Monday, November 28, 2011

How much crazier can Black Friday get? (AP)

NEW YORK ? Pepper-sprayed customers, smash-and-grab looters and bloody scenes in the shopping aisles. How did Black Friday devolve into this?

As reports of shopping-related violence rolled in this week from Los Angeles to New York, experts say a volatile mix of desperate retailers and cutthroat marketing has hyped the traditional post-Thanksgiving sales to increasingly frenzied levels. With stores opening earlier, bargain-obsessed shoppers often are sleep-deprived and short-tempered. Arriving in darkness, they also find themselves vulnerable to savvy parking-lot muggers.

Add in the online-coupon phenomenon, which feeds the psychological hunger for finding impossible bargains, and you've got a recipe for trouble, said Theresa Williams, a marketing professor at Indiana University.

"These are people who should know better and have enough stuff already," Williams said. "What's going to be next year, everybody getting Tasered?"

Across the country on Thursday and Friday, there were signs that tensions had ratcheted up a notch or two, with violence resulting in several instances.

A woman turned herself in to police after allegedly pepper-spraying 20 other customers at a Los Angeles-area Walmart on Thursday in what investigators said was an attempt to get at a crate of Xbox video game consoles. In Kinston, N.C., a security guard also pepper-sprayed customers seeking electronics before the start of a midnight sale.

In New York, crowds reportedly looted a clothing store in Soho. At a Walmart near Phoenix, a man was bloodied while being subdued by police officer on suspicion of shoplifting a video game. There was a shooting outside a store in San Leandro, Calif., shots fired at a mall in Fayetteville, N.C. and a stabbing outside a store in Sacramento, N.Y.

"The difference this year is that instead of a nice sweater you need a bullet proof vest and goggles," said Betty Thomas, 52, who was shopping Saturday with her sisters and a niece at Crabtree Valley Mall in Raleigh, N.C.

The wave of violence revived memories of the 2008 Black Friday stampede that killed an employee and put a pregnant woman in the hospital at a Walmart on New York's Long Island. Walmart spokesman Greg Rossiter said Black Friday 2011 was safe at most of its nearly 4,000 U.S. stores despite "a few unfortunate incidents."

Black Friday ? named that because it puts retailers "in the black" ? has become more intense as companies compete for customers in a weak economy, said Jacob Jacoby, an expert on consumer behavior at New York University.

The idea of luring in customers with a few "doorbuster" deals has long been a staple of the post-Thanksgiving sales. But now stores are opening earlier, and those deals are getting more extreme, he said.

"There's an awful lot of psychology going on here," Jacoby said. "There's the notion of scarcity ? when something's scarce it's more valued. And a resource that can be very scarce is time: If you don't get there in time, it's going to be gone."

There's also a new factor, Williams said: the rise of coupon websites like Groupon and LivingSocial, the online equivalents of doorbusters that usually deliver a single, one-day offer with savings of up to 80 percent on museum tickets, photo portraits, yoga classes and the like.

The services encourage impulse buying and an obsession with bargains, Williams said, while also getting businesses hooked on quick infusions of customers.

"The whole notion of getting a deal, that's all we've seen for the last two years," Williams said. "It's about stimulating consumers' quick reactions. How do we get their attention quickly? How do we create cash flow for today?"

To grab customers first, some stores are opening late on Thanksgiving Day, turning bargain-hunting from an early-morning activity into an all-night slog, said Ed Fox, a marketing professor at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. Midnight shopping puts everyone on edge and also makes shoppers targets for muggers, he said.

In fact, robbery appeared to be the motive behind the shooting in San Leandro, about 15 miles east of San Francisco. Police said robbers shot a victim as he was walking to a car with his purchases around 1:45 a.m. on Friday.

"There are so many hours now where people are shopping in the darkness that it provides cover for people who are going to try to steal or rob those who are out in numbers," Fox said.

The violence has prompted some analysts to wonder if the sales are worth it, and what solutions might work.

In a New York Times column this week, economist Robert Frank proposed slapping a 6 percent sales tax on purchases between 6 p.m. on Thanksgiving and 6 a.m. on Friday in an attempt to stop the "arms race" of earlier and earlier sales.

Small retailers, meanwhile, are pushing so-called Small Business Saturday to woo customers who are turned off by the Black Friday crush. President Barack Obama even joined in, going book shopping on Saturday at a small bookstore a few blocks from the White House.

"A lot of retailers, independent retailers, are making the conscious decision to not work those crazy hours," said Patricia Norins, a retail consultant for American Express.

Next up is Cyber Monday, when online retailers put their wares on sale. But on Saturday many shoppers said they still prefer buying at the big stores, despite the frenzy.

Thomas said she likes the time with her sisters and the hustle of the mall too much to stay home and just shop online.

To her, the more pressing problem was that the Thanksgiving weekend sales didn't seem very good.

"If I'm going to get shot, at least let me get a good deal," Thomas said.

___

Associated Press Writers Julie Walker in New York, Christina Rexrode in Raleigh, N.C., John C. Rogers in Los Angeles and Terry Tang in Phoenix contributed to this report

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111126/ap_on_re_us/us_black_friday_what_s_to_blame_3rd_ld_writethru

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Sunday, November 27, 2011

Football Open Thread, by request (Balloon Juice)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/166967066?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Readers Respond to "The Sunny Side of Smut"--and More

Image:

MIRROR THERAPY
I read with great pleasure ?Reflections on the Mind,? by Vilayanur S. Rama?chandran and Diane Rogers-Ramachandran [Illusions]. These experiments involving the senses are indeed fascinating. Similar experiments were first done by a well-known behavioral optometrist, Robert A. Kraskin, more than 40 years ago in Washington, D.C. He used the techniques in diagnosis and for vision rehabilitation?including for Luci Baines Johnson while her father was in office. He called his regimen of eye exercises ?squinchel? and taught it to many optometrists and vision therapists nationwide at various professional meetings and workshops. As a member of the advisory board of the Neuro-Optometric Rehabilitation Association, I thank you for bringing this useful and interesting phenomenon back into public awareness.
Diana P. Ludlam
via e-mail

MIND-SET ISN?T EVERYTHING
?Painful Pessimism,? by Janelle Weaver [Head Lines], is misleading: most drugs are taken to effect a cure, but the study was only on pain management. It has long been known that pain management is very complex and involves both physical and psychological factors. My wife has ovarian cancer, so I have ?become very aware of how many people truly believe that a positive attitude is the key to a cure. It ain?t necessarily so! We have had drugs fail totally when we expected them to work, and vice versa. Please, please, please, Scientific Amer?ican Mind, don?t feed the antiscience, antipharma sentiment.
?Daouda?
commenting at www.ScientificAmerican.com/Mind

PONDERING PORN
Melinda Wenner Moyer?s article ?The Sunny Side of Smut? [Perspectives] misleads readers by painting a ?sunny? and innocuous picture of pornography. Not only does Moyer?s account leave out much research that depicts pornography in bleaker terms, it also overstates the sunniness of porn. The overall insinuation one gets from the article is that porn is not all that bad.

When children are in porn, no one simply looks at the declining rates of child sexual abuse and blithely insinuates that child pornography has a ?sunny? side to it. There it is acknowledged that the children depicted in child pornography (mainly girls) are harmed in its creation. Nonchild pornography is still a form of prostitution (paying women for sex acts), and there is ample evidence that women are harmed in systems of prostitution. Pointing to those who claim they were not harmed does not erase the harm of those who claim they were.

To indicate that porn does not harm relationships, Moyer looks at studies that take the porn users? side of the equation (their reports of sexual satisfaction and intimacy), as if that is sufficient to indicate that relationships are not harmed by porn. She ignores other research that indicates wives and girlfriends report being deeply hurt by their boyfriends? or husbands? porn use.

Finally, I think the ?benevolent sexism? Moyer indicates that pornography produces hardly compensates for the ?more negative attitudes toward women? that she concedes it brings about.
Saffy Casson
via e-mail

I am a senior family and individual psychotherapist. My long experience is that pornography is not at all harmful to anyone, even adolescents. I am a clinician, however, and not a scientist.

I do know that statistics establish correlations, not causes or effects. The correlations some cite about bad marriages and pornography do not establish anything causal. Spouses who are jealous of their partners? autoerotic private life need to grow up. A jealous partner who interprets the other?s interest in porn as rejection might consider whether the other finds one an unsatisfactory partner in sex and life in general and get to work on making things better.
?Dr. Whom?
commenting at www.ScientificAmerican.com/Mind


Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=5b20e67bbbd9f086f48e7fcdd6626d7a

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Saturday, November 26, 2011

In Canada, hockey for everyone

? A local, slice-of-life story from a Monitor correspondent.

Skip to next paragraph

A hockey player who has been diagnosed as legally blind is rollerblading from Halifax, Nova Scotia, to Toronto to raise money to teach blind Canadians how to play hockey. Mark DeMontis, who has limited vision, is in-line skating through Canada with two friends who take turns being his guide. He is raising funds through an organization he started called Courage Canada, and is expected to arrive in Toronto on Oct. 15 ? two months after setting off from Halifax.

Mr. DeMontis says he was inspired by Chris Delaney, a blind Canadian who rode a tandem bike across Canada to raise funds for research.

Blind hockey is a sport that so far exists only in Canada. It involves a puck that is much larger, slower, and noisier than a normal puck ? which makes it easier to spot for visually impaired players, according to Fran?ois Beauregard, a captain of a Montreal-based blind hockey team called Les Hiboux de Montreal, or The Montreal Owls. Canada started having national blind hockey tournaments two years ago, but organizers would like to turn it into an international sport. They?ve received e-mails and phone calls from the United States and Sweden expressing interest.

In addition to hockey, there are also bicycling, snow-shoeing, and cross-country skiing events for blind people in Canada.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/kdlxaqol_fk/In-Canada-hockey-for-everyone

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Target: BoGo Free Pillow Pets! | MyLitter - 2011 Black Friday Deals ...

Target has got the 18? Pillow Pets ( full size ones) on sale from $12.99 and up. The best deal are the ones that are BOGO, so you are getting 2 for $19.99! Shipping will run you around $6.50 for both, but $13 each for a full size pillow pet is a great deal! Thanks Surviving the Stores!?

**When you get to Target, type in ?Pillow Pet? and it will bring up a TON of them! Make sure to look for the BOGO ones!

See more Black Friday deals HERE.

?

This post may contain affiliate links. When you use them, you support this site. Thank you!

Source: http://mylitter.com/target/target-bogo-free-pillow-pets/

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Friday, November 25, 2011

Superfly Takes On Google And Kayak With Personalized Flight Search

superfly-1Israeli startup Superfly, which debuted at TechCrunch Disrupt in 2010, launched earlier this year as a service to organize travel rewards (i.e. frequent flier miles or hotel rewards) and educate users on how to maximize their value when using rewards points or miles. Today, Superfly is taking this a step further by allowing users to book air travel through the website and receive personalized recommendations based on status, miles and more.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/Z7pUW1kORbc/

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The Evolution of the Enterprise: From the Revolutionary War to Star Trek [Military]

Today is the 50th anniversary of the USS Enterprise CVN-65, the first nuclear powered aircraft carrier. It's first crucial role was during the Cuban Missile Crisis blockade. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/YiMQXgKA7qQ/the-evolution-of-the-enterprise-from-the-revolutionary-war-to-star-trek

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Thursday, November 24, 2011

Teamsters expand lawsuit against Mexican trucks (AP)

WASHINGTON ? The International Brotherhood of Teamsters on Wednesday expanded its lawsuit against the government in a long-running battle that has stopped Mexican trucks from coming deep into the United States.

In papers filed in federal appeals court in Washington, the union said the government must first assess the environmental impact of a pilot project before letting it continue. The first Mexican truck in the pilot program crossed the border last month.

Teamsters President James P. Hoffa said opening the border to the trucks is an attack on the environment, on highway safety and on American truckers and warehouse workers.

"It's outrageous enough that we've outsourced millions of jobs to foreign countries, but now we're bringing foreign workers here to take our jobs," Hoffa said in a statement. "This is another pressure the American middle-class doesn't need."

Under the North American Free Trade Agreement signed nearly two decades ago, trucks from both countries were supposed to have unhindered access to highways on either side of the border.

Mexico's Ambassador to the U.S., Arturo Sarukhan, said that the Teamsters are engaging in protectionism.

"First it was about the safety of Mexican rigs; now, with nowhere to run with that argument, the new red herring is an alleged environmental impact," Sarukhan said in a statement.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mexico/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111123/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/us_teamsters_mexico

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Man to plead guilty to harassing Palin attorney (Reuters)

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters) ? A Pennsylvania man has agreed to plead guilty to a charge that he harassed an attorney for former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, actions that authorities said followed his similar goading of Palin herself, according to court documents filed on Monday.

Shawn Christy, 20, is charged with a single federal count of making harassing interstate phone calls, an offense that carries a maximum penalty of two years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

He and his father, Craig, are accused of making hundreds of hostile telephone calls to Fairbanks, Alaska, attorney John Tiemessen, who represents the Palin family, and his colleagues.

Attorneys for Shawn Christy, who is in jail in Anchorage on the charge, submitted a change-of-plea motion in U.S. District Court on Monday.

"Defendant, Shawn Richard Christy, by and through counsel ... notifies this court that he intends to plead guilty," the filing stated.

Representatives from the U.S. Attorney's Office and Shawn Christy's lawyers could not be reached for comment.

Shawn Christy is scheduled to enter his guilty plea officially and be sentenced on December 1, the court papers state.

A plea agreement is also expected from Craig Christy, according to court papers filed earlier this month.

Both men were already the subject of restraining orders issued by an Alaska state court over repeated telephone calls that authorities say the two made to Palin's parents and a long-time Palin friend, Kristan Cole.

Palin first won a restraining order against Shawn Christy last year. In a court hearing this year, she described him as being obsessed with her and said he made sexual threats.

In May, the state court issued a new restraining order against Shawn Christy and a similar order against Craig Christy over calls he had made to the Palin camp.

The two men from McAdoo, Pennsylvania, were arrested in August in their home state and later sent to Anchorage, Alaska, to face charges over the calls made to Palin's attorney.

Those calls were laced with profanities, and Shawn Christy also used repeated anti-Semitic slurs, an affidavit filed in the case said.

A psychiatric report prepared for the U.S. Secret Service and submitted in state court said Shawn Christy was intelligent but suffered from delusions that made him believe he was entitled to contacts with powerful people.

(Editing by Alex Dobuzinskis and Peter Bohan)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111122/us_nm/us_palin_harassment_alaska

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Cyborg-style contact lenses closer to reality

Cyborgs of the future beware: Humans are working on computerized contact lenses with display technology.

"Some day maybe we'll have full-fledged streaming in your contact lenses," said Babak Amir Parviz, an associate professor of electrical engineering at the University of Washington who co-authored a paper describing the computerized new contact lens in the latest issue of the Journal of Micromechanics and Microengineering.

Parviz, along with an international team of engineers, has constructed a contact lens embedded with a tiny LED that can light up when a wireless signal is sent to it.

Parviz collaborated on the device with UW ophthalmologist Tueng Shen and researchers from Aalto University in Finland led by optoelectronics professor Markku Sopanen. Parviz?s group specializes in incorporating miniaturized devices into unconventional materials and has been working on functional contact lenses for a while, he said.

"If we can make very small devices of various sorts, if we have the ability to put them into different materials, what can I do with this contact lens that I stare at every morning?"

The engineers took an extremely small custom-designed LED made with sapphire and embedded it in the center of a plastic contact lens. They also embedded a circular antenna around the inside lip of the lens. A miniature integrated circuit connects the antenna and the blue LED. Using remote radio frequency transmission, the group was able to control a single pixel.

With this setup, a human eye still wouldn?t be able to distinguish that pixel due to the minimum focal distance required to see anything clearly. With that in mind, the researchers created a separate, non-computerized contact lens containing an array of special flatter, thinner lenses known as Fresnel lenses, each less than a micron thick. The array successfully focused light from the LED.

Once the researchers had determined that the experimental lenses were safe in the lab, they tested them on live rabbits. After wearing them for a short period, the rabbits didn?t have any abrasions or thermal burning. ?We have been able to build the whole system and test it on rabbits, on live eyes, and show that this works and it?s safe,? Parviz said.

Being able to display information and images directly into the field of vision via contact lens would be useful in a number of ways, according to the engineers. The devices could be used for navigation, for gaming and even as a way to monitor someone?s health and safety. It could also be a super sneaky way to access information while carrying on a conversation.

This early system is still extremely rudimentary, Parviz said. The computerized lens is made from polyethylene terephthalate (PET), a hard plastic that doesn?t allow airflow to the eye, limiting usage to only a few minutes. Although the device could be powered from about three feet away when outside the eye, that distance narrowed to about an inch when the contact was in an actual eye. While a single pixel lighting up could potentially be useful as a warning, without the focusing micro-lenses, the rabbits saw only a blurry shadow.

The researchers are planning to tackle these challenges. They are working on combining the flat micro-lens technology that can focus light with the computerized device in the lab. They would like to increase the pixel count, refine the antenna design, widen the wireless range and get the components into a softer, more flexible material.

"If we can make them as comfortable as normal contact lenses, you don't feel you're wearing them," Parviz said. Contacts would allow users to take their displays with them anywhere, hands and headset-free, he added. "In a sense, it?s the ultimate electronic gear that is totally unnoticeable."

Arnaud Bertsch is a microsystems researcher at the ?cole Polytechnique F?d?rale de Lausanne (EPFL) in Switzerland who previously worked on incorporating sensors into a soft contact lens for glaucoma detection. That project resulted in a commercial product now sold by the Swiss company Sensimed.

"There's still a little more integration to do to have something that can be used as a device for projecting an image onto the retina, but basically the concept is here,? he said of the new contact lens.

Bertsch thinks it could take 10 years to achieve fully functional computerized contact lens displays, but added that the field has taken big steps forward with help from miniaturization.

"Five years ago, it was something like science fiction. When we started to discuss integrating things into a contact lens, people were laughing," he said. "Now it's real."

? 2011 Discovery Channel

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45403495/ns/technology_and_science-innovation/

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Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Fred The Godson Just Trying To 'Win' For New York

Bronx MC talks to Mixtape Daily about inspiration for his aptly titled City of God tape.
By Rob Markman


Fred the Godson
Photo: MTV News

Main Pick
Headliners: Fred the Godson and DJ Drama

Representing: Bronx, New York

Mixtape: City of God

Real Spit: Fred the Godson makes a strong proclamation for a relative newcomer to rap on his new City of God mixtape: "You can't rank my skill/ I told Drama that this would be one of the most lyrical Gangsta Grillz." But the Bronx, New York, MC backs up his boast with bullying bars.

Big Bronx, as Fred's also known, sets a hell of a tone on the tape's intro, and exercising his lyrical dominance isn't the only promise he makes. Over a subdued piano track, Fred the God also pledges to return New York to its rap prominence.

"We chose for the mixtape to be called City of God because of 'City of God' the movie — it's like a takeover," Fred told Mixtape Daily of drawing inspiration from the 2002 Rio de Janeiro-set film.

Making a play on the title of the flick and his rap moniker, Fred's confidence in his own ability is apparent throughout the 19-track mixtape. "That's why we went with that name, and I'm just here to try to win New York, to try to bring New York back in general," he said.

Fred's formula is simple: mix dramatic, banging beats with witty punchlines and a hustler's ambition, then add the occasional notable feature and voila, you have one of the hardest mixtapes of 2011.

On "Gettin' Money Pt. II," Fred collaborates with Meek Mill and Cory Gunz over a menacing track guided by a Diddy-laced hook. "Doves Fly" finds Fred alongside G.O.O.D. Music's Pusha T on a cocaine-themed free-for-all. "What up Pusha? Tell Malice I got that Khaled/ The best, send a fiend to the moon — Alice," Fred spits while Pusha Ton offers, "Every block another notch up on my résumé/ Now I'm getting rap money with a better 'Ye."

Raekwon shows up on the title track, Maino on "How You Don't Know Me" and Vado for "Head Banger," but Fred is just as comfortable holding tracks down by himself. "Block on Fire" is a coming-of-age story in which the hefty MC documents his street rise. "I'm tryin' to cop the drop-650 from the powder/ I can't do that makin' $6.50 an hour," he spits about his dream car.

It isn't all chest-pounding, however, as Fred displays a healthy amount of conviction on "We Gon Fly." Instead of rapping about the upside of the drug trade, the Godson rhymes about moving from the street to rap's legal hustle, opening up about his daughter Sadie and his almost-lethal bout with asthma.

Although he has already accomplished a lot in his rap career, the 2011 XXL Freshman gets honest on "Long Way to Go," noting that his "top-ranked flow" is only one part of the bigger picture. Still, if Fred the Godson continues to put out projects of this caliber, the road to riches may not be as long as he thinks.

Joints to Check For

» "Hip Hop": "The first joint is called 'Hip Hop,' featuring D-Dot Angelettie; you know him as the Mad Rapper from [the] '90s, Biggie, Mase and all that, 'Tell 'em why you mad son,' " Fred said. "We brought him back on this joint called 'Hip Hop' because now he got something to be mad about again, you know, the bars is back, them lyrics is fire. It's called 'Hip Hop' 'cause it got that knock to it. And I'm just going in with them bars with the flow and all that, so this one they gonna love."

» "Talkin Bout Money": "This joint right here is the 'Dead Presidents' freestyle from [Jay-Z's] Reasonable Doubt. I took the beat and I got a little bit of harmonizing on it from my brother Remo the Hitmaker and it's just bars on it. Not everybody can mess around with this beat, so I took it and I did my thing with it."

For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines.

Related Artists

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1674793/fred-the-godson-city-of-god-mixtape.jhtml

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Kris Humphries: The Husband from Hell?


Kim Kardashian has been receiving the brunt of criticism for her split from Kris Humphries, with over 100,000 people even signing a petition to take this waste of large breasts off the air.

But the latest issue of Us Weekly quotes sources who point a finger at the bruising NBA power forward, even dubbing him the Husband from Hell.

Us Weekly Cover Pic

On top of clubbing throughout New York and Los Angeles - insisting on free bottle service wherever he went - Humphries simply acted like a jerk for most of the 72 days, an insider claims:

"He belittled her in front of people. He'd call her stupid. It was truly sickening."

This mole remembers at least one incident where Kris referred to Kim as a "fat ass" and added that he resents her fame and fortune:

"He tried to control Kim by bringing her down... He would say truly terrible things. One time, he said she had no talent and her fame wouldn't last."

Well, one of those points is true. We're praying the other soon comes to fruition, as well.

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/11/kris-humphries-the-husband-from-hell/

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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

UN: AIDS epidemic stabilizing, still work to do (AP)

LONDON ? The AIDS epidemic is leveling off and the number of people newly infected with the virus that causes it has remained unchanged since 2007, the United Nations said in a report Monday.

Critics say that the body's aim of wiping out the disease is overly optimistic, however, considering there is no vaccine, millions remain untreated and donations have slumped amid the economic crisis.

There were 2.7 million new HIV infections last year, approximately the same figure as in the three previous years, said the report from UNAIDS, the joint United Nations program on HIV and AIDS. The figures largely confirm earlier findings released by the group in June.

At the end of last year, there were about 34 million people with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. While that is a slight rise from previous years, experts say that's due to people surviving longer. Last year, there were 1.8 million AIDS-related deaths, down from 1.9 million in 2009.

The outbreak continues to hit hardest in southern Africa. But while the number of new infections there has fallen by more than 26 percent since the peak in 1997, the virus is surging elsewhere.

In eastern Europe and central Asia, there has been a 250 percent jump in the number of people infected with HIV in the past decade, due largely to the spread among injecting drug users. In North America and western Europe, the outbreak "remains stubbornly steady," according to the report.

"It's looking promising, but the numbers are still at a scary level," said Sophie Harman, a global health expert at City University in London. She was not connected to the UNAIDS report.

In its strategy for the next few years, UNAIDS says it is working toward zero new HIV infections, zero discrimination and zero AIDS-related deaths. Harman said that was an admirable goal but wasn't sure it was achievable. "They need to get real," she said. "Maybe they need to aim high but if their main goal is eradication, it's highly unlikely that will ever happen."

Dr. Paul De Lay, deputy executive director of UNAIDS, acknowledged the idea of eliminating AIDS infections and deaths is "more of a vision for the future," and would likely not be accomplished without new tools like a vaccine, which could take several decades. Earlier this month, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called for an AIDS-free generation and promised more money for programs in Africa.

De Lay said U.N. strategies will focus on more aggressive prevention and treatment policies, like treating people with HIV earlier. In Africa, people with HIV are not usually treated until their immune system reaches a certain threshold, and officials are now increasingly trying to start treatment before patients get too sick.

Future strategies might also include giving medicines to people at high risk even before they get infected. The World Health Organization is considering how to advise countries with major epidemics on giving drugs to healthy people vulnerable to catching the virus, such as prostitutes, gay men and injecting drug users, as a prevention method.

While studies have shown that could dramatically slow AIDS transmission, experts have voiced concerns about healthy people taking AIDS drugs, which have toxic side effects. It could also encourage drug resistance, and there are already millions of people in developing countries who qualify for treatment but are still waiting for it.

Sharonann Lynch, an HIV policy adviser at Doctors Without Borders, said many African countries are anxious to implement more aggressive strategies and that some are redrafting their guidelines even before official U.N. advice is available. But she said the financial crisis is affecting treatment and that enrollment in some clinics, like in Congo, have stalled or even been suspended. That could allow the epidemic to resurge.

"Just at the moment when we know how to manage HIV, we're hitting the brakes," Lynch said. "Without more investment, we'll be squandering the best chance we have of getting ahead of the new wave of infections."

___

Online:

http://www.unaids.org

http://www.msf.org

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/health/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111121/ap_on_he_me/eu_med_global_aids

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Analysis:Obama pivots towards Asia, eyeing U.S. exports and jobs (Reuters)

NUSA DUA, Indonesia (Reuters) ? U.S. President Barack Obama sought to charm Asia-Pacific leaders this week with Australian slang and memories from his childhood in Hawaii and Indonesia in his bid to boost U.S. ties with the fast-growing region.

The top goal of the nine-day trip, which took Obama away from Washington just as U.S. budget battles were intensifying, was to cement a foreign policy "pivot" toward Asia that could open the door to more American exports and jobs.

The Democratic president, struggling in the polls after bitter fights with Republicans in Congress, geared his Asia message to U.S. voters who will decide next November whether to give him another four years in office.

In Honolulu, Australia and the Indonesian island of Bali, Obama sought out every chance to talk about America's export potential, and the White House previewed Boeing and GE deals with Asia that it said could sustain 130,000 U.S. jobs.

Hitching the lackluster U.S. economy to the world's fastest growing region could be a "win-win" for American companies and workers as well as for the increasingly affluent Asian consumers who might buy their products, Obama said.

He also sharpened his tone toward China in a strategy that might help him counter criticism from Republican hopeful Mitt Romney, who has accused Obama of being willing to only "whisper" to Beijing about U.S. trade concerns.

'KEY GOALS'

Obama was clearly at ease in Asia, especially in Bali where he marveled at the island's development in the years since he was there writing his book "Dreams From My Father."

He greeted leaders at a Friday dinner with "Selamat Malam," drawing from the Bahasa Indonesia he learned as a boy in Jakarta, and was welcomed at a fundraising event in Honolulu as "Keiki o ka 'aina" - child of the land.

As he left Bali on Saturday to return to a still-divided Washington, White House officials seemed confident the messages from his Asia tour would resonate well at home.

"From our perspective, we've been able to positively advance each of the key goals that we had for the course of this trip. And I think that's been in the U.S. interest," said Tom Donilon, Obama's top national security adviser.

In addition to the trade accord, Obama also unveiled a new military partnership with Asia and seized on a diplomatic opening with Myanmar by announcing that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton would soon visit the reclusive country.

Casting himself as a strong leader is fundamental to Obama's hopes for re-election a year from now.

His leadership on China is a particularly potent political issue. Obama acknowledged in a meeting in Honolulu with Chinese President Hu Jintao that Americans are increasingly frustrated with what they see as an unfair approach by Beijing on currency and trade policy.

Romney has accused Obama of soft-pedaling the U.S. concerns about trade with China.

"Who can blame the Chinese for ignoring our complaints when the status quo has served them so well?" Romney asked in an opinion piece in the Politico newspaper.

As if on cue, Obama, who was criticized for taking an overly accommodating approach in a 2009 trip to Beijing, called the U.S.-Chinese relationship "off-kilter" and suggested China was now too "grown up" to flout international trade rules.

Beijing seemed to find the shift jarring and it was unclear whether Obama managed to ease the tensions in conversations he had near the end of the trip with Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao.

BUDGET BATTLES

When Obama returns to the White House, one of his first orders of business will be to get up to speed on the struggles of the congressional "super committee."

The panel of Democratic and Republican lawmakers is trying to craft a deal to cut the U.S. budget deficit by $1.2 trillion with a deadline looming on Wednesday, the day before the Thanksgiving holiday.

Few in Washington are hopeful the committee can break its impasse and a failure would be a blow to both Obama's Democrats and opposition Republicans.

In Hawaii, he even hinted that the budget battles and his push for to pass initiatives on jobs could disrupt his plans to return to Hawaii for a family vacation in December.

He also referred jokingly to the stalemate during his visit to Canberra, Australia's capital, where he said he was eager to introduce "ear-bashing" -- an Australian expression for lecturing somebody -- to Washington's vernacular.

Some have questioned whether the U.S. fiscal strains could limit America's ability to serve as a counterweight to China, especially if the congressional "super committee" fails to reach a deal and defense budgets suffer blunt cuts.

But with Europe mired in debt crisis, both Democrats and Republicans are clearly focused on Asia as a key economic partner for the United States. Foreign policy experts say that is unlikely to change no matter who wins the 2012 election.

"It is a safe bet that Obama and his successors - despite powerful fiscal and political constraints at home - will be able to follow through on plans to bulk up America's presence," said Charles Kupchan, a Georgetown University professor.

(Additional reporting by Samson Reiny, Editing by Jonathan Thatcher)

(This story corrects the title of Obama's book to "Dreams From My Father" from "Dreams Of My Father" in the 7th paragraph)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111119/pl_nm/us_obama_asia

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Monday, November 21, 2011

Seattle Mariners outfielder Greg Halman killed

This is a 2010 photo of Greg Halman of the Seattle Mariners baseball team. Dutch police said Monday Nov. 21, 2011 that Halman has been stabbed to death> (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

This is a 2010 photo of Greg Halman of the Seattle Mariners baseball team. Dutch police said Monday Nov. 21, 2011 that Halman has been stabbed to death> (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

FILE -This is a Tuesday, July 19, 2011 file photo of Seattle Mariners' Greg Halman as he ia congratulated after his three-run home run against the Toronto Blue Jays during the second inning of a baseball game in Toronto . Dutch police say Seattle Mariners outfielder Greg Halman has been stabbed to death and his brother has been arrested as a suspect. Rotterdam Police spokeswoman Patricia Wessels says police were called to a home in the Dutch port city early Monday Nov. 21. 2011 and found Halman bleeding from a stab wound. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Frank Gunn, File)

FILE - This is a Sunday, June 5, 2011 file photo of Seattle Mariners' Greg Halman as he triples in a pair of runs against the Tampa Bay Rays in the seventh inning of a baseball game in Seattle. Dutch police say Seattle Mariners outfielder Greg Halman has been stabbed to death and his brother has been arrested as a suspect. Rotterdam Police spokeswoman Patricia Wessels says police were called to a home in the Dutch port city early Monday Nov. 21. 2011 and found Halman bleeding from a stab wound.(AP Photo/Elaine Thompson, File)

THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) ? Seattle Mariners outfielder Greg Halman was stabbed to death early Monday and his brother was arrested as a suspect, Dutch police said.

Rotterdam Police spokeswoman Patricia Wessels said police were called to a home in the port city in the early hours of the morning and found the 24-year-old Dutch player bleeding from a stab wound.

The officers and ambulance paramedics were unable to resuscitate Halman.

Wessels said the officers arrested Halman's 22-year-old brother. She declined to give his name, in line with Dutch privacy rules.

"He is under arrest and right now he is being questioned," Wessels told The Associated Press in a telephone interview. "It will take some time to figure out what exactly happened."

No charges have been filed in the case.

Halman hit .230 in 35 games and made starts at all three outfield positions for the Mariners in 2011 before being optioned to Triple-A Tacoma.

Because he played professionally in the United States, Halman was not part of the Netherlands team that won the Baseball World Cup in Panama last month. The Dutch beat Cuba 2-1 in the final to become the first European team to win the title.

Born in the city of Haarlem, Halman played in the Dutch Pro League and was part of the gold-medal winning Dutch squad at the 2007 European Championship.

Former major leaguer Robert Eenhorn, the technical director of the Dutch baseball association, said he was devastated by the news.

"The only thing I can say right now is we are deeply shocked," Eenhorn, who played for the New York Yankees and Anaheim Angels in the 1990s, told the AP. "All our thoughts are with his family and how they are going to have to deal with this tremendous loss."

Halman was in Europe this month as part of the European Big League Tour, an initiative organized by Baltimore Orioles pitcher Rick Van den Hurk in which major leaguers gave clinics to children. Van den Hurk is also Dutch.

"It's really sad and it's really terrible the way it happened," International Baseball Federation President Riccardo Fraccari said. "We mourn for him and respect his family's sorrow."

Massimo Fochi, the vice president of the Italian baseball federation, said he met Halman less than two weeks ago at a European Big League Tour event in Parma.

"He was a great guy and the most appreciated by the kids," Fochi said. "His passing away is really painful."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-11-21-BBA-Mariners-Halman-Killed/id-70eba99daf5b473cbad2be99da9f7ede

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Herschel may have changed how Turner painted the sun

Kat Austen, CultureLab editor

SAG-118576.jpg(Image: The Festival of the Opening of the Vintage, Macon (oil on canvas), Turner, Joseph Mallord William (1775-1851) / Sheffield Galleries and Museums Trust, UK / Photo ? Museums Sheffield / The Bridgeman Art Library)

Here at CultureLab we are always interested to hear about cross-pollination between arts and sciences. So, we were intrigued to hear about new research linking astronomer William Herschel?s 1801 Royal Society lectures on imperfections on the sun?s surface to the way our star is portrayed in the paintings of esteemed 19th century English artist J.M.W. Turner.

In a new essay entitled "Earth?s Humid Bubbles" published in the book Turner and the Elements (which accompanies a forthcoming exhibition of the same name), Turner biographer James Hamilton implies something even more intriguing.

In Turner?s day, the Royal Society scientific institution and Royal Academy arts body were both located in Somerset House, London. Turner was a member of the Royal Academy when Herschel gave his lectures and Hamilton argues that exposure to Herschel?s ideas culminated in his painting the sun as a real object, instead of just a hazy source of light. He identifies Turner?s 1803 painting The Festival upon the Opening of the Vintage of M?con as the first in which he depicts the sun this way, interpreting it as ?purposefully and intentionally painted in three different textures to give the sun physical reality within the painting?. This, he argues, is a reflection of Herschel?s consideration of the sun as ?an object, with physical features?.

Hamilton points out that there were thin walls between the rooms of the Royal Society and Royal Academy, through which, by all accounts, you could hear arguments and applause. He places Turner and Herschel on opposite sides at similar times in April 1801. The inference is that Turner could have overheard Herschel?s lectures - an appealing idea that was jumped on by the BBC.

But Hamilton provides no solid evidence for this implication. He even states emphatically that there is nothing to say that Turner ever attended any Royal Society lectures. When pushed on the suggestion that Turner overheard the lectures, he explained that his phraseology regarding the thin adjoining walls in Somerset House had been ?poetic?.

It is incredibly hard to pin down influences on the creative process, and a direct, causal link between Herschel?s lectures and Turner?s painting technique is lacking. Turner was regularly at the intellectual hotbed that was Somerset House in the early 1800s, though, and Hamilton argues that ?the burden of proof has moved,? regarding the way scientists and artists may have exchanged ideas there. ?It is for people to say that, no, they couldn?t have mixed?, he says.

But if we put aside the niceties of how Turner might have heard about Herschel?s work, Hamilton?s essay - tenuous implications aside - contains an intriguing broader hypothesis: that Turner changed the way in which he painted the sun in response to changes in scientific understanding.

Herschel?s work undoubtedly altered the way people conceived of the sun. According to Debbie James, curator of the Herschel Museum of Astronomy in Bath, UK, ?Before Herschel, people hadn?t realised that the sun was the core of the solar system.? When it came to convincing people that the sun is a physical object, she adds, ?I think Herschel made a huge amount of progress.? As the ripples of Herschel?s experimental observations spread out through society, it is likely that they would have reached Turner one way or another, especially given the artist?s interest in nature.

If there was a change in Turner?s depiction of the sun, there are some correlations (not causations, mind you) in Turner?s painting that do hint at a link. The first is the timing of The Festival upon the Opening of the Vintage of M?con, coming two years after Herschel?s lectures. This was long enough for the ideas to percolate, even indirectly, through to Turner, who had also been away from his studio in the interim on a trip around Europe. The second is that, prior to M?con, Turner had depicted the moon as a physical entity, but had not done the same for the sun.

The influence of Herschel?s discoveries on the arts is well known, says James. ?From 1781 onwards he suddenly raised awareness about the solar system and the way the planets revolved around the sun. All of the major painters of the day took this up - they all start mentioning Herschel?s work in various ways.? So, did he change the way Turner painted the sun? Possibly.

The exhibition, Turner and the Elements, opens at the Turner Contemporary gallery in Margate, England on 28 January.

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Source: http://feeds.newscientist.com/c/749/f/10897/s/1a46f594/l/0L0Snewscientist0N0Cblogs0Cculturelab0C20A110C110Cdid0Eherschel0Echange0Ehow0Eturner0Epainted0Ethe0Esun0Bhtml0DDCMP0FOTC0Erss0Gnsref0Fonline0Enews/story01.htm

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The science of money ? how you can help

The mosquitoes are so thick John Gust can feel them hitting his arm as he sweeps a branch out of his way. After an hour-long boat ride through the Yucatan, he's hacking his way through the jungle surrounding an old rum distillery. It's hot, muggy and pouring rain, but Gust is on a mission to solve the murder of the distillery's last owner, Robert Stephens, who died in 1875.

Who put Gust, a doctoral student at University of California, Riverside, through this nightmarish trip? You did. His research trip to the Yucatan depends on funding gathered through the SciFund Challenge, a type of crowd-sourced funding where your money decides what science gets done.

The SciFund Challenge, which is being run by the online crowd-funding platform, RocketHub, opened Nov. 1 and runs through Dec. 15; those interested in donating can choose between 49 projects ranging from exploding duck penises and zombie fish to math models of political rallies and yeast-based cancer research.

"This is the first time that I know of in human history that science can be powered directly by the people," RocketHub founder Brian Meece told LiveScience. "Here's the chance for the common man or woman to make something happen."

  1. More science news from MSNBC Tech & Science

    1. Guide us to the top Science Geek Gifts

      Science editor Alan Boyle's Weblog: Send in your suggestions for the 10th annual Science Geek Gift contest ... you might just win a geeky prize.

    2. New bee or not new bee? 11 species added
    3. What? Yeti nests found?! Not so fast...
    4. Ant-like robots poised to invade the marketplace

And while the researchers involved hope to get their projects funded, they are just as interested in connecting the public with science.

"I see part of my responsibility studying elephants as a conservation effort and to communicate the science that I do," Shermin de Silva, director of the Uda Walawe Elephant Research Project, told LiveScience. "Scientists are typically not really rewarded for doing this ? scientists are rewarded when they publish a paper."

Kristina Killgrove, who is trying to get her project on the DNA of Roman slaves funded, agreed: "It works to get the public involved. It's important for us as scientists to not just sit in our ivory towers and not just make science for other scientists, but also to bring our science to the public. "

Science projects
SciFund donations fund small projects of all kinds. For example, Patricia Brennan and her colleague Diane Kelly, both researchers at the University of Massachusetts, are interested in studying the duck penis, which inflates incredibly quickly when inserted into a female. Brennan and Kelly want to design equipment to test how much force the exploding penis exerts and also to figure out how female ducks avoid injury from the explosive penis.

"People really like it, they find it interesting because it has to do with sex and with violence, which hits at people's interests and imagination," Brennan told LiveScience. "This is the perfect thing to get people to say, 'I want to know more about this story.'"

Other projects could provide the baseline research needed to apply for larger grants. Zen Faulkes wants to go collect a crayfish that's the closest relative of a mysterious all-female crayfish species. With the data gleaned from setting up a colony and studying the two species, Faulkes can apply for a National Science Foundation grant.

"They aren't that far from me, they live in Florida and I'm in southern Texas," Faulkes, a researcher at The University of Texas-Pan American, told LiveScience. "It's just long and complicated enough that it's not free, it's not zero dollars. But it's just a little bit of time and a little bit of money to go collect some of those animals from the wild."

In comes crowdfunding
Even a little bit of money is hard to find these days, although the public is aware of government funding cuts. Most scientists rely on government funding to pay for their labs, equipment, training, expeditions and personnel. Sixty-five million dollars (about 1 percent) was cut from the National Science Foundation budget between 2010 and 2011; $260 million (0.08 percent) was cut from the National Institutes of Health, according to their websites.

Things look better for the 2012 budget, but previous cuts mean more competition for the remaining money, researchers say. With small preliminary projects funded by a SciFund type program, researchers can strengthen their case for limited government funds.

"In science we have the equivalent of the World Bank, giant-sized funding, but where's the microfinance?" Faulkes asked "How can we support a project that's two-thousand bucks?"

How it works
Crowdfunding, or raising money from small donations made by a large number of people, has successfully made its mark in several different areas: New artists can rally their fan base to produce an album or to rent gallery space. Websites such as Kiva.org crowdfunds microloans to buy a family a goat or build a village a well.

Why would it work in science? Meece believes it's all about the stories scientists are telling: "I think that a lot of the drivers that are driving these science projects for SciFund are the same as for any project. Real people making real things happen with a lot of passion," he told LiveScience. "That passion can be very contagious. The stories are very compelling."

To convince the masses that their project is worth pursuing, the researchers make their case using video, text, blog posts and "rewards" for donations. Some of the rewards include things like a snake skin ($50 donation to The Yin Yang World of Venom project) or the right to name a lion cub ($1,000 contribution to the Serengeti Live project).

Making a successful project
Only a few of the 49 SciFund projects have been successfully funded so far. These include a zombie fish project and a project studying the genes of ancient Roman slaves. What makes for a successful project? Communicating with one's social network helps.

"There was a large group of people that I could connect with, that I know they are already interested in science," Kelly Weinersmith, a graduate student at the University of California, Davis, and lead researcher studying parasites that turn fish into zombies, told LiveScience. "The general public is actually very excited about the science that's going on, but at the moment a lot of scientists don't communicate with them."

Many of the SciFund researchers are also striving to make a personal connection with their audience.

"What all of these crowdfunding campaigns have in common is that to successfully fund your project you need to make a connection with them (the funders)," Jarrett Byrnes, SciFund organizer and researcher at the University of California at Santa Barbara, told LiveScience. "That's what will lead to successful funding of these projects."

John in the jungle
The researchers hope the funding will help fill in the end of their science stories. Gust may never discover just why Robert Stephens was killed in his rum distillery in 1845, but his trip to the mosquito-ridden Yucatan will still lead to a better understanding of the historical and even the current state of the citizens of the Yucatan, if public funders get excited about his project.

"We may never really be able to solve the reason for this guy's murder, but you can look at the material evidence of how his workers lived and compare that to conditions elsewhere, and get some idea of what people were living in," Gust said. "He was either a really nice guy who treated his crew very well or a really terrible guy who didn't."

Plans for future rounds of SciFunding haven't been announced, but based on the public and the researchers' excitement, it's very possible Byrnes said. "We've just started this and really interested in finding out where this goes," he said. "People seem to be really excited about it."

In the future, SciFunding may look for non-profit routes, as RocketHub is a for-profit venture that collects 4 percent of the funds donated (if you reach your funding goal, 8 percent if you don't) and the credit card companies get a cut too, typically about 4 percent.

Either way, introduction of a new funding model could be something really important for the future of science funding. "If this is successful I can totally dream up a gazillion other things to do that would be totally doable," Brennan (the duck penis researcher) said. "It can really be transformative in many ways in how science is happening."

You can follow LiveScience staff writer Jennifer Welsh on Twitter @ microbelover. Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescience and on Facebook.

? 2011 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45362324/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Sunday, November 20, 2011

Enlace owner San Diego Union Tribune sold to Doug Manchester

The San Diego Union Tribune, the publisher of Spanish-language weekly Enlace and recently launched magazine Vida Latina, has been sold by Platinum Equity to local hotel owner and developer Doug Manchester.

In an interview with Voice of San Diego Manchester said he paid "above" $110 million for the newspaper. "The asking price was a lot higher than that," he said. Platinum Equity had bought the San Diego Union Tribune from the Copley family in 2009 for approximately $50 million.

Editorial Staff
Portada

Source: http://www.portada-online.com/article.aspx?aid=8837

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Online reviews site Yelp to go public (AP)

NEW YORK ? Popular online reviews site Yelp is going public, the latest in a slew of Internet businesses to do so.

Yelp Inc. said in a regulatory filing Thursday that it plans to raise $100 million in an initial public offering. The amount of money Yelp is seeking in its IPO will likely change as its bankers determine how many shares should be sold and at what price. That process typically takes three to four months.

San Francisco-based Yelp, a website best known for reviews of restaurants, bars and other local merchants, generated $58.4 million in net revenue in the first nine months of this year. It booked a net loss of $7.6 million in the same period. The company makes the bulk of its money from advertising.

Yelp filed its initial IPO papers the same day that another reviews site, Angie's List Inc., began trading its stock. Unlike Yelp, Angie's List charges a monthly fee for access to its reviews of local services such as dentists, veterinarians, roofers and plumbers. Yelp, meanwhile, is free.

And Groupon Inc., the online deals site, filed for its IPO earlier this month. The offerings have been successful, but it'll take some time ? and earnings reports ? to see how well the companies can do over the long term.

Yelp's underwriters include Goldman Sachs, Citigroup and others.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/internet/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111117/ap_on_hi_te/us_tec_yelp_ipo

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Saturday, November 19, 2011

The Best Virtual Pets : 31Night.com, A World of Entertainment

Posted by RauhuffStmichel792 | November - 17 - 2011 | Comments Off

May be during the past ten year since the new innovation of toys had been created, virtual pets.

What is virtual pet?

Then I would like you to imagine when you are having real pet, like dogs or cats that you have to tak cre of them, feed them and may be take them to sleep or take them to everywhere with you. Virtual pets are the same thing!!! Virtual pets has become very much popular among people long time ago and they have been rapidly developed in terms of technology that try to make them similar to the real pets but much more easier to look after. Particularly for children that would like to have a pet but parents seem not to agree to let them have the real pet due to some reasons. Therefore let the children enjoy with the virtual pets may be the better option. However, it is necessary to know more about this type of toys. Even though it has been introduced for a long time but still in the process of building awareness to the people. For parents who are considering to buy new one for their children may have to be enter to the world of virtual pet to ensure that they have enough information before making any decision.

Welcome to the place where make-believe is reality, at least, virtually! The Virtual pets world is a very unique place. Do you know why? This is because its members are furry, some have long tails, and others have snouts and whiskers and some have green skin! This is a jungle online with the best collection of animal dolls. These are waiting to be adopted by your child! So let us tell you more about our virtual pets right away! Virtual pets is a part of the Ganz group that deals with stuffed toys. Virtual pets is a new effort to bring back the magical world of pretend playmates for kids. If you are worrying that you can neither spend more time with your child nor get real pets for her to play with, this is the perfect solution. All you need is an Internet connection and you are all set to have a cool online pet for your little one. Each pet you see comes with a special secret code. One you decide to buy the pet, you can load your pet onto the web by using this code. Your child can freely choose any fancy name for her pet and even decide if it is going to be her or him!

The Kinzcash can be used to purchase the necessities for your kid?s pets. The kid now can select a smart home for the animal and feed it and take care of it for a whole year. This responsibility is an educational experience for the child. Virtual pets has a nice range of accessories as well. Pet parties can be arranged and your kid can even chat with the pet! There are exciting games as well. If your kid is a computer buff, then having an online pet will be a great idea.

If you want supplementary information about free classified ads there is plenty of points not covered in this post, take a look at Author?s site to locate more.

Source: http://www.31night.com/2011/11/the-best-virtual-pets/

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PFT: Reid irritated by questions about Vick's injury

Buffalo Bills v Miami DolphinsGetty Images

As Rosenthal continues to pull away in this 17-week race (he added two more games to his lead), I?m possibly getting close to waving the white flag.

But I don?t plan to be a good loser.

So I?ll keep the hanky in my pocket for now, especially since we disagree on two games this week, giving me a chance to make back the ground I lost last Sunday.

Last week, Rosenthal was 11-5, and I was 9-7.

For the season, he?s 99-47.? I?m 88-58.? And, yes, he has an 11-game lead.

And I now officially hate him.

Jets at Broncos

Florio?s take:? The Jets have the ideal defense to shut down the T-bone offense.? Whether the Jets are able to get ready on a short week after a deflating loss to the Pats will go a long way toward determining whether the Jets will be able to execute what should be an effective game plan.? Doubting the Broncos seems to fuel them, but if a run-heavy offense were truly the key to success in the modern NFL someone would have done it successfully long before 2011.

Florio?s pick:? Jets 24, Broncos 10.

Rosenthal?s take: Tim Tebow gets the attention, but this Broncos season turned around when Elvis Dumervil started applying pass pressure along with Von Miller.? (Miller should make the Pro Bowl and win defensive rookie of the year.)? They probably won?t get a chance to pass rush much Thursday.? The Jets will happily run all game because Rex Ryan knows Denver?s offense is limited.

Rosenthal?s pick: Jets 20, Broncos 13.

Bengals at Ravens

Florio?s take:? If the Bengals were 3-6, they?d have a good chance to beat the Ravens, since the Ravens overlook the bad teams.? Since the Bengals are 6-3, the Ravens will be ready to roll into a tie with the Steelers atop the AFC North.

Florio?s pick:? Ravens 21, Bengals 16.

Rosenthal?s take: Andy Dalton impressed me more in the loss to Pittsburgh than most of his wins. He made a number of ?NFL? throws and mostly made good decisions against the blitz. Dalton will have to be even better against the Ravens, because Cincinnati?s secondary is ready to spring a leak without Leon Hall.

Rosenthal?s pick: Ravens 27, Bengals 21.

Jaguars at Browns

Florio?s take:? For the second straight week, the Browns host a game and there?s a good chance no one beyond Cleveland and the hometown of the visiting team will notice.? This one has tie written all over it.? But since tie isn?t an option, I?ll give it to the Browns by a field goal in overtime.? Assuming the snapper can snap, the holder can hold, and the kicker can kick on the shop floor in that factory of sadness.

Florio?s pick:? Browns 13, Jaguars 10.

Rosenthal?s take: Tough choice. The immovable offense (Cleveland) goes up against the irresistible urge to always pick against Blaine Gabbert on the road.? These are similarly dreary teams, lucky to be 3-6. Jacksonville has the better running game and defense to overcome their struggling young quarterback.

Rosenthal?s pick: Jaguars 17, Browns 10.

Panthers at Lions

Florio?s take:? Detroit has the perfect chance to right the ship after an embarrassing loss in Chicago.? But if Ndamukong Suh tries to rip off Cam Newton?s helmet, there?s a good chance that Newton will rip off Suh?s helmet in response.? For that reason alone, this one is worth watching.

Florio?s pick:? Lions 35, Panthers 27.

Rosenthal?s take: I?m not sure how the Titans stifled Carolina?s running game, but I don?t expect the trend to continue. Detroit has just the overaggressive, soft-against-the-run defense that Cam Newton and company can exploit. Unfortunately, nearly any team can exploit the Panthers defense.

Rosenthal?s pick: Lions 34, Panthers 31.

Buccaneers at Packers

Florio?s take:? The Bucs have played twice against 3-4 defenses in 2011.? And they?ve been outscored 85-12 by the 49ers and the Texans.? The Packers use a 3-4 defense.? Uh-oh.

Florio?s pick:? Packers 42, Buccaneers 10.

Rosenthal?s take: It?s a bad sign when Albert Haynesworth is trying to rally the troops. The Bucs are a sneakily terrible team because there isn?t one thing they do particularly well. The Packers do one thing better than any squad since the ?07 Patriots: throw the ball. That?s more than enough against an imploding Bucs defense.

Rosenthal?s pick: Packers 38, Bucs 14.

Bills at Dolphins

Florio?s take:? With their first home victory since December 2009, could Miami win a second straight game at Sun Life Stadium?? A few weeks ago, beating the Bills would have been unthinkable.? Now that the Bills are bumbling a bit, the Fins could have a chance.? If the Bills can?t right the ship after getting blown out by the Cowboys, the Bills will have no chance to get to the postseason.

Florio?s pick:? Bills 28, Dolphins 24.

Rosenthal?s take: This is a massive game for the Bills, who can?t afford to lose in Miami after consecutive blowout defeats to the Ryan brothers. Buffalo gets the Dolphins at the wrong time. Matt Moore has settled down. The offensive line is playing much better. Brandon Marshall has gone beast mode, and Karlos Dansby has played himself into shape. Andrew Luck is far in the rearview mirror now.

Rosenthal?s pick: Dolphins 23, Bills 20.

Raiders at Vikings

Florio?s take:? In a rematch of Super Bowl XI, it feels like the team that hasn?t been back in 35 years will need at least another 35 years before it will return.? With Carson Palmer getting comfortable and Antoine Winfield done and the Vikings close to giving up, this one could get ugly.

Florio?s pick:? Raiders 35, Vikings 21.

Rosenthal?s take: Don?t be surprised if the Raiders have a two-game division lead after this week. The Vikings don?t have the passing attack to take advantage of Oakland?s biggest weakness ? the secondary. Carson Palmer has the arm strength and weapons to score on the league?s 31st-ranked defense in points allowed.

Rosenthal?s pick: Raiders 30, Vikings 24.

Cowboys at Redskins

Florio?s take:? Even though the Cowboys are making a move to the top of the division and the Redskins are sliding into irrelevance, the records get thrown out the window whenever these two get together.? Except this time.? The Redskins are falling apart, and no amount of hatred of the Cowboys should make a difference.

Florio?s pick:? Cowboys 28, Redskins 14.

Rosenthal?s take: Everything is looking up in Dallas. DeMarco Murray completes an offense that has started connecting on vertical passes again. The Cowboys defense has consistently been good all year, Eagles loss aside. This is usually a game the Cowboys blow, but these dreadful Redskins are beyond redemption. I?d stake my reputation on it.

Rosenthal?s pick: Cowboys 27, Redskins 17.

Cardinals at 49ers

Florio?s take:? For any other team, like the one coached by Jim Harbaugh?s brother, this would be a trap game.? For the 49ers, the team walking into the trap is the Cardinals.

Florio?s pick:? 49ers 24, Cardinals 13.

Rosenthal?s take: Let?s not get carried away with John Skelton hype; the Cardinals are winning because their defense woke up. Skelton had a ton of mistakes and missed throws against Philly. Arizona?s defense gave Skelton 15 drives to work with. Two of Skelton?s biggest plays came after balls tipped by Eagles defenders.? The luck runs out in San Francisco.

Rosenthal?s pick: 49ers 20, Cardinals 11.

Seahawks at Rams

Florio?s take:? Last year?s top two teams from the NFC West get together for the first time since last year?s Week 17 elimination game for a game that is largely meaningless.? OK, it?s completely meaningless.? Except for Rams coach Steve Spagnuolo, who needs more wins in order to have a shot a returning next year.

Florio?s pick:? Rams 20, Seahawks 17.

Rosenthal?s take: The nicest thing I can say about this game: I?d rather watch it than Jaguars-Browns. If you miss it, don?t worry. ESPN has the huge rematch on Monday night in three weeks.

Rosenthal?s pick: Rams 16, Seahawks 14.

Titans at Falcons

Florio?s take:? Last week, the Titans played on the road against an NFC South team.? This week?s NFC South team is slightly better.? And slightly more desperate.

Florio?s pick:? Falcons 31, Titans 20.

Rosenthal?s take: Tennessee is the worst 5-4 team in the league. I mean that as a compliment to coach Mike Munchak. The offense lacks playmakers. Cortland Finnegan is the only defensive player headed to the Pro Bowl. The schedule gets tougher from here and the Titans don?t have enough firepower to beat good teams on the road.

Rosenthal?s pick: Falcons 24, Titans 16.

Chargers at Bears

Florio?s take:? The Bears are peaking at the right time.? The Chargers are bottoming out at the wrong time.? Regardless of whether the Chargers kick to Devin Hester, they?ll likely be heading home with the Bears? collective boot in their behind.

Florio?s pick:? Bears 34, Chargers 20.

Rosenthal?s take: It?s taken two months for everyone to realize the Chargers just aren?t very good. In nine weeks, they don?t have one truly impressive game. The defense has fallen apart faster than Florio?s PFT Picks record.? [Editor's note:? We will soon be hiring a new writer.]? It?s also taken people a while to realize the Bears are legit.? Their offensive line injuries won?t matter against San Diego?s poor pass rush.

Rosenthal?s pick: Bears 30, Chargers 20.

Eagles at Giants

Florio?s take:? The playoffs start for the Eagles on Sunday night.? And the playoffs end for the Eagles on Sunday night.

Florio?s pick:? Giants 28, Eagles 17.

Rosenthal?s take: This game looked a lot better two weeks ago. You could make the argument the Eagles are still alive because a win here puts them two games back in the NFC East. That argument assumes the Eagles can beat teams like Arizona, much less the Patriots who arrive in Philly next week. The Giants will put a nail in Philly?s coffin before the Patriots get there.

Rosenthal?s pick: Giants 28, Eagles 20.

Chiefs at Patriots

Florio?s take:? Scott Pioli makes his return to New England.? Both he and the Patriots would likely be better off if he stays.

Florio?s pick:? Patriots 38, Chiefs 13.

Rosenthal?s take: This game also looked a lot better two weeks ago. The Chiefs were on top of the AFC West. Now they are the team that scored scored 13 combined points at home against Miami and Denver, then lost their starting quarterback.? A UFL team wouldn?t have cut Tyler Palko if he were still better than Joe Flacco.

Rosenthal?s pick: Patriots 31, Chiefs 14.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/11/16/reid-gets-irritated-with-questions-about-when-vick-broke-his-ribs/related/

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