Saturday, December 31, 2011

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Florida can't finish in double-OT loss to Rutgers

Published: Thursday, Dec. 29, 2011 9:35 p.m. MST

By Tom Canavan, Associated Press

PISCATAWAY, N.J. ? On the surface, it appeared No. 10 Florida simply didn't finish off Rutgers.

The Gators blew a seven-point lead in the final 3 minutes of regulation and a three-point lead with less than 20 seconds to go in the first overtime before falling to Rutgers 85-83 in double overtime on Thursday.

Florida coach Billy Donovan wasn't interested in letting the late collapses serve as the reason the Gators' five-game losing streak came to an end against one of the lesser teams in the Big East Conference.

Donovan said Florida (10-3) stopped playing long before that. They opened the game with a 14-5 spurt and then stopped moving the ball and looking for each other.

"I don't think that we were very good on offense," Donovan said, adding that the performance came just a week after his team played an outstanding game against Florida State. "Their kids played the right way and I don't think that our guys played the right way."

While not a big fan of learning from a loss, Donovan felt this game could help his team down the road.

"Our team needs to go through this to reach our full potential, as difficult as that may be," he said. "It's bigger for me than just this game, it's about us getting better."

Rutgers (8-5) was the team that really improved Thursday after struggling much of the season.

Freshman Eli Carter led the way with a career-high 31 points, hitting the go-ahead basket in the second overtime. He also nailed a late 3-pointer in the first overtime to put the Scarlet Knights in position for their biggest win since knocking off No. 9 Villanova at home last season.

Erving Walker had a chance to tie the game for the Gators in the final seconds, but his off-balance attempt from the foul line hit off the rim.

Scarlet Knights fans stormed the court to celebrate in a game billed as the return of former Rutgers star and current Gator Mike Rosario to Piscataway.

"When you're younger and you dream of playing college basketball and you see everybody storm the floor, and for me to be in it was definitely a blessing," said Rutgers freshman Jerome Seagears, who added 13 points. "The floor was shaking it was so crazy. I thought Godzilla was coming through. They put their pants on just like we put our pants on, so in that case they can be beat. And tonight we did that as a team. This is the biggest win of my life.

Dane Miller added 16 points and Myles Mack had 14 for Rutgers, which won its fourth straight game.

Kenny Boynton matched his season high with 26 points for Florida. Bradley Beal added 15, and Erik Murphy had 14 points and eight rebounds for Florida, which was playing its first game at the loud and intimidating Rutgers Athletic Center.

Source: http://www.deseretnews.com/article/700211080/Florida-cant-finish-in-double-OT-loss-to-Rutgers.html?s_cid=rss-38

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Pew: Hispanic community upset with status quo

Even as the Democratic Party continues to enjoy the Hispanic community?s support heading into the 2012 election year, the Pew Hispanic Center finds that only 45% of Hispanic voters identified the Democratic Party as the more concerned party (for their interests), while 12% picked the Republican Party.

hispanicallyspeakingnews.com

It?s a lopsided result to be sure. However, the trend should concern Democrats.? The percentage of Latinos who say that the Democratic party displays greater concern has declined by 10 points since 2008.

During this same time, the percentage of Hispanic voters who said that the Republican Party has demonstrated more concern increased, but only by a mere 6% since 2008. Simply put, this is hardly a stat to flaunt if the GOP hopes to attract more Hispanics to the party.

Generally speaking, Hispanic sentiment toward the Democratic and Republican parties should be a cause of concern for the political establishment. These poll numbers may reflect the fact that Hispanic voters feel that both major parties are out of touch when it comes to addressing their community?s key interests.

Hispanics also seem to be growing frustrated with the two-party gridlock.? 33% said there?s no difference between Democrats and Republicans, compared to 12% who believed otherwise. In addition, 56%? said that the country is headed in the wrong direction.

Heading into the 2012 election, Pew finds that President Obama has strong Hispanic support in hypothetical match ups against both Mitt Romney and Rick Perry. However, there?s no denying that the President?s approval rating has suffered with the Latino demographic. It?s now down to 49% compared to 58% in 2010.? While the President?s aggressive immigration policy might have something to do with the drooping poll numbers,? it?s not the whole story.? Hispanics are also concerned with issues such as the economy followed by education, healthcare, taxes, and the federal deficit- all of which rank higher than the immigration issue. Perhaps not coincidentally, this priority list is quite similar to that of independent voters.

Given that the Hispanic voting bloc has become critical for electoral success at the national level, the community?s discontent would appear to pose an increasing threat to the status quo.? If the political establishment is not careful, the nation?s largest minority may jump ship and join the burgeoning Independent movement.

The Pew Hispanic Center?s survey was conducted from November 9- December 7, 2011 in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. It included a randomly selected , nationally representative sample of 1220 Latino adults, 557 of whom said they are registered to vote. It had a margin of error of +/- 3.6 percentage points for the full sample and +/- 5.2 percentage points for the registered voter sample.

Tags: Democrats, hispanics, immigration, independent voters, independents, latinos, Obama, Republicans

Source: http://ivn.us/news/2011/12/30/pew-hispanic-community-upset-with-status-quo/

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Man charged in Calif. soldier shooting (AP)

SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. ? A California man has been charged with attempted murder in the shooting of an Afghanistan war veteran at a homecoming party.

San Bernardino County prosecutors say Tuesday they charged 19-year-old Ruben Ray Jurado with attempted murder.

Jurado's defense attorney says his client was being attacked when the shooting of 22-year-old Christopher Sullivan occurred at a party Friday night in San Bernardino.

Authorities say Jurado shot Sullivan after Sullivan intervened in a fight over football teams.

Sullivan's family says the gunfire shattered Sullivan's spine, leaving him paralyzed.

Sullivan survived a suicide bombing attack in Afghanistan last year and was healing at an Army base in Kentucky before coming home for the holidays and a party in his honor.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

An attorney said Tuesday that the man jailed in the critical wounding of an Afghanistan war veteran at a California homecoming party was being attacked and was on the ground when the shooting took place.

Attorney Michael J. Holmes said he wants to talk to 19-year-old client Ruben Ray Jurado and the district attorney before commenting further.

"It appears that he was being attacked and he was on the ground and was being kicked in the back, stomach, the head, and that is consistent with the injuries that I observed," Holmes said Tuesday morning. "It is alleged at that point that Mr. Sullivan was shot."

Jurado surrendered himself to authorities on Monday for investigation of attempted murder in connection with Friday's shooting at a San Bernardino party for 22-year-old Army soldier Christopher Sullivan. The district attorney's office has until Wednesday to file charges.

Sullivan survived a suicide bombing attack in Afghanistan last year, received a Purple Heart and was healing at a U.S. base before coming home for the holidays.

Authorities said Jurado, who had played football with Sullivan in high school, began arguing with Sullivan's brother over football teams and then punched him. Sullivan intervened and Jurado pulled a gun and fired multiple shots, hitting Sullivan in the neck, San Bernardino police Sgt. Gary Robertson said.

Sullivan remains in critical condition. His relatives say the gunfire shattered his spine and left him paralyzed from the neck down.

On Tuesday, Sullivan was able to breathe partially on his own. A few days ago, he relied solely on a hospital breathing machine, his family said.

"He's opening his eyes more," his 20-year-old brother Brandon Sullivan told the Associated Press. "We're just waiting day by day."

Sullivan was wounded in a suicide bombing attack last year in Kandahar province while serving with the 101st Infantry Division. He suffered a cracked collarbone and brain damage in the attack and had been recovering in Kentucky, where he is stationed.

Sullivan was an avid wrestler and football player in high school in San Bernardino, about 60 miles east of Los Angeles. He had nine months to go in the military and then planned to become a firefighter or police officer. He always liked to help people, his brother said.

"Say there was a person at school who never had friends or nothing ? Chris would be the person who would go up to him and try to be his friend. He didn't like people to feel alone," Brandon Sullivan said. "He always had a smile on his face."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111227/ap_on_re_us/us_soldier_shot

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Top Pick Apps for Android Smartphones and Tablets

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Source: http://www.mobiletechreview.com/ubbthreads/showflat.php?Board=news&Number=41892

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The mystery of expertise (The Week)

New York ? There is a chasm between what the brain knows, says David Eagleman, and what our minds can fathom

CONSIDER THE SIMPLE act of changing lanes while driving a car. Try this: Close your eyes, grip an imaginary steering wheel, and go through the motions of a lane change. Imagine that you are driving in the left lane and you would like to move over to the right lane. Before reading on, actually try it.

It's a fairly easy task, right? I'm guessing that you held the steering wheel straight, then banked it over to the right for a moment, and then straightened it out again. No problem.

SEE ALSO: Why does entering a room make you forget things?

?

Like almost everyone else, you got it completely wrong. The motion of turning the wheel rightward for a bit, then straightening it out again would steer you off the road: You just piloted a course from the left lane onto the sidewalk. The correct motion for changing lanes is banking the wheel to the right, then back through the center, and continuing to turn the wheel just as far to the left side, and only then straightening out. Don't believe it? Verify it for yourself when you're next in the car. It's such a simple task that you have no problem accomplishing it in your daily driving. But when forced to access it consciously, you're flummoxed.

The lane-changing example is one of a thousand. You are not consciously aware of the vast majority of your brain's ongoing activities, nor would you want to be ? it would interfere with the brain's well-oiled processes. The best way to mess up your piano piece is to concentrate on your fingers; the best way to get out of breath is to think about your breathing; the best way to miss the golf ball is to analyze your swing.

SEE ALSO: Does WiFi damage sperm?

?

Remembering motor acts like changing lanes is a type of implicit memory ? which means that your brain holds knowledge of something that your mind cannot explicitly access. Riding a bike, tying your shoes, typing on a keyboard, and steering your car into a parking space while speaking on your cellphone are examples of this. You execute these actions easily but without knowing the details of how you do it. You would be totally unable to describe the perfectly timed choreography with which your muscles contract and relax as you navigate around other people in a cafeteria while holding a tray, yet you have no trouble doing it. This is the gap between what your brain can do and what you can tap into consciously.

To the extent that consciousness is useful, it is useful in small quantities, and for very particular kinds of tasks. It's easy to understand why you would not want to be consciously aware of the intricacies of your muscle movement, but this can be less intuitive when applied to your perceptions, thoughts, and beliefs, which are also final products of the activity of billions of nerve cells.

SEE ALSO: How new periodic table elements get their names

?

WHEN CHICKEN HATCHLINGS are born, large commercial hatcheries usually set about dividing them into males and females, and the practice of distinguishing gender is known as chick sexing. Sexing is necessary because the two genders receive different feeding programs: one for the females, which will eventually produce eggs, and another for the males, which are typically destined to be disposed of (only a few males are kept and fattened for meat). So the job of the chick sexer is to pick up each hatchling and quickly determine its sex in order to choose the correct bin to put it in. The problem is that the task is famously difficult: Male and female chicks look exactly alike.

Well, almost exactly. The Japanese invented a method of sexing chicks known as vent sexing, by which experts could rapidly ascertain the sex of one-day-old hatchlings. Beginning in the 1930s, poultry breeders from around the world traveled to the Zen-Nippon Chick Sexing School in Japan to learn the technique.

The mystery was that no one could explain exactly how it was done. It was somehow based on very subtle visual cues, but the professional sexers could not say what those cues were. They would look at the chick's rear (where the vent is) and simply seem to know the correct bin to throw it in.

And this is how the professionals taught the student sexers. The master would stand over the apprentice and watch. The student would pick up a chick, examine its rear, and toss it into one bin or the other. The master would give feedback: yes or no. After weeks of this activity, the student's brain was trained to a masterful ? albeit unconscious ? level.

Meanwhile, a similar story was unfolding oceans away. During World War II, under constant threat of bombings, the British had a great need to distinguish incoming aircraft quickly and accurately. Which aircraft were British planes coming home and which were German planes coming to bomb? Several airplane enthusiasts had proved to be excellent "spotters," so the military eagerly employed their services. These spotters were so valuable that the government quickly tried to enlist more spotters ? but they turned out to be rare and difficult to find. The government therefore asked the spotters to train up some others.

It was a grim attempt. The spotters tried to explain their strategies but failed. No one got it, not even the spotters themselves. Like the chicken sexers, the spotters had little idea how they did what they did ? they simply saw the right answer.

With a little ingenuity, the British finally figured out how to successfully train new spotters: by trial-and-error feedback. A novice would hazard a guess and an expert would say yes or no. Eventually the novices became, like their mentors, vessels of the mysterious, ineffable expertise.

THERE CAN BE a large gap between knowledge and awareness. When we examine skills that are not amenable to introspection, the first surprise is that implicit memory is completely separable from explicit memory: You can damage one without hurting the other.

Consider patients with anterograde amnesia, who cannot consciously recall new experiences in their lives. If you spend an afternoon trying to teach them the video game Tetris, they will tell you the next day that they have no recollection of the experience, that they have never seen this game before ? and, most likely, that they have no idea who you are, either. But if you look at their performance on the game the next day, you'll find that they have improved exactly as much as nonamnesiacs. Implicitly their brains have learned the game: The knowledge is simply not accessible to their consciousness.

Of course, it's not just sexers and spotters and amnesiacs who enjoy unconscious learning. Essentially everything about your interaction with the world rests on this process. You may have a difficult time putting into words the characteristics of your father's walk, or the shape of his nose, or the way he laughs ? but when you see someone who walks, looks, or laughs the way he does, you know it immediately.

One of the most impressive features of brains ? and especially human brains ? is the flexibility to learn almost any kind of task. Give an apprentice the desire to impress his master in a chicken-sexing task and his brain devotes its massive resources to distinguishing males from females. Give an unemployed aviation enthusiast a chance to be a national hero and his brain learns to distinguish enemy aircraft from local flyboys. This flexibility of learning accounts for a large part of what we consider human intelligence. While many animals are properly called intelligent, humans distinguish themselves in that they are so flexibly intelligent, fashioning their neural circuits to match the task at hand. It is for this reason that we can colonize every region on the planet, learn the local language we're born into, and master skills as diverse as playing the violin, high-jumping, and operating the space shuttle.

ON DEC. 31, 1974, Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas was debilitated by a stroke that paralyzed his left side and confined him to a wheelchair. But Justice Douglas demanded to be checked out of the hospital on the grounds that he was fine. He declared that reports of his paralysis were "a myth." When reporters expressed skepticism, he invited them to join him for a hike, a move interpreted as absurd. He even claimed to be kicking football field goals with his paralyzed leg. As a result of this apparently delusional behavior, Douglas lost his seat on the Supreme Court.

What Douglas experienced is called anosognosia. This term describes a total lack of awareness about an impairment. It's not that Justice Douglas was lying ? his brain actually believed that he could move just fine. But shouldn't the contradicting evidence alert those with anosognosia to a problem? It turns out that alerting the system to contradictions relies on particular brain regions, especially one called the anterior cingulate cortex. Because of these conflict-monitoring regions, incompatible ideas will result in one side or another's winning: The brain either constructs a story that makes them compatible or ignores one side of the debate. In special circumstances of brain damage, this arbitration system can be damaged, and then conflict can cause no trouble to the conscious mind.

ON AUG. 20, 1974, in a game between the California Angels and the Detroit Tigers, Guinness World Records clocked Nolan Ryan's fastball at 100.9 miles per hour. If you work the numbers, you'll see that Ryan's pitch departs the mound and crosses home plate ? 60 feet, 6 inches away ? in 0.4 seconds. This gives just enough time for light signals from the baseball to hit the batter's eye, work through the circuitry of the retina, activate successions of cells along the loopy superhighways of the visual system at the back of the head, cross vast territories to the motor areas, and modify the contraction of the muscles swinging the bat.

Amazingly, this entire sequence is possible in less than 0.4 seconds; otherwise no one would ever hit a fastball. But even more surprising is that conscious awareness takes longer than that: about half a second. So the ball travels too rapidly for batters to be consciously aware of it.

One does not need to be consciously aware to perform sophisticated motor acts. You can notice this when you begin to duck from a snapping tree branch before you are aware that it's coming toward you, or when you're already jumping up when you first become aware of a phone's ring. The conscious mind is not at the center of the action in the brain; instead, it is far out on a distant edge, hearing but whispers of the activity. As Carl Jung put it, "In each of us there is another whom we do not know." As Pink Floyd put it, "There's someone in my head, but it's not me."



?2011 by David Eagleman. Reprinted courtesy of Pantheon Books, a division of Random House, Inc., from Incognito by David Eagleman.

?

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    Tuesday, December 27, 2011

    NBA fans tune in to basketball's return with big television ratings for Christmas games

    NEW YORK - NBA fans seem more excited about basketball's return than bitter about the lockout based on television ratings for the league's delayed openers.

    The five Christmas games Sunday attracted large audiences, with the Bulls-Lakers matchup drawing the third-highest preliminary rating for a regular-season game on ABC. The 6.5 overnight rating trailed only a 7.3 for last year's highly anticipated Heat-Lakers showdown and a 7.9 for another meeting between Miami and LA in 2004.

    Chris Paul's Clippers debut in the nightcap against the Warriors earned a 2.3 overnight, up 77 percent over last year's Portland-Golden State telecast. It was ESPN's highest-rated Christmas prime-time game.

    The earlier night game on ESPN ? Magic-Thunder ? drew a 1.9 overnight, up 36 percent from to last year's Denver-Oklahoma City matchup. The afternoon's finals rematch on ABC, the Heat's rout of the Mavericks, earned a 5.6 overnight, up 6 percent from Boston-Orlando last year.

    The Celtics-Knicks game on TNT to open the day drew a 4.1 overnight. The early game on ESPN last year, Bulls-Knicks, had a 2.7 on ESPN.

    Ratings represent the percentage of all homes with televisions tuned to a program. Overnight ratings measure the country's largest markets.

    Source: http://www.startribune.com/sports/wolves/136227773.html

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    Russian communications satellite crashes to Earth after launch www ...

    By
    Anna Edwards

    Last updated at 9:39 PM on 26th December 2011

    A man and his wife narrowly escaped being crushed by a fragment of a Russian satellite that crashed into his Siberian home in Cosmonaut Street.

    In the latest setback for Russia's space programme, a chunk of the Meridian satellite hit the house in the Novosibirsk region of central
    Siberia and were found in the Ordynsk district.

    The Meridian communications satellite failed to reach orbit Friday due to a failure with its Soyuz rocket, raising new concerns over the Russian space programme which has now lost over half a dozen satellites in the last year.

    Russian communications satellite crashes to Earth after launch

    Crashing back to earth: A small piece of the Meridian satellite plummeted through a man's house Cosmonaut Street

    'A sphere was found, around 50 centimetres (20 inches) in diameter, which crashed into the roof of a house in the village of Vagaitsevo' in the Ordynsk district, an official in the local security services told the Interfax news agency, AFP reported.

    In an extraordinary irony, the official said that the house was located on Cosmonaut Street, named after the heroic spacemen of the Soviet and Russian space programme.

    The owner of the house Andrei Krivoruchenko, who was at home with his wife at the time, said that he heard a huge noise and a crash as the satellite hit his roof.

    'I climbed up onto the roof and could not work out what had happened. Then I saw a huge hole in the roof and the metal object,' he told Russian state television.

    Russian communications satellite crashes to Earth after launch

    Blast off: The Russian Soyuz rocket booster lifting off this week to carry three astronauts to the International Space Station. However, the launch today was not successful

    There were no reports of casualties while officials said that radiation was within normal limits.

    The head of the Ordynsk district, Pavel Ivarovksy, told Interfax that the damage was being examined by specialists and the owner of the property would receive compensation.

    The failure of the Soyuz-2.1B rocket to deliver the satellite is a particular worry as it comes from a member of the same family that Russia uses to send multinational manned crews to the International Space Station (ISS).

    An unmanned Progress supply ship bound for the ISS crashed into Siberia in August after its launch by a Soyuz, forcing the temporary grounding of the rockets and as well as a complete overhaul of the station's staffing.

    Russian space agency Roscosmos said the satellite came down due to third stage rocket failure just seven minutes after the launch.

    'This again shows that the (Russian space) industry is in crisis,' admitted Vladimir Popovkin, the head of Roscosmos, in comments broadcast on state television. 'It is deeply unpleasant.'

    Acknowledging that the jobs of the Roscosmos leadership were at risk, he added: 'I think it is possible that the organisational conclusions will be quite severe, right up to including myself.'

    He blamed the crisis in the Russian space industry on the departure of specialists who quit in the 1990s after the collapse of the Soviet Union.

    'The main problem is the loss of the personnel who should have come into the industry. People left but did not come in. We need to find a way out of this situation and we will concentrate on young people.'

    The loss of the Meridian satellite, which can have both military and civilian use, caps a disastrous 12 months for Russia.

    Three Glonass navigation system
    satellites launched in December last year veered off course and crashed
    into the Pacific Ocean, costing Moscow around $160million and setting
    back the program to develop a rival to U.S. GPS.

    It suffered a further blow when the Progress cargo craft taking supplies
    to astronauts aboard the International Space Station broke up in the
    atmosphere in August.

    The most recent calamity in the Russian space programme was the loss of the $165-million Phobos-Grunt probe for Mars's largest moon, which was launched on November 9 but is stuck in orbit.

    Russian officials have warned that Phobos-Grunt is expected to fall back to Earth in January.

    Source: http://www.macsecure.com/russian-communications-satellite-crashes-to-earth-after-launch.html

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    EFF: EFF's @RaineyReitman talks to Bloomberg's @emilychangtv about why #SOPA will hurt jobs and Internet innovation https://t.co/9PduMNhs

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    Source: http://twitter.com/EFF/statuses/150768729762971648

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    Monday, December 26, 2011

    University of Cape Coast awards its retirees

    Cape Coast, Dec, 25, GNA - The University of Cape Coast (UCC) on Wednesday honoured retired workers including 24 junior staff, 17 senior staff, and 12 senior members.

    They were presented with sets of living room furniture and deep freezers for their meritorious service to the University.

    Professor Naana Jane Opoku Agyemang, Vice Chancellor of UCC, said that the awards were to motivate active workers to work harder.

    She commended the retirees for making strides in various fields to lift the image of the university.

    Reverend Professor Emmanuel Adow Obeng, immediate past Vice Chancellor of UCC, on behalf of the retirees, expressed gratitude to the University and staff for the awards.

    He said though most of the retirees joined the UCC when it was not financially sound, they worked hard to sustain the university.

    GNA

    Source: http://www.modernghana.com/news/368968/1/university-of-cape-coast-awards-its-retirees.html

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    Fry Communications adding jobs in 2012 | PennLive.com

    The Mechanicsburg-based printing and digital publishing company plans to add up to 50 jobs to its press and binding operations in 2012.

    The company is bringing back some jobs that had been cut over the past few years, said Michael T. Lukas, CEO of Fry Communications. The company is now seeing additional volume, although Lukas would not provide details.

    Fry Communications added 67 workers throughout 2011. The company employs about 1,000 workers at six locations in the midstate.

    Lukas in June succeeded Henry Fry as company CEO. Fry remains chairman of the company board of directors.

    Source: http://www.pennlive.com/midstate/index.ssf/2011/12/fry_communications_adding_jobs.html

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    Sunday, December 25, 2011

    CEO Facebook v? ng??i t?nh th?m H? Long

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    '; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += '

    '; subMenu += 'Tin ??c nhi?u nh?t'; subMenu += '

    '; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += '' subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; try { if(subMenu !='') { jQuery('#subThoiCuoc').prepend(subMenu); } } catch(Error) { return; } }, 'onError' : function(req){ //alert("Ko load duoc submenu ThoiCuoc"); } } ) } }) /*load ajax subMenu ThuGian*/ $('#thugian').mouseenter(function() { if($('#subThuGian').html() == '') { var sLink =''; var subMenu = ''; sLink='/ListFile/subMenu/subThuGian.xml'; AjaxRequest.get ( { 'url':sLink, 'onSuccess': function(req) { domItem = req.responseXML.getElementsByTagName('ThuGian')[0]; domAnChoi = req.responseXML.getElementsByTagName('AnChoiNew')[0].getElementsByTagName('item'); domMostView = req.responseXML.getElementsByTagName('MostView')[0].getElementsByTagName('item'); subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += '

    '; subMenu += 'Tin ??c nhi?u nh?t'; subMenu += '

    '; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += '' subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; try { if(subMenu !='') { jQuery('#subThuGian').prepend(subMenu); } } catch(Error) { return; } }, 'onError' : function(req){ //alert("Ko load duoc submenu ThuGian"); } } ) } }) /*load ajax subMenu CuoiHoi*/ $('#cuoihoi').mouseenter(function() { if($('#subCuoiHoi').html() == '') { var sLink =''; var subMenu = ''; sLink='/ListFile/subMenu/subCuoihoi.xml'; AjaxRequest.get ( { 'url':sLink, 'onSuccess': function(req) { domItemCoDau = req.responseXML.getElementsByTagName('CoDau')[0].getElementsByTagName('item'); domItemCamNang = req.responseXML.getElementsByTagName('CamNang')[0].getElementsByTagName('item'); domItemAnhCuoi = req.responseXML.getElementsByTagName('AnhCuoi')[0].getElementsByTagName('item'); domItemChiaSe = req.responseXML.getElementsByTagName('ChiaSe')[0].getElementsByTagName('item'); domMostView = req.responseXML.getElementsByTagName('MostView')[0].getElementsByTagName('item'); //console.log(getNodeValue(req.responseXML.getElementsByTagName('CoDau')[0].getElementsByTagName('item')[0].getElementsByTagName('L'))); subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += '

    '; subMenu += 'Tin ??c nhi?u nh?t'; subMenu += '

    '; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += '' subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; //console.log(getNodeValue(domMostView[0].getElementsByTagName('L'))); try { if(subMenu !='') { jQuery('#subCuoiHoi').prepend(subMenu); } } catch(Error) { return; } }, 'onError' : function(req){ //alert("Ko load duoc submenu CuoiHoi"); } } ) } }) /*load ajax subMenu GocDocGia*/ $('#gocdocgia').mouseenter(function() { if($('#subGocDocGia').html() == '') { var sLink =''; var subMenu = ''; sLink='/ListFile/subMenu/subGocDocGia.xml'; AjaxRequest.get ( { 'url':sLink, 'onSuccess': function(req) { domItemThiAnh = req.responseXML.getElementsByTagName('ThiAnh')[0].getElementsByTagName('item'); domItemBlog = req.responseXML.getElementsByTagName('ChoiBlog')[0].getElementsByTagName('item'); domMostView = req.responseXML.getElementsByTagName('MostView')[0].getElementsByTagName('item'); //console.log(getNodeValue(req.responseXML.getElementsByTagName('CoDau')[0].getElementsByTagName('item')[0].getElementsByTagName('L'))); subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += '

    '; subMenu += 'Tin ??c nhi?u nh?t'; subMenu += '

    '; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += '' subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; //console.log(getNodeValue(domMostView[0].getElementsByTagName('L'))); try { if(subMenu !='') { jQuery('#subGocDocGia').prepend(subMenu); } } catch(Error) { return; } }, 'onError' : function(req){ //alert("Ko load duoc submenu GocDocGia"); } } ) } }) /*load ajax subMenu PhongCach*/ $('#phongcach').mouseenter(function() { if($('#subFongCach').html() == '') { var sLink =''; var subMenu = ''; sLink='/ListFile/subMenu/subPhongCach.xml'; AjaxRequest.get ( { 'url':sLink, 'onSuccess': function(req) { domItem = req.responseXML.getElementsByTagName('PhongCach')[0]; domTracNghiem = req.responseXML.getElementsByTagName('TracNghiem')[0].getElementsByTagName('item'); domMostView = req.responseXML.getElementsByTagName('MostView')[0].getElementsByTagName('item'); subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += '

    '; subMenu += 'Tin ??c nhi?u nh?t'; subMenu += '

    '; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; subMenu += '' subMenu += ''; subMenu += ''; //alert(getNodeValue(req.responseXML.getElementsByTagName('dropEx')[0].getElementsByTagName('L'))); //console.log(getNodeValue(req.responseXML.getElementsByTagName('ulMostView')[0].getElementsByTagName('li')[0].getElementsByTagName('L'))); try { if(subMenu !='') { jQuery('#subFongCach').prepend(subMenu); } } catch(Error) { return; } }, 'onError' : function(req){ //alert("Ko load duoc submenu PhongCach"); } } ) } }) $('#cuoihoi, #gocdocgia, #thugian, #phongcach, #thoicuoc, #thethao, #hautruong').mouseleave(function(){ $("#loadsubmenu").hide(); $(this).find("a:first-child").removeClass("menuhover"); if (badBrowser) $(".dropMenu").hide(); else $(".dropMenu").fadeOut($duration); }); });

    > ?ng ch? Facebook ??n Vi?t Nam
    > Ng??i t?nh c?a ?ng ch? Facebook b? ch? x?u

    Chuy?n bay xu?t ph?t t? s?n bay Gia L?m (H? N?i) l?c 10h s?ng v? ??p xu?ng khu v?c ph? B?i Ch?y (Qu?ng Ninh). Hi?n ch?a x?c ??nh Mark Zuckerberg v? b?n g?i s? ??n Gi?ng sinh ? H? Long hay ?i n?i kh?c.

    C? quan cung c?p d?ch v? bay cho bi?t, theo h?p ??ng v?i nh?m kh?ch VIP n?y, kh?ch h?ng c? th? t? li?n l?c v?i c? tr??ng ?? tr? l?i H? N?i trong ng?y ho?c c? th? sang h?m sau.

    Th?ng th??ng m?t chuy?n tr?c th?ng ch? ???c 24 kh?ch, t? H? N?i ??n H? Long m?t 50 ph?t, bay v?ng quanh di s?n thi?n nhi?n th? gi?i ch?ng 5 ph?t. Theo g?i d?ch v? n?y, m?y bay s? ch? kh?ch tham quan trong kho?ng 3-4 gi?. Chi ph? thu? m?t chuy?n kh? h?i h?n 6.400 USD.

    C?p ??i Mark Zuckerberg v? Priscilla Chan. ?nh: zimbio.com

    Tr??c ?? Mark Zuckerberg v? b?n g?i ng??i Trung Qu?c ?? ?i chuy?n c? t?i N?i B?i, H? N?i v?o l?c 14h30 ng?y 22/12 v? ? kh?ch s?n 5 sao Sofitel Metropole. C?p ??i n?y ?? v?o th?m c?a h?ng ?i?n tho?i ? kh?ch s?n. Tuy nhi?n, v? s? c?a h? t? ch?i cho ng??i h?m m? ch?p ?nh.

    Zuckerberg ???c c?p visa v?o ng?y 16/12 v?i th?i h?n 2 tu?n. ?ng Hu?nh Kim T??c, ??i di?n Facebook Vi?t Nam, cho bi?t chuy?n ?i c?a CEO n?y kh?ng ???c th?ng b?o tr??c. Anh ?i du l?ch n?n bay t? M? qua Th?i Lan, r?i t?i Vi?t Nam. C? th? anh c?ng b?t ch??c nh? Jolie ?i ngh? ng?i ? C?n ??o.

    T? ph? tr? n?y ???c Time b?nh ch?n l? Nh?n v?t c?a n?m 2010. Khi 19 tu?i, m?i l? sinh vi?n n?m th? hai ? tr??ng Harvard, anh c?ng b?n h?c Dustin Moskovitz v? Chris Hughes b?t ??u m? trang web ngay t?i k? t?c x? c? t?n Thefacebook.com v? gi? n? ?? l? m?t ?? ch? v?i g?n m?t t? ng??i d?ng Internet.

    Ph??ng Linh

    Source: http://ngoisao.net/tin-tuc/24h/2011/12/ceo-facebook-va-nguoi-tinh-tham-ha-long-186673/

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    Penn engineers develop more effective MRI contrast agent for cancer detection

    Abstract:
    Many imaging technologies and their contrast agents ? chemicals used during scans to help detect tumors and other problems ? involve exposure to radiation or heavy metals, which present potential health risks to patients and limit the ways they can be applied. In an effort to mitigate these drawbacks, new research from University of Pennsylvania engineers shows a way to coat an iron-based contrast agent so that it only interacts with the acidic environment of tumors, making it safer, cheaper and more effective than existing alternatives.

    Philadelphia, PA | Posted on December 22nd, 2011

    The research was conducted by associate professor Andrew Tsourkas and graduate student Samuel H. Crayton of the department of bioengineering in Penn's School of Engineering and Applied Science. It was published in the journal ACS Nano.

    Magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI, is an increasingly common feature of medical care. Using a strong magnetic field to detect and influence the alignment of water molecules in the body, MRI can quickly produce pictures of wide range of bodily tissues, though the clarity of these pictures is sometimes insufficient for diagnoses. To improve the differentiation ? or contrast ? between tumors and healthy tissue, doctors can apply a contrast agent, such as nanoparticles containing iron oxide. The iron oxide can improve MRI images due to their ability to distort the magnetic field of the scanner; areas they are concentrated in stand out more clearly.

    These nanoparticles, which have recently been approved in the United States for clinical use as contrast agents, are literally sugar-coated; an outer layer of dextran keeps the particles from binding or being absorbed by the body and potentially sickening the patient. This non-reactive coating allows the iron oxide to be flushed out after the imaging is complete, but it also means that the particles can't be targeted to a particular kind of tissue.

    If the contrast agent could be engineered so it only sticks to tissue that is already diseased, such as tumors, it would solve both problems at once. Scientists have tried this approach by coating nanoparticles with proteins that bind only to receptors found on the exterior of tumors, but not all tumors are the same in this regard.

    "One of the limitations of a receptor-based approach is that you just don't hit everything," Tsourkas said. "It's hard to recommend them as a screening tool when you know that the target receptors are only expressed in 30% of tumors."

    "One of the reasons we like our approach is that it hits a lot of tumors; almost all tumors exhibit a change in the acidity of their microenvironment."

    The Penn engineers took advantage of something known as the Warburg effect, a quirk of tumor metabolism, to get around the targeting problem. Most of the body's cells are aerobic; they primarily get their energy from oxygen. However, even when oxygen is plentiful, cancerous cells use an anaerobic process for their energy. Like overtaxed muscles, they turn glucose into lactic acid, but unlike normal muscles, tumors disrupt the blood flow around them and have a hard time clearing this acid away. This means that tumors almost always have a lower pH than surrounding healthy tissue.

    Some imaging technologies, such as magnetic resonance spectroscopy, can also take advantage of tumors' low-pH microenvironments, but they require expensive specialized equipment that is not available in most clinical settings.

    By using glycol chitosan ? a sugar-based polymer that reacts to acids ? the engineers allowed the nanocarriers to remain neutral when near healthy tissue, but to become ionized in low pH. The change in charge that occurs in the vicinity of acidic tumors causes the nanocarriers to be attracted to and retained at those sites.

    This approach has another benefit: the more malignant a tumor is, the more it disrupts surrounding blood vessels and the more acidic its environment becomes. This means that the glycol chitosan-coated is a good detector of malignancy, opening up treatment options above and beyond diagnosis.

    "You can take any nanoparticle and put this coating on it, so it's not limited to imaging by any means," said Tsourkas. "You could also use it to deliver drugs to tumor sites."

    The researchers hope that, within seven to 10 years, glycol-chitosan-coated iron oxide nanoparticles could improve the specificity of diagnostic screening. The ability to accurately detect sites of malignancy by MRI would be an immediate improvement to existing contrast agents for certain breast cancer scans.

    "Gadolinium is used as a contrast agent in MRI breast cancer screenings for high-risk patients. These patients are recommended to get an MRI in addition to the usual mammogram, because the sensitivity of mammograms can be poor," said Tsourkas. "The sensitivity of an MRI is much higher, but the specificity is low: the screening detects a lot of tumors, but many of them are benign. Having a tool like ours would allow clinicians to better differentiate the benign and malignant tumors, especially since there has been shown to be a correlation between malignancy and pH."

    The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health and the Department of Defense Breast Cancer Research Program.

    ####

    For more information, please click here

    Contacts:
    Evan Lerner
    215-573-6604

    Copyright ? University of Pennsylvania

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    Wahoo Fitness' iPhone 4S-compatible Blue HR heart rate monitor ships in January for $80

    Remember that Wahoo Fitness Bluetooth 4.0 heart rate monitor we showed you last month? Here she is again. The company's proper unveiling of the device will come at CES 2012, linking up exclusively (at first, anyway) with the iPhone 4S and other Bluetooth Smart Ready devices. By tapping into the Blue HR and harnessing your fitness app of choice (a nice touch, we must say), you'll have access to heart rate data, music playlists, phone, maps, etc., all in one place. It'll start shipping in January for $79.99, and we're told that the product will launch with "full support of several of Wahoo Fitness' app partners, who have been working with Wahoo's Open API to support the Blue HR." A few compatible apps have already filtered into the App Store, including MapMyFitness, RunKeeper, 321Run, Runmeter, and MotionX, and the company's expecting even more in 2012. Full PR is after the break, no galloping required.

    Continue reading Wahoo Fitness' iPhone 4S-compatible Blue HR heart rate monitor ships in January for $80

    Wahoo Fitness' iPhone 4S-compatible Blue HR heart rate monitor ships in January for $80 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 22 Dec 2011 19:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink   |  sourceWahoo Fitness  | Email this | Comments


    Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/b6sx6vaheBw/

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