Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Mirror of Justice: Walter Russell Mead on Nature and Nature's God

? Physician-Assisted Suicide in Massachusetts | Main | Gedicks on religious freedom and the HHS mandate ?

October 30, 2012

Walter Russell Mead on Nature and Nature's God

As those of us in the East clean up from Hurricane Sandy and try to bring things back to normal, Walter Russell Mead reflects in a lovely essay here on the fragility of life before nature's power. A short excerpt:

Strangely, that admission of weakness opens the door to a new kind of strength. To acknowledge and accept weakness is to ground our lives more firmly in truth, and it turns out that to be grounded in reality is to become more able and more alive. Denial is hard work; those who try to stifle their awareness of the limits of human life and ambition in the busy rounds of daily life never reach their full potential.

To open your eyes to the fragility of life and to our dependence on that which is infinitely greater than ourselves is to enter more deeply into life. To come to terms with the radical insecurity in which we all live is to find a different and more reliable kind of security. The joys and occupations of ordinary life aren?t all there is to existence, but neither are the great and all-destroying storms. There is a calm beyond the storm, and the same force that sends these storms into our lives offers a peace and security that no storm can destroy. As another one of the psalms puts it, ?Weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning.? Accepting your limits and your dependence on things you can?t control is the first step on the road toward finding that joy.

Posted by Michael Moreland on October 30, 2012 at 11:04 AM in Moreland, Michael | Permalink

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Saturday, October 27, 2012

AJAC 'best of' list the only one that counts - Norris McDonald's Auto ...

Although this is primarily an auto racing blog, there are occasions when I, as editor of Toronto Star Wheels and Wheels.ca, will discuss policy. This is one of those times. NM

Every time a freelance journalist drives a car for review in Toronto Star Wheels, we acknowledge that the vehicle was provided by the manufacturer.

When one of our journalists goes to Europe or the United States for an unveiling or to attend a car show, we state at the end of the article that the manufacturer paid for the trip.

We are transparent about this, almost to a fault.

More: Behind the wheel of the best ? this year?s TestFest winners

The policy was initiated by the late Dennis Morgan, the founder of Wheels, to deflect suggestions of conflicts-of-interest. ?We could not do what we do without the assistance of the auto manufacturers,? Morgan said.

?We have to tell our readers.?

In fact, with the exception of Consumer Reports magazine, most media ? newspapers, automotive websites, magazines ? are dependent on the manufacturers, although many won?t admit it.

Only recently did one of Canada?s national newspapers ? the original one ? start to publish a paragraph acknowledging this reality. Rarely do you find this admission anywhere else.

The reason, of course, is that none of us (except for the previously mentioned Consumer Reports) can afford to buy the cars, motorcycles or light trucks in order to review them. We have to partner with the automakers in order to do our job.

There are those who will say that this arrangement automatically compromises the reviews we publish, which is true to a point: if Wheels writers trashed just about every vehicle they tested, I think it?s fair to say we wouldn?t have as much cooperation from the automakers as we do.

But automakers are like classical musicians: they want to be reviewed and they are not averse to criticism. And Wheels writers never pull their punches. If there?s something wrong with a vehicle, they will say so and the manufacturers appreciate it. But with the bad always comes good, and our correspondents include that in their reviews too.

I can say with pride that the men and women who write for us are the best in the business. Many of them were in Niagara-on-the-Lake this week participating in the annual Automobile Journalists Association of Canada TestFest, in which members drive and evaluate 2013-model-year cars on sale in Canada.

The best in 11 categories were chosen (see Page 13 of today?s Wheels section for the winners) and the 2013 Canadian Car of the Year and the Utility Vehicle of the Year selected. The last two winners won?t be announced until the Canadian International AutoShow in Toronto next February.

As is the case with individual journalists and publications, the cars entered in the TestFest were provided by the manufacturers. In fact, they paid $3,500 per car for the privilege of having the vehicle judged. The tests were conducted in a manner that encouraged fairness: journalists assigned to a category drove all the vehicles along the same route and under the same conditions and filled out a secret ballot. The scores on the ballots were then tabulated by Canadian accounting firm KPMG and they determined the winners.

Toronto Star Wheels is an AJAC-oriented publication. We like the way TestFest is organized as well as the methodology employed. It?s not foolproof, but it?s about as close as you can get to impartiality.

In recent years, other auto-writer groups have issued ?best of? lists and sometimes they were published in Wheels. That won?t happen any more, for several reasons.

First, the potential for confusion in the marketplace increases exponentially with the number of lists published.

Second, and most important, the AJAC results have more legitimacy than a discussion leading to consensus, usually done over dinner that is sometimes arranged by an automaker, which is the way some of those other organizations operate.

There is only one Canadian Car of the Year and one Utility Vehicle of the Year and they are selected by the Automobile Journalists Association of Canada.

Source: http://thestar.blogs.com/autoracing/2012/10/ajac-best-of-list-the-only-one-that-counts.html

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Mobile Ad Fat Finger Problem May Be Worse In Morning - GoldSpot ...

Facebook?s mobile ad business has grown so much, so quickly ? it was at zero six months ago, and last quarter it generated $153 million for Mark Zuckerberg ? that it immediately has people wondering how real it is.

More specifically: Are people clicking on Facebook?s phone ads because they want to? Or because they meant to click on something else?

This isn?t the first time that the mobile ad business has grappled with the ?fat finger? question ? the notion that the smaller a screen gets, the more likely accidental clicks become. And there?s probably some truth to it.

For instance:?GoldSpot, a mobile ad network, guesses that nearly four in 10 clicks on the conventional banner ads it serves on smartphones may be accidental.

But it thinks that number drops down to 13 percent for the ?rich media? ads it serves ? ads that dance, sing, do headstands, etc. ? because it?s much more obvious that its ads are ads. Not coincidentally, GoldSpot really pushes its rich media ads.

Just as interesting: GoldSpot figures that accidental clicks are much more likely to happen in the morning than during the middle of the day. And it thinks the likelihood of a mistake picks up again in the evening.

Two guesses here:

  • You?re more likely to make a mistake on your phone when you?re in motion, distracted, headed to/or from work/school, etc.
  • You?re probably using your phone less during daytime hours, anyway. Because you?re at work/school, etc.

Meanwhile, as we?re assessing the girth of your fingers, keep in mind that engagement rates for all sorts of digital advertising fall over time.

Because at first we?re likely to click on this stuff because we haven?t seen it before ? like the original banner ads in the mid-?90s ? and then we get used to it.

And then it won?t matter how big these things are, and how much they shimmy. Unless there?s something really compelling there, you?re going to learn to ignore it.

Source: http://allthingsd.com/20121025/your-fingers-are-fatter-in-the-morning/

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Friday, October 26, 2012

Online Reputation Management And Online Brand Protection ...

The building practically heaved with relief when I turned in my last invoice, and I set out to create a marketing agency that advertises what people (not consumers) really want to know. While you may be inclined to build your page into the subpages of a local tourism site, the best strategy is to create a website that is unique and designed for your restaurant alone. One more method that is used to manage reputations is social media. This will include authenticating the information posted, responding honestly. With this firms undertake a proactive, reactive management strategy that tracks down all forms of negative publicity and comments that damage the business at various levels.

Less thn one percent f search engine users venture past page three, meaning tht th negative content h been effectively buried t th- point. Search engines calculate th value f th links well th quantity f thm t determine how popular site r page -. Online reputation, or ORM, allows you to research and analyze a person?s reputation across all types of online media. This would surely damage the reputation of the company. Every company whether it is large or small go through the both positive and negative approach.

Have you come across any search engine reputation management company on the internet? The users of an organisation tend to agree on one CRM application as by nature we feel most comfortable with what we already know. All the negative promotional items available in the internet can be never removed or deleted. Online Reputation services can also access the position of your opponent?s product or their service and it can also create many key phrases which are used to locate your various kinds of product and services online. ORM is never successful with ?one size fits all? approach.

To attain success in building online reputation it is important that you attend to your clients, prospects questions judiciously and intelligently. Reputation is something that?s difficult to generate and takes many years of constant support and client orientation. However, it should be pointed out that there are only few such websites that publish authentic reviews from clients. This has been termed by the people at Microsoft as xRM ? (x) anything Relationship Management. There are some common methods which help to sustain the customer?s repute like article marketing, Blog Creation, Brand Name Monitoring, Social media set up, Mention Monitoring, article creation and many more.

These tools may be free and simple in terms of mechanism but they are truly effective. Those who are involved with SEO services are aware of this setback. Most businesses, who have fallen into trouble have a tough time in solving issues. Submitting articles that effectively sell your products and services to reputed websites, like Ezine, Article Alley and Build My Rank, can help you reach your target audience much faster and this ensures an effective and solid online reputation management. From the way people buy Christmas gifts to how business pay bills, the Internet has brought a number of radical alterations.

The proactive campaign is a preemptive strike put into place long before any complaints or bad reviews are created. This isn?t always easy, and every once in a while someone may say too much, but if there?s nothing being hidden you won?t have to worry about a 20/20 expos. In this way, the micro-site can get 1st page key phrase position using the promotions comparatively simply than your web site. If you?re a consumer, you should always pay attention to your credit score, and if you?re a company or corporation you should always keep an eye on what people are saying about you. Most reputation management services work by tracking what?s written about a client on the Web, and then responding by doing SEO (search engine optimization) which promotes positive pages.

Come up with mechanism that will send you alerts, notifications, and feeds every single time that your name, services, brand, company, domain, and employees are mentioned. The procedure is managed and implemented by monitoring the brand, reacting to negative feedback and manage the situation. A note on SaaS versus In-House deployment . Opinions of consumers and brand subscribers vary according to the products/services. Apart from this, there are clients of your competitor brands, who play a key role in constantly pulling down your firm?s status quo.

Getting such news removed is near impossible, but flooding the Web with positive news is far easier and the information can be easily manipulated to produce nothing but rosy stories on Google or Yahoo. Before paying for the SEO reputation management service you must cross check the market rate for these companies. However, situations arise when it is just impossible to maintain balance and one has to choose one out of the two types of reputation. Consumers love to gather information. Thus this measure is more linked to safeguarding the business reputation instead of regaining lost reputation.

They use SEO technique to write positive feedback and fill pages to get promote the sites. Better still you can set up a Google Alert as described in point 1.
Go Here

Source: http://cannabismrsacure.letstalkaboutpot.com/online-reputation-management-and-online-brand-protection-2/

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Romney backs Mourdock as Obama continues criticism

CINCINNATI (AP) ? Republican Mitt Romney is standing behind Indiana Senate hopeful Richard Mourdock as President Barack Obama's campaign keeps up criticism of Romney's ties to a candidate who said pregnancies that result from rape are "something God intended."

Romney's campaign has said he disagreed with Mourdock's remark, which came in a debate Tuesday with his opponent, Rep. Joe Donnelly. But Romney is standing by his endorsement of Mourdock ? and not asking the Indiana state treasurer to take down an ad Romney filmed Monday in support.

The remark thrust a contentious social issue back into the presidential race as Election Day draws near. Early voting has begun in many states, and Obama himself plans to vote Thursday in Chicago. It's an inopportune time for Republicans, who had been seeing gains in polls among female voters critical to a Romney victory. Democrats are eager to link Romney and other Republican candidates to Mourdock's remarks.

"Romney must withdraw his support of Mourdock? who'd force rape victims to bear an attacker's child as 'God intended,'" Obama's campaign wrote on the president's campaign Twitter account.

On "The Tonight Show" Wednesday, Obama criticized Mourdock for his comments, saying "rape is rape" and distinctions offered by the Republican candidate "don't make any sense to me."

Obama campaign aides see Romney's refusal to pull his support for Mourdock as an opportunity to cast the GOP nominee as extreme on women's health issues and expose what they say are Romney's attempts to moderate those views for political gain.

"Romney has campaigned as a severe conservative, supports severely conservative candidates, and would be a severely conservative president ? especially on issues important to women," Obama deputy campaign manager Stephanie Cutter wrote in a fundraising plea Wednesday evening. She called Mourdock's remarks "one of the most demeaning comments about women" from a politician.

The Republican nominee and his traveling staff spent Wednesday avoiding questions on the subject. Romney did not speak to reporters or address Mourdock's remarks during two public appearances. His aides sometimes speak to reporters traveling on Romney's campaign plane but did not appear Wednesday ? and were scarce at Romney's rallies. They ignored repeated emailed questions about Mourdock.

Less than two weeks before Election Day, opinion polls depict a close race nationally. Romney's campaign claims momentum as well as the lead in Florida and North Carolina, two battleground states with a combined 44 of the 270 electoral votes needed to win. Obama's aides insist the president is ahead of or tied with his rival in both those states and in the other seven decisive battlegrounds.

Obama was campaigning with all the signs that his presidency is on the line, crossing the country Wednesday with rallies in Iowa, Colorado and Nevada and appearing on the "The Tonight Show" in California. In the 17th hour of his day, he stood in a park on a cool, crisp night before thousands of supporters in Las Vegas. By then it was nearly 1 a.m. in Washington, where his day had begun, and Obama's voice still boomed.

"If you're not going to sleep, you might as well be in Vegas," Obama said before encouraging people to cast their votes early, as Nevada law allows. He met later with employees at the Bellagio hotel.

On Thursday, Obama was so not much starting his day as continuing his last one. After spending the night on Air Force One, he's campaigning in Tampa, Fla., Richmond, Va., and Cleveland before heading back to the White House.

In the midst of the 40-hour dash across six battleground states and eight states overall, he planned to do exactly what he is imploring millions of people to do for him: vote.

In his hometown of Chicago, Obama was scheduled to be the first president to vote early in person. By making a special trip just to cast his vote, Obama sought to build awareness about the early voting option, which is a vital part of both campaigns' political operations.

"I can't tell you who I'm voting for," Obama told a crowd of thousands gathered in chilly Denver on Wednesday. "It's a secret ballot." He noted that his wife, Michelle, had already voted by absentee ballot and she promised she went for him.

Taken together, the nonstop travels were the busiest single stretch of Obama's long and combative run for a second term.

He is selling a more specific second-term agenda these days and warning that Romney is untrustworthy, but increasingly, Obama's goal is to ensure his supporters get to the polls.

Romney was waking up in Cincinnati to kick off a daylong swing through three Ohio towns, sharpening his focus on a state that's critical to his hopes of winning the White House. The Republican's advisers say their internal data has him tied to win the state's 18 electoral college votes, but public polling has shown Obama with a slim lead.

Romney is working to cast Obama's campaign as focused on small issues while the Republican ticket is focused on fixing the nation's serious fiscal problems.

"His campaign seems to be smaller and smaller by the day," Romney told more than 2,000 people in an airplane hangar off the tarmac in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, his campaign plane looming behind him. "Attacking me is not an agenda for the future."

__

Associated Press writers Ben Feller in Nevada and Julie Pace in Washington contributed to this report.

__

Follow Kasie Hunt on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/kasie

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/romney-backs-mourdock-obama-continues-criticism-074839917--election.html

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Obama gets personal: 'Know what it?s like to have a tough time?

President Barack Obama in Cleveland, Ohio. (Chris Moody/Yahoo! News)

CLEVELAND, Ohio?President Barack Obama's voice sounded coarse and tired when he delivered the final speech of a cross-country tour that had taken him to eight states in three days. About 12,000 supporters were waiting on the airport tarmac here when Air Force One landed and rolled behind the stage. With the music of U2 blaring into the warm autumn night, Obama hustled down the stairs from the plane and jogged toward the lectern and teleprompters awaiting him.

The message he delivered along the banks of Lake Erie was the same one he preached previously that day in Virginia, and before that in Florida, Iowa and Colorado. He spoke about women's health, promoted his agenda to increase federal spending on domestic programs paid for by higher taxes on upper-income families, and he accused his opponent Mitt Romney of favoring the wealthy over the middle class. He gave his standard line about what he calls "Romnesia" and implored the crowd to vote?preferably before Election Day.

But before Obama reached the the part of his speech at the end when he usually calls on the audience to share his message with their neighbors, the president paused. His tone changed. His voice, hoarse from three days of rallies and an almost sleepless night, quieted.

"Look, Ohio, I know we've been through tough times," Obama said. "Every day I think about everybody out there across the country who's still looking for a job...whose homes may be still under water or at risk of foreclosure. The folks out there who at the end of the month are sitting at the kitchen table trying to figure out, How am I going to make all these bills? Michelle and I understand it, because we know what it's like to have a tough time sometimes."

The message was meant for the entire nation, but was directed to the inhabitants of the city in front of him, a place still struggling with an unemployment rate above nine percent. Other parts of the state have fared better since the end of the recession, although Ohio faced periods of statewide joblessness of above 10.5 percent during Obama's first term.

Since those dark days, parts of Ohio have seen a resurgence, and in a state where one in eight jobs relies on the auto industry, Obama's early support of a federal bailout for General Motors and Chrysler provides him leverage. It also offers an opening to attack Romney, who supported a plan that would have withheld guaranteed federal loans to the embattled companies until they agreed to undergo a managed bankruptcy.

"I bet on American workers. I bet on American manufacturing," Obama shouted over the noise of the crowd. "And I would do it again, because that bet always pays off."

Obama's post-debate tour had taken him to Florida, Colorado, Iowa, Ohio, Virginia, California, Illinois and Nevada, mostly states where victory is not yet secure for either candidate but are battlegrounds that will determine the outcome of the race.

The driving theme of this trip, which Obama dubbed a 48-hour marathon extravaganza, targeted these key states, all of which allow early voting. At every stop along Obama's tour, supporters were encouraged to vote early so they could spend Election Day focusing their efforts on bringing others to the polls. (Also, history has shown that Democrats are more likely to vote in larger numbers than Republicans if given more than a single day to cast a ballot.) In Dayton, Ohio, where Obama ralliedon? Tuesday, the campaign hung a white, all-caps sign that read simply, "Vote Early."

Obama campaign officials are placing a special emphasis on getting minorities to vote before Election Day, a strategy to secure more votes among overwhelmingly Democratic groups. The campaign is banking on the early vote to give them a head start, and officials predict more Democrats will come out this time than four years ago.

"We are going to enter the election with larger margins than we did in 2008," White House senior adviser David Plouffe said during one of the many bus rides on the trip.

While Obama finished his tour on a personal note in Cleveland, his speeches aimed to draw sharp contrasts with Romney. At times it seemed he was talking more about Romney than his own vision for the future, although Obama always took time to share the blueprint for what he planned to do in his second term. The campaign distributed a 19-page magazine-style booklet that described the direction Obama planned to take the country if re-elected, a publication he spoke about at every rally this week.

But it was while discussing Romney that Obama's message seemed to resonate most. With mere days before the end of the campaign, Obama sharpened his attacks on the former Massachusetts governor, pivoting from describing the differences of policy to attacking his integrity. Obama expanded on his light-hearted use of the phrase "Romnesia" this week to say, bluntly, that Romney was not only a man with whom he disagreed politically, but also one who could not be trusted.

"We joke about Romnesia. But it's not funny," Obama said in Cleveland. "Because it speaks to something serious. It has to do with trust. There's no more serious issue in a presidential campaign than trust. Trust matters."

When he did speak about policy, Obama sought to tie Romney with Senate candidates like Todd Akin in Missouri and Richard Mourdock in Indiana, socially conservative Republicans who believe abortion should be illegal even in cases of rape. The Obama campaign joined Democrats in seizing on comments made by Mourdock in which he called a child conceived from a rape "something God intended to happen." Obama began alluding to Mourdock's comments Thursday morning in Tampa, Florida.

"I don't think any politician in Washington, most of whom are male, should be making health care decisions for women," Obama said in Tampa, warning that Romney would "turn back the clock 50 years for women." Later that day, Obama's official Twitter account posted a series of tweets that focused exclusively on the topic, using the word "rape" six times in the span of about half an hour. Earlier this month, the official campaign Tumblr page declared that women's "lady parts" were at stake in the election. (The post was later removed after being heavily criticized.)

The aggressive effort to steer women away from Republicans is a calculated one, since Democrats see female voters as a primary component to their victory strategy. According to Obama campaign data, there are more female undecided voters than males, and it is independents both campaigns are fighting for.

"The more we're talking about women's issues, women's health care, the differences between the candidates, the better it is for us," Obama campaign spokeswoman Jen Psaki said. "We feel it's a winning issue."

As the final week of the campaign approaches, polls suggest Romney is closing the gap with female voters, although Obama strategists write off the data as sloppy polling. White House spokesman Dan Pfeiffer on Thursday said some polls, even those sponsored by national news outlets, are "worth putting in the waste bin."

Still, it is hard to deny there does appear to be a growing momentum of support for Romney, even though his path to the 270 Electoral College votes is not nearly as clear as Obama's. To win, he will need to secure Florida, Ohio and Virginia, and then other battleground states.

The state of the map is much friendlier to the president, but as his tumultuous campaign schedule suggests, his campaign is taking nothing for granted.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/obama-tour-wraps-personal-touch-know-tough-time-130213761--election.html

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Zoologger: Humble bee nests in horse dung

Zoologger is our weekly column highlighting extraordinary animals ? and occasionally other organisms ? from around the world

Species: Trichothurgus bolithophilus
Habitat: The bush steppes of Patagonia, taking home-ownership to a new low

People can be sentimental about their homes. Think of Dorothy at the end of The Wizard of Oz, happily chirruping that "there's no place like home" to get herself sent back to Kansas ? even though, as far as she knows, her beloved dog was due to be put down as soon as she returns.

Animals aren't as dewy-eyed as Dorothy, but their homes are no less important to them. Nests provide refuge for parents and offspring alike, protecting them both from the elements and from predators. So, animals will seize the chance to set up home anywhere, from hollow tree trunks to deep within caves.

Newly discovered in Argentina, the bee Trichothurgus bolithophilus has a rather less salubrious lifestyle. Seemingly eschewing soil, plants and rocks, it makes its home in networks of tunnels dug into dried-out piles of horse dung.

Pimp my pad

T. bolithophilus is only the fourteenth member of the still small Trichothurgus genus, which itself belongs to a group called the Lithurgini. Forget the complex lifestyles of the familiar honeybees, with their colonies, workers and queens: these are primitive bees that live a solitary existence in their dung palaces.

Exploring the bush steppes of Patagonia, Laura Sarzetti of the Bernardino Rivadavia Natural Sciences Museum in Buenos Aires, Argentina, and colleagues found six dried-out horse droppings, called pads, each of which had been partially hollowed out. These were T. bolithophilus nests.

When Sarzetti broke the manure pads open, she found that the six nests were all quite different from each other. Three had single main tunnels, either straight or with gentle bends, with two or three nest chambers branching off. Another just had a curving tunnel with no separate nest chambers, while in the fifth nest the main tunnel bent back on itself.

The sixth nest was by far the most complex. A single main tunnel, with a kink halfway down, branched out into six nest chambers. A seventh branch curved back on itself, so that it came to a dead end just above the main tunnel.

Within the nest chambers, Sarzetti found eggs and larvae. They had been supplied with pollen from daisies and pigweeds, both of which are common on the Patagonian steppes.

No place like dung

T. bolithophilus is the first bee known to nest in dung, but others have been found. Unpublished research by the US Department of Agriculture shows that two species of mason bee, which normally nest in soil, sometimes nest in dried cattle dung in Wyoming.

Nevertheless it's unusual. Many animals rely on dung for food ? the dung beetleMovie Camera being an obvious example ? but few go so far as to live in it. "Some dung beetles construct brood balls within the food source," says Sarzetti, but they don't dig tunnels.

Manure is pretty scarce in T. bolithophilus's neighbourhood: the only animals that provide decent-sized pads are horses, which were only recently introduced on the Patagonian steppes and are still uncommon. In any case, the dung seems like an odd place to transform into a home.

Crappy protection

For one thing, pads of manure don't make for particularly secure homes. They are fragile, so might get blown around and broken by strong winds. Their thin outer layers provide little protection for larvae in the freezing Patagonian winters. These drawbacks lead Sarzetti to think that the bees only started nesting in dung recently, trying them for size when their usual lodgings weren't available.

We don't know where T. bolithophilus normally nests, says Sarzetti, but there are plenty of cactuses in the area that the bees could burrow into. There are also "cushion plants", which look like mosses and have a similar texture to dung.

Perhaps, if they want to go back to living in comfy plants, they should try clicking their hind legs together.

Journal reference: Journal of Hymenoptera Research, doi.org/jjp

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Why astronauts experience low blood pressure after returning to Earth from space

ScienceDaily (Oct. 25, 2012) ? When astronauts return to Earth, their altitude isn't the only thing that drops -- their blood pressure does too. This condition, known as orthostatic hypotension, occurs in up to half of those astronauts on short-term missions (two weeks or less) and in nearly all astronauts after long-term missions (four to six months). A new research report published online in The FASEB Journal solves the biological mystery of how this happens by showing that low gravity compromises the ability of arteries and veins to constrict normally, inhibiting the proper flow of blood.

Prevention and treatment strategies developed for astronauts may also hold promise for elderly populations on Earth who experience orthostatic hypotension more than any other age group.

"The idea of space exploration has been tantalizing the imagination of humans since our early existence. As a scientist, I have had the opportunity to learn that there are many medical challenges associated with travel in a weightless environment, such as orthostatic hypotension, bone loss and the recently recognized visual impairment that occurs in astronauts," said Michael D. Delp, Ph.D., a researcher involved in the work from the Department of Applied Physiology and Kinesiology, and the Center for Exercise Science at the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida. "Although I have come to realize that it is unlikely I will ever get to fulfill my childhood dream of flying in space, I take great satisfaction with helping in the discovery of how microgravity alters the human body and how we can minimize these effects, so humans can safely explore the bounds of our universe."

To make this discovery, Delp and colleagues examined arteries and veins from mice housed at Kennedy Space Center in Florida with blood vessels from groups of mice flown on three of the last five space shuttle missions -- STS-131, STS-133 and STS-135. Mice flown on the STS-131 and STS-135 missions were tested immediately after returning to Earth, whereas mice from STS-133 were tested one, five and seven days after landing. Not only did they find that these mice experienced the equivalent of orthostatic hypotension in humans, they also discovered that it takes as many as four days in normal gravity before the condition is reversed.

"There has been considerable interest in sending humans to the moon, asteroids, and Mars," said Gerald Weissmann, M.D., Editor-in-Chief of The FASEB Journal, "but what we're finding is that extended space missions have their own inherent risks above and beyond the obvious. If we ever hope to visit distant worlds for extended periods of time -- or colonize them permanently -- we've got to figure out how to mitigate the effects that low and no gravity has on the body. This report brings us an important step closer to doing just that."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Dominguez II, Judy M. Muller-Delp, Michael D. Delp. Effects of spaceflight and ground recovery on mesenteric artery and vein constrictor properties in mice. FASEB Journal, 2012; DOI: 10.1096/fj.12-218503

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/yAumOki-6bY/121025122620.htm

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LG Display posts first profit in two years on phone, tablet panels

SEOUL (Reuters) - LG Display Co Ltd reported its first quarterly profit in two years on Friday as sales of its screens used in Apple Inc's iPad and iPhone offset weak demand from TV manufacturers, the South Korean panel maker's biggest revenue source.

LG Display, which vies with Samsung Electronics Co Ltd's panel unit for the top position in liquid crystal display (LCD) flat screens globally, reported 253 billion won ($230 million) in operating profit for its July-September third quarter.

That was a tad below an average forecast for a 265 billion won profit in a poll of 13 analysts by Thomson Reuters.

The profit, LG's first after seven straight quarters of losses, compared with a 492 billion won loss a year earlier and a 26 billion won loss in the preceding three months.

"We expect profitability to improve further in the fourth quarter, as a host of new mobile devices will launch and increase panel demand," the firm said in its earnings statement.

LG said it expected LCD panel prices to remain stable in the current quarter, and its flat-screen shipments to rise by a high single digit percentage quarter-on-quarter.

LG Display shares have jumped about 37 percent in the past three months, outperforming a 6 percent rise in the benchmark KOSPI index, on expectations for better fourth-quarter earnings as the company ties its fortunes more tightly to Apple.

Barclays expects LG's revenue from panel supplies to Apple and Amazon.com Inc to jump nearly 70 percent to 2.1 trillion won worth in the fourth quarter from the third quarter, due to solid demand for the iPhone 5, iPad mini and Amazon's Kindle tablet computer.

LG's new and thinner display -- its in-cell touch screen panel, which is used in the iPhone 5 -- costs 40 percent more than that of conventional smartphone panels, according to Nomura Securities. Analysts at Korea Investment & Securities expect panel sales to Apple to rise to around 27 percent of LG's total revenue in the second half of this year from 16 percent in the first half.

Shares of LG Display closed down 1.2 percent prior to the results announcement, versus a 1.7 percent fall in the broader market. ($1 = 1098.2000 Korean won)

(Reporting by Miyoung Kim; Editing by Chris Gallagher)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lg-display-posts-first-profit-two-years-phone-063124530--finance.html

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Search Challenge: What Could Go Wrong? Fighting Fires in the 19th Century Home

Search Challenge: What Could Go Wrong? Fighting Fires in the 19th Century HomeDaniel Russell knows how to find the answers to questions you can't get to with a simple Google query. In his weekly Search Research column, Russell issues a search challenge, then follows up later in the week with his solution?using whatever search technology and methodology fits the bill.

What could go wrong?

Back in the day, fragile glass globes would be kept in the home to fight fires. The instructions were, more-or-less, "in case of fire, throw this at the base of the flames?" The globe would shatter, scattering a fluid that would chemically help to extinguish the flames.

The globes came in red and blue (possibly other colors as well) and would be kept in places where fires might start?the kitchen, but also the living room (fireplace), and the bedroom (near candles and lanterns).

But in retrospect, these fire-fighting devices were a really terrible idea. They actually seem to have worked, but the fluid they contained was problematic for several reasons.

Now that you know a bit about 19th century fire-fighting devices, let me pose today's challenge:

1. What were these devices commonly called?

2. What problematic fluid were they often filled with?

3. Can you find the original patent for this device?

And for extra credit, should you be inclined, can you find an advertisement from the day showing this device in use? (Some of them are truly wonderful.)

Search on!

Wednesday search challenge (10/24/12): What could go wrong? Fighting fires in the 19th century home | SearchReSearch


Daniel M. Russell studies the way people search and research?an anthropologist of search, if you will. You can read more from Russell on his SearchReSearch blog, and stay tuned for his weekly challenges (and answers) here on Lifehacker.

Image by Photology (Shutterstock).

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/XWw0urUk-xM/challenge-what-could-go-wrong-fighting-fires-in-the-19th-century-home

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Steve Carell to executive-produce Fox comedy starring "Daily Show" correspondent Jason Jones

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Marathon Oil in talks to sell Alberta oil sands stake

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Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Deal of the Day: Seidio ACTIVE Case for HTC EVO 4G LTE

Deal of the Day The Oct. 22 ShopAndroid.com Deal of the Day is the Seidio ACTIVE Case for HTC EVO 4G LTE. The Seidio ACTIVE Case provides great shock and impact absorption while adding minimal bulk to your device. This two-layer case features a compact and lightweight rubber polymer with a precisely positioned hard skeleton for added protection. Comes in black, blue, red, purple, white and features cutouts for the kickstand and ports of your device.

The Seidio ACTIVE Case is available for just $16.00, 47% off today only. Backed by our 60-day return policy and fast shipping.

Never miss a deal. Sign up for Daily Deal alerts!



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/93C_Ta4v8bU/story01.htm

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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Dell unveils Inspiron 15z Ultrabook with optional touchscreen, prices start at $750

Dell unveils Inspiron 15z Ultrabook with optional touchscreen, prices start at $750

In case Dell's convertible XPS 12 is too expensive (or weird-looking) for your tastes, the company's got a more traditional sort of Ultrabook on tap. The company just announced the Inspiron 15z, a 15-inch notebook with an optional touchscreen. As you can see in our hands-on shots below, it's essentially the same plastic-and-metal design as earlier Inspiron Ultrabooks, though that touchscreen is of course new. At "less than an inch thick" it's still chunkier than your typical ultraportable, but if you insist on having a DVD burner, this could be a tempting choice. Plus, at 4.12 pounds, it's reasonably light for a machine with this large a footprint.

It's already up for sale on Dell's site, starting at $750 with a Core i3 processor, 6GB of RAM, and a 500GB hard drive paired with a 32GB SSD. Touch-enabled versions start at $900. So far as we can tell, the memory and hard drive stay pretty consistent as you move up in configurations, though you can opt for a Core i5 or i7 CPU. The highest-end confg also steps up from integrated graphics to a 2GB NVIDIA GeForce GT630M GPU. Curious? We've got hands-on pics below, with more details at the source link.

Filed under: ,

Dell unveils Inspiron 15z Ultrabook with optional touchscreen, prices start at $750 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Oct 2012 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceDell  | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/10/23/dell-inspiron-15z/

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AT AMAZON, Warehouse Deals in Automotive & Industrial - PJ Media

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Source: http://pjmedia.com/instapundit/154926/

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Monday, October 22, 2012

Last minute Fall decor for your home

This fall season sneaking up on you? There?s still time to get in your spirit and dec your home out with some simple crafts that are more creative than jack-o-lanterns or store-bought scares. But you love pumpkins you say? Check out last week?s Vox coverage of creative ways to decorate your favorite gourds without the mess!

1. Some Simple ghosts: These creative creatures are perfect to stick in your yard, in a vase or just around your home. Put them under a vent or in the wind to watch them move.

Supplies- Small white trash bags, Marshmallows*, thin dowel rods, string, a Sharpie.

  • Stick a marshmallow onto a dowel rod.
  • Cover the marshmallow with an opened up white trash bag.
  • Tie a string around the bag at the bottom of the marshmallow and make a knot.
  • Draw a face with a Sharpie.

*Note: If you?re putting your ghosts outside, consider something other than a marshallow. Perhaps a cotton ball.

___________________________________________________

2. The edible decoration: Here?s a treat that you won?t have to worry about cleaning up when winter comes around. They will surely disappear on their own.

Supplies- Pretzel rods, meltable chocolate in a variety of colors, wax paper, fun and festive sprinkles.

  • Melt the chocolate. I suggest buying milk chocolate, white chocolate and orange colored chocolate to end up with a flattering platter.
  • Dip the pretzels in the chocolate and roll them in sprinkles.
  • Let them dry on wax paper in the fridge for 30 minutes
  • Arrange them nicely on a platter and serve to your friends.

___________________________________________________

3. A spooky classic: This quick trick is a tradition for all the best decorated houses. And it?s not even that hard to do. Those tricksters!

Supplies: a bag of webbing from any craft store, Scotch tape.

  • Take your webbing and pull it apart until it looks thin but not breakable.
  • Tape the edges to a balcony or door to create a spooky spider web effect.
  • Or ditch the tape and hang them in your trees or bushes.

___________________________________________________

4. Not to scary shadows: The perfect touch to any home for when the lights go out. This crafty creation is perfect for any home, apartment or dorm room.

Supplies: Medium sized pieces of cardboard, an exact o knife and cutting board of sorts, Scotch tape, candles (real or fake).

  • Use your exact o knife to cut a festive shape out of card board.*
  • Attach the wire to the back of the cardboard cut out and stick the other end of the wire into the wax of the candle so that the cut out sits about 8 inches above the candle. If you?re using a fake candle just use tape to attach both ends of the wire.
  • Place the creation near the wall and watch the shadows dance along it.

*You can use regular scissors, but the exact o will be easiest if you have inside pieces you want to cut out to add to the shape.

___________________________________________________

5. A band of life-sized witches: This is not for the faint at heart. But if you?re in the mood to craft and have some yard space, this is for you. You?ll surely be the coolest house on the street.

Supplies: 6 witch hats (I suggest a dollar store), 6 stakes, 6 black table cloths, some string, 6 large pieces of styrofoam (preferably spherical).

  • Place the 6 stakes in your yard in a fairly large circle.
  • Stick the styrofoam onto the top of the stakes.
  • Cover each piece of styrofoam with a black table cloth so that the styrofoam is completely covered and the cloth hangs off the stake like a cape.
  • Tie the tablecloth around the stake and cloth to hold it in place.
  • Tie the ends of each table cloth to each other so it looks like the witches are holding hands.

___________________________________________________

Did you end up trying any of these? Share your pictures with us on Facebook and Twitter!

Source: http://www.voxmagazine.com/blog/2012/10/last-minute-fall-decor-for-your-home/

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NYC's Mayor Bloomberg donates $125K to defeat Minn. constitutional gay marriage ban (Star Tribune)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/257421755?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Sunday, October 21, 2012

6 Stress Management Tips from Around the World | Care2 Healthy ...

  • Katie Waldeck
  • October 20, 2012
  • 4:29 pm
  • 5 comments

get healthy living updates

?

How do you decompress after a long day or week? What do you consider relaxing? They answer may change based on where you live. Check out some of the ways people across the globe manage their stress, and let us know your techniques in the comments.

See Also: What?s Your Stress IQ?

Read more: Anxiety, Family, General Health, Guidance, Health, Inspiration, Life, Mental Wellness, Nature, Outdoor Activities, Spirit, Stress, relaxation, slideshow, stress, stress management

Katie Waldeck

Katie is a freelance writer focused on pets, food and women?s issues. A Chicago native and longtime resident of the Pacific Northwest, Katie now lives in Oakland, California.

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Source: http://www.care2.com/greenliving/how-the-world-de-stresses.html

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