95 percent of the Earth's species disappeared 250 million years ago as a result of dramatic temperature changes likely influenced by fierce volcanic eruptions.?

By Charles Choi,?LiveScience Contributor / October 18, 2012

Ammonoid mollusks showed a broad diversity one million years after the Permian extinction. The mass extinction that occurred at the end of the Permian period 252 million years ago was a body blow to marine organisms as the oceans became toxic.

Dr. A. Brayard and J. Thomas, University of Burgundy, Dijon, France via The New York Times

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Feverishly hot ocean surface waters potentially reaching more than 104 degrees Fahrenheit (40 degrees Celsius) may have helped cause the greatest mass extinction in Earth's history, researchers say.

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"We may have found the hottest time the world has ever had," researcher Paul Wignall, a geologist at the University of Leeds in England, told LiveScience.

The?mass extinction?at the end of the Permian Era about 250 million years ago was the greatest die-off in Earth's history. The cataclysm killed as much as 95 percent of the planet's species. One key factor behind this disaster was probably catastrophic volcanic activity in what is now Siberia that spewed out as much as 2.7 million square miles (7 million square kilometers) of lava, an area nearly as large as Australia. These eruptions might have released gases that damaged Earth's protective ozone layer.

After the end-Permian mass extinction came a time "called the 'dead zone,'" Wignall said. "It's this 5-million-year period where there's no recovery, where there is a very low diversity of life."

The dead zone apparently experienced a serious case of?global warming, but the extremes?this global warming?reached were uncertain. To find out, scientists analyzed fossils dating from 253 million to 245 million years ago, shortly before and after the mass extinction. [Wipe Out: History's Most Mysterious Extinctions]

Unraveling an isotope mystery

The researchers focused on isotopes or atomic variants of oxygen within these fossils. All isotopes of oxygen have eight protons in their atomic nuclei, but differ in the number of neutrons they possess ? oxygen-16 has eight neutrons, while oxygen-18 has 10.

As marine creatures form shells, bones and teeth, "they tend to use lighter isotopes of oxygen under warmer conditions," Wignall said. "You can still see this today when looking at modern-day sea creatures. The ratios of oxygen isotopes in their shells are entirely controlled by temperature."

The researchers analyzed strange eel-like creatures known as conodonts, which are known mainly by their?elaborate mouthparts. The fossils came from the Nanpanjiang Basin in south China, helping reconstruct what temperatures were like around the equator at the end-Permian.

Different groups of conodonts shed light on what temperatures were at different depths. For instance, one group,?Neospathodus, lived down about 230 feet (70 meters) deep, while others, such as?Pachycladina,?Parachirognathus?andPlatyvillosus?lived near the surface.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/QDZuXi-nxf4/Extreme-global-warming-caused-devastating-die-off

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10 Insights into the Design Mind of Philippe Starck

philippe starck 10 Insights into the Design Mind of Philippe Starck

Philippe Starck is one of the most prolific designers of our time. He has turned his hand to practically everything there is, from hotels, restaurants, bars and clubs, to furniture, tableware, baggage, kitchens and even nutrition. Often regarded as the bad boy of design, Starck is known for his witty reinterpretation of everyday objects and anyone who has had the pleasure of being in the same room as him will undoubtedly find him extremely engaging and most definitely entertaining.

Philippe Starck presenting Axor Starck Organic range in Berlin 10 Insights into the Design Mind of Philippe Starck

Freshome had the pleasure of encountering Monsieur Starck a few weeks ago in Berlin at the world premiere of his latest bathroom collection for Axor. Held at the E-Werk, the launch of Axor Starck Organic was an elaborate affair that saw Starck unveiling his new creation and allowing all who attended to get an intriguing insight into the workings of his undeniably brilliant mind.

Philippe Starck Unveils Axor Starck Organic 10 Insights into the Design Mind of Philippe Starck

1. Creativity is hard work

?I go to my house in Formentera, which I have had for 46 years. When I am there I am working, working, working night and day with my wife, it?s very boring for her [?] ?I work alone for 8-10 hours a day especially from June to the middle of September and everything is done during this time. This is my period of creativity.?

Axor Starck Organic Mixer 10 Insights into the Design Mind of Philippe Starck

2. Creativity is not fun

?It?s not fun to create, ask a mother. It is the best time of your life but it is not fun. It is like a drug addiction. You have to know that at the end of August I am destroyed and I have to go to a clinic. After these three months of work, I go to the clinic to rest because I am destroyed and I am in pain everywhere. I can?t make any decisions.?

Axor Starck Organic Ambience 1 10 Insights into the Design Mind of Philippe Starck

3. Pressure is not an issue

?I am pressure proof. It is impossible to put pressure on me. I am the freest person in the world. But when you progress, you make better and better and better.? When you start to improve it is very difficult to continue.?

Axor Starck Organic Mixer 10 Insights into the Design Mind of Philippe Starck

4. Design should be timeless

?A designer has a duty to create timeless design. To be timeless you have think really far into the future, not next year, not in two years but in 20 years minimum.?

Axor Starck Organic Ambience 2 10 Insights into the Design Mind of Philippe Starck

5. Success isn?t about numbers

?I have worked all my life to stay the smallest possible. For me it was possible to become a business man with 400 designers making a business and becoming very rich. But I didn?t want this. Two years ago when there were 60 or 70 of us, I closed down the company. I paid everybody and destroyed the company so I could start again from scratch to be sure that I could always stay the smallest possible.?

Axor Starck Organic range 10 Insights into the Design Mind of Philippe Starck

6. Creativity is a personal thing

?Creativity is not industry, creativity is not inspiration, it?s just a guy, naked in front of the page. That means everything you see that is good, it was me, everything that you see that is bad, it was me.?

Axor Starck Organic Ambience 3 10 Insights into the Design Mind of Philippe Starck

7. Design cannot solve everything

?Every time has its own tool or its own weapon and every tool or weapon has its own time. For the challenge we have today, the violence of the challenge and the urgency of the challenge, design is perhaps not the right tool for the next 20 years.?

Axor Starck Organic 10 Insights into the Design Mind of Philippe Starck

8. There are 2 types of design

?There are two types of design: Useful, which saves lives and useless, which doesn?t save lives. Today design doesn?t save lives. Design has never ever saved lives but before this was not so urgent. Design at best can try to improve life.?

Axor Starck Organic Ambience 4 10 Insights into the Design Mind of Philippe Starck

9. What is happiness?

?I don?t know what happiness is, but since I married Jasmine I start to understand.?

Philippe Starck answers press questions in Berlin 10 Insights into the Design Mind of Philippe Starck

10. Never be satisfied

?I am always disappointed. Sometimes, because I am very feminine, I cry when I see the results. I never go to hotels or restaurants that I have designed because for me they are like a mirror that reflects all my mistakes, my weaknesses. I am always disappointed in myself.?

Source: http://freshome.com/2012/10/18/10-insights-into-the-design-mind-of-philippe-starck/

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Thursday, October 18, 2012

Marketing Communications Manager - School of Music at Ithaca ...

Ithaca College is seeking a marketing communications manager to work within the Office of Marketing Communications as an account manager assigned to the School of Music. The Marketing Communications Manager works within the Office of Marketing Communications and will work collaboratively with the School of Music to coordinate the School?s marketing and communications needs; designs and implements strategies that are in line with the College?s brand strategies. The Marketing Communications Manager oversees and develops events, projects, publications, web content and e-communications to promote the School to prospective students, alumni, donors, the campus community, and general public. The Marketing Communications Manager works directly with staff, faculty, and students in the School to coordinate and manage marketing efforts.

The successful candidate will have a Bachelor?s degree in marketing, communications, or related field with progressively responsible experience in marketing communication, higher education or related field, or the equivalent combination of education and experience; demonstrated knowledge of the development and execution of promotional materials, advertising, public relations, market research and other marketing communication techniques; strong writing and communication skills; previous content management web maintenance experience; and demonstrated ability to work as part of a team and lead groups to consensus are required. Experience coordinating and overseeing the design and production of online or print projects.

Interested individuals must apply online at apply.icjobs.org, and attach a cover letter, resume, a list containing the contact information for at least three (3) professional references, and up to two (2) sample(s) of writing. Questions about the online application should be directed to the Office of Human Resources at (607) 274-8000. Review of applications will begin immediately and will continue until the position is filled.

Ithaca College is committed to building a diverse academic community and encourages members of underrepresented groups to apply. Experience that contributes to the diversity of the college is appreciated.

Source: http://www.higheredexperts.com/work/job/5088/marketing-communications-manager-school-of-music-at-ithaca-college/

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Filmmaker explores dark family saga in "The Flat"

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - "The Flat," a documentary directed by Israeli writer and filmmaker, Arnon Goldfinger, uses a vacant Tel Aviv apartment as a jumping-off point for a journey through history, and a unique look at the way different generations view the Holocaust.

The film, which opens on Friday in New York followed by Los Angeles on October 24 and a subsequent national roll out, grew from a highly personal saga that Goldfinger never set out to document.

The result is a documentary about family secrets and the unlikely friendship between a high-ranking Nazi SS propaganda officer and his stylish wife, and a cultured German Jewish family who fled from Germany to Palestine before World War Two broke out.

"After my grandmother, Gerda, died at 98, I felt the urge to document her flat, because it was like a little Berlin in Tel Aviv, and I knew it would all vanish very quickly," Goldfinger, best known for his 2000 documentary "The Komediant," told Reuters in an interview.

"So I just set out to make a little short film as me and my mother and siblings went through all her belongings. It was just going to be a document of what someone leaves behind."

But as the family slowly sifted through decades of memorabilia, photographs and letters, Goldfinger discovered a Nazi newspaper that proved to be the key that unlocked a dark family secret.

"There was this story in it, ?A Nazi in Palestine,' written by a Baron von Mildenstein, who turned out to be (Adolf) Eichmann's boss and who worked for (Joseph) Goebbels, and who had toured Palestine with my grandparents in the thirties," he recalled.

"They were good friends, even after the war, and I was a bit shocked," he said.

Goldfinger said he was even more shocked when his own mother, Hannah, who he said "didn't really want to be part of this film anyway," expressed little curiosity about her own parents' strange and curious past.

"It seems to be a generational thing," Goldfinger mused.

"While I wanted to find out the truth about our family, her generation - and it's the same in Germany - had never asked any questions of their parents, about what had really happened. But maybe, psychologically, they didn't want to find out."

In his quest for discovery, Goldfinger traveled to Germany where he met Edda von Mildenstein, the baron's daughter, who, like Hannah, was happy not to confront the past.

The filmmaker discovered that Gerda's own mother - Goldfinger's great-grandmother - was transported to a concentration camp, where she was murdered.

"That was the most shocking thing of all," he said.

"I knew our family was originally from Germany, but I never thought there was any connection to the Holocaust - that my own great-grandmother had perished in it. And no one ever asked about it, or talked about it."

Although the expulsion and eradication of German Jews provides the film's underpinnings, Goldfinger said he feels that his documentary's "universal themes and emotions" touch all of us.

"After all," he asked, "what do you really know about your family's past? And what do you want to know?"

(Reporting By Iain Blair; editing by Chris Michaud and Carol Bishopric)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/filmmaker-explores-dark-family-saga-flat-215220950.html

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VOIP Basics & Unified Communications ? Leawood, KS

You?re invited?for a savory lunch at?Bristol Seafood Grill?where High Touch Technologies will showcase ShoreTel, an award-winning IP phone system. Transform the speed of your business, simplify communications, and save big on long distance charges with a brilliantly simple ShoreTel phone system. Attend our free event to learn more about voice over IP phone basics.?

Wednesday, November 14, 2012
11:30 a.m. ? 1:30 p.m.?

Bristol Seafood Grill
5400 West 119th Street
Leawood, KS 66209
Driving Directions

CLICK HERE TO REGISTER NOW

Everyone in attendance will be entered into a quarterly drawing?to WIN an iPad!?

Event Topics:

-????? Voice Over IP (VoIP) Basics
-????? Unified Communications Overview
-????? Tools to help your team do more with less
-????? Save big by slashing mobile costs and long distance charges
-????? Add new users simply and easily with ShoreTel Director
-????? Increase communication productivity
-????? Simplify communications for mobile workers
-????? Experience a live ShoreTel demonstration

About High Touch Technologies:
?Since 1984, High Touch has provided technology solutions to small and mid-size businesses. Started in Wichita, Kansas, High Touch serves businesses with software and hardware services, web site development, and IT systems management. High Touch now has locations in Corpus Christi, Dallas, Denver, and Kansas City.

About ShoreTel:
ShoreTel is the provider of brilliantly simple Unified Communications solutions based on its award-winning IP business phone system. ShoreTel delivers an award-winning UC system that is purpose-built for IP, and designed to be as easy to manage and scale across sites and geographies as it is to deploy and use. ShoreTel is based in Sunnyvale, California, and has regional offices in Austin, Texas, United Kingdom, Sydney, Australia and Munich, Germany.

?Watch this video to learn more about ShoreTel.?

Source: http://hightouchtechnologies.com/voipbasicskc/

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Breast-feeding reduced risk for ER/PR-negative breast cancer, results find

ScienceDaily (Oct. 18, 2012) ? Breast-feeding reduced the risk for estrogen receptor-negative and progesterone receptor-negative breast cancer, according to results presented at the 11th Annual AACR International Conference on Frontiers in Cancer Prevention Research, held in Anaheim, Calif., Oct. 16-19, 2012.

"We found an increased risk for estrogen receptor- and progesterone receptor- (ER/PR) negative breast cancer in women who do not breast-feed, but in women who have children and breast-feed, there is no increased risk," said Meghan Work, M.P.H., doctoral student in the department of epidemiology at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health in New York, N.Y.

Work and colleagues examined the relationship between reproductive risk factors -- such as the number of children a woman delivers, breast-feeding and oral contraceptive use -- and ER/PR-negative breast cancer. ER/PR-negative breast cancer often affects younger women and has a poor prognosis, according to Work.

The researchers used data from three sites of the Breast Cancer Family Registry, which includes women with and without breast cancer from the United States, Canada and Australia. This study included 4,011 women with breast cancer and 2,997 population-based controls.

The results indicated that having three or more children without breast-feeding was associated with an increased risk for ER/PR-negative breast cancer.

"Women who had children but did not breast-feed had about 1.5 times the risk for ER/PR-negative breast cancer when compared with a control population," Work said. "If women breast-fed their children, there was no increased risk for ER/PR-negative cancer."

Further, the researchers found that oral contraceptive use was not associated with ER/PR-negative cancer risk, with the exception of those formulations available before 1975. "These earlier formulations contained higher doses of estrogen and progestin than more recent versions," Work said.

These findings are in line with previous findings that have demonstrated breast-feeding benefit in triple-negative breast cancer. "This is particularly important as breast-feeding is a modifiable factor that can be promoted and supported through health policy," Work said.\

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/living_well/~3/p_zsRm7WFH4/121018121959.htm

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Does Congress Get a Passing Grade on Science?

capitol, congressional answers, science debate Image: Wikimedia Commons

Presidential candidates snatch the most attention during election seasons, and science usually gets scant mention. Science and technology, however, underpin some of the biggest problems facing the U.S., which is why Scientific American partnered with ScienceDebate.org to ask Pres. Barack Obama and former Gov. Mitt Romney to talk about 14 top challenges facing the country that are ultimately rooted in science.

But even the most science-savvy chief executive needs scientifically literate partners in Congress to implement sound initiatives. After all, the nation's laws ultimately get debated and passed on the floors of the House of Representatives and Senate. Because most of Congress's legislative work occurs within committees, we thought it made sense to find out how the top-ranking members of those committees approach issues that have some sort of foundation in science.

We chose eight of the original 14 questions that seemed to be most clearly legislative matters. Next we identified about a dozen congressional committees (including Appropriations and Budget) and two subcommittees that were likely to pay the largest roles on these issues. We then reached out to the committee chair and ranking member of these committees as well as the House and Senate majority and minority leaders. Finally, we did not contact representatives who were retiring.

Our targeted survey produced a 28 percent response rate, which we think is pretty good for our first effort at surveying the legislative leadership on science. Naturally, we would like it to be higher.

Of the 32 congressional leaders contacted, nine responded with either complete or partial answers, six declined our requests and 17 never got back to us, despite repeated e-mail and telephone requests. Of the congressional members who responded, two are Republicans and seven are Democrats.

The responders typically took the opportunity to point out their past legislative efforts as well as support or undermine current proposals from others. If they offered possible solutions, outlines were tentative. Some responses, including Sen. Jay Rockefeller's on the government's role in managing the Internet, are involved and lengthy. At the other end of the spectrum, Rep. John Mica kept his brief: for example, he answered one question in 10 words by pointing out that innovations in technology can solve freshwater problems.

All nine acknowledged climate change. Rep. Ralph Hall, however, prevaricated about the extent of humans' influence?citing great debate and uncertainty among experts.

We turned to Web sites and past statements made by the nonresponders to fill in the gaps. For example, we used public statements of the Senate majority and minority leaders as well as the speaker of the House to cobble together approximate positions. For the remaining legislative leaders in science- and technology-related policy, we ask for your help. If you find any public statement they have made addressing any of the questions, shoot an e-mail to submit@sciam.com with a link to the source.

We sent out initial requests in late July and early August. Each congressional member received at least six e-mails and six phone calls to their press offices to remind them that we were seeking written responses. The party leaders of the House and Senate?Speaker of the House John Boehner, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell?each received at least eight e-mails and six phone calls.

By September 30 nine members of Congress had sent answers and six officials declined to address the questions; the remaining 17 have not responded at the time of this writing. The door is still open: If any of the silent legislators send replies, we will post their responses.

We have responses to all eight questions from Reps. Henry Waxman (Committee on Energy and Commerce), Chris Van Hollen (Committee on the Budget), Ralph Hall (Committee on Science, Space and Technology), Timothy Bishop (Subcommittee on Water Resources and Environment) and John Mica (Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure); Senators who responded were Jay Rockefeller (Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation), Tom Harkin (Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions) and Dianne Feinstein (Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development). House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi answered five of the eight questions.

The following legislators declined to participate: Sens. Michael Enzi (Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions) and Jeff Sessions (Committee on the Budget) as well as Speaker of the House John Boehner and Rep. Collin Peterson (Committee on Agriculture). Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell's press secretary informed SA that the senator ultimately did not have time to get to the questions before the deadline. Sen. Ron Wyden's press team wrote that the member of the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, has a policy not to respond to survey questions.

The remaining elected officials did not respond: from the House, Frank Lucas (Committee on Agriculture), Scott Garrett (Committee on the Budget), Fred Upton (Committee on Energy and Commerce), Edward J. Markey and Doc Hastings (both on the Committee on Natural Resources), Eddie Bernice Johnson (Committee on Science, Space and Technology), Bob Gibbs (Subcommittee on Water Resources and Environment) and Nick Rahall (Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure); from the Senate, Pat Roberts and Debbie Stabenow (both on the Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry), Patty Murray (Committee on the Budget), Jim DeMint (Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation), Lisa Murkowski (Committee on Energy and Natural Resources), James Inhofe and Barbara Boxer (both on the Committee on Environment and Public Works), Harry Reid (majority leader) and Lamar Alexander (Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development).

We posted the responses in full and we welcome your analysis in the comments. Do congressional leaders weigh science when forming their policies? How do they plan to fund and regulate research? We are not asking politicians to be scientists, but we are asking them to consider the evidence when shaping U.S. science policy for the future.

Read the presidential candidates? answers to all 14 questions in full at either ScienceDebate.org or Scientific American Online

Election 2012 button used under Creative Commons license BY 2.0.

? Does Congress Get a Passing Grade on Science?
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Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=6564d8a5df25500a5906394ec62eaa12

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Battle for private selling shows - The Art Newspaper

Auctions Trends Market USA
Auction houses are vying for supremacy with art dealers by holding more exhibitions, and adjusting their business models accordingly

For years now, the major auction houses have been going head to head with art dealers as part of their ongoing battle for supremacy. They have increasingly been throwing their considerable weight behind private treaty sales, in direct competition with galleries, and this part of their business has been growing strongly. Now they are ratcheting up the competition with another foray into dealer territory: private selling shows.

These are very much like what you would see in a gallery, and their number and global scope is increasing fast (see table). Sotheby?s inaugurated what it calls a ?dedicated private sale exhibition gallery?, called S|2, in its York Avenue headquarters in New York last year, and has held six exhibitions there since. In September, the art adviser Josh Baer, who runs the Baer Faxt newsletter, organised a show of 26 works by Californian artists at S|2. This month, in its Rockefeller premises, Christie?s unveils a show of paintings by artists working in New York in the 1970s. It has been organised by Robert Pincus-Witten and includes work by Susan Rothenberg, Richard Artschwager and Jo Baer?coincidentally, the mother of Josh Baer.

The increasing importance of all of this is illustrated by the announcement earlier this year that Christie?s chairman of post-war and contemporary art, Amy Cappellazzo, is taking on an ?expanded role? in private sales; she says that ?other top people in the firm are also focusing more on this aspect of the business?.

If the auction houses are putting more emphasis on this source of revenue, it is because income from classic auctioneering has fallen?at least at Sotheby?s, which reported a decrease of 42% in net income in the first half of 2012, and perhaps also at Christie?s (which is not a publicly quoted company like Sotheby?s so does not have to disclose its accounts). Both houses are constantly exploring new ways of making money, and Christie?s is also bolstering its online-only platform, with a sales gallery on the web. Last December, part of the Elizabeth Taylor sale was conducted online, and some of the works from the $100m sell-off by the Warhol Foundation will also be treated this way.

Christie?s notes that it has always hosted art exhibitions?even as far back as 1761, when members of the Society of Arts showed at ?Mr Christie?s? in London. Phillips de Pury has held 25 selling exhibitions since 2005. But the number of selling shows at all auction houses has stepped up since 2011. According to Caroline Sayan, the international managing director of private sales at Christie?s: ?We see them as an opportunity to use our space, which is not always busy with auctions, and as a way to engage clients throughout the year.?

As for online sales, she says they are a ?marketing platform? used as a way to ?reach a larger audience?. Christie?s is keen to connect with a younger demographic, which is more comfortable buying online, particularly in the contemporary art field. Its ?private sales online gallery? this season offers works in the $250,000 to $1m range. Sotheby?s does not have a comparable venture, but Alex Platon, its head of private sales, says: ?We are working towards this.?

Sotheby?s and Christie?s are clam-like about how much they are earning from these selling shows, refusing to separate them from their private sales totals. Sotheby?s reported $513m in private sales in the first half of 2012, making commission revenues of $41.5m on them. Christie?s says private treaty sales made ?413.4m ($665m) in the first half of 2012, an increase of 53% on the same period last year. In both firms, private sales now represent more than 18% of turnover.

Platon says that private selling shows are ?growing fast?. ?We are putting more resources and more time into them, and this is bearing fruit,? he says. ?We will continue to invest in this area.? Asked why the firm is so reluctant to give prices, he says: ?In these shows, we operate along the same guidelines as dealers??and it must be admitted that art galleries are often as tight-lipped. And, Platon says, ?we have more flexibility on commission when working in the private sales arena?.

One question that could be asked is whether these new selling platforms will eviscerate the core business of auctioneering. Sayan says that the material offered online is ?fresh, well-priced and attractive?. So why not put it into auction? ?Our clients have differing needs; we discuss it with them, they make the choice,? she says. Platon defends the shift in platforms. ?It?s absolutely not true that they cannibalise the market. The market is big enough.? Asked what will happen if the market shrinks, he says: ?We will readjust.?

Art dealers are resigned if by no means thrilled by all of this. James Roundell, the chairman of the Society of London Art Dealers, says: ?This does cause a lot of disquiet, but the art market is not static, and this is all part of how the auction houses have diversified over the past 15 years. What is confusing for buyers is a lack of transparency over who they are actually dealing with when they buy from an auction house today?is it acting as an auctioneer, an agent, an owner of a work of art or a dealer??

Lucy Mitchell-Innes, the president of the American Art Dealers? Association, notes: ?The auction houses still have had no impact in the primary market, which continues to be about the relationship between artists and their gallerists, who nurture the careers of their artists and service their needs. An auction house may have a broad reach, but it is certainly not as deep.?

?The market has been expanding so much, and some of the major dealers have expanded as well. The art market is an industry like others; it?s a competitive situation,? Amy Cappellazzo says. ?The internet has transformed it. I realised some time ago that we are not an auction house, we?re an art business: being just an auction house is old-fashioned.?

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Source: http://www.theartnewspaper.com/articles/Battle+for+private+selling+shows/27295

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Lightning to 30-pin Adapters hands-on

While Apple managed to ship the iPhone 5 to dozens of countries within the span of a couple weeks, it's taken almost a month to get the 30-pin Dock to Lightning connector adapters shipped and into stores. So, now that they're here, how are they?

Okay. Pretty much exactly what you'd expect.

30-pin Dock to Lightning adapters hands-on

The dongle isn't really small enough to avoid being annoying, but that's what you get when you need something to translate the new, all-digital Lightning signal into the old, partly analog Dock signal and vice versa. If all you have is an old legacy cable, either stand-alone or as part of an in-car system, it works fine. Anything that's cramped, however, or relies on wrapping around the base or back of the iPhone for stability, probably won't work.

That brings us to the cable. It's the same as the dongle but includes a short length -- 20 cm or 7.8-inches -- of USB cable as well. So, for example, you could attach it inside a battery case or even some types of media docks and still, awkwardly, use them with your iPhone 5, iPod touch 5, or iPod touch 7.

Both are expensive, neither is ideal, neither supports video, and they took far too long to get into stores. That said, if you have a legacy accessory that absolutely needs a 30-pin Dock port to work, it's something you're going to have to pick up.

I tested both out with the iPod connector kit in my car and they both worked fine, exactly how the iPhone 4S worked with the traditional, direct Dock connector. My music played out through the car, and the car controls were recognized by my iPhone 5.

$39.95 - Lightning to 30-pin Adapter (0.2 m) - Buy now

$29.95 - Lightning to 30-pin Adapter - Buy now



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/apflOzpgjOQ/story01.htm

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When Science is a Conveyor of Bad News | Do the Math

Science is a phenomenal institution. Sometimes I can?t believe we created this construct that works so incredibly well. It manages to convert human imperfections into a remarkably robust machine that has aided our growth juggernaut. Yet science seeks truth, and sometimes the truth is not what we want to hear. How will we respond? Will we kill the messenger and penalize the scientific institution for what is bound to be an increasing barrage of bad news this century as Earth fills beyond capacity?

I think for many people in our society, personal contact with science is limited to science classes in school or perhaps the dreaded science fair?or maybe as adults watching shows like Nova or tuning in to Shark Week on the Discovery Channel.

So let me take a moment to explain science as I have come to understand it. (You can skip if you already have a firm grip.)

The Scientific Method

The best description of the scientific method I have ever seen is from a conceptual physics textbook by Hobson. Paraphrasing:

The scientific method involves the dynamic interplay between theory and experiment.

That?s it. Perfect. As a scientist, I don?t come to work on Monday and make an observation, then form a hypothesis on Tuesday, devise an experiment to test some prediction on Wednesday, perform the experiment Thursday, and interpret the result on Friday. On any given day I would be hard pressed to tell you where I am in the process. All of the above, really. It?s a mess. It?s a constant back and forth comparing theoretical expectations to the final arbiter of any dispute: nature. Some people specialize in one aspect of the process, and can spend years chewing on some piece of it. But it is seldom done in isolation.

Meanwhile, science fair projects across the nation?under the advisement of teachers who themselves often do not have personal experience in how science really works?approach their subject in an uncharacteristically formulaic way.? Nine times out of ten the effort culminates in a proof that the initial hypothesis was right; as if that were the goal and criterion for success. The rare student is surprised by the data, admitting to a failure of the hypothesis, quickly reconsidering initial assumptions and driving into an unexpected yet rewarding direction (dynamic interplay). That?s the real scientist at work. Too bad the judges (in my experience as a judge) often don?t recognize this apparent failure as the true success.

I can?t pass up the opportunity to share with you the ?best? high school science fair project I ever saw (when I was myself a student participant in the fair?and no, it was not my project): ?Does light travel through the dark?? Setup: light-tight cardboard box painted black on the inside; flashlight shining through a hole in one end; a peephole in the other end to see if the light made it. Any guesses?

A Hungry Snake

What is so special about science is that it is constantly trying to tear itself apart, like a snake eating its tail. While such an action may not actually make a snake stronger, it does make science stronger.

This self-mutilation is driven by some of the less admirable traits of humans: ego, thirst for fame and status, the need to quell insecurity.

It works like this: Professor Establishment sees an opportunity to expose Theory X (be it evolution, general relativity, anthropogenic climate change, etc.) as a sadly misguided notion. What beckons is fame and glory, a Nobel Prize, and eternal validation?perhaps erasing years of victimization at the hands of bullies in school. All the incentives are there, for virtually every scientist on the planet.

I think this surprises non-scientists, who might perceive the scientific establishment as a sycophantic collection of losers who flock to consensus every time a bandwagon passes through campus dropping research funds off its tailgate. No. Scientists can be argumentative, clever, devious, competitive, possessive, and still manage to be really fun to hang around.

What Holds it Together?

So with all these scientists itching to overturn the applecart, why isn?t the whole enterprise in a woeful state of chaos? Why do we see headlines about consensus views? Do I even know what I?m talking about?

Professor Establishment has one big problem. Data. Mountains of experimental data. For any new idea to be taken seriously, it has to demonstrate consistency with relevant data sets that came before. But a new theory that adequately describes existing data is in itself not enough to make headlines. To be considered interesting or superior, it either has to also explain anomalies that the current theories can?t seem to handle?or better, correctly predict the outcome of an experiment that had not yet been performed, while the older theory fails to match the resulting experimental data.

I?ve been talking about Professor Establishment rather than Joe Schmoe. Joe Schmoe has lots of really mind-bending ideas all the time?and e-mail access, unfortunately. Maybe? there are some gold nuggets in there. But the Cinderella-scientist seldom has sufficient awareness of the mountain of data, the acumen to perform any meaningful analysis, or the mathematical skills to formulate their idea in a useful way. (Fed up with a constant stream of unsolicited crackpot e-mails, I finally put up a self-test page, which has, alas, reduced the flow.)

So years of professional training and research experience, reading and writing journal articles, and following developments in theory and experiment give Professor Establishment a substantial leg up when it comes to dealing a deadly blow to a well-rooted scientific theory. Scientific revolutions almost always come from within the establishment. And before you jump to the Swiss patent clerk as a counter-example, be aware that this fellow had a Ph.D. in physics, had published a number of articles in the leading physics journal of the day prior to 1905, and was known to leading physicists across Europe. Einstein was not the outsider many think him to be.

I?ve known several scientists who jumped onto global warming confident that they could bring a wrecking ball to the hype and expose mistakes in analysis, data, or interpretation?only to find that the thing is much more robust than they imagined at first. They generally change their tune after personally experiencing the weight of evidence. I am not claiming that every detail is wrapped up, or that there is no chance that the whole story may unravel someday. But the odds get slimmer with every failed attempt.

Emergent Robustness

The result of all this scheming is a sort of scientific Darwinism. Prominent new theories stand out as bigger prizes for the taking, attracting more gunfire. Every failed shot gives the theory more strength, feeding a cycle of continued challenge. In the process, more experiments are conducted and the mountain of data grows. Eventually, exhausted scientists cease fire, and start working with the theory as a useful and as-far-as-we-know accurate description of nature, often providing a stepping stone to explore new frontiers. One upshot is that the emerging consensus does not come easily. Meanwhile, some scientists will continue to probe the foundations of all the important theories in the high-stakes game of seeking ultimate truth.

Very rarely, revolutionary ideas do prevail, but generally in a way that preserves the key qualities of the preceding theory in some well-tested regime. Einstein?s general relativity renders Newtonian gravity as fundamentally wrong, but still accurate enough in most situations to be darned useful to this day and forever more. General relativity may well falter some day, but its replacement must preserve the general-relativistic (post-Newtonian) aspects of nature that have already been measured and confirmed to moderate precision.

I like to say that physicists did not gleefully adopt quantum mechanics, general relativity, or ghostly neutrinos because they were eager for the novelty, or thought the idea just sounded really cool, or deferred to some authoritative figure (like Einstein) whose opinions on such matters were not to be questioned. Rather, ideas of this sort were forced down the throats of fussy physicists who didn?t want to adopt these strange notions. And it is the tight agreement between theory and experiment that does the throat-cramming.

Is it Truth?

It would be too strong a statement to claim that science achieves truth. But truth is certainly the aim, and at the very least science achieves an admirable level of Truthiness. Perhaps it is sufficient to say that science provides us with the best version of the truth we are currently capable of realizing.

All the same, science is never written in stone: it cannot become religious dogma. It?s only as good as the observations that support it, and the door is always open to new observations and new interpretations. So we can never call it Truth with a capital ?T.? It?s just a whole heck of a lot better than anything we could spout from the comfort of our armchair?being vetted by nature and experiments.

The Good, the Bad, and the Jerk Called Science

The preceding exposition serves to emphasize the fact that science builds into itself a level of objectivity despite depending on the efforts of subjective practitioners. Science therefore acquires a certain indifference, exercising little in the way of value judgments. It?s jerky that way.

Many regard science as a good thing: providing the foundation for technology and bringing with it medical advances, creature comforts, security, and twinkies. Some see the bad aspects: nuclear weapons, genetic engineering, environmental degradation, and twinkies.

But science, like the honey badger, doesn?t care. Science enables humans to understand the evolution of the universe since the big bang? Shrug. Science cures polio? Yawn. Science unsettles us by revealing the ultimate demise of the earth, sun, and universe? All in a day?s work. Science unlocks the secrets to making nuclear bombs that are used to destroy all life on a planet? No matter. So science is a bit like an ornery uncle.

And it?s what this ornery uncle has to say about our future that makes me sit up. Uncle Science says:

  • Our familiar growth phase is a temporary phenomenon, as any exponential function must be;
  • The chief energy source that brought us to this place is finite and will wane over the next century or so;
  • Modern agriculture is dependent on finite fossil fuels, requiring roughly ten calories of energy input for every one calorie delivered to the table;
  • Population will continue to grow even if birthrate suddenly dropped to replacement levels around the world due to demographic inertia (a young-laden distribution not yet at reproductive age);
  • Escaping the bounds of this planet does not constitute a likely escape hatch due to both energy constraints and the hostile environment we find away from the eggshell-thin layer around the earth;
  • Our fossil fuel bonanza has created an unauthorized global-scale climate experiment that may wreak havoc on crops and the interconnected web of species on the planet.

Burn the Observatory

So my main question is: how will the public react to grumpy Uncle Science as the message pivots away from telling us about all the amazing things that are possible to detailing why some of our dreams are not possible? As our planet ?fills up,? the balance will certainly shift?as it has begun to do already?to the negative side effects and to pointing out practices that cannot continue without dire consequences.

An example of such bad news crossed my path last week. A common dream is that once societies achieve a certain level of education, comfort, economic scale, and energy use, the population stops growing, and can even contract slightly. This so-called demographic transition is a main ingredient in many people?s hope for the future. Our goal, it is said, should be to foster growth in developing countries to speed them on their way to this state (and surely no one will object if we developed countries experience more economic growth as well, right?). A recent study (see also this related article) looked at the correlation between energy availability and population growth rate, concluding that the break-even value is at a per-capita energy intake rate of 13,000?W. Combining this with various projections for future energy availability, it was found that population will continue to surge to levels well above the UN projections by mid-century. The amount of energy necessary to achieve a global demographic transition (if the current correlation is to hold) is absurd. Uncle Science says not likely. Another dream dashed.

Look for more examples in newspapers near you. I predict an increasing drumbeat of scientists pointing out limitations to our ambitions. It?s not because that?s what?s ?in? right now. It?s where the mountain of evidence is leading us.

This all makes me very worried. I cherish the scientific institution for its ability to transcend petty human shortcomings: actually building on those weaknesses to create a strong approximation of Truth. Science is a pursuit of luxury, borne by the citizenry out of a sense of goodwill, curiosity, and promise. It has served as a catalyst to economic growth not only by paving the way to a world full of gizmos and new capabilities, but also through the development of sophisticated methods for locating underground resources in the form of energy and materials. As long as science keeps it up, everyone is happy. But as the century wears on, the words ?can?t,? ?won?t,? and ?shouldn?t? will likely appear more often in connection with science. Not so popular with the peoples.

Will funding for science wither as a result? Will we decide to stop paying for more bad news? Will scientists feel political pressure to stay away from ?downer? topics after people get fed up or the dire news is deemed to be bad for morale and therefore a psychological impediment to economic growth? I hope we will always keep the door open to truth, even when it?s not music to our ears. But I am not so certain this will be the case?especially when money is on the line.

Taking insight from the Simpsons?that fountain of wisdom on matters of human nature?a favorite episode of mine starts with Bart discovering a comet while messing around with a telescope. As the local observatory confirms, this comet is barreling straight toward Springfield. All attempts to avert disaster only make the situation worse (like the missile sent to destroy the comet veering off course to blow up the only bridge out of town). Homer is the only one unconcerned, speculating that the comet will burn up in the atmosphere, reduced to the size of a chihuahua?s head by the time it makes landfall. Having completely botched any coordinated attempts at mitigating the disaster, the whole town ends up squeezing into Ned Flanders? deluxe shelter, forcing Ned out. In a rare display of guilt, Homer follows Ned out to face ?the end? together, shaming the rest of the town out into the open with them. The comet indeed burns up during entry?the remnant managing to strike and destroy the abandoned shelter, rolling to a stop at Homer?s feet where a chihuahua conveniently happens by for a favorable size comparison.

This is all amusing enough and I highly recommend the episode. But as etched as the story is in my memory, the part that is really seared into my brain is the reaction of the crowd. Moments after experiencing relief, anger boils to the surface in response to the emotional roller coaster to which the townsfolk had been subjected. An angry mob forms to march off to the observatory, intent on burning it to the ground ?so that nothing like this ever happens again.?

Sadly, I think this could portend the fate of science. And it also captures the inaccuracy of public opinion: the observatory played a minor role in the story, let alone the larger point that knowledge of the approaching comet should only be viewed as a useful service. Perhaps I?m not justified in taking a cartoon as poignant commentary. What matters is what we do in the real world.

Whether dealing with predictions of global warming, limits to growth, ecosystem collapse, pollution, crop failure, aquifer discharge, fisheries depletion, or any number of similar warnings?when the anticipated fate befalls us, will our reaction be to blame the institution that brought awareness? Will we burn the observatory, shun science, and close our ears to further cautions? I hope we can be smarter than that. Meanwhile, keep a lookout for signs that science is waning in popularity?as I suspect it will in the decades to come. In fact, I sense that it has already started.

Source: http://physics.ucsd.edu/do-the-math/2012/10/when-science-brings-bad-news/

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Kenyan police kill three suspects in al Shabaab raid

MOMBASA, Kenya (Reuters) - Police shot dead three suspected supporters of the Somali militant group al Shabaab on Wednesday in a raid in Kenya's turbulent coastal region, in which a police officer also died.

Kenya has suffered a series of grenade and gun attacks since it sent troops into Somalia a year ago in pursuit of the insurgents it blames for kidnapping security personnel and Western tourists from its territory.

Grenades, AK-47 assault rifles and ammunition were also confiscated during the night-time operation in the run-down Likoni area during the operation, Coast province police chief Aggrey Adoli said.

A local group campaigning for independence for the Coast region has added to tensions ahead of a presidential and parliamentary election due in March, the first since a disputed 2007 poll that sparked inter-ethnic violence nationwide in which more than 1,200 people were killed and thousands more displaced.

Adoli said the suspected al Shabaab supporters threw two grenades and opened fire when an elite Nairobi police unit burst into their building, seriously wounding four officers. One later died of his wounds in hospital.

About six people were also arrested but later released after it was found they were neighbors caught up in the raid, he said.

"With the key suspects killed and weapons recovered, the operation (has ended). It's still a big success in our war against terrorism," Adoli told Reuters.

Mwagomba Juma, a youth leader who lives in the area, said heavy gunfire, punctuated by at least two blasts, began in the early hours of the morning.

Dozens of police in bullet-proof vests and armed with automatic rifles combed the neighborhood, just south of the port city of Mombasa, as nervous residents peered through their windows, witnesses said.

The instability has kept many foreign tourists away. The number of visitors to Kenya was down by a fifth in the first eight months of this year, a heavy blow to the tourism sector which is a main driver of east Africa's biggest economy.

In Nairobi, Kenyan police arrested Mohammed Dor, a legislator and prominent Muslim cleric from the coastal region, after he said he had no objection to funding the separatist Muslim Mombasa Republican Council if they approached him.

"He will be charged in a Kenyan court of law on Thursday for incitement to violence," Ireri Kamwende, Nairobi's provincial criminal investigation officer said.

Dor's arrest sparked fierce criticism of the police by Kenya's Muslim leaders, who said their community was now living in "fear" of the police.

"We take this as a humiliation. It's not only an embarrassment, it is disgraceful," Abdullahi Abdi, chairman of the National Muslim Leaders Forum, told reporters in Nairobi.

Kenyan authorities have intensified a crackdown on the MRC movement which is seeking independence for the coastal region, a tourism and trade hub. The MRC says the region has suffered decades of social and economic marginalization.

On Monday, MRC leader Omar Mwamnuadzi and 36 supporters were arrested. Kenya's government said last week it had information that the MRC intended to sow chaos during national school exams that began on Monday.

Though there are no known links between the MRC and al Shabaab, there is a sizeable community of indigenous Somalis in Nairobi and along the coast swelled by numerous Somali refugees fleeing conflict in their homeland.

They as well as Kenya's Muslims, who also make a large part of the coastal population, are thought to harbor some sympathies with the Somali militant group, as well as demands for secession for the coastal strip.

(Additional reporting by Humphrey Malalo and Drazen Jorgic in Nairobi; Writing by Duncan Miriri; Editing by Yara Bayoumy and Jon Hemming)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kenyan-police-kill-three-suspects-al-shabaab-raid-161910699.html

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Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Traveling solo? Here's where you should go

10 hrs.

Let?s first tackle?the concerns and hesitations about traveling solo. Safety issues, handling?language barriers?and having to dine out alone are all things that could keep?us all from hitting the road alone. But the benefits ? being on your own?schedule, eating what you want where you want?and?feeling totally independent ? can outweigh any negative connotations. Plus, the?solo traveler gets to temporarily escape from the hustle of the everyday and go?exactly and only where they want.

Click?here to see 8 prime destinations for the solo traveler

Of course, traveling on one?s own isn?t for everyone. The?trick is to plan ahead ? make sure you choose a safe place, plan great?activities to keep you busy, do some research on all the great things to taste,?think of somewhere with friendly locals and a communal vibe and suck up any?insecurities about talking to strangers because they?re the ones with the best?tips; the hotel concierge, friendly bartender and locals standing in line for?something that looks and smells delicious are all the best impromptu tour?guides.

Click?here to see the 101 best hotel restaurants around the world

Certain destinations?are better for solo travelers than others, depending on language barriers,?easy-to-understand currency, built-in activities or food so good you?ll forget?you?re sitting there on your own. Ideal solo destinations don?t need to be too?far flung, either ? Austin and Portland are both dynamic, charming places to?spend a few days alone. But international destinations from Belize to Dublin?make for safe, mouthwatering, friendly and relaxing getaways for anyone?looking to get out on their own. If retelling the glory of your own travel?successes and laughing at your own trip-ups sounds like the right kind of holiday for you, read on for the eight prime solo?destinations.

Click?to see 10 money saving travel tips

Venice, Italy
Getting lost along Venice's?canals is one of life's great pleasures, and?while it might sound like a romantic interlude, it can be equally (if not more)?indulgent if you take that stroll on your own. Stop into family-owned?boutiques, lounge over espressos on canal-side terraces and sink into dimly-lit trattorias for long, perfectly prepared dinners. Spend at least one day?exploring Murano and Burano, the two islands sitting just out of view of Piazza?San Marco where lace and hand-blown glass have been made for generations.

Norway
Scandinavians love?showing newcomers around to help them fall ever more in love with their?fantastic food scene, fascinating culture and stunning landscape. And that Norway?is ranked ninth on the Global Peace?Index quells safety concerns. The country boasts 21 national parks, legendary?fjords and the National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design, as well as a?cuisine that has been on culinary trends lists for the last two years, for good?reason.

Portland, Ore.
Portland is on everyone's minds now, with its?laid-back cool vibe, lush greenery and ample opportunities to spend all day?outdoors. Its food cart scene rivals that of cities twice its size and the?caf?s, boutiques and galleries lining Mississippi Avenue are not the usual?brand names you'll find from SoHo to Melrose. Solo travelers are easily?entertained in this relaxing mecca of hip design and mouthwatering food.

Austin, Texas
Austin, Texas, is definitely having its moment in?the spotlight ? the food, music and art scenes are at full tilt. Solo?travelers would be right at home during a long weekend spent in Austin, where?sampling the iconic barbecue at the Salt Lick, grabbing a coffee from Jo's?coffee shop at the Hotel San Jose or stopping in for a drink at La Condesa mean built-in conversation with locals sitting nearby.

Fiji
It?s easy to assume?that an island of spectacular beauty like Fiji would be expensive or lonely for?solo travelers, or both. Not so. Fiji has fantastic lodgings that don't break?the bank, the locals are warm and welcoming, and there is ample mouthwatering?tropical food to sample. Close your eyes and imagine this: island-hopping to?try spicy island-style Indian food, fresh grilled seafood and Fiji-style?barbecue with funds to spare.

Click?here to see more prime destinations for the solo traveler

More from The Daily Meal:

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/travel/itineraries/prime-destinations-solo-traveler-6175427

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Plaque build-up in your brain may be more harmful than having Alzheimer's gene

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

A new study shows that having a high amount of beta amyloid or "plaques" in the brain associated with Alzheimer's disease may cause steeper memory decline in mentally healthy older people than does having the APOE ?4 allele, also associated with the disease. The study is published in the October 16, 2012, print issue of Neurology?, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

"Our results show that plaques may be a more important factor in determining which people are at greater risk for cognitive impairment or other memory diseases such as Alzheimer's disease," said study author Yen Ying Lim, MPsych, with the University of Melbourne in Victoria, Australia. "Unfortunately, testing for the APOE genotype is easier and much less costly than conducting amyloid imaging."

For the study, 141 people with an average age of 76 who were free of any problems in memory and thinking underwent PET brain scans and were tested for the APOE gene. Their memory and thinking was then tracked over the following year and a half, using a set of computer-based cognitive assessments that were based on playing card games and remembering word lists.

The study found that after a year and a half, people who had more brain plaques at the start of the study had up to 20 percent greater decline on the computer based assessments of memory than did those who had fewer brain plaques. The study also found that while carriers of the APOE ?4 allele also showed greater decline on the memory assessments than those who did not have the allele, carrying the ?4 allele did not change the decline in memory related to the plaques.

"Our finding that brain plaque-related memory decline can occur while people still have normal memory and thinking shows that these plaque-related brain changes can be detected and measured while older people are still healthy. This provides an enormous opportunity for understanding the development of early Alzheimer's disease and even a sound basis for the assessment of plaque-targeting therapies," said Lim.

###

American Academy of Neurology: http://www.aan.com/go/pressroom

Thanks to American Academy of Neurology for this article.

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

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/124508/Plaque_build_up_in_your_brain_may_be_more_harmful_than_having_Alzheimer_s_gene

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Earth-sized planet too hot for non-asbestos life forms, but ...

Earth-sized planet: With a mass about 1.1 times that of Earth, it is strikingly similar in size. Could the Alpha Centauri B system hold more? Earth-sized, but habitable planets?

By Seth Borenstein,?Associated Press / October 17, 2012

This artist's concept shows the newfound alien planet Alpha Centauri Bb, found in a three-star system just 4.3 light-years from Earth.

ESO/L. Cal?ada

Enlarge

European astronomers say that just outside our solar system they've found a planet that's the closest you can get to Earth in location and size.

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It is the type of planet they've been searching for across the Milky Way galaxy and they found it circling a star right next door ? 25 trillion miles (40 trillion kilometers) away. But the Earth-like planet is so hot its surface may be like molten lava. Life cannot survive the 2,200 degree heat of the planet, so close to its star that it circles it every few days.

The astronomers who found it say it's likely there are other planets circling the same star, a little farther away where it may be cool enough for water and life. And those planets might fit the not-too-hot, not-too-cold description sometimes call the Goldilocks Zone.

RECOMMENDED: Are you scientifically literate? Take the quiz

That means that in the star system Alpha Centauri B, a just-right planet could be closer than astronomers had once imagined.

It's so close that from some southern places on Earth, you can see Alpha Centauri B in the night sky without a telescope. But it's still so far that a trip there using current technology would take tens of thousands of years.

But the wow factor of finding such a planet so close has some astronomers already talking about how to speed up a 25 trillion-mile (40 trillion-kilometer) rocket trip there. Scientists have already started pressuring NASA and the European Space Agency to come up with missions to send something out that way to get a look at least.

The research was released online Tuesday in the journal Nature. There has been a European-U.S. competition to find the nearest and most Earth-like exoplanets ? planets outside our solar system. So far scientists have found 842 of them, but think they number in the billions.

While the newly discovered planet circles Alpha Centauri B, it's part of a system of three stars: Alpha Centauri A, B and the slightly more distant Proxima Centauri. Systems with two or more stars are more common than single stars like our sun, astronomers say.

This planet has the smallest mass ? a measurement of weight that doesn't include gravity ? that has been found outside our solar system so far. With a mass of about 1.1 times the size of Earth, it is strikingly similar in size.

Stephane Udry of the Geneva Observatory, who heads the European planet-hunting team, said this means "there's a very good prospect of detecting a planet in the habitable zone that is very close to us."

And one of the European team's main competitors, Geoff Marcy of the University of California Berkeley, gushed even more about the scientific significance.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/pUOfR8ph9E8/Earth-sized-planet-too-hot-for-non-asbestos-life-forms-but

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Government: Violent crimes rose 18 percent in 2011

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The number of violent crimes rose by 18 percent in the United States last year while property crimes went up by 11 percent, the government reported Wednesday.

It was the first year-to-year increase for violent crime since 1993, marking the end of a long string of declines. Violent crime fell by 65 percent since 1993, from 16.8 million to 5.8 million last year.

According to the U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics' annual national crime victimization survey, the size of the percentage increases in both violent crime and property crime for last year was driven in large part by the historically low levels seen in 2010.

The increase in violent crime was the result of an upward swing in assaults, which rose 22 percent, from 4 million in 2010 to 5 million last year. But the incidence of rape, sexual assault and robbery remained largely unchanged, as did serious violent crime involving weapons or injury

"While it's cause for concern, I would caution against forecasting future crime trends based on a one-year fluctuation," said Chris Melde, an assistant professor at Michigan State University's school of criminal justice.

"You can have percentage changes that seem quite large, but unless you put them in a longer-term perspective you can sometimes misinterpret the overall seriousness of the problem," Melde added.

The increases in violent crime experienced by whites, Hispanics, younger people and men accounted for the majority of the increase in violent crime.

In the latest survey, property crime was up for the first time in a decade, from 15.4 million in 2010 to 17 million last year. Household burglaries rose 14 percent, from 3.2 million to 3.6 million. The number of thefts jumped by 10 percent, from 11.6 million to 12.8 million.

The victimization figures are based on surveys by the Census Bureau of a large sample of people in order to gather data from those who are victims of crime. They are considered the government's most comprehensive crime statistics because they count both crimes that never are reported to the police as well as those reported.

Last May, the FBI's preliminary crime report for 2011, which counts only crimes reported to police, concluded that crime dropped again last year, down 4 percent for violent crime and 3.7 percent for property crime. The declines slowed in the second half of last year, a sign to academic experts that the many years of lowering crime levels might be nearing an end. Historically, less than half of all crimes, including violent crimes, are reported to police.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/government-violent-crimes-rose-18-percent-2011-134303924.html

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Lauren Conrad on The Hills: Mostly Sort of Real!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/10/lauren-conrad-on-the-hills-mostly-sort-of-real/

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Russia's Medvedev calls for ban of tobacco ads

FILE - In this Thursday, Sept. 6, 2012 file photo two women smoke at a downtown street in the eastern Russian city of Vladivostok, where the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit is taking place. Russia?s Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev on Tuesday Oct. 16, 2012, called for a ban on all tobacco ads, referring to Russia?s ?terrifying? smoking statistics. In a video message in his blog on Tuesday, Medvedev listed dismal statistics and insisted that the government?s clampdown will not be targeted at smokers, but at smoking. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu, file)

FILE - In this Thursday, Sept. 6, 2012 file photo two women smoke at a downtown street in the eastern Russian city of Vladivostok, where the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit is taking place. Russia?s Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev on Tuesday Oct. 16, 2012, called for a ban on all tobacco ads, referring to Russia?s ?terrifying? smoking statistics. In a video message in his blog on Tuesday, Medvedev listed dismal statistics and insisted that the government?s clampdown will not be targeted at smokers, but at smoking. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu, file)

FILE - In this Nov. 28, 1997 file photo, Muscovites walk down a central city street heavily adorned with advertisements of western tobacco companies. Russia?s Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev on Tuesday Oct. 16, 2012, called for a ban on all tobacco ads, referring to Russia?s ?terrifying? smoking statistics. In a video message in his blog on Tuesday, Medvedev listed dismal statistics and insisted that the government?s clampdown will not be targeted at smokers, but at smoking. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko, file)

(AP) ? Russia's Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev on Tuesday called for a ban on all tobacco ads, as the government prepares a bill that would also phase out smoking in public.

World Health Organization says that some 40 percent of Russia's adult population smokes, more than in any other country. A pack of cigarettes in Russia costs between one and two dollars, and clouds of smoke hover in most Russian bars and restaurants.

In a video message posted on his blog on Tuesday, Medvedev listed the dismal statistics and insisted that the government's clampdown is not targeting smokers, but smoking.

The government will consider a bill this month that would ban all tobacco ads, gradually ban smoking in all public places by 2015 and raise the price of cigarettes, a radical step for a country where 44 million adults light up.

About 400,000 Russians die every year of smoke-related causes, which Medvedev described as a "terrifying figure equivalent to the population of one big city."

The number of smokers in Russia has increased over the past decades while tobacco prices were hardly regulated and smoking ads were largely unrestricted.

WHO statistics show that the rate of female smoking in Russia shoot up from just 7 percent in 1992 to 22 percent in 2010.

Medvedev said the planned clampdown should benefit children and teenagers. He said that 90 percent of Russian smokers take up the habit before they turn 20.

"Our children get used to tobacco smoke when they're still babies and have their first cigarette in middle school, that's why we cannot talk about smoking as a free choice of an adult," the prime minister said.

Oleg Salagai, a health ministry official, told the Interfax news agency that the proposed measures are expected to cut smoking rates by half.

Medvedev called on Russians to support the bill, insisting that it will focus on smoking and tobacco companies, not on smokers.

"We can no longer tolerate tobacco companies making profits on our children and turn them into life-time tobacco consumers. It's immoral."

Salagai said that Russia loses an estimated 1.2 trillion rubles ($38 billion), or 6 percent of the country's gross domestic product, because of smoke-related deaths.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-10-16-Russia-Smoking/id-2b25fa21305f46cda8346dca6a096f9a

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Repealing Itemized Deductions Leads to 4-Percent Tax Rate Cut ...

An analysis of individual tax rate reduction from closing tax expenditures, credits or deductions would only generate enough savings to reduce marginal tax rates by 4 percent, according to a report by the bipartisan Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT). The JCT based its findings on the assumption that the 2001 and 2003 tax rate cuts would expire, leading to higher rates to begin with and resulting in a reduced top rate of 38.02 percent.

The report stemmed from a September 19 request by Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont., during a committee meeting to discuss the alternative minimum tax (AMT) and provisions of the Internal Revenue Code that have either expired over the past year or are about to expire. Baucus asked the JCT about the concept of repealing all tax expenditures and using all or part of the revenues to reduce statutory marginal tax rates. The JCT agreed to find out.

Republicans attacked the study as misleading and hypothetical, warning that it should not thwart efforts to reform the tax code by lowering rates. ?There are some who may suggest that this study is evidence that tax reform should not be undertaken,? said Senate Finance Committee ranking member Orrin G. Hatch, R-Utah. ?Their position is that we should close deductions, credits or tax expenditures to broaden the tax base without any rate relief, in order to pay down the debt and without having to shrink the bloated size of government.?

Democrats, however, hailed the study as further proof that Republican plans to reduce tax rates would place a heavier burden on the middle class. ?Republicans have engaged in all kinds of twists and turns to escape the basic fact that their tax plan would give wealthy taxpayers an enormous tax break and harm middle-income families,? said House Ways and Means Committee ranking member Sander Levin, D-Mich., in a written statement ?This report from Congress? official scorekeeper highlights what has become increasingly clear: the Republican tax plan would either raise taxes on middle class families or further explode the deficit.?

The JCT outlined the results of its findings in an October 11 letter to both Baucus and Hatch (TAXDAY, 2012/10/15, O.1 ). JCT Chief of Staff Thomas Barthold explained that the estimate was an ?experiment? and that it did not represent all of the possible broadening of the tax base. He said the experiment makes several changes to present law, including: repealing the individual AMT; repealing the overall limitation on itemized deductions and personal exemptions for certain taxpayers, repealing all itemized deductions, taxing capital gains and dividends as ordinary income; and repealing the interest exclusion on state and local bonds issued after December 31, 2012. Transition relief was not provided under any repeal. Under the proposal, the individual income tax rates would be: 14.4 percent, 26.88 percent, 29.76 percent, 34.56 percent and 38.02 percent.

By Jeff Carlson, CCH News Staff

Letter from JCT Chief of Staff Barthold Regarding Repeal of Tax Expenditures and Reducing Tax Rates

Source: http://www.cchgroup.com/wordpress/index.php/tax-headlines/federal-tax-headlines/repealing-itemized-deductions-leads-to-4-percent-tax-rate-cut-study-finds/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=repealing-itemized-deductions-leads-to-4-percent-tax-rate-cut-study-finds

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