Wednesday, November 21, 2012

How Can I Make a Long Plane or Car Ride Suck Less?

How Can I Make a Long Plane or Car Ride Suck Less? Dear Lifehacker,
I'm about to hit the road for to visit family. It's a really long trip, and since I won't be driving, I'd like to make the most of the time without going crazy from boredom. I could play video games or rip some movies, but that gets boring after a few hours. I want something that works my brain a little more. Do you have any tips?

Sincerely,
Backseat Boredom

Dear Backseat Boredom,
When most people are staring down a long drive, train ride, or flight, they consider it a time to catch up on sleep, do some reading, watch some movies or listen to music, or even play some new mobile games. Preparation for a long trip is key, and we've covered that before. Those are all great ways to pass the time, but they're not the only ways. Here are some suggestions that will turn your long, boring travel plans into something that energizes you, informs you, and keeps you entertained.

Catch Up on Podcasts

How Can I Make a Long Plane or Car Ride Suck Less? If you've been meaning to check out some new podcasts (like ours, for example) or you just have a backlog of podcasts to listen to or watch, a long trip is the best time to do it. Even better, choose some new podcasts that will teach you something new or help you get a new perspective on life. If you're looking for something new to watch or listen to, try looking for some interesting TED Talks, TWiT podcasts, 5by5 podcasts, or Revision3 shows. Each network likely has something to suit your tastes, whether you're looking for something entertaining to pass the time or something interesting and educational to spark your creativity or get you up to speed on current events. Best of all, if you have a long trip ahead, you have plenty of time to listen to multiple shows. Photo by Mingo Hagen.

Plan a Mini Curriculum of Online Classes and Go To School

If podcasts don't really suit you, now might be a great time to download some online courses and set up a little cirriculum of "classes" to take on your long trip. For your sanity's sake, we'd suggest avoiding anything that requires a lot of work, but a few video classes here or there and some downloadable exercises could turn a long and boring plane trip or backseat car ride into something that's educational and helps you learn a new skill or trade. Head over to Lifehacker U to scope out some great classes we've hand-picked, most of which are all-online, and many of which have video components and lessons you can download for offline viewing.

Learn a Specific New Skill for Work (or Play)

How Can I Make a Long Plane or Car Ride Suck Less? In the same vein as taking an online class, maybe those hours in one place are well suited to a good book or set of instructional videos that teach you a specific skill. If you've been meaning to learn a new programming language, study up on a new productivity technique, or maybe learn about a new tool that everyone is migrating to at work, a long trip is a good time to dive into a book or some reference material to get up to speed quickly. If you're traveling and will have internet access while you travel, you can even do your research online. Photo by Shiny Things.

Alternatively, if you want to learn something more for fun than for work, a long trip is a good time to do that as well. Set aside a few chunks of your travel time to really immerse yourself in learning it. You may not be able to break out an Arduino or a Raspberry Pi and get your DIY on while you're riding in the backseat of someone's car, but you can pick up some reading or download some articles to help you get started (like our guide to getting started with the Arduino, and some of our favorite Raspberry Pi hacks and tutorials.) Then you can walk away from your trip ready to get hands-on with the real thing.

Write a Short Story or Start a Blog

How Can I Make a Long Plane or Car Ride Suck Less? We've mentioned before that being a model Internet citizen requires more than just not trolling?contributing your own ideas and thoughts and creating something on your own is essential. If you have hours to kill on a train or plane, why not fire up your favorite text editor and start writing down all of those ideas for that blog you've been meaning to start. You could even write the first few posts just so you'll have something to put up when you build it. If you've read the news lately and have your own opinions, or think you can tackle a topic better?or at a different angle?than someone else did, write your thoughts down. Photo by James Whatley.

Similarly, if you've been meaning to write a short story or your NaNoWriMo entry is a little behind, now is a great time to make up for lost ground. Get your thoughts in order and start writing. If you don't have access to a computer, even brainstorming and outlining on pen and paper will do you a lot of good, and not just for the purpose of finishing a story or starting a blog, but also for turning otherwise boring time into an opportunity to keep your creative juices flowing.

Learn Enough of a New Language to Impress Everyone When You Arrive

Learning a new language will open up possibilities for you that you may never have had, but it also changes your worldview. Even a short trip is enough time to commit to memory enough words in a language you've always wanted to learn that you'll be able to impress your family at Thanksgiving (or at least give them something other than politics to talk about) and get your foot in the door learning something new that you've always wanted to. You can pick up a language-learning podcast from Open Culture or just learn the basics and start practicing, but either way even a few short hours in the back of a car is enough time to learn how to say things like "Hello, my name is," "What's your name?" "Do you speak English?" and "Where's the restroom, please?"

Teach Yourself to Meditate

How Can I Make a Long Plane or Car Ride Suck Less? If none of the above appeals to you, or you know that long trips wreak havoc on your attention span, perhaps a long trip is a good time to plug in your headphones, listen to some ambient music or nature sounds, and teach yourself to relax and meditate. We've discussed how meditation can improve your memory, focus, and productivity, but it can also help relieve stress and improve your health. Even if it's just two minutes of meditation, it can do wonders for you. Check out our guide to meditation for the rest of us for tips. At least on a long trip you won't be able to say you're too busy to meditate. If you need guidance on the go, we even have an app that can help. Photo by RelaxingMusic.

Hopefully we've offered up a few options beyond "read a good book" or "play video games" or "make a travel playlist," although all of those are great things to do on a long trip. They'll help you relax and de-stress, especially if the situation you're traveling to is a stressful one. At the same time however, consider dedicating some of your travel time to something that'll enrich your mind as well as relax your body, and maybe you'll look forward to that 12 hour flight or 6 hour drive a little more. Good luck!

Sincerely,
Lifehacker

Title photo made using Andrey Yurlov (Shutterstock) and Sweet November Studio (Shutterstock).

Have a question or suggestion for Ask Lifehacker? Send it to tips+asklh@lifehacker.com.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/7ecF3V4wseU/how-can-i-make-a-long-plane-or-car-ride-suck-less

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Saturday, November 17, 2012

English professor earns high acclaim for poetry anthology | Campus ...

Courtesy of Jennifer Grotz

English Professor Jennifer Grotz received Rochester?s Lillian Fairchild Award last week for her book of poetry, ?The Needle.?
Grotz joined the Department of English in 2009 and teaches courses in translation, poetry composition and modern and contemporary American and European poetry.

In addition to her award, Grotz was recognized by National Public Radio ? which selected ?The Needle? as one of the five best books of poetry published in 2011 ? and was lauded as ?one of America?s best young poets? by the Washington Post.

Grotz said she is happy to receive the award, given out annually to a local visual artist, writer or composer for his or her commitment to the arts in the Rochester area, because as a relative newcomer to the city, it makes her feel ?welcomed into the community.?

The Lillian Fairchild Award was established in 1924 by UR Professor Herman Fairchild in memory of his daughter, who died of tuberculosis at 32.

?The Needle? was inspired by a variety of sources, Grotz said.

Every poem comes ?from a different inspiration, a different moment,? but many were written during time she spent in Poland. Grotz said that places are a particular muse for her; she cites the cityscape of Krakow as especially influential. Some of her other poems draw from the Texan landscapes that she used to call home. Some operate as an elegy and commemorate her younger brother who passed away in 2006. And a few do not draw from any place or landscape at all, but rather ?directly from the imagination and the mind as an interior landscape.?

Grotz?s strongest influence when writing this collection of poetry was the legacy of 20th century Polish poetry. It served as a great antidote for her ?romantic tendencies,? as Polish poets were forced to snap out of their own romantic inclinations to deal with the many traumatic situations that were prominent in their lives, Grotz said.

The Holocaust forced many of these poets out of these tendencies, leading them to free themselves by reading American poetry ? a dynamic Grotz said she explores in her course on Polish poetry.

Grotz is no stranger to receiving accolades for her poetry. Her first book of poems, ?Cusp,? published in 2003, received the Katharine Nason Bakeless Prize in 2002 and the Natalie Ornish Best First Book of Poetry Prize from the Texas Institute of Letters in 2004.

Her newest project is a collection of translated poems by French poet Patrice de La Tour du Pin and will be released in February 2013.

Konowitch is a member of the class of 2015.

Source: http://www.campustimes.org/2012/11/15/english-professor-earns-high-acclaim-for-poetry-anthology/

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Friday, November 16, 2012

Tony Blair's father Leo Blair dies at 89

LONDON (AP) ? Leo Blair, father of former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, has died at the age of 89.

The ex-premier's office says the elder Blair died peacefully on Friday with his son at his side.

Leo Blair was born to traveling entertainers, adopted by a Glasgow shipworker and raised in a working-class home.

After serving in World War II, he studied law in his spare time, becoming a barrister and law lecturer.

He hoped to become a member of Parliament, but gave up the idea after suffering a stroke at the age of 40.

Tony Blair says his father "worked his way up from nothing, with great ambitions dashed by serious illness on the very brink of their fulfillment."

He adds: "I was privileged to have him as a dad."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/tony-blairs-father-leo-blair-dies-89-202921054.html

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Study Tracks Brain Gene Response to Territorial Aggression

Study Tracks Brain Gene Response to Territorial Aggression [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 15-Nov-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Diana Yates
diya@illinois.edu
217-333-5802
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. With a mate and a nest to protect, the male threespined stickleback is a fierce fish, chasing and biting other males until they go away.

Now researchers are mapping the genetic underpinnings of the stickleback's aggressive behavior. Armed with tools that allow them to see which genes are activated or deactivated in response to social encounters, a team from the University of Illinois has identified broad patterns of gene activity that correspond to aggression in this fish.

A paper describing their work appears in the Proceedings of the Royal Society: Biological Sciences.

"The molecular mechanisms underlying complex behaviors such as aggression are a challenge to study because hundreds of genes are involved, and in order to study them, we have to delve into arguably the most complex tissue: the brain," said Illinois animal biology professor Alison Bell, who led the study.

The researchers looked at brain gene expression the pattern of genes that were activated or deactivated across four brain regions in the nesting stickleback fish shortly after it encountered an intruder. They compared the brains of nesting stickleback males that did and did not encounter an intruder, to identify how the experience of fending off a challenger changed gene expression in the brain.

"Territorial aggression and other behaviors in sticklebacks have been well-studied by astute observers of animal behavior for almost a century, but complex behaviors in wild animals require the use of powerful tools to understand them," Bell said. "Until recently we have not had sophisticated computational and genomics tools to delve into the causes of aggression in real organisms in natural populations."

The analysis revealed that hundreds of genes were upregulated (activated at higher levels than normal) or downregulated in different regions of the stickleback brain after it encountered an intruder. The upregulated genes were being transcribed and translated into proteins at higher levels to perform specific tasks within the brain.

An analysis of the types of genes that responded when a stickleback male faced an intruder revealed that many molecular and cellular processes were affected. Genes involved in immunity, metabolism and regulation of normal body states were recruited or put to bed. Many of these genes had never before been implicated in studies of aggression or territorial defense, Bell said.

Some of the genes that were downregulated are associated with metabolism and sexual behavior.

"For ages we've known that there are costs of aggression for things like immunity, and conflicts between aggression and other functions such as courtship behavior," Bell said. "This study begins to identify some of the molecular mechanisms that mediate these tradeoffs."

The greatest changes in gene expression were seen in the diencephalon (a region deep in the brain that is involved in relaying sensory information, emotions and motor signals to other brain regions and helps regulate consciousness, sleep, alertness and circadian rhythm, among other things) and the cerebellum (which receives sensory signals and plays a role in motor coordination). A significant number of these genes were regulated in opposite directions in these two brain regions (up in one and down in the other), the researchers report.

One gene, which codes for a protein hormone known as CGA, was the most highly upregulated in the diencephalon and the most highly downregulated in the cerebellum. CGA is known to play a role in reproductive changes and is associated with aging in males and females.

"That the same gene was expressed in opposite directions in different brain regions suggests that there are complex patterns of gene regulation," Bell said.

The researchers also found evidence that some proteins, called transcription factors, which regulate the expression of networks of genes, are regulated differently in different brain regions in response to a territorial threat.

"This suggests that complex transcription regulatory networks are involved in the behavioral response of territorial animals to an intrusion," Bell said.

The new study offers a glimpse into the regulatory mechanisms that govern brain responses to perceived threats, Bell said.

"It lays the stepping-stones to the ultimate characterization of the neurogenomic states underlying complex decision-making in response to social challenges," said postdoctoral researcher Yibayiri Osee Sanogo, the lead author on the paper.

"This study shows how computational approaches can help solve complex problems of molecular biology," said computer science professor Saurabh Sinha, a co-author on the study. "Only powerful computational tools in combination with new approaches in genomics can begin to address the complexity of the brain and behavior."

###

Bell and Sinha are affiliates of the Institute for Genomic Biology at Illinois.

Editor's note: To reach Alison Bell, call 217-265-5469; email alisonmb@illinois.edu.

The paper, "Transcriptional Regulation of Brain Gene Expression in Response to a Territorial Intrusion," is available online or from the News Bureau.

Biotechnology Center: http://www.biotech.illinois.edu/


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Study Tracks Brain Gene Response to Territorial Aggression [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 15-Nov-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Diana Yates
diya@illinois.edu
217-333-5802
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. With a mate and a nest to protect, the male threespined stickleback is a fierce fish, chasing and biting other males until they go away.

Now researchers are mapping the genetic underpinnings of the stickleback's aggressive behavior. Armed with tools that allow them to see which genes are activated or deactivated in response to social encounters, a team from the University of Illinois has identified broad patterns of gene activity that correspond to aggression in this fish.

A paper describing their work appears in the Proceedings of the Royal Society: Biological Sciences.

"The molecular mechanisms underlying complex behaviors such as aggression are a challenge to study because hundreds of genes are involved, and in order to study them, we have to delve into arguably the most complex tissue: the brain," said Illinois animal biology professor Alison Bell, who led the study.

The researchers looked at brain gene expression the pattern of genes that were activated or deactivated across four brain regions in the nesting stickleback fish shortly after it encountered an intruder. They compared the brains of nesting stickleback males that did and did not encounter an intruder, to identify how the experience of fending off a challenger changed gene expression in the brain.

"Territorial aggression and other behaviors in sticklebacks have been well-studied by astute observers of animal behavior for almost a century, but complex behaviors in wild animals require the use of powerful tools to understand them," Bell said. "Until recently we have not had sophisticated computational and genomics tools to delve into the causes of aggression in real organisms in natural populations."

The analysis revealed that hundreds of genes were upregulated (activated at higher levels than normal) or downregulated in different regions of the stickleback brain after it encountered an intruder. The upregulated genes were being transcribed and translated into proteins at higher levels to perform specific tasks within the brain.

An analysis of the types of genes that responded when a stickleback male faced an intruder revealed that many molecular and cellular processes were affected. Genes involved in immunity, metabolism and regulation of normal body states were recruited or put to bed. Many of these genes had never before been implicated in studies of aggression or territorial defense, Bell said.

Some of the genes that were downregulated are associated with metabolism and sexual behavior.

"For ages we've known that there are costs of aggression for things like immunity, and conflicts between aggression and other functions such as courtship behavior," Bell said. "This study begins to identify some of the molecular mechanisms that mediate these tradeoffs."

The greatest changes in gene expression were seen in the diencephalon (a region deep in the brain that is involved in relaying sensory information, emotions and motor signals to other brain regions and helps regulate consciousness, sleep, alertness and circadian rhythm, among other things) and the cerebellum (which receives sensory signals and plays a role in motor coordination). A significant number of these genes were regulated in opposite directions in these two brain regions (up in one and down in the other), the researchers report.

One gene, which codes for a protein hormone known as CGA, was the most highly upregulated in the diencephalon and the most highly downregulated in the cerebellum. CGA is known to play a role in reproductive changes and is associated with aging in males and females.

"That the same gene was expressed in opposite directions in different brain regions suggests that there are complex patterns of gene regulation," Bell said.

The researchers also found evidence that some proteins, called transcription factors, which regulate the expression of networks of genes, are regulated differently in different brain regions in response to a territorial threat.

"This suggests that complex transcription regulatory networks are involved in the behavioral response of territorial animals to an intrusion," Bell said.

The new study offers a glimpse into the regulatory mechanisms that govern brain responses to perceived threats, Bell said.

"It lays the stepping-stones to the ultimate characterization of the neurogenomic states underlying complex decision-making in response to social challenges," said postdoctoral researcher Yibayiri Osee Sanogo, the lead author on the paper.

"This study shows how computational approaches can help solve complex problems of molecular biology," said computer science professor Saurabh Sinha, a co-author on the study. "Only powerful computational tools in combination with new approaches in genomics can begin to address the complexity of the brain and behavior."

###

Bell and Sinha are affiliates of the Institute for Genomic Biology at Illinois.

Editor's note: To reach Alison Bell, call 217-265-5469; email alisonmb@illinois.edu.

The paper, "Transcriptional Regulation of Brain Gene Expression in Response to a Territorial Intrusion," is available online or from the News Bureau.

Biotechnology Center: http://www.biotech.illinois.edu/


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-11/uoia-stb111512.php

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Eric Toone, former Energy dept. official, will take over Duke entrepreneurship initiative

Eric Toone will serve as the new leader of the Innovation and Entrepreneurship Initiative, Duke administrators announced Wednesday.

Toone, Anne T. and Robert M. Bass professor of chemistry, succeeds Kimberly Jenkins, who resigned as adviser to the president and provost for innovation and entrepreneurship in July.

?Innovation and entrepreneurship have become major priorities for Duke because they connect to the heart of education?using the creative powers of mind to invent a better world,? President Richard Brodhead said in a press release. ?Our University-wide initiatives have gained speed in recent years, and with a leader as experienced and dynamic as Eric Toone, they will continue to thrive.?

On leave from the University since 2009, he has since led the Department of Energy?s Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy as its principal deputy director. A government task force, ARPA-E is responsible for promoting and funding research and development of advanced energy technology.

Under his purview, Toone said the initiative will develop around four foundational axes?education, research, translation and social entrepreneurship. Such efforts, he added, will facilitate the transformation of fundamental discoveries in the sciences and engineering into commercial products.

?This initiative, focused on both innovation and entrepreneurship, is a means to increase the relevance of the University and increase its impact on society,? Toone said in the release.

Toone noted that his experience with Department of Energy?s research incubator has prepared him to direct the initiative. adding that nearly half of ARPA-E funding was funneled to research conducted at the university level.

?Early-stage tech transfer is not about discovery anymore?it is about making those discoveries ready for market impact. I spent four years learning how Washington works?who funds what, who is responsible for what, how agencies work and how Congress works,? he noted. ?This knowledge is important because the federal government is still the primary supporter of early stage translation?not venture capitalists. VC support typically comes later on in the process.?

Provost Peter Lange noted that Toone?who founded two medical startups, Aerie Pharmaceuticals and Vindica Pharmaceuticals?draws upon a wealth of personal experiences and accomplishments.

?The breadth of vision, with its combination of educational, research and translational ambitions and commitments to both commercial and social entrepreneurship, assure a good match both with the University?s mission and the passions and interests of our faculty and students,? Lange said.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thechronicle/all/~3/tdos7CkKBeA/eric-toone-former-energy-dept-official-will-take-o

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Thursday, November 15, 2012

Charles Brennan: how the Police Department's first Deputy ...

This is the third story in a multi-part series looking at the state of police IT: where it?s been, what?s it like now and where it?s going.?Find the other stories in the series here.

Charles Brennan knows it sounds crazy, but he can still remember having to force computers on police captains.

It was back in the mid-to-late 80s, said Brennan, the Police Department?s first Deputy Commissioner of Science and Technology, when?computers were so expensive that the department could only buy 10 at a time.

Some police captains didn?t want anything to do with the new technology, he remembers. (Now, the focus is when cops are still using typewriters.)

He said police captains would tell him, ?Don?t put that computer in my office. Put it out there with the secretary. I don?t want it.? Sure enough, a few weeks later, Brennan says they?d call him up and say, ?You know that computer out by the secretary? Can you get me one of those??

Brennan, 62, was something of a technology pioneer at the Police Department. His former colleagues credit him with pushing the Police Department into the future during a time when top brass didn?t see the worth of technology. Brennan developed ideas for new systems to increase accountability and help cops do their jobs, sought funding for the projects and saw them to their end.

Brennan, who grew up in the Southwark area of South Philadelphia, joined the police force in 1973. After a few years working the streets, he took a job in the Police Administration office working with computers, though he had zero tech background. Brennan was less interested in computers and more interested in working normal hours (the night shifts were rough, he said). But soon, the computers started to grow on him. (And we?re talking mainframe computers ? PCs hadn?t been invented yet.)

In 1998, he was?appointed the Police Department?s first Deputy Commissioner of Science and Technology?by then-Commissioner John Timoney. He oversaw all police IT projects until he retired in 2006. He then joined state government to work?as its deputy secretary of Public Safety Radio Services. Today, he lives in Roxborough and works as a senior consultant at Essential Management Solutions, a 911 management service out in Pottsville, Pa.

Brennan oversaw numerous projects, including putting mobile computers inside cop cars, implementing a digital arrest warrant system and automating payroll. He said he?s most proud of making crime data accessible so officers could do their jobs better.?When he started at the Police Department, if an officer wanted data on a certain crime, it would take two weeks to get it, he said.

?But when I left,? he said, ?you could do it in two seconds.?

He?s also the one who hired Robert Cheetham, now the CEO of GIS firm Azavea, to develop a police GIS system?so officers could identify crime patterns?[check back next week for a story on major upgrades to the old GIS system].

It was Brennan?s leadership and vision that really propelled the Police Department in terms of technology, Cheetham said.

?There was no funding in the department for this,? Cheetham said, speaking of the time before Brennan was appointed Deputy Commissioner of Science and Technology. ?No mandate from the top. No one was clamoring for it. It wasn?t something the public was asking for.?

?[Brennan] was really an example of someone who had the leadership to see what was possible, to see how it could have an impact on crime,? he said.

Ray Hayling, the current interim director of Police IT. Photo courtesy of Patch.com.

When Brennan retired in 2006, the department turned over his responsibilities to Deputy Commissioner of Administration and Training?John Gaittens. Gaittens said he didn?t have the technical skills to do the job, so he suggested that a Director of Police IT position be created for a civilian, rather than a cop. This position was initially under the umbrella of the Police Department but was transferred to the Office of Innovation and Technology during the city?s IT consolidation effort (though the director of Police IT still worked out of police headquarters).

The city hired Gery Cardenas for this position in 2006, but Cardenas left this post at the end of the summer, according to multiple sources, though the city?s Chief Innovation Officer Adel Ebeid has not yet confirmed this. Cardenas could not be reached for comment. The city is looking for a new director of police IT, Gaittens said, but for now, Deputy CIO Ray Hayling holds the position with the help of GIS/IT Program Manager Jennifer Brennan.

Hayling, a former Deputy Director of IT for New Jersey, was in the news this summer, when?Fox29 reported that he had previously been?charged with forgery and falsifying records?though the charges were later dismissed. Hayling declined to comment on this matter.

When asked about his interim position via email, Hayling said it was an important and challenging job. The challenge, he said, lies in introducing new ways of accessing data to help cops do their jobs better, while still maintaining the ?legacy applications? where the data lives. He added that it?s important to make new systems user-friendly, so cops can adapt to them (Police Commissioner Charles Ramsay agrees: he?s been known to say that he wants every police IT tool to be as user-friendly as TurboTax.)

Brennan previously worked on the Philly 311 app. She did not respond to a request for comment.

Source: http://technicallyphilly.com/2012/11/15/charles-brennan-philly-police-technology-commissioner-science

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High life in Denver? NBA, Heat say no

LOS ANGELES?

? For now, "mile high" in the NBA has only one meaning, the thin air the Miami Heat will have to deal with Thursday night against the Denver Nuggets at the Pepsi Center on the second night of back-to-back games.

? But by the will of the voters of Colorado, that soon will change. The question is whether that means it also will change for the NBA.

? The league's answer is an emphatic no.

? Last week, voters in Colorado and Washington state approved legalized recreational use of marijuana. Because there currently is no team in Seattle, the Washington law is a backburner issue for the NBA.

? But when it comes to Denver, the NBA has gotten in front of the issue, citing that its collective-bargaining agreement with its players supersedes such local allowances.

? "It will not affect how marijuana is treated under our program," a league spokesman confirmed to the Sun Sentinel. "It will remain a prohibited substance per our CBA."

? Asked for clarification, NBA spokesman Tim Frank told the Sun Sentinel, "Marijuana is a prohibited substance under our collectively bargained anti-drug program."

? Heat forward James Jones, an officer with the National Basketball Players Association, agreed Wednesday with the NBA stance.

?? "The rules that we negotiated in the CBA are the rules that we will abide by," Jones said before facing the Los Angeles Clippers at Staples Center. "So as it stands right now, players won't have an issue. They'll just continue to adhere to the rules and policies that are in place. And if it becomes an issue, it definitely won't be from the players.

?? "I think, at the end of the day, the guys understand the reason behind [the NBA rule]. It's to hold a standard and make sure our game is held in high esteem. So, I don't expect that our players would even make it an issue, especially when it doesn't have to be one."

?? Colorado's Amendment 64 passed last week with nearly 55 percent of the vote, in a state that already had allowed medicinal marijuana. The amendment allows those 21 and older to possess up to an ounce of marijuana and grow up to six plants in their homes, as well as sales at regulated stores. The regulations are not expected to be in place for at least a month, with regulations allowing operation of such stores not expected until 2014.

?? The Heat have had their marijuana issues over the years, from Michael Beasley's well-chronicled incidents that led to an in-patient program to former guard Rodney Buford being caught with the substance in his sock during a customs check in Toronto to forward Udonis Haslem having his car seized in Miami-Dade when marijuana was found, a case where the charges eventually were dropped.

? Haslem said he does not believe the change in Colorado will be an issue with NBA players.

?? "Not at all, not at all," he said. "The rule is the rule. We have our four random tests. You have to pass your tests. And there's no gray area. There's not 'if, and or buts' about it."

?? Under the NBA's marijuana program, the league conducts both random and reasonable-cause testing. A first violation mandates entrance into a treatment program, ?a second violation is a $25,000 fine, with a third violation mandating a five-game suspension, with a five-game suspension as well for any further violation. Also the policy reads, "a player will be dismissed and disqualified from the NBA if he is convicted of, or pleads guilty, no contest or nolo contendre to, a crime involving the felony distribution of marijuana."

? The NBA has not issued a statement that specifically addresses the change in Colorado.

iwinderman@tribune.com. Follow him at twitter.com/iraheatbeat

Source: http://www.sun-sentinel.com/sports/miami-heat/heat-blog/sfl-miami-heat-nba-marijuana-s111412,0,4740289.story?track=rss

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????? Internet Explorer 10 Release Preview ?? Windows 7 ...

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Source: http://forums.ferra.ru/index.php?showtopic=52914

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Chocolate Bars Are Shrinking, And Not For Health ... - Business Insider

CadburyIt has long been suspected but now it is official: our chocolate bars are shrinking.

For the first time, the Office of National Statistics has revealed that the size of our chocolate bars and bags of sweets have reduced by as much as 10 per cent in the past year.

The government agency took the unusual step of mentioning the development in its latest consumer price index report so that the public were aware they were getting less for their money.

Rising food prices were said to be a major factor in the jump in October inflation to 2.7 per cent, up from 2.2 per cent the month before.

But the ONS also said consumers were facing inflation ?by the back door? as confectionery products were being reduced in size but still costing the same money.

The report said: ?The main upward pressures came from potatoes (where there have been reports of low yields as a result of the poor weather in recent months), fruit, and confectionery.

?In the case of the last of these, a number of confectionery products have reduced in size.

"This is treated as a price increase as consumers get less for their money.?

Richard Campbell, a statistician at the ONS, said: ?We are always careful to compare like for like so if people are getting less for their money then it is effectively a price increase.

?Our price collectors noticed that chocolate bars and bags of sweets were decreasing in size by around 10 per cent so we felt it was important to inform the public.

Cadbury recently decreased the weight of its Dairy Milk chocolate bar from 49g to 45g while continuing to charge 59p.

It reduced the size in the wake of rising fuel and cocoa prices.

A 205g bag of Rowntree's Fruit Pastilles Sharing Bag reduced to 170g, a 175g Smarties bag is now 147g and Nestle's Munchies Pouch dropped from 150g to 126g.

The shrinkage has been attributed to the rising cost of production and seems to have centered on family pack sizes, which are easier to alter than the single bars.

A spokesman for consumer magazine Which? said shrinking products could be an underhand way of inflating prices and called for pricing to be clearer and the food companies to make any changes obvious to their customers.

Global food costs had increased because of poor harvests in Britain and in the US which had a knock on effect on animal products such as milk.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/chocolate-bars-are-shrinking-but-not-for-health-reasons-2012-11

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San Bernardino bankruptcy: How self-interest sank ... - Financial Post

It?s total political chaos. There is no solution. They?ll never fix anything

How San Bernardino went bankrupt

In August 2010, almost two years before the San Bernardino city council abruptly voted to seek bankruptcy protection, city manager Charles McNeely gave a presentation to the council that became known as ?Groundhog Day.?

McNeely, who has since resigned, warned that the city of 210,000 was facing financial ruin. The sharp fall in housing prices had slashed tax collections even as employee pay and benefit costs spiraled upwards. Years of budgetary gimmicks would come home to roost in the form of a US$40-million deficit in the current fiscal year, he predicted.

Read the full story here.

SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. ? When this sun-drenched exurb east of Los Angeles filed for bankruptcy protection in August, the city attorney suggested fraudulent accounting was the root of the problem.

The mayor blamed a dysfunctional city council and greedy police and fire unions. The unions blamed the mayor. Even now, there is little agreement on how the city got into this crisis or how it can extricate itself.

?It?s total political chaos,? said John Husing, a former San Bernardino resident and regional economist. ?There is no solution. They?ll never fix anything.?

Yet on close examination, the city?s decades-long journey from prosperous, middle-class community to bankrupt, crime-ridden, foreclosure-blighted basket case is straightforward ? and alarmingly similar to the path travelled by many municipalities around America?s largest state. San Bernardino succumbed to a vicious circle of self-interests among city workers, local politicians and state pension overseers.

Little by little, over many years, the salaries and retirement benefits of San Bernardino?s city workers ? and especially its police and firemen ? grew richer and richer, even as the city lost its major employers and gradually got poorer and poorer.

Unions poured money into city council elections, and the city council poured money into union pay and pensions. The California Public Employees? Retirement System (Calpers), which manages pension plans for San Bernardino and many other cities, encouraged ever-sweeter benefits. Investment bankers sold clever bond deals to pay for them. Meanwhile, state law made it impossible to raise local property taxes and difficult to boost any other kind.

No single deal or decision involving benefits and wages over the years killed the city. But cumulatively, they built a pension-fueled financial time-bomb that finally exploded.

In bankrupt San Bernardino, a third of the city?s 210,000 people live below the poverty line, making it the poorest city of its size in California. But a police lieutenant can retire in his 50s and take home $230,000 in one-time payouts on his last day, before settling in with a guaranteed $128,000-a-year pension. Forty-six retired city employees receive over $100,000 a year in pensions.

Almost 75% of the city?s general fund is now spent solely on the police and fire departments, according to a Reuters analysis of city bankruptcy documents ? most of that on wages and pension costs.

IN THE DARK

San Bernardino?s biggest creditor, by far, is Calpers, the public-employee pension fund. The city says it owes Calpers US$143-million; using a different calculation, Calpers says the city would have to pay US$320-million if it left the plan immediately.

Second on the city?s list of creditors are holders of US$46-million worth of pension bonds ? money borrowed in 2005 to pay off Calpers. The total pension-related debts are more than double the $92 million owed to the city?s next 18 largest creditors combined.

Complicating matters were obscure budgeting procedures that left residents in the dark. The word ?pension? doesn?t appear once in the most recent 642-page budget, and retiree costs are buried in detailed departmental line items.

?I?ve been asking for years for the pension costs,? said Tobin Brinker, a former council member and pension-reform advocate, who lost his seat last year to a challenger backed by nearly $100,000 in contributions from the fire and police unions. ?I still don?t know the number.?

James Penman, the longtime city attorney who critics say is closely aligned with the unions, alleged during a council meeting this summer that 13 of the past 16 city budgets had been falsified. He has refused to elaborate on that accusation since, but told Reuters that he hasn?t retracted it, either.

The Securities and Exchange Commission has opened an informal inquiry into the San Bernardino situation because of the city?s bond obligations. The federal Department of Housing and Urban Development, which has provided funds to the city in the past, says it is conducting a routine periodic audit of the city?s books that began before the bankruptcy.

No regulatory or law-enforcement agency has announced any criminal probe. Recently hired city finance officers do say they have found evidence of terrible accounting and record-keeping.

But unlike in the small Southern California cities of Bell, where eight city officials face trial on allegations that they stole from the public, and Vernon, where three officials have been convicted of corruption, San Bernardino?s problems appear to be mainly the result of back-scratching on an epic scale.

It?s a pattern common throughout the Golden State ? and while the particulars are quite different, it is akin to what happened in other states with severe financial crises, such as Illinois and Pennsylvania.

?2.5 AT 55?

By the time San Bernardino?s council met behind closed doors on Sept. 17, 2007, it was already clear the city was in trouble.

Just six months earlier, a report by consulting firm Management Partners showed that spending was outpacing revenue, pension costs were escalating and the city was quickly accumulating unfunded retirement liabilities.

Last decade?s housing boom had papered over the deep economic problems stemming from the shutdowns of a huge steel mill in the 1980s and the Norton Air Force Base in the 1990s. Now the boom was over. Tax revenues were poised for a big fall: Between 2007 and 2011, they dropped 30%, according to Husing, the regional economist.

Yet on this day in 2007, the city was about to raise pension benefits again, in a deal allowing non-public-safety workers to retire at age 55 with a pension equal to three-quarters of their salary. Called ?2.5 at 55,? it calculated annual pensions at 2.5 percentage points of final salary for each year worked ? 75% for 30 years.

It wasn?t nearly as good a deal as the one police and firefighters enjoyed ? a ?3% at 50? plan passed a year earlier. That enabled the public-safety workers to retire at 50 with a pension of up to 90% of their final salary. Regardless, ?2.5 at 55? was what union negotiators had asked for, and the council was poised to rubber-stamp it.

But then something happened. And in a city which has a particularly toxic brand of politics, what transpired depends on who you talk to.

According to four people present at the meeting, Penman, the city attorney, brought a pregnant co-worker to the session. By their account, Penman?s co-worker made an emotional case for an even more generous pension deal. Otherwise, she said, she would be forced to leave San Bernardino and seek work in a city with better benefits. She had her family to consider, she said.

Penman vehemently denies that any of this took place. ?Welcome to San Bernardino politics,? he said.

RUNAWAY TRAIN

That afternoon, in public session, the council unanimously voted to award its non-safety workers 2.7% at 55 ? more even than the union sought. That tiny fraction could raise the pension on a US$100,000 salary by US$6,000 per year. Penman, in office since 1987, earned $164,799 last year, according to city payroll data.

?In hindsight I am not proud of this vote,? said Brinker, who was on the city council at the time. ?The recession hit barely a year later. This was one more log on the pension bonfire.?

Meanwhile, San Bernardino continued to boost wages along with benefits. The average salary for a full-time San Bernardino firefighter in 1997 was US$75,610, adjusted for inflation into 2010 dollars. By 2010, it was nearly US$147,000, according to a Reuters analysis of Census Bureau data.

City wages were a runaway train, according to the Management Partners report. The city charter automatically calculated police and firefighter pay using a formula linked to wages offered by comparably sized cities ? most of which were much wealthier than San Bernardino. Efforts to amend the charter were strongly opposed by the safety unions and voted down by the council earlier this year.

City workers took advantage of compensation rules, common among public employees in California, that made retirement deals even better. Key to this was boosting an employee?s eve-of-retirement wages, which form the basis of the pension calculations.

Mike Conrad, chief of the fire department from 2006 to 2012, said he saw managers negotiate a promotion in their final year, to boost their final salary. It was not uncommon for someone to move into a position with a US$30,000 annual pay rise shortly before retirement, he said.

Retiring employees are also able to extract big one-time ?cash outs.? In San Bernardino, eight hours per month of unused sick time can be rolled over and saved year after year, without limit. Come retirement, 50% of the total can be taken in cash. The same goes for unused vacation time: up to 460 accrued hours of vacation ? nearly three months of salary ? can be cashed in at the fire department, Conrad said.

The police have a similar deal. In 2009, patrol lieutenant Richard Taack retired at the age of 59, after 37 years of service. He took home US$389,727 that year, including US$194,820 in unused sick time and US$33,721 for unused vacation time, according to city payroll records. Shortly after Taack retired ? on an annual lifetime pension of US$128,000 ? he was hired part-time by Penman?s city attorney?s office, at US$32 an hour.

POTHOLES AND EMPTY LOTS

Taack?s 2009 income was nearly double that of the city?s entire street-sweeping department. In 2011, overtime pay alone for the police department ? US$2,766,175 ? exceeded the total payroll of 12 other San Bernardino city departments, according to the Reuters analysis of payroll data. Taack didn?t respond to requests for comment.

?I can?t begrudge the man for receiving what he?s entitled to under the contract,? said David Green, the head road sweeper, who has seen his department cut to five people from 13 when he joined in 1995. But he said there should be a better balance between the safety forces and other departments. ?Nobody wants to drive a car and have to hit a three-foot pothole.?

Indeed, potholes scar downtown San Bernardino. Many stores are shuttered. Abandoned lots sit unkempt. Since the bankruptcy filing, city finance officials have put forward proposals to close libraries, senior centers and a cemetery.

Andrea Travis-Miller, interim city manager, told the council this summer that 250 non-safety positions had been eliminated in the past three years to save money ? and implied that police and fire benefits were crowding out other essential services. ?I believe that city buildings, roads, trees and parks that have begun to show neglect would deteriorate further if more cuts are made,? Travis-Miller said.

The police and fire unions fiercely dispute the charge that large salaries and pensions are to blame for the predicament. They point to the housing crash, which left the city with the fourth-worst foreclosure rate in the country.

Scott Moss, head of the firefighters union, said 20 positions had already been cut from the fire department, leaving about 120 people.

?There?s been mismanagement for years,? Moss said, over coffee in a local restaurant. He noted that Mayor Patrick Morris had majority support on the city council for six years until union-backed members regained a majority in March. ?The mayor and his people are trying to make us look bad.?

Moss, 46, a fire paramedic, said he might retire at 53. Payroll records show a base pay of US$94,500, and total 2011 wages, with overtime, of about US$147,000. Moss confirmed the base figure but didn?t comment on the overtime number.

SICK OF THE BLAME

Moss said he is sick of people blaming pensions. ?You go to bankruptcy, you got to blame somebody. So they say it?s the benefits, it?s the overtime ? it?s everybody but them,? Moss said. ?But what have they been doing these last six years??

On sick-pay cash-outs, Moss said: ?If you call in sick, you?re a bad employee. So my guys don?t call in sick. Then you get all this time you are owed ? and you get vilified.?

He added: ?This is a dangerous city. It?s an old, decayed city. It burns. There are gangs. The pay and benefits attract the police and firefighters it needs. Without them, you lose all the good ones. That?s the balance.?

Crime and gangs are real dangers in San Bernardino. In 2010, according to Federal Bureau of Investigation data, the rate of known violent crimes ? 8.15 per 1,000 people ? was higher than in any other city in the region.

A five-minute drive from city hall, on a residential street, sit flowers and homemade signs next to a picture of Angel Cortez. The 22-year-old was shot in the back of the head in May in what police suspect was a ?gang-related? murder. His body was found in the backyard of a vacant home. His killers had first tried stuffing his body into a trash can, then returned to dig a hole, before unsuccessfully attempting to burn his body, police said.

Mayor Morris, a 74-year-old former judge who?s been in office six years, is scathing about the power he says the unions have over much of the city council. The unions, he said, ?wag the dog.? (Council members are paid just US$50 a month for their service, but also receive a car allowance worth US$600 a month).

He rejects Moss?s argument that he should take responsibility for the financial crisis. He is particularly critical of his two-time challenger for the mayorship, city attorney Penman, who he said ?has blocked all efforts to reform the budget? on behalf of the unions.

Morris added: ?I have no vote on the council. I can only veto a vote if it is 4 to 3. All I have is the power of persuasion. I?ve told them a bunch of times to be far more conservative, not to be so generous with our unions, and it?s advice they have largely ignored.?

?MEAN, DIVISIVE, CORROSIVE?

Morris isn?t running for re-election when his term expires a year from now. ?The politics of this place are and have been for decades mean-spirited, divisive, and it?s corrosive to the extreme,? he said.

Penman denies being influenced by the unions. He said he takes campaign contributions from the police and firefighters like most other elected officials in California. He said he actually split with the police union in 2007 ? a rupture reported at the time ? and wasn?t endorsed by them again until his last re-election bid in 2011. Campaign finance records show that he received US$30,000 in contributions from the police and fire unions in 2011.

Of his critics, Penman said: ?You are hearing from some people whose ethics and honesty are very much in doubt.?

A key facilitator of San Bernardino?s generous retirement packages was Calpers, which manages pensions both for state workers and for many city and county employees across California.

Led by a board of directors who are all themselves members of the pension plan, Calpers has for decades pushed to sweeten benefits for retirees.

A 1999 law championed by Calpers, known as SB 400, cut the retirement age five years and increased benefits for state workers, all on the premise that a rising stock market meant benefits could be juiced up at little or no cost. Many cities and counties, though not required to go along, were happy to heed Calpers? analysis. About half ? including San Bernardino ? adopted the richer benefit formula.

When the stock market tumbled in 2000, cities and towns suddenly had to ramp up payments to Calpers to make up for the hit to their fund balances, which were heavily invested in shares. Fee-hungry investment bankers stepped into the breach.

Led by the now-defunct Lehman Brothers, they persuaded many cities ? including San Bernardino and Stockton, which is also in bankruptcy ? that the best way to satisfy growing obligations to Calpers was to borrow the money via so-called pension obligation bonds. San Bernardino raised US$50-million in 2005 by issuing these notes. Between 1999 and 2009, 26 California cities sold about US$1.7-billion of debt to fund their pensions, including bond issues that were used to pay off earlier debt.

?CALPERS VERSUS WALL STREET?

Yet even in bankruptcy, reducing pension costs by cutting benefits is not an option ? at least according to Calpers.

The pension agency says the benefits are carved in stone, arguing that from the day a worker is hired, the pension plan in place on that day for that person can never be reduced in value under any circumstances, including municipal bankruptcy.

That argument has never been tested in court: When the Bay Area city of Vallejo went bankrupt in 2008, it declined to challenge the pension payments to Calpers, in part because of the daunting legal costs involved.

But the pension-bond insurers who are now on the hook for defaulted bonds in both Stockton and San Bernardino have signaled their intention to do battle with Calpers in bankruptcy court. San Bernardino, in an unprecedented move, has already stopped making payments to Calpers.

?Calpers is the 800-pound gorilla in the room,? said Michael Sweet, a bankruptcy attorney at Fox Rothschild, which is not representing any parties in the San Bernardino bankruptcy. ?No one has yet taken on Calpers. This is going to be a huge fight, and it?s going to be Calpers versus Wall Street.?

Calpers says it wasn?t responsible for the decisions made in San Bernardino. Alan Milligan, chief actuary at Calpers, said the 1999 legislation ?provided options to cities and agencies to change their retirement benefits, but it did not encourage or force them? to do so. ?Calpers does not give advice about how an agency should pay for their retirement benefits.?

Brad Pacheco, a spokesman for Calpers, said San Bernardino lost major employers in recent years and was one of the U.S. cities hardest hit by the foreclosure crisis. He said San Bernardino?s annual pension costs account for just 10 percent of the total city budget.

Those figures, however, exclude the city?s US$46-million in pension-bond debt plus its unfunded debt to Calpers. The city in its bankruptcy filing says it is US$143-million in the hole to Calpers. Calpers says that if San Bernardino pulled out of the plan, it would owe US$320-million to cover its current and future obligations.

MISERABLE COMPANY

San Bernardino and Stockton are hardly alone. A handful of other small California cities, including Atwater, Hercules and Compton, are teetering near bankruptcy.

Big California cities that run their own pension plans also have deep problems. San Jose, hub of Silicon Valley, and San Diego, biotech center of California, both passed pension reforms in June in the face of unmanageable retirement benefits. They are now defending those measures in court against public-employee lawsuits.

In Los Angeles, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, a former labor organizer, led a push to raise the retirement age and cut pensions for new, non-safety city staff. He exempted police and fire employees. A ballot measure sponsored by former Mayor Richard Riordan aims to include them in the cuts, too.

And while California has the biggest pension debt in the United States in dollar terms, it?s not the worst off. Illinois and Kentucky plans are battling for the dubious distinction of having the lowest ratio of assets to liabilities, according to the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.

The chronic mismanagement in San Bernardino, though, is a common feature of local government in California and around the United States. Much power over municipal finance lies in the hands of those with the most at stake ? city employees, elected officials and others who depend directly on government for their livelihood. And California is moving to put even more responsibility and funds, not less, in their hands.

One of Governor Jerry Brown?s marquee initiatives is ?realignment,? an effort to move more public-safety, welfare and prison services from state control to the cities and counties. Local governments are more flexible and more responsive to local issues, Brown argues, and thus able to make better decisions.

Charles McNeely, who served three years as San Bernardino?s city manager after 13 years in the same post in Reno, Nevada, quit last March, citing the ?toxic? atmosphere on the council. He had warned repeatedly that without change, the city faced ruin. In a presentation to the city council in August 2010, he said spending was far outpacing revenue and predicted a budget deficit of US$40-million for this fiscal year.

?I don?t know how you could come out of that meeting not understanding we had a serious problem,? McNeely said in an interview. ?I told them, ?You?re headed for trouble, it?s a train wreck. You can?t keep doing business this way.??

? Thomson Reuters 2012

Source: http://business.financialpost.com/2012/11/13/how-a-vicious-circle-of-self-interest-pushed-san-bernardino-into-bankruptcy/

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Wednesday, November 14, 2012

NetLingo: The Blog - Improve Your Internet IQ: U.S. is Tightening ...

Federal regulators are about to take the biggest steps in more than a decade to protect children online. According to Natasha Singer of The New York Tiems, the moves come at a time when major corporations, app developers and data miners appear to be collecting information about the online activities of millions of young Internet users without their parents? awareness.
Some sites and apps have also collected details like children?s photographs or locations of mobile devices; the concern is that the information could be used to identify or locate individual children. For example, McDonald?s invites children who visit HappyMeal.com to upload their photos so they can make collages or videos.

These data-gathering practices are legal. But the development has so alarmed officials at the Federal Trade Commission that the agency is moving to overhaul rules that many experts say have not kept pace with the explosive growth of the Web and innovations like mobile apps. New rules are expected within weeks.

?Today, almost every child has a computer in his pocket and it?s that much harder for parents to monitor what their kids are doing online, who they are interacting with, and what information they are sharing,? says Mary K. Engle, associate director of the advertising practices division at the F.T.C. ?The concern is that a lot of this may be going on without anybody?s knowledge.?

The proposed changes could greatly increase the need for children?s sites to obtain parental permission for some practices that are now popular ? like using cookies to track users? activities around the Web over time. Marketers argue that the rule should not be changed so extensively, lest it cause companies to reduce their offerings for children.

?Do we need a broad, wholesale change of the law?? says Mike Zaneis, the general counsel for the Interactive Advertising Bureau, an industry association. ?The answer is no. It is working very well.?

The current federal rule, the Children?s Online Privacy Protection Act of 1998 (COPPA), requires operators of children?s Web sites to obtain parental consent before they collect personal information like phone numbers or physical addresses from children under 13. But rapid advances in technology have overtaken the rules, privacy advocates say.

Today, many brand-name companies and analytics firms collect, collate and analyze information about a wide range of consumer activities and traits. Some of those techniques could put children at risk, advocates say.

Under the F.T.C.?s proposals, some current online practices, like getting children under 13 to submit photos of themselves, would require parental consent.

Children who visit McDonald?s HappyMeal.com, for instance, can ?get in the picture with Ronald McDonald? by uploading photos of themselves and combining them with images of the clown. Children may also ?star in a music video? on the site by uploading photos or webcam images and having it graft their faces onto dancing cartoon bodies.

But according to children?s advocates, McDonald?s stored these images in directories that were publicly available. Anyone with an Internet connection could check out hundreds of photos of young children, a few of whom were pictured in pajamas in their bedrooms, advocates said.

In a related complaint to the F.T.C. last month, a coalition of advocacy groups accused McDonald?s and four other corporations of violating the 1998 law by collecting e-mail addresses without parental consent. HappyMeal.com, the complaint noted, invites children to share their creations on the site by providing the first names and e-mail addresses of their friends.

?When we tell parents about this they are appalled, because basically what it?s doing is going around the parents? back and taking advantage of kids? naivete,? says Jennifer Harris, the director of marketing initiatives at the Yale Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity, a member of the coalition that filed the complaint. ?It?s a very unfair and deceptive practice that we don?t think companies should be allowed to do.?

Danya Proud, a spokeswoman for McDonald?s, said in an e-mail that the company placed a ?high importance? on protecting privacy, including children?s online privacy. She said that McDonald?s had blocked public access to several directories on the site.

Last year, the F.T.C. filed a complaint against W3 Innovations, a developer of popular iPhone and iPod Touch apps like Emily?s Dress Up, which invited children to design outfits and e-mail their comments to a blog. The agency said that the apps violated the children?s privacy rule by collecting the e-mail addresses of tens of thousands of children without their parents? permission and encouraging those children to post personal information publicly. The company later settled the case, agreeing to pay a penalty of $50,000 and delete personal data it had collected about children.

It is often difficult to know what kind of data is being collected and shared. Industry trade groups say marketers do not knowingly track young children for advertising purposes. But a study last year of 54 Web sites popular with children, including Disney.go.com and Nick.com, found that many used tracking technologies extensively.

?I was surprised to find that pretty much all of the same technologies used to track adults are being used on kids? Web sites,? said Richard M. Smith, an Internet security expert in Boston who conducted the study at the request of the Center for Digital Democracy, an advocacy group.

Using a software program called Ghostery, which detects and identifies tracking entities on Web sites, a New York Times reporter recently identified seven trackers on Nick.com ? including Quantcast, an analytics company that, according to its own marketing material, helps Web sites ?segment out specific audiences you want to sell? to advertisers.

Ghostery found 13 trackers on a Disney game page for kids, including AudienceScience, an analytics company that, according to that company?s site, ?pioneered the concept of targeting and audience-based marketing.?

David Bittler, a spokesman for Nickelodeon, which runs Nick.com, says Viacom, the parent company, does not show targeted ads on Nick.com or other company sites for children under 13. But the sites and their analytics partners may collect data anonymously about users for purposes like improving content. Zenia Mucha, a spokeswoman for Disney, said the company does not show targeted ads to children and requires its ad partners to do the same.

Another popular children?s site, Webkinz, says openly that its advertising partners may aim at visitors with ads based on the collection of ?anonymous data.? In its privacy policy, Webkinz describes the practice as ?online advanced targeting.?

If the F.T.C. carries out its proposed changes, children?s Web sites would be required to obtain parents? permission before tracking children around the Web for advertising purposes, even with anonymous customer codes.

Some parents say they are trying to teach their children basic online self-defense. ?We don?t give out birth dates to get the free stuff,? said Patricia Tay-Weiss, a mother of two young children in Venice, Calif., who runs foreign language classes for elementary school students. ?We are teaching our kids to ask, ?What is the company getting from you and what are they going to do with that information?? ?

- As seen in The New York Times
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Source: http://netlingo.blogspot.com/2012/11/us-is-tightening-web-privacy-rule-to.html

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Communications : Open A Cellular Phone Store Step By Step ...

Open a cellular phone store that taps into a terrific industry, a recognized brand, plus a successful business model. Cellular phone franchise opportunities provide a means for individuals attempting to own their business to supply worthy goods and services that the ever growing number of the populace sees being a very important part of modern-day communication.

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An incredible alternative to being a cellular phone small company authorized seller would be to turn into a an independent license mobile phone vendor which gives you greater independence and handle of how their small business will be controlled at the pos level.

How simple and easy can it be to spread out a cellular phone store?

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Something?s You Might Need When You Open A Mobile Phone Store:

prepaid cellular phones, display cases, computer, cash register or cash box, printer, promotional materials, and store signage.

Mobile Phone Store For Prepaid ? Unlimited Talk & Text

Sync Mobile connects the vendor directly directly into a successful partnership with all the wholesale department for that leading cdma and gsm coverage model Cell phones which run on a number of countrywide networks. Determine the preferred limitless nationwide coverage suppliers or go private-label utilizing your own store name it?s your choice, they are there to create your mobile phone franchise goals possible with their innovative alternatives.

Sync Mobile offer?s the perfect solution to those searching how to ?open a mobile phone store?. You will also require assistance with instructing the employees, which their cellular phone store agents can assist you with.

Seeking out the right small company?

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Register your small business with the state, Setup your small business bank account, Get a concept of a area for your location, and have $1495.95 for the development fee.

Source: http://communications2y.blogspot.com/2012/11/open-cellular-phone-store-step-by-step.html

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Source: http://fightclub.dnfmoshenwg.com/281/communications-open-a-cellular-phone-store-step-by-step/

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Source: http://pamnichols.typepad.com/blog/2012/11/communications-open-a-cellular-phone-store-step-by-step.html

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Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Russian police detain members of banned Islamic group

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Infants mimic unusual behavior when accompanied by language

ScienceDaily (Nov. 12, 2012) ? A new Northwestern University study shows the power of language in infants' ability to understand the intentions of others.

As the babies watched intently, an experimenter produced an unusual behavior--she used her forehead to turn on a light. But how did babies interpret this behavior? Did they see it as an intentional act, as something worthy of imitating? Or did they see it as a fluke? To answer this question, the experimenter gave 14-month-old infants an opportunity to play with the light themselves.

The results, based on two experiments, show that introducing a novel word for the impending novel event had a powerful effect on the infants' tendency to imitate the behavior. Infants were more likely to imitate behavior, however unconventional, if it had been named, than if it remained unnamed, the study shows.

When the experimenter announced her unusual behavior ("I'm going to blick the light"), infants imitated her. But when she did not provide a name, they did not follow suit.

This revealed that infants as young as 14 months of age coordinate their insights about human behavior and their intuitions about human language in the service of discovering which behaviors, observed in others, are ones to imitate.

"This work shows, for the first time, that even for infants who have only just begun to 'crack the language code,' language promotes culturally-shared knowledge and actions -- naturally, generatively and apparently effortlessly," said Sandra R. Waxman, co-author of the study and the Louis W. Menk Professor of Psychology at Northwestern.

"This is the first demonstration of how infants' keen observational skills, when augmented by human language, heighten their acuity for 'reading' the underlying intentions of their 'tutors' (adults) and foster infants' imitation of adults' actions."

Waxman said absent language and its power in conveying meaning, infants don't imitate these "strange" actions.

"This means that human language provides infants with a powerful key: it unlocks for them a broader world of social intentions," Waxman said. "We know that language, and especially the shared meaning within a linguistic community, is one of the most powerful conduits of the cultural knowledge that we humans transmit across generations."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Northwestern University, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS. The original article was written by Hilary Hurd Anyaso.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Chen ML, Waxman SR. "Shall We Blick??: Novel Words Highlight Actors? Underlying Intentions for 14-Month-Old Infants. Developmental Psychology, 2012 [link]

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/top_science/~3/Xn5ohCcmPG8/121112135650.htm

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