Thursday, February 28, 2013

Nut-cracking monkeys use tools skillfully

Barth Wright

A bearded capuchin monkey uses a rock to crack open a nut placed on an "anvil."

By Stephanie Pappas
LiveScience

Nut-cracking monkeys don't just use tools. They use tools with skill.

That's the conclusion of a new study that finds similar tool-use strategies between humans and Brazil's bearded capuchin monkeys, which use rocks to smash nuts for snacks. Both monkeys and humans given the nut-smashing task take the time to place the nuts in their most stable position on a stone or log "anvil," the study found, keeping the tasty morsels from rolling away.

That means the monkeys are able to not only use tools, but to use them with finesse. This ability may be a precursor to humans' ability to adapt tools to different circumstances and to use them smoothly under varying conditions.


"Any one individual can accommodate stones of different sizes, anvils of different angles and material and nuts of different shapes and sizes," said study leader Dorothy Fragaszy, a primate researcher at the University of Georgia, adding, "In fact, some of these nuts people can't crack."

Nut-crackers
Bearded capuchin monkeys were the first non-ape primates to be discovered using tools in the wild. They crack tough nuts by placing them on pitted boulders or logs and then hitting them hard with other large rocks. [8 Humanlike Behaviors of Primates]

Barth Wright

Bearded capuchin monkeys place nuts in their most stable positions before cracking them.

"They are slamming (the rock) on that nut," Fragaszy told LiveScience. "It's very impressive when you see it."

Fragaszy and her colleagues wanted to get a better idea of how skilled capuchins are at nut-cracking. In particular, they noticed the monkeys have an odd habit of tapping the nuts multiple times against the pits in a log?before putting them down. Perhaps, they thought, the tapping was a way to tell how stable the nut might be.

To find out, the researchers brought palm nuts to a population of capuchin monkeys in Fazenda Boa Vista in Brazil. The monkeys are wild, but habituated to human presence. Ten of the monkeys "volunteered" for the study by gathering the nuts and cracking them with stones as big as their heads as the researchers videotaped.

Before handing over the nuts, however, the scientists rolled them along the floor to find their flat sides, which they marked with a line. They also marked the other axis of the nut with color-coded pens so they could identify how the monkeys placed the nuts in the video.

Savvy tool use
The results revealed that the monkeys consistently placed the nuts in the most stable position. Out of 302 nut-cracking attempts, 253 started with the line marking the nut's stable axis facing up. Monkeys varied only slightly in their ability to ideally place the nut, doing so between 71 percent and 94 percent of the time depending on the individual. [See Video of the Monkey Attempts]

Next, the researchers ran an identical test with humans. Seven male and seven female volunteers were given nuts and told to crack them with stones, just as the capuchin monkeys do. The humans were blindfolded during the task, because the researchers suspected that the monkeys could place the nuts by feel and wanted to find out if humans could, too.

On average, the humans also placed the nuts in the most stable position, doing so on about 71 percent of tries. Unlike capuchins, however, they didn't knock the nuts against the?sides of the pit very frequently. Instead, humans tended to roll the nuts around in their hands, feeling their shape. Humans have much larger hands than bearded capuchins, the researchers wrote Wednesday?in the journal PLOS ONE, which could explain the different strategies.

The results suggest that humans and monkeys share the ability to use tools skillfully, with minimal effort for maximum effect, the researchers wrote.

"It's skill in the way that we use that word to talk about human skills," Fragaszy said. "It's a goal-directed activity. It's done fluidly. It's done flexibly."

Correction for 2:10 p.m. ET Feb. 28: An earlier version of this story, including a photo caption, implied that the monkeys used only stones as their anvils. A log anvil can be used as well, and that's what the researchers used for their experiment.

Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas?or LiveScience @livescience. We're also on Facebook?and Google+.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.?

This story was originally published on

Source: http://science.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/27/17122532-those-nut-cracking-monkeys-they-use-tools-with-finesse?lite

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

HP LaserJet Pro 200 color MFP M276nw


Much like the similarly-priced Samsung CLX-4195FW that I reviewed a few months ago, the HP LaserJet Pro 200 color MFP M276nw delivers most of the basics that you're probably looking for in a color laser MFP, but also goes beyond basics. It even offers some of the same key extras, including, for example, a 3.5-inch color touch screen backed up by well-designed menus that make it easy to give commands from the front panel. Its low paper capacity limits it to light-duty use, but if light-duty is all you need, it can be a good fit.

The bad news first:? When I reviewed the Samsung CLX-4195FW, I pointed out that it was a little weak on paper handling. The M276nw's paper handling is even less impressive. Like the Samsung printer, the M276nw lacks both a duplexer (for two-sided printing) and any paper handling options. However, it also lacks a manual feed capability, and it's limited to a lower paper capacity, at just 150 sheets.

A 150-sheet capacity is generally enough for most personal use, but the M276nw is big for a personal printer, measuring 16.3 by 17.7 by 18.7 inches (HWD) and weighing in at 52 pounds. The size alone makes it more appropriate as a shared printer, and, indeed, with both Ethernet and Wi-Fi it's easy to connect to a network for sharing. In that context, a 150-sheet capacity is meager at best, and it limits the M276nw to light duty use even by micro office standards. If that's sufficient for your needs, however, the M276nw delivers lots attractive features otherwise.

The Basics
The M276nw offers a full set of basic MFP functions, including the ability to print and fax from as well as scan to a PC, including over a network, and the ability to work as a standalone copier and fax machine. It can also both print from and scan to a USB memory key, and it supports a variety of mobile print applications as well as HP's online print apps.

If you connect the M276nw to a network, you can print to it through the cloud with HP ePrint, print to it over a Wi-Fi connection using Apple AirPrint or HP's own mobile print app, or use the front panel touch screen to print using HP's online apps. And because the printer also supports a Wireless Direct connection?HP's variation on Wi-Fi direct?even if it's not on a network, you can connect to it directly from a smartphone, laptop, or tablet to print wirelessly.

One other key feature is the 35-page automatic document feeder (ADF). As is typical for an office-centric printer, the ADF supplements a letter-size flatbed and lets you scan both multipage documents and legal-size pages.

Setup, Speed, and Output Quality
For my tests, I connected the M276nw to a wired network and installed the driver on a Windows Vista system. Setup was typical for the breed. On our business applications suite (using QualityLogic's hardware and software for timing) I clocked it at an unimpressive 3.3 pages per minute (ppm), which makes it slower than a fast inkjet. In comparison, the Samsung CLX-4195FW came in at 6.0 ppm, and the Editors' Choice Dell 1355cnw Multifunction Color Printer managed 4.5 ppm. (Dell no longer sells the 1355cnw directly, but as of this writing the printer can still be found for sale on an assortment of Web sites.)? ?

Partly making up for the M276nw's lackluster speed is its better than par overall output quality, thanks mostly to text quality. The text is in the top tier for color laser MFPs, which makes it easily good enough for virtually any business need, even in offices with an unusual need for small fonts. Most people would also consider the quality suitable for most desktop publishing applications.

Graphics and photo quality are both dead on par for a color laser MFP. For graphics, that translates to being easily good enough for PowerPoint handouts or the like, or even output going to important customers or clients when you want to convey a subtext of being fully professional.

Depending on your level of perfectionism, you may consider text, graphics, and photos all suitable for marketing materials like trifold brochures or one page handouts.

The low paper capacity makes the HP LaserJet Pro 200 color MFP M276nw a poor choice if you expect to print a lot of pages. However, the printer also offers better than par output quality and a wealth of conveniences, from its touch screen to its Wireless Direct feature that lets you connect to it easily from a smartphone or tablet. Given sufficiently light duty print needs?including copies and incoming faxes?the balance of features is enough to make it a reasonable choice.

More Multifunction Printer Reviews:
??? Dell B3465dnf Multifunction Laser Printer
??? HP LaserJet Pro 200 color MFP M276nw
??? Canon Pixma MG5420 Wireless Photo All-In-One Printer
??? HP Officejet Pro X576dw MFP
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All in: New Jersey gets online gambling

New Jersey Governor Chris Christie

By Tiziana Barghini and Hilary Russ, Reuters

New Jersey Governor Chris Christie on Tuesday approved online gambling within the state's border, a move that he hopes can help boost state revenues and revive Atlantic City casinos.

The measure, announced the same day that Christie unveiled his new budget plan for fiscal 2014, will legalize Internet gaming to New Jersey's 9 million residents and also create opportunities for European companies with expertise in running online gaming operations.


New Jersey, the 11th most populous state, will become the largest so far and the third in the United States to allow online gambling after Delaware and Nevada, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Nevada, home to international gambling Mecca Las Vegas, last week became the first U.S. state to allow interstate online poker.

"We are offering a responsible yet exciting option that will make Atlantic City more competitive, while also bringing financial benefits to New Jersey as a whole," Christie said in a statement.

The Republican governor signed the legislation after Democratic lawmakers agreed to make several changes, including a provision to review the program after 10 years to gauge its impact on problem gambling.

By legalizing internet gaming, New Jersey could see a huge jump in state casino revenue, to an estimated $436 million in fiscal 2014 from $235 million this fiscal year, which ends June 30, according to budget documents.

Earlier this month, the prospect of a quick approval of online gambling in New Jersey spurred gains among gaming companies on both side of the Atlantic amid hopes it could unlock a market worth up to $1 billion.

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/26/17107849-all-in-new-jersey-gets-online-gambling?lite

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AT&T turns on LTE in 6 more markets

ATT LTE

AT&T announced this morning that it has flipped the switch and turned on LTE in more markets.

Any of you in the following locales will be fortunate to have AT&T LTE soon. The new markets are:

Always good to see the expansion of LTE and higher speeds it brings.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/P5sHonw_a5k/story01.htm

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Gupta ordered to pay Goldman Sachs $6.22 million

A federal judge on Monday ordered former Goldman Sachs Group Inc. director Rajat Gupta to reimburse $6.22 million to help the Wall Street bank cover its legal expenses related to his criminal insider trading case.

Goldman had sought to recover $6.91 million, and U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff in Manhattan said the bank had proved it was entitled to 90 percent of what it requested.

Gupta, 64, is appealing his June 15, 2012, conviction and two-year prison term for feeding confidential information he had learned at Goldman board meetings to Raj Rajaratnam, the Galleon Group hedge fund manager and former billionaire.

Rajaratnam has been a central figure in a multi-year U.S. government crackdown on insider trading. Gupta is a former global managing director of the consulting firm McKinsey & Co, and is the highest corporate executive convicted in the probe.

Jurors found Gupta guilty of leaks during the second half of 2008, including news related to a crucial $5 billion investment in Goldman by Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc at the height of the global financial crisis.

Goldman had sought to recover fees it had paid its law firm Sullivan & Cromwell in connection with Gupta's criminal case and related matters. It cited the federal Mandatory Victims Restitution Act, which requires restitution in some fraud cases.

Gupta opposed restitution but Rakoff, who presided over the criminal trial, said nearly all of what Goldman sought was a "necessary, direct, and foreseeable result of the investigation and prosecution of Gupta's offense of conviction."

Rakoff said Goldman could also recover legal costs linked to a related U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission civil case against Gupta, and to the criminal case against Rajaratnam.

He said Gupta's opposition to the latter "ignores the glaring fact" that he had been convicted of conspiring with Rajaratnam to commit securities fraud.

But the judge said Goldman did not deserve all it sought.

Rakoff said some entries in the "voluminous" 542 pages of billing records he reviewed did not qualify because they involved depositions in civil cases that followed the criminal conviction.

And Rakoff said Goldman on "a few occasions" assigned too many lawyers to the case - "perhaps perfectly appropriate on the assumption that Goldman Sachs wished to spare no expense on a matter of great importance to it," but more than reasonably necessary under the law.

Goldman spokesman Michael DuVally said: "We are pleased that the court ordered Mr. Gupta to pay restitution."

Richard Davis, a lawyer for Gupta, said his client plans to appeal.

Rajaratnam is separately appealing his criminal conviction and 11-year prison term, saying FBI wiretap evidence should not have been admitted by U.S. District Judge Richard Holwell at his 2011 trial. Holwell is now in private practice.

The case is U.S. v. Gupta, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 11-cr-00907.

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/gupta-ordered-pay-goldman-sachs-6-22-million-1C8546818

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

High-stakes trial begins over 2010 Gulf oil spill

Protestors from the National Audubon Institute, the Gulf Restoration Network and other organizations stand outside Federal Court on the first day of the Gulf oil spill settlement trial in New Orleans, Monday, Feb. 25, 2013. U.S. District Judge Carl Barbier is scheduled to hear several hours of opening statements Monday by lawyers for the companies, federal and state governments and others who sued over the disaster. Barbier is hearing the case without a jury. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

Protestors from the National Audubon Institute, the Gulf Restoration Network and other organizations stand outside Federal Court on the first day of the Gulf oil spill settlement trial in New Orleans, Monday, Feb. 25, 2013. U.S. District Judge Carl Barbier is scheduled to hear several hours of opening statements Monday by lawyers for the companies, federal and state governments and others who sued over the disaster. Barbier is hearing the case without a jury. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

FILE - In this aerial file photo madeWednesday, April 21, 2010 in the Gulf of Mexico, more than 50 miles southeast of Venice on Louisiana's tip, an oil slick is seen as the Deepwater Horizon oil rig burns. Nearly three years after the deadly rig explosion in the Gulf of Mexico triggered the nation's worst offshore oil spill, a federal judge in New Orleans is set to preside over a high-stakes trial for the raft of litigation spawned by the disaster on Monday Feb. 25, 2013. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, file)

Protestors from the National Audubon Institute, the Gulf Restoration Network and other organizations stand outside Federal Court on the first day of the Gulf oil spill settlement trial in New Orleans, Monday, Feb. 25, 2013. U.S. District Judge Carl Barbier is scheduled to hear several hours of opening statements Monday by lawyers for the companies, federal and state governments and others who sued over the disaster. Barbier is hearing the case without a jury. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

Protestors from the National Audubon Institute, the Gulf Restoration Network and other organizations stand outside Federal court on the first day of the Gulf oil spill settlement trial in New Orleans, Monday, Feb. 25, 2013. U.S. District Judge Carl Barbier is scheduled to hear several hours of opening statements Monday by lawyers for the companies, federal and state governments and others who sued over the disaster. Barbier is hearing the case without a jury. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

(AP) ? BP put profits ahead of safety and bears most of the blame for the disastrous 2010 spill in the Gulf of Mexico, a U.S. Justice Department attorney charged Monday at the opening of a trial that could result in the oil company and its partners being forced to pay tens of billions of dollars more in damages.

The London-based oil giant acknowledged it made "errors in judgment" before the deadly blowout, but it also cast blame on the owner of the drilling rig and the contractor involved in cementing the well. It denied it was grossly negligent, as the government contended.

The high-stakes civil case went to trial after attempts to reach an 11th-hour settlement failed.

Eleven workers were killed when the Deepwater Horizon rig leased by the BP exploded on April 20, 2010. An estimated 172 millions of gallons of crude gushed into the Gulf over the three months that followed in the worst offshore oil spill in U.S. history.

Justice Department attorney Mike Underhill said the catastrophe resulted from BP's "culture of corporate recklessness."

"The evidence will show that BP put profits before people, profits before safety and profits before the environment," Underhill said in opening statements. He added: "Despite BP's attempts to shift the blame to other parties, by far the primary fault for this disaster belongs to BP."

BP attorney Mike Brock acknowledged that the oil company made mistakes. But he accused rig owner Transocean Ltd. of failing to properly maintain the rig's blowout preventer, which had a dead battery, and he claimed cement contractor Halliburton used a "bad slurry" that failed to prevent oil and gas from traveling up the well.

BP has already pleaded guilty to manslaughter and other criminal charges and has racked up more than $24 billion in spill-related expenses, including cleanup costs, compensation for businesses and individuals, and $4 billion in criminal penalties.

But the federal government, Gulf Coast states and individuals and businesses hope to convince a federal judge that the company and its partners in the ill-fated drilling project are liable for much more in civil damages under the Clean Water Act and other environmental regulations.

One of the biggest questions facing U.S. District Judge Carl Barbier, who is hearing the case without a jury, is whether BP acted with gross negligence.

Under the Clean Water Act, a polluter can be forced to pay a minimum of $1,100 per barrel of spilled oil; the fines nearly quadruple to about $4,300 a barrel for companies found grossly negligent, meaning BP could be on the hook for nearly $18 billion.

The judge plans to hold the trial in at least two phases. The first phase, which could last three months, is designed to determine what caused the blowout and assign percentages of blame to the companies involved. The second phase will determine how much crude spilled into the Gulf.

During opening arguments, BP and its partners pointed the finger at each other in a tangle of accusations and counter-accusations. But BP got the worst of it, from its partners and the plaintiffs in the case.

Jim Roy, who represents individuals and businesses hurt by the spill, said BP executives applied "huge financial pressure" to "cut costs and rush the job." The project was more than $50 million over budget and behind schedule at the time of the blowout, Roy said.

"BP repeatedly chose speed over safety," Roy said, quoting from a report by an expert who may testify.

Roy said the spill also resulted from Transocean's "woeful" safety culture and failure to properly train its crew. And Roy said Halliburton provided BP with a product that was "poorly designed, not properly tested and was unstable."

Brad Brian, a lawyer for Transocean, said the company had an experienced, well-trained crew on the rig. He said the Transocean workers' worst mistake may have been placing too much trust in the BP supervisors on the rig.

"And they paid for that trust with their lives," Brian said. "They died not because they weren't trained properly. They died because critical information was withheld from them."

A lawyer for Halliburton defended the company's work and tried to pin the blame on BP and Transocean.

"If BP had shut in the well, we would not be here today," Halliburton's Donald Godwin said.

Underhill, the Justice Department attorney, heaped blame on BP for cost-cutting decisions made in the months and weeks leading up the disaster. He said two BP rig supervisors, Robert Kaluza and Donald Vidrine, disregarded abnormally high pressure readings that should have been glaring indications of trouble.

Kaluza and Vidrine have been indicted on federal manslaughter charges.

Brock, the BP lawyer, said Transocean employees on the rig also played roles in misinterpreting the "negative pressure test."

"It was a mistake made by several men from two different companies," Brock said. "They were trying to get it right. They were trying to do the right thing."

Hundreds of attorneys have worked on the case, generating roughly 90 million pages of documents, logging nearly 9,000 docket entries and taking more than 300 depositions from witnesses who could testify at trial.

"In terms of sheer dollar amounts and public attention, this is one of the most complex and massive disputes ever faced by the courts," said Fordham University law professor Howard Erichson, an expert in complex litigation.

The spill fouled marshes, killed wildlife and closed fishing grounds. Scientists warn that the disaster's full effect may not be known for years. But they have reported dying coral reefs and fish afflicted with lesions and illnesses that might be oil-related.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-02-25-Gulf%20Oil%20Spill-Trial/id-5ae366e35fbe4af288a8994b94f7c188

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Mozilla details apps for Firefox OS: Facebook, Cut the Rope, Nokia Here and Twitter confirmed

Mozilla details apps Firefox OS Cut the Rope, Nokia Here, Facebook and Twitter confirmed

We've only just stepped into Mozilla's press arena but the Firefox creators handed a rich press kit as we did, detailing a fair chunk of what we're expecting to see over the next hour. One of the more noticeable announcements focused on Firefox Marketplace, detailing HTML5 apps you might have heard of before. Along the predictable likes of Facebook and Twitter, games like Cut The Rope will also make an appearance on the new mobile OS, as well as Where's My Water, Disney Mobile and EA game titles. There will be support for cloud file storage through Box too, as well as a mapping app from Nokia Here. Yes, the Finnish phone maker will be bringing its location clout to Firefox OS. SoundCloud, Pulse News, Time Out and Airbnb have also signed up for the new operating system.

Developing...

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

Authorities: Report of gunman at MIT was a hoax

Pedestrians on the MIT Campus in Cambridge, Mass., duck underneath police tape, Saturday, Feb. 23, 2013, after police responded to reports of a gunman on campus that Cambridge police later said were unfounded. Police said that officers searched for a man reported to be carrying a long rifle and wearing body armor and found nothing. A spokeswoman for the university says the school also called off a campus-wide lockdown. (AP Photo/Josh Reynolds)

Pedestrians on the MIT Campus in Cambridge, Mass., duck underneath police tape, Saturday, Feb. 23, 2013, after police responded to reports of a gunman on campus that Cambridge police later said were unfounded. Police said that officers searched for a man reported to be carrying a long rifle and wearing body armor and found nothing. A spokeswoman for the university says the school also called off a campus-wide lockdown. (AP Photo/Josh Reynolds)

Pedestrians on the MIT Campus in Cambridge, Mass., duck underneath police tape, Saturday, Feb. 23, 2013, after police responded to reports of a gunman on campus that Cambridge police later said were unfounded. Police said that officers searched for a man reported to be carrying a long rifle and wearing body armor and found nothing. A spokeswoman for the university says the school also called off a campus-wide lockdown. (AP Photo/Josh Reynolds)

Pedestrians walk by police tape on the MIT Campus in Cambridge, Mass.,after police responded to reports of a gunman on campus that Cambridge police later said were unfounded, Saturday, Feb. 23, 2013. Police said that officers searched for a man reported to be carrying a long rifle and wearing body armor and found nothing. A spokeswoman for the university says the school also called off a campus-wide lockdown. (AP Photo/Josh Reynolds)

(AP) ? A false report of a gunman at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology that briefly caused a campus-wide lockdown Saturday stemmed from an electronic message sent to police, authorities said.

Officers searched for a man reported to be carrying a long rifle and wearing body armor but found nothing unusual, Cambridge police said. The report ? that alleged the gunman was barricaded inside a building on campus ? turned out to be a hoax, and there was no threat to public safety, state police spokesman David Procopio said.

Cambridge police received the tip in an electronic message around 7:30 a.m., but witnesses on the scene eventually contradicted it, spokesman Dan Riviello said. Neither police nor MIT specified how the tip was received, though the police department's website says anonymous tips may be made via text message or email, in addition to a telephone hotline.

"The MIT community was sent a precautionary text message at 8:52 a.m. asking them to remain indoors and shelter in place," the university said in a statement issued following online criticism over the delay in alerting the public that a gunman was possibly on campus. It did not explain why it took more than an hour to issue the alert.

A room-to-room search by MIT and Cambridge police, along with state police troopers, led officers to declare that the scene was clear at about 10:30 a.m., MIT said.

"No armed suspects were found in the building or on campus and police believe that the event, as reported, did not occur," according to a statement by Cambridge police.

Investigators are trying to identify the prankster and will pursue criminal charges if they do, Riviello said.

He declined to provide additional details or confirm reports that the IP address used by the prankster has been traced to New York, saying the investigation continued.

John DiFava, chief of MIT's campus police, acknowledged the delay in telling students about a possible gunman on campus. "I have to look into it and find out the reason for the lag," he told the Boston Globe.

Junior Zach Wener-Fligner told the newspaper that the delay was "a little worrisome."

"But I assume the relevant area was locked down," he said.

About 11,000 people attend the prestigious school outside Boston where students are famous for their smarts as well as their stunts, including once putting a police car on top of a domed campus building.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-02-23-MIT%20Lockdown/id-16b1da51180e4d56bd017f6452d52a47

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Owner of dog found on ice unable to pick up pup

By BJ Lutz and Lauren Jiggetts, nbcchicago.com

The owner of a dog found floating on ice floes Friday afternoon wasn't able to claim his pup today, but will be reunited once more Sunday afternoon.

Nerijus Steponavicius claimed his lost dog at Animal Care & Control Friday night and was told he could pick him up Saturday afternoon, but now he must wait for retreiver to be neutered and microchipped before he can go home.

Steponavicius said he will be back with his father Sunday afternoon to pick up the dog, but was happy he was able to see his beloved pup this afternoon.

"He's really shy and he started jumping," Steponavicius said.Steponavicius said the dog had no history of running away and would have never run away if he was there.

He planned to take his pup to his parents house to play with their two labs, but that trip will have to wait."I?m just a real disappointed," he said

Rescue crews captured the dog at about 4:30 p.m. Friday after he was seen jumping from ice floe to ice floe off Howard Street Beach.

The dog's name is reportedly "Pifas," and he got loose nine days ago when Steponavicius' ?landlord was changing locks while Steponavicius was at school.

He's posted several notices on Facebook about his missing dog and said he drove straight to Animal Control when his sister called him to tell him about a dog on the ice.

A quick comparison of photos assured him the dog was his and he immediately rushed to Animal Care & Control, he said.

Pifas was about 200 feet off the shore of Lake Michigan when word reached fire officials about an animal on the ice.

Rogers Park neighbor Dave Kenhast also saw the dog and jumped into action, grabbing his wetsuit and kayak to hit the water. Fire officials responded with a boat and a helicopter.

With Kenhast inching close, Pifas jumped about the ice fragments, sometimes landing in the icy water and pulling himself out.?

"I wanted to just grab him because it was shallow enough where I could stand, and I just wanted to get my hands on him but he wanted to bite me, it looked like. He didn't want anyone touching him," said Kehnast.

Eventually, the dog jumped into Lake Michigan and swam the short distance to the snowy shore. He took off from there, eluding authorities as he ran around nearby apartment complexes.

Crews eventually caught up with the exhausted animal and ushered it into the back of a white utility van.

"The biggest lesson, once again: keep those dogs on leashes along the lakefront in the wintertime," said Chicago Fire Department Deputy District Chief Ron Dorneker. "This is what can happen when they get out there on that ice and they fall through and they get a distance off-shore.

It gets to be dangerous for them and for us."Steponavicius said he's looking forward to showing his appreciation to those who helped rescue Pifas. More importantly, though, he said he's looking forward to his reunion with Pifas.

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/24/17075198-owner-of-dog-found-on-ice-unable-to-pick-up-pup?lite

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Fire at Bluffton course destroys dozens of golf carts

A fire burned through a shed Friday night at Eagle's Pointe Golf Course in Bluffton, destroying 50 to 75 golf carts.

The Bluffton Township Fire District was called to the fire at about 7:30 p.m., according to Capt. Randy Hunter.

Though the fire was under control by 8:15, firefighters had to continue spraying the ruins with thick, white flame-retardant foam because of battery acid from the carts, Hunter said. There were no injuries.

As of 10 p.m., fire investigators could not get close enough to the shed to start investigating the cause and origin of the fire because of smoldering debris, Hunter said. It also hadn't been determined what time the fire started, he said.

Brent Carlson, the course's general manager, declined to comment because he had not yet spoken with authorities at Textron Financial Corp., the company that owns Eagle's Pointe. That company also owns Crescent Pointe Golf Course, which is about four miles southeast off U.S. 278.

Both courses have been for sale since 2009, according to news reports.

This is the second fire at a cart shed in southern Beaufort County since November.

A cart shed at a golf course on Hilton Head Island burned down Nov. 26. That fire, at Bear Creek Golf Club in Hilton Head Plantation, was caused by arson and destroyed 52 golf carts, authorities have said.

Source: http://www.islandpacket.com/2013/02/22/2390622/fire-at-bluffton-course-destroys.html

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Researchers propose new way to probe Earth's deep interior

Friday, February 22, 2013

Researchers from Amherst College and The University of Texas at Austin have described a new technique that might one day reveal in higher detail than ever before the composition and characteristics of the deep Earth.

There's just one catch: The technique relies on a fifth force of nature (in addition to gravity, the weak and strong nuclear forces and electromagnetism) that has not yet been detected, but which some particle physicists think might exist. Physicists call this type of force a long-range spin-spin interaction. If it does exist, this exotic new force would connect matter at Earth's surface with matter hundreds or even thousands of kilometers below, deep in Earth's mantle. In other words, the building blocks of atoms?electrons, protons, and neutrons?separated over vast distances would "feel" each other's presence. The way these particles interact could provide new information about the composition and characteristics of the mantle, which is poorly understood because of its inaccessibility.

"The most rewarding and surprising thing about this project was realizing that particle physics could actually be used to study the deep Earth," says Jung-Fu "Afu" Lin, associate professor at The University of Texas at Austin's Jackson School of Geosciences and co-author of the study appearing this week in the journal Science.

This new force could help settle a scientific quandary. When earth scientists have tried to model how factors such as iron concentration and physical and chemical properties of matter vary with depth ? for example, using the way earthquake rumbles travel through the Earth or through laboratory experiments designed to mimic the intense temperatures and pressures of the deep Earth ? they get different answers. The fifth force, assuming it exists, might help reconcile these conflicting lines of evidence.

Earth's mantle is a thick geological layer sandwiched between the thin outer crust and central core, made up mostly of iron-bearing minerals. The atoms in these minerals and the subatomic particles making up the atoms have a property called spin. Spin can be thought of as an arrow that points in a particular direction. It is thought that Earth's magnetic field causes some of the electrons in these mantle minerals to become slightly spin-polarized, meaning the directions in which they spin are no longer completely random, but have some preferred orientation. These electrons have been dubbed geoelectrons.

The goal with this project was to see whether the scientists could use the proposed long-range spin-spin interaction to detect the presence of these distant geoelectrons.

The researchers, led by Larry Hunter, professor of physics at Amherst College, first created a computer model of Earth's interior to map the expected densities and spin directions of geoelectrons. The model was based in part on insights gained from Lin's laboratory experiments that measure electron spins in minerals at the high temperatures and pressures of Earth's interior. This map gave the researchers clues about the strength and orientations of interactions they might expect to detect in their specific laboratory location in Amherst, Mass.

Second, the researchers used a specially designed apparatus to search for interactions between geoelectrons deep in the mantle and subatomic particles at Earth's surface. The team's experiments essentially explored whether the spins of electrons, neutrons or protons in various laboratories might have a different energy, depending on the direction with respect to the Earth that they were pointing.

"We know, for example, that a magnet has a lower energy when it is oriented parallel to the geomagnetic field and it lines up with this particular direction ? that is how a compass works," explains Hunter. "Our experiments removed this magnetic interaction and looked to see if there might be some other interaction with our experimental spins. One interpretation of this 'other' interaction is that it could be a long-range interaction between the spins in our apparatus and the electron spins within the Earth, that have been aligned by the geomagnetic field. This is the long-range spin-spin interaction we were looking for."

Although the apparatus was not able to detect any such interactions, the researchers could at least infer that such interactions, if they exist, must be incredibly weak ? no more than a millionth of the strength of the gravitational attraction between the particles. That's useful information as scientists now look for ways to build ever more sensitive instruments to search for the elusive fifth force.

"No one had previously thought about the possible interactions that might occur between the Earth's spin-polarized electrons and precision laboratory spin-measurements," says Hunter.

"If the long-range spin-spin interactions are discovered in future experiments, geoscientists can eventually use such information to reliably understand the geochemistry and geophysics of the planet's interior," says Lin.

###

University of Texas at Austin: http://www.utexas.edu

Thanks to University of Texas at Austin for this article.

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

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/126978/Researchers_propose_new_way_to_probe_Earth_s_deep_interior

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

Israel: Report Shows Iran 'Closer Than Ever' to Nuclear Weapon

23 Feb 2013, 12:16 PM PDT post a comment

On Feb. 21, the office of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the report "proves Iran is continuing to rapidly advance to the red line that the prime minster drew during his [September] speech in the United Nations."?

During that speech, Netanyahu called for a "clear red line" to stop Iran from getting a nuclear weapon.?

At that time, he said Iran already had "70 percent of the necessary uranium enrichment for a bomb." Now, in light of the UN report, his office says "Iran is closer than ever to obtaining enriched material for a nuclear bomb."?

Israel believes Iran's pursuit of a nuclear must be stopped "at any cost," and will not rule out military action as an option.?


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/BigPeace/~3/UYPm3-bIpsM/Israel-Report-Shows-Iran-Closer-Than-Ever-To-Building-Nuclear-Weapon

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Friday, February 22, 2013

No increase in HIV/AIDS cases in India: Azad

NEW DELHI: There has been no increase in the number of people living with HIV/AIDS in India, union health minister GhulamNabi Azad said on Friday.

In a written reply in the Lok Sabha, Azad said under the National AIDS Control Programme (NACP), antiretroviral therapy (ART) centres have been established in medical colleges, district hospitals and other local hospitals in the government sector to provide treatment to people with HIV/AIDS.

The minister said there are 380 ART centres functional in the country and 604,987 patients were obtaining free drugs from these centres.

The minister said the government proposed to make 600 ART centres functional in the country by the end of 2016-17 to treat to an estimated 850,000 people living with HIV/AIDS in the country.

Azad said the performance of NACP has been assessed through periodic joint implementation reviews and mid-term review involving development partners.

"All the review missions reported that most of the targets under NACP have been achieved and even surpassed," he said.

Azad quoted an independent impact assessment study, funded by the World Bank, to say that the HIV epidemic in India has remained contained and has been declining in the country.

Increase in condom use in sex work as a result of targeted interventions accounted for the decline, he said quoting from the study.

Source: http://timesofindia.feedsportal.com/fy/8at2EtY0kNFxR48s/story01.htm

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Hitler on Indian ballot? Frankenstein, Hitler among those running for election in Indian state

Hitler on Indian ballot:?This 54-year-old father of three has won three elections to the state assembly with little controversy over being named after the Nazi dictator.

By Wasbir Hussain,?Associated Press / February 22, 2013

Adolf?Hitler?is running for election in?India. So is Frankenstein.

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The tiny northeast Indian state of Meghalaya has a special fascination for interesting and sometimes controversial names, and the ballot for state elections Saturday is proof.

Among the 345 contestants running for the state assembly are Frankenstein Momin, Billykid Sangma, Field Marshal Mawphniang and Romeo Rani. Some, like Kenedy Marak, Kennedy Cornelius Khyriem and Jhim Carter Sangma, are clearly hoping for the electoral success of their namesake American presidents.

Then there is?Hitler.

This 54-year-old father of three has won three elections to the state assembly with little controversy over being named after the Nazi dictator.

His father had worked with the British army, but apparently developed enough of a fascination with Great Britain's archenemy to name his son Adolf?Hitler?? though he also gave him the middle name Lu,?Hitler?said.

"I am aware at one point of time Adolf?Hitler?was the most hated person on Earth for the genocide of the Jews. But my father added 'Lu' in between, naming me Adolf Lu?Hitler, and that's why I am different,"?Hitler?told The Associated Press from the small village of Mansingre, 200 kilometers (125 miles) west of Gauhati, the capital of the nearby state of Assam.

Hitler?said his name has not stopped him from traveling the world, including to the United States and Germany.

"I never had problems obtaining a visa but I was asked many times during immigration as to why I should have such a name. I told the immigration staff I possibly didn't have a role in my naming," he said.

India?played little role in World War II, and many Indians view?Hitler?not as the personification of evil but as a figure of fascination.?Hitler's?book "Mein Kampf" is prominently displayed at many Indian bookstores. The owner of a menswear shop named his store "Hitler," then expressed puzzlement last year after Israel complained.

Musfika Haq, a teacher in Meghalaya's capital, Shillong, said such names are common in the state.

"Parents obviously get fascinated by names of well-known or great leaders, but must be unaware that some of them, like?Hitler, had been highly controversial," he said.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/PIN077nV7ac/Hitler-on-Indian-ballot-Frankenstein-Hitler-among-those-running-for-election-in-Indian-state

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Thursday, February 21, 2013

Commercial cyber spying offers rich payoff

(AP) ? For state-backed cyber spies such as a Chinese military unit implicated by a U.S. security firm in a computer crime wave, hacking foreign companies can produce high-value secrets ranging from details on oil fields to advanced manufacturing technology.

This week's report by Mandiant Inc. adds to mounting suspicion that Chinese military experts are helping state industry by stealing secrets from Western companies possibly worth hundreds of millions of dollars. The Chinese military has denied involvement in the attacks.

"This is really the new era of cybercrime," said Graham Cluley, a British security expert. "We've moved from kids in their bedroom and financially motivated crime to state-sponsored cybercrime, which is interested in stealing secrets and getting military or commercial advantage."

Instead of credit card numbers and other consumer data sought by crime gangs, security experts say cyber spies with skills and resources that suggest they work for governments aim at higher-value but better-guarded information.

A state-owned energy company in a bidding war for access to oil and gas fields abroad can save huge sums if it can find out what foreign rivals are willing to pay. Stealing formulas for chemical processing can save hundreds of millions of dollars in research costs. Suppliers can negotiate higher prices if they know their customers' internal discussions.

"There are a lot of hackers that are sponsored by the Chinese government who conduct cyber attacks," said Lim Jong-in, dean of Korea University's Graduate School of Information Security.

Mandiant said it found attacks on 141 entities, mostly in the United States but also in Canada, Britain and elsewhere. It said attackers stole information on pricing, contract negotiations, manufacturing, product testing and corporate acquisitions.

It said multiple details indicated the attackers, dubbed APT1 in its report, were from a military cyber warfare unit in Shanghai, though there was a small chance someone else might be responsible.

"We do believe that this stolen information can be used to obvious advantage" by China and Chinese state-owned enterprises, said Mandiant. Target companies were in four of the seven strategic industries identified in the Communist Party's latest five-year development plan, it said.

China's ruling party has ambitious plans to build up state-owned corporate champions in industries from banking and telecoms to oil and steel. State companies are flush with cash from the country's boom and benefit from monopolies and other official favors but lag global rivals in skills and technology.

Last year, a group of Chinese state companies were among defendants charged in U.S. federal court in San Francisco in the theft of technology from DuPont Co. for manufacturing titanium dioxide, a chemical used in paints and other products.

In 2011, another security company, Symantec Inc., announced it detected attacks on 29 chemical companies and 19 other companies that it traced to China. It said the attackers wanted to steal secrets about chemical processing and advanced materials manufacturing.

China has long been cited by security experts as a center for a global explosion of Internet crime. They say some crimes might be carried out by attackers abroad who remotely control Chinese computers. But experts including Mandiant say there is growing evidence Chinese attackers are behind many of them.

China's military is a leader in cyber warfare research, along with its counterparts in the United States and Russia. The People's Liberation Army supports hacker hobby clubs with as many as 100,000 members to develop a pool of possible recruits, according to security consultants.

Few companies are willing to confirm they are victims of cyber spying, possibly for fear it might erode trust in their business.

"When companies admit their servers were hacked, they become the target of hackers. Because the admission shows the weakness, they cannot admit," said Kwon Seok-chul, president of Cuvepia Inc., a security firm in Seoul.

An exception was Google Inc., which announced in 2010 that it and at least 20 other companies were hit by attacks traced to China. Only two other companies disclosed they were targets in those attacks. Google cited the hacking and efforts to snoop on Chinese dissidents' email as among reasons for closing its mainland China-based search service that year.

Mandiant cited the example of an unidentified company with which it said a Chinese commodity supplier negotiated a double-digit price increase after attackers stole files and emails from the customer's chief executive over 2? years beginning in 2008.

"It would be surprising if APT1 could continue perpetrating such a broad mandate of cyber espionage and data theft if the results of the group's efforts were not finding their way into the hands of entities able to capitalize on them," the report said.

___

AP Technology Writer Youkyung Lee in Seoul, South Korea contributed.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-02-20-China-Hacking-The%20Cost/id-95afc5bbcbb7437096cb4a5d61ac9462

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Tuesday, February 19, 2013

This Is Where Apple Sources All Its Components (Spoiler: It Ain't Just China!)

This Is Where Apple Sources All Its Components (Spoiler: It Ain't Just China!)This map, put together by China File, plots all of the publicly available suppliers who fuel Apple's production lines. While the majority are found in Asia, it's interesting to see that the rest of world represents, too.

Each point on the interactive map represents an individual supplier, provided with complete context?from Analog Devices in Limerick, Ireland, to Arvato Digital in Smithfield, Australia. Explore the zoomable, clickable version of the map here.

There are, as you can see, plenty of suppliers based in the US, the most important?or at least, prolific?of which produce glass and processors for iOS devices. [China File]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5984962/this-is-where-apple-sources-all-its-components-spoiler-it-aint-just-china

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Monday, February 18, 2013

FRESH OFF THE RUNWAY: Rihanna Reveals Her First Collection For RIVER ISLAND At London Fashion Week

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Rihanna's had a big UK weekend.? She shot the cover of Elle UK's April issue when she arrived in London, then she headed over to London Fashion Week to debut her brand new collection for River Island.

?

We've got her fab look, and a look at her designs....

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Rocking a fitted black tank dress, Rihanna made her way to her show to present her River Island Autumn/Winter 2013 collection.? She tweeted:

And just like that these bitches is my sons #RihannaForRiverIsland #LONDONfashionweek

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The "Stay" singer debuted a collection full of clothes that she indeed put her imprint on.? The sexy, minimal, skin baring looks are all looks we've seen her rock over the past year or so.? So it's no surprise that's what we saw fresh off the "runway":

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? photo BDQNHlqCEAAqUuzjpg_large_zpsa3256f78.jpg photo BDQKux4CQAACpCwjpg_large_zpsfa0c01be.jpg??  photo BDQcRrTCYAATk7yjpg_large_zps8944434a.jpg photo BDQccGdCUAAEccLjpg_large_zps2fe69d15.jpg

She was spotted backstage with her models:

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And her model friends Jourdan Dunn and Cara Delevingne were there to support.? We're feeling the designs.? Congrats Rih!

Check out video of Rih greeting her audience:

Pics: WENN/Twitter

Source: http://theybf.com/2013/02/17/fresh-off-the-runway-rihanna-reveals-her-first-collection-for-river-island-at-london

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Mophie Outride review: action-cam case for iPhone can't replace dedicated shooters

Mophie Outride review actioncam case for iPhone can't replace dedicated shooters

Over the years, Mophie has become synonymous with extending the iPhone's battery life. The outfit's range of battery-filled iPhone cases has garnered rave reviews across the industry, and even I religiously used one on an iPhone 3G. In more recent days, the company has cautiously expanded into a few new areas -- namely, building battery cases for non-Apple phones, and creating the contraption shown above. The Mophie Outride is an action-cam case that's designed to be strapped onto helmets, automobile hoods and any other place where your average X Games wannabe would look to capture extreme sports footage.

But, unlike the myriad rivals on the market today, the Outride doesn't actually include a camera. Instead, you're supposed to strap your iPhone 4 or 4S into it (an iPhone 5 model has yet to be announced), allowing the smartphone you already own to handle the bulk of the work. At first blush, it sounded like an ideal solution to me. After all, I'm generally in favor of convergence and consolidation, and as an avid traveler, having one less thing to carry (in this case, a dedicated camera) is a godsend. In practice, however, the Outride did little outside of convincing me that GoPro exists for a reason.

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Source: Mophie

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/8VXtkcghmXQ/

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