Wednesday, January 25, 2012

5 new reasons to get excited about HDTV

HD Guru

LG's OLED TV will bring the long-promised "organic light emitting diode" technology to the living room this year.

By Geoff Morrison

Now that we?ve had time to recuperate from the Consumer Electronics Show, that international showcase of new technologies, it?s time to take a look at how HDTV will change ? meaningfully???this year.

For the most part, this year?s CES was about bigger, cheaper flat panels, but in the crevasses there was some tech that?s actually worth getting excited about.

OLED
Of course.

LG and Samsung announced OLED, or "organic light emitting diode" televisions. We, and many other media outlets, gave the LG a best-in-show award.

Why are we excited? OLED promises to have a better black level and contrast ratio than plasma (even CRT), while offering lower power consumption and thinner cabinets than LED LCDs. Not only the best of both worlds, but better than both worlds.

No pricing was announced, but rumors have the 55-inch models in the $8,000 to $10,000 range. Before you scoff, it was only a few years ago that 50-inch LED LCDs were near this range. Prices will drop, quality will improve. We can?t wait.

Gesture control/facial recognition
Several companies, including Samsung and LG (see a trend?) announced gesture control, or the ability to adjust your television without the remote. Think of it like a Xbox Kinect, but built into your TV. Wave your hand to increase the volume, etc. With facial recognition, the TV can automatically log you into Skype, or other services. All you have to do is look at your TV.

In some closed-door demonstrations at the show, we got to see this in action. Like any cutting-edge technology, it?s not as seamless as you?d want, but it is undeniably cool.

Will you ditch the remote for hand waving and facial recognition? Probably not this year, but how could this not be the future of product interaction?

ARC (Audio Return Channel)
Released as part of the HDMI 1.4 standard, ARC sends the audio from the TV back up the cable to the receiver and/or soundbar. We?re finally seeing products with this feature built in.

In most cases, a home theater setup would be: source (Blu-ray, cable/satellite) -> receiver or soundbar -> television. This works fine, unless the TV itself is a source. With the prevalence of smart TVs, this is becoming more common. So if you?re watching Netflix through an app on your TV, you either have to run a separate optical cable from the TV to the receiver, or just use the TV speakers.

With ARC, the TV?s audio gets sent back towards the receiver, and then out to your system?s speakers. Both the TV and the receiver/soundbar need to have ARC, and you?ll need an HDMI cable that supports it (most new ones do).

Mobile High-definition Link (MHL)
Roku recently released the Streaming Stick, essentially a miniaturized version of its Internet streaming box that?s the size of a USB flash drive and plugs directly into your TV. While cool, it itself isn?t ?new tech? worthy. But how it works is.

Mobile High-definition Link is a connection technology that uses existing connector types (i.e. HDMI or USB) to transmit 1080p video and 8-channel audio from a device to a TV, and then power from the TV back down to the device. This power can either charge the device (in the case of a mobile phone) or in Roku?s case, power it completely.

The odd thing about the Roku is that the TV has to have the MHL technology, meaning it has to be a new TV. Most new TVs already have streaming services built in. Regardless, it?s a cool idea that I?m sure many companies will developing products for.

Speech recognition
While OLED got all the fanfare at CES this year, it was speech recognition that was seemingly everywhere. Whether it was standalone products, or built into TVs, talking to your products seems to be coming in a big way. You can thank the hype around Apple?s Siri for that.

The reason so many of these products are coming out now, and working, is largely due to one company: Nuance. Thanks to years of research and extensive studying of human speech patterns, Nuance allows devices to understanding what?s being said. No small feat, that.

Samsung and LG both have speech recognition built into many of their 2012 models. Commands like ?Volume up? and ?Power off? make the interaction with your TV more fluid, and entirely sci-fi.

Like any new technology (and the gesture/face control mentioned above), it?s not quite as fast or fool-proof as you?d hope. Still, the idea of being able to walk into your TV room, say ?TV on, channel 4,? and have the TV magically come to life is any sci-fi nerd?s dream. The tech isn?t quite there yet to do this perfectly, but it?s getting there.

Contact Geoff Morrison on Twitter at?@TechWriterGeoff, and check out?Geoff?s book. Questions for HD Guru? Send an?email.

Source: http://gadgetbox.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/23/10217044-5-new-reasons-to-get-excited-about-hdtv

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Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Newt Gingrich's Success Entertains Democrats (ContributorNetwork)

COMMENTARY | There is a doctored Washington Post front page making the rounds on Facebook with an image of President Barack Obama laughing with the headline "Gingrich Wins S.C. Primary." Clearly this is not a real headline from The Post, but it has probably been seen by even more people than if it were.

The reason so many people are sharing this faux front page is because it mimics exactly how many Democrats felt when they heard that Newt Gingrich handily beat Mitt Romney in last week's primary in South Carolina. Seriously; do Republicans really think that Gingrich is their best option? Are the pigs flying or do these folks just have their head buried extra deep along their lovely coastline?

As a Democrat, I have watched the Republican primaries with interest. Even though I will not be participating in the vote for the Republican nominee, it is important to me to be knowledgeable regarding the candidates as one of them will be running for the office of President.

It seemed clear early on that Mitt Romney would be the most formidable opponent for President Obama. Romney is conservative, but not so conservative that he would turn off independents. With so many people concerned about the economy, Romney has a wealth of real-world business experience that would seem to make him particularly qualified to deal with economic issues and possibly lead our country down the road to prosperity. He has been married to the same woman for many years, and seems to have raised a lovely family.

So, why, oh why, are so many Republicans choosing Newt Gingrich? Are they poorly informed or just dim? Newt Gingrich claims to have strong family values, but he is currently married to his third wife, who he began relations with while still married to his second wife, who he asked to marry him while he was still married to his first wife, who was battling cancer at the time. Is this a man that people actually believe puts a priority on family values?

Based on a 1997 ethics report, Newt Gingrich was sanctioned by an overwhelming bipartisan vote which forced him to pay back $300,000 in costs due to ethics violations. Gingrich later stepped down as Speaker of the House when he was told that as many as 30 Republicans would refuse to vote for him on the floor of the House. Those were members of his own party, Republicans, who refused his leadership of the House. Yet some people think he would make a good president?

The Republicans that are working to make Newt Gingrich the Republican nominee, if successful, will be handing President Obama his second term on a silver platter. As Republican political consultant Mike Murphy said on Meet the Press this Sunday, "Newt Gingrich cannot carry a general election swing state it if was made of feathers." He's exactly right, and the heads of Republicans leaders are spinning.

The reasons Mitt Romney would appeal to many who don't vote strictly along party lines are the same reasons he isn't conservative enough for tea party Republicans. However Newt Gingrich isn't the guy they are looking for, he's just pretending to be. Gingrich is the dream Republican nominee from a Democrat's perspective. It is truly astonishing that those who are voting for him are blind to this.

"Gingrich stuns Washington by stepping aside," cnn.com

Heidi Pryzbyla, "Gingrich's Ex-Wife Says He Sought 'Open Marriage' to Keep Affair," Businessweek

January 22nd transcript, Meet the Press, NBC

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20120123/us_ac/10873563_newt_gingrichs_success_entertains_democrats

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Monday, January 23, 2012

[OOC] Mythical Hunt

Forum rules
This forum is for OOC discussion about existing roleplays.

Please post all "Players Wanted" threads in the Roleplayers Wanted forum!

This topic is an Out Of Character part of the roleplay, ?Mythical Hunt?. Anything posted here will also show up there.

Topic Tags:

Forum for completely Out of Character (OOC) discussion, based around whatever is happening In Character (IC). Discuss plans, storylines, and events; Recruit for your roleplaying game, or find a GM for your playergroup.
This is the auto-generated OOC topic for the roleplay "Mythical Hunt"

You may edit this first post as you see fit.

User avatar
Zenia
Member for 1 years



This will begin next week.

User avatar
Zenia
Member for 1 years




Okay let me check the spots left. If needed I will make two more.
EDIT: I'd rather not though.

Last edited by Zenia on Sun Jan 22, 2012 9:17 pm, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
Zenia
Member for 1 years


Okay I have two spots left. One though is the traitor.

User avatar
Zenia
Member for 1 years


So glad to be back.

You said you would always be there for me...I guess you lied

User avatar
Nowfaleena
Member for 1 years


Good to have you back Meraradus.

User avatar
Zenia
Member for 1 years


Okay since two people want to be beings Tonks, and Vampire Mistress.
Are either of you okay with being the traitor?

User avatar
Zenia
Member for 1 years


Got it sorted. ^-^
Forgot to put this in rules so I will put it here first. As I said this will start next week. Also wait until I make the world post and my charries posts.

User avatar
Zenia
Member for 1 years


Also these posts are probably gonna be in the 100 to 200 words. Everyone can handle that right? My post may be longer, like my intro posts. Also because I am controlling so far three characters.

User avatar
Zenia
Member for 1 years



Of course. Hunters are human, you know that correct?

User avatar
Zenia
Member for 1 years



Long as you know that. Also you will have 1 artificial magic.

Only the leaders have more.

User avatar
Zenia
Member for 1 years


Submit it ^^ please tell me if I need to edit it

User avatar
Arthurna
Member for 0 years



Post a reply

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Sony VAIO series get minor processor refresh, Z series grabs LTE option on the way

Ahead of any possible Ultrabook announcements, Sony's looking to give its existing VAIO catalogue a (relatively underwhelming) shot in the arm with a bundle of hardware retweaks. The Z series looks to gain the most out of the Spring refresh, with a new off-white Carbon Fiber Silver color option set to be offered up alongside an optional LTE modem. The series also gets a processor step-up, with new Intel Core i5 and i7 options rounded off with the choice of SSD storage. Including the connectable drive, prices for the series refresh will start from $1,950. Meanwhile, both the S (13-inch, $800, 15-inch, $980)and E series will get a similar bump to Core i7 processors, with both the S and aforementioned Z series able to lock into an extended sheet battery accessory. If minor processor improvements, more battery options and LTE connectivity warrant forking over your cash, you can expect the revitalized units to arrive early next month.

Sony VAIO series get minor processor refresh, Z series grabs LTE option on the way originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 Jan 2012 02:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/WeznJduN1k8/

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Sunday, January 22, 2012

Google Maps updates to version 6.1.1, fixes 'bugs on tablets and phones'

Maps update

If you're a Google Maps user, you'll find a new app update waiting for you in the Android Market this morning. The new version 6.1.1 fixes "bugs on tablets and phones" according to the latest change log. We're not aware of any serious problems with earlier versions of Maps, but if you've been experiencing any issues in the past, hopefully this latest revision will have you fixed up.

You should see an automatic update notification if you've already got Maps installed. Otherwise, head past the break for the Market link and QR code.

Update: According to feedback down in the comments, this update fixes a bug involving starting the Navigation app directly on certain Honeycomb devices, as well as an issue with phone numbers on the search result page.

read more



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/AZjOC9e7lwY/story01.htm

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Google Hauled in $10 Billion of Highly Relevant Money Last Quarter [Google]

Google just reported its earnings results from the most recent financial quarter, and while there's not too much to go on yet, it's notable that for the first time, the company took in over $10 billion of revenue in a single three-month period. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/effr5CpQc54/google-hauled-in-10-billion-of-highly-relevant-money-last-quarter

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Saturday, January 21, 2012

Skyrim (Not Really) Ported To The TI-84 Calculator

Are you ready to destroy the Dragons of Skyrim with your trusty orcish arrows and shortsword? Do you wish to hop on your trusty horse and ride endlessly up steep slopes and through wooded glens? Do you have a TI-84 graphing calculator? Well you're kind of in luck.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/T0CUTxf9a8I/

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Synthetic Windpipe Transplant Boost For Tissue Engineering

Surgeons in Sweden replaced an American patient's cancerous windpipe with a scaffold built from nanofibers and seeded with the patient's stem cells. Lead surgeon Dr. Paolo Macchiarini discusses the procedure and the benefits of tissue-engineered synthetic organs.

Copyright ? 2012 National Public Radio?. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

IRA FLATOW, HOST:

This is SCIENCE FRIDAY. I'm Ira Flatow.

An American cancer patient became the second person in the world to receive a synthetic windpipe transplant. Surgeons in Sweden replaced a patient's cancerous windpipe with one that was grown in the laboratory. It was made from plastic nanofibers and seeded with the patient's stem cells.

But just how is this artificial organ turned into a functioning airway? And how can this experimental procedure be used on other organs, perhaps lungs, even the heart in the future?

My next guest, Dr. Paolo Macchiarini, was the lead surgeon for both synthetic windpipe transplants. Dr. Macchiarini is the director of the Advanced Center for Translational Regenerative Medicine at Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden.

Welcome to Science Friday.

DR. PAOLO MACCHIARINI: Thank you so much.

FLATOW: Thank you for joining us.

Let's start at the beginning. How was the scaffold for the synthetic trachea built?

MACCHIARINI: Well, basically, by the same fibers that everybody of us has, nanofibers; very, very small fibers that are composed and native to the human trachea. So when we wanted to transplant this organ, we thought what is best. And the best would be to just replicate what human nature has done. And this is the reason why we use these very thin fibers.

FLATOW: And then you seeded the fibers, the mold, so to speak, the plastic, with the patient's own stem cells.

MACCHIARINI: Exactly. Because these first steps, the generation of the scaffold, was entirely made in the laboratory. But without the cells, the scaffold could not be implanted, because the trachea is the only organ which is in contact with the external environment. So if you put a prosthesis(ph) or synthetic material (unintelligible) become infected. And you can have different lethal problems. By reseeded the scaffold with a patient's own stem cells, we were making living plastic tissue.

FLATOW: Did the stem cells then start to grow as trachea cells?

MACCHIARINI: Well, the first step is to produce a nano(ph) composite. Then the second step is to take the stem cells of the patient. The third step is to put the two together using a so-called bioreactor, which is a shoebox where you put this (unintelligible) cells and the scaffold. And the cells are attracted by this scaffold, because it is biomaterial and permits attachment of the cells. And the cells are not only attaching, but then starts to proliferate, are living. So that they feel like they would be in a physiological (technical difficulties).

Once you have done this, you implant it, implant this in the human body and you give bioactive (unintelligible) that differentiate the stem cells into the (unintelligible) of the trachea. And this happens usually within 14 days after the transplantation.

FLATOW: And so that the stem cells basically grow and become part of the trachea?

MACCHIARINI: Well, rather than growing, they differentiate into the given specific cells. And to avoid infection (unintelligible) the graft. Yes.

FLATOW: And so by the time you transplant it back into the patient, you have the plastic structure and you have tracheal cells that you're putting back into the patient?

MACCHIARINI: Well, we have the nano composite. We have cells. But these are not tracheal cells, because in such a short time you cannot differentiate a cell. You just can have cells that are living. And once they are implanted in the human body, we use the human body as a so-called own bioreactor and we boost the regeneration.

FLATOW: And so how long would it take for those cells to regenerate once they're back in the human?

MACCHIARINI: Well, after one week of the transplantation, we did an endoscopy. That means an evaluation of the graft. And by taking the cells out, we were finding evidence that the cells of the (technical difficulties) inside it were already there. So in short of seven days you can have differentiated cells starting from not differentiated cells.

FLATOW: And how long would it take to cover and make a complete trachea?

MACCHIARINI: Well, we did - before the last patient came home, we did again an endoscopy. And it was lined with the cells. And today we just proved, with the pathologist, that cells were all there. So probably this depends (technical difficulties) three dimensional measures of the trachea. Because if it a - it's a very long - it is a trachea with bifurcation so that many factors play a role. But usually within two to three weeks, if you tell the body to boost, to accelerate regeneration, you can get the complete differentiated trachea.

FLATOW: Two to three weeks you can make the whole trachea.

MACCHIARINI: Well, using the human body as a bioreactor, yes.

FLATOW: So I imagine you could try to do this with other organs in the body, other things.

MACCHIARINI: Well, we are starting to learn what happens with this still experimental therapy. So I'm not so pessimistic to try to do the same with other tissues or organs. And since I'm a thoracic surgeon, I deal with organs of the chest. So I would think of the esophagus at the chest wall, at the liver ? at the lung, and eventually at the heart. Yes.

FLATOW: And how are the patients doing?

MACCHIARINI: Well, probably there was a huge media coverage when he came back in the United States. And he's doing very well. He was seen yesterday by his referring physician in Baltimore. And as far as I know he's doing fine.

FLATOW: Can you reconstruct blood vessels this way?

MACCHIARINI: Well, actually, the Yale University has started to - a clinical trial approved by the FDA using tissue (unintelligible) in children. So the answer would be yes.

FLATOW: And just to understand more completely, this is a - the trachea is - it has a microfiber backbone to it, on top of which you have permeated with stem cells. And the stem cells have been coaxed into becoming tracheal cells?

MACCHIARINI: Exactly.

FLATOW: Exactly. And then they have now totally covered and taken over on top of this structure of plastic? They have now become sort of a living organism?

MACCHIARINI: Yes, sir.

FLATOW: Wow. And you did this all - it all happened within just a matter of a few weeks?

MACCHIARINI: Well, usually - again, depending on the degree of difficulty of the three dimensional aspect of the tissue, you can produce a trachea, for instance, just the tube, in two days. And a bifurcated trachea in 10 days. So now - then you need two days for getting the cells, reseeding the grafts, or in two weeks you have an entire trachea.

FLATOW: And perhaps you might extend your work further, because you deal in this and possibly into the lungs.

MACCHIARINI: Well, ideally, yes. But to me my dream would be another one. It would be rather than replacing the lung or replacing the heart, you use cell therapy to treat these organs before they ultimately do not work anymore. so rather than doing a transplantation, just when we have the first signs of insufficiency, whether to treat these organs with the patient's stem cells, probably targeting the defect that they have, so prolonging and extending their life.

FLATOW: So if you have untreatable tumors, for example, within the patient, you might be able to instead of putting a new part in put the stem cells in and they would grow to replace that?

MACCHIARINI: Well, I don't think that this is so easy. We first need to be very cautious to identify so-called cancer stem cells, because within the cancer you have cells that do proliferate forever and have many of the aspects of undifferentiated and ever proliferating stem cells.

So whether we could target these cells to block the growth and eventually treat cancer, this is very, very early.

FLATOW: So what makes your technique so revolutionary?

MACCHIARINI: Well, the fact that, first of all, in six months we've had three - we were able to treat 31 and 30 years respectively, young gentlemen that had a tumor of the trachea and they're still alive. So the revolution is there, because there wouldn't be any other treatment options.

And the second revolution is that (unintelligible) is too much, but a new thing is that we were able to ? we saw in the blood of the patient's stem cells that as soon as the (unintelligible) transplant, were already expressing the profile of respiratory cells. So they were recruited from the preferred(ph) and went home to the site of the transplant to make the cells of the trachea.

So that means that indeed, we could do and replicate this for other types of - like the liver, kidney, heart. We just need time and more economic support to prove this concept.

FLATOW: Yes, time and money. That's all we need.

MACCHIARINI: Exactly, as usual.

(SOUNDBITE OF LAUGHTER)

MACCHIARINI: Exactly.

FLATOW: Well, thank you very much, Dr. Macchiarini, for...

MACCHIARINI: Thank you.

FLATOW: ...taking time to talk with us.

Dr. Paolo Macchiarini is the director of the Advanced Center for a Translational Regenerative Medicine at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden.

We're going to take a break. After the break, we're going to look at two renewable energy projects using pioneering technology. One that taps the heat that causes - under volcanoes. And another project: to float wind turbines off the coast of Maine in really deep water. Not close to shore but far away so you can't even see them from the shore. In deep water creating, you know, electrical energy that way.

We'll talk about it when we get back. Our number: 1-800-989-8255. Tweet us at SciFri@SCIFRI. We'll be right back after this break.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

FLATOW: I'm Ira Flatow. This is Science Friday from NPR.

Copyright ? 2012 National Public Radio?. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to National Public Radio. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2012/01/20/145525008/synthetic-windpipe-transplant-boost-for-tissue-engineering?ft=1&f=1007

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Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Venezuela: Consulate officials in US threatened (AP)

CARACAS, Venezuela ? Venezuelan exiles with links to terrorism have threatened officials at the South American country's consulate in Miami, the foreign minister said Sunday.

Nicolas Maduro did not single out any specific group or provide details of his claims, which came shortly after President Hugo Chavez said his government would close the consulate in response Washington's expulsion of a Venezuelan diplomat.

Maduro told the state-run AVN news agency that "a group of organizations bringing together Venezuelans who fled justice" in their homeland "have threatened not only the consul but the personnel at out consulate."

Livia Acosta Noguera, Venezuela's consul general in Miami, was ordered out of the U.S. last weekend followed an FBI investigation into allegations that she discussed a possible cyber-attack on the U.S. government while she was assigned to the Venezuelan Embassy in Mexico. The allegations were detailed in a documentary aired by the Spanish-language broadcaster Univision.

The documentary was based on recordings of conversations with her and other officials, and alleged that Cuban and Iranian diplomatic missions were involved. Citing audio and video obtained by the students at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, Univision alleged Acosta was seeking information about the servers of nuclear power plants on U.S. soil.

Chavez said Friday he decided the consulate will shut its doors in response to what he called an unfair action by the U.S. State Department.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120115/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_venezuela_us

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Tuesday, January 17, 2012

China: a lifeline for Iran and its oil exports?

As Europe and the US tighten sanctions on Iran, China?remains the largest buyer of Iranian oil and?has played down economic sanctions as an effective way to influence Tehran.

There were few signs that US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner had any success during his visit to Beijing this month to persuade China to help pressure Tehran over its nuclear program by buying less Iranian oil.

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"China's regular demand for energy has nothing to do with the nuclear issue and it should not be affected," Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Weimin said Jan. 11, after Mr. Geithner met with top Chinese leaders.

China is Iran's largest oil and gas client, and Beijing has consistently played down economic sanctions as an effective way to influence Tehran, or any other government.

How much do you know about China? Take our quiz.

"Few issues can be solved by sanctions," says Tao Wenzhao, a foreign-affairs analyst at the government-sponsored China Academy of Social Sciences. "We think that the correct way to resolve international issues is through negotiations."

But while Beijing's reluctance to go along with United States sanctions came as little surprise, at the same time there seemed equally little chance that China would increase its Iranian oil intake to help Tehran if other countries cut back their purchases.

The European Union has agreed in principle to an oil embargo, and US allies such as South Korea and Japan, two other major importers of Iranian oil, could also join America in pressuring Tehran.

"China will not go all the way" to support Iran, says Willem van Kemenade, a Beijing-based expert on Sino-Iranian relations. "They are not going to confront the US in a decisive way."

Oil traders here say Beijing, which last year bought 11 percent of its oil imports from Iran, cut back on purchases this month. But this appears to be a result of a dispute over price and credit terms, as China seeks to profit from Iran's straitened circumstances by bargaining for a better deal.

The temporary cutback, for which Beijing has compensated with emergency purchases from Vietnam, Russia, the Middle East, and Africa, does not mean that China has any sympathy for planned US sanctions, analysts here say.

On New Year's Eve, President Obama signed a bill that would ban foreign financial institutions that deal with Iran's Central Bank from operating in US financial markets. That would effectively make it impossible for refiners in China to pay Iran for the oil they buy.

Chinese officials have repeatedly criticized the effort to make other nations follow America's lead. "To place one country's law above international law and force others to obey is not reasonable," Mr. Liu said Jan. 11.

"China is not a US ally, and it is not obliged to abide by US law," adds Dr. Tao. "This is hegemonic behavior."

Chinese leaders may expect that Mr. Obama will exempt Beijing from the effects of the new bill, as he is empowered to do, on national security grounds. They may also be counting on resistance to the congressional bill from US allies such as Japan and South Korea, both of which have expressed reservations about its impact on world oil prices.

Previous congressionally mandated international sanctions have failed, Tao recalls. A 1996 bill introduced by Sen. Alfonse D'Amato (R) of New York, punishing foreign companies that made energy deals with Iran, sparked such an international outcry that then-President Clinton issued a waiver to European countries.

"I doubt very much that the stipulations of the new law can really be implemented," says Tao. "It will cause widespread opposition around the world, not just from China and Russia but from US allies, too."

How much do you know about China? Take our quiz.

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Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/h6xdhaoahrU/China-a-lifeline-for-Iran-and-its-oil-exports

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Russian space probe turned space junk crash will have worldwide audience

According to ESA, studies by the Russian space agency and NASA indicate that Phobos-Grunt's fuel tanks should burst high above the Earth, releasing a load of propellant that will subsequently dissipate.

A coordinated global campaign is monitoring a wayward Russian Mars probe that's slated to crash to Earth in the next few days, the European Space Agency has announced.

Skip to next paragraph

The doomed?Phobos-Grunt spacecraft, which Russian officials estimate will re-enter Earth's atmosphere between Saturday and Monday (Jan. 14-16), is now officially a target for the 12-member Inter-Agency Space Debris Coordination Committee, or IADC for short.

"An IADC re-entry prediction campaign is ongoing since January 2. Phobos-Grunt was identified to be no high-risk object," said Heiner Klinkrad, head of the space debris office at the European Space Agency's (ESA) European Space Operations Centerin Darmstadt, Germany. "Hence, this will be adopted as our annual 'test campaign' for 2012," he told SPACE.com.

The determination that Phobos-Grunt is not a high-risk?piece of space junk??is due to the relatively low dry mass of the errant spacecraft ? just 2.5 tons. There is about 11 tons of toxic propellant onboard, adding up to the probe?s total mass of 13.5 tons.

According to ESA, studies by the Russian space agency (known as Roscosmos) and NASA indicate that Phobos-Grunt's fuel tanks should burst high above the Earth, releasing a load of propellant that will subsequently dissipate. [Photos of the Phobos-Grunt mission]

"Because it was stuck in low Earth orbit rather than heading towards Mars, this has meant that it's full of fuel too," said Alice Gorman, a lecturer in the School of Humanities, Department of Archaeology at Flinders University in South Australia.

Gorman specializes in space archaeology and noted that the fuel tanks, according to the Russian space agency, are made of aluminum.?

"More than 50 percent of all re-entered spacecraft material is titanium, beryllium or steel, which has a melting point twice that of aluminum, so the likelihood of the fuel tanks surviving is very low,? Gorman said. "The fuel is reported to be hydrazine and nitrogen tetroxide, which boil at 113 degrees Celsius and 21 degrees C (235 F to 69 F) respectively, so it will evaporate at high altitude once the tanks go."

Phobos-Grunt leftovers

Roscosmos has said that, at most, 20 to 30 fragments of Phobos-Grunt, weighing a total of less than 440 pounds (200 kilograms), may reach Earth?s surface. However, given that most of our planet's surface is covered by water, the probability that these pieces will?fall onto populated terrain?is seen as very small.

Phobos-Grunt also carries a small Chinese Mars orbiter called Yinghuo-1. Chinese state media declared the Yinghuo-1 probe a loss back in mid-November.

ESA?s Space Debris Office in Darmstadt hosts the IADC database that's used to exchange orbit data and re-entry predictions among IADC members, a membership roster that includes NASA and Roscosmos.

IADC member agencies also include European national agencies and the Chinese, Canadian, Japanese, Ukrainian and Indian space agencies.

Results from the Phobos?Grunt monitoring campaign will be used by IADC members to improve their models and make future predictions of?space debris re-entry?more accurate, officials said.

"Taking this step demonstrates the increasing trend by space actors to take voluntary cooperative action to protect the space and Earth environments and share risk," said Joanne Irene Gabrynowicz, director of the National Center for Remote Sensing, Air, and Space Law at the University of Mississippi School of Law.

"It is a practical application of the legal fact that outer space is a global commons," Gabrynowicz told SPACE.com.

Survivable return capsule

Predicting the exact time that Phobos-Grunt will slip into Earth?s atmosphere ?and over what part of the Earth the craft will re-enter ? is anybody?s guess at the moment.

"Right now, due to the large number of uncertainties in the orbit and space environment affecting the satellite, the indications are that?Phobos-Grunt could re-enter?between January 13-17, between 51.4 degrees north and 51.4 degrees south," Klinkrad said in a recent ESA statement.

Phobos-Grunt launched on Nov. 8 (Nov. 9 in Moscow). The probe was supposed to land on Phobos ? one of two moons circling the Red Planet ? collect soil samples and then send those specimens back to Earth in 2014 ("grunt" means "soil" in Russian).

However, shortly after launch, the probe failed to boost itself out of Earth orbit on an interplanetary trajectory.

That's LIFE

The wayward Russian probe carries a nose-cone-shaped descent vehicle that was designed to haul back to Earth bits and pieces of Phobos. That hardware is likely to survive re-entry, since it was built to plunge through Earth?s atmosphere and make a hard landing.

The return capsule was supposed to touch down at the Sary Shagan missile test range in Kazakhstan.

Tucked inside the capsule is the?Living Interplanetary Flight Experiment?(LIFE) designed and built by the Planetary Society, a United States-based?nonprofit?organization. This biomodule was devised to assess how spending years in deep space affects organisms.

"Because we can?t predict the details of the re-entry, we can?t predict whether the Phobos LIFE biomodule will survive re-entry, and certainly we can't predict whether it will land somewhere it could be recovered," said the Planetary Society?s Bruce Betts, LIFE project manager.

"In the unlikely event the Phobos LIFE biomodule is recovered, we would want to study the organisms inside," Betts told SPACE.com. "Though the primary goal of 34 months in deep space will not have been achieved, there would be some scientific value to study the organisms after two months in low-Earth orbit."

Leonard David has been reporting on the space industry for more than five decades. He is a winner of last year's National Space Club Press Award and a past editor-in-chief of the National Space Society's Ad Astra and Space World magazines. He has written for SPACE.com since 1999.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/PtKPkxoLqSU/Russian-space-probe-turned-space-junk-crash-will-have-worldwide-audience

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Sunday, January 15, 2012

New Year, Powerline Still Stupid (OliverWillisLikeKryptoniteToStupid)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/186307855?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Packers, Giants get boost from history

New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning throws a pass during an NFL football practice, Friday, Jan. 13, 2012, in East Rutherford, N.J. The Giants are scheduled to play the Green Bay Packers in an NFC divisional playoff game on Sunday, Jan.15, in Green Bay, Wis. (AP Photo/Bill Kostroun)

New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning throws a pass during an NFL football practice, Friday, Jan. 13, 2012, in East Rutherford, N.J. The Giants are scheduled to play the Green Bay Packers in an NFC divisional playoff game on Sunday, Jan.15, in Green Bay, Wis. (AP Photo/Bill Kostroun)

San Francisco 49ers tight end Vernon Davis (85) stretches during NFL football practice in Santa Clara, Calif., Wednesday, Jan. 11, 2012, in preparation for the 49ers' playoff game against the New Orleans Saints on Saturday, Jan. 14. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)

FILE - In this Feb. 7, 2010, file photo, New Orleans Saints center Jonathan Goodwin (76) prepares to hike to quarterback Drew Brees (9) during the first half of the NFL Super Bowl XLIV football game against the Indianapolis Colts in Miami. Goodwin, who won a Super Bowl ring with the New Orleans Saints two years ago, has been giving his San Francisco teammates playoff tips. The 49ers have only eight players with postseason experience; the Saints had 39 before defeating Detroit. Goodwin's insights could help in their NFC divisional playoff game scheduled for Jan. 14, 2012, against the Saints. (AP Photo/Rob Carr, File)

San Francisco 49ers quarterbacks Alex Smith (11) and Scott Tolzien (3) pass during NFL football practice in Santa Clara, Calif., Wednesday, Jan. 11, 2012, in preparation for the 49ers' playoff game against the New Orleans Saints on Saturday in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)

San Francisco 49ers quarterback Alex Smith passes during NFL football practice in Santa Calf., Wednesday, Jan. 11, 2012, in preparation for the 49ers' playoff game against the New Orleans Saints on Saturday. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)

Athletes and coaches don't live in the past. They do get enlightened and, sometimes, uplifted from it.

The Green Bay Packers and New York Giants have good memories from recent postseasons. Green Bay went from sixth-seeded NFC wild card to Super Bowl champion a year ago. New York used a similar route to win the 2007 NFL championship ? winning at Lambeau Field on the way.

They meet Sunday in the final game of the divisional round.

In going 15-1, including winning all eight home games, the Packers established themselves as the cream of the NFL this season. They have gotten healthy during their bye. They beat the Giants 38-35 in the Meadowlands on Dec. 4.

Most significantly, they discovered how to win in last year's surge to the title.

"I think we learned a lot last year being a six seed and having to go on the road," star quarterback Aaron Rodgers said. "You take on a different attitude as a team as the road team going into a hostile environment. I think that prepares us for the mindset that the opposing team is going to have. It is a different feeling, and last year we just got in and this year we had a run and got a bye. So it is a different feeling, but last year really helped."

Just as 2007 certainly helped the Giants. They fell to New England in the season finale that year, completing the Patriots' undefeated record, but gained so much confidence from that loss that they were not intimidated when they met up with the Patriots in the Super Bowl. The Giants won 17-14.

That defeat five weeks ago to the Packers also brought confidence. New York fell to 6-6 with that fourth straight loss, but won three of its last four to take the NFC East, then easily handled Atlanta 24-2 in the wild-card round last Sunday.

"We're extremely excited to have all of our key guys intact that we're going to ride with going through this postseason," safety Antrel Rolle said, noting that defensive end Osi Umenyiora and linebacker Michael Boley didn't play against Green Bay but will this time.

"We're excited. We're excited about the opportunity that's ahead of us and we're excited about playing together and understanding the defense, understanding each other, understanding that this guy is going to be next to us and he's fighting with everything he has."

Also fighting to get into the conference championship games were New Orleans (14-3) and San Francisco (13-3), who open the second round of the playoffs Saturday afternoon.

That NFC matchup will be followed by Tim Tebow and Denver (9-8) at New England (13-3).

Before the Giants and Packers renew their rivalry, Houston (11-6) will be at Baltimore (12-4) on Sunday.

No visitor has won at Lambeau Field since Miami managed the feat on Oct. 17, 2010. The Giants were blown out 45-17 in Game 15 of that season when they were in position to make the playoffs.

But coach Mike McCarthy knows there is more to be learned from this edition of the Giants, the team that challenged his Packers as much as anyone in 2011.

"There is a reason why we are both playing in this game. We are two of the last four teams in the NFC," McCarthy said. "They are playing well and they wouldn't be here if they were not, so to me, that is to be expected. I think they are playing better than when they played us and earlier in the season they had some tough defeats also. It is playoff football and they are a very good football team."

Baltimore has been very good in each of John Harbaugh's four seasons as coach, but this is the first time the Ravens are playing a home game after three successive wild-card appearances. The Ravens were 8-0 at home, including a 29-14 victory over Houston in October.

"If you look at wild card weekend, I don't think that there was one home team that lost the whole weekend," Lewis said. "When you get into that, it plays a big momentum. It's a big momentum swing for you. It's just hard to win on the road. I don't care who you are, I don't care how good you are, it's hard to win on the road.

"For us to work as hard as we did, get 12 wins, do the things we were supposed to do, and now get this home playoff game, we have positioned ourselves to be in the right place. Now we have to go finish it."

Houston is 0-5 in meetings with Baltimore, but its first postseason game, in its 10th season, was a strong victory over Cincinnati last Saturday.

"It's been pretty one-sided so, we've got to get on the board," tackle Eric Winston said. "At the same time, you've got to look back on it and I don't think a lot of that stuff is going to have a lot of bearing on this game either, though.

"So, there's different guys, there's a different situation and we all know from past experiences that playoffs, funny things happen in the playoffs and games turn out a lot different than they did in the regular season. So hopefully we can hold true to that."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-01-14-NFL%20Playoffs%20Rdp/id-dc36a5035aa14526a9bcae842c722b63

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Saturday, January 14, 2012

"Girls" explore the reality of "Sex and the City" (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) ? Ever wondered whether single life in New York is really like "Sex and the City?"

"Girls," written, directed and starring Lena Dunham, is a bittersweet homage to HBO's influential hit TV series "Sex and the City".

It follows the lives of four young college graduates trying to find jobs and love in a big city but who find it's not quite the fairytale life enjoyed by Carrie, Samantha, Miranda and Charlotte in the freewheeling 1990s.

"This is about girls who aren't from New York, but they grew up watching 'Sex and the City' and thought they were going to live the dream, and now that they've arrived, it's something decidedly different," Dunham told television critics on Friday.

Dunham, 25, first made an impact in 2010 with her debut independent film, "Tiny Furniture," which she wrote, directed and starred in as a young graduate struggling to adapt after returning home to New York City after college.

Dunham said "Girls", which debuts on HBO in April, was "closely based" on her own experiences. She plays a character who has to deal with reality when her parents cut her off financially and she loses her unpaid internship.

"We've all been really conscious of making sure that it's clear that they're trying their hardest and that they make mistakes, but they're also working towards something," said Dunham.

"You realize that it's ok to be annoyed by them, that they're making terrible mistakes, there's a sense of self-entitlement," said executive producer Judd Apatow.

Apatow, producer of the female-led box-office hit comedy "Bridesmaids," said he loved the geeky aspect of "Girls".

"It's really a golden era for talented women in comedy," he said. "I love underdogs and people making awful mistakes. There's a female geekdom to the show that I appreciate."

(Editing by Jill Serjeant)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120114/tv_nm/us_girls

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Friday, January 13, 2012

Mother killed in South African university stampede

A woman has been crushed to death in a stampede for places at a South African university, a stark symptom of how the country is struggling to meet demand for education among the poor.

Thousands of young South Africans and their parents had camped out for 24 hours at the University of Johannesburg to seek its precious remaining slots.

Most were from poor families who learned they were eligible to apply only after receiving the results of their secondary school exams last week.

A melee broke out at about 7.30am. Ihron Rensburg, the university's vice-chancellor, said: "When we opened the gates this morning, we had this unfortunate, this very sad situation, where there was simply an unbearable crush on the front entrance, or front gate."

A mother who had accompanied her son to the campus was killed, he said. "The situation was particularly tragic as the young man was inside the registration tent and had no idea that this had happened."

Three other people were critically injured and nearly 20 others hurt.

Witnesses told how the gate broke and people tried to clamber over the fence. Desmond Mlangu, a prospective student, said he witnessed a "traumatising" scene, with women screaming and people continuing to push.

Hours later, shoes, camping chairs and other detritus was strewn across the site. People remained in line still seeking to join the courses, which begin next month.

Regular admission to the university closed in June, but some places remain open for late entrants. The application process has been open for weeks but many poor students do not have internet access and were unable to apply online.

The university said it had received 7,000 applications in the past 24 hours, of which only 800 would be successful.

The gap is indicative of a strain on South Africa's universities and of a national education system that experts say lurches from one crisis to another, representing arguably the biggest blemish on the African National Congress's record in government.

"This is an absolutely tragic incident but it also shows the desperate situation of poor families, who see university as a way out of poverty," said Salim Vally, the director of the Centre for Education Rights and Transformation at the University of Johannesburg. "It's about race and class. These issues have not been resolved, 17 years after apartheid."

University offers an escape from the prospect of unemployment, which remains the fate of one in three South Africans. There are too many applicants for too few places. This year more than 180,000 would-be students will be turned away from the country's top nine universities, the Times of South Africa reported on Tuesday, including about 74,000 at the University of Johannesburg alone.

Their alternative is further education colleges and other institutions offering vocational skills, but many of these are poorly advertised and of inferior quality.

Rhoda Kadalie, an academic and executive director of the Impumelelo Social Innovations Centre, said the applications logjam was the result of universities closing down in December, a failure to computerise the process, and a continued shortage of universities in South Africa.

It was also too easy to achieve the pass mark for admission, she added. "Too many students are allowed into university who shouldn't be there. We have this warped notion that everyone in South Africa should be able to go to university, irrespective of their marks."

Under apartheid, all but a trickle of the country's black majority was shut out of higher education. When white minority rule ended, in 1994, the gates to universities were opened to all.

But Kadalie believes efforts to increase the number of black students have backfired. "Because of affirmative action, a lot of coloured, Indian and white students aren't admitted. In trying to be politically correct, they are holding students back," she said.

Similar concerns have been raised by Jonathan Jansen, vice-chancellor of the University of the Free State. In a newspaper column last year, he described meeting a school leaver who, despite poor exam marks, was deemed to have fulfilled the minimum requirement for higher education.

"Slowly, slowly we are digging our collective graves as we fall into a sinkhole of mediocrity from which we are unlikely to emerge," Jansen wrote.

"This young (incidentally black) person did not achieve anything above 50% in her Senior Certificate results for any exam subject, but we tell her she can proceed to higher studies. What are we saying? That black students are somehow less capable and therefore need these pathetic results to access higher education?"

Education has been one of the biggest segments of state spending for years, accounting for about 20% of the budget, but it is seen as grossly underperforming, with schools near the bottom in global rankings. The University of Cape Town is South Africa's sole representative, at 103rd, in the Times Higher Education's list of the top 200 universities in the world.

Dr Junita Kloppers-Lourens, the shadow minister of higher education and training for the opposition Democratic Alliance, said: "The situation at the University of Johannesburg is absolutely unacceptable. Last year the minister was asked about the flood of applicants and he said: 'I see it as a wonderful problem.' But today the 'wonderful problem' has turned around into a tragedy.

"The government has failed dismally in dealing with education. It's absolutely criminal, what has happened under the ANC. It will take years to drag it out of the mud."

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/jan/10/mother-killed-south-african-university-stampede

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Welcome to Another Wonderful CES [Ces]

Awwww yeah, it's that time of year again. The Consumer Electronics Show, where we storm Las Vegas and see if there is anything worth writing about. We squeeze into fart-smelling rooms with hundreds of other tech journalists to hear about "vision" and "the future" and, this year, probably a whole lotta ultrabooks. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/kBr8aAxZL5c/welcome-to-another-wonderful-ces

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