Sunday, December 9, 2012

Florida's Crist may run again; GOP says its ready

FILE - In this April 5, 2007 file photo, Florida Gov. Charlie Crist talks to the media at the Miami airport, about the plan to restore voting and other civil rights to felons who have finished their sentences. Former Florida Gov. Charlie Crist has announced on Twitter that he's joining the Democratic Party, Friday, Dec. 7, 2012. (AP Photo/Alan Diaz, File)

FILE - In this April 5, 2007 file photo, Florida Gov. Charlie Crist talks to the media at the Miami airport, about the plan to restore voting and other civil rights to felons who have finished their sentences. Former Florida Gov. Charlie Crist has announced on Twitter that he's joining the Democratic Party, Friday, Dec. 7, 2012. (AP Photo/Alan Diaz, File)

(AP) ? Now that former Republican Gov. Charlie Crist is a Democrat, pretty much everyone in Florida's political world expects him to seek his old job.

"I will consider it, and I will think about it," Crist told The Associated Press by phone while boating off of Miami and before a planned dinner Saturday evening with former Democratic governor and Sen. Bob Graham.

The former Republican governor revealed his long-anticipated conversion Friday, after more than two years as an independent. He made the announcement on Twitter and included a photo of his new voter registration form, which he filled out at the White House.

Earlier Saturday, Florida Republicans gathered for a meeting and said they will be extra motivated to re-elect Gov. Rick Scott if his opponent is Crist, who left the GOP during his 2010 run for Senate.

"Bring it on," Peter Feaman, the party's national committeeman, told a room of Republican activists. "That man sat at my house, in my kitchen, at my breakfast table and told me he was a Ronald Reagan Republican. OK, I'm putting my boots on, because guess what? You lied to me."

Should the 56-year-old Crist run, he could become the first person to run for Florida governor as a Republican and as a Democrat. Crist only served one term before choosing to run for Senate instead of re-election.

Republicans, anticipating the switch, have been attacking him for months. As Crist campaigned with President Barack Obama and other Democrats during the fall, Republicans ran a television ad and issued scores of press releases pointing out his previous conservative positions.

"I really feel at home. A lot of it was inspired by what Democrats have stood for, and honestly, friends have told me most of my political life, 'Charlie, you're really a Democrat and you just don't know it," Crist said.

Crist was a moderate governor and met often with Democratic leaders. At dinners in the governor's mansion, he includes both Republicans and Democrats at his head table. He endeared himself to the teachers union by vetoing a Republican priority bill that would have stripped teachers of tenure and based merit raises on test scores. He also won over many black leaders by championing civil rights issues, prompting one black lawmaker to describe him as the first black governor.

Since leaving the GOP, Crist, who called himself "the people's governor" while in office, has criticized the party for going too far to the right. Crist has already criticized Scott for refusing to extend early voting despite pleas from U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson and other Democrats.

"The leadership of the party lately has gone off the cliff, I wasn't comfortable enough," Crist said. "What I love most about our state is our people ... I just have a feeling in my heart right now that leadership doesn't appreciate that fact."

Crist was elected governor in 2006 as a Republican, succeeding two-term Republican Gov. Jeb Bush. A popular governor and considered one of the best campaigners in the state, Crist used his charisma and feel-good messages to win over voters.

But many conservatives became disenchanted with Crist after he hugged President Barack Obama at a rally to push for the $787 billion stimulus package, which passed in 2009 with virtually no Republican support.

Although Crist was the early favorite for a U.S. Senate seat in 2010, conservatives began to rally around the bid of Marco Rubio in the 2010 GOP primary, prompting Crist's independent bid.

If he runs for his old job, Crist will have better name recognition than any other Democrat seeking the governor's seat, including former state Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink, who lost a hard-fought campaign to Scott.

Scott's approval ratings haven't come close to what Crist had in office. Scott, a former hospital chain CEO and tea party favorite who never ran for office before spending nearly $80 million of his and his family's money to win election, isn't considered a natural politician. He can be an awkward speaker, and it has taken a while for him to grow comfortable in the spotlight.

But that doesn't mean Crist would have an easy time winning. During primary elections, only about 20 percent of voters turn out, and they are the most faithful in the party. Activists on both sides will remember the many elections in which they fought Crist, who often called himself a Ronald Reagan and Jeb Bush Republican.

"We're going to be ready to play ball," said Republican Party of Florida Chairman Lenny Curry, noting that Crist previously praised former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, criticized Obama and held conservative views on abortion.

And it's not easy switching parties after reaching political success. After nearly three decades as a Republican U.S. senator from Pennsylvania, Arlen Specter switched to the Democratic party rather than face a potentially uphill primary battle against a conservative challenger in 2010. Obama and Senate Democrats welcomed him, but Specter lost in that year's Democratic primary to Rep. Joe Sestak, who went on to lose in the fall to Republican Pat Toomey. Then there's former Louisiana Gov. Buddy Roemer, who won office as a Democrat and then lost his 1992 re-election bid as a Republican.

"The strong Democrats are the ones that vote in the non-presidential year, and they're the ones that are most likely to have a problem with Crist," said Democratic pollster David Beattie.

Beattie, however, said Crist has been smart about the transition because he got people used to the idea of him being a Democrat. After losing his independent bid for Senate, he began doing public events with Democrats. His wife, Carole, switched from Republican to Democrat. Then he began backing Democratic candidates in Florida, then Obama. And he spoke at last summer's Democratic National Convention.

"There are a lot of people who say, 'Oh, I thought he did that a long time ago,'" Beattie said. "I don't think he's stopped campaigning over the last two years."

___

Follow Brendan Farrington on Twitter: http://twitter.com/bsfarrington

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-12-08-Crist-Democratic%20Party/id-77ad34a3008e4928aa5d51ae351fb203

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Card's coach Charlie Strong to stay at UofL reports Sports Illustrated

by WHAS11

WHAS11.com

Posted on December 5, 2012 at 7:03 PM

Updated Wednesday, Dec 5 at 11:31 PM

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WHAS11) -- It looks like head football coach Charlie Strong will stay in Louisville, according to Sports Illustrated. Strong had been rumored as a front runner for the University of Tennessee coaching position.

Strong is holding a meeting with players and the media Thursday morning at 8 a.m. according to University of Louisville.

On Wednesday afternoon WHAS11 learned that the University of Louisville was working on a new contract for football coach Charlie Strong yet it is unclear whether Strong has decided to stay at Louisville or accept an offer from UT.

CBS Sports reported that the University of Tennessee coaching job has been offered to Oklahoma State's Mike Gundy. That follows an ESPN report that Charlie Strong was UT's top choice and a report by Yahoo Sport's Pat Forde that UofL was still confident that Strong would stay here.

Strong left his future up in the air on Monday when he was asked whether he could put the rumors to rest.

At the practice facility Wednesday morning, Cardinal players said they had not been told anything one way or the other. Athletic director Tom Jurich however has always said that the University of Louisville would match anyone else's offer for Strong.

Just last year in Strong's second season UofL agreed to a new seven-year contract that raised his base salary from $1.6 million to $2.3 million. That contract runs through 2018.

WHAS11's Joe Arnold asked former Louisville football coach Howard Schnellenberger who left Louisville for Oklahoma in 1994 what it's like behind the scenes.

Having coached at four different universities and interviewed for jobs that people don't know about, Schnellenberger says every negotiation is different, it can take months or days.?

?

Want the latest Louisville Cardinals news, scores and info? Get the Louisvlle Sports app from?WHAS11 on your phone. Choose your smartphone type below and have the link emailed or texted directly to your phone! Get everything Cards from?WHAS11!

Source: http://www.whas11.com/sports/university-of-louisville-sports/Charlie-Strong-watch-182225141.html

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Washington Post to pay dividend early

Associated Press

Posted on December 8, 2012 at 1:01 AM

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The Washington Post Co. will pay its 2013 dividends before the end of this year to try to spare investors from potential tax increases expected in the coming year.

The media and education company said Friday that a dividend of $9.80 per share is payable Dec. 27 to shareholders of record as of Dec. 17. The payout is instead of regular quarterly dividends next year.

A number of companies are moving up quarterly payouts or issuing special end-of-year payments to protect investors from expected higher taxes on dividend income starting in January. Investors have paid a maximum of 15 percent on this income for years, but if a resolution is not reached on the "fiscal cliff" it could jump as high as 43.4 percent for the country's highest earners.

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Source: http://www.ktvb.com/news/business/182592281.html

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Google Nexus 4 Camera sample [Trees in Low Light]

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Sanook launches online marketplace in Chiang Mai - The Nation

Home ? business ? Sanook launches online marketplace in Chiang Mai


THE NATION December 8, 2012 1:00 am

"Dealfish.co.th is the most convenient locally focused person-to-person community marketplace in Thailand that Sanook officially launched in February," said Tiwa York, Sanook Online managing director for e-commerce. "After its introduction, we received a good response and we saw that there was an opportunity to expand the market by focusing on the major provinces of Thailand, beginning with Chiang Mai at chiangmai.dealfish.co.th.

"The reason we chose Chiang Mai as the first province in the expansion of dealfish.co.th was that we had analysed Internet users' behaviour and found that apart from Bangkok and its neighbouring provinces, people in the Chiang Mai area used the Internet the most. Hence we saw that an expansion of dealfish into the local market would best respond to the needs of local users, so we combined products and services for local sales in the Northern area to provide convenience for people in Chiang Mai and in other provinces in the North.

"We envisage that in the future when 3G is available nationwide, this will be a factor in stimulating the further growth of e-commerce," Tiwa added, referring to third-generation wireless broadband.

"Nowadays, Thais' buying behaviour has been changed a lot, with the use of online services increasing with the popularity of mobility devices. The number of mobile or smart-phone users now exceeds 10.4 million units [according to the National Statistics Office], while the number of people who access websites using mobility devices has increased by about 19 per cent over the past six months. We see this as a great opportunity to expand the e-commerce market of Sanook into the provinces."

Currently, dealfish.co.th has about 200,000 listings, with 4,000-5,000 new ones posted every day. There are 270,000 daily visits to the site with 2.8 million page views per day.

It also provides other services to create opportunities for small and medium-sized enterprises with a Facebook fanpage and with the development of a Dealfish Store application.

Latest stories in this category


Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/business/Sanook-launches-online-marketplace-in-Chiang-Mai-30195790.html

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Ford Ranger engine 2.3 code 1443

I have a 1996 Ford Ranger that has a 2.3 and it has an engine code of 1443. I need to know how to resolve this code problem. I really rely on my vehicle to run trouble free since I have a 500 miles a day to make my job work for me.

I thought that I had the engine code resolved, but after all the service engine light comes back on after 40 miles of disconnection of battery to clear code.

On the charcoal canister I had a hose that was pretty rough shape, so I replaced the hose. However at first I found the hose was disconnected.

(This post was edited by mr+brakes on Dec 7, 2012, 9:56 PM)

Source: http://autoforums.carjunky.com/Automotive_Repair_C1/Engine_Fault_Codes_F29/Ford_Ranger_engine_2.3_code_1443_P132070/

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With Nationwide University Hackathon, General Catalyst Aims To Give Students Early Intro To Startup Life

Screen shot 2012-12-07 at 8.45.50 AMWhile organized hackathons and startup-building events have begun to sprout up across the globe thanks to companies like AngelHack and Startup Weekend, university-focused hackathons remain underrepresented. General Catalyst, the veteran venture capital firm based in Massachusetts and Palo Alto, wants to change that. General Catalyst, in partnership with hacker event specialist Signalfire, has organized the University Hacker Olympics, an invitation-only competition that aims to be the largest university hackathon held to date. The competition began in October with “Qualifiers” at over 25 of the top engineering schools in the U.S., where students have been competing in coding challenges designed by Y Combinator alum HackerRank. After the Qualifiers wrap up at Princeton later this month, the five students with the highest scores at each university are then invited to participate in an all-expenses-paid, three-day “finals” event in San Francisco that is set to take place the weekend of January 11th. Those 100-plus students will code alongside CTOs and top engineers from startups like Airbnb, Square, Stripe and over 30 others. At the end of the Hackathon, the winning team will be taken to a VIP dinner with Silicon Valley notables. The final day will consist of a “Hacker Demo Day,” where more than 40 startups will pitch students on their businesses and offer networking opportunities and a chance to join their teams. The University Hacker Olympics initially began as an open challenge in which students from all over the country could apply to participate — the only required criterion being a “.edu” email address. While many students are aware of Facebook, Twitter, Google and Silicon Valley’s biggest tech companies, many of them have never had a chance to see them in person and interact with entrepreneurs, investors and engineers from the top tech startups. The organizers tell us that the inspiration for the event came from just that: wishing they’d had a similar opportunity when they were in college. Though the list of 25 schools has been set (which you can see here), the organizers want the event to be open to all, so they’re hosting a “Wildcard Challenge” this Sunday, where any student from any school can apply to test their coding chops. The final qualifier will be held December 16th, after which the organizers and sponsors will be tallying the results and sending out invitations to the winners. For students interested in participating, you can find more information here.

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

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Kate Middleton Hospital Worker Dead After Radio Prank

The prank call that happened earlier this week at King Edward VII Hospital that led to Kate Middleton's confidential information being revealed has suddenly turned incredibly tragic. The receptionist who initially answered the call and transferred the line to Middleton's hospital room has been found dead of an apparent suicide.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/kate-middleton-hospital-receptionist-found-dead-after-radio-prank/1-a-507336?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Akate-middleton-hospital-receptionist-found-dead-after-radio-prank-507336

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Scuba Diving: An Exotic Sport | JACKIES SCUBA DIVING BAZAAR ...

Related eBooks

Scuba diving is a great recreational sport where you get to explore exotic underwater locations either in the ocean or your favorite lake. The word scuba is an acronym that stands for self contained underwater breathing apparatus.

The scuba gear you?ll need when you go diving:

? Dive tanks ? This is your air supply. They come in different sizes and shapes ? and are made of aluminum or steel. You can rent or buy your dive tanks at one of the many diving outlets.

? A mask ? dive shops carry a variety of diving masks. Some are full-face masks while others just cover your eyes. You can even buy them with optical lenses.

? Valves ? regulate the air-flow from the tanks.

? Gauges ? there are many different type gauges you can get from the diving stores, such as depth, temperature, and pressure gauges.

If you are thinking of taking up scuba diving as a hobby you?ll need to purchase or rent all the scuba gear mentioned above. You should also check out scuba certification. There are different levels of scuba dive certifications, from the very basic to the most advanced.

When you decide you want to scuba dive you should check out scuba driving lessons. Scuba diving lessons are a great way to learn how to scuba dive safely. Check with your local YMCA to see if scuba classes are given in one of their indoor pools. Lessons focusing on safety will give you the confidence you need to make your diving experience an enjoyable one.

After you have been doing local diving for a while you may want to go on some international dive trips. Dive trips are some of life?s most amazing and enjoyable life experiences. You will see spectacularly colored fish that may be dangerous ? so be careful.

What are some of the best scuba diving destinations?

Scuba diving in Belize is considered one of the best scuba diving destinations in the world. It has the second largest barrier reef in the northern hemisphere ? and has many dive spots in and outside the reef. The water is so clear you can see hundreds of feet. It?s truly a visual wonderland. Scuba divers of all levels can dive here.

Indonesia ? has really gained in popularity as a dive destination because of its amazing amount of beautiful and diverse marine life.

Micronesia ? with its two thousand islands you are sure to see sights you won?t see anywhere else.

North Carolina, United States ? Between Cape Hatteras and Cape Fear lies the ?graveyard of the Atlantic? ? it?s very popular with divers.

There are so many great places on earth to dive ? maybe you will personally discover the next great destination.

Anthony Benjamin, an avid writer, world traveler and a great lover of nature. He would like for you to check-out his latest book: http://www.amazon.com/Belize-Wildlife-Barrier-Fishing-ebook/dp/B007E2SFNQ/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1336140932&sr=8-1

View the original article here

Tags: Diving, Exotic, Scuba, Sport

Source: http://jackiesnichebazaar.com/recreationsports/scubadiving/uncategorized/scuba-diving-an-exotic-sport-2/

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Source: http://carsons38.typepad.com/blog/2012/12/scuba-diving-an-exotic-sport-jackies-scuba-diving-bazaar.html

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Source: http://franklinjere.typepad.com/blog/2012/12/scuba-diving-an-exotic-sport-jackies-scuba-diving-bazaar.html

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Saturday, December 8, 2012

First Ever Nationally Franchised Urgent Care, Doctors Express ...

Doctors Express Opening 6 New Centers Throughout the U.S.

(PRWEB) December 06, 2012 -?Doctors Express, the first ever nationally franchised urgent care, continues to expand across the country by opening six new centers by the end of the year. The centers will open in Greenville, South Carolina, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Bound Brook, New Jersey and Waltham, Saugus and North Andover Massachusetts. Doctors Express has a total of 58 centers open nationwide with 145 franchise territories sold in 25 states.

Patient Solution

Company leaders say the continued expansion shows the Doctors Express concept fills a desperate need in this country for quality, affordable and accessible healthcare.

?When people are sick, they don?t want to waste their entire day waiting for their doctor and they don?t need the full scale resources or expense of a hospital emergency room,? says David Sedgwick, President of Doctors Express. ?We provide a high quality, low cost, healthcare solution.?

Healthy Business Opportunity

Company leaders also say Doctors Express is growing because it?s attractive to business people and investors as a recession-resistant business opportunity with a proven track record for success.

?People recognize this as a golden opportunity with amazing growth potential. Plus, they can own a medical facility without having a medical background,? says Sedgwick. ?We?re also attracting doctors as owners who want to escape the long hours and sinking profits of private practice.?

The Doctors Express Difference

Doctors Express walk-in medical centers stand out from other urgent care centers by offering a consistent, broad range of treatment and services on the spot. Doctors and physician?s assistants will diagnose and treat illnesses, dispense medication and have capabilities to X-ray and set broken bones, all under one roof.

The centers also have on-site labs that give quick test results for ailments such as mono and strep throat and will perform employment and sports physical exams, drug screenings and work-site inoculations for employers. Plus, the average wait time to see a doctor or nurse?s assistant is only 15-20 minutes.

About Doctors Express

Doctors Express was founded in Baltimore in 2005 by an emergency room physician seeking a more efficient, affordable and personable system for urgent care patients. In 2012, the business was acquired by Phoenix-based Immediate Clinic. Doctors Express walk-in medical centers are sweeping the country as America?s first nationally branded urgent care centers. Doctors Express provides state-of-the-art treatment for acute illness, trauma and sports injuries (including minor surgical procedures) and has on-site laboratory and digital x-ray service as well as medication dispensing. Pre-employment physicals, drug screening and treatment of work related injuries are also available to local employers. Visit http://www.doctorsexpress.com.

Contact:

Stacey Hilton
Doctors Express
http://www.doctorsexpress.com/
919.459.8163

###

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Source: http://www.franchising.com/news/20121206_first_ever_nationally_franchised_urgent_care_docto.html

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Friday, December 7, 2012

Notes from the Drunken Editor: Forging Your Own Independence ...

I don't have a drinking problem, because I rarely drink. When I drink, I don't get drunk. The reason I'm calling this series "Notes from the Drunken Editor" is because I would like to catch a particular kind of reader's attention, and if you are reading this, it seems to have worked.

That's part of the gimmick, too. For some readers scanning the new LitReactor articles, seeing the word "drunken" will be a turn-off. It would be a turn-off for me on most days, because it instantly brings to mind the Bukowski stereotype, that literary drunkard. And since I do not enjoy reading Bukowski and I know there's a Bukowski collection called Notes of a Dirty Old Man, the whole unconscious association would probably stop me from reading my own article on a bad day.

The point is that I adopted a strategy. I know that many LitReactor folks like the Hunter S Thompson tell-it-like-it-is, bullshit-killer approach, so I'm trying to reach a compromise between expectations and my original intention.

This is the intention: to speak (as an author and as a publisher) to those who wish their editors and publishers would get drunk and loosen up a little and speak their minds.


Places like LitReactor help writers feel serious solidarity, and I think that's why they work in the long run. Classes with professional novelists are certainly exciting, but solidarity is what keeps people around.

In mid-2011, when I joined the team involved in creating LitReactor, I was especially interested in opening up a space where professional authors could teach new writers directly, with as little interference as possible. That was the great motivator for going along with the idea. Since then, though, my own career has changed in unexpectedly wonderful ways, and I've had to take some distance from LitReactor. I run a fiction press and co-run a political, philosophy, and cultural criticism press as well. This means I switch, daily, from speaking with writers who haven't published anything at all to working with authors of eight or nine published books, only some of which are known.

Places like LitReactor help writers feel serious solidarity, and I think that's why they work in the long run. Classes with professional novelists are certainly exciting, but solidarity is what keeps people around.

Still, you need to cultivate solitude, too, and that's what I want to address in this article. You should be able to stand on your own feet as a writer, and I don't just mean that you have to be able to look at your own writing objectively. The publishing world is changing drastically, and the ways in which it's changing should be something you understand. It will make your life easier in the long run. You won't have to rely on the expertise of others so much; you'll be able to figure out the best way to approach an agent, or a publisher, or a publicist for your specific project. You won't just go around searching for places with a fast response time on duotrope.com because you'll have developed very particular standards to help you.

Standing on your own feet involves having a sense of competence in the publishing world. It means developing at least a mild curiosity for the key terms in publishing. What are subsidiary rights, and how important are they when a publisher offers a contract? When there's a clause about first refusal in that contract, does that make sense? Is it necessarily an Epic Win if your publisher prints 20,000 copies of your first book? (What happens if it only sells 3,000? Will you be dropped from the publisher's list? Does it cost money to pulp books? Why do publishers destroy their own books??)

It also means understanding how flawed any publishing company can be. I spoke very recently to someone who's been running a small academic series with a big UK publisher, and was surprised to hear how incompetently a few of the titles were handled by that publisher: three people on the same publishing team writing to ask the same question without ever checking with each other to see if an answer had already been given; a cover design totally at odds with the rest of the series because, oops, I thought it was another series.

We publishers can be truly incompetent. We often are, because we're overwhelmed, or bored, or we have cheating, manipulative spouses who ran off with our best friend and we can't focus on your fucking book right now, which, by the way, is not going to change the world and your little questions about a specific copyediting mistake are not our top priority, okay?

Protect yourself and learn a bit more about what's going on in the industry, so you don't have to rely on editors and publishers who happen to be people with delightful flaws.

How do you start learning on your own? Start by reading around, trying to connect different concepts. If you're not happy with the way a particular story of yours was handled, find out in some detail what should have been done according to professional standards ? maybe you're just being a wimp, but it's also perfectly possible that you got screwed over. Ask around, read about it, then ask about what you've read.

It will, in the end, boil down to adopting a strong attitude of independence toward your own fate as a writer. The other side of knowing about the industry is knowing about yourself, and what you can do, and how you can do it. Here are some ideas that have worked for me.

Don't rely on existential maxims to justify things which, in fact, do more harm than good.

There's a great literary tradition of philosophically-inflected novels out there. Authors of such novels can make that their main "thing" and it can work well. Sartre and Camus are obvious examples, as are Iris Murdoch and Walker Percy. But the existential maxims I'm talking about have nothing to do with fiction; they are fictions, and they influence you, the author as a human being. "Pain is weakness leaving the body" is a great example. "One must imagine Sisyphus happy" is another. Little soundbites taken out of context do not constitute a personal philosophy, and they can do you harm. They can make you incapable of admitting that your writing isn't very good yet. They can turn the question of your writing's quality into a matter of whether it is good or not, full stop, instead of whether it is good yet, whether it is improving.

I'm not going to tell anyone to eat more veggies and drink enough water, but there is a difference between standing by your fiction for good or bad, and standing by your desire to improve it. The latter requires a bit of compromise. A heroic streak is great in an author and I believe many great artists would fail without it, but the heroism can be attached to incompatible projects. One of the most infuriating things I've had to deal with, as far as helping other authors goes, has been their misplaced egotism. They see themselves as misunderstood, and therefore superior to their critics. Or they think their books are ahead of their time, and that those books are therefore good. It's delusional, and while delusion can be your best strategy in some cases, it's incredibly off-putting when you're trying to form a professional relationship that revolves around writing.

There's nothing controversial in saying that writers are, on the whole, egomaniacs. They get off by writing, then being praised for their writing, then they solidify an "author personality" with particular opinions on things, even things totally unrelated to writing. That's fine. We are guilty, to whatever extent, of a tendency to self-inflation. It's a matter of making that self-inflation work for you, not very badly against you. When a publisher turns you down, don't sulk, and especially: don't bite back. When a publishing deal goes awry, unless there was something seriously unprofessional or immoral about the circumstances, leave it alone. Learn from it, investigate the circumstances, and keep going.

Make an ally out of Suspicion when you read any writing-related article that tells you not to do something.

This is trickier than it looks, and it may also contradict what I've just been saying. (On the whole, I think it's important to figure out the contradictions for yourself and decide how much they bother you.) Hey, I've just been giving you advice in a negative, don't-do-it way. I accept the hypocrisy as part of talking about independence in general.

Standing on your own feet involves having a sense of competence in the publishing world. It means developing at least a mild curiosity for the key terms in publishing... It also means understanding how flawed any publishing company can be.

When you're learning a new sport or a new musical instrument, you tend to listen very attentively to warnings from those who know better. When someone says, "Don't use this technique," or, "Avoid this as much as possible," it's hard not to take it seriously as long as you accept that they know more than you about this. They've been in the game longer than you.

The thing about writing articles for aspiring writers is that, if you're like me, you know what sorts of writing you prefer, and you think you've got it figured out. Almost everyone tells you adverbs are bad, but very few people make a convincing case for the inherent badness of adverbs. I used "almost" in the previous sentence to avoid too sweeping a generalization, and "almost" is an adverb. Handy, and it shows you what I mean. Think it through: If you're going around telling people adverbs are bad, are you full of shit? Probably not, but that teeny-weeny element of bluffing creeps into advice of that sort, because it ignores subtleties ? the things that make style so important to people who look at it ? just to create a rule that sounds simple, even if it's impractical.

The American novelist John Gardner was fond of making bold assertions about "good" writing, but these assertions were never so pointlessly reductive that you could take 'em or leave 'em or helpfully point out, in an online discussion, that there are exceptions, guys. Take the following, from his famous guide, The Art of Fiction:

"Sanity in a writer is merely this: However stupid he may be in his private life, he never cheats in his writing. He never forgets that his audience is, at least ideally, as noble, generous, and tolerant as he is himself (or more so), and never forgets that he is writing about people, so that to turn characters to cartoons, or treat his characters as innately inferior to himself, to forget their reasons for being as they are, to treat them as brutes, is bad art."

Opinionated, yes, but if you read it through a few times, you can get a good understanding of the author's personality, his philosophical attitude toward the writer's task, and his style of expression. If you spent fifteen minutes simply reading that quotation, I expect you'd find yourself inside its world, even without a sense of its context. What is your ideal audience ? is it as noble, generous and tolerant as you, or is it debauched and looking for someone to push the boundaries of what fiction can do, thematically or structurally? Do you treat your characters are innately inferior to yourself, or is everyone in your story a kind of John Galt? Does this matter? If it doesn't, then what does matter, to you, about your characters? Should a writer even be sane, and what does "sanity in a writer" even mean if you agree that there's such a thing but that Gardner's got it wrong?

Forget adverbs for a few days. What is it about your attitude to writing that is most helpful to you? And what's just bullshit?

Redefine professionalism to make it work for you.

Steven Pressfield, whose books on writing are worth reading for their great discussion of the need for discipline in writing, has laid out the "habits and qualities that the professional possesses that the amateur doesn?t" ? my favorites are:

  • The professional shows up every day.
  • The professional is committed over the long haul.
  • The professional is patient.
  • The professional dedicates himself to mastering technique.
  • The professional does not hesitate to ask for help.
  • The professional does not take failure or success personally.
  • The professional does not identify with his or her instrument.

These speak to me because, although they're not always easily spotted in my own behavior, they are the ones that get me inspired to be serious about writing. Showing up every day, as a writer, is not just about wanting to write every day. It involves making room for writing in your everyday life: often that seems to involve sacrificing social relationships, sometimes permanently. Once that happens, the writing life seems to get a bit less lonely, because although you're spending more time on your own, you don't feel like you have to explain it to everyone.

Not identifying with your instrument is crucial, too. Everyone is a writer; few of us are good writers. Even fewer of us are actually thought to be any good by our friends, no matter what anyone tells us in person. If you start submitting your manuscript to agents because that's just what writers do, or because you want to be in print very badly, then you're playing the role of a writer a little too earnestly. Writing and "being a writer" are different things, and writing can be combined with business sense, social intelligence, and even social media savvy.

It's a lot more enjoyable to work with authors who don't give the impression of just wanting a goddamn contract please-please. When you can talk about your own book, not just as the embodiment of spiritual purity that you believe it to be, but as something that could take years before anyone ever reads it, or reads it properly, the way you want it to be read?? that's when working with you will be a pleasure. Until then, you are probably more of a pain in the ass than you might realize.

There is nothing wrong with being a pain in the ass. But time it properly.

Image of The Art of Fiction: Notes on Craft for Young Writers

Author: John Gardner

Price: $11.20

Publisher: Vintage (1991)

Binding: Paperback, 240 pages

Image of Turning Pro: Tap Your Inner Power and Create Your Life's Work

Author: Steven Pressfield

Price: $12.95

Publisher: Black Irish Entertainment LLC (2012)

Binding: Paperback, 146 pages

Source: http://litreactor.com/columns/notes-from-the-drunken-editor-forging-independence

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Monday, December 3, 2012

Study shows growth in second screen users

(AP) ? Television viewers were once called couch potatoes. Many are becoming more active while watching now, judging by the findings in a new report that illustrates the explosive growth in people who watch TV while connected to social media on smartphones and tablets.

The Nielsen company said that one in three people using Twitter in June sent messages at some point about the content of television shows, an increase of 27 percent from only five months earlier. And that was before the Olympics, which was probably the first big event to illustrate the extent of second screen usage.

"Twitter has become the second screen experience for television," said Deirdre Bannon, vice president of social media at Nielsen.

Social networking is becoming so pervasive that the study found nearly a third of people aged 18-to-24 reported using the sites while in the bathroom.

An estimated 41 percent of tablet owners and 38 percent of smartphone owners used their device while also watching television at least once a day, Nielsen said.

That percentage hasn't changed much; in fact, 40 percent of smartphone owners reported daily dual screen usage a year earlier, Nielsen said. The difference is that far more people own these devices and they are using them for a longer period of time. The company estimated that Americans spent a total of 157.5 billion minutes on mobile devices in July 2012, nearly doubling the 81.8 billion the same month a year earlier.

"There are big and interesting implications," Bannon said. "I think both television networks and advertisers are onto it."

The social media can provide networks with real-time feedback on what they are doing. The performance of moderators at presidential debates this fall was watched more closely than perhaps ever before, because people were instantly taking on Twitter to provide their own critiques.

It also makes for some conflicting information: Twitter buzzed with complaints last summer about NBC's policy of airing many Olympics events from London on tape delay, yet ratings for the prime-time Olympics telecast soared past expectations.

The increase in people watching television and commenting about it online would seem to run counter to another big trend this fall: more people recording programs and watching them at a later hour. Those contrary trends both increase the value of live event programming like awards shows or sporting events.

The Nielsen study also found that 35 percent of people who used tablets while watching TV looked up information online about the program they were watching. A quarter of tablet owners said they researched coupons or deals for products they saw advertised on television

As rapid as the use of social media while on television is growing in the United States, it already lags behind other countries. Nielsen said that 63 percent of people in the Middle East or Africa report using social media while on TV, and 52 percent of people in Latin America.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-12-03-TV-Social%20Media/id-ddd139b906894131aba851f4be1d6498

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News anchor ?regrets? negotiating on air with man holding family hostage

Datena successfully brokered the release of these women. (Band News/CNN)

Jose Luiz Datena, host of a popular Brazilian crime show, became part of the unfolding story he was covering when a knife-wielding man holding his own mother and sister hostage demanded to speak with him.

The man had been negotiating with police--who had surrounded his Sao Paulo area home--for more than an hour late last month when he told negotiators he wanted to speak with Datena, host of "Urgent Brazil."

Police agreed, and Datena--who was already on the air--pleaded with the man for 20 minutes to release the women. The man eventually agreed, and the women walked out unharmed.

Datena, though, said he regretted blurring the line between journalist and hostage negotiator.

"I deeply regretted doing that," Datena said, according to CNN. "It is not our role as journalists."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/hostage-live-air-brazil-tv-host-150147614.html

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Wyoming police: Two slain before killer takes own life

CASPER, Wyo. (AP) ? The first victim was found in the gutter of a quiet residential street, just as the killer was shedding blood again on the campus of a nearby community college.

Wielding some kind of sharp-edged weapon, he killed a community college instructor before taking his own life in front of a classroom of students.

Police wouldn't speculate on a motive for the murder-suicide and said little about how it all developed Friday at Casper College and in a neighborhood about two miles away. They hinted, however, that the three knew each another.

Casper Police Chief Chris Walsh said an "edged weapon" was used in at least one of the killings. He didn't say more about what type of weapon it was and whether the killer used the same weapon in all of the deaths.

He said he didn't know how many students were in the class or what the topic was. The attacker wasn't believed to be a Casper College student but it appeared he knew the victims, he said.

No names were released.

"We're locating next of kin and working on notification absolutely as fast as we can," Walsh said.

The campus was locked down and class called off for the day. Later, after the lockdown, students who lived on campus trickled back to their dorm rooms.

The violence came as a shock to this typically peaceful prairie city of about 56,000 in east-central Wyoming.

"It was a little bit of a wake-up call," said freshman Nathan Hansen, of Glenrock, a town of 2,500 about 30 miles east of Casper. "It was kind of odd hearing news of that happening here."

Authorities said they didn't believe there was any further threat to the community.

All students and staff were evacuated from the classroom building where the attack occurred just before 9 a.m. MST.

The college sent out a campus-wide alert via text message and email within two minutes of receiving word of the attack at 9:06 a.m., school spokesman Rich Fujita said. The lockdown ended at about 11 a.m. after school officials received word that police were no longer searching for a suspect, Fujita said.

There are fewer classes on Fridays than any other day of the week at Casper College, so only between 1,500 and 2,000 of the college's 5,000 students were there, he added.

"It is particularly painful because of our size," Fujita said of the small, tight-knit campus.

Pearson Morgan, a freshman, was in a math class on the first floor of the science building when his instructor relayed the news in a state of shock.

"My teacher was just so sick, he said, 'You can just leave,'" Morgan said.

Morgan walked outside his classroom to find a female student crying. He then turned to see two or three officers with assault rifles bounding up the stairs. Then, all the classrooms emptied and a crush of students carried him outside, but nobody panicked, Morgan said.

"There was a large group of students behind me," he said. "There was a lot of confusion."

Political science instructor Chris Henrichsen said he was showing the film "Frost/Nixon" to his Wyoming and U.S. government class when he stepped into the hall and was told a homicide had occurred on campus.

Moments later his students started getting messages about the campus lockdown on their phones.

"We locked the door and waited for further instruction," Henrichsen said.

About two miles away, Dave Larsen said he was headed to the gym when he drove past a body in a gutter with two people standing over it, one talking on a cellphone.

Larsen lives about a block from the location of the body, a well-kept middle-class neighborhood of mostly single-story houses.

Walsh said that within minutes of the initial call, there was another report of a traumatic injury about two miles southwest of campus.

The college planned a candlelight vigil and memorial service on Tuesday.

Casper College opened in 1945 as the state's first junior college and moved to its current site 10 years later. Wyoming has only one four-year university, the University of Wyoming in Laramie, which serves more than 13,000 students.

Casper is Wyoming's second-largest city. Wyoming residents refer to it as the "Oil City" because it's a hub for the state's oil industry.

___

Associated Press writers Ben Neary in Cheyenne, Matt Volz in Helena, Mont., and Dan Elliott in Denver contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/wyo-police-2-slain-killer-takes-own-life-084416300.html

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Make Fitness a Family Affair | The Best Life Blog: Fitness, Weight ...

Posted By Team Best Life on December 2, 2012

Do you ever think that working out would be easy if it weren?t for your spouse or kids? I hear different versions of the same problem all the time: I have a young child and have no time to work out. I?m too busy taking care of my family and the house to get to the gym. But there are ways to have a family and be healthy! Use these tips to make fitness a part of your family routine.

Level with yourself. It?s possible that if your husband or kids didn?t give you a reason to skip the gym, someone or something else would?the holidays, your schedule, or your job, for example. Why we undermine our own efforts can be a complex issue, so I recommend that you try to understand yourself a little better. In other words, know your motivations and how badly you really want to lose the weight or get in shape. Ask yourself a few questions. Are there other reasons (such as stress or emotions) why you go off your healthy program? Do you have a need to please other people at your own expense? Sometimes the answers to these questions can tell you if you really want to do what is necessary to permanently lose weight and live healthfully.

Get an early start. Exercise first thing in the morning. This will remove many of the excuses that can come up during the day, like your son?s soccer practice that ran late or your daughter missing the school bus.

Choose child-friendly workouts. Select an exercise that you enjoy and know you?ll perform regularly. No need to find a sitter?simply exercise while watching your little ones. For example, walk or jog with your child in a stroller or baby jogger. Or try aerobic dancing or a fitness DVD in your living room.

Schedule family workouts. Combine exercise with some good old family bonding. Choose a time on the weekend, and plan a family outing; any activity is fair game, from a family bike ride to a trip to the farm to go apple picking to a game of tag in the yard.

Don?t make excuses. Make regular exercise non-negotiable. Not only will this help you stay on track, but it also sets a good example for your children. They?ll learn that taking care of your health is a priority.

Original article by Bob Greene for TheBestLife.com

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Related posts:

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  • I?m Having An Affair
  • Tags: best life diet, bestlife, bob greene, diet, make fitness a family affair, weight loss

    Source: http://members.thebestlife.com/blog/make-fitness-a-family-affair/

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    Sunday, December 2, 2012

    MacFarlane surprises UCLA class, announces contest

    Seth MacFarlane arrives at Variety Power of Comedy at Avalon Hollywood on Saturday, Nov. 17, 2012, in Los Angeles. (Photo by Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP)

    Seth MacFarlane arrives at Variety Power of Comedy at Avalon Hollywood on Saturday, Nov. 17, 2012, in Los Angeles. (Photo by Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP)

    LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Oscar host Seth MacFarlane is inviting college students to join him on stage at the Academy Awards.

    The "Family Guy" creator made a surprise appearance at UCLA to announce a contest sponsored by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and mtvU that will allow winning college students to appear on the Feb. 24 Oscar telecast.

    The contest invites students to submit videos on the academy's Facebook page describing how they'll contribute to the future of film. At least six winners will serve as trophy carriers on the Oscar show, replacing the leggy models who usually perform the duties.

    MacFarlane spent 40 minutes leading the undergraduate film and television class at UCLA's Westwood campus on Wednesday as part of mtvU's "Stand In" series, which brings celebrities to college classrooms as guest lecturers.

    "In re-imagining what we want the Oscar show to be, we wanted everyone appearing on that stage to feel a deep commitment to film and its legacy, and most importantly, its future," said Oscar telecast producers Craig Zadan and Neil Meron in a statement. "That was the impetus in creating this special honor for young film students who will inspire a new generation to create the films that will be honored in the future."

    The contest is also aimed at drawing younger viewers favored by advertisers to the Oscars' aging TV audience. Like UCLA student Abby Smith, who immediately pulled out her smartphone to share the moment on Facebook when MacFarlane appeared before her class.

    "Seth MacFarlane is speaking to my film lecture for the next hour," Smith posted. "I'm having a panic attack."

    The 39-year-old entertainer urged the aspiring filmmakers and show-runners in the class to make a "commercially viable student film" before leaving school, adding that "Family Guy" was based on his own student film.

    And MacFarlane said "Family Guy" could once again become a film. He said he's already come up with a concept for a feature-length movie and promised "it will happen at some point."

    MacFarlane cheekily described the Academy Awards as "a crazy little variety show" and said "all I can do is do what I think is funny and most entertaining."

    "The Oscars is a tricky venue," he said. "The (hosts) who have not done well, I would classify them as a noble failure, an honorable failure, because at least they were trying something new... If I can do it without torpedoing my career and getting drummed out of the business... All I can do is my very best."

    He paused a beat, and added, "Lame (expletive) answer."

    ___

    AP Entertainment Writer Sandy Cohen is on Twitter: www.twitter.com/APSandy.

    ___

    Online:

    http://www.facebook.com/TheAcademy/app_436081253118204

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-11-30-People-Seth%20MacFarlane/id-c4c4cc850fa34b25bb4049dd43197dd0

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    Saturday, December 1, 2012

    Study provides first direct evidence linking TB infection in cattle and local badger populations

    Study provides first direct evidence linking TB infection in cattle and local badger populations

    Saturday, December 1, 2012

    Transmission of tuberculosis between cattle and badgers has been tracked at a local scale for the first time, using a combination of bacterial whole genome DNA sequencing and mathematical modelling. The findings highlight the potential for the use of next generation sequencing as a tool for disentangling the impact of badgers on TB outbreaks in cows at the farm level.

    The role of badgers in the transmission of bovine tuberculosis (bTB) amongst cattle remains controversial, with the government's proposal to implement a widespread badger cull in England recently delayed and meeting with extensive criticism over the evidence base for this approach.

    Previous studies have used lower resolution genetic typing of bacteria and information observed during an outbreak to identify links between cattle and badgers. However, until now, direct evidence of transmission of the bacteria between the two hosts at the farm scale has been lacking.

    In this study, researchers made use of advances in genetic technologies to sequence whole genomes of bacteria that had been isolated from twenty six cows and four badgers from a group of neighbouring farms in Northern Ireland over a decade long history of repeated bTB outbreaks. This approach enabled the team to retrospectively trace changes in the bacteria's DNA as it passed from animal to animal.

    The findings reveal that the bacteria isolated from badgers and cattle were extremely closely related, with often indistinguishable bacterial types obtained from badgers and nearby cattle farms. Moreover, the bacteria isolated from the two species were more closely related to each other than they were to farms even a few kilometers away.

    "This study provides the first direct evidence of the close relationship between tuberculosis infections in cows and local badgers, at a very local scale," explains Prof. Rowland Kao, a Wellcome Trust Senior Research Fellow who led the study jointly conducted by the University of Glasgow and the Agri-Food and Biosciences Institute (AFBI) in Northern Ireland. "However, only with a larger study might we be able to quantify the extent and direction of transmission between cattle and badgers and reliably inform disease control policies."

    The mathematical models used in this study show that different herd outbreaks were usually characterised by genetically distinct groups of bacteria, while bacteria from within single outbreaks were usually closely related, highlighting the potential to use of next generation sequencing for tracking spread of the bacteria from herd to herd.

    Bovine tuberculosis (bTB) is an important disease of both livestock and wildlife with severe impacts on animal health and subsequent economic consequences. Although the disease in cattle is caused by a different bacteria from human disease, Mycobacterium bovis rather than Mycobacterium tuberculosis, M. bovis is believed to have been a major historical contributor to human cases of TB worldwide and remains a health concern in both developed and developing countries.

    ###

    Wellcome Trust: http://www.wellcome.ac.uk

    Thanks to Wellcome Trust for this article.

    This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

    This press release has been viewed 42 time(s).

    Source: http://www.labspaces.net/125621/Study_provides_first_direct_evidence_linking_TB_infection_in_cattle_and_local_badger_populations

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    Thursday, November 29, 2012

    US softens China currency criticism

    NEW YORK (CNNMoney) ?

    The Treasury Department said Tuesday that China's currency remains undervalued, but stopped short of branding the country a currency manipulator.

    In its semi-annual report on international exchange rates, the Treasury Department said Chinese authorities "have substantially reduced the level of official intervention in exchange markets" since last year, and have "taken a series of steps to liberalize controls on capital movements."

    Critics blame Beijing for holding down the value of its currency, the renminbi, in order to boost China's competitiveness in international trade at the expense of other countries.

    Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney vowed during the campaign to brand China a currency manipulator, a potential step towards trade sanctions. The Obama administration, however, has avoided this designation.

    The Treasury Department said in its report Tuesday that the renminbi has appreciated by 12.6% against the dollar when adjusted for inflation since June 2010. Nevertheless, it added that the renminbi "remains significantly undervalued, and further appreciation... against the dollar and other major currencies is warranted."

    Treasury said that for China to secure sustainable growth going forward, it needs to increase domestic consumption. Additional renminbi appreciation is a "critical part of this process," the report said, as a stronger currency increases the purchasing power of Chinese households.

    The oft-delayed report was originally scheduled to be published last month.

    Source: http://www.wisn.com/news/money/US-softens-China-currency-criticism/-/9373130/17568924/-/rci7ogz/-/index.html?absolute=true

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    Energy Efficient Embedded Systems using MSP430

    Abstract:?

    The One day Hands-On Workshop covers the architecture and applications of Energy Efficient Ultra Low Power 16 bit RISC Mixed Signal Microcontroller MSP430 from Texas Instruments . The data, program memory, peripheral organization and its special features are covered.? The peripherals include I/O Ports, Timers, PWM, A/D Converters, Universal Serial Interfaces and Comparators.

    The course is structured and tailored to meet the need of the engineering students to get a very good exposure of Mixed Signal Controllers which can be very well extrapolated to any other platform.

    Typical applications could be battery powered sensor signal acquisition, processing and serial transmission to a host system.

    Source: http://e2e.ti.com/group/universityprogram/c/e/38.aspx

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    Sunlight instantly turns ice water to steam using nanoparticles

    1 hr.

    Sunlight and itsy bitsy flecks of metal or carbon are all that?s required to quickly vaporize icy-cold water, according to researchers who recently unveiled a new steam-generating process that could revolutionize industrial practices without the hangover of greenhouse gas emissions.

    Steam is used throughout our world. It spins turbines to generate electricity and heats kettles used to brew beer. It is used to sterilize medical equipment and distill alcohol.?

    But, generating steam typically requires tons of energy to heat and boil water. The most common sources of energy are coal, oil, and natural gas ? fossil fuels that when burned emit carbon dioxide, the greenhouse gas that?s building up in the atmosphere and causing the planet?s climate to change.

    Researchers at Rice University unveiled a method that uses light-absorbing nanoparticles submerged in water to convert solar energy directly into piping?hot?steam. It is so effective that it can even produce the?steam from ice water.

    The tiny particles heat up so quickly that they instantly vaporize water, rather than dissipating the?heat into the surrounding fluid. Precisely how this works is a bit of a mystery, according to Naomi Halas, ?director of the nanophotonics laboratory at Rice University.

    ?There seems to be some nanoscale thermal barrier, because it is clearly making steam like crazy,? she told Technology Review.

    The process has an overall efficiency of 24 percent, compared to about 15 percent efficiency for solar panels such as those on your neighbor?s roof. But generating electricity is unlikely the first application of the new technology, which was developed with funding from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.?

    Rather, it will be used for sanitation and water purification in developing countries, helping to stem the spread of disease. To that end, the Rice University team has already created a solar steam-powered autoclave to sterilize medical and dental instruments at clinics without access to electricity.

    The technology could, however, also improve the efficiency and lower the cost of large-scale solar thermal energy generating plants, which use sunlight to warm up oil that is then used to heat water and generate steam to spin turbines.?

    Generating steam directly with the nanoparticles would be 3 to 5 percent more efficient and result in a cost savings of about 10 percent due to the less complex design, Todd Otanicar, a mechanical engineer at the University of Tulsa, told Technology Review.?

    For more information, check out the video below. A paper on the process was published Nov. 19 in the journal ACS Nano.?

    ?? via Technology Review and Rice University?

    John Roach is a contributing writer for NBC News Digital. To learn more about him, check out his website. For more of our Future of Technology series, watch the featured video below.

    Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/futureoftech/sunlight-instantly-turns-ice-water-steam-using-nanoparticles-1C7285506

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    Asian shares fall as focus shifts to U.S. budget talks

    TOKYO (Reuters) - Asian shares ended a seven-day winning streak on Wednesday and commodities eased as investors fretted that a lack of progress in talks on U.S. budget woes risked putting the world's largest economy into recession, dragging down global growth with it.

    European shares will likely track Asian peers lower. Financial spreadbetters predicted London's FTSE 100 <.ftse>, Paris's CAC-40 <.fchi> and Frankfurt's DAX <.gdaxi> will open down as much as 0.5 percent. A 0.1 percent drop in U.S. stock futures also hinted at a soft Wall Street open. <.l><.eu><.n/>

    MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan <.miapj0000pus> fell 0.5 percent, retreating from Tuesday's nearly three-week highs, with materials and energy sectors <.miapjmt00pus><.miapjen00pus> leading the declines.

    "The global economy, China, Europe, needs the U.S. economy to grow, and that is why the pressure to get this deal done is greater than before," said Carl Larry, a derivatives broker at the Houston-based Atlas Commodities. "The global economy can't afford for America to slip back into a recession."

    Shares in resource-reliant Australian <.axjo> eased 0.2 percent, off Tuesday's two-week highs as top miners fell on weaker gold prices.

    Australia's Bureau of Resources and Energy Economics said committed investment in major resources and energy projects, the main driver of Australian growth, still rose to A$268.4 billion ($280.5 billion) at October 31 from A$260.8 billion at end-April, but the rise partly reflected higher project costs and masked a fall in the number of projects. A fall in commodity prices due to a drop-off in Chinese demand also weighed on shares.

    "Markets don't really provide any sort of compelling investment value here at present because the grey cloud of uncertainty still overhangs the economic climate, in particular across Europe and the U.S., but also filtering into this part of the world as well," Jamie Spiteri, senior dealer at Shaw Stockbroking, said of Australian shares.

    U.S. stocks slid overnight after Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid expressed disappointment over little progress in dealing with the approaching "fiscal cliff" of deep cuts in government spending and big tax hikes early next year.

    The Shanghai Composite Index <.ssec> slid 0.9 percent to its lowest in nearly four years as growth-sensitive sectors sank, extending losses after closing on Tuesday below 2,000 points for the first time since January 2009.

    The weak Chinese stock market, along with doubts over the U.S. ability to resolve its fiscal crisis, strengthened demand for sovereign debt, helping to push the 10-year Japanese government bond futures price to a 9-1/2-year high of 144.79, while U.S. Treasuries clung to gains made on Tuesday.

    Japan's Nikkei stock average <.n225> slumped 1 percent, after closing on Tuesday at a seven-month high.

    The Nikkei had risen 8.8 percent over the past two weeks since the government announced a December 16 election. Japan's main opposition party is forecast to win power, and investors expect it will force the Bank of Japan into aggressive easing. <.t/>

    EUROPE LACKS CONFIDENCE

    Tuesday's agreement by international lenders to cut Greece's debt offered relief that it has averted an imminent bankruptcy, but uncertainty remained over the lack of details on how Athens will carry out budget reforms to meet its new debt targets as analysts cited the deal as falling short of addressing medium-term financing and debt sustainability issues.

    "The uncertainty brought by this approach makes European assets, including the EUR, vulnerable to global growth risks. For that reason, we think the European muddle through amplifies the market's response to the fiscal cliff discussion in the US," Barclays Capital analysts said in a note.

    The euro fell 0.2 percent to $1.2924, after peaking at $1.3010 on the Greece news on Tuesday, its highest level since October 31.

    Worries over the fiscal crisis overshadowed positive U.S. economic data that showed improvement in durable orders, the real estate sector and consumer confidence, which hit a 4-1/2-year high in November.

    The dollar dropped 0.3 percent against the yen to 81.85. U.S. crude futures were steady around $87.16 a barrel while Brent edged up 0.2 percent to $110.13. London copper dropped 0.4 percent to $7,776 a metric ton (1.1023 tons).

    Spot gold inched down 0.1 percent to $1,739.40 an ounce after slipping on Tuesday for a second session.

    Southeast Asia kept some hopes that the damage to their economies may be contained from global growth deterioration triggered by the prolonged euro zone debt crisis.

    Indonesia, Southeast Asia's biggest economy, sees annual economic growth in the fourth quarter at 5.9-6.3 percent, while the Philippine economy picked up more than expected in the third quarter, with the government expecting the economy to surpass its 2012 full-year growth target of 5-6 percent.

    Investors were sidelined in Asian credit markets, keeping the spreads on the iTraxx Asia ex-Japan investment-grade index little changed from Tuesday's levels.

    (Additional reporting by Miranda Maxwell in Melbourne and Luke Pachymuthu in Singapore; Editing by Jonathan Thatcher)

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/asian-shares-fall-focus-shifts-u-budget-talks-031354440--finance.html

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    VTech Introduces Home Telephone System for Aging Americans

    Seniors who want to age independently in their homes can now stay connected to friends and family with the new CareLine? home safety telephone system from VTech? Communications, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of VTech Holdings Ltd.

    Designed with experts in aging and technology, the affordable and easy-to-use CareLine system incorporates features to uniquely meet seniors' daily communication needs, including large displays, reminder capabilities, volume boost and a wearable pendant with one-button dialing that directly calls people that seniors communicate with most.

    "America is aging, and with age comes challenges that can make it more difficult to live on your own," said Jeffrey Kaye, the Director of the Oregon Center for Aging and Technology (ORCATECH) and a professor of neurology and biomedical engineering at Oregon Health & Science University. "Seniors seeking to remain independent need help finding the right people at the right time. Making that connection easy and affordable is key. That's why we at ORCATECH provided our input to VTech in the design of its CareLine product."

    Source: http://www.cedailynews.com/2012/11/vtech-introduces-home-telephone-system-for-aging-americans.html

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