Friday, December 21, 2012

Continental gets automated vehicle approved for Nevada roads

Continental gets its 'highly automated vehicle' approved for Nevada roads, joins Google in the Silver State

Google isn't the only outfit puttering around Nevada roads with its hands off the wheel -- German automotive supplier Continental has the state's approval to let the computer take the wheel, too. Earlier this week the Silver State signed off on the German company's safety, employee training, system function and accident reporting plans, granting Continental a testing license and adorning its vehicles with red license plates. It's the very same treatment Mountain View received back in May -- but Continental's cars aren't exactly direct competitors to Google's fare.

The company's "highly automated vehicles" are more of an advanced cruise control system than a self driving car -- capable of navigating stop and go traffic on a freeway, for example, but still requiring the driver to take control as their exit draws near. Continental sees the partially autonomous vehicle as a stepping stone to fully automated cars, and plans to offer the partial solution between 2016 and 2020, switching up to fully automated driving systems by 2025. The company hopes refine its testing to meet this goal in Nevada, putting its stereo camera and sensor equipped vehicle through freeway and rush-hour trials in real traffic. The company's ultimate goal, of course, is to eliminate accidents and fatalities on the road. Check out the firm's official PR after the break.

Continue reading Continental gets automated vehicle approved for Nevada roads

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Via: Verge, Wired

Source: Continental

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/12/20/continental-highly-automated-vehicle-approved-nevada/

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Thursday, December 20, 2012

Pulled over for littering, women given cavity searches

By Frank Heinz and Ken Kalthoff, NBCDFW.com

Two Irving, Texas, women are suing two Texas State Troopers and the director of the Department of Public Safety after they say they were violated during roadside cavity searches in full view of the public and without probable cause.

On July 13, while driving along state Highway 161,?Angel?Dobbs and her niece Ashley Dobbs?were stopped for littering by Trooper David Ferrell. In?the dashcam video released by the women and their attorney, Ferrell can be heard telling the women they would both be cited for littering for throwing cigarette butts out of the car.

Farrell then?returned to his cruiser and, in the video, can be heard calling female trooper Kelley Helleson to the scene to search both women whom he?said were acting weird.

While waiting for Helleson to arrive, Farrell asked Angel Dobbs to step out of the vehicle and began questioning her about marijuana use. In the video,?the Trooper?is heard?telling?Dobbs he smelled marijuana coming from the vehicle?while asking her several times how much pot was in the car.

Farrell:?How much marijuana is in that car? And don't lie to me.
Angel Dobbs:?I don't smoke marijuana.
Farrell:?OK, how much marijuana is in that car? That's my question.
Dobbs:?I swear to God, I don't smoke marijuana.
Farrell:?I'm not asking you if you smoke it.
Dobbs:?I don't think there is any marijuana in that car.
Farrell:?OK, when was the last time somebody smoked marijuana in that car?
Dobbs:?I honestly don't know. It's my boyfriend's car. So, I just borrowed it.
Farrell:?There's an odor of marijuana coming from the car and that's why I've got to talk to you further about it. Um, and the more upfront you are the better it's going to go for you. So, you're telling me there's no marijuana in that car?
Dobbs:?To the best of my knowledge, no there is not.
Farrell:?Is there anything hidden on your person?
Dobbs:?On my person?
Farrell:?On your person, in your shoes, in your underwear?
Dobbs:?No. I feel like I'm being treated like a criminal right now. What's going on?
Farrell:?I've got a female trooper up the road, she's going to come down here and we're just going to check a little bit more.

After Helleson arrived, she can be seen in the dashcam video putting on blue latex gloves to conduct a search of both women. According to the lawsuit, when Angel Dobbs asked about the gloves, Helleson "told her not to worry about that.

In the lawsuit, Dobbs said the trooper conducted the cavity search on the roadside, illuminated by the police car's headlights, in full view of any passing?motorists.

"This has been an eye-opening experience for me. I've never been pulled over, never searched like this. I was totally violated over there a few minutes ago... this is so embarrassing to me," Angel Dobbs said on the video.

"I've never been so humiliated or so violated or felt so molested in my entire life," Angel Dobbs told NBC?5.

Dobbs said she never gave consent for the trooper to "frisk, pat-down, search, or otherwise touch her" and that she never gave consent for Farrell to search?her vehicle -- which he can be seen doing in the dashcam video while the cavity search was under way.

Dobbs said she was powerless to stop it. "What are you going to say? What's going to happen to you if you challenge that authority?" she said.

With the cavity search concluded, Farrell then asked Dobbs about prescription medications found in the car. Dobbs said they were for her thyroid and for?migraines. According to the lawsuit, Dobbs also suffers from a medical condition that was irritated by the search.

Meanwhile, Helleson can then be seen performing the same cavity search on Dobbs' niece, Ashley.

"It's because somebody is a daily smoker in that car. OK, you can attribute it to that," Farrell can be heard saying on the recording.

The lawsuit further alleges that Helleson performed searches on both women, touching both their anus and vaginas, without changing the latex gloves between?searches.

"I don't think anybody needs to have to feel, or go through what we went through," Ashley Dobbs said. "It crosses my mind every day. It's humiliating."

After searching the entire car and finding no narcotics, Farrell then administered a DWI test which Dobbs passed, the lawsuit said. The women were then issued warnings for littering and released at the scene.

The lawsuit goes on to say that a bottle of prescribed Hydrocodone was missing from Dobbs' car and purse after the search.? The women returned to the scene?of the traffic stop the next day to search for the medication, but it was nowhere to be found.

Their lawyers say the search was illegal and a complaint about it was filed in August but that DPS Texas Rangers who investigated the incident took no action.

"This is outside the constitutional grounds by a mile. It's not even close," attorney Scott Palmer said. "This has to stop. These two need to be stopped. There's no telling how many other people they've done this to and we hope that others come forward."

Attorney Charles Soechting, Jr. said his father was a DPS trooper and he has great respect for the agency. "But in this instance they have completely failed the citizens of Texas," Soechting said.

Soechting said a records request to DPS produced no policy that allows for cavity searches of any suspect in public.

"What we're dealing with is a Class C Misdemeanor. It does not justify any type of pat down, let alone an invasive search of cavities of women,"? he said.

Calls for comment to the DPS Austin headquarters were not returned Tuesday.?

The women are requesting a trial by jury and are asking for unspecified, compensatory and exemplary damages and interest as well as recovery of attorney's fees and court costs.

The Dallas County District Attorney's office tells NBC?5 it has received the case and will refer it to a grand jury in January.

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/12/19/16018344-pulled-over-for-littering-women-given-body-cavity-searches?lite

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Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Chemical that fends off harm to organs: Purines fend off surgery-related damage

Dec. 17, 2012 ? Anesthesia is quite safe these days. But sometimes putting a patient under to fix one problem, such as heart damage, can harm a different organ, such as a kidney.

Now a group of researchers led by Holger Eltzschig, MD, PhD, a professor of anesthesiology at the University Colorado School of Medicine, has found a group of molecules that fend off damage during anesthesia.

"This is a promising discovery," says Eltzschig, who practices at University of Colorado Hospital. "It suggests a new way to promote healing."

In an article published Dec. 12 in the New England Journal of Medicine, Eltzschig and colleagues at Harvard Medical School and Northeastern University report hopeful findings about a group of molecules called purines. Purines are basic molecular building blocks in the body -- they help produce DNA and RNA and they assist with short-term storage of energy. One variety of purine is called adenosine.

The researchers determined that generating adenosine outside of cells can help protect organs from damage. And they saw that activating adenosine receptors on the lungs, the intestine, or the heart can help protect these organs.

Eltzschig and his fellow researchers looked at adenosine and related chemical processes in cancer, lung injury, bowel inflammation and platelet function, among others.

For patients who might face surgery with anesthesia, the findings are good news.

"Increasing developments in this arena will open up several new avenues for the treatment," the article says.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Colorado Denver. The original article was written by Dan Meyers.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Holger K. Eltzschig, Michail V. Sitkovsky, Simon C. Robson. Purinergic Signaling during Inflammation. New England Journal of Medicine, 2012; 367 (24): 2322 DOI: 10.1056/NEJMra1205750

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/WohRMwolbhE/121218094310.htm

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3 Reasons Dos Santos vs. Velasquez Will Become a Classic UFC Trilogy

Just as Velasquez has achieved stardom by perpetually flooring and mauling his opponents, Dos Santos has made his mark by fine-tuning his takedown defense in an effort to impose a Chuck Liddell-esque game plan. They?ve taken different approaches, but both men have managed to utilize their respective departments of wrestling expertise to dictate where their fights transpire.

While Velasquez has competed in just 12 professional tilts, nine of which have come in the UFC, he?s landed 13 more takedowns than Cigano, who has racked up 16 pro bouts, including nine in the UFC. In fact, since his first scrap in the UFC in April 2008, Velasquez has become one of the UFC?s most prolific and efficient takedown artists, executing 71 percent of his attempts (16-of-22) and averaging 6.61 floorings?for every three rounds he fights.

In contrast, Dos Santos has finished just 3-of-4 career takedown attempts and has stuffed 88 percent of his opponent?s shots, including attempts from top-notch grapplers like Shane Carwin, Frank Mir and Roy Nelson.

And like countrymen and UFC featherweight champ?Jos? Aldo, Dos Santos uses his extraordinarily flexible hips to keep the fight standing, a place he can enact a game plan that?s more tailored to his strengths. Just ask Carwin, Mir and Nelson, among others, and they?ll tell you how difficult grounding Cigano has become.

Being on bottom against Velasquez or trying to strike with Cigano from a distance pose different threats to any of their potential challengers. Anyone who?s willing to play to the strengths of Velasquez or Dos Santos will quickly realize that it?s a costly mistake.

Source: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1447464-four-reasons-dos-santos-vs-velasquez-will-become-a-classic-ufc-trilogy

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Monday, December 17, 2012

The Effect of Pre-Existing Injuries on your Personal Injury Claim


The Effect of Pre-Existing Injuries on your Personal Injury Claim

The law does not hold a person responsible for injuries that existed prior to their supposed act of negligence that led to their being liable for such damages. Said another way, if you have a ?trick knee? from an old skiing accident and one day you suffer a personal injury due to a treadmill malfunction, you can sue the gym or treadmill manufacturer for your injuries and expenses but you cannot reasonably expect to recover for a surgery to completely repair your previously injured knee. The law will only require that a defendant (or tortfeasor) compensate the plaintiff or injured party for the expenses associated with the injuries that stem directly for their act of negligence. An area within New Mexico personal injury law that the concept of exclusion of recovery for pre-existing injuries is very active is that of injuries involving soft tissue damage. It is common to have whiplash, back strain and other such soft tissue injuries in car accidents. While injuries such as broken bones are easily attributable to a specific event, soft tissue damage is far more difficult to reliably pin point as far as date of injury is concerned. If the plaintiff in such a case has a documented history of previous neck or back problems, it suddenly becomes far less clear when the specific injury to the neck or back actually took place. This creates significant ?wiggle room? for defense lawyers to attempt to minimize the damages attributed to their client. Naturally, there are varying shades of grey in this concept for attributing liability only for direct injuries caused. If, say, the plaintiff had a history of back problems but had not needed treatment of any kind for many years prior to the event in question the connection between the event and the injury is more clear. However, if the plaintiff had been seeing a doctor regularly for the months immediately preceding the event, then the causation of the back injury is put in question. Perhaps this plaintiff was injured in the car accident, but they are trying to get extra money to treat an injury they had previously suffered.? The issue of pre-existing injuries in personal injury cases can further be muddled if you consider that many people suffering from such soft tissue injuries can go long periods without feeling pain or needing treatment, only to later find that their injury had caused significant degeneration of the tissue and even greater injury, only much delayed. Even if the plaintiff had not been suffering pain or undertaking treatment immediately prior to the accident, it does not mean that they did not have such degenerative tissue problems from their previous injury, and thus, they may not be compensated for injuries to their neck or back. Because the injury pre-existed, even though it had not been treated for years, means that it was not legally ?caused? by the event and thus the plaintiff cannot recover for that soft tissue injury. It can be treated as a general truth that an injured party will not receive full, 100% compensation for damages relating to their complaint if there existed previous injuries or damage because the defendant would no longer be directly and wholly liable. The practical effect of this is that most personal injury cases that involve at least some pre-existing injuries will settle, or even be adjudicated, at a percentage of the total damages suffered by the plaintiff. If you?ve been injured in an accident, of virtually any kind, do not delay. Speak with your local personal injury lawyer about your situation and learn more about your possible recovery/compensation options.?

Source: http://www.abqlawblog.com/2012/12/the-effect-of-pre-existing-injuries-on.html

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Health care exchange Q&A with Rep. Bill Cassidy, R-Baton Rouge ...

Following the House Energy and Commerce Committee meeting Thursday that featured Louisiana Health and Hospitals Secretary Bruce Greenstein, I chatted with Rep. Bill Cassidy, R-Baton Rouge. Cassidy, a committee member and a practicing physician, doesn't see a bright future for Obamacare under its current arrangement.

Q: I guess the first question is what do you see happening come January, it's like no one knows what to expect.

Cassidy: Are you speaking of the exchanges or just in general?

Q: Well, both, but primarily I guess with the exchanges.

Cassidy: The exchanges don't start until, I think, October of '13, so that's when it's supposed to start so maybe better to start there. What I got out of this committee is very disturbing. Again, as you know my bio, I work in the LSU hospital system so I'm all about providing access to health care to those who are lower income. But let me walk you through this -- you ready?

Q: Yuup.

A: First, the exchanges that are being proposed by the administration are based upon what was done in Massachusetts and Massachusetts has the highest individual and small business health insurance premiums cost in the nation. Number 2: McKinsey Consulting predicts, based upon surveys, that at least 30 percent, maybe more, of employers will drop their employees into the exchange. Number 3: talking to insurance brokers, they suspect the typical family fending for themselves will go for the least generous plan. So, the company, which usually provides a more generous plan, will put their employee into the exchange where those who know about the marketplace suggest they will go for the least generous plan. And so, I'm a guy about access, and when you go from more generous to less generous, that's disturbing. And lastly, which kind of sealed it, if you will, in Wisconsin they have real data, not computer models but real data, that when people who are roughly 200 percent of federal poverty level, have to being paying premiums that before they did not have to pay, as many as 50 percent of them drop their coverage. Now under the plans of this exchange, the ones my people tell me folks are most likely to take, they're going to have a $2,000 deductible and they're going to have premiums. They're going to go from more generous to less generous while seeing costs they've never seen before, and the empiric information is that many of those folks will drop coverage. As a person who is all about working for access for working class families, I am very disturbed after this committee hearing.

Q: Let me ask you this, as a physician don't you think that in the long run maybe some of that will help in this sense: it seems to me that one of the real inflationary aspects of health care has been that people don't pay -- somebody else is paying for it. If everybody had to pay for their own health care, that would be an incredible check on costs, would it not? I mean, I realize it's incredibly complex and you can't immediately withdraw from the market and the market has been so warped by government subsidies and insurance and the like, but in theory ...

Cassidy: Jim, let me give you this scenario.

Q: OK

Cassidy: Under the 'Bronze Plan,' somebody has a policy with a deductible for $2,000. But if they go to the emergency room everything is paid for. Now they get a headache. And they want get it checked out, they can go to their physician, they haven't made their deductible yet so it's all out-of-pocket, they've got a $30 co-pay. Or they can go to the emergency room and everything is paid for. Jim, where do you think they're going to go?

Q: The emergency room.

Cassidy: So if you structure this reform poorly your results will be poor. What you originally suggested I absolutely agree with. But there's a way to do it right and a way to do it wrong, and I think what I'm getting from our hearing today is that the way this health care bill is being implemented is the way to do it wrong. Again, as a guy who is concerned about that family not having to go to the emergency room, I am seeing that they are going to be driven to it.

Q: Which is what everybody complains is happening now, right? It's, 'oh, people go to the emergency room all the time for their care...'

Cassidy: It may get worse if what McKinsey predicts is true, that employers will dump their employees into the exchange and somebody goes from a more generous plan to a less generous plan. And so we actually may be worsening the problem.

Q: OK. I want to come back to that in a second, something you just mentioned, but, keeping that thread -- what options does Louisiana have right now?

Cassidy: Well, the options for Louisiana right now are basically what the federal government gives them, and I think that's some of the concern because the federal government, as I understand -- I mean, the rules for the exchanges came out and folks had 30 days before the deadline to decide whether to adopt. Now, this is an incredibly complex project, Utah has been beta-testing their exchange for about three years, Massachusetts has been tweaking their exchange since it was first put in, and now states have 30 days to review the regs and have a robust exchange going by October 2013. It's probably not practicable. Nonetheless, the options the state has is to either attempt to do that or to turn the matter over to the federal government. And I just saw something, a press release in which like 30 states are going to ask the federal government to do it for them. When 30 states, or let's see, when two-thirds of the exchange enrollment will be federally administered is what it says, so that's not necessarily the number of states, but it is two-thirds of those people there, that is 17 states plus the District of Columbia will set up an exchange and Utah is trying to get their's approved and everybody else has turned it over to the feds, that's a little bit of a commentary and just how daunting the task seems.

Q: Well, you know, here when Jindal says ...

Cassidy: And by the way the deadline to decide is this Friday. So it isn't as if they had six months to work through it. No, over the holiday season, Thanksgiving etc., they were given all this and said, 'ok, you've got 30 days to decide.' I can see why a lot of states decided to punt.

Q: Well, Gov. Jindal has said, look, he isn't going to do it, we'll be one of those states that, as you just described the federal government's going to set it up, and he's been painted in my newspaper and in others and by a lot of his opponents down here as kind of, you know, nuts to go this route and setting off on his own. But I look at it and I see Gov. Christie doing the same thing in New Jersey and I see Gov. Perry doing the same thing in Texas, and you mentioned Utah -- I mean, it seems that Louisiana is not taking some maverick approach here, it's taking one that other governors are also taking and I guess in part because as you just said they don't like what they're seeing.

Cassidy: 33 states are not doing it. Now at some point you've got to assume that these guys and gals who've got to get re-elected are doing things not just for political reasons but in the best interests of their state if they hope to get re-elected. And the scenario I just described where, if Mackenzie is right and employers being to dump their employees in the exchange and people go from more generous coverage to less coverage, and then people are dropping their coverage because they cannot afford the dollar amount as Wisconsin experience shows - but, again as a person who has dedicated his professional life to providing access and I see this incredibly logical process playing out, I can see the governors saying, 'we need a different sort of exchange. This is not one that we can administer.'"

Q: You're saying this 'logical,' or, 'illogical,' process play out?

Cassidy: What I described, now we're back where we're worse off than we were before -- that just seems like it's going to happen under the current scenario.

Q: OK, well this then goes back to the point I wanted to talk about a moment ago which is when Obamacare first came up a lot of people talked about it as really a Trojan horse to try to get us toward a single payer system. And from what you're saying here it sounds like that might have been an apt description.

Cassidy: Well, Barney Frank suggested that, if done right, it would certainly lead to single player. A little ironic, I think what he really meant is if it's cumbersome enough and un-workable enough, we'll end up with single payer. I would like to think, I'm a doctor whose been working at a government-run institution and I've found that when the patient has the power, the patient does better. And so whenever there's a process set up where bureaucrats in Washington have more power than the patient, I am very concerned. So, ideally, probably too much to hope for, people will see what's going to happen and they'll look for a way to make it more workable for a working family so that they really do have access at a lower cost instead of a piece of paper but without access.

Q: There's been some talk that I've heard over the last week or so about the House tightening the purse strings here and maybe having a positive impact on some of the worst aspects of Obamacare by doing that. What are they talking about there, what is that you guys can do?

Cassidy: Well all that is subject to negotiations, but let me tell you what we have to do. Medicare is going broke within 12 years. The president's health care law cuts $716 billion out of Medicare. Now that the election is over, the president of AARP has come out opposing any further cuts to Medicare, precisely because Obamacare cuts $716 billion from it. Now, after the election he says it, I wish he had said it beforehand (laughter). But again, that's not Republican rhetoric, that's the head of the AARP...

Q: Well, it's definitely not Republican rhetoric then! (laughter)

Cassidy: "It's going bankrupt in 12 years and we just took $716 billion out of it, ideally we'd begin to make, change, restructure Medicaid so it continues to provide safety-net benefits to those who are on it, but also can survive beyond 12 years. I mean, we just have to do that. The president's plan does not. The president's plan makes it worse.

Q: But how can you change it, right? What's done is done.

Cassidy: At some point the left will have to admit that it's going bankrupt. And by law, by law, Medicaid's supposed to be self-sufficient and we're not allowed to transfer money out of the general fund to cover its losses. Now, either the left is going to say -- you know, national Democrats, I should say -- either national Democrats are going to say, 'yes, indeed, we can't afford to have this important safety net program fail.' Or they're going to say, 'let's restructure it in a way which ideally holds people who are currently on it harmless, maybe those who are going to be on it within 10 years harmless, but allows those who are younger to begin to restructure their plans.' That would be ideal. There are bi-partisan plans that would do just that. Unfortunately, the president demagogued them during his national campaign. So we'll have to see what we can do.

Q: I appreciate you taking the time to walk me through some of these things, but it's just so damn complex, I think people get frightened because it seems like such a behemoth, they don't know how to make sense of it. What kind of advice can you give people?

Cassidy: I would say, if a plan puts more power with the patient, then you know immediately it is a better plan. If a plan takes power from the individual, or the family, takes their power and gives it to someone in Washington, or someone associated with an exchange, or things like that, then you are going to have less control over your outcomes, less control over your taxes, less control over your pocketbook -- that is bad. That's always the litmus test, if you will. More power to the patient, which are the proposal I favor, I think ultimately you end up getting more access for that; less power to the patient, it's going to be a worse-off family.

Q: I couldn't agree more with what you're saying, but isn't that the argument that went on before Obamacare passed? Aren't we talking about a fight that's already been lost?

Cassidy: The importance of the hearings such as the one we had today is to hopefully bring before the nation's attention those things I described, those kind of logical, this-is-how-it's-going-to-happen -- employers are probably going to put their employees in the exchange, they'll go from a more generous to a less generous plan, and once that happens families are more likely to drop their coverage. All we can do is try to aquaint people with that and say if President Obama and national Democrats are going to insist on this plan, let's make it work for families and not work for bureaucrats.

Q: One of the things that everybody says -- and not just here, but Jindal's been hit pretty hard with this -- is, 'oh, how can you not sign up for it because at the beginning 100 percent of the Medicare costs are going to be covered! It doesn't cost us anything!' And I'm thinking, what world do you live in that you think Medicare is free money? That's still tax money, that's still public money.

Cassidy: Let me also point out, people in Washington love to speak percentages but not dollar amounts. There's a Kaiser Family Foundation study in which it shows how much benefits states get. But, according to this study, which is all about the expansion, Louisiana will pay $1.8 billion more over 10 years out of state general funds to enact this program. Now, for the first time since 2009, states spent more money on Medicaid than they did on K-12 education. Our state is cannibalizing every other part of the budget to pay for Medicaid. This is before the additional $1.8 billion over 10 years required for the state portion of this expansion. How much higher does tuition have to go? How much lower does funding for K though 12 have to go? How many more prisons have to be shuttered, how many more road and bridges will not be built or updated in order to do this? And let me also ask, as a guy who's been working with the uninsured for 20 years: what's more likely going to elevate someone out of poverty -- more money for education or more money for this government mandate?

Q: Well, that's a good question.

Cassidy: I'd say more money for education. But you look at tuition, you look at funding for K through 12, it is being cannibalized and that is before the $1.8 billion required for this expansion. We can send you the study -- their assumptions are specious, I think. Part of the off-set is that they think is that all this extra money will increase economic activity, ignoring the fact there will be a lot higher taxes to pay for the increased Medicare spending. At some point, government spending becomes a zero sum game and the Kaiser study ignores that. But even with that specious sort of reasoning they say it will cost $1.8 billion more over 10 years.

Source: http://www.nola.com/opinions/index.ssf/2012/12/health_care_exchange_q_with_re.html

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Friday, December 14, 2012

Joanna Penn Talks About Taking a Leap & Her Life as a Writer ...



Posted by Dava Lee Stewart on December 13, 2012 in Independent Writing | 1 comment

Joanna Penn is the author of the ARKANE thrillers, Pentecost, Prophecy and Exodus. Read more at http://www.JFPenn.com. Joanna is also an entrepreneur and professional speaker. Her site for writers http://www.TheCreativePenn.com has been voted one of the Top 10 sites for writers 2 years running and offers articles, audio and video on writing, publishing and book marketing. Connect with Joanna on twitter @thecreativepenn.?

It is a pleasure to share this interview with Joanna! Be sure to visit her site, check out the resources she offers, including the Author 2.0 Blueprint ? a free guide to help writers. She also has several courses that are very helpful for writers, and of course you should buy her books!

?

You made a big transition from ?regular work? to writing. Can you talk a little about that transition and describe any particularly difficult hurdles, orJoanna Penn anything that really surprised you?

After 13 years of being an IT consultant, I became a fulltime author-entrepreneur in Sept 2011. However, I would say that I had been building my business for 3 years before that while working part-time and getting to the point where I would have income coming in, so it was less of a risk.

The hard bits were adjusting to the financial differential, as I was on a high six-figure income and downsized considerably in order to change my life. This was a conscious decision though, as I don?t see the point of the trappings if at your core, you are unhappy. We moved from a 4 bedroom house with a car, to a 1 bedroom flat with no car, simplifying life down to the essentials, which turn out to be very little! This was very liberating for me, and I highly recommend downsizing if you want to try a life change. We don?t even own any furniture now.

I also found that I was going crazy in my house all day, so I joined the London Library where I go several times a week to work in a space with other writers. Even just the routine of the commute, along with other people around me, helps with that. I also have some physical networks in London which help me stay sane ? we can?t have everything virtually!

It?s definitely easier to have a day job but I am loving my life these days, and after years in soul-destroying IT departments, I am very happy. I get to spend my time being creative and working on projects I think are important. With every book and every course, I am building an asset for the future.

I wrote a lot more on this when I reached 1 year as an author-entrepreneur here: http://www.thecreativepenn.com/2012/09/25/1-year-author-entrepreneur/

Most writers are working on tight budgets. Are there any tools or services that you recommend they definitely budget for? In other words, what do writers absolutely need to purchase?

Scrivener changed my life! It is writing software that helps you plot, organize and write your books, from plain text fiction to complicated research papers with footnotes etc. It allows you to drag and drop chapters around which really helps in the editing process. Then it has a Compile function which means you can output correctly formatted files for Kindle in .mobi format as well as ePub for Kobo and Nook, and Word for Smashwords or editing, or PDF or other formats. It means you are in total control of your digital JF Pennpublishing, and you don?t have to pay someone else to do your formatting. It?s only ~$45 so well worth the investment.

Here?s an interview I did with Gwen Hernandez, author of ?Scrivener for Dummies? where we discuss all the functionality http://www.thecreativepenn.com/2012/11/22/writing-scrivener-gwen-hernandez/

Can you describe a typical day? How much time do you spend writing, how much promotion do you do, how many hours on administrative stuff? (What I?m really trying to get at here is your process. I find learning about other people?s processes fascinating!)

I am a chronic organizer of my time, so I diarize a lot in advance and this helps me plan my days. So I try to spend 3 days a week working in the London Library, which is my fiction writing time, and I have one whole day a week for interviews, blogging, scheduling posts and tweets. I am also a professional speaker and entrepreneur so I have other business tasks, for example, speaking prep or media articles to write. At the moment it is about 50:50 split between fiction and non-fiction.

So a typical day is one of two kinds I guess:

a) Introverted and quiet, creating, with a focus on writing or editing or whatever is the latest project

b) business and marketing focused, creating material for sale or for speaking events, or courses. A more external focus and live interviews, video skype, podcast recording etc.

I find it hard to switch between these ?heads? in one day, so I diarize them separately and the mix depends on my focus for the month.

Do you have any favorite forums, writers? sites, or blogs that you recommend (in addition to your own, of course)?

I am a happy member of the Alliance of Independent Authors and we have a great Facebook group which is very active in sharing what we?re all doing in terms of writing,

Author 2.0 is Joanna's extremely helpful free "blueprint" for writers.

Author 2.0 is Joanna?s extremely helpful free ?blueprint? for writers.

publishing and marketing. There?s also a great blog, How to successfully self-publish.

Then I definitely recommend the following:

* TheBookDesigner.com for everything self-publishing in print and ebook format

* JaneFriedman.com for publishing industry insight

* Copyblogger.com for copywriting, content marketing and online business

* Brain Pickings for creative randomness

* Justine Musk for empowering inspiration, and a lot of great book recommendations

Source: http://smilingtreewriting.com/2012/12/13/joanna-penn-talks-about-taking-a-leap-her-life-as-a-writer/

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North Korea still years away from reliable missiles

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) ? After 14 years of painstaking labor, North Korea finally has a rocket that can put a satellite in orbit. But that doesn't mean Pyongyang is close to having an intercontinental ballistic missile.

Experts say North Korea is years from even having a shot at developing reliable missiles that could bombard the American mainland and other distant targets, though it did gain attention and the outrage of world leaders Wednesday with its first successful launch of a three-stage, long-range rocket.

A missile program is built on decades of systematic, intricate testing, something extremely difficult for economically struggling Pyongyang, which faces guaranteed sanctions and world disapproval each time it stages an expensive launch. North Korea will need larger and more dependable missiles, and more advanced nuclear weapons, to threaten U.S. shores, though it already poses a threat to its neighbors.

"One success indicates progress, but not victory, and there is a huge gap between being able to make a system work once and having a system that is reliable enough to be militarily useful," said Brian Weeden, a former U.S. Air Force Space Command officer and a technical adviser to the Secure World Foundation, a think tank on space policy.

North Korea's satellite launch came only after repeated failures and hundreds of millions of dollars. It is an achievement for young authoritarian leader Kim Jong Un, whose late father and predecessor, Kim Jong Il, made development of missiles and nuclear weapons a priority despite international opposition and his nation's poverty.

Kim said the achievement "further consolidated" the country's status "as a space power," the government's official Korean Central News Agency reported Thursday. It added that Kim personally issued a written launch order and "stressed the need to continue to launch satellites in the future."

South Korea's Defense Ministry said Thursday the satellite was orbiting normally at a speed of 7.6 kilometers (4.7 miles) per second, though it's not known what mission it is performing. North Korean space officials say the satellite would be used to study crops and weather patterns.

Though Pyongyang insists the project is peaceful, it also has conducted two nuclear tests and has defied international demands that it give up its nuclear weapons program.

A senior U.S. official said the satellite is tumbling in orbit and not acting as it should, but the official said that doesn't necessarily mean it is out of control. The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of a lack of authorization to publicly discuss the U.S. analysis, said the important takeaway is that North Korea was able to successfully execute all three stages of the missile launch and get the satellite into space.

The U.N. Security Council said the launch violates council resolutions against the North's use of ballistic missile technology, and said it would urgently consider "an appropriate response."

"This launch is about a weapons program, not peaceful use of space," U.S. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said. Even the North's most important ally, China, expressed regret.

North Korea has long possessed the components needed to construct long-range rockets. Scientists in Pyongyang, however, had been trying and failing since 1998 to conduct a successful launch. Only this week ? their fifth try ? did they do so, prompting dancing in the streets of the capital.

North Korea's far more advanced rival, South Korea, has failed twice since 2009 to launch a satellite on a rocket from its own territory, and postponed two attempts in recent weeks because of technical problems.

Each advancement Pyongyang makes causes worry in Washington and among North Korea's neighbors. In 2010, U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates warned that within five years the North could develop an intercontinental ballistic missile capable of reaching the United States.

But experts say the North must still surmount tough technical barriers to build the ultimate military threat: a sophisticated nuclear warhead small enough to mount on a long-range missile, something experts say will be the focus of future nuclear tests.

And despite Wednesday's launch, Pyongyang is also lacking the other key part of that equation: a reliable long-range missile.

"If in the future they develop a nuclear warhead small enough to put on a rocket, they are not going to want to put that on a missile that has a high probability of exploding on the launch pad," David Wright, a physicist with the Union of Concerned Scientists who has written extensively about North Korea's missile program, said in an email.

To create a credible missile program, experts say, North Korean technicians need to conduct many more tests that will allow them to iron out the wrinkles until they have a missile that works more often than it fails. Pyongyang's past tests have been somewhat scattershot, possibly because of the heavy international sanctions the rocket and nuclear tests have generated.

North Korea must build a larger missile than the one launched Wednesday if it wants to be able to send nuclear weapons to distant targets, analysts said.

The satellite North Korea mounted on the rocket weighs only 100 kilograms (220 pounds), according to the office of South Korean lawmaker Jung Chung-rae, who was briefed by a senior South Korean intelligence official. A nuclear warhead would be about five times heavier.

Other missing parts of the puzzle include an accurate long-range missile guidance system and a re-entry vehicle able to survive coming back into the atmosphere at the high speeds ? 10,000 mph ? traveled by intercontinental ballistic missiles, said Jonathan McDowell of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Massachusetts.

Both are seen as being years off.

History also shows that first-generation, long-range missiles need dozens of test flights before they are accurate enough to be deployed.

The world's "ICBM club" has just four countries: the United States, Russia, China and France, according to Markus Schiller, an analyst with Schmucker Technologie in Germany and a leading expert on North Korean missiles.

If North Korea "really intended to become a player in the ICBM game, they would have to develop a different kind of missile, with higher performance," Schiller said. "And if they do that seriously, we would have to see flight tests every other month, over several years."

Wright said the Unha-3 rocket launched Wednesday has a potential range of 8,000 to 10,000 kilometers (4,970 to 6,210 miles), which could put Hawaii and the northwest coast of the mainland United States within range.

But even if North Korea builds a ballistic missile based on a liquid-fueled rocket like the 32-meter (105-foot)-tall Unha-3, it would take days to assemble and hours to fuel. That would make it vulnerable to attack in a pre-emptive airstrike. Solid-fueled missiles developed by the U.S. and Soviet Union are more mobile, more easily concealed and ready to launch within minutes.

Money is another problem for Pyongyang. A weak economy, chronic food shortages and the sanctions make it difficult to sustain a program that can build and operate reliable missiles.

"I don't think the young leader has any confidence that the home economy could afford a credible deterrent capability," said Zhu Feng, deputy director of the Center for International and Strategic Studies at Peking University.

Weeden said North Korea may want to create the perception that it poses a threat to the United States, but "I don't think that perception will be matched by the actual hard work and testing needed to develop and field a reliable, effective weapon system like the ICBMs deployed by the US, Russia and China."

North Korea already poses a major security threat to its East Asian neighbors. It has one of the world's largest standing armies and a formidable if aging arsenal of artillery that could target Seoul, the capital of South Korea. Nearly 30,000 U.S. forces are based in South Korea, a legacy of the 1950-53 Korean War that ended with an armistice, not a formal peace treaty.

The North's short-range rockets could also potentially target another core U.S. ally, Japan.

Daryl Kimball, executive director of the nongovernmental Arms Control Association, said those capabilities, rather than the North's future ability to strike the U.S., still warrant the most attention.

___

Pennington reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Liz Sidoti in Washington, Alexa Olesen in Beijing and Jenni Sohn in New York contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nkorea-still-years-away-reliable-missiles-165539108.html

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Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Jenna Bush Hager announces pregnancy

Jenna Bush Hager, daughter of former President George W. Bush, announced Wednesday that she and husband Henry Hager are expecting their first child next spring.

"I'm nervous and so excited to say that Henry and I are pregnant?or I'm pregnant," Hager, a correspondent for NBC's "Today Show" announced on the program. "We're so excited. And I'm, you know, obviously nervous about it. I'm a first-time mom?but it's something I've always wanted."

Former President Bush and former first lady Laura Bush called into the show to share their joy.

"I'm fired up! Looking forward to it. And I'm excited for Jenna and Henry," the former president said of his future first grandchild. "I said I can barely contain the news when I found out, so now I can tell all my buddies."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/jenna-bush-hager-announces-pregnancy-134643320--politics.html

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Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Fitness, From Health To Strength, A General Knowledge Guide ...

Increasing your fitness and health is a fantastic goal. True, it can seem daunting in the beginning, especially if you are new to fitness. The article below has ideas and advice that can help. You?ll feel great and enjoy improved health.

The best method of getting fit is daily exercise. Daily exercise keeps you focused so you never let a day go to waste in regard to your physical health. This will allow exercising to become more of a habit as well. Be sure that you?re saving a few days a week for exercise that is more light so you?re not overloading your body.

There are few exercises as great as kickboxing. There is not a single person that can attempt kickboxing and say it was not a great workout. You will burn a lot of calories during this workout, and you will also gain a lot of strength.

How much do you know about whole grains? However, there are many whole grains that can be eaten any time of the day, such as quinoa, barley or brown rice. Adding these to many dishes, such as stir-frys or soups, is a strong possibility. Eating your whole grains is easier than you thought.

Avoid over exercising when you become sick. If you are ill, your body has to use its energy to heal itself. The body is unable to create muscle and increase endurance throughout this period. This means that you should stop exercising until you feel better. Until then, follow your doctor?s directions, eat nutritious foods and get adequate rest.

If you want to look and feel great, consider making fitness a major goal in your life. If regular exercise has not been part of your past, starting it can seem intimidating. However, you can do it with the proper assistance. The tips here will increase your level of fitness and help you achieve all of your goals.

Source: http://stumblepeach.com/fitness-from-health-to-strength-a-general-knowledge-guide/

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Monday, December 10, 2012

Santa Claus Parade this Saturday

December 7, 2012 at 7pm, Historic Downtown Coopersville

Grand Marshall - Ruth Brifling

One of the original night-time parades in Michigan, this annual event begins immediately following the lighting of Lori's Tree at the corner of Eastmanville & Main Streets.

Professional and amateur floats, decorated vehicles and firetrucks compete for prizes as they travel along Main Street in the Historic Downtown District of Coopersville.

Guests are invited to a free ride on the Coopersville & Marne Railway Shuttle from East Street adjacent to the school campus to the downtown area.? After their return ride they are invited to have free refreshments while the children have a visit with Santa, get their faces painted and more.

Visit http://www.coopersville.com for additional information.

Source: http://coopersville.wzzm13.com/news/community-spirit/75491-santa-claus-parade-saturday

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Egypt's Oppositions Calls for Protests Against Referendum (Voice Of America)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/269489565?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Friday, December 7, 2012

Seeing in color at the nanoscale: Scientists develop a new nanotech tool to probe solar-energy conversion

ScienceDaily (Dec. 6, 2012) ? If nanoscience were television, we'd be in the 1950s. Although scientists can make and manipulate nanoscale objects with increasingly awesome control, they are limited to black-and-white imagery for examining those objects. Information about nanoscale chemistry and interactions with light -- the atomic-microscopy equivalent to color -- is tantalizingly out of reach to all but the most persistent researchers.

But that may all change with the introduction of a new microscopy tool from researchers at the Department of Energy (DOE)'s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) that delivers exquisite chemical details with a resolution once thought impossible. The team developed their tool to investigate solar-to-electric energy conversion at its most fundamental level, but their invention promises to reveal new worlds of data to researchers in all walks of nanoscience.

"We've found a way to combine the advantages of scan/probe microscopy with the advantages of optical spectroscopy," says Alex Weber-Bargioni, a scientist at the Molecular Foundry, a DOE nanoscience center at Berkeley Lab. "Now we have a means to actually look at chemical and optical processes on the nanoscale where they are happening."

Weber-Bargioni is corresponding author of a paper reporting this research, published in Science. The paper is titled, "Mapping local charge recombination heterogeneity by multidimensional nanospectroscopic imaging." Co-authoring the paper are Wei Bao, Mauro Meli, Frank Ogletree, Shaul Aloni, Jeffrey Bokor, Stephano Cabrini, Miquel Salmeron, Eli Yablonovitch, and James Schuck of Berkeley Lab; Marco Staffaroni of the University of California, Berkeley; Hyuck Choo of Caltech; and their colleagues in Italy, Niccolo Caselli, Francesco Riboli, Diederik Wiersma, and Francesca Intoni.

"If you want to characterize materials, particularly nanomaterials, the way it's traditionally been done is with electron microscopies and scan/probe microscopies because those give you really high, sub-atomic spatial resolution," says co-author James Schuck, a nano-optics researcher at the Molecular Foundry. "Unfortunately, what they don't give you is chemical, molecular-level information."

For chemical information, researchers typically turn to optical or vibrational spectroscopy. The way a material interacts with light is dictated to large part by its chemical composition, but for nanoscience the problem with doing optical spectroscopy at relevant scales is the diffraction limit, which says you can't focus light down to a spot smaller than approximately half its wavelength, due to the wave-nature of light.

To get around the diffraction limit, scientists employ "near-field" light. Unlike the light we can see, near-field light decays exponentially away from an object, making it hard to measure, but it contains very high resolution -- much higher than normal, far-field light.

Says Schuck, "The real challenge to near-field optics, and one of the big achievements in this paper, is to create a device that acts as a transducer of far-field light to near-field light. We can squeeze it down and get very enhanced local fields that can interact with matter. We can then collect any photons that are scattered or emitted due to this interaction, collect in the near field with all this spatial frequency information and turn it back into propagating, far-field light."

The trick for that conversion is to use surface plasmons: collective oscillations of electrons that can interact with photons. Plasmons on two surfaces separated by a small gap can collect and amplify the optical field in the gap, making a stronger signal for scientists to measure.

Researchers have exploited these effects to make near-field probes with a variety of geometries, but the experiments typically require painstaking optical alignment, suffer from background noise, only work for narrow frequency ranges of light and are limited to very thin samples.

In this latest work, however, the Berkeley Lab researchers transcended these limitations with a cleverly designed near-field probe. Fabricated on the end of an optical fiber, the probe has a tapered, four-sided tip. The researchers named their new tool after the campanile church tower it resembles, inspired by the landmark clock tower on the UC Berkeley campus. Two of the campanile's sides are coated with gold and the two gold layers are separated by just a few nanometers at the tip. The three-dimensional taper enables the device to channel light of all wavelengths down into an enhanced field at the tip. The size of the gap determines the resolution.

In a regular atomic force microscope (AFM), a sharp metal tip is essentially dragged across a sample to generate a topological map with sub-nanoscale resolution. The results can be exquisite but only contain spatial information and nothing about the composition or chemistry of the sample.

Replacing the usual AFM tip with a campanile tip is like going from black-and-white to full color. You can still get the spatial map but now there's a wealth of optical data for every pixel on that map. From optical spectra, scientists can identify atom and molecule species, and extract details about electronic structure.

"That's the beauty of these tips," says Schuck. "You can just put them on the end of an optical fiber and then it's just like using a regular AFM. You don't have to be a super near-field jock anymore to get this type of data."

The team developed their new tool to study indium-phosphide nanowires. These nanowires, with the nearly ideal band gap of 1.4 electron-volts, are well-suited to converting solar energy to electricity. The researchers found that the nanowires were not the homogeneous objects previously thought, but instead had varying optoelectronic properties along their length, which could radically alter how sunlight is converted to electricity. They also found that photoluminescence, an indication of the relationship between light and electricity, was seven-times stronger in some parts of a nanowire than others. This is the first time anyone has measured these events on such a small scale.

Weber-Bargioni says: "Details like this about indium-phosphide nanowires are important because if you want to use these suckers for photocatalysis or a photovoltaic material then the length scale at which we're measuring is where everything happens. This information is really important to understand how, for example, the fabrication and surface treatment of nanowires influences these charge recombination velocities. These determine how efficiently a solar device can convert photons into usable electrons."

Adds Schuck: "We realized that this is really the optimal way to do any kind of optical experiment one might want to do at the nano scale. So we use it for imaging and spectroscopy but we anticipate many other uses also."

This research was supported by the DOE Office of Science.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by DOE/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. The original article was written by Alison Hatt.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Wei Bao, M. Melli, N. Caselli, F. Riboli, D. S. Wiersma, M. Staffaroni, H. Choo, D. F. Ogletree, S. Aloni, J. Bokor, S. Cabrini, F. Intonti, M. B. Salmeron, E. Yablonovitch, P. J. Schuck, A. Weber-Bargioni. Mapping local charge recombination heterogeneity by multidimensional nanospectroscopic imaging. Science, December 7, 2012 DOI: 10.1126/science.1227977

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/OhX5q6TMmHI/121206153640.htm

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Barbra Streisand declares: 'I'm not a diva'

By Courtney Hazlett, TODAY

If you're among those who thinks of Barbra Streisand and the word "diva" comes to mind, you might be especially interested in the singing legend's new role, in which she's anything but.?In "The Guilt Trip" Streisand plays Joyce, mom to a character played by Seth Rogan. Joyce is a Gap-loving, sneaker-wearing, candy-eating, doting mom from New Jersey. In other words, she's anything but a diva.

In an exclusive interview with TODAY host Savannah Guthrie, the singer says she and the character have lots in common. "Yeah, there's a part of me that's very like Joyce. You know, I'm -- I like to be very comfortable, so I was able to wear sweatsuits and sneakers, you know -- the part of me that really came from Brooklyn," she said.?

To be clear, Streisand emphasizes that despite what some people might say, "I'm not a diva. I don't think so," she said. "I'm very down-to-earth."

But back to Brooklyn --?Streisand recently performed her very first concert there, an experience that was meaningful, she told Guthrie. "It made me really appreciate coming from Brooklyn. You just know where you stand in Brooklyn ... Those are my people. That's where I was born.?That's where I was raised.?That's where I also wanted to escape from."

Escaping is something Streisand is able to do from time to time. She told Guthrie that she and her husband James Brolin are fans of taking a road trip.

"We bought a truck with a bench seat so you could sit next to each other," Streisand said. "It's fun to get away.?You close those doors and it's just the two of you."

Acting, performing, going on road trips: Streisand's life has been a full one of late. But there's one type of project she still hopes to tackle. Like many performers before her, she's wants a chance to be a director.

"I wanna direct movies. That's what I wanna do. Be behind the camera, not in front of the camera. Just get the best out of actors, the best out of a story," Streisand said. In the meantime though, Streisand says she's feeling grateful for how things have unfolded.

"You know, as I said on stage in these tours, I was feeling very grateful at this period of my life.?And grateful for the people who have supported me for a lot of years.?And grateful for life itself."

Related content:

More in TODAY Entertainment:

Source: http://todayentertainment.today.com/_news/2012/12/07/15732616-barbra-streisand-declares-im-not-a-diva?lite

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Eyeing public companies you never heard of. Maybe's there's a gem ...

There are thousands of public companies you never heard of. There are reasons. Most haven?t done well in the past two years. Or they?re new and taking a very long time to get ramped up. Or they screwed up. (hired too many people, expanded too quick) and then? they ?restructured? (fired people, sold divisions). Or they have marketing-challenged managements. Or all combined.

Fact is it?s not easy to be a small public company today. Especially if your stock has been around 17 cents all year.

The worst ones are biotech. Most are so far from an approved drug they can sell that you wonder why they even bother. I met one that was selling for $700 three years ago, then dropped to 28 cents and is now 56 cents. Heh, we doubled the price this year. As one biotech director quipped, ?If mice had money, we?d all be millionaires.? He was referring to all the mice whose lives were saved by new drugs. Of course, most of them were made sick deliberately by old drugs. But, that?s another story. Maybe.

The LD Micro Conference I?m attending in L.A. features public companies selling at 11 cents on up. Many are under $1. Virtually all are under $10. There is one selling at $26.88 ? BOFI Holdings. BOFI is the holding company for Bank of Internet USA. It works over the Internet from one location in San Diego. Its sales have exploded. One is selling at $24 ? the DDD Group, which develops and sells software to let you watch 3D images without glasses. Their sales are growing nicely. BOFI and DDD present today.

But they?re not this morning?s story.

Nor is this morning?s story a diatribe on CEOs who can?t speak publicly or Powerpoint slides the audience can?t read because there?s too many words, numbers, pie charts, and zillions of circles and arrows all crammed into unbelievable clutter. Nor is this about using cliches, like ?game changer,? or ?restructuring?, or our ?exit strategy.? But it could be about all these presentation practices which can give irritation a whole new meaning. I wonder if any of these CEOs have ever heard of communications coaches. They sure could use a few.

I spied four trends ? first, making online purchases better, faster, bigger with software and other services. Second, making commerce work on smartphones. Dumb phones that only make phone calls and do SMS are dead. Now everyone has apps that do everything from price shopping to calling limousines. And everyone is buying a smartphone. Third, everyone is eying social media ? especially Facebook and now also Google Plus ? as a way of finding out what consumers want to buy and then selling it to them online. Fourth, everyone and everything is moving to the cloud. The cloud is hot. Since I write this column ?in the cloud,? I am aware of its perils.

I?m here to find nuggets. Here goes with nuggets, albeit preliminary ones and based on my listening to their 25 minute presentations and getting in an occasional question ? but no additional research.

I liked Acacia Research (ACTG). They get patents from the holders, license them and split the revenues. Their sales are exploding. They have 250 patent portfolios and seem to be getting more every day. They mine money from their patents.? Companies will license patents as a peace of mind thing ? not being sued down the road when they?re successful with their shiney new products. The lawyers are winning, again.

I liked Local Corp. (LOCM). They help local businesses (many of whom don?t have web sites) be contacted by people looking for local services, like hairdressing or dog grooming, etc.

I liked Newtek Business Service (NEWT). They?re the only non-bank SBA-approved lender, which means that of every $100 they lend to a small business, they can immediately sell off $75 ? the part that?s SBA-insured. They hold the remaining 25% on their balance sheet, hoping it won?t default. They talked about a 9% default, which seemed high to me. They also do ?managed technology solutions? for small businesses ? like web hosting, data storage, cloud computing, etc. Little businesses are being pushed into the 21st century.

I also liked Cinedigm Digital Cinema (CIDM). They process movies for showing in theaters. Their digital files are much larger and far more complex than the movies you and I watch on DVDs. There are worldwide standards for showing in theaters, great theater projection equipment (from Sony and others). Digital movies don?t degrade ? get scratched, etc. These guys seem to be in the right place at the right time.

The good news about the conference was nobody ? and I mean nobody ? talked about the Fiscal Cliff. They all talked about their shiny new thing and their shiny new company. It?s truly exciting to float around watching everyone selling everyone else a deal.? Heh, I?m buying.

That?s it for now. I got to get ready for the early sessions, which begin at ? yuch ? 7.30 AM.

?PYONGYANG (The Borowitz Report)-North Korean leader Kim Jong-un surprised Korea-watchers today by abruptly cancelling his nation?s controversial rocket test and launching a fragrance instead.

The dictator?s signature fragrance, called ?Number Un,? could be on store shelves in time for Christmas, according to the Korean Central News Agency.

The decision to launch a fragrance rather than a rocket ?shows a kind of realism that has been rare in the Kim family,? said North Korea expert Dr. Hiroshi Kyosuke, of the University of Tokyo.

?I think Kim Jong-un most likely said to himself, `Given how badly my last rocket did, maybe I?ll just launch a fragrance,? ? he said.

The official North Korean announcement offered this description of the new fragrance: ?Number Un deliriously combines the sweet smells of North Korea?s native unicorns with the irresistible aroma of our Dear Leader himself. This holiday season, every kiss begins with Kim Jong-un.?


Harry Newton, who is aware that his emailed column is truncated. But isn?t quite sure why. If you?re looking for a good reason to hate software, this is it.

Apple got pounded yesterday. Down over 6%. One of the firms raised its margin need on Apple. But the firm was tiny. And not powerful enough to erase over $30 billion of Apple market cap in one day. I suspect people are dumping Apple to lock in gains, figuring their cap gain tax rates will be hugely higher next year. What with the Fiscal Cliff. I?m glad I?ve been warning against Apple, because of no-Steve and no-new products. But I didn?t push short-selling it. Drat. Apple will bounce back, but maybe not until next year. Meantime, I love the iPhone 5. I?m getting one the moment I get back to New York ? tomorrow morning. Stay well. Turn off the TV. Stop with this Fiscal Cliff, for now. There are businesses to start, businesses to buy and products to launch. It?s a good time to be alive ? despite Washington?s efforts to rain upon our parade. Whoever elected the morons?

Which way do you spell eyeing or eying? I like eyeing. But the dictionary tells me I?m wrong. Wait there, I wrote a dictionary. I?ll do it my way.

Source: http://www.technologyinvestor.com/?p=16477

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Thursday, December 6, 2012

Confrontation between rival protesters looms in Egypt

CAIRO (Reuters) - Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood called for a rally backing President Mohamed Mursi outside his palace on Wednesday and leftists planned a counter-demonstration, raising fears of clashes in a crisis over a disputed push for a new constitution.

Mursi returned to work at his compound a day after it came under siege from opposition protesters furious at his drive to ratify a new constitution in a snap referendum set for December 15 after temporarily expanding his powers by decree.

The Islamist president said he acted to prevent courts still full of appointees from the era of autocratic predecessor Hosni Mubarak from derailing the draft constitution meant to complete a political transition in the Arab world's most populous state.

The Brotherhood, from which Mursi emerged to narrowly win a free election in June, summoned supporters to a demonstration outside the palace in response to what it termed "oppressive abuses" by opposition parties.

Brotherhood spokesman Mahmoud Ghozlan was quoted on its Facebook page as saying opposition groups "imagined they could shake legitimacy or impose their views by force".

Leftist opposition leader Hamdeen Sabahy promptly urged his supporters to go to the streets as well, heightening the chances of confrontation between Islamists and their opponents.

A spokeswoman for Sabahy's Popular Current movement asked protesters to head to the palace to reinforce those still camped out there after Tuesday evening's protests, in which officials said 35 protesters and 40 police were wounded.

Although they fired tear gas when protesters broke through barricades to reach the palace walls, riot police appeared to handle those disturbances with restraint.

About 200 protesters camped out overnight, blocking one gate to the palace in northern Cairo, but traffic was flowing normally and riot police had been withdrawn.

"Our demands to the president: retract the presidential decree and cancel the referendum on the constitution," read a placard hung by demonstrators on a palace gate.

The rest of the Egyptian capital was calm, despite the political furore over Mursi's November 22 decree handing himself wide powers and shielding his decisions from judicial oversight.

Crowds had gathered on Tuesday for what organisers dubbed a "last warning" to Mursi. "The people want the downfall of the regime," they chanted, roaring the signature slogan of last year's uprising that ousted Mubarak.

But the "last warning" may turn out to be one of the last gasps for a disparate opposition that has little chance of stopping next week's vote on a constitution drafted over six months and swiftly approved by an Islamist-dominated assembly.

MURSI STANDS HIS GROUND

Facing the gravest crisis of his six-month-old tenure, the Islamist president has shown no sign of buckling under pressure, confident that the Muslim Brotherhood and its Islamist allies can win the referendum and a parliamentary election to follow.

Many Egyptians yearn for an end to political upheaval that has scared off investors and tourists, damaging the economy.

Ahmed Kamel, spokesman for the Congress Party led by former Arab League chief Amr Moussa, said Mursi should meet opposition demands, not call for an Islamist counter-demonstration.

Some protesters have already gone beyond opposition calls for Mursi to scrap his decree, defer the referendum and set up a "representative committee" to revise the draft constitution, instead demanding the president's overthrow.

"The demands of the street are moving faster than those of the politicians," said Elijah Zarwan, a fellow with the European Council on Foreign Relations. "Now is the time for the Egyptian liberals to negotiate without conditions."

COURT PROTEST

Dozens of pro-Mursi demonstrators, watched by equal numbers of police, waved flags outside the Supreme Constitutional Court, whose rulings have complicated the Islamists' rise to power.

"You are not a political agency," read one banner held by the demonstrators, addressing a court that in June ordered the dissolution of the Islamist-led lower house of parliament.

Mursi issued his decree temporarily putting his actions above the law to forestall any court ruling to dissolve the upper house or the assembly that wrote the constitution.

State institutions, with the partial exception of the judiciary, have mostly fallen in behind Mursi.

The army, the power behind all previous Egyptian presidents in the republic's six-decade history, has gone back to barracks, having apparently lost its appetite to intervene in politics.

In a bold move, Mursi sacked Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, the Mubarak-era army commander and defence minister, in August and removed the sweeping powers that the military council which took over after Mubarak's fall had grabbed two months earlier.

The liberals, leftists, Christians, ex-Mubarak followers and others opposed to Mursi, elected in a close result against a secular rival, have yet to generate a mass movement or a grassroots political base to challenge the Brotherhood.

Protesters have scrawled "leave" over Mursi's palace walls, but the president has made clear he is not going anywhere.

"The crisis we have suffered for two weeks is on its way to an end, and very soon, God willing," Saad al-Katatni, head of the Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party, told Reuters.

Investors have seized on hopes that Egypt's turbulent transition, which has buffeted the economy for two years, may soon head for calmer waters, sending stocks 1.6 per cent higher after a 3.5 percent rally on Tuesday.

The most populous Arab nation has turned to the IMF for a $4.8 billion loan to help it out of a crisis that has depleted its foreign currency reserves.

The government said on Wednesday the process was on track and Egypt's request would go to the IMF board as expected.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypts-mursi-back-palace-night-protests-090428384.html

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The Best Things to Buy In December

The Best Things to Buy In DecemberFeeling the cold yet? Winter is coming, and so are the holidays?which make for some pretty great deals to round out the end of the year.

Every month, we look back at the best times to buy anything during the year, and pull out items each month to remind you what's coming. Obviously, none of this is to say you should go on a shopping spree?but if you've been holding off for a lower price on something, these are the things that get the sale treatment in October.

All Autumn

  • Cars: New car models come out in the summer, which makes the end of the year a great time to buy a car?as long as you're willing to get last year's model. Time.com goes into a bit more detail, noting that the later into the autumn you go, the better deal you're going to get, so if you can hold off, it might be a good idea. Make sure it's not better for you to lease a car instead of buy, and if you're looking to get a good deal, you can save some money by screwing with the car salesmen.
  • Cookware & Kitchen Accessories: MSN Money notes that November has the best deals, but you'll find sales through the rest of December too. Check out Consumer Reports' cookware buying guide, our five must-have kitchen tools, and give your kitchen a makeover.
  • Gas Grills and Air Conditioners: Just like in September, most stores are trying to get rid of their summer gear. As Forbes says, no one wants to store the stuff no one is buying?it's cheaper to just sell it at a discount. So if you have the space to store it, stock up on your grills, air conditioners, and other summer-only items now.
  • Shrubs, Bushes, Bulbs, etc.: Most plants aren't going to survive the harsh winter ahead, but if you have an indoor garden or greenhouse going on, you can pick up a lot of new plats cheaply as the weather starts to cool down.
  • Toys & Games: Places like Toys R Us are starting to ramp up their holiday sales, so now's a good time to get kids' stuff at a discount?whether for Christmas gifts or not.
  • Wedding Supplies: As beautiful as it is, winter isn't exactly prime wedding season for most people, which means planning one gets a lot easier and cheaper. Find a venue, negotiate services, and buy or rent supplies for much less as the fall and winter go on.

December

  • Champagne: New Year's is coming up, and that means champagne is actually going to get cheaper, according to Sharon Castillo, director of the Office of Champagne USA. In this case, the high demand means companies are trying to undercut their competitors to sell more during this peak time.
  • Golf Clubs: As you might expect, it's not exactly the best month to go play a round of 18 holes, so golf clubs are going to be on sale right now. New England Golf Monthly points out that they'll probably be last year's models, so you won't be getting the absolute latest and greatest, but if you're hunting for a deal, now's the time.
  • Pools: You may not be looking to go for a dip in the cold winter, but it's a good time to get that pool set up for summer. A number of pool installers have blogged about the fact that winter is the best time to buy a pool, mainly because no one else is buying them, so they need to keep prices down in order to keep up work. And, since they're doing so much less work in the winter, it's often of higher quality, too.
  • Televisions & Other Electroincs: You should see sales continue after Black Friday and through the holidays, though if you can wait, February is probably a better time than now to buy that new TV.
  • Tools: If you shop around, you can probably find some good holiday sales on tools, so it's a good time to buy?particularly if you want to winterize your home before the cold really sets in.

  • We'll be posting updates for you guys every month, so you're aware of the deals going on all year round. If you're curious to see what's coming up, you can always check out our full best time to buy guide to see the entire year at a glance. And, if you know of any deals we didn't mention, share them in the comments below.

    Pool icon by DryIcons.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/C9x1mcoQFHQ/the-best-things-to-buy-in-december

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