Monday, November 28, 2011

NASA launches $2.5 billion rover to Red Planet

NASA has launched its next Mars rover, kicking off a long-awaited mission to investigate whether the Red Planet could ever have hosted microbial life.

The car-size Curiosity rover blasted off atop its Atlas 5 rocket at 10:02 a.m. ET Saturday, streaking into a cloudy sky above Cape Canaveral Air Force Station here. The huge robot's next stop is Mars, though the 354-million-mile (570-million-kilometer) journey will take eight and a half months.

Joy Crisp a deputy project scientist for the rover at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., called the liftoff "spectacular."

"This feels great," she said as she watched the rocket lift off from Cape Canaveral.

Pamela Conrad, deputy principal investigator for the mission at Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., said, "Every milestone feels like such a relief. It's a beautiful day. The sun's out, and all these people came out to watch."

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    3. All systems go for a Curiosity launch
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The work Curiosity does when it finally arrives should revolutionize our understanding of the Red Planet and pave the way for future efforts to hunt for potential Martian life, researchers said.

"It is absolutely a feat of engineering, and it will bring science like nobody's ever expected," Doug McCuistion, head of NASA's Mars exploration program, said of Curiosity. "I can't even imagine the discoveries that we're going to come up with." [Photos: Last Look at Curiosity Rover]

Long road to launch
Curiosity's cruise to Mars may be less challenging than its long and bumpy trek to the launch pad, which took nearly a decade.

NASA began planning Curiosity's mission ? which is officially known as the Mars Science Laboratory, or MSL ? back in 2003. The rover was originally scheduled to blast off in 2009, but it wasn't ready in time.

Launch windows for Mars-bound spacecraft are based on favorable alignments between Earth and the Red Planet, and they open up just once every two years. So the MSL team had to wait until 2011.

That two-year slip helped boost the mission's overall cost by 56 percent, to its current $2.5 billion. But Saturday's successful launch likely chased away a lot of the bad feelings still lingering after the delay and the cost overruns.

"I think you could visibly see the team morale improve ? the team grinned more, the team smiled more ? as the rover and the vehicle came closer, and more and more together here when we were at Kennedy [Space Center]" preparing for liftoff, MSL project manager Pete Theisinger of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory said a few days before launch.

A rover behemoth
Curiosity is a beast of a rover. Weighing in at 1 ton, it's five times more massive than either of the last two rovers NASA sent to Mars, the golf-cart-size twins Spirit and Opportunity, which landed in 2004 to search for signs of past water activity.

While Spirit and Opportunity each carried five science instruments, Curiosity sports 10, including a rock-zapping laser and equipment designed to identify organic compounds ? carbon-based molecules that are the building blocks of life as we know it.

Some of these instruments sit at the end of Curiosity's five-jointed, 7-foot-long (2.1-meter) robotic arm, which by itself is nearly half as heavy as Spirit or Opportunity.

The arm also wields a 2-inch (5-centimeter) drill, allowing Curiosity to take samples from deep inside Martian rocks. No previous Red Planet rover has been able to do this, researchers say.

"We have an incredible rover," said MSL deputy project scientist Ashwin Vasavada of JPL. "It's the biggest and most capable scientific explorer we've ever sent to the surface of another planet."

Learn more about Curiosity's mission (800kb PDF)

Curiosity is due to arrive at Mars in early August 2012, touching down in a 100-mile-wide (160-km) crater called Gale.

While the rover's launch was dramatic, its landing will be one for the record books, if all goes well. A rocket-powered sky crane will lower the huge robot down on cables ? a maneuver never tried before in the history of planetary exploration. [Video: Curiosity's Peculiar Landing]

A giant mound of sediment rises 3 miles (5 kilometers) into the Martian air from Gale Crater's center. The layers in this mountain appear to preserve about 1 billion years of Martian history. Curiosity will study these different layers, gaining an in-depth understanding of past and present Martian environments and their potential to harbor life.

Life as we know it depends on liquid water. So the rover will likely spend a lot of time poking around near the mound's base, where Mars-orbiting spacecraft have spotted minerals that form in the presence of water, such as clays and sulfates.

"Going layer by layer, we can do the main goal of this mission, which is to search for habitable environments, " Vasavada said. "Were any of those time periods in early Mars history time periods that could have supported microbial life?"

If Curiosity climbs higher, its observations could shed light on Mars' shift from relatively warm and wet long ago to cold, dry and dusty today, researchers said.

"We want to understand those transitions, so that's why we're headed there [to Gale]," said Bethany Ehlmann of JPL and Caltech in Pasadena.

Setting the stage for life detection
Curiosity isn't designed to search for Martian life. In fact, if the red dirt of Gale Crater does harbor microbes, the rover will almost certainly drive right over them unawares.

But MSL is a key bridge to future efforts that could actively hunt down possible Martian life forms, researchers said. Curiosity's work should help later missions determine where ? and when ? to look.

"We don't really detect life per se," Vasavada said. "We set the stage for that life detection by figuring out which time periods in early Mars history were the most likely to have supported life and even preserved evidence of that for us today."

You can follow Space.com senior writer Mike Wall on Twitter: @michaeldwall. Follow Space.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

? 2011 Space.com. All rights reserved. More from Space.com.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45444246/ns/technology_and_science-space/

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Saturday, November 26, 2011

Teamsters expand lawsuit against Mexican trucks (AP)

WASHINGTON ? The International Brotherhood of Teamsters on Wednesday expanded its lawsuit against the government in a long-running battle that has stopped Mexican trucks from coming deep into the United States.

In papers filed in federal appeals court in Washington, the union said the government must first assess the environmental impact of a pilot project before letting it continue. The first Mexican truck in the pilot program crossed the border last month.

Teamsters President James P. Hoffa said opening the border to the trucks is an attack on the environment, on highway safety and on American truckers and warehouse workers.

"It's outrageous enough that we've outsourced millions of jobs to foreign countries, but now we're bringing foreign workers here to take our jobs," Hoffa said in a statement. "This is another pressure the American middle-class doesn't need."

Under the North American Free Trade Agreement signed nearly two decades ago, trucks from both countries were supposed to have unhindered access to highways on either side of the border.

Mexico's Ambassador to the U.S., Arturo Sarukhan, said that the Teamsters are engaging in protectionism.

"First it was about the safety of Mexican rigs; now, with nowhere to run with that argument, the new red herring is an alleged environmental impact," Sarukhan said in a statement.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111123/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/us_teamsters_mexico

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Friday, November 25, 2011

Cooking can be surprisingly forgiving

Network analysis confirms ingredient swaps are feasible

Web edition : Wednesday, November 23rd, 2011

If your pumpkin pie recipe calls for cinnamon but you?ve used the last of it, nutmeg, ginger or cardamom will do. Out of olive oil? Try applesauce. A new in-depth analysis of recipes, reviews and suggestions from an online foodie site reveals that many recipes are more flexible than standard cookbooks suggest.

Researchers mined more than 40,000 recipes and nearly two million reviews from the website Allrecipes.com, investigating various aspects of cooking and ingredient preferences. ?We wondered if the analysis would let us see how flexible recipes are,? says coauthor Lada Adamic of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.

Her team discovered that there?s a lot of wiggle room. The analysis, reported online November 16 at arXiv.org, identified several clusters of ingredients that can be swapped for one another.

For the uninitiated, using less sugar than called for, or substituting or skipping an ingredient altogether, could ruin a dish. But distilling the collective wisdom of recipe reviews revealed alternates that would allow even the culinarily challenged to improve a dish or tailor it to their tastes.

Adamic, Michigan?s Chun-Yuen Teng and Yu-Ru Lin of Harvard and Northeastern University in Boston generated a list of the top 1,000 ingredients, which accounted for 94.9 percent of the ingredients in the database. The team noted heating methods, such as broiling and simmering, and various food processing techniques, both mechanical (such as grinding) and chemical (such as marinating). Recipe ratings and regional preferences within the United States were also taken into account.

Then the team created a huge diagram of ingredients that are frequently substituted for one another, yielding a network of clustered communities of swappable ingredients. A sweet potato community, for example, includes yams, pumpkin, potatoes, parsnips and butternut squash. Milk, butter, chicken broth and sugar all have recipe doppelgangers. And in some instances, dropping ingredients all together won?t hurt a dish.

A second ingredient diagram connected complementary ingredients, pairings that are found together more often than expected by chance. This network split cleanly into two communities, one sweet and one savory. The only other community detected was a small satellite cluster comprising alcoholic drink ingredients.

Recipes that had healthier substitutions were typically rated more highly by users, the researchers found, suggesting that making such swaps easier for users to find ? such as with a roll-over or pop-up on a website ? would enhance user experience. Restaurants or meal planners might even learn a thing or two, says Lin, perhaps experimenting with healthier replacements on menus.

Other foodie preferences also emerged. Recipes that called for processing foods in some way, rather than just tossing ingredients together, were rated more favorably. This link could relate to a longstanding hypothesis regarding the development of bigger brains in the evolution of humans and our hominid relatives, the team speculates. Processing food mechanically and chemically makes extracting nutrients easier, reducing the cost of digestion. Such techniques may have allowed more nutritional resources to be allocated toward growing bigger brains (SN: 8/22/11).

Which cooking method is preferred, however, appears to depend on regional tastes. While baking is popular everywhere, marinating and grilling are favored in the West and Mountain regions, and in the West this often entails seafood. Frying is especially popular in the South and Northeast, a trend that prompted Teng to look more closely at the data. The recipes suggest that while the frying signature of the South emerges from the soul food tradition, Northeasterners use a lot of bacon (especially in chowdah) and have a lot of recipes for buffalo wings.

?This research gives us a lot of insight into how different people want to eat their food, whether they prefer quick or healthy,? says Vaidehi Venkatesan who, with Ali Minai at the University of Cincinnati, is investigating the relationships among various cuisines. ?It is a really great paper.?

And the research project helped the scientists feel slightly more at ease in their own kitchens. ?I?ve felt more comfortable leaving out nutmeg,? Adamic says.


Found in: Numbers and Science & Society

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/336419/title/Cooking_can_be_surprisingly_forgiving

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GOP presidential rivals to debate each other on foreign policy, condemn Obama's handling of it (Star Tribune)

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Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Michael Jackson's bed removed from planned auction (AP)

LOS ANGELES ? The bed where Michael Jackson died is no longer available for sale.

Julien's Auctions has removed the queen-sized headboard from its auction of items from 100 North Carolwood Drive, Jackson's last residence.

"This item is the only portion of the bed that had been listed for auction, and no part of the bed remains for sale," company president Darren Julien said Tuesday, adding that he removed the carved headboard seen in evidence photos during the criminal trial of Jackson's physician from the auction's lots at the request of Jackson's estate.

Dr. Conrad Murray was convicted last week of involuntary manslaughter in Jackson's death.

The day Murray was convicted, Julien's Auctions announced that it would sell the contents of the rented Bel Air mansion where Jackson lived as he prepared for his ill-fated series of comeback concerts. Among the items available are antique furnishings, oil and watercolor paintings and other effects, including a chalkboard with a message from one of Jackson's children that reads, "I (heart) Daddy."

Julien said that the mattress where Jackson took his final breaths "was never included in the auction and, in fact, is the property of The Estate of Michael Jackson." Only the headboard had been offered for sale.

"Michael Jackson has played a major part in the history of Julien's Auctions and we would never do anything that is not in the best interests of Michael's children, his mother or the Estate. We will always honor these requests," Julien said in a statement. His company sold items from Jackson's Neverland Ranch and one of the singer's spangled gloves ? which fetched more than $400,000 ? in 2009.

"We want all of our events involving items associated with Michael Jackson to be a good experience for everyone and a celebration of his life and career," Julien said.

Julien's Auctions will host a free exhibit of items from the Carolwood house at the company's Beverly Hills, Calif. Headquarters beginning Dec. 12. The auction is set for Dec. 17. Photos of the house and the items available for sale are featured in a limited-edition auction catalog, which is being sold for $100.

___

Online:

www.juliensauctions.com

___

AP Entertainment Writer Sandy Cohen can be reached at www.twitter.com/APSandy

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/music/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111115/ap_en_mu/us_jackson_house_auction

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Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Home Depot's 3Q net rises on storm boost

An employee at the Home Depot wears an apron in Irving, Texas, Monday, Nov. 14, 2011. Spending on home projects and storm-related repairs helped boost Home Depot Inc.'s third-quarter net income 12 percent, the home-improvement retailer said Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011. (AP Photo/LM Otero)

An employee at the Home Depot wears an apron in Irving, Texas, Monday, Nov. 14, 2011. Spending on home projects and storm-related repairs helped boost Home Depot Inc.'s third-quarter net income 12 percent, the home-improvement retailer said Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011. (AP Photo/LM Otero)

A Home Depot store is pictured in Edmond, Okla., Nov. 14, 2011. Spending on home projects and storm-related repairs helped boost Home Depot Inc.'s third-quarter net income 12 percent, the home-improvement retailer said Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011.(AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)

(AP) ? Home Depot Inc.'s third-quarter net income rose 12 percent as consumers spent a bit more on home-improvement projects and repaired their homes after Hurricane Irene

The No. 1 U.S. home-improvement retailer's results announced Tuesday beat expectations and the company raised its 2011 earnings outlook and its dividend.

Home-goods sellers are facing cautious consumer spending and a prolonged weak housing market. They've had to adjust to fewer consumers making large-scale home renovations by cutting costs and improving services such as online shopping and customer service.

Atlanta-based Home Depot's smaller rival Lowe's Cos. reported Monday its third-quarter net income fell 44 percent on restructuring costs as it closes stores. Lowe's CEO Robert Niblock said Monday he didn't expect any significant rebound in the housing market until 2013.

Home Depot CEO Frank Blake echoed that sentiment.

"In the U.S., we still do not see, and do not expect to see in the near term, any meaningful tailwind from the housing market," Blake said in a call with analysts. "In this type of environment, it is critical that we effectively invest in our business and keep focused on customer service."

Some examples of Home Depot's investments are a new "buy online, pick up in store" program, a new scheduling system for staffers and a new return-to-vendor process.

Home Depot said consumers are spending slightly more on their homes. Storm-related repairs helped results after Hurricane Irene swept up the East Coast in August. But spending was up in all regions. Blake said the Western division, which was not affected by the hurricane, was the strongest region.

The number of customers making purchases rose 1 percent, the third sequential quarterly increase. The average ticket rose 3 percent to $53.03. Products related to smaller maintenance and repair categories like pipes and fittings, hand tools and appliance parts sold well.

The number of customers buying items worth $50 or less was flat for the quarter, while customers spending over $900 rose 3.6 percent, helped by sales of roofing and generators.

Net income in the quarter ending Oct. 30 rose 12 percent to $934 million, or 60 cents per share, from $834 million, or 51 cents per share, last year.

Revenue rose 4 percent to $17.33 billion from $16.6 billion last year.

Analysts polled by FactSet expected earnings of 59 cents per share on revenue of $17.11 billion.

Revenue in stores open at least a year rose 4.2 percent globally and 3.8 percent in the U.S. The measure is considered a key gauge of a retailer's fiscal health because it excludes stores that open or close during the year.

The measure shows "Home Depot continues to capture share in a challenging macro-environment," said S&P Capital IQ analyst Michael Souers.

The company now expects net income of $2.38 per share for the year, from August guidance of $2.34 per share. It reiterated it expects revenue to rise 2.5 percent, implying revenue of $69.7 billion. Analysts expect earnings of $2.36 per share on revenue of $69.66 billion.

For the holidays, Home Depot has expanded its LED Christmas light selection to 70 different options and is offering new Martha Stewart holiday d?cor. Gift centers will showcase hand tools, power tools and tool storage items.

Home Depot also raised its dividend to by 4 cents to 29 cents. The dividend is payable on Dec. 15 to shareholders of record as of Dec. 1.

Shares slipped 17 cents to $38.08 in late morning trading after rising as high as $38.74 in earlier trading. The company's shares are up 35 percent from their low for the past year of $28.13 set in early August. Their 52-week high was $39.38 reached in late February.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-11-15-Earns-Home%20Depot/id-165e3d7cd0984fdfbadf732323cd3591

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Cyberwar Most Likely to Take Place Among Smaller Powers, Experts Say

News | Technology

Small, faraway conflicts could precipitate an attack against the U.S., so cyberdefense could drop the 'fortress' mentality for a focused set of solutions


Image: Wikimedia Commons

Most Americans who worry about cyberwarfare are concerned that it will be directed against the United States. But the truth is that cyber conflict is far more likely to involve smaller players ? and the dangers associated with that possibility are just as real.

That's because war is more common in small, unstable areas: it's where the most conflicts are. The U.S. and other big powers ? Russia and China, for instance ? have pretty well-established diplomatic channels. Such hotlines are less common, for example, in Central Asia, where many nations trace their modern independence to the early 1990s, or in the Middle East, where a tit-for-tat skirmish between pro-Israeli and pro-Palestinian hackers broke out just last weekend.

Jeffrey Hunker, a Pittsburgh-based cybersecurity consultant who worked for the National Security Council under President Bill Clinton as senior director for critical infrastructure, said the problem is compounded by the fact that the appropriate response to a cyberattack hasn't yet been worked out.

Fighting in the fog
"Nobody can quite figure out rules for use of engagement and response," Hunker said. "When is it an act of war? What is the mechanism for deterrence? What is the doctrine for deterrence?"

The ambiguities could create big problems if a small "patriotic" group ? such as the Russian-speaking hackers who attacked Estonian websites in 2007 ? were to mount a hacking attack that caused real damage, all without the explicit support of a nation-state. Thus far, such attacks haven't provoked a military response.

But they might provoke such a response in the future. Hunker noted that the Pentagon's recently unclassified cyberwar strategy treats cyberattacks, no matter who launches them, as acts of war, and other countries may see them in the same light.

[What Cyberwar Would Look Like]

Then there's the problem of governance. Pakistan, for example, has state institutions that are comparatively weak. That leaves room for rogue actors within the system to attack other countries ? perhaps India. The Pakistani government might deny involvement, but that doesn't mean India would believe it.

"The scope for someone to do something irrational is expanded," Hunker said.

Jeffrey Carr, chief executive officer of Taia Global, a security consulting firm based in McLean, Va., and an expert who blogs about cyberconflict, expects attacks by non-state actors in the near future.

"I think you'll see more of that in the next few years," Carr said. "You'll see an increase in religious or other fanatical groups that just want to destroy things."

Supplementing physical attacks
Carr said he sees cyberconflict as part of larger wars and struggles. He thinks there isn't any ultimate cyberweapon that would bring down an entire nation's infrastructure. But, he said, there are other kinds of attacks that can work in tandem with "real" military force and shade into espionage.

For example, the Israeli external intelligence agency Mossad reportedly used a Trojan to infect a computer belonging to Mahmoud Al-Mabhouh, a Hamas military commander. Mossad agents allegedly read his email, figured out his travel schedule and assassinated him in a Dubai hotel room in January 2010.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=dfbd9cda9da2fe19651b1cdce860111d

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Monday, November 14, 2011

Some iPod Nano Owners Could Be In for a Pleasant Surprise [UPDATED] (Mashable)

[More from Mashable: 10 Explosive iPhone Fireworks Photos [PICS]]

UPDATE: We've made three attempts to contact Apple officials, trying to find out what this "replacement unit" will be if you send in a first-generation iPod Nano. There has been no response. We called Apple support, asking if a new iPod Nano would be sent to replace the 5-year-old Nanos. Here's the response the company is giving to its customers: "Your guess is as good as mine." Stay tuned for a full story, whether Apple officials respond or not.

[More from Mashable: 10 Geeky Accessories Celebrating the Iconic Hand Cursor [PICS]]

UPDATE 2: Confirmed (finally): First-generation iPod Nanos will be sent as replacements. Read the story here.

Do you have an old first-generation iPod Nano lying around? If so, Apple wants to replace it for you, 5 years after you bought it. Such a deal.

But watch out: There's a slight risk of your old Nano overheating, and possibly even catching on fire because of a defective battery. Apple says if you own one of the Nanos with this problem, you should stop using it immediately. The good news is, newer iPods aren't affected by the battery defect.

Writes the company on its website:

"Apple has determined that, in very rare cases, the battery in the iPod nano (1st generation) may overheat and pose a safety risk. Affected iPod Nanos were sold between September 2005 and December 2006.

This issue has been traced to a single battery supplier that produced batteries with a manufacturing defect. While the possibility of an incident is rare, the likelihood increases as the battery ages."

Apple's providing a place to check your Nano's serial numbers and order a "replacement unit." So far, it's unclear exactly what Apple will send you if you have the correct serial number on your old Nano. We presume the company wouldn't dig up old iPod Nanos from the distant past, nor would it swap out the batteries in the one you have now.

So if our guess is correct, you'll be able to trade in that old beat-up and scratched-up iPod for a shiny new one. We've contacted the company to find out, but we can't imagine Apple sending anything but the Read our story here.

We'll update this post if and when we hear from Apple. In the meantime, start digging around in those old dresser drawers -- there might be an old iPod in there for you to cash in on a new one.

This story originally published on Mashable here.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/applecomputer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/mashable/20111112/tc_mashable/some_ipod_nano_owners_could_be_in_for_a_pleasant_surprise_updated

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Sunday, November 13, 2011

Sony Hopes To Debut ?A New Form Of Television?

Sony CEO Howard Stringer isn’t in an enviable position. The company has had a rough few years, and expects to lose a cool billion dollars in the fiscal year ending in March 2012. The TV business, in particular, has been a millstone around his neck; the price of TV, very much a commodity, has gone down steadily for years, and the poor economy has driven people towards budget brands and smaller sets if they buy anything at all. Despite this, Stringer is philosophical about the hard times. You have bad years,” he told the Wall St Journal. “The trick is to weather them, learn from them, act graciously through them, and learn why and when you have to change.” And the TV market is ripe for real change, but whether they can make a better change than their new adversary in there, Apple, is up in the air. Jobs was rumored to have been working on just this problem, the reinvention of TV, before he died. Inventor, manager, or tweaker, whatever the man was, he was certainly someone you didn’t want working on a product that competed with yours. Stringer, aware of this, began preemptively working against Apple: “I spent the last five years building a platform so I can compete against Steve Jobs. It’s finished, and it’s launching now,” he said. This was in reference, however, to a multi-screen strategy that unifies experiences across mobile phones, tablets, laptops, and TVs. If Apple is building something, it’s going to be a single “breakthrough device,” as they are sure to call it, not an ecosystem or a meta-platform optional to a hundred different devices. Is Sony ready for that? It’s been a long time since Sony had to invent anything on its own in this sector. For years it has sold the same products in increasingly powerful variations or with lowered price points. Despite real advantages in some areas and a global network of consumer electronics companies that rely on its OEM portion (the iPhone 4S’s new camera is a Sony, for instance), it has had precious few original ideas. Is it even possible for this company to rise to the challenge and beat Apple to the punch by disrupting its own industry? Sony is many things, but surprising isn’t one of them. Their forces are too widely distributed, and are vulnerable to a blitzkrieg by someone like Apple who, having

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/ozy8QYfkZ5Y/

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Friday, November 11, 2011

Traditional turkey dinner costs 13 percent more

(AP) ? It's going to cost a bit more to put a traditional Thanksgiving dinner on the table this year.

The American Farm Bureau Federation reported Thursday that a meal with turkey and all the trimmings will cost about 13 percent more this holiday.

It estimates the average cost to make a meal for 10 people is $49.20. That's $5.73 more than last year's average of $43.47.

It's a result of soaring costs for commodities that are raising prices for food makers, grocers and consumers.

The costs for nearly everything from cranberries to pumpkin pie are up. But the biggest price hike is for the main course: a 16-pound turkey costs 4 percent more this year at $21.57.

The classic Thanksgiving meal comes in at about $5 per person

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-11-10-US-Thanksgiving-Dinner-Costs/id-13d2e081267041e3a261903dc503168a

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Hybrid phone network offers Wi-Fi calls

Jacob Aron, technology reporter

republicwireless.jpg(Image: Republic Wireless/LG Optimus)

Smartphones let you do almost everything over Wi-Fi, so why do we still have to use up cellular minutes when making a call? That's the thinking behind Republic Wireless, a new hybrid phone network that lets you seamlessly make calls using any available Wi-Fi hotspot, falling back to the regular cellular network when you move out of Wi-Fi range.

The company estimates that most people are near a Wi-Fi network 60 per cent of the time, whether that be your home, work or the local coffee house, but it might not be suitable for those who like to roam further afield - rely too much on the cellular connection and you'll receive a warning before eventually being booted off the network.

It is a nice idea, especially if you are after a cheap smartphone - the initial cost is $199 for a modified LG Optimus phone running Android, followed by a $19 monthly charge. There is no minimum contract tie-in as with most other networks. You can't yet use your existing phone, though the company says it hopes to allow this in the future as well as providing a range of other handsets.

But is hotspot availability in the US good enough for the hybrid plan to work? Running data-hungry smartphones on Wi-Fi makes much more sense than the ageing cellular network, which was never designed to stream movies or download the latest apps, but it does rather reduce the mobility of your mobile phone.

Perhaps the Republic Wireless model would work better in a country like Estonia, which enjoys near-ubiquitous Wi-Fi coverage.


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Source: http://feeds.newscientist.com/c/749/f/10897/s/19ebd781/l/0L0Snewscientist0N0Cblogs0Conepercent0C20A110C110Chybrid0Ephone0Enetwork0Eoffers0Ewi0Bhtml0DDCMP0FOTC0Erss0Gnsref0Fonline0Enews/story01.htm

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Thursday, November 10, 2011

Morissette: I was unprepared to be a mom

This new mommy has lived and learned!

Alanis Morissette became a mother for the first time on Christmas Day 2010 when she welcomed son Ever Imre, 10-months, with husband Mario "Souleye" Treadway ? and she's not afraid to admit she was a little clueless at first!

PHOTOS: Pregnant stars in bikinis

"I remain baffled at how little I was prepared for what was to come," Morissette, 37, writes in Monday's iVillage.com blog post.

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    3. 'Dancing' reveals its final four contestants
    4. 'Loser' gets lonely for one bitter player
    5. Could Stephen Colbert host 'SNL'?

PHOTOS: Cute celeb babies

Slideshow: Celebrity moms (on this page)

"I had used, as usual, the I'll-rise-to-that-occasion-when-I-get-there approach to the post-child-bearing journey," the "Ironic" singer writes. "So all my DVD-watching and focus went toward the birth experience itself, and how to prepare myself for that (as though I really could prepare for a Human. Being. Coming. Out. Of. My. Body)," she wrote.

PHOTOS: 90s stars - where are they now?

In her column, Morissette describes the unexpected changes she felt after giving birth, admitting she felt like "a blank slate", with "no handbook" to guide her. Underneath all the fluctuating hormones, lack of sleep, and her gigantic, new responsibility of her baby son, the singer wrote of the astonishing change the "mom" title cast on her life.

Story: Hey ladies, want a hit song? Bash a man!

"Life literally and figuratively moved through me that morning of Dec. 25," she says of her son's birth. "Yet another example of life's unsentimental and ruthless way of shaking me awake to the direct experience of being human."

But the postpartum process wasn't just about her baby. "I had no idea the person I'd always dreamed of becoming was being born at the exact same time."

Copyright 2011 Us Weekly

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45204002/ns/today-entertainment/

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Tuesday, November 8, 2011

?Gorilla man? goes unheard

Tracking a conversation can block out peripheral sounds

Web edition : Monday, November 7th, 2011

SEATTLE ? Good listeners inadvertently turn a deaf ear to unexpected sounds. Attending closely to a conversation creates a situation in which unusual, clearly audible background utterances frequently go totally unheard, says psychologist Polly Dalton of the University of London.

This finding takes the famous ?invisible gorilla effect? from vision into the realm of hearing, Dalton reported November 4 at the annual meeting of the Psychonomic Society. More than a decade ago, researchers observed that about half of volunteers watching a videotape of people passing a basketball fail to see a gorilla-suited person walking through the group if the viewers are instructed to focus on counting how many times the ball gets passed (SN: 5/21/11, p. 16).

An ability to prioritize what sounds and sights to monitor supports daily activities, but it can also wipe out perceptions of obvious peripheral happenings. ?We?re not aware of as much in the world as we think we are,? Dalton said.

Dalton and her colleagues created a 69-second recording of two men talking as they prepared food for a party and two women chatting as they wrapped a party gift. Headphones delivered one conversation to each ear of 41 volunteers, creating a sense of the four characters moving around a room as they talked. Partway into the recording, a man dubbed ?gorilla man? by the researchers appears in the acoustic scene for 19 seconds saying ?I?m a gorilla? over and over.

Participants were assigned to pay attention either to the men?s or the women?s conversation.

Nearly all of those following the women and almost one-third of those tracking the men didn?t hear gorilla man at all. The intrusive ape passed closer to the gabbing men in the acoustic scene, partly explaining why his voice was heard more often by those listening to the men, Dalton suggests.

But the problem wasn?t that gorilla man spoke too softly. Only one participant failed to hear the talking gorilla in a second trial, when volunteers were asked to track the men?s conversation and listen for anything unusual.

Psychologist Jeremy Wolfe of Harvard Medical School suspects that, given the power of focused attention to erase peripheral sounds, volunteers would fail to hear gorilla man even if the unseen primate made gorilla sounds or played a flute.

That?s the kind of experiment that will make some noise in the wake of gorilla man?s first silent stroll.


Found in: Humans and Psychology

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/335904/title/%E2%80%98Gorilla_man%E2%80%99_goes_unheard

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Markets pressure Italy ahead of budget vote (AP)

ROME ? Italian borrowing costs have risen to fresh euro-era new highs as markets await the outcome of a vote that could force the resignation of Premier Silvio Berlusconi.

Berlusconi's government is under intense pressure to enact quick reforms to protect Italy from the growing sovereign debt crisis, but has been hobbled by a weak coalition.

The yield on Italy's 10-year bonds jumped another 0.07 percentage point Tuesday to 6.74 percent, its highest level since the euro was established in 1999 and nearing the 7 percent threshold that forced Greece, Ireland and Portugal to accept bailouts.

Parliament votes later on the 2010 state accounts ? a normally routine measure that failed by one vote last month. The opposition is trying to make the measure a vote of confidence in Berlusconi.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111108/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_italy_financial_crisis

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Monday, November 7, 2011

HP does the inevitable, announces the TouchSmart 620 with a 3D display and webcam (video)

HP's pushed out a raft of all-in-ones this past year, but until today, there was one gimmicky stone it left unturned. Say hello to the TouchSmart 620, the company's first 3D all-in-one. Essentially, it's the 610 with ATI's 3D tech shoehorned inside. Otherwise, it looks the same, with a 23-inch, 1080p panel and that sliding display that reclines at a nearly flat 60-degree angle. In addition to the 3D screen (best viewed when positioned upright), it has a webcam that captures 3D stills and video. At the base level, you'll get a pair of active shutter glasses, TV tuner, a Core i5 CPU, 8GB of RAM, a 1.5TB HDD and an AMD Radeon HD 6650 card with 1GB of video memory. (For whatever reason, HP didn't add HDMI-in this go 'round.) That starting configuration technically costs $1,900, but HP's going to apply $300 in instant savings when it goes on sale November 15, so for all intents and purposes it starts at $1,600. Full PR after the break, and if you need a refresher on what this thing looks like, we suggest you revisit our review of the 610.

Continue reading HP does the inevitable, announces the TouchSmart 620 with a 3D display and webcam (video)

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/07/hp-does-the-inevitable-announces-the-touchsmart-620-with-a-3d-d/

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