রবিবার, ২৩ জুন, ২০১৩

Krauthammer: Obama 'self-indulgent and adolescent' | The Daily ...

On Friday?s ?Special Report? on the Fox News Channel, Washington Post columnist Charles Krauthammer criticized President Barack Obama?s speech on Wednesday at the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin.

The speech was sparsely attended compared to the speech Obama had made at the same venue back in 2008 during his first presidential election campaign. And as part of the ?All-Star Panel? Friday ?Lightning Round? segment, Krauthammer won the privilege of posing the question to his colleagues on how to define the speech.

?Obama gave a speech in Germany this week,? Krauthammer said. ?Was it a) a stirring defense of the United States and the concept of liberty, like Reagan and Kennedy; b) a mediocre mush of platitudes; c) ?the worst presidential speech on foreign affairs in memory; or d) ?self-indulgent, anachronistic and adolescent??

The Hill?s A.B. Stoddard replied ?b? and National Review?s Rich Lowry replied ?d.?

But Krauthammer said it was both ?c? and ?d? in his answer.

?It doesn?t even reach the level of mush,? he said. ?C is the correct answer ? yes, to be harsh, absolutely ? and d, empty, self-indulgent, anachronistic and adolescent.?

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Source: http://dailycaller.com/2013/06/21/krauthammer-obamas-berlin-speech-self-indulgent-anachronistic-and-adolescent/

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Ask Engadget: best starter camera for an 11 year old?

Ask Engadget: best starter camera for an 11 year old?

We know you've got questions, and if you're brave enough to ask the world for answers, then here's the outlet to do so. This week's Ask Engadget inquiry is from Diego, who wants to give his son the gateway drug into photography. If you're looking to ask one of your own, drop us a line at ask [at] engadget [dawt] com.

"I'm an amateur photographer, and my 10-year-old son has started to show an interest in what I do on weekends. I've shown him a thing or two on my DSLR and he wants to learn the basics, but I'd prefer it if he didn't do it on my $1,500 rig. His birthday's coming up, and I'd like to get him something that he can use for himself, that lets him customize ISO, white balance, aperture etc. Naturally, I was thinking of just a regular compact camera, but if you can suggest something else that won't break the bank, I'll gladly listen. Thanks!"

So, we turned this question over to one of our photo experts, who suggested that really, if you've got the budget for it, you might as well pick up a very old, very cheap DSLR. For instance, you can pick up an old Canon Rebel XT for around $200, and while it won't be shiny and new, will let them play with features and settings beyond the average compact camera. But what do we know, eh? This is the part of the weekend where we poll our community for their sage wisdom, so have at it, chums.

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

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Brooke Anderson Expecting Second Child

The Entertainment Tonight correspondent and her husband Jim Walker are expecting their second child in late November, Anderson announced Friday on her website.

Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/rF23HnvpwME/

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Dakar Fashion Week targets city's working class

DAKAR, Senegal (AP) ? Organizers of Dakar Fashion Week have staged a show in a working-class suburb as part of a bid to democratize high fashion.

The show on Friday night attracted thousands of residents, who offered vocal, real-time assessments of the clothes on display while cheering loudly for the more famous models.

Organizer Adama Ndiaye, who launched Dakar Fashion Week 11 years ago, said she hoped the project would further her dream of making high fashion as accessible to the working-class as it is for the wealthy.

The show was part of a six-day event featuring 18 designers, seven from Senegal and others from as far away as Germany and Brazil. Shows were scheduled to be held in three different locations throughout Dakar.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dakar-fashion-week-targets-citys-working-class-145325716.html

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Robert Duvall stops in on 'Whitey' Bulger trial

BOSTON (AP) ? Academy Award winner Robert Duvall is one of the spectators at the racketeering trial of reputed gangster James "Whitey" Bulger.

Duvall sat in the back of the Boston courtroom Friday.

The 82-year-old Duvall has had a long TV and film career, including starring roles in "The Godfather" and "The Godfather: Part II." In those mob epics, he played Tom Hagen, a lawyer and adviser to the Corleone family.

He won a best actor Oscar in 1984 for his role in "Tender Mercies."

He has been shooting a movie, "The Judge," in Shelburne, Mass., this month. Duvall plays the title character in the film, which also stars Robert Downey Jr., Billy Bob Thornton and Vincent D'Onofrio.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/robert-duvall-stops-whitey-bulger-trial-153609891.html

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Lost Maya city found in Mexican jungle

Scientists have discovered what was once likely a prominent city in the booming Mayan empire.

By Elizabeth Barber,?Contributor / June 21, 2013

A National Institute of Anthropology and History worker shows the remains of a building at the newly discovered ancient Maya city Chactun in Yucatan peninsula.

INAH/Reuters

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This is a week for found lost worlds.

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Just weeks after a similar find was made in Cambodia, archaeologists have uncovered an ancient Maya city that been hidden for hundreds of years in the Yucatan?s jungle-covered Campeche province, a find that researchers said could tell us more about how the advanced, still mysterious empire presided over its vast lands at its height.

The abandoned city, called Chactun, is one of the largest ever found in Mexico?s Yucatan peninsula, teeming with some 30,000 or 40,000 people during the late Classic period of Maya civilization between 600 and 900 AD, after which year the civilization spun into decline. That would have made it somewhat smaller than Tikal, the fabled Mayan city once home to some 90,000 in what is now Guatemala, Reuters reported.

"It is one of the largest sites in the Central Lowlands, comparable in its extent and the magnitude of its buildings with Becan, Nadzcaan and El Palmar in Campeche," said archaeologist Ivan Sprajc in a statement from Mexico's National Institute of Anthropology and History, translated from Spanish by LiveScience.

The city was recently spotted in aerial photographs that had been snapped some 15 years ago by the National Commission for the Knowledge and Use of Biodiversity. A team of archeologists then spent about three weeks cutting a 10-mile path into the opaque jungle to reach the site marked on their aerial map.

So far, the archeologists have found in the 54-acre stretch some 15 pyramids, one of which is about 75 feet tall, as well as ball courts that indicate the city was likely a prominent one in the empire. Researchers hope that in studying the features of Chactun they will better understand the relationship between the Mayan empire?s various cities, as well as learn more about the civilization?s stunning decline after centuries of cultural ingenuity and territorial expansion, Reuters said.

The Maya civilization was one of the great civilizations that controlled then pre-Columbian rolling jungles of Central America and whose collapse has become an almost mythologized piece of modern lore. At its peak, the Mayans presided over the entire Yucatan, as well as over Belize, Guatemala, and Honduras. Scientists believe that a combination of population growth and climate change might have pushed the civilization under.

The discovery of the Mayan city comes just days after an announcement from half-a-world-over that Cambodia's Khmer Empire may have been laid out in a carefully coordinated urban plan, rather than as a loosely organized collection of population centers. That ancient civilization - which left behind the tales of Cambodia's mythical origins recorded on its sky-grazing stone temples - is also thought to have been brought to its knees from a combination of environmental degradation and population growth.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/b6SrUjuSIwE/Lost-Maya-city-found-in-Mexican-jungle

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Women's facial features can determine length of relationship

June 20, 2013 ? Men in relationships prefer women with more feminine faces for a fling.

This is one of the findings of Anthony Little from the University of Stirling and Benedict Jones from the University of Glasgow that will be published in the British Journal of Psychology today, Friday 21 June 2013.

The study investigated whether considering partners for long-term or short-term relationships would affect men's preference for different women's faces.

One of the experiments was conducted online with 393 heterosexual men. From this group 207 stated they had a current partner. Participants were shown 10 paired images of pictures of women and in each pair of composite images one had been further transformed to possess masculine traits and the other feminine traits.

The men were asked to rate which of each pair they found most attractive indicating the most attractive for short term relationships and long term relationships.

The results showed that men in relationships were more likely to find women with feminine faces most attractive when they were looking for a short-term relationship.

Anthony explained: "It's interesting that these findings are comparable to previous research that indicates women's preference for masculine male faces are higher if they were judging for short-term relationships. Our findings point to a similar preference in men. When they already have a partner, men find more feminine women more attractive for short-term relationships.

"There are several possible explanations; perhaps some men are inclined to take a long-term partner whilst still attempting to cheat with other, more feminine, women. Or maybe once a long-term partner is secured, the potential cost of being discovered may increase a man's choosiness regarding short-term partners relative to unpartnered men."

"In another part of the study we also showed that men who think themselves attractive have stronger preferences for femininity than those who think themselves less attractive. Again, this effect appears similar to an effect seen in women, whereby attractive women are choosier in their preferences for men. Across the two studies attractive men were found to be more discriminating in their preferences for a woman's facial femininity."

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/living_well/~3/9hIYQ1eI73I/130620214010.htm

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Snowden to Face Espionage Charges (ABC News)

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শুক্রবার, ২১ জুন, ২০১৩

A look at the jurors for George Zimmerman's trial

(AP) ? The six women picked Thursday to serve on the jury in George Zimmerman's second-degree murder trial come from different backgrounds and they have varying knowledge about the case involving the former neighborhood watch volunteer who claims self-defense in the fatal shooting of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin.

Here are some details they shared during two weeks of jury selection. Their names will be released sometime after the trial, which could last two weeks to a month after opening statements on Monday.

Race and ethnicity have played a prominent role in the case. While the court did not release the racial makeup of the jury, the panel appeared to reporters covering jury selection to be made up of five white women and a sixth who may be Hispanic.

___

B-51 is retired, not married and doesn't have kids. She has lived in Seminole County for nine years. She has worked in real estate and run a call center where she said she had experience resolving conflicts. When asked if Zimmerman did something wrong by following Martin instead of waiting for police, she said: "Yeah, I guess he did do something wrong."

___

B-29 recently moved to central Florida from Chicago. She enjoys watching the "Real Housewives" on television and works as a nurse on an Alzheimer's section of a nursing home. She said she hadn't paid much attention to the shooting. She said she has been arrested, but her case was disposed of. It's not clear why she was arrested or exactly what happened to her case, though she said she was treated fairly. She is married and has several children. A prosecutor described her as "black or Hispanic" during jury selection.

___

B-76 is a white woman who has lived in central Florida for 18 years. She manages rental properties with her husband of 30 years. She has two adult children, including one who is an attorney. She is involved with rescuing animals in her free time. During jury selection, she said she had been the victim of a nonviolent crime. "Everyone deserves a fair trial," she said.

___

B-37 is a white woman who volunteers rescuing animals. She is married to an attorney and has two adult children. She said she and her husband used to have concealed weapons permits. During the last round of questioning, she said she had an issue with the type of weapons people are allowed to carry. She also thought weapons' training was inadequate for people seeking permits. "It should become harder," she said.

___

E-6 is a white woman who is married and has two children. She has worked in financial services and has lived in Seminole County for two years. She is active in her church and involved with her children's school. During jury selection, she said she didn't know the facts of the case well.

___

E-40 is a white woman who works as a safety officer and recently moved to Seminole County from Iowa. She describes herself as a football fan. During jury selection, she said she had been the victim of a nonviolent crime.

___

Follow Mike Schneider on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/MikeSchneiderAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-06-20-Neighborhood%20Watch-Jury/id-48e9be6c74fb4df880d4e8e8b4d4cc3d

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Light and nanoprobes detect early signs of infection

June 20, 2013 ? Duke University biomedical engineers and genome researchers have developed a proof-of-principle approach using light to detect infections before patients show symptoms.

The approach was demonstrated in human samples, and researchers are now developing the technique for placement on a chip, which could provide fast, simple and reliable information about a patient. A diagnostic device based on this chip also could be made portable.

The researchers developed a silver-based nanoparticle that homes in on a specific molecular marker that spills into the bloodstream at the first stages of an infection. When light is aimed at the sample, the nanoparticle attached to a molecular marker will reflect a distinct optical fingerprint.

"We have demonstrated for the first time that the use of these nanoprobes can detect specific genetic materials taken from human samples," said Tuan Vo-Dinh, the R. Eugene and Susie E. Goodson Distinguished Professor of Biomedical Engineering at Duke' Pratt School of Engineering and director of The Fitzpatrick Institute for Photonics at Duke. He is also a professor of chemistry.

The results of the Duke experiments appear online in the journal Analytica Chimica Acta. Hsin-Neng Wang, a post-doctoral fellow in Vo-Dinh's laboratory, was the first author of the paper.

In this interdisciplinary project, the Vo-Dinh team collaborated closely with scientists at Duke's Institute for Genome Sciences & Policy (IGSP) who have developed a method of measuring the host's response to infection through RNA profiling.

The research is supported by the National Institutes of Health, the Defense Advanced Projects Agency, the Department of Defense and the Wallace H. Coulter Foundation.

In the Duke experiments, the nanoprobes are used in conjunction with a phenomenon first described in the 1970s known as surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS). When light, usually from a laser, is shined on a sample, the target molecule vibrates and scatters back in its own unique light, often referred to as the Raman scatter. However, this Raman response is extremely weak.

"When the target molecule is coupled with a metal nanoparticle or nanostructure, the Raman response is greatly enhanced by the SERS effect -- often by more than a million times," said Vo-Dinh, who has been studying the potential applications of SERS for decades.

"This important proof-of-concept study now paves the way for the development of devices that measure multiple genome-derived markers that will assist with more accurate and rapid diagnosis of infectious disease at the point of care," said Geoffrey Ginsburg, director of genomic medicine at the IGSP, executive director of the Center for Personalized Medicine at Duke Medicine, and a professor of medicine and pathology.

"This would guide care decisions that will lead to more effective treatment and improved outcomes of antimicrobial therapy," Ginsburg said. "Point-of-care diagnostics holds great promise to accelerate precision medicine and, more importantly, help patients in limited-resource settings gain access to molecular testing."

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/strange_science/~3/bB4VZQVAqos/130620162846.htm

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রবিবার, ২ জুন, ২০১৩

Microsoft's New 'Xbox One' Can Measure Heart Rate | HealthWorks ...

Image

(Editor's note: Dan Munro writes for Forbes.com under the heading "HealthCare Compass")

To be clear,?Microsoft??made?no official healthcare announcement today. At least none that I?m aware of.?They?did, however,?announce their latest home entertainment console ? the new Xbox One (pictured above) ? and that?does make for some really interesting speculation on the intersection?of home entertainment and?home health.?That intersection hasn?t arrived ? but it?s definitely coming and it?s likely to get here a lot sooner than we realize.

?

Microsoft Reveals The Xbox One

?

Microsoft promises the Xbox One will be more than just a game console, but a "living room" with a TV tuner and cable box. Users will be able to switch between watching TV and gaming instantly through the Kinect device.

?

The press event was carefully orchestrated on Microsoft?s Redmond campus inside a specially built tent. From that vantage point ? I was able to follow the?live events onstage as?recorded by fellow Forbes Contributor?Matt Hickey(h/t and thanks to Matt!).?Using the?coveritlive.com?service (recorded here)?Matt provided?live text updates throughout the main event.

By all accounts, it was fairly standard stuff ? although the anticipation has been building for months.?The long awaited announcement. The official unveiling of?the new console. Lot?s of demos and descriptions around its sleek new capabilities wrapped inside a whole new hardware box. I?m not?really a gamer, so there was only a few hints of excitement for our home setup:

* A more seamless switch between games and live TV (ah ? much needed)
* Kinect included with every console (ok ? nice touch)
* Built-in Blue Ray Disc player (yup ? finally)
* 500GB Hard Drive (ok)
* 8-core, X86 Processor (ok ? but no specs around GPU?)
* HDMI?- In/Out?(hmm ? 1080P in and out? ok ? this is interesting)
* USB 3.0 ports

In a nutshell, all very interesting ? but all fairly?evolutionary ? not revolutionary. That is until about?the 10:23am mark. Here?s how Matt described it from inside the tent:

10:23:?It?s more sensitive, can read more data points of articulation[referring to the new Kinect camera]

10:23:?The sensor can read your heartbeat

10:23:?IT CAN READ YOUR HEARTBEAT

My?reaction was the same as Matt?s last one ? where he used all caps. Say what??I dug into the data sheet (here):

Redesigned Kinect:?It includes a 1080p, HD camera that captures video at 30 frames per second. All-new, active-infrared capabilities increase precision, allowing it to work in nearly any lighting condition and expanding field of view to accommodate a greater variety of room sizes. Microsoft proprietary Time-of-Flight technology measures the time it takes individual photons to rebound off you to create unprecedented accuracy and precision. The new noise-isolating multimicrophone array filters ambient sound to recognize natural speaking voices even in crowded rooms.

It even looks a little different than the first Kinect:

I quickly connected with Matt to find out more. He tracked to sources at Microsoft and replied with this update:

?They say it?s just the Kinect [measuring heart rate], no controller needed.?

He also referenced a link as a possible source of the technology at work. It?s called Eulerian Video Modification and?from the MIT link (here)?comes this abstract:

Our goal is to reveal temporal variations in videos that are difficult or impossible to see with the naked eye and display them in an indicative manner. Our method, which we call Eulerian Video?Magnification, takes a standard video sequence as input, and applies spatial decomposition, followed by temporal filtering to the frames. The resulting signal is then amplified to reveal hidden information. Using our method, we are able to visualize the flow of blood as it fills the face and also to amplify and reveal small?motions. Our technique can run in real time to show phenomena?occurring at temporal frequencies selected by the user.

The four reference frames used to highlight this technique?look like this:

In other words, the technology to measure heart rate is entirely optical and not based on physical contact with the controller. Later in the day ? Matt confirmed that the technology was developed entirely in-house by Microsoft.

?The Xbox One?s technology is all developed in-house.??Yusuf Mehdi, Corporate Vice President of Marketing and Strategy, Interactive Entertainment Business?(Matt?s interview with Yusuf Mehdi here)

Matt?also captured this image ? which he?shared for use here:

I?ve always been intrigued by the direct connection between home entertainment and home health ? because it?s such a logical intersection for broader elements of patient-centered healthcare. It?s also a much more seamless?experience.

Clinical devices?(and apps) that are exclusive to major healthcare events?are often required for serious medical conditions ? but as we move into the low acuity spectrum,?we quickly arrive at categories of health like?remote diagnostics?(for kids and aging at home), chronic disease management?and physical therapy.?Those are big, exciting opportunities. In that spectrum of healthcare ? standalone/dedicated devices?aren?t likely to be as effective ? and the capabilities of an in-home console like the Xbox are pitch-perfect as a natural extension to other aspects of our home life. Including health data capture and remote sharing.

More importantly, the future for consoles as dedicated gaming devices is limited. That was also part of the landscape of quotes that appeared throughout the day from various sources. This is a great example of one?filed by The Telegraph (here) :

?Gaming is on the rise: More people will play more games for more minutes on more devices than ever before. But ironically even as gaming rises, the Xbox will only continue its growth by moving beyond gaming.Xbox Live Gold members already spend a majority of console time?not with gaming but with video. The opportunity for Microsoft to deepen its customer relationship with this next Xbox is there, as long as it confidently reaches beyond the hardcore gamers Sony is so focused on, making its console more important for everything from gaming to video to shopping to home management.??James McQuivey ? VP, Principal Analyst at Forrester Research

Again, Microsoft made?NO?healthcare announcements today. Or did they?

More on Forbes:

?

Authored by:

Dan Munro

Dan is a Contributing Editor at Forbes where he writes on the intersection of Healthcare IT, Innovation and Policy. His focus is broadly around those challenges, opportunities and solutions that are fundamentally geared to scale ? and have the capacity to influence our healthcare system in significant ways.

Dan graduated from the International School of Brussels before completing ...

See complete profile

Source: http://healthworkscollective.com/dan-munro/105221/microsofts-new-xbox-one-can-measure-heart-rate

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রবিবার, ৫ মে, ২০১৩

Perform Pachelbel On a Pint-Sized Playable Pop-up Paper Piano

Taking those electronic music playing greeting cards to a whole new level, Antonella Nonnis created a playable paper piano that she eventually hopes to turn into one of the awesomest pop-up books you've ever seen.

The paper keys are all lined with a strip of copper foil that's wired to a series of megaohm resistors and an Arduino. Using the same capacitive approach as your smartphone's display, the electronics can sense when and which key is being pressed to produce the appropriate synthesized tone. So instead of only playing Happy Birthday, one day a card could be used to play an entire concerto. [Antonella Nonnis via Creative Applications]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/perform-pachelbel-on-a-pint-sized-playable-pop-up-paper-489071555

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Julia Louis-Dreyfus' freakish 'Veep' mascot (CNN)

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Golden State coach Mark Jackson fined $25,000

Golden State Warriors head coach Mark Jackson, right, argues a call against his team with referee Tony Brothers during the first quarter of Game 5 of their first-round NBA basketball playoff series against the Denver Nuggets, Tuesday, April 30, 2013, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

Golden State Warriors head coach Mark Jackson, right, argues a call against his team with referee Tony Brothers during the first quarter of Game 5 of their first-round NBA basketball playoff series against the Denver Nuggets, Tuesday, April 30, 2013, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

Golden State Warriors head coach Mark Jackson, right, consoles guard Stephen Curry as Curry is pulled late in their 107-100 loss to the Denver Nuggets in Game 5 of their first-round NBA basketball playoff series, Tuesday, April 30, 2013, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) ? Golden State coach Mark Jackson was fined $25,000 by the NBA on Thursday for making public comments in an attempt to influence the officiating in the Warriors' playoff series with Denver.

After Golden State's 107-100 loss at Denver on Tuesday night, Jackson repeatedly mentioned Kenneth Faried's foul in the first half, when the Denver forward stuck out his right leg and moved his body while Warriors star Stephen Curry ran through traffic.

"They tried to send hit men at Steph," Jackson said. "There were some dirty plays early."

Jackson also commented Wednesday before practice at the team's headquarters.

"They'll be physical again. They'll try to beat up Steph Curry. They'll try to set illegal screens. They'll try to chuck him when he goes down the lane," said Jackson, whose team took a 3-2 series lead into Game 6 on Thursday night. "Other than that, I'm not sure what to expect out of them."

Denver Nuggets coach George Karl thought the reaction to his team's Game 5 victory sounded like a "different movie than I'm watching."

"If there's a scorecard, if we're in a boxing fight right now, they're winning the fight," Karl said Wednesday. "OK, we won round one, maybe our first round (Tuesday) night. I'm going to tell you, I'll go to any arbiter right now and show the dirty shots. They're winning."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-05-02-Warriors-Jackson%20Fined/id-33834c3984a940b28a5422cc8726a038

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Ebola's secret weapon revealed

May 2, 2013 ? Researchers have discovered the mechanism behind one of the Ebola virus' most dangerous attributes: its ability to disarm the adaptive immune system.

University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston scientists determined that Ebola short-circuits the immune system using proteins that work together to shut down cellular signaling related to interferon. Disruption of this activity, the researchers found, allows Ebola to prevent the full development of dendritic cells that would otherwise trigger an immune response to the virus.

"Dendritic cells typically undergo a process called 'maturation' when they're infected by a virus -- they change shape and present antigens on their surface that tell T-cells to attack that particular virus, thus generating an adaptive immune response," said UTMB professor Alexander Bukreyev, senior author of a paper on the discovery now online in the Journal of Virology. "But Ebola prevents dendritic-cell maturation and produces a severe infection without an effective adaptive immune response. We found that its ability to do this depends on several specific regions of two different proteins."

Bukreyev's research group made the discovery after a series of procedures that started with a clone of the Ebola Zaire virus strain. Working under maximum-containment conditions in a biosafety level 4 facility in UTMB's Galveston National Laboratory, the team introduced mutations into the virus' genetic code at four locations thought to generate proteins that affected immune response.

They then infected human dendritic cells with each of the resulting new strains and compared the results with those produced by unmutated Ebola Zaire. Each of the four new viruses, they found, was unable to suppress dendritic-cell maturation.

"We saw two very interesting things," Bukreyev said. "First, that these mutations restore maturation of dendritic cells very effectively, and second, that a mutation in even one of these genetic domains makes the virus unable to suppress maturation. That means that the virus needs multiple combined effects in order to undermine the immune system in this way."

Ebola's ability to evade the human immune response is one of the factors that accounts for its high mortality rate -- up to 90 percent in humans -- and the notoriety that it gained after its first appearance in Zaire in 1976, in an outbreak that killed 280 people. Zaire -- now the Democratic Republic of the Congo -- is the home country of Ndongala Lubaki, lead author on the paper and a postdoctoral fellow at UTMB.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. N. M. Lubaki, P. Ilinykh, C. Pietzsch, B. Tigabu, A. N. Freiberg, R. A. Koup, A. Bukreyev. The Lack of Maturation of Ebola Virus-Infected Dendritic Cells Results from the Cooperative Effect of at Least Two Viral Domains. Journal of Virology, 2013; DOI: 10.1128/JVI.03316-12

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/c6CT4d4pdj0/130502192226.htm

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Focus on STD, not cancer prevention, to promote HPV vaccine use

May 2, 2013 ? The HPV vaccine can prevent both cervical cancer and a nasty sexually transmitted disease in women. But emphasizing the STD prevention will persuade more young women to get the vaccine, a new study suggests.

These results go against the conventional wisdom that scaring women about the possibility of cancer is the best way to get them vaccinated.

The failure of that cancer-threat message may be one reason that fewer than 20 percent of adolescent girls in the United States have received the HPV vaccine, said Janice Krieger, lead author of the study and assistant professor of communication at The Ohio State University.

"Young women don't respond strongly to the threat of cervical cancer," Krieger said.

"They seem to be more worried about getting an STD. That's the way we should try to encourage them to get the HPV vaccine."

The vaccine -- most commonly sold under the brand name Gardasil -- prevents the types of HPV, or human papillomavirus, that cause most cases of cervical cancer and most cases of genital warts, a sexually transmitted disease.

Krieger conducted the study with Melanie Sarge of Texas Tech University. It appears in a recent issue of the journal Health Communication.

Many early studies of how to sell the benefits of the HPV vaccine found that the message that it prevents cancer was effective. But these studies often involved women of all ages, from adolescence to old age. The problem, though, is that the vaccine is targeted to women under the age of 26.

"Cancer is something people start to worry about later in life, not when they're in high school and college. We decided to do a clean study that compared what message worked best with college-aged women versus what worked with their mothers," Krieger said.

Participants in the study included 188 female college students (average age of 22) and 115 of their mothers (average age of 50).

The mothers and students both received a packet of materials that included a questionnaire and a pro-vaccine message. The student message recommended talking to a doctor about the HPV vaccine, and the parent message recommended encouraging their daughter to talk to a doctor.

Two different messages were created. Half of the mothers and students received a message sheet about the vaccine with a large headline that read, "Prevent cervical cancer." The other half received a similar message, but with the headline declaring, "Prevent genital warts." A text box on the sheet also re-emphasized either the cancer or the genital warts message.

Participants then filled out the questionnaire, which asked a variety of questions that included how they felt about the threat of HPV and whether they felt they (or their daughter) could talk to a doctor about receiving the vaccine.

Results showed that the message emphasizing the vaccine's effectiveness at preventing genital warts was a clear winner with the young women.

Compared to those who received the cancer prevention message, young women who read that the vaccine prevented genital warts were more likely to say they intended to talk to their doctor about the vaccine. They also said they felt more comfortable talking to their doctor about the vaccine.

"Preventing cancer was not a big motivator," Krieger said.

Overall, the findings showed that scaring young women into getting the vaccine doesn't seem to be a good strategy.

Young women who perceived HPV as a bigger threat to their health than others, or who thought they were more likely to get the virus, were not consequently more likely to say they would get the vaccine or talk to their doctor.

"Our results suggest it is more important to get women to feel comfortable talking to their doctor about the vaccine," she said. "Fear doesn't work. They need to feel it is not difficult or embarrassing to discuss the vaccine with their doctor. That's the best way to encourage them to be vaccinated."

The researchers expected that the mothers in the study would be more likely to talk to their daughters about getting the HPV vaccine if they read the cancer prevention message rather than the STD prevention message.

Part of their reasoning was that the mothers, being older, were at a stage in their life when cancer was a bigger issue for them, Krieger said. But they also thought mothers would not feel comfortable about an STD message that assumes that their daughters were sexually active.

However, it turned out that the mothers weren't affected by which of the messages they received.

"We believed that mothers would react negatively to the message about preventing genital warts, but that wasn't supported. Mothers reacted similarly to the genital warts and cancer prevention messages. It suggests that if we focus on the prevention of genital warts in our messages to daughters, it may not mean we have lost the mothers."

Krieger said the results should encourage policymakers, doctors and others to shift their messages to young women concerning the HPV vaccine.

"Cancer may seem to be the more serious issue to some older adults, but it is not the top concern for young women," she said.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Ohio State University. The original article was written by Jeff Grabmeier.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Janice L. Krieger, Melanie A. Sarge. A Serial Mediation Model of Message Framing on Intentions to Receive the Human Papillomavirus (HPV) Vaccine: Revisiting the Role of Threat and Efficacy Perceptions. Health Communication, 2013; 28 (1): 5 DOI: 10.1080/10410236.2012.734914

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/mind_brain/child_development/~3/yHA7pTOaEBU/130502120439.htm

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will.i.am Didn't Have Permission To Use Arty & Mat Zo's 'Rebound,' Label Says

Anjunabeats weighs in after will.i.am denied ripping off 'Rebound' on his #willpower album.
By James Montgomery


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Photo: Paul Morigi/ WireImage

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1706739/will-i-am-arty-mat-zo-rebound.jhtml

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will.i.am Didn't Have Permission To Use Arty & Mat Zo's 'Rebound,' Label Says

Anjunabeats weighs in after will.i.am denied ripping off 'Rebound' on his #willpower album.
By James Montgomery


will.i.am
Photo: Paul Morigi/ WireImage

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1706739/will-i-am-arty-mat-zo-rebound.jhtml

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PFT: Poll shows strong support for Redskins name

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The first overall pick in the 2013 NFL draft apparently will play right tackle to start his NFL career.

That?s what Chiefs coach Andy Reid said Thursday, given the collapse of talks regarding a possible trade of left tackle Branden Albert.

?Well, yeah, that?s right,? Reid told Bruce Murray and Rich Gannon of SiriusXM NFL Radio in response to whether Albert will play the left side and rookie Eric Fisher the right.? ?I?m gonna play the five best guys.? You saw me do that with Shawn Andrews in Philadelphia.? Shawn Andrews was as good an offensive lineman as I?ve ever seen at the college level and then he came to the pros and he was the same thing.?? He was one of the best I?ve ever coached, now, as far as being athletic and being a football player.? Well, we had two veteran tackles who were two pretty stinking good players and so we put Shawn at guard and he ended up being a Pro Bowler there.?

There?s still a chance Albert won?t be in Kansas City, but it appears that a trade to Miami won?t happen..

?We allowed Albert?s people to talk and look and do that whole thing and it didn?t work out one way or the other,? Reid said.? ?And so, you never know, I mean, in this business you?d love to say that he?d be here or not be here, one of the two, but I know he?s a good kid, I know he?s a hard worker and I know he?s a good left tackle.?? So that gives us a whole lot of flexibility and if he was here today he would be the left tackle.?? And then we go from there and we just see what happens down the road.?

Although Albert is under contract, he has opted to remain away from voluntary offseason workouts until his status is resolved.? He will earn a guaranteed salary of $9.8 million in 2013 as the team?s franchise player.? With that amount providing the starting point for talks on a long-term deal, it could be difficult for the Chiefs to extend Albert?s contract.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/05/02/poll-shows-high-support-for-redskins-name/related/

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If This Iron Man Flash Drive Can't Protect Your Files, What Will?

If Tony Stark's fancy suit is good enough for taking down baddies like the Mandarin, surely at least part of his getup must be an effective way to secure your digital paraphernalia? Available in eight and sixteen gig capacities, these Iron Man severed hand flash drives include posable fingers, a glowing repulser in the palm, and they come in left and right hand versions forcing you to get both to complete the set.

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Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/sklwoW4vCsk/if-this-iron-man-flash-drive-cant-protect-your-files-487094997

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Gigabit internet finds a new home in Omaha, Nebraska

Gigabit internet finds a new home in Omaha, Nebraska

When it comes to gigabit internet, the headline buzz usually involves Google and some mid or south western American locale. But not today. No, today, the ridiculously high-speed internet spotlight falls on Omaha, Nebraska where local provider CenturyLink is poised to launch a pilot service. Starting Monday, the telco's Lightspeed Broadband package ($150 a month for standalone service or $80 a month as a bundle) will go live for nearly 10,000 subscribers and continue to rollout to a footprint just shy of 50,000 residential and enterprise subs by October. Further expansion plans for the greater metro area all hinge upon whether CenturyLink can turn a profit on the service, but the company will continue to sign-up enterprise subs outside of this pilot zone for the next two years. The path forward -- at least, to us -- is pretty clear, Omahans: vote with your wallet if you want to preserve the gigabit bragging rights.

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Source: Omaha

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/iTDl5YXtXy8/

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