Friday, November 30, 2012

Zynga Loosens Its Deal With Facebook: No Longer Tied To Facebook Ad Units, Credits, Or Exclusivity

zynga logoZynga just filed a document with the SEC outlining new terms to its agreement with Facebook. Overall, it seems that Zynga and Facebook establishing a little more distance and flexibility in their relationship, with Zynga being treated more like any other game developer. According to the filing, any "standard Zynga game page" that uses Facebook data will now be governed Facebook's standard terms of service, meaning that games on Zynga's new-ish platform Zynga.com are no longer obligated to use Facebook ad units and Facebook credits. In exchange, Zynga's right to cross-promote its non-Facebook games using Facebook data and email addresses is now "limited by Facebook?s standard terms of service."

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

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Teva Pharma 2013 forecast misses expectations

Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd., the world's biggest maker of generic drugs, offered 2013 earnings and revenue guidance on Friday that was below analysts' expectations.

The Israeli company said that it expects adjusted earnings of between $4.85 and $5.15 per share next year on revenue ranging between $19.5 billion and $20.5 billion. Adjusted earnings exclude the impact of things like acquisitions, restructuring and asset impairment charges.

Analysts expect, on average, adjusted earnings of $5.62 per share on $20.76 billion in revenue, according to FactSet.

Teva expects generic drugs to generate as much as $10.7 billion in revenue next year and for branded medicines to produce as much as $8 billion. The balance would be comprised of revenue from products sold without a prescription and from distributing products from other companies.

Despite the below-consensus forecast, U.S.-traded shares of Teva rose 20 cents to $40.42 in midday trading Friday.

Gabelli & Co. analyst Kevin Kedra said a conservative outlook was expected from a relatively new management team at Teva. Dr. Jeremy Levin succeeded Shlomo Yanai as CEO this year.

Kedra said a new CEO doesn't want to raise expectations too high and then have credibility questions arise if the company misses the forecast.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/teva-pharma-2013-forecast-misses-expectations-171409948--finance.html

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Lindsay Lohan risks jail return after double trouble

NEW YORK/LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Lindsay Lohan on Thursday faced the possibility of being sent back to jail after a tumultuous 24 hours in which she was arrested in New York for assault, and charged in California with reckless driving and lying to police over a June car crash.

Lohan, 26, who has been to rehab, jail and court multiple times since a 2007 arrest for drunk driving and cocaine possession, is still on unsupervised probation in Los Angeles for a 2011 jewelry theft.

But prosecutors in Santa Monica, California, said in a statement on Thursday that the "Mean Girls" actress lied to police when she told them she was not at the wheel of her Porsche when it smashed into a truck on a busy highway in the summer.

They charged Lohan with three misdemeanor counts stemming from that collision, hours after the troubled starlet was arrested on suspicion of punching a woman in the face at a Manhattan nightclub.

Frank Mateljan of the Los Angeles City Attorney's office, which handled the jewelry case, said prosecutors were still awaiting paperwork from New York and Santa Monica to determine if they will pursue a probation violation case against Lohan.

A Los Angeles judge told Lohan in March that she must obey all rules until 2014, and advised her to stop night clubbing and focus on her work.

Lohan's publicist and attorney did not return calls for comment on Thursday.

The two incidents came during a rough week for the former "Parent Trap" child star, who was once one of the most promising young actresses in Hollywood.

Her comeback performance on Sunday as screen legend Elizabeth Taylor in the TV movie "Liz & Dick," was panned by critics and watched by a disappointingly small U.S. TV audience of 3.5 million.

In New York, Lohan was briefly arrested shortly after 4 a.m. (0900 GMT) on Thursday on a third-degree misdemeanor assault charge against a 28-year-old woman, police said. The victim suffered minor injuries, New York Police Sergeant John Buthorn said.

Celebrity website TMZ.com said Lohan had been drinking heavily and lashed out in a stand-off over one of the members of British boy band The Wanted, who were also at the club after playing a concert in New York.

Lohan's recent visits to New York have featured run-ins with police and public spats over the last three months.

In October, police were called to the Long Island home of Lohan's mother, Dina, after a loud argument, though no arrests were made. In September, Lohan was arrested in Manhattan after a pedestrian told police her car had struck him in an alley, but charges were not filed.

(Reporting by Colleen Jenkins in New York and Jill Serjeant in Los Angeles; Editing by Xavier Briand and Bernadette Baum)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lindsay-lohan-arrested-york-accused-punching-woman-130651914.html

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Thursday, November 29, 2012

Small-Business Owners Meet With Obama - OPEN Forum ...

A group of 15 small-business owners spent two hours at the White House on Tuesday, nearly an hour talking with President Barack Obama and the rest with his top economic advisers about the fiscal cliff and what should be done about it.

Obama stressed the need for tax cuts for the middle class, and the group discussed what should be done about tax rates for high-income Americans. Most of the group agreed with Obama on taxes, although some said they feared higher taxes could affect investment in small business.

Tax Code Too Complex?

David Ickert, the founder of Air Tractor Inc. in Olney, Texas, and first vice-chair of the National Small Business Association, said most of the group agreed on a middle class tax package. Some of the group, though, feared higher taxes on higher-income Americans could impact small business, both in terms of shrinking the pool of investors and because 83 percent of small businesses pay taxes on their business at the personal income level.

A bigger problem, he told the President, is the complexity of the tax code itself.

?More small businesses cite complexity and administrative burdens as the biggest problem with the tax code than those that cite the financial burden,? he said.?

Lisa Goodbee, president of Goodbee & Associates, an environmental and civil engineering firm in Centennial, Colo., was another Washington veteran at the meeting. In September, she was part of a group of 14 the Small Business Majority flew in for two days of meetings with House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, Senate Small Business and Entrepreneurship Committee Chair Mary Landrieu, and members of the U.S. Small Business Administration.

?Business is picking up as the economy recovers, but my clients could take a big hit if we fall off the so-called fiscal cliff, and that could be devastating for my business,? she told The Business Journals. ?It?s really important for my clients and my own business for Congress to take a balanced approach to this problem, and find a sensible solution that both generates revenue and cuts expenses.?

Diverse Opinions

Other small business participants included Deb Carey, co-founder of New Glarus Brewing Co. in New Glarus, Wis. Carey is both an Obama supporter?she appeared in a video in 2011 to support his American Jobs Act?and a critic of both Wisconsin?s Republican governor and the state?s Republican legislative majority. Previously, she was named a White House Champion of Change.

Ickert said of the meeting: ?There was just a back and forth discussion between the group and the president.? He said there was?an ?openness and honesty there that was very genuine.?

Chris Yura, a former Notre Dame football player who founded recycled clothing company SustainU, tweeted: ?I had the unique and amazing pleasure of talking with President Obama and Vice President Biden.??(See the full list of meeting attendees.)

The conservative National Federation of Independent Business expressed dismay that more conservative small business groups were not at the table.

?It?s becoming clear that the president only wants to hear certain views on the issue,? NFIB spokesman Kevan Chapman told The Business Journals. ?We?d welcome the opportunity to allow him to hear from some of our members.?

photo: Getty Images

Source: http://www.openforum.com/articles/small-business-owners-meet-with-obama/

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U.S. bans BP from new government contracts after oil spill deal

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. government banned BP Plc from new federal contracts on Wednesday over its "lack of business integrity" in the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in 2010, a move that could imperil the British energy giant's U.S. footing.

The suspension, announced by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, comes on the heels of BP's November 15 agreement with the U.S. government to plead guilty to criminal misconduct in the Gulf of Mexico disaster, the worst offshore oil spill in U.S. history. BP agreed to pay $4.5 billion in penalties, including a record $1.256 billion criminal fine.

BP and its affiliates are barred from new federal contracts until they demonstrate they can meet federal business standards, the EPA said. The suspension is "standard practice" and BP's existing U.S. government contracts are not affected, it said.

The EPA's suspension of contracts could push BP to settle civil litigation brought by the U.S. government and states from the spill. An EPA official said government-wide suspensions generally don't exceed 18 months, but can continue longer if there are ongoing legal cases.

In a statement, BP said it has been in "regular dialogue" with the EPA, and that the agency has informed BP that it is preparing an agreement that "would effectively resolve and lift this temporary suspension." The EPA has notified BP that the draft agreement will be available soon, BP said.

The suspension could threaten BP's dominance in the Gulf of Mexico, where it is one of the largest producers of oil and natural gas and the largest lease-holder. U.S. operations accounted for over 30 percent of BP's pre-tax profits in the third quarter, and the United States accounts for about a fifth of BP's global oil production.

The suspension could also hamper BP's ability to maintain its position as a top supplier of jet fuel and other refined products to the U.S. military, the largest single buyer of oil in the world. As recently as September, BP affiliates won two fuel supply contracts with the U.S. military worth as much as $1.37 billion to supply fuel to the U.S. Defense Logistics Agency, the Pentagon's procurement arm, according to a U.S. website that tracks military contracts.

The suspension is a sign that all federal contractors will be held to high standards, said Scott Amey, general counsel for the Project on Government Oversight, a federal watchdog group.

"BP had years to improve its business ethics and is paying the price for its inaction," Amey said.

However, the suspension will have a "minimal direct financial impact," and will not impair BP's ability to produce oil and gas from existing U.S. assets, said Pavel Molchanov, an analyst with Raymond James & Associates Inc in Houston.

"BP's supply contract of fuels to the Pentagon might be at risk, but of course BP could supply other customers if this supply contract is not renewed," Molchanov said in a research note.

BP's Finance Director Brian Gilvary told investors on a November 15 conference call that should a blanket ban be put in place, the company may have to rethink its entire U.S. business.

The suspension could be an attempt by the U.S. government to pressure BP to settle civil charges from Deepwater Horizon, which could top $20 billion if BP is found to be grossly negligent for the spill under the U.S. Clean Water Act.

The Justice Department says it intends to prove in a court case set to get underway in February 2013 that BP was grossly negligent, a claim the company has adamantly refuted.

"The critical question is whether this a shot across BP's bows to get settlement, or a more sustained stance, in which case the importance of the context is underlined" by Gilvary's comments, said Peter Hutton, an analyst with RBC Capital Markets.

BP did not participate in Wednesday's federal auction of 20 million acres of drilling tracts in the Gulf of Mexico, one of BP's biggest oil production regions globally.

If BP had submitted high bids in the sale, they would not have been approved until the suspension was resolved, said Tommy Beaudreau, director of the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, which oversees the federal leases.

The EPA statement did not say how long the suspension could last.

"Federal executive branch agencies take these actions to ensure the integrity of federal programs by conducting business only with responsible individuals or companies. Suspensions are a standard practice when a responsibility question is raised by action in a criminal case," it said.

One long-time critic of BP applauded the decision.

"After pleading guilty to such reckless behavior that killed men and constituted a crime against the environment, suspending BP's access to contracts with our government is the right thing to do," U.S. Rep. Edward Markey, a Democrat from Massachusetts, said in a statement.

BP shares ticked lower in London after the news to stand 1 percent down on the day at 427 pence, but were still outperforming a weak European energy sector.

(Additional reporting by Andrew Callus in London, Ayesha Rascoe and Timothy Gardner in Washington, Joshua Schneyer in New York and Chris Baltimore and Kristen Hays in Houston; Editing by John Wallace, Grant McCool and Andrew Hay)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/epa-temporarily-suspends-bp-u-federal-government-contracts-135930995--finance.html

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'That 70s Show' star arrested in North Carolina

(AP) ? "That '70s Show" star Lisa Robin Kelly is free on bond after being arrested for assault.

Police in the Charlotte, N.C., suburb of Mooresville arrested the 42-year-old Kelly and 61-year-old husband Robert Joseph Gilliam after responding to a disturbance at their home Monday. Both are free on bond.

Gilliam is charged with misdemeanor assault on a female. Kelly is charged with misdemeanor assault. They were taken to the Iredell County Detention Center and released on $500 bond apiece. They have a court date of Jan. 25. It's not known if either has an attorney.

Kelly portrayed Laurie Forman, sister of Topher Grace's lead character Eric, on the FOX series, which ended in 2006. She also appeared on the TV shows "Murphy Brown" and "Married . . . With Children."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-11-29-US-People-Lisa-Robin-Kelly-Arrest/id-c955cc5f61bc44f1a82623e87de08097

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Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Delinda Mccann: Random Thoughts On Death, Dying, and My Own ...

??????????? Two of my friends have died this month, so I am taking time to reflect on death.? It is inevitable?the natural end to life, yet we encounter it with shock and surprise.??I confess that I don't know the answers to our questions about death and dying and am as shocked and surprised as anybody else?when someone passes. ?Why??

??????????? Once, when I was in a meeting about disability services, I commented that we need to have transition services in place for when the parent-caregiver of a disabled adult dies.? The leader dismissed my comment by saying, ?Yes, they might die.?

??????????? I countered this dismissal with a promise.? ?No!? I can promise you with one hundred percent accuracy that every, single parent-caregiver will die!?

??????????? My remarks were ignored, almost as if I was being obscene.? During my time working with state disability services, they never set up a protocol for dealing with this transition.? It would not take much to have a page in a file listing people to contact, resources and an action plan for when the caregiver of a client dies.? It would serve the client to have a plan in place.? It would save the state time and money to have a plan in place, yet this didn?t happen.

??????????? What is it that causes us to look upon death with so much denial that we cannot make a plan and put it in a file?? For believers in many faiths, death is just a passage to eternity?a return to our real home.? Yet we want to deny that death happens.? Why?

???????????I think the answer lies in our own grief.? It hurts so much to be separated from someone we love. ?I think the grief of separation effects both the dying and the survivors.

??

?? ? ? ? ? Personally, I see death itself as a pleasant passage to what lies ahead.? Still, I am reluctant to leave behind my loved ones.? I feel compassion for their sense of loss and grief, so I grieve with them and fight to cling to life.

??????????? Clinging to life was a choice and challenge for me during and after my stroke and during my cancer treatments.? Living involved some tough choices and suffering.? It hasn?t been easy.? In addition to the pain of illness, I was well aware of the presence of total love and peace just around the corner that we call death.? Turning the corner would have been so much easier than fighting to live.? I chose to live partly because of my love for my family, but mostly because of a sense that I have unfinished business here.

??????????? During my struggle, I started writing Lies That Bind.? In a sense, it was the story about my struggle to live, and the conflict between my desire to be with the One who loves me unconditionally and my attachment to those in this imperfect world.? This is not a sugary sweet story about life and death.? It is a passionate story about love.? I came to understand death as part of our passionate life love-story.

??????????? I used adultery as the central theme in Lies That Bind because our society treats the topic of death much as it treats the topic of adultery.? We know adultery is a betrayal.? I think under much of our grieving, we see death as a betrayal.? Our loved one has abandoned us.?

??????????? Just as Jake and Celia in Lies That Bind needed to unravel the lies that separated them, we need to unravel the lies that cause us undue grief when someone dies.? Death is not abandonment.??We need to remember that our loved one still loves us and we can still love them.?Yes, we will miss our loved ones.? Still, they have made a natural passage whether we think it was timely or not.? We need to learn how to deal with this transition, to have a plan in our file.?

??????????? How do we grieve?? How do we find wholeness when part of our life has been ripped away?? The answers to these questions will be different for each person, but we need to answer them.? The answers to our questions about grieving involve telling our-selves the truth and finding truth.? I sense that the answers involve living our passionate life love-story and recognizing that love is the eternal spark that each life passes on to the next generation.

?? ? ? ? ? ?

Source: http://delindamccann.blogspot.com/2012/11/random-thoughts-on-death-dying-and-my.html

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Using biomarkers from prehistoric human feces to track settlement and agriculture

Using biomarkers from prehistoric human feces to track settlement and agriculture

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

For researchers who study Earth's past environment, disentangling the effects of climate change from those related to human activities is a major challenge, but now University of Massachusetts Amherst geoscientists have used a biomarker from human feces in a completely new way to establish the first human presence, the arrival of grazing animals and human population dynamics in a landscape.

Doctoral student Robert D'Anjou and his advisor Raymond Bradley, director of the Climate System Research Center at UMass Amherst, with UMass colleagues Nick Balascio and David Finkelstein, describe their findings in the current online edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"We are really excited about how well this method worked," D'Anjou says. "Without even knowing it, early settlers were recording their history for us, and in the most unlikely of ways, in their poop. The prehistoric settlers and their livestock pooped and their feces washed into the lake, which over time left a record of trace amounts of specific molecules that are only produced in the intestines of higher mammals. When you find these molecules at certain concentrations and in specific ratios, it provides an unmistakable indicator that people were living in the area."

Bradley adds, "This approach opens the door to other studies, where the presence of humans is uncertain; we believe it has great potential for much wider applications in archaeology."

D'Anjou carried out the work just north of the Arctic Circle, at Lake Liland in the Lofoten Islands in northern Norway, where humans were thought to have lived in prehistoric settlements from the early Iron Age through the Viking period. They extracted two sediment cores from the lake bottom and used radiocarbon measurements and the presence of volcanic ash from Iceland to establish their chronology. The sediments provided a continuous record extending back roughly 7,000 years.

Paleoclimatologists have long used markers in lakebed sediments, such as charcoal from humans' fires and pollen from cultivated plants, as a natural archive of environmental changes to estimate when humans first began having an impact. But these indirect indicators must be used with care when reconstructing the history of a place because it's not always clear that they indicate human activity in the same area.

By contrast, the presence of a molecular biomarker directly linked to humans, one transmitted through their bowel movements, offers "a strong human signal," as the authors put it, one that can be dated with "excellent chronological control." D'Anjou and colleagues extracted the compound coprostanol, a molecular marker formed from the digestion of cholesterol in the human gut, from the sediment, plus other sterols characteristic of other mammals to estimate the presence of sheep and cattle. From these, they were able to produce a long-term record of the presence and relative population size of humans extending back over thousands of years at the site.

In addition, the geoscientists used two other molecular markers to reconstruct the vegetation history: relative length of carbon molecules found in leaf waxes (different in forest and grassland), and pyrolytic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) as evidence of fire in the Lake Liland area. They say that taken together, the sediment cores, vegetation changes and fire records clearly define a pre-settlement period with no detectable human activity in the lake's water catchment area from about 7,300 to 2,250 years ago.

At that point, however, changes in the background state appear in the record, marking an "abrupt shift" to significantly increased levels of pyrolytic PAH first, followed by increased human fecal material. This likely indicates that as people moved in, they first cleared the land by burning before establishing a permanent settlement, the researchers say. "This interpretation is bolstered," they add, by the leaf wax record that shows a "marked transition to a more grassland-dominated landscape beginning at this time."

After the initial influx of people to the region, D'Anjou and colleagues say the record shows a lull in human activity from about 2,040 to 1,900 years ago, reflected in all markers. After this, the human and livestock populations steadily increased to a local maximum around the year 500, based on the fecal record, then fell again to a second minimum around the year 850.

The climate scientists note a further decline in human activity and population to another minimum at about AD 1750 that coincided with the highest relative grassland cover for the entire 7,300-year history. Findings related to human activity over the past 7,300 years in northern Norway correlate well with other climate reconstructions, in particular summer temperature patterns indicating poor vs. fruitful growing seasons. This shows that the early settlers were vulnerable to small changes in summer temperature at this far northern location.

Overall, the authors say, the new fecal markers are likely to prove valuable in many other places, to distinguish natural from human factors that influenced the environment in the past.

###

University of Massachusetts at Amherst: http://www.umass.edu

Thanks to University of Massachusetts at Amherst 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/125501/Using_biomarkers_from_prehistoric_human_feces_to_track_settlement_and_agriculture

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Health insurance options for the unemployed | InsuranceQuotes.com

Tamara E. Holmes

A high unemployment rate not only hurts the economy, but it affects the general health of America. Americans with jobs are more than 30 percent more likely to have health insurance than those who are unemployed.

Most people get their health insurance through their employers, and employers typically subsidize some or even all of the cost, says Robert Giordano, an independent agent who sells health insurance in New York and New Jersey. But when a job ends, the health insurance typically does as well. However, options are available for people who want to maintain health insurance coverage while they?re searching for new employment.

Consider COBRA. The Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act, better known as COBRA, is the first thing you might want to consider if you lose your job, says Stephanie Cohen, CEO of Cohen & Golden, a company in Maryland that sells health insurance and financial products. unemployment-health-insurance

Through COBRA, employees of companies with at least 20 workers can keep their group health benefits for up to 18 months if they lose their jobs. However, while your employer might have paid some of your health insurance costs in the past, you likely would be required to pick up the entire tab for the premiums through COBRA, plus a 2 percent administrative fee.

While COBRA provides an opportunity for the unemployed to continue their health benefits, it?s not practical for many people because of the high costs, some experts say. People who recently lost have their jobs often don?t have the extra money to pay for health benefits under COBRA, according to Sara Collins, vice president of The Commonwealth Fund, a nonprofit organization that works to make health care more accessible.

Get a plan of your own. Another option for people who?ve recently lost their jobs is to buy an individual health insurance plan. However, individual plans factor health and age into the rate you?ll pay. If you?re young and healthy, you might easily find an affordable plan. But if you?ve had any health problems, insurers can deny you coverage until 2014, when the federal health care reform law will stop that practice.

However, even if an insurer offers coverage, the premium likely will be high if you have health problems, so you may not be able to afford it, Cohen says. If you do intend to look for an individual policy, a broker can help you to identify lower-cost options, Cohen says.

Think short-term coverage. Another way to get health coverage while you?re between jobs is to consider short-term, or temporary, insurance. For example, GradMed provides major medical coverage for six or 11 months for graduates of nearly 200 colleges and universities. Through such plans, you?ll pay a premium and typically will be covered for major medical events, such as the diagnosis and treatment of pneumonia.

However, you may have to pay a deductible, and such plans typically don?t cover wellness visits such as physicals or routine exams. However, these plans will buy you some time as you look for a job that will offer full health care benefits.

Explore ?mini? options. ?Mini-med? health plans are yet another option for the unemployed. Such plans provide limited health insurance coverage for things such as emergency treatment and inpatient hospital procedures. However, these plans typically have low annual coverage limits (sometimes as low as $1,000 or $2,000). So if you?re diagnosed with a major illness, there?s a good chance you?ll run out of your coverage pretty quickly, according to an analysis of mini-med plans by Consumer Reports. While mini-med plans aren?t an ideal long-term solution, they could provide relief while you?re hunting for work.

Mix and match coverage. If you lose your job and need to find insurance for your family, consider using a variety options, Cohen says. For example, you might be eligible for COBRA but be unable to afford to pay for coverage for everyone in your household. In that case, maybe you can pay for your own coverage under COBRA if you have a chronic medical condition and then you can buy a mini-med plan or a short-term plan for the healthier members of your family. ?Sometimes you have to do a mixture of things; it doesn?t have to be all or nothing,? Cohen says.

Source: http://www.insurancequotes.com/health_insurance-unemployed/

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Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Permanent Record

The old Manhattan Trade School for Girls report cards, which I found in a discarded file cabinet in 1996 (you can get the full story on that here), are filled with notations that present puzzles. One of them appears on the card of a student named Leah Palmigiano, who began attending Manhattan Trade in December 1919. Her address was initially listed as 338 E. 14th St. in Manhattan but then was crossed out in favor of 337 E. 14th St.

The Vallone family, 1935. Leah is in the center of the middle row, with the big smile.

The Vallone family, 1935. Leah is in the center of the middle row, with the big smile.

Courtesy of Peter Vallone.

It's not unusual for a Manhattan Trade report card to show multiple addresses for a student, since many of the families moved to new residences and the school often kept tabs on students even after they graduated. But I was intrigued by Leah's address being shown as 338 and then 337?did her family simply move across the street, perhaps because they had relatives there? Or maybe her address was recorded incorrectly the first time, and then someone fixed it? Or was there some other explanation?

As I recently discovered, Leah did indeed move across the street during her time at Manhattan Trade. It was a move necessitated by tragic circumstances and one that changed the course of her life. It also led to one of the greatest success stories to emerge so far from the Permanent Record project.

Peter Vallone is a familiar name to those who follow New York politics. He was a member of the City Council from 1974 through 2002 and spent more than half of that span serving as council speaker?the second most powerful post in the city after the mayor. In 1998 he was the Democratic Party's gubernatorial candidate, losing to the incumbent, George Pataki. Although Vallone is now retired from politics, his name still circulates in public life thanks to his son, Peter Vallone Jr., a city councilman from Queens who's generally assumed to have ambitions for higher office.

Now 77 years old but still active as an attorney and consultant, the senior Vallone maintains an office near his longtime home in Astoria, Queens, and another one in the historic Woolworth Building near City Hall in Manhattan. He recently agreed to meet with me at the Manhattan location, where we discussed the life of his mother, Leah Palmigiano Vallone?the Manhattan Trade School student who moved across the street.

Peter Vallone holding the report card of his mother, Leah Palmigiano Vallone.

Peter Vallone holding the report card of his mother, Leah Palmigiano Vallone.

Photo by Paul Lukas.

Leah, a child of Sicilian immigrants, was born in New York in 1905. As noted on her report card, her father, Fortunato, was already deceased by the time she began attending Manhattan Trade in 1919. What's not noted is that Leah's mother, Marie, was blind. "I'm not sure what caused the blindness," Peter Vallone told me. "Anyway, she died, too, when my mother was about 15."

This would have been around 1920, when Leah was still attending Manhattan Trade. She and her older brother were now orphaned, but help was available from another Italian family in the neighborhood?the Vallones, who lived across the street.

"The Vallones were a large family?there were nine brothers and sisters," Peter explained to me. "And the sisters knew my mother, because they lived across the street from each other. So when my mother's parents died, they took her in. They had taken out two apartments and combined them, so they had a lot of bedrooms." The Vallones didn't officially adopt Leah, but they treated her as one of their own and gave her a home. (It seems likely that the Vallones also took in Leah's brother, although Peter isn't certain of that.)

None of this drama is documented in Leah's school record, which is surprising, given that many of the Manhattan Trade report cards include extensive notes about the students' home and family situations. In any event, it must have been an extremely difficult time for Leah. Aside from dealing with the grief of losing her remaining parent, she had to adjust to a new family culture that was very different from what she'd been used to. Her family was small and reserved, while the Vallone clan was large and boisterous.

"The Vallone family had a big love, an embracing love," said Peter. "Whereas my mother, she was more introverted. Even later in life, she loved her immediate family, but her feeling regarding the extended family was more, 'You live your life, I'll live mine.' " Maybe that came from spending her teen years in a family that wasn't her own, or maybe it was just her nature.

Despite all this turmoil, Leah's report card shows generally good grades and positive teacher comments. She apparently made a positive impression on the staff, because Manhattan Trade hired her as a vocational helper and an assistant teacher clerk after she completed her trade training. That must have been a plum job compared to the grueling garment factory work that most of the girls ended up with, and it put Leah in a fairly elite club: Of the nearly 400 Manhattan Trade School students whose report cards are in my collection, only a handful were hired to work at the school. She apparently enjoyed the job.

Leah and Charles Vallone, date unknown.

Leah and Charles Vallone, date unknown.

Courtesy of Peter Vallone.

Meanwhile, Leah had found more than a new home when she moved to the other side of 14th Street. One of the brothers in the Vallone household?Charles Vallone, who was a few years older than Leah?had taken a liking to her, and the feeling was mutual. They courted while Charles went to college and law school and were finally married in 1928. In 1931, they moved to the Queens neighborhood of Astoria. "I still live half a block from that apartment house today," said Peter.

As Charles worked for a bank and then a law firm and Leah worked as a principal's assistant and substitute teacher at a high school in Manhattan, the two of them slowly began getting involved on the organizing level of local politics. For Charles, this came easily?he was naturally gregarious, a glad-hander. But how did Leah, with her more reserved demeanor, get involved?

"Reluctantly," said Peter. "See, my father was very active politically, so everyone knew my mother because of that, and everybody liked her. But she never enjoyed it. She never wanted to be a state committeewoman, and then they elected her district leader, and she didn't want that either. She didn't like the fighting and acrimony. After a few years, my father got elected as a judge, at which point he could no longer be involved in politics, so she immediately resigned from everything."

It's interesting that Peter got involved in politics even though one of his parents found the whole racket so distasteful. Did Leah discourage him from seeking elective office? "No, she encouraged me, and I think she was very proud of me," he said. "But like any mother, she just didn't want me to get hurt."

And what about Leah's and Charles' contrasting social styles?did that ever make for an awkward match? "No," said Peter, "because they complemented each other so well. If they walked into the room right now, my father would ask you all sorts of questions?where are you from, how'd you get here, what's your last name, and so on?to the point where he'd know everything about you within a few minutes. My mother wasn't as outgoing, but she'd be very polite and answer any questions you might have."

Peter himself seems to fall somewhere in between, at least at this stage of his life?outgoing but also patient, letting the conversation come to him. A hint of his younger, presumably more boisterous self came when I asked him to pose for a photo with Leah's report card, at which point he instantly flashed the electric smile of a career politico. Once a candidate, always a candidate.

An unfortunate thread running through Leah's life is the death of most of the men she was close to, usually at an early age. Her father passed away when she was still a girl; her brother, who had settled in Pennsylvania but with whom she was still very close, died of a heart attack while in his late 40s; Charles, her husband, died in 1967 at the age of 66. But the biggest blow came one night in 1975, when her son Buddy?Peter's older brother?was killed by a hit-and-run driver in Astoria. He was 42.

Leah and Charles Vallone with their sons, Buddy (far left) and Peter, right, circa 1960s.

Leah and Charles Vallone with their sons, Buddy (far left) and Peter, right, circa 1960s.

Courtesy of Peter Vallone.

Peter had to deliver the news to Leah the following morning, which he called "the hardest thing I've ever done." Later that day, Leah fainted, fell, and broke her ankle, triggering a physical and mental deterioration that played out over the ensuing decade. She passed away in January 1985 at the age of 79.

Although the earliest and latest chapters of Leah's life were difficult, Peter said the times in between were happy ones. And while there are other students in my Manhattan Trade School report-card collection who went on to have brushes with fame (Eva Greene Rosencrans, for example, designed Mamie Eisenhower's inaugural ball gown), I'm not aware of any students whose children achieved a public profile to rival Peter Vallone's. When you add up the political careers of Charles, Peter, and Peter Jr., Leah shapes up as the de facto matriarch of what has become a New York political dynasty?an impressive achievement for an orphaned daughter of Italian immigrants and a classic example of the American dream made good.

For Leah, that dream started when she left behind her old life at 338 E. 14th St. and moved across the street to 337. I was curious to see what those addresses looked like today, so I recently went out to the East Village to have a look.

At 338, where Leah's family lived, there's a five-story building with a beauty salon on the ground floor. But Leah's family lived here a nearly century ago?it may be the same address, but is it the same building? The building's certificate of occupancy, available via the Department of Buildings' website, describes it as an "old law tenement," which means it was built between 1879 and 1901. So yes, this is the building where Leah was living when she began attending Manhattan Trade in 1919.

Across the street, however, there have been changes. A large, modern apartment complex sprawls out across several lots in the middle of the block. Its address is 333, and the next building to the east is 347. So 337, where the Vallones lived when they took Leah in, no longer exists. The symbolism, however, remains intact: The old building at 338 represents the past, while the modern building across the street represents new life, a fresh start, progress. That?s certainly how it turned out for Leah.

This will be the last Permanent Record article on Slate, at least for a while. (We may run additional entries as developments warrant.) But you can still keep up with the project over on the Permanent Record Blog, where I'll continue investigating the Manhattan Trade School report cards, along with other found objects that have stories to tell. You can also sign up for the Permanent Record mailing list by sending me an email. My thanks to all of Slate's readers for your support and enthusiasm?it's been a privilege to share these stories with you.

(Special thanks to researcher Samantha Bulgerin for her invaluable assistance with this article.)

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=36c95cfbee555728d396aab0b61923e0

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dog clothing in addition to getting fashionable

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Source: http://ampm.hacres.com/index.php/paul/dog-clothing-in-addition-to-getting-fashionable/

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Wikileaks GI to argue his detention merits release

FORT MEADE, Md. (AP) ? An Army private charged in the biggest security breach in U.S. history is trying to avoid trial by claiming he was already punished enough when he was locked up alone in a small cell and forced to sleep naked for several nights.

Pfc. Bradley Manning was expected to testify about his treatment during a pretrial hearing set to begin Tuesday and run through Sunday in a military court at Fort Meade, outside Baltimore. Military officers were expected to testify first, so Manning may not be called to testify until later this week.

Manning's lawyers contend he was illegally punished by being locked up alone in a small cell for nearly nine months at the Marine Corps brig in Quantico, Va., and having to sleep naked for several nights.

Military judges can dismiss all charges if pretrial punishment is particularly egregious, but that rarely happens. The usual remedy is credit at sentencing for time served, said Lisa M. Windsor, a retired Army colonel and former Army judge advocate now in private practice in Washington.

In a 1956 case, U.S. v. Bayhand, a military appeals court ordered all charges dismissed against a soldier who had been forced during his pretrial confinement to do hard labor alongside a sentenced prisoner. The court ruled that the soldier had been given an illegal order.

Since then, there have been few, if any, cases in which pretrial punishment has led to dismissal of all charges. Lt. Col. Eric Carpenter, chairman of the criminal law department at the judge advocates school in Charlottesville, Va., said he couldn't find one but he couldn't say for sure that the remedy hasn't been granted.

Manning has also offered to take responsibility for the leak by pleading guilty to reduced charges. The military judge hasn't yet ruled on the offer and prosecutors have not said whether they would still pursue the charges against him.

He was kept at the Marine Corps brig from July 2010 to April 2011. The military contends the treatment at Quantico was proper, given Manning's classification as a maximum-security detainee who posed a risk of injury to himself or others. He was later moved to Fort Leavenworth, Kan., where he was re-evaluated and given a medium-security classification.

A United Nations investigator called the conditions of Manning's time at Quantico cruel, inhuman and degrading, but stopped short of calling it torture.

Outside Fort Meade, about two dozen people gathered in the rain and under umbrellas to show support for Manning. Some held a banner that said, "Support Bradley Manning."

The 24-year-old native of Crescent, Okla., faces possible life imprisonment if convicted of aiding the enemy, the most serious of the 22 charges.

He is accused of sending hundreds of thousands of classified Iraq and Afghanistan war logs and more than 250,000 diplomatic cables to the secret-spilling website WikiLeaks while he was working as an intelligence analyst in Baghdad in 2009 and 2010.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/wikileaks-gi-argue-detention-merits-release-121733314.html

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Congo says no talks with rebels unless they quit Goma

GOMA, Democratic Republic of Congo (Reuters) - Congo said on Sunday it would not negotiate with M23 rebels in the east until they pulled out of the city of Goma, but a rebel spokesman said Kinshasa was in no position to set conditions on peace talks.

Congolese President Joseph Kabila met with M23 for the first time on Saturday after an urgent summit in Uganda where regional leaders gave M23 two days to leave Goma, which the rebels seized six days ago after U.N.-backed government troops melted away.

Eight months into a rebellion that U.N. experts say is backed by neighboring Rwanda, the rebels have so far shown no sign of quitting the lakeside city of one million people.

The rebels say they plan to march on other cities in the east, and then strike out across the country to the capital Kinshasa, across 1,000 miles of dense jungle with few roads, a daunting feat achieved 15 years ago by Kabila's father.

Amani Kabasha, a spokesman for M23's political arm, welcomed the meeting with Kabila but questioned the government's resolve to end a crisis that risks engulfing the region.

"Why put conditions on talks? You pose conditions when you are in a position of strength. Is the government really in such a position?" Kabasha told Reuters in Goma, which sits on the north shore of Lake Kivu at Congo's eastern border with Rwanda.

Vianney Kazarama, the rebels' military spokesman, said government forces that had been reinforcing along the shores of the lake were now deploying in hills around the rebel held town of Sake and government-held Minova, both Goma's west.

A U.N. source in Minova said government soldiers had gone on a looting spree for a second straight night there. The town was calm on Sunday but gunshots rang out overnight, the source said.

"What is real is that the morale of the troops is very low. They've lost hope in the commanders," the U.N. source said.

The Congolese army has vowed to launch counter-offensives and win back lost territory. The rebels have warned the government against embarking on a "new military adventure".

So far, the unruly and poorly-led army has been little match for the rebels, despite assistance from a U.N. peacekeeping mission that deployed attack helicopters to support the government before Goma fell.

Rebel leaders share ethnic ties with the Tutsi leadership of Rwanda, a small but militarily capable neighbor that intervened often in eastern Congo in the 18 years since Hutu perpetrators of Rwanda's genocide took shelter there. Rwanda has repeatedly denied Congolese and U.N. accusations it is behind M23.

Saturday's Kampala summit called on the rebels to abandon their aim of toppling the government and proposed that government troops be redeployed inside Goma.

The rebels have not explicitly rejected or accepted the proposals. They are, however, unlikely to cede control of the city or accept government soldiers inside it.

WITHDRAW

Regional and international leaders are trying to halt the latest bout of violence in eastern Congo, where millions have died of hunger and disease in nearly two decades of fighting fuelled by local and regional politics, ethnic rifts and competition for reserves of gold, tin and coltan.

"Negotiations will start after the (M23) withdrawal from Goma," Congolese government spokesman Lambert Mende said.

Kabila was still in the Ugandan capital on Sunday morning but was expected to return to Kinshasa later in the day or on Monday, two Congo government sources said. Kabila's communications chief Andre Ngwej said he did not believe official talks would start in the next few days.

While Kabila's army is on the back foot, analysts are skeptical the rebels can make good on their threat to march on Kinshasa without major support from foreign backers.

The regional leaders' plan proposed deploying a joint force at Goma airport comprising of a company of neutral African troops, a company of the Congolese army (FARDC) and a company of the M23.

In a statement, the Kinshasa government said Tanzania would take command of the neutral force and that South Africa had offered "substantial" logistical and financial contributions towards it. The Kampala plan did not say what the consequences would be if the rebels did not comply.

(Writing by Richard Lough; Editing by James Macharia and Peter Graff)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/congo-says-no-talks-rebels-unless-quit-goma-032444393.html

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

Matthew Staver for The New York Times

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Monday, November 26, 2012

Putting more cores to work in server farms

Putting more cores to work in server farms [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 26-Nov-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Boris Grot
boris.grot@epfl.ch
41-216-931-379
Ecole Polytechnique Fdrale de Lausanne

Reorganizing the inner architecture of the processors in data processing centers to make significant energy savings

Streaming data, social networks, online games and services, databases the number of interactions we have with the Internet is continually increasing. Every time we click on a link, we trigger an avalanche of computer operations that are then carried out in huge server farms. It's estimated that these massive installations are responsible for 2% of total world electricity consumption. EPFL Scientists are proposing a novel solution to help rein in this runaway consumption. By integrating the same kind of processor cores that are used in smartphones, the amount of energy needed can be reduced by a factor of four. Their research is part of EcoCloud, a program designed to pioneer technologies to make cloud computing scalable, cost-effective and sustainable. It was recently published in an article in IEEE Micro.

The giants of the digital world such as Facebook, Google, Microsoft all depend on vast, powerful farms with tens of thousands of servers to manage their data processing. To help keep costs down and to improve energy efficiency, chips have been improved and packed as tightly as possible into the processors. But this approach has reached its limits.

Ecocloud's solution, called "scale-out processors," is based on a different approach. They propose a reorganization and redesign of the processors used in the servers. Instead of the current design based on a few, very powerful processor cores, they propose using more, but less powerful, cores. Each processor could thus respond to a larger number of requests.

Over-powerful

"The vast majority of Internet requests don't involve complicated analysis, but are generally just retrieval from memory," explains Boris Grot, from Parallel Systems Architecture Laboratory (PARSA). "But current servers are designed for carrying out a whole range of tasks, from complex scientific calculations to gaming. They're actually way too powerful for most basic demands. As a result, they're not being used in an optimal manner."

The researchers have combined the advantages of new-generation small processor cores developed for smartphone-type devices; their architecture is simple but their processing ability is very efficient. Concentrated in large numbers in a large chip, they would provide a better solution to the way servers are currently used. After having studied and compared several designs, EcoCloud scientists concluded that this arrangement maximizes space in the processors and significantly improves their performance.

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Putting more cores to work in server farms [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 26-Nov-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Boris Grot
boris.grot@epfl.ch
41-216-931-379
Ecole Polytechnique Fdrale de Lausanne

Reorganizing the inner architecture of the processors in data processing centers to make significant energy savings

Streaming data, social networks, online games and services, databases the number of interactions we have with the Internet is continually increasing. Every time we click on a link, we trigger an avalanche of computer operations that are then carried out in huge server farms. It's estimated that these massive installations are responsible for 2% of total world electricity consumption. EPFL Scientists are proposing a novel solution to help rein in this runaway consumption. By integrating the same kind of processor cores that are used in smartphones, the amount of energy needed can be reduced by a factor of four. Their research is part of EcoCloud, a program designed to pioneer technologies to make cloud computing scalable, cost-effective and sustainable. It was recently published in an article in IEEE Micro.

The giants of the digital world such as Facebook, Google, Microsoft all depend on vast, powerful farms with tens of thousands of servers to manage their data processing. To help keep costs down and to improve energy efficiency, chips have been improved and packed as tightly as possible into the processors. But this approach has reached its limits.

Ecocloud's solution, called "scale-out processors," is based on a different approach. They propose a reorganization and redesign of the processors used in the servers. Instead of the current design based on a few, very powerful processor cores, they propose using more, but less powerful, cores. Each processor could thus respond to a larger number of requests.

Over-powerful

"The vast majority of Internet requests don't involve complicated analysis, but are generally just retrieval from memory," explains Boris Grot, from Parallel Systems Architecture Laboratory (PARSA). "But current servers are designed for carrying out a whole range of tasks, from complex scientific calculations to gaming. They're actually way too powerful for most basic demands. As a result, they're not being used in an optimal manner."

The researchers have combined the advantages of new-generation small processor cores developed for smartphone-type devices; their architecture is simple but their processing ability is very efficient. Concentrated in large numbers in a large chip, they would provide a better solution to the way servers are currently used. After having studied and compared several designs, EcoCloud scientists concluded that this arrangement maximizes space in the processors and significantly improves their performance.

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-11/epfd-pmc112612.php

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Using the internet to sell houses in The Santa Clarita Valley

by paris911 on November 25, 2012

What is the internet all about? When did it become so popular? We have Gates and Google to thank when it comes to the internet and over 90% of the home buying public searching on-line for a home to buy before contacting a real estate agent.

To prove my point, look at the success that the real estate syndication websites have had. They take a sellers listing and use it to drive leads into their system so they can sell those buyer leads to the agents that pay most handsomely for them.

That is their business model. By the Syndication sites doing this they can then pay for writers, copy writers, HTML experts and many sales and IT professionals to pitch their sites all over the World Wide Web. That is why their websites are hitting at the tops of the Search Engine Results Pages ? the SERP?s.

When you search for real estate, with the REMAX Brand and the Coldwell Banker Brand you are going to come across Syndication sites like: Realtor.com / Homes.com / realestate.com / Trulia.com / Zillow.com / Redfin.com / and others. These websites take a sellers listing, by assumption and not by direct approval, and advertise it. They upload the same photos the listing agent uploaded. They take the exact data the listing agent compiled and publicize it.

While it may not seen fair in many circles ? this is how the machine works. It cannot be stopped at the present time, it can only be monopolized. That is why we take full advantage of this knowledge with our real estate sellers. This why The Paris911 Team at REMAX has embraced a Technological business model with our Relational one.

If you are going to approaching selling your Santa Clarita, Valencia, Castaic, Canyon Country, Newhall, Saugus or Stevenson Ranch home, make sure you hire a real estate agent or team that holds the same ideals as their core values. It will mean the difference between your success as a real estate seller and victories as a real estate buyer.


Source: http://realtor.paris911.com/2012/11/25/using-the-internet-to-sell-houses-in-the-santa-clarita-valley/

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When Sign Language Influences Speech | Psychology Today

Have you ever spoken with people who know sign language, such as American Sign Language (ASL), or who are learning it (see here)? Have you noticed how their hands move much more than they would normally? It happened to me a lot when I was learning to sign and then conducting research on the language.

San Diego State University researchers Shannon Casey, Karen Emmorey and Heather Larrabee set about studying the influence of ASL as a second language on the gestures (also called co-speech gestures) that are used when English is being spoken.

They asked English speakers, acquiring ASL, to re-tell in English two scenes of a Tweety and Sylvester cartoon. The students did this twice, in the same experimental conditions, once when they started their ASL acquisition and then again one year later, after six hours of instruction per week covering three 10-week quarters.

What they found is that the ASL learners, when speaking English, had increased their rate of gestures significantly after one year of language instruction, in particular iconic gestures, i.e. gestures that represent the attributes, actions, or relationships of objects or characters, according to University of Chicago Professor David McNeill. An example would be making a downward movement with the hands to represent a bowling ball being thrown down a pipe (as in the Tweety and Sylvester cartoon). The authors also observed a significant increase of marked ASL handshapes (such as the L handshape illustrating this post) after one year of ASL.

Interestingly, students were aware of these changes in their gesturing. In another study done by the same authors, 75% of the students at the end of two semesters of ASL instruction felt that their co-speech gestures had indeed increased since they had started learning ASL. Practically the same percentage (76%) felt that their gestures had changed in some way during that time. According to them, they were bigger and used more space, as is the case when using sign language. They also felt that they used more gestures to express emotion or to explain what they were saying.

The authors of the study propose several reasons for this change in number and type of gestures. Since signing involves manual articulators, the students may have become accustomed to moving their hands when communicating, and this carries over into monolingual speech environments.

Another reason they put forward is that learners of ASL become accustomed to signing and speaking at the same time when using sign language, that is they produce a sign and whisper its English translation equivalent. This behavior, which is true of many hearing people who sign, not just learners, simply carries over into speech. Finally, a third possibility could be that the students' repertoire of conventional gestures (akin to crossing your fingers for "good luck") may simply have been increased by bringing in new gestures. The problem, of course, is that these new gestures are not meaningful to people who do not know sign language.

Whatever the reason, signing definitely influences gesturing in speech. Two questions come to mind though: Would a difference have been found in number and type of gestures if the students had retold the cartoons to English monolinguals, on the one hand, and to English-ASL bilinguals, on the other? We would expect this to be the case (see here). And how long does this influence last when a person stops signing for good, as in my case regretfully?

Photo courtesy of Mario Carneiro, Wikimedia Commons.

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Reference

Casey, S., Emmorey, K. and Larrabee, H. (2012). The effects of learning American Sign Language on co-speech gesture. Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 15(4), 677-686.

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"Life as a bilingual" posts by content area.

Fran?ois Grosjean's website.

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Source: http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/life-bilingual/201211/when-sign-language-influences-speech

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