Friday, October 25, 2013

B.o.B hopes to join Bruno Mars on Super Bowl stage




FILE - In this Dec. 10, 2010 file photo, B.O.B. and Bruno Mars perform at the 2010 Z100 Jingle Ball concert at Madison Square Garden in New York. B.o.B is happy that Mars is the halftime performer at Super Bowl XLVIII, especially if he gets an invite to join him onstage. Super Bowl XLVIII will take place Feb. 2 in East Rutherford, N.J. (AP Photo/Peter Kramer, File)






ATLANTA (AP) — B.o.B is happy Bruno Mars is the halftime performer at Super Bowl XLVIII, especially if he gets an invitation to join him onstage.

B.o.B says with a laugh: "I ain't got my phone call yet, but I hope I'll be on there."

Mars and the rapper collaborated on the 2010 No. 1 hit, "Nothin' on You." The song was nominated for multiple Grammy Awards and helped Mars launch his successful solo career, which includes two platinum albums and 10 Top 5 hits.

B.o.B said in an interview Wednesday that he and Mars came up the music ranks together, performing in the studio before the singer became a pop star.

Super Bowl XLVIII will take place Feb. 2 in East Rutherford, N.J.

B.o.B will release his third album, "Underground Luxury," on Dec. 17.

____

Follow Jonathan Landrum Jr. at http://twitter.com/MrLandrum31

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/b-o-b-hopes-join-bruno-mars-super-164917268.html
Category: walking dead   Ink Master   zac efron   Rafael Caro Quintero   megan fox  

Live Oct. 28: Arcade Fire, In Concert



Studio Sessions


This news feed contains stories that meet all of the following criteria: (1) Stories from the "Studio Sessions" topic. (2) Stories from the "Music Videos" topic.



  • British rock icon Bobby Gillespie sings "It's Alright, It's OK" from this year's <em>More Light LP</em>.

    Watch KCRW Presents: Primal ScreamKCRW



  • Watch the British singer-songwriter perform a single from her debut album, <em>Like I Used</em> <em>To</em>, at KEXP.

    Watch KEXP Presents: Lucy RoseKEXP



  • Watch two of the finest blues-rock musicians of their era perform "Made Up Mind" for World Cafe.

    Watch World Cafe Presents: Tedeschi Trucks BandWXPN



Studio Sessions





Field Recordings


NPR Music takes musicians out of the concert hall and off the beaten path for a series of surprising performances.



  • New York's 6th & B Community Garden provides a perfect setting for the singer once known as Smog.

    Watch Bill Callahan Sings 'Small Plane' In A Serene CitySoundcheck



  • The Swedish indie-pop singer performs "Funeral For My Future Children" on a rare instrument.

    Watch Anna Von Hausswolff Finds A Pipe Organ In New York CitySoundcheck



  • Watch the celebrated violinist play music of the spheres amid twinkling lights.

    Watch Daniel Hope's Earth And Sky Expedition Q2



Field Recordings





Tiny Desk Concerts


Intimate video performances, recorded live at the desk of All Songs Considered host Bob Boilen.



  • Pretty and melancholy, the Londoners' music conjures a perfect mix of gloom, desire and hostility.

    Watch Daughter: Tiny Desk Concert



  • The bassist composes beautiful, unpretentious music for an unusual jazz band with accordion.

    Watch Matt Ulery's Loom: Tiny Desk Concert



  • The band performs three songs from a record inspired by the childhood of singer Will Sheff.

    Watch Okkervil River: Tiny Desk Concert



Tiny Desk Concerts




Source: http://www.npr.org/event/music/239134780/live-oct-28-arcade-fire-in-concert?ft=1&f=1109
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Ultrasound device combined with clot-buster safe for stroke, say UTHealth researchers

Ultrasound device combined with clot-buster safe for stroke, say UTHealth researchers


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University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston






HOUSTON (Oct. 24, 2013) A study led by researchers at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) showed that a hands-free ultrasound device combined with a clot-busting drug was safe for ischemic stroke patients.


The results of the phase II pilot study were reported today in the American Heart Association journal Stroke. Lead author is Andrew D. Barreto, M.D., assistant professor of neurology in the Stroke Program at the UTHealth Medical School. Principal investigator is James C. Grotta, M.D., professor and chair of the Department of Neurology at the UTHealth Medical School, the Roy M. & Phyllis Gough Huffington Distinguished Chair and co-director of the Mischer Neuroscience Institute at Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center.


The device, which uses UTHealth technology licensed to Cerevast Therapeutics, Inc., is placed on the stroke patient's head and delivers ultrasound to enhance the effectiveness of the clot-busting drug tissue plasminogen activator (tPA). Unlike the traditional hand-held ultrasound probe that's aimed at a blood clot, the hands-free device used 18 separate probes and showers the deep areas of the brain where large blood clots cause severe strokes.


"Our goal is to open up more arteries in the brain and help stroke patients recover," said Barreto, an attending physician at Mischer Neuroscience Institute. "This technology would have a significant impact on patients, families and society if we could improve outcomes by another 10 percent or more by adding ultrasound to patients who've already received tPA."


In the first study of its kind, 20 moderately severe ischemic stroke patients (12 men and eight women, average age 63 years) received intravenous tPA up to 4.5 hours after symptoms occurred and two hours exposure to 2-MHz pulsed wave transcranial ultrasound.



Researchers reported that 13 (or 65 percent) patients either returned home or to rehabilitation 90 days after the combination treatment. After three months, five of the 20 patients had no disability from the stroke and one had slight disability.


Cerevast Therapeutics has recently launched an 830-patient international, randomized efficacy study of the ultrasound approach combined with the clot buster in ischemic stroke. Barreto is the North American principal investigator for that Phase III study called Combined Lysis of Thrombus with Ultrasound and Systemic Tissue Plasminogen Activator (tPA) for Emergent Revascularization in Acute Ischemic Stroke (CLOTBUST-ER). Locally, patients will be recruited from Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center, Memorial Hermann Southwest Hospital and Baptist Beaumont Hospital.

###


The study was conducted at UTHealth and the University of Alabama-Birmingham with funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) including the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (P50NS044227, 1K23NS02229-01, 1P50NS044277), an NIH training grant (T32NS07412) and the National Center for Research Resources (UL1RR024148).


UTHealth co-authors are Nicole Gonzales, M.D.; Sean I. Savitz, M.D.; Andrew Bursaw, M.D.; Preeti Sahota, M.D.; Renganayaki Pandurengan, Ph.D.; Mohammad Rahbar, Ph.D.; Loren Shen, B.S.N.; Manouchehr Ardjomand- Hessabi, M.D.; Hari Indupuru, M.B.B.S.; and Hui Peng, Ph.D. Other co-authors are Andrei Alexandrov, M.D.; April Sisson, R.N.; and Kristian Barlinn, M.D.




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Ultrasound device combined with clot-buster safe for stroke, say UTHealth researchers


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Contact: Deborah Lake
deborah.m.lake@uth.tmc.edu
713-500-3304
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston






HOUSTON (Oct. 24, 2013) A study led by researchers at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) showed that a hands-free ultrasound device combined with a clot-busting drug was safe for ischemic stroke patients.


The results of the phase II pilot study were reported today in the American Heart Association journal Stroke. Lead author is Andrew D. Barreto, M.D., assistant professor of neurology in the Stroke Program at the UTHealth Medical School. Principal investigator is James C. Grotta, M.D., professor and chair of the Department of Neurology at the UTHealth Medical School, the Roy M. & Phyllis Gough Huffington Distinguished Chair and co-director of the Mischer Neuroscience Institute at Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center.


The device, which uses UTHealth technology licensed to Cerevast Therapeutics, Inc., is placed on the stroke patient's head and delivers ultrasound to enhance the effectiveness of the clot-busting drug tissue plasminogen activator (tPA). Unlike the traditional hand-held ultrasound probe that's aimed at a blood clot, the hands-free device used 18 separate probes and showers the deep areas of the brain where large blood clots cause severe strokes.


"Our goal is to open up more arteries in the brain and help stroke patients recover," said Barreto, an attending physician at Mischer Neuroscience Institute. "This technology would have a significant impact on patients, families and society if we could improve outcomes by another 10 percent or more by adding ultrasound to patients who've already received tPA."


In the first study of its kind, 20 moderately severe ischemic stroke patients (12 men and eight women, average age 63 years) received intravenous tPA up to 4.5 hours after symptoms occurred and two hours exposure to 2-MHz pulsed wave transcranial ultrasound.



Researchers reported that 13 (or 65 percent) patients either returned home or to rehabilitation 90 days after the combination treatment. After three months, five of the 20 patients had no disability from the stroke and one had slight disability.


Cerevast Therapeutics has recently launched an 830-patient international, randomized efficacy study of the ultrasound approach combined with the clot buster in ischemic stroke. Barreto is the North American principal investigator for that Phase III study called Combined Lysis of Thrombus with Ultrasound and Systemic Tissue Plasminogen Activator (tPA) for Emergent Revascularization in Acute Ischemic Stroke (CLOTBUST-ER). Locally, patients will be recruited from Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center, Memorial Hermann Southwest Hospital and Baptist Beaumont Hospital.

###


The study was conducted at UTHealth and the University of Alabama-Birmingham with funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) including the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (P50NS044227, 1K23NS02229-01, 1P50NS044277), an NIH training grant (T32NS07412) and the National Center for Research Resources (UL1RR024148).


UTHealth co-authors are Nicole Gonzales, M.D.; Sean I. Savitz, M.D.; Andrew Bursaw, M.D.; Preeti Sahota, M.D.; Renganayaki Pandurengan, Ph.D.; Mohammad Rahbar, Ph.D.; Loren Shen, B.S.N.; Manouchehr Ardjomand- Hessabi, M.D.; Hari Indupuru, M.B.B.S.; and Hui Peng, Ph.D. Other co-authors are Andrei Alexandrov, M.D.; April Sisson, R.N.; and Kristian Barlinn, M.D.




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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/uoth-udc102413.php
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AT&T won't match T-Mobile's free data on the iPad Air, at least for now


October 24, 2013




By Martyn Williams | IDG News Service




AT&T won't be matching T-Mobile's offer of free wireless data for the iPad Air when the device debuts at the company's stores across the U.S. next month.


AT&T, the country's second-largest cellular carrier, said it will offer a $100 discount to customers who sign a two-year contract for tablet data service.


[ Understand how to both manage and benefit from the consumerization of IT with InfoWorld's "Consumerization Digital Spotlight" PDF special report. | Subscribe to InfoWorld's Consumerization of IT newsletter today. ]


For customers who don't want to sign a contract, AT&T will offer recently announced plans costing between $5 for 250MB of data for one day and $50 for 5GB for one month. Those customers won't get the $100 discount.


Subscribers will also be able to add the iPad Air to an existing data plan for an additional $10 per month.


On Wednesday, T-Mobile said it will give tablet owners 200MB of data per month for no cost. Once that's used up, customers will have the option of paying $5 for 500MB of data for one day or $10 for 1GB of data for a week.


T-Mobile, which is the fourth-largest of the country's four major carriers, is aggressively courting customers with cheaper pricing plans. It recently said customers heading overseas would get unlimited 2G data at no additional cost.


A spokesman for AT&T declined to comment on T-Mobile's announcement.


Martyn Williams covers mobile telecoms, Silicon Valley and general technology breaking news for The IDG News Service. Follow Martyn on Twitter at @martyn_williams. Martyn's e-mail address is martyn_williams@idg.com



Source: http://www.infoworld.com/d/mobile-technology/att-wont-match-t-mobiles-free-data-the-ipad-air-least-now-229448?source=rss_mobile_technology
Category: Government Shutdown Over   penn state   monday night football   Blackboard   mila kunis  

Thursday, October 24, 2013

No U.S. mortgage limit changes before spring: FHFA


By Margaret Chadbourn


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. lenders will get at least six months' notice before the government reduces the limit on the size of loans that taxpayer-owned Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac can back, the firms' regulator said on Thursday.


The Federal Housing Finance Agency, which has already said it was considering lowering the cap to wean the housing finance system off its dependence on the government, said any change would be phased in to avoid economic disruptions.


"We are not making a change there in the immediate term," FHFA Acting Director Edward DeMarco told reporters. "We're not looking to disrupt the market or create some sudden dislocation. Anything we would do would have a long lead time and be gradual and measured."


The housing finance industry had expected officials to lower the limits on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac-backed loans on January 1, 2014. While it will get more time to prepare for any changes, a decision on whether to lower the limits, and by how much, would still be made in late November, DeMarco said.


Currently, Fannie and Freddie cannot back loans of more than $417,000 in most markets, although the cap ranges as high as $625,500 in some pricier areas - including Washington, D.C., California and the New York City area - and up to $721,050 in Hawaii.


Separately, DeMarco said disputes between financial institutions and the government-run mortgage finance firms on loans made before the financial crisis are on track to be settled by the end of the year.


"We've been making progress on getting the claims resolved and settled," DeMarco said. The firms are sorting through delinquent loans for signs of any violations of representations and warranties.


LOWER LOAN LIMITS IMPACT


Lowering the caps, which were raised in 2008 to help keep the mortgage market liquid during the financial crisis, could make it harder for Americans to obtain home loans and drive up mortgage costs, unless the private market steps in to fill the void.


Investors' willingness to take on more risk once the government retreats could prove to be an early test of how well the housing market can operate without a large federal guarantee.


Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac together have drawn nearly $190 billion in taxpayer aid since they were seized by the government in September 2008, but they have paid about $146 billion to the Treasury in dividend payments in return for the support.


Republicans and Democrats agree the firms should eventually be wound down, but have yet to resolve disagreements over what should replace them and how extensive a role the government should play in supporting housing. The Obama administration also wants to reduce taxpayer backing in the housing system.


The two firms do not directly make loans. They purchase mortgages from lenders, which they either keep on their books or bundle into securities that they offer to investors with a guarantee. Those investors pay Fannie and Freddie a "guarantee fee" when they buy the securities.


The guarantee Fannie and Freddie provide makes it easier for the companies to package and sell mortgage bonds to investors.


Some housing industry leaders have said they are concerned a move to lower the loan limits could come too soon, impeding the housing recovery and shutting out home buyers. Investors might not be willing to take the risk of buying securities without a government guarantee, they caution.


"I recognize and understand that the industry is very busy right now," DeMarco said. New loan regulations that are part of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street reform law, some of which take effect in January, are often cited as restricting mortgage lending.


The industry has pushed FHFA to delay any lowering of the loan limits. The FHFA said in August it was considering reducing them and has been thinking about when any changes should take effect.


"The industry had an awful lot going on on January 1. The better course was to wait," DeMarco said.


Some in the industry and lawmakers have tried to challenge the FHFA's legal authority to reduce the loan limits. In addition, a bipartisan group of lawmakers in the House of Representatives this month called on the agency to drop its plans to change them.


(Reporting by Margaret Chadbourn; Editing by James Dalgleish and Dan Grebler)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fannie-freddie-finish-sorting-loan-disputes-end-193255562--sector.html
Category: Keke Palmer   Kenichi Ebina   Miley Cyrus Wrecking Ball   Daft Punk   Alfonso Soriano  

Portugal reopens missing Madeleine case, new leads

This undated image released Sunday Oct. 13, 2013, by the London Metropolitan Police, shows missing British girl Madeleine McCann before she went missing from a Portuguese holiday complex on Thursday, May 3, 2007. British police are making a fresh appeal Monday Oct. 14, 2013, with new information about their investigation, with e-fit computer images of men allegedly seen in the Portuguese town of Praia da Luz around the time of Madeleine McCann's disappearance. (AP Photo/London Metropolitan Police)







This undated image released Sunday Oct. 13, 2013, by the London Metropolitan Police, shows missing British girl Madeleine McCann before she went missing from a Portuguese holiday complex on Thursday, May 3, 2007. British police are making a fresh appeal Monday Oct. 14, 2013, with new information about their investigation, with e-fit computer images of men allegedly seen in the Portuguese town of Praia da Luz around the time of Madeleine McCann's disappearance. (AP Photo/London Metropolitan Police)







LISBON, Portugal (AP) — More than six years after British girl Madeleine McCann vanished from her bedroom during a family vacation in Portugal and five years after Portuguese police gave up trying to find her, authorities reopened the case Thursday, citing new evidence.

Madeleine's parents, Kate and Gerry McCann, had long campaigned from their home in central England for the Portuguese investigation to resume. In a statement Thursday, they said they were "very pleased" at the development.

"We hope that this will finally lead to (Madeleine) being found and to the discovery of whoever is responsible for this crime," Kate and Gerry McCann said. The couple, both doctors, continue to care for Madeleine's younger siblings, twins Sean and Amelie.

Madeleine went missing shortly before her fourth birthday. Her disappearance sparked global interest as pictures of her and her grieving parents beamed around the world. Her parents briefly met with Pope Benedict XVI in St. Peter's Square in June 2007, a month after Madeleine disappeared, and the pontiff held a picture of their daughter.

Then, in a stunning twist, Portuguese police briefly considered the parents suspects before they were cleared and returned home.

Portuguese police closed the case in 2008 because authorities had detected no crime. However, a team of detectives from Porto, in northern Portugal, began reviewing the evidence in March 2011. They had not been involved in the original investigation.

The public prosecutor's office in Lisbon said it decided to reopen the investigation after new leads emerged during the case review. It did not elaborate. The case is subject to Portugal's judicial secrecy law, which forbids the release of information about investigations.

British police, meanwhile, launched Operation Grange in 2011 to try to find out what happened to Madeleine. British detectives have been sifting through the case files in Portugal and say they also have identified new avenues of investigation. They say both the timeline and the version of events surrounding the girl's disappearance have changed significantly as new information has emerged.

Madeleine disappeared from her family's resort apartment in Praia da Luz, a coastal town 200 kilometers (120 miles) south of Lisbon, while her parents and their friends were eating dinner nearby.

British detectives say it's possible that Madeleine is still alive.

Ten days ago, British police released a computer-generated image of a person they were interested in questioning about the girl's disappearance. Police asked the public for help and worked with the BBC on a "Crimewatch" TV show, which drew more than 2,000 calls offering possible new leads.

Police said the images were based on information from witnesses who spotted a man in the Portuguese resort the day Madeleine was last seen.

In London, Scotland Yard said the reopened Portuguese investigation will run parallel to the British police's efforts, and British police will be traveling regularly to Portugal.

"Both sides of the investigation are at relatively early stages, with much work remaining to be done," Scotland Yard said in a statement. "This new momentum is encouraging, but we still have a way to go."

Experts say all those efforts are worthwhile.

Even after so many years, officials should "do whatever it takes" to ensure that grieving parents get closure, said Delphine Moralis of Missing Children Europe, an umbrella group of 28 non-governmental organizations in 19 European Union countries and Switzerland.

"It's essential to keep the ball rolling" on efforts to find missing children, Moralis said by telephone from Brussels.

She cited as examples the cathartic resolution provided in the cases involving Natascha Kampusch, who was found eight years after being kidnapped in 1998 in Austria, and three women rescued in May after being held captive in a Cleveland house for about a decade.

____

Gregory Katz in London contributed to this report.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-10-24-Portugal-Missing%20Girl/id-24dfb0224d3f44d5bdf077aa7d11153d
Category: hocus pocus   The Blacklist   fox sports   Betty Pino   Frank Castillo  

How I Became the Poster Girl for Liberal Agitprop


You might have heard: I wrote a piece asking liberal critics of the ACA’s Web problems to take a larger perspective, and not rush to join the clusterf*ck of conservatives declaring the entire program a failure. I mentioned two writers I admire, Ezra Klein and Ryan Lizza. Both had offered smart and sober criticism of the Web troubles; both also took to Twitter to get a little bit silly. Lizza suggested the ACA’s Web glitches might be a bigger disaster for Democrats than their default-hostage crisis was for Republicans. That seemed to me to be a pretty clear example of “false equivalence” that erodes media credibility. One party brought us to the brink of a constitutional crisis and almost precipitated a global economic collapse. The other party rolled out a complicated and apparently poorly designed Web site with insufficient testing and a screwed up procurement process. Those seem about equal, right? Of course not. There’s no comparison.






Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/2013/10/24/how_i_became_the_poster_girl_for_liberal_agitprop_318539.html
Related Topics: 9news   alice eve   Tropical Storm Flossie  

Unleashing the power of the crowd

Unleashing the power of the crowd


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McGill University



McGill online game expands to connect global scientific community with citizen scientists




Over the past three years, 300,000 gamers have helped scientists with genomic research by playing Phylo, an online puzzle game. Now Jrme Waldisphl, the McGill computer science professor and his colleagues, who developed the game are making this crowd of players available to scientists around the globe. The idea is to put human talent to work to improve on what is already being done by computers in the field of comparative genomics.


Phylo is a cross between Tetris, Rubik's cube and an old-fashioned sliding-tile puzzle game. As gamers line up coloured rectangles that represent real genetic material (in the form of DNA sequences), they are helping to pinpoint the genetic anomalies that may be the key to a range of diseases that include diabetes, breast cancer and retinoblastoma (the most common form of malignant tumour in the eyes of children). Since it was first launched, players who range from teenagers to seniors have suggested solutions for over 4,000 puzzles based on genomic data that has already been gathered. Now these gamers will be put to use helping scientists with a whole new range of research.


Waldisphl and his colleagues are hoping that along with providing solutions to genomic problems, this process will also help to promote a better general understanding of scientific research. "Playing a game helps lower the barriers that sometimes exist between scientists and the population in general," says Waldisphl. "Since we launched Phylo, what I've most enjoyed are the conversations I've had with people who are interested in science and want to know more about the research. Our goal now is to connect thousands of scientists around the globe with hundreds of thousands of gamers."




Waldisphl and his colleagues have already fielded inquiries from scientists working on viral bioinformatics at the University of Victoria. And they hope soon to hear from many others. Phylo is already available in 10 languages, including German, Russian, Chinese and Hebrew, and a future goal is to translate the website into Japanese, Arabic and Italian.


###


To access the game online: http://phylo.cs.mcgill.ca/


To contact the researcher directly: jerome.waldispuhl@mcgill.ca




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Unleashing the power of the crowd


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

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Contact: katherine gombay
katherine.gombay@mcgill.ca
514-398-2189
McGill University



McGill online game expands to connect global scientific community with citizen scientists




Over the past three years, 300,000 gamers have helped scientists with genomic research by playing Phylo, an online puzzle game. Now Jrme Waldisphl, the McGill computer science professor and his colleagues, who developed the game are making this crowd of players available to scientists around the globe. The idea is to put human talent to work to improve on what is already being done by computers in the field of comparative genomics.


Phylo is a cross between Tetris, Rubik's cube and an old-fashioned sliding-tile puzzle game. As gamers line up coloured rectangles that represent real genetic material (in the form of DNA sequences), they are helping to pinpoint the genetic anomalies that may be the key to a range of diseases that include diabetes, breast cancer and retinoblastoma (the most common form of malignant tumour in the eyes of children). Since it was first launched, players who range from teenagers to seniors have suggested solutions for over 4,000 puzzles based on genomic data that has already been gathered. Now these gamers will be put to use helping scientists with a whole new range of research.


Waldisphl and his colleagues are hoping that along with providing solutions to genomic problems, this process will also help to promote a better general understanding of scientific research. "Playing a game helps lower the barriers that sometimes exist between scientists and the population in general," says Waldisphl. "Since we launched Phylo, what I've most enjoyed are the conversations I've had with people who are interested in science and want to know more about the research. Our goal now is to connect thousands of scientists around the globe with hundreds of thousands of gamers."




Waldisphl and his colleagues have already fielded inquiries from scientists working on viral bioinformatics at the University of Victoria. And they hope soon to hear from many others. Phylo is already available in 10 languages, including German, Russian, Chinese and Hebrew, and a future goal is to translate the website into Japanese, Arabic and Italian.


###


To access the game online: http://phylo.cs.mcgill.ca/


To contact the researcher directly: jerome.waldispuhl@mcgill.ca




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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/mu-utp102413.php
Category: First Day Of Fall 2013   FXX   nytimes   Into the Wild   North West  

Chris Evans & Scarlett Johansson Captivate In First Full-Length Captain America The Winter Solider Trailer!



ZOOOOOMG! WE cannot WAIT for this to come out!!


We've FINNNNAALLLY got the first trailer for Chris Evans' upcoming film Captain America: The Winter Solider and it is packed with SO MUCH action!


It looks like Steve Rodgers will be teaming up with Natasha Romanoff/Black Widow aka Scarlett Johansson as his new Partner-In-Fighting-Crime.


We also get some glimpses at the newest member of the Cap's Crew, The Falcon, played by Anthony Mackie, and are shown more of Robert Redford's character as well. Nick Fury, aka Samuel L. Jackson, as always, makes an appearance.


The film looks SO bad-ass. We can't WAIT to see it!


It's a good thing Chris has this coming out to distract him from his break-up with Minka Kelly!


Ch-ch-check out the trailer (above)!!!


Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,


Source: http://perezhilton.com/2013-10-24-chris-evans-captain-america-winter-solider-trailer-released-marvel-super-hero-scarlett-johansson
Tags: ABC Family   msnbc   nfl schedule   Perez Hilton   Hasnat Khan  

Watch: 'SCAR Project' Documents Young Breast Cancer Victims

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id : "kaltura_player_default",
src : service_url + "/index.php/kwidget/wid/_" + kdp_embed_default.partner_id +
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height : 361,
width : 640,
bgcolor : "#eeeeee",
allowNetworking : "all",
version : [10,0],
expressInstall : "http://cdn.kaltura.org/apis/seo/expressinstall.swf",
wmode: "transparent"
},
{ // flashvars (double-quote the values)
externalInterfaceDisabled : "false",
jsInterfaceReadyFunc : "jsInterfaceReady",
contentType: "video",

//"restrictUserAgent.restrictedUserAgents": "GoogleTV",
referer : "http://abcnews.go.com/Health/video/scar-project-documents-young-breast-cancer-victims-20629108",
"omniture.videoViewEventEvar15Value" : "player|videoindex",
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"omniture.videoViewEventProp16Value" : jsvideoViewEventProp16Value,
"omniture.videoViewEventEvar20Value" : jsvideoViewEventEvar20Value,
"omniture.adStartEvar15Value" : "player|videoindex",
"omniture.adStartEvar20Value" : jsvideoViewEventEvar20Value,
"closedCaptionActive" : closedCaptionActiveValue,


noThumbnail: true,
"abcnews.displayEndCard":false,
"addThis.embedCodeLinks" : "%3Ca%20href%3D%22http%3A%2F%2Fabcnews.go.com%2F%3Fcid%3D11_extvid1%22%3EBreaking%20News%3C%2Fa%3E",
"addThis.embedFlashVars" : "referer=http://abcnews.go.com/Health/video/scar-project-documents-young-breast-cancer-victims-20629108%26flashvars[autoPlay]=false%26addThis.playerSize=392x221%26freeWheel.siteSectionId=nws_offsite%26closedCaptionActive=false",
"addThis.iframeTemplate" : "%3Ciframe%20id%3D%22%24playerId%24%22%20height%3D%22360%22%20width%3D%22640%22%20style%3D%22%24cssStyle%24%22%20src%3D%22"+embedSrc+"%22%3E%24noIFrameMessage%24%3C%2Fiframe%3E%20%3Cdiv%20style%3D%22text-align%3Aleft%3Bfont-size%3Ax-small%3Bmargin-top%3A0%3B%22%3E%3Ca%20href%3D%22http%3A%2F%2Fabcnews.go.com%2F%3Fcid%3D11_extvid1%22%3EBreaking%20News%3C%2Fa%3E%3C%2Fdiv%3E",
"shareBtnControllerScreen.enabled" : "true",
"outbrainKalturaVideo.plugin": "true","outbrainKalturaVideo.isDebug": "true","outbrainKalturaVideo.relativeTo": "PlayerHolder","outbrainKalturaVideo.path": "http://widgets.outbrain.com/fl/outbrainKalturaVideo.swf","outbrainKalturaVideo.position": "lastChild","outbrainKalturaVideo.idx": "1","outbrainKalturaVideo.playerSrcId": "ABCNewsKaltura","outbrainKalturaVideo.widgetId": "VP1","outbrainKalturaVideo.displayWidget": "true","outbrainKalturaVideo.sendStats": "true",

//"video.stretchThumbnail":true,
//"volumeBar.initialValue":0.75,
//"volumeBar.forceInitialValue":true,
debugMode: true

}
)
},
onFail : function() {
alert("FLASH EMBEDDING FAILED");
},
getEntryIdFromUrl : function() {
if(location.hash.indexOf(kdp_embed_default.url_param_name) != -1) {
// get the entry id from the url document fragment (aka hash):
return location.hash.split("#")[1].substring((kdp_embed_default.url_param_name.length+1));
}
else if(location.search.indexOf(kdp_embed_default.url_param_name) != -1) {
// get the entry id from the url parameters (aka querystring):
return location.search.split("?")[1].substring((kdp_embed_default.url_param_name.length+1));
}
else {
// use the default video defined in "fallback_entry" below:
// return kdp_embed_default.fallback_entry;
return false;
}
},
getEntryIdFromDataAttr : function() {
var data_attr_val = document.getElementById(this.placeholder_id).getAttribute("data-entryid");
if(data_attr_val && !(data_attr_val












Source: http://abcnews.go.com/Health/video/scar-project-documents-young-breast-cancer-victims-20629108
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BlackBerry working on BBM fix following iOS 7.0.3 font fubar

BlackBerry working on BBM fix following iOS 7.0.3 font fubar

Stop me if this sounds implausible even for a Damon Lindloff movie, but right after BlackBerry finally shipped BlackBerry Messenger (BBM) for iOS on Monday, Apple's iOS 7.0.3 update broke it on Tuesday. Adam Zeis on CrackBerry:

The heat of the issue lies with the font that BBM uses, "HelveticaNeue-Italic", and the fact that it was removed in the 7.0.3 update. This is causing various issues within BBM on iOS and making it crash in certain scenarios.

BlackBerry is aware of the issue and working on a fix. Hopefully they ask for and get an expedited review and the updated gets posted at Facebook speed.

Meanwhile, BBM for iPhone will be unstable and annoying. Where exactly HelveticaNeue-Italic went is another question...

Source: CrackBerry


    






Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/Nc8WWP9waPM/story01.htm
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Rousimar Palhares vs. Dean Lister set for 2013 World Jiu-Jitsu Expo


Several promotions turned down the possibility of signing Rousimar Palhares after his controversial win over Mike Pierce at UFC Fight Night 29 in Barueri, Brazil. However, the World Jiu-Jitsu Expo is not one of them.


World Jiu-Jitsu Expo promoter Renzo Gracie told MMAFighting.com on Tuesday that they have signed the submission wizard to be part of their next edition on Nov. 9-10 in Long Beach, Calif., and he’s set to meet UFC veteran and three-time ADCC champion Dean Lister in a 20-minute submission-only no-gi match with no points.


Graciemag first reported the news.


"I already wanted to get ‘Toquinho’ in the event, but wanted even more after everybody started criticizing him and I wouldn’t let that happen," Gracie told MMAFighting.com. "He’s a great guy, an incredible grappler, and I respect him a lot. He represents jiu-jitsu all the time."


Lister was offered the fight after he returned from Beijing, China, where he won the silver medal at ADCC 2013, losing to Joao Assis in the final.


Lister has won three ADCC titles over his career, in 2003, 2005 and 2011, with wins over the likes of Jean Jacques Machado, Nate Marquardt, Saulo Ribeiro, Rodolfo Vieira and Joao Assis.


"Dean has done some epic fights at ADCC and took this fight on short notice, but he was already in shape after his fights this weekend," he said. "He’s a great talent and accepted the challenge as soon as we offered it. They are both great leg lock guys and this fight will be amazing."


Kron Gracie, who was expected to fight Rodolfo Vieira, is out of the event after his opponent suffered an injury. Marcus "Buchecha" Almeida, who won his weight division at ADCC 2013, will also no longer compete at the Jiu-Jitsu Expo.


Source: http://www.mmafighting.com/2013/10/22/4867408/rousimar-palhares-vs-dean-lister-set-for-world-jiu-jitsu-expo-in
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A7 in the iPad: more power, more savings

A7 in the iPad: more power, more savings

Going in to yesterday’s Apple Mac and iPad event, the expectation was that we would get new iPads. The good money was also that these new iPads would get new processors. The previous two generations of iPads had followed the introduction of new iPhones and had incorporated an upgraded version of that processor. But the new iPad Air and Retina iPad Mini? They both sport the A7 processor, the same chipset as in the month-old iPhone 5s.

The A7 in the iPhone 5s is a 64-bit 1.3GHz dual-core CPU coupled with what’s believed to be a PowerVR G6430 GPU. It has an advanced image signal processor, a “secure enclave” for storing and processing the Touch ID fingerprint sensor data, and offloads accelerometer, gyroscope, and compass motion-tracking to a dedicated low-power M7 coprocessor. The A7 is a powerful beast, but is it enough to handle an iPad?

A brief history of the A-series

A brief history of the A-series

The original iPad, launched in April 2010, was the first Apple device with a custom A-series processors, this one being the A4. The original A4 was an 800MHz ARM v7 Cortex-A8 single core chip with a PowerVR SGX 535 GPU. All that really means is that it was up to the task of pushing pixels around on that original iPad with its 1024x768 screen. It wasn’t the most powerful of chips, but considering that the original iPad was in a class all its own, that wasn’t an issue. By custom-designing their chipsets, Apple also was able to perform significant streamlining and optimizations that aren’t possible with off-the-shelf mobile processors from Samsung, Nvidia, and the like, giving the 800Mhz single core chip more power and efficiency than otherwise possible.

Two months later, Apple introduced the iPhone 4, using the same A4 chip as the iPad. Where the iPad display had 786,432 pixels, the new Retina display on the iPhone 4 clocked in a 640x960, good for 614,400 pixels, something the A4 was more than up to the task of handling.

In March 2011 the iPad 2 landed. The new iPad was thinner and lighter than the previous generation, and also had the new dual-core 1GHz A5 processor. Later in October, the iPhone 4S was announced, also with the A5 chipset, though clocked down to 800MHz for battery life reasons.

Things got interesting in March of 2012 with the introduction of the third generation "the new" iPad (which we’ll just call iPad 3 for sanity’s sake). Inside was an A5X processor, an improvement over the year-old A5. It still had two cores and was still clocked at 1GHz, but the GPU had seen a massive upgrade to a quad core unit, which Apple claimed had twice the graphics performance of the A5. Considering that the iPad 3 was also the first iPad with a Retina display, and thus had four times the pixels of the iPad 2, this extra power was desperately needed.

iPad 4, iPad Mini, iPhone 5

Six months later the iPhone 5 arrived with the A6 processor, a dual core 1.3GHz chip, which was upgraded to 1.4GHz in the A6X for the iPad 4 two months later in November (also the shortest turn-around time between iPad generations). Two generations in a row this set up the pattern: iPhone then iPad, A# then A#X. Or so we thought.

There are some aberrations in there, of course. The A5-powered iPad 2 continued to hang around in Apple’s line-up, discounted $100 to offer a less expensive alternative to those who didn’t want to spend $499 on the current-generation iPad, even if it was almost universally a markedly better product. The original iPad Mini, launched in November 2012 alongside the iPad 4, carried the same A5 chip as in the iPad 2, in many respects it was merely a smaller and less expensive version of the iPad 2.

In September of 2013 we were introduced to the iPhone 5s, which was powered by the new A7 processor. The A7 had two cores clocked at 1.3GHz, but added 64-bit processing to the mix based off the ARMv8 instruction set. The A7 was the most powerful A-series chip yet, and that came as no surprise. With the iPhone 5s launched in late September, conventional wisdom pegged November as the launch timeframe for an updated full-size iPad and iPad Mini, and conventional wisdom said that we should expect a new A7X processor for at least the big one.

But that’s not what happened. The A7 processor that’s in the iPhone 5 was announced to be powering the new iPad Air and iPad Mini. Surprise!

We've gone from the iPad processor being crammed into the iPhone, to the iPhone processor being upgraded for the iPad, to the iPhone processor just being dropped into the iPad.

Power enough to go around

iPad Mini

The A5X and A6X existed because Apple knew that the A5 and A6 simply weren't up to the task of powering the Retina iPads.

Where the lower-resolution iPads had 786,432-pixel displays that the A4 and A5 could handle, the jump to Retina quadrupled that to 3,145,728 pixels. Technically the then-in-development A6 could have been dropped into the iPad 3 with that insane display, but the experience for the user would have been less than good.

Apple instead ramped up the power behind the A5 and gave us the A5X. When it came time for the fourth-generation iPad, Apple again cranked up the GHz on the previous iPhone processor and gave us the A6X.

If you just look at the specifications for the A7 on paper it doesn't seem that much more impressive than the A6. They both have two cores, both of which are clocked at 1.3Ghz. Where things go wildly different is with the application of 64-bit processing and a high-power quad-core GPU (previously only dual-core on the A5 and A5X).

That much horsepower makes for an iPhone 5s that screams. It's a fast phone and in a month's time there's been nary a report of lag of stutter or wondering if the processor can keep up, even with 727,040 pixels to push.

The Retina iPads, however, have more than four times as many pixels. Clearly Apple believes that the A7 can handle it well enough that there was no need to crank out an X variant this time. It's possible that there are some differences, maybe in clock speed or GPU configuration with the iPads' A7, but Apple gave no indication that there were changes. There weren't any impressive tech demos with gaming or rendering engines on stage to show off the A7 processor, because that's all stuff we've seen before.

Indeed, according to in-depth benchmarking tests done by the likes of AnandTech have shown that the A7 consistently outscores the A6X. If the A6X was good enough for the iPad 4, why wouldn't the more powerful and more modern A7 do the trick?

Based on hands-on reports from the launch event yesterday, the new iPads are tremendously responsive and fast, though those were just early impressions of a just-announced product. But so far it seems like the A7 from the iPhone is more than enough to power the iPad.

Scale and simplicity

iPad Air

Even if the A7 is powerful enough to power an iPad, using the same processor for multiple devices provides tremendous economies of scale for Apple. They can now get away with producing one processor to power the three most-modern devices in the iOS line-up.

The concept of economies of scale is relatively simple: the more you do of one thing, the easier and cheaper it is to do. It's why McDonald's can offer the Big Mac at as low of prices as they do and still turn a profit - they buy more beef than anybody and prepare it the same way around the globe. Mass purchasing and mass manufacturing help offset the single-time costs like the machines used to process all of those cows into 1.6oz hamburger patties by lowering the overall per-unit production cost. That same 1.6oz patty is used in six other McDonald's products for further cost benefits.

The same economies of scale that apply to McDonalds also apply to Apple. Producing the A6 and A6X processor was necessary, as the A6 just wouldn't cut it for the iPad. But it also meant having two separate manufacturing processes to build the different chips. It required more engineering effort to design two chips, duplicated quality assurance, and more.

The A5X and A6X were necessary, but they also complicated Apple's notoriously efficient manufacturing process.

Using the A7 in the three flagship products reduces that complexity. It's just one production process and one design. Making the A7 as powerful as it is probably means it was more expensive to design and produce than the A6. But it also only has to be designed once and then manufactured for years to come.

It frees up resources for Apple, allowing the design team to focus on their next project (presumably an A8 processor due out about a year from now) instead of wasting time building a step-up processor to bridge the gap.

The iPad Air and Retina iPad Mini running off the A7 aren't the only similarities the two new tablets have with the iPhone 5s. All three also contain 1GB of RAM, the M7 motion coprocessor, and front-facing 1.2MP FaceTime HD cameras.

Both the iPad Air and Retina iPad Mini have the same set of Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, and LTE radios, and the same 5.0MP rear camera. In fact, the only real difference between the two is their footprint, owing to the size of the screen, and the size of the battery needed to power the backlight for the screen.

The Retina iPad Mini has even more synergy happening with the iPhone - the 326PPI display on the new iPad Mini is the exact same pixel density as on the iPhone. The displays obviously aren't the same size, but the same manufacturing process that's been used to produce the 0.077mm-square pixels since the iPhone 4 came out can now be applied to the Retina iPad Mini.

It's the reason the iPad Mini has exactly a 7.85-inch display, so when they went Retina with it they could exercise some additional economies of scale. More tiny pixels for everyone.

Using the same parts across the entire iOS line-up like this reduces the acquisition and production costs for Apple. It makes manufacturing easier, and frees up precious human resources to focus on other challenges.

Where we stand today is with the A7 in the iPhone 5s, iPad Air, and Retina iPad Mini. The A6 exists only in the iPhone 5c. The A5 is still a surprisingly well-used processor, finding a home in the iPhone 4S, iPad 2, first generation iPad Mini, the iPod Touch, and the Apple TV. And there's still the A4 in the iPhone 4 being sold in less-wealthy markets around the globe, though we can't imagine that the A4 production line is very large (if even active - for all we know Apple's just working through a stockpile of the processors).

What's next for the A-series?

iPad Air

It's hard to prognosticate what exactly Apple is going to do, apart from release new products eventually (unless your name is iPod Classic). As it currently stands, running four (or three?) processor production lines isn’t the worst thing Apple could be doing.

Apple broke what was assumed to be the beginning of a pattern (two instances does not a pattern make, as they say) with the introduction of the A7 and the use of it seemingly unaltered in the new iPads. Hypothetically-speaking, an A8 processor that's even more powerful than the A7 would be more than enough for both a new iPhone and a new iPad.

Is this the beginning of a new pattern? Will we see Apple continue to simplify their product line to the point that the only difference between an iPhone, an iPad Air, and an iPad Mini is the size of the display and battery? Economies of scale say that would be a good idea.

We saw with the introduction of the updated MacBook Pro laptops that Apple was able to lop $200 off the price while dropping in faster processors, RAM, and flash storage. Much of the cost of the laptop was associated with that storage and the pixel-happy Retina displays above them, unprecedented in a consumer device at launch.

But since ramping up production with the Retina-screened 15-inch MacBook Pro and then the 13-inch version, Apple's been able to decrease their per-unit costs enough that they could also reduce the price to consumers. Make the computer better but yet less expensive means more people can buy it, which means Apple can make more and further reduce per-unit costs. Which will make investors happy, because that means more of the all-driving profit.

It's likely we'll see the simultaneous three (or four?) A-series processor lines continue for at least the next few years. The same economies of scale that apply over mass manufacturer also apply over time - the A6 is cheaper to produce today than it was a year ago, so Apple can offer the iPhone 5c at a lower price than the iPhone 5 was at launch.

The A5 has proven to be a versatile chip, powering everything from the iPhone 4S and iPad 2 to the 1080p Apple TV. Is the A7 up to the task of powering the 8,553,600 pixels that you'll find in a UHD/4K television? That's nearly three times as many pixels as you'll find in a Retina iPad, so maybe we'll have to wait for an A8 chip for that mythological 4K Apple TV set.

Or maybe an A8X would do the trick...


    






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