Sunday, May 12, 2013

Cate Blanchett: Suncorp Twenties Launch

Just Jared:

Cate Blanchett poses for a photograph during the launch of Suncorp Twenties held at the Sydney Theatre Company on Friday (May 10) in Sydney, Australia.

The 43-year-old actress was joined by her hubby Andrew Upton and Geoff Summerhayes, CEO of Suncorp Life, as they announced the new theatre ticketing initiative.

Read the whole story at Just Jared

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/11/cate-blanchett-suncorp-twenties_n_3259579.html

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Jennifer Aniston Shows Off Her Huge Engagement Ring!

The actress displays her amazing diamond! Plus, check out more pics of your favorite stars on the scene!

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/star-snapshots-celebrity-photo-gallery-2012/1-b-450006?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Astar-snapshots-celebrity-photo-gallery-2012-450006

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Saturday, May 11, 2013

Lawsuit says Thermo Fisher deliberately concealed information: WSJ

(Reuters) - A lawsuit filed on Friday alleged that laboratory equipment maker Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc sold a Mexican plant last year without revealing that a drug cartel was operating there, the Wall Street Journal reported.

The Reynosa, Mexico-based manufacturing facility, part of a larger deal between Opengate Capital Group LLC and Thermo Fisher, was occupied by gangsters from the Gulf Cartel, the Journal reported Saturday.

The private equity firm filed the lawsuit in federal court in Los Angeles.

The report said the lawsuit alleged that Thermo Fisher acted in bad faith by withholding documents and directing employees to conceal the drug gang's presence at the facility.

Opengate alleged gangsters brandished weapons at employees and parked their cars and "tractor-trailers filled with unknown cargo" at the facility, the newspaper reported.

The firm did not specify damages sought, it said.

The suit said that the company rushed the negotiations and provided misleading answers to due-diligence inquiries, the newspaper reported. (http://r.reuters.com/byj97t)

Thermo Fisher, the world's largest maker of laboratory equipment and scientific instruments, agreed to acquire Life Technologies Inc in mid-April for more than $13 billion.

Thermo Fisher was not immediately available for comment outside normal U.S. business hours.

The company's shares closed at $84.46 on Friday on the Nasdaq.

(Reporting by Pallavi Ail in Bangalore, Editing by Doina Chiacu)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lawsuit-says-thermo-fisher-deliberately-concealed-information-wsj-021938158.html

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iPad Mini Sales Spat Puts Focus on Apple Suppliers: Apple is famous for keeping its supply chain partners under strict gag orders. So when the CEO of an iPad Mini manufacturer reportedly blamed his declining revenue on that device's slowing sales, ears per

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Fair/Not Fair: Trade iTunes for Windows 8 in exchange for Office on iOS. Vote for the results in the left column below or go straight to the results here.

Friday Highlights: Negotiations with Sony Music over royalties apparently the problem stalling Apple's launch of iRadio streaming service; Sterling Wong at Minyanville is of the belief that "Apple's next trump card is mobile payments" not an Apple TV, or an iWatch; and Megan Willett at Business Insider calls for Apple to abandon the rumored iWatch for the simple reason that "the classic wristwatch will never die"; Bloomberg reporter called on the carpet for putting words in Pegatron CEO's mouth that Apple's iPad mini sales declining; Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster believes Apple will face lower profit margins by introducing a cheaper iPhone, but stresses word of 30% decline is overblown; Mark Hibben argues that Apple has huge opportunity in 4K TV akin to the successful iPod in which the combo of hardware/software/services made the iPod a success; Microsoft apparently urging Apple to make a compatible version of iTunes for Windows 8, but Jonny Evans suggests a trade: iTunes 8 for Office on iOS; Macworld has suggestions for when OS X's TextEdit app refuses to save your work; Pixelmator 2.2 is a Photoshop replacement, reviews Dennis Sellers; Mactuts+ shows how to create an AppleScript which lets you "switch between multiple iTunes accounts"; IT.Enquirer reviews Pacifist, an app which lets you drill into and extract file info; do you Automator? Macworld thinks you should know at least 5 workflows; Strategy Analytics releases stats that Apple leads the party in Tablet apps processor revenue, shares lead on the smartphone side with Samsung and Qualcomm; meanwhile, ZDNet says Android "crushing Apple and Microsoft in the mobile device market" to the tune of 59.5% of shipments compared to a paltry 19.3% from Apple; law enforcement has apparently deluged Apple with requests to decrypt iPhones, which Apple will do, but the waiting list is long; so the story goes like this: a 14 year old girl "discovered" Apple's smart covers can interfere with defibrillators, but the problem is, Apple already stated the fact; Macworld puts RAM upgrades to the test to show you "ramifications", meaning should you upgrade, or not?; Bare Feats tests out new GPUs on Mac Pros; Terry White reviews Belkin's Thunderbolt Express Dock; Tim Bajarin breaks down the real threat Samsung poses to Apple.

Today's MU PROMO offers 35% savings on Scrabble 1.0. "Scrabble for Mac brings the timeless crossword game to your desktop. Grab your tiles, find a spot on the board, and start making words. Play solo, with friends, or against the computer. Scrabble for Mac is a classic word-making challenge for players of all ages."

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Fri May 10
"iPad Mini Sales Spat Puts Focus on Apple Suppliers: Apple is famous for keeping its supply chain partners under strict gag orders. So when the CEO of an iPad Mini manufacturer reportedly blamed his declining revenue on that device's slowing sales, ears perked up all over Wall Street. The CEO denied mentioning any specific product, however, and industry watchers point to other factors that could impact Apple's sales." MacNewsWorld 8:06 AM
News
  • "No iTunes for Microsoft Windows 8 devices anytime soon: A Microsoft executive said in an interview with CNN Money that even though Microsoft would like to support an iTunes app for Windows 8, it's unlikely Apple will allow it anytime soon."?CNET News?8:29 AM
  • "Why no iTunes for Windows 8 shouldn't surprise you: Microsoft says Apple's showing no signs of wanting to bring its popular jukebox software to Windows 8, but this was obvious."?CNET News?2:06 PM
  • "Microsoft wants iTunes as a Windows 8 app, of course, but says Apple's not so keen"?iMore?8:07 AM
  • "Microsoft's Pleas for Windows 8 Version of iTunes Fall on Deaf Ears"?Mac|Life?8:01 AM
  • "Apple seeds sixth beta build of OS X 10.8.4 to developers"?Macworld UK?8:09 AM
AppleCare/Troubleshooting
  • "Bugs & Fixes: When TextEdit won't save"?Macworld?9:41 AM
Reviews/How-To/Tips
  • "Creating an AppleScript to Switch Between Multiple iTunes Accounts"?Mactuts+?8:05 AM
  • "Pacifist, file extraction and system forensics tool"?IT.Enquirer?7:30 AM
  • "Mac Gems: GIF Brewery makes it easy to create animated GIFs"?Macworld?9:11 AM
  • "5 Automator workflows everyone should have"?Macworld?8:07 AM
  • "Mastering Notification Center: Dump It Entirely From Your Mac [OS X Tips]?Cult of Mac?8:09 AM
  • "3 Mac Tips To Save You Time & Lower Your Blood Pressure"?The Mac Observer?2:10 PM
  • "AppleScript to open new Finder window in same folder as frontmost window"?Mac OS X Hints?9:42 AM
  • "What Do You Get When You Blend A Little Of Photoshop With Illustrator? An Affordable Acorn"?NoodleMac?7:36 AM
  • "Rent The New Photoshop By The Month? Or, Buy A Photoshop Wannabe And Save Hundreds Of Dollars"?Mac 360?7:32 AM
  • "Try The Simple App That Makes Your Mac Work Better And Faster"?TeraTalks?7:36 AM
  • "The Best Mac Personal Information Manager Just Got Better (but is still missing one thing)"?Mac 360?7:36 AM
  • "Wordify Is The Magic Typographic App That Turns Photos Into Artistic Images Of Art"?McSolo?7:31 AM
  • "How To Do To Microsoft What Microsoft Did To You (think Office for free)"?BohemianBoomer?7:31 AM
Op/Ed
  • "Apple should learn from Microsoft's broken Windows: With its latest features, the Mac is starting to resemble a souped-up iPad."?Financial Times [Paid Membership Required]?2:58 PM
Press Releases
  • "Pixelmator 2.2 Major Upgrade Available from the Mac App Store"?MacPrices?1:41 PM
  • "CS Odessa Adds New Business Process Section To ConceptDraw Solution Park"?prMac?7:40 AM
  • "iFunia Updates DVD Creator 3.0.0 for Mac"?prMac?7:40 AM
  • "Strategy Analytics: Tablet Apps Processor Revenue Jumped 83 Percent in 2012/Apple Maintains Lead"?PRNewswire?8:13 AM
  • "Strategy Analytics: Smartphone Apps Processor Revenue Soared 60 Percent in 2012/Apple, Qualcomm and Samsung Dominated"?PRNewswire?8:13 AM
  • "Google's Android on 59.5% of all 'smart mobile devices' shipped in Q1, Apple at 19.3%"?AppleInsider?8:04 AM
  • "Apple reclaims top 5 ranking in China's smartphone market"?ZDNet?7:52 AM
  • "Apple supplier hiring 40,000 'to build new iPhone': Pegatron, an Apple supplier, has said it will boost its 100,000 workforce by 40 per cent later this year, sparking speculation it is preparing to build the next iPhone"?Telegraph?7:53 AM
  • "Messaging App Line's Virtual Currency For Sticker Gifting Falls Foul Of Apple's App Store Rules"?TechCrunch?7:53 AM
  • "A month after booting AppGratis, Apple approves AppCurious ? a new take on app discovery"?VentureBeat?1:41 PM
  • "Apple's iPhone Security Measures Prompt Queue Of Unlock Requests From Law Enforcement"?TechCrunch?8:17 AM
  • "Need Apple's Decryption Expertise? Get In Line"?PC Magazine?2:45 PM
  • "Apple will reportedly unlock your iPhone for police, but there's a wait list"?Ars Technica?11:40 AM
  • "iOS 7 sees usage in San Francisco and Cupertino despite not existing"?Stabley Times?7:36 AM
  • "AT&T's new Aio Wireless offers iPhone 5 with unlimited data ? for $649"?Stabley Times?7:30 AM
  • "PayPal Says It's Time to Ditch Passwords and PINs, and Apple may lead the way with iPhone 6"?CIO?7:46 AM
  • "Apple's two-step verification for Apple IDs rolling out to Canada and additional countries"?9 to 5 Mac?9:00 AM
  • "New bill introduced that legalizes cellphone unlocking and more"?iDownload Blog?8:00 AM
  • "Apple iPads could be bad for your heart"?TG Daily?7:45 AM
  • "Your iPad Smart Cover Could Switch Off a Pacemaker"?Gizmodo?7:43 AM
  • "Magnets are bad for some heart devices, and that includes those on the iPad"?iMore?8:07 AM
  • "Apple I to be sold in auction of historic computers"?ZDNet?7:52 AM
  • "Not now, Apple: We've got the Pi-Phone, the smallest mobe network"?The Register?7:51 AM
Non-Apple News
  • "Heads up: CIOs are growing attached to Google Glass"?InfoWorld?9:08 AM
Publications/Podcasts
  • "The GigaOM Show: LinkedIn leans into news, Apple's dumb phone, YouTube Subscriptions"?GigaOM?8:06 AM

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  • "Carl Icahn Puts His Winning Streak Up Against Michael Dell"?Forbes?11:08 AM
  • "What Icahn Sees In Dell"?Forbes?11:08 AM
  • "Icahn and Southeastern try to hamstring Mike Dell's buyout bid: 'It Is Not Too Late To Do The Right Thing, Dell Board'"?The Register?11:16 AM
  • "Battle For Dell Intensifies As Icahn, Southeastern Make Rival Offer"?Forbes?8:30 AM
  • "Icahn, Southeastern's Letter to Dell"?WSJ Blogs?9:30 AM
  • "Icahn, Southeastern, Shift Dell Takeover Goal Posts"?TheStreet?8:55 AM
  • "Icahn, Southeastern propose alternative to Dell buyout"?Reuters?8:51 AM
  • "Reports: Icahn, Southeastern make alternative bid for Dell"?InfoWorld?8:32 AM
  • "Icahn Offer for Dell Increases Investor Risk"?24/7 Wall St.?8:26 AM
  • "Icahn With Southeastern Challenges Silver Lake's Dell Bid"?Bloomberg?9:35 AM
  • "Michael Dell deal faces further obstacles"?TG Daily?11:14 AM
  • "Dell rises slightly on Icahn, Southeastern bid: Group threatens proxy battle if Dell board rejects alternative proposal"?MarketWatch?9:30 AM
  • "HP Hit By Fresh Lawsuit Over Troubled Autonomy Deal"?TechWeekEurope?9:17 AM
  • "HP chief: Cyber security pandemic will only get worse"?V3?9:17 AM
  • "Barnes & Noble in talks with Microsoft to sell Nook unit"?Bloomberg?9:21 AM
  • "Book News: Microsoft Rumored To Be Interested In Buying Nook"?NPR?9:06 AM
  • "Microsoft Bidding for Barnes and Noble's Nook?"?ABCNews?9:05 AM
  • "Microsoft, surrounded, wants Nook for the content"?CBS News?9:07 AM
  • "Windows 8 Now Installed on 5% of Computers Worldwide"?Softpedia?9:05 AM
  • "No iTunes for Windows 8 devices anytime soon"?CNET News?9:02 AM
  • "The Windows 'Blue' burden: Saving the PC itself"?InfoWorld?8:32 AM
  • "Don't believe the myths about Windows 8.1 'Blue'"?InfoWorld?11:11 AM
  • "Windows 8: forget 100m licences 'sold', here's how many PCs are running it/Microsoft's announcement that 100m Windows 8 licences have been 'sold' disguises how many PCs are actually running it. The answer: a lot less than that suggests"?The Guardian?8:42 AM
  • "Windows 8.1 / Blue Developer Preview Build 9391 Out for Testing ? Rumor"?Softpedia?9:03 AM
  • "Microsoft issues emergency 'fix-it' for browser flaw"?FOXNews?9:05 AM
  • "Microsoft details Patch Tuesday Internet Explorer fixes"?IT PRO?9:03 AM
  • "It's Larry's world, we only live in it"?GigaOM?11:09 AM
  • "Intel Vs. Intel: Its Atom CPUs Get Better... And Threaten Its Cash Cow"?ReadWrite?9:19 AM
  • "Intel CEO's legacy: PC glory, smartphone grief"?PCWorld?8:35 AM
  • "Israelis want Stephen Hawking to boycott Intel"?The Inquirer?8:38 AM
  • "Intel's New Atom Represents 'Thermonuclear War' On Samsung"?Seeking Alpha?8:48 AM
? ?

Source: http://www.macsurfer.com/redirr.php?u=782063

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Ottawa eliminated Montreal in 5 games

MONTREAL (AP) ? Craig Anderson made 33 saves and Cory Conacher scored twice on a shaky Peter Budaj as the Ottawa Senators advanced to the second round of the playoffs Thursday night with a 6-1 rout of the Montreal Canadiens.

Ottawa took the best-of-seven series 4-1 and put a punctuation mark on its dominance in moving on for the first time since 2007, when the Senators lost in the Stanley Cup finals to the Anaheim Ducks.

The victory gives Ottawa time to rest up and heal bruises from the physical series before the conference semifinals begin next week.

Zack Smith, Kyle Turris, Daniel Alfredsson and Erik Condra also scored for Ottawa, underdogs as the seventh seed in the East, but bolstered down the stretch by the return of top players on defense Erik Karlsson and Jared Cowan.

P.K. Subban scored for injury-struck Montreal, which failed to solve Anderson. The Canadiens scored only nine goals in the series, while their own spotty goaltending allowed 20.

Budaj made 23 saves in place of the injured Carey Price.

Desperate to stay alive, Montreal came out quickly and Anderson robbed Rene Bourque with the glove on a one-timer in the opening moments.

At the other end, Budaj was on the hot seat and the nerves showed early as the Senators scored on their third shot. A generous rebound was left in front for Smith to backhand into an open net only 2:17 in.

Another puck slipped behind Budaj off a post and Conacher was there to tap it in 10 minutes later.

Montreal got one back on its first power play with 15 seconds to go in the period. Subban sent a low point shot to the far corner.

The Bell Centre crowd booed as Turris gave Ottawa a 3-1 lead with a short-handed score midway in the second period. The Senators center was pushed into Budaj by Tomas Plekanec and was on his hands and knees in the crease when Condra's shot went in off Turris' arm. The goal was confirmed by video review.

It was eerily quiet at the 21,273-seat rink as the Senators scored on three straight power-play chances. Alfredsson wristed a shot in, Conacher beat Budaj from the left side, and Condra poked in a loose puck in the crease at 16:12.

Montreal's season was over.

The Canadiens had five players injured in the series, including Price and forwards Brian Gionta, Lars Eller, Brandon Prust and Ryan White.

NOTES: Montreal finished last in the conference last season and rose to second in the lockout-shortened 2013 campaign. But it went into a funk late in the regular season and never recovered. ... Michael Blunden made his playoff debut for Montreal, while Budaj got his first career postseason start. ... Robert Mayer backed up Budaj ... Ottawa had no line-up changes from Game 4.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ottawa-eliminated-montreal-5-games-015837694.html

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Friday, May 10, 2013

Thomas Bach announces IOC presidential candidacy

FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) ? Thomas Bach became the first member to declare as a candidate for IOC president on Thursday, saying his long experience in the Olympic movement makes him "well prepared" for one of the most powerful jobs in sports.

Bach, an IOC vice president, is considered the front-runner in the race to succeed Jacques Rogge, who steps down in September after 12 years as leader of the International Olympic Committee.

The 59-year-old German lawyer, a 1976 Olympic gold medalist in fencing, said he notified Rogge and fellow IOC members of his intention to run on Wednesday. He said he will formally submit his candidacy in June under the motto "Unity in Diversity."

Bach, who had been widely expected to run for president, is seen as the favorite among a possible half dozen candidates.

"I am humbly aware of the magnitude of the task of an IOC president," Bach said at a news conference. "At the same time, in honorary positions and throughout my professional career, I have gained a wealth of management and leadership experience in national and international sports, economics, politics, law and society.

"This is why I feel well prepared."

The German has served on the policy-making IOC executive board as a regular member or vice president since 1996. As chairman of the IOC juridical commission, Bach leads most of the investigations into doping cases. He also heads the German Olympic Sports Confederation.

Bach said he will officially enter as a candidate by the June 10 deadline, exactly three months before the Sept. 10 election in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

An unofficial election campaign has been going on for months, with Bach and other prospective candidates traveling the world to attend various Olympic gatherings to talk to members.

Singapore's Ng Ser Miang, another IOC vice president, is expected to announce his candidacy soon. Richard Carrion, a former executive board member from Puerto Rico, is another likely leading contender.

Ng led the organizing committee for the inaugural Youth Olympics in Singapore in 2010. Carrion heads the IOC's finance and audit commissions and led negotiations that secured a record $4.38 billion deal with NBC for U.S. TV rights through 2020.

Other likely contenders include Sergei Bubka of Ukraine, the former pole vault champion who still holds the world record in the event, and C.K. Wu of Taiwan, head of the international amateur boxing federation.

Two Swiss members, Rene Fasel and Denis Oswald, have been weighing their options. Fasel is president of the International Ice Hockey Federation. Oswald is the former longtime head of the Association of Summer Olympic International Federations. It's unlikely both will run.

Nawal El Moutawakel, the Moroccan who won a gold medal in the women's 400-meter hurdles at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics, has also considered a possible run but members say they do not expect her to be a candidate.

___

AP Sports Writer Stephen Wilson in London contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/thomas-bach-announces-ioc-presidential-candidacy-103331760.html

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Alternative Comics catalog debuts on comiXology - Robot 6 - Comic ...

by Michael May | May 8, 2013 @ 12:00 PM | No Comments |

Alternative Comics banner

When comics entrepreneur Marc Arsenault announced almost a year ago that he had bought defunct Alternative Comics in order to relaunch the publisher, a lot of fans (me included) were thrilled. Under founder Jeff Mason, Alternative introduced readers to creators like Graham Annable, Brandon Graham, James Kochalka, Ed Brubaker, Scott Campbell (of Great Movie Showdowns fame), Dean Haspiel and Josh Neufeld.?So with Alternative and comiXology announcing today that the publisher?s catalog is becoming available digitally on the app, I was eager to talk to Arsenault about their plans.

Michael May: For those who don?t know you, what?s your background in comics?

Marc Arsenault: Wow. Where to begin? I?ve been a pretty behind-the-scenes guy for most of my time in comics, but this year I?ve hit the quarter century mark for working in them.

I figured out that I wanted to make comics somewhere around eighth grade when I discovered RAW, Warrior and Heavy Metal. When I found out about the comics program at the School of Visual Arts (SVA) my path was clear. I didn?t even apply to any other schools. I got to study with Harvey Kurtzman, Will Eisner, Joe Orlando, David Sandlin, Jerry Moriarity, Marshall Arisman and the very influential Jack Potter.

That experience was very relevant to Alternative Comics? past and present because it was there that I met Sam Henderson and Tom Hart. I shared a studio space with Tom, and he and Sam had started an off-campus comics anthology called Tuna Casserole. By the fifth issue I became co-editor and we founded the first incarnation of my company Wow Cool. I ended up becoming an illustrator instead of a cartoonist, and did that freelance on and off up until about a decade ago.

Alternative ComicsI went on to work as assistant art director for Mark Martin at Kevin Eastman?s Tundra Publishing. The highlights of that for me were probably getting to design all the odd bits in the last couple of Taboos ? including working with Neil Gaiman and Michael Zulli on the various Sweeney Todd materials ? and editing and designing the Michael Kaluta Sketchbook. That book was eventually nominated for an Eisner. We lost to Scott McCloud?s Understanding Comics ? so, no shame there. I shared a studio with Al Columbia for a while in Northampton and was actually the model for one of the characters in Big Numbers. People have finally chilled out on asking about that whole story, and mostly go on repeating the same incorrect information.

That?s when Ed Brubaker enters the story. I don?t actually remember how I met Ed. We were at Comic-Con ?92 and I was talking to him about how I was getting restless at Tundra (and could see the writing on the walls ? oh, and on a secret memo I accidentally found), and he introduced me to Josh Petrin, who he had recently edited the anthology Monkeywrench with.

Josh was the ?zine and small press buyer for the San Francisco Bay Area?s Comic Relief (back when there were two stores). We hatched the plan for the first incarnation of Wow Cool as a proper business. We did mail order of comics and music (which Wow Cool has done from day one to the present), expanded the publishing, and started a distribution business that was pretty successful for a couple of years ? bringing small-press comics and ?zines to cafes, alternative book stores, records stores and a few comic shops. We ended up getting a lot of attention from mainstream media (CNN, New York Times ?) as part of the ?zine explosion. One of the titles we published was the very first issue of Jon Lewis? True Swamp. We also reprinted all of Scott McCloud?s minicomics, as well as new or reprint editions of ones by Dennis Worden, Wayno, Jim Woodring, Jason Lutes and Adrian Tomine, and we also published or kept in print many of the big ?zines from that time, including Cometbus, Dishwasher, Scam and Absolutely Zippo.

MagicWhistle13Around the end of 1995 we closed down the wholesale end of things and Josh left the company. Wow Cool was pretty far from supporting me so I started looking around for something else. I asked Kim Thompson if Fantagraphics needed anyone and he said yes. I spent the next year and a half as their art director during a pretty heavy-duty upgrade phase and continued as a designer and editor for them for several more years after that. My big jobs while there were designing Zero Zero (the fun part), massively revamping the mail-order catalog to fit twice the product into not too many more pages (the pain in the ass part), and co-editing and designing Robert Williams? Malicious Resplendence (the Eisner Award-nominated bit). I was also the editor of the Vaughn Bod? library for a long time.

After doing the big fancy coffee-table book thing I felt like there was not much room to move in comics without more resources, so I moved onto working in advertising, PR and marketing for plastics and martial arts companies for the next decade ? and basically advanced myself out of employability again. I just could not see starting my own agency or going back to working for someone else, and eventually stumbled back into comics.

How did you get involved with Alternative and re-launching the company?

In 2011 I became Sam Henderson?s distributor on his comeback book Free Ice Cream (some three years after Magic Whistle #11) and we were starting to work on plans for what format would be best for future books. I had re-launched Wow Cool as a much larger mail-order operation than it had ever been before and was looking at my publishing and distributing options.

SceneButNotHeard

A couple of projects and plans had not worked out and I was really starting to wonder if this was a good direction. I think we had reached the point where I knew that I would be publishing Magic Whistle #12 and wanted to get some stock of the back issues. So, I asked Sam about that and, naturally, he said I should just talk to Jeff Mason. After some back and forth with Jeff and a serious, hard look at his back catalog, I offered to take things over.

As you can see above I have some history with many of the artists that Jeff went on to publish after they were involved with Wow Cool and related projects like Monkeywrench. The large number of Brooklyn-based and Meatha?s/SVA people also seemed to make for some sort of continuity, even though I knew relatively few of those artists at that time. The closure of Highwater/Bodega and Beunaventura had also left a big hole in the indie comics publishing world that I was looking to help fill. The explosion of micro-publishers like Hic & Hoc, Studygroup, Revival House, Retrofit and Space Face and the various retailer/publisher operations like Floating World, Desert Island, Secret Headquarters and recently Bergen Street filled some of that gap and many of the artists landed at or bounced around with other publishers. The timing worked out perfectly for Sam Henderson and Karl Stevens in particular.

Is Jeff still involved with Alternative in any way?

Jeff?s main role is to ?Like? what I?ve been doing on our Facebook page. We are still technically in a transition phase, as all the materials that are in Gainesville have yet to be moved to California, and we haven?t signed everything over. Tom Hart has been serving as the liaison on much of this ? or ?chieftain,? as he prefers to be referred to. Basically he answers some of the stranger questions that come up. Jeff has his own thing going on now as a defender of peoples? rights as an attorney and general stand-up good guy doing things like poll-monitoring.

FailureAlternative officially re-opened its doors last year. What?s been happening since then?

The first couple of books Alternative relaunched with had started out as Wow Cool projects that had already been under way when the move became official. I talked Ted May into doubling the print run on Injury #4 (which was recently nominated for an Eisner Award) so that Alternative could distribute it to the direct market, and we published Magic Whistle #12.

By August or so of last year I knew what most of 2013?s books would be, but getting them sufficiently developed to the point where we could safely announce a full publishing schedule took much longer than anticipated. We also had some delays in September when my wife was in a very bad car crash and I messed up my arm in a pallet jack accident moving some Alternative books. She?s OK now, but honestly I?m not sure when my right arm will ever be 100 percent again. Otherwise, there have been a lot of things to work out with our distributors ? Diamond and Last Gasp ? to get things moving again and make sure that all of our 80-odd in-print titles were available again. We lost something like six distributors over the last decade, all of which never settled their accounts with Alternative. Mainly it?s been all about getting the new books together and working on getting the backlist available, digitized and, where applicable, back into print.

So, speaking of digitizing, you?re rolling out digital editions of Alternative?s books this week. Which ones are you making available first?

We are launching with a fairly small batch: three from Sam Henderson (Magic Whistle #7 and 12, and the Humor Can Be Funny?collection) Karl Stevens? Failure and Steven Cerio?s Pie. Pie was a Wow Cool comic that came out back in 1997. Steven was basically a prime motivator in Wow Cool branching out in publishing. He asked us to do his second book back in 1988 and just kept asking. Alternative Comics will publish his book Sunbeam on the Astronaut in early 2014, and a comprehensive collection of his earlier comics later in that year.

AlternativeComics4

What factors went into picking those books?

The focus was obviously re-introducing readers to the batch of artists that we are still working with in 2013. To that end, several of the upcoming digital releases are by artists that we will be publishing or distributing, including several by James Kochalka, K. Thor Jensen?s Red Eye, Black Eye, and the relaunched Alternative Comics anthology. Alternative Comics, the comic, had been a Free Comic Book Day book for three issues and we are continuing the numbering with this new edition and several of the regular Alternative artists. Right now I?m working on the free sampler of Sam Henderson?s comics, Magic Whistle #0.

Wow Cool?s focus as a studio has been on digitization and digital distribution of the various music, video and comic projects that were created over its 25 years. That?s taken on it?s own sort of life lately as the people involved in the main group associated with the label, Brown Cuts Neighbors, have had a fairly high-profile level of success we never anticipated. Brown Cuts Neighbors are having a SOHO screening in June as part of the New York Electronic Art Festival, and members Lady Starlight and Ben Coccio have had great success as the opening act for Lady Gaga and the screenwriter for The Place Beyond The Pines, respectively.

What?s next in terms of print??

Debuting this month is Karl Stevens? Failure, the follow-up to his 2011 book The Lodger ? a Los Angeles Times Book Prize finalist. Failure was originally announced for a February 2013 release but was postponed and remade to accommodate for changes necessitated by the cancellation of the strip by The Boston Phoenix?(and the closing of the paper mere weeks later). Stevens is promoting the book at numerous events, including the Toronto Comic Arts Festival.

LookStraightAheadOur flagship anthology returns as a twice-yearly comic with more pages in June with the release of Alternative Comics #4. The cover art is by Mike Bertino (Trigger) with comics by Theo Ellsworth (The Understanding Monster) and Craig Thompson (Blankets, Habibi), Sam Alden (Eighth Grade), James Kochalka (SuperF*ckers), Sam Henderson (Magic Whistle), Noah Van Sciver (The Hypo), Grant Snider (Incidental Comics), Alex Schubert (Blobby Boys), Andy Ristaino (Adventure Time) and Allison Cole (Never Ending Summer). The popular Inkstuds podcast also launches a regular feature in the magazine with an interview with and comics by David Lasky. It?s debuting at TCAF.

Next in the lineup is a pair of books by beloved funny man Sam Henderson. In August, Sam celebrates the 20th anniversary of his Magic Whistle series with the release of Vol. 2, No. 13. The long-running comic has returned to bi-annual status and will regularly feature guest contributors. This issue?s guests are Lizz Hickey and David Goldin.

Appearing in September is the release of the complete collection of Sam?s popular Nickelodeon Magazine comic strip ?Scene But Not Heard,? which ran from the debut issue in 1993 until its final days in 2009. ?Scene But Not Heard? is co-published with Top Shelf.

For many years Alternative Comics, Top Shelf, and Highwater Books supported the recipients of the Xeric Foundation grants by distributing the awarded books to the comic book direct market. The final Xeric grants were handed out in May 2012 and one of the very last books to be released from that batch is Look Straight Ahead by Elaine M. Will, which will be distributed through Alternative. This is an astounding debut graphic novel from a young, Canadian artist and will be in shops in October. Elaine?s debuting the book at TCAF as well.

CollectedSugarBooger

In November, James Kockalka releases the complete Fancy Froglin strips ? previously available only to online subscribers and partially issued by Alternative in 2003. This is the entire dirty work: Fancy Froglin Uncensored. Fancy Froglin is an ineffably cute happy little frog that loves getting boners. He?s highly sexual yet purely innocent. And he loves bunnies. Most important, he?s really funny. Sure to please fans of Kochalka?s SuperF*ckers.

Coming in winter will be Alternative Comics #5, the Complete Sugar Booger by Kevin Scalzo, and Sunbeam on the Astronaut by Steven Cerio.

You?re obviously in touch with some of the creators who published under Alternative before. Is there any chance for new material from Alternative by people like Ed Brubaker, James Kolchaka, or Graham Annable?

I haven?t been in touch with everyone yet, but nearly all of them. The focus has had to be on moving forward, and since there are many things we are not finished sorting out, I have yet to issue some sort of state-of-the-company to all the many artists that have been published or distributed by Alternative. That day is coming soon. (Anyone out there that has questions, please contact me!)

I have asked Ed a couple of times about when we can expect Detour #2 and he has yet to give me a straight response. Maybe I?ll be surprised one day. Like I said, a few artists have moved on, for better or worse. Graham Annable did his collected Grickle comics with Dark Horse a few years ago and recently there was a new edition of Hickee from Topatoco. That release was something that seems to have completely flown under the radar of most of the comics world, which is a shame as all of those guys do brilliant work, and I?m a huge fan.

FancyFroglinUncensoredAfter the distributor crashes in the middle of the last decade the schedule got cut way down and it?s great that books that had started out at Alternative landed elsewhere, like Lauren Weinstein?s Goddess of Mars (at Picture Box) and Gabrielle Bell?s Lucky (at D&Q). In addition to the complete Fancy Froglin at Alternative this fall from James Kochalka, we?ll see several digital editions of his other books. I?m sad to say that Brandon Graham had decided not to reprint Escalator, but is working on re-issuing some of the material in different packages with our friends at Image.

Are you looking to continue that legacy of discovering new talent? Or is the immediate focus more on making available Alternative?s existing library?

I don?t want to crush anyone?s Wookiee, but the discovering-new-talent job is sadly some very thankless and discouraging work for the most part. I think it?s a great shame that the Xeric Grants for first-time comic artists has ended, but we?re distributing one of the very last recipients of the Xeric Grant for 2012: Elaine M. Will?s Look Straight Ahead. It?s one of the strongest from that batch.

I look at everything. There is more great comic work being done now than ever before. We have been seriously looking at what is making its way through Kickstarter and will be announcing very soon one of the books that made it?s way through there as a distributed title.

SunbeamonTheAstonaut

Is ?What Would Jeff Mason Do?? a part of your decision-making process at all, or would you like the new Alternative to be its own thing reflecting your particular tastes?

I can?t swear that I?ve ever thought, ?What would Jeff do?? More like, what is appropriate for Alternative Comics, given the fairly significant history of the company in the short decade that it actively published comics? That is a large chunk of major comics and artists in a fairly short time. Also, an impressive list of award nominated and winning artists? and many who went on to much greater success.

Alternative now is much more a ?boutique? publisher, as I edit and design many of the books myself. I have stated many times that it really comes down to my tastes as to what we publish, but other considerations do play into it. Commercial or potentially commercial ones, first of all. There?s no escaping that. There seems to exist a concept that we were largely a publisher of autobiographical comics, and while there were some of those ? some very strong examples of those ? I think that made up a fairly small part of the line.?I do actually want to distance the label from that, but am not exactly jumping straight into the genre/fusion/fantasy/video game what-have-you realm that ? although I love them greatly ? makes up a big chunk of alt comics now.

I think that Alternative Comics has been historically weak in all ages and YA titles, which are obviously big markets in comics publishing, and I?d like to see those grow. Bottom line, I think comics should be fun. I want to put out books people can be excited about. I certainly think there is not enough humor in comics. There are days when I think, looking at some of the indie comics out there, ?Pretty can be so boring; let?s do some comics that are awesome!?

Tagged: Alternative Comics, Brandon Graham, Craig Thompson, Dean Haspiel, Ed Brubaker, Elaine M. Will, Fancy Froglin, graham annable, James Kochalka, Jeff Mason, Josh Neufeld, K. Thor Jensen, Karl Stevens, Marc Arsenault, Noah Van Sciver, Sam Henderson, Scott Campbell, Steven Cerio, Ted May, Wow Cool

Source: http://robot6.comicbookresources.com/2013/05/alternative-comics-catalog-debuts-on-comixology/

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Dietary flexibility may have helped some large predators survive after last ice age

May 8, 2013 ? During the late Pleistocene, a remarkably diverse assemblage of large-bodied mammals inhabited the "mammoth steppe," a cold and dry yet productive environment that extended from western Europe through northern Asia and across the Bering land bridge to the Yukon. Of the large predators--wolves, bears, and big cats--only the wolves and bears were able to maintain their ranges well after the end of the last ice age.

A new study led by researchers at the University of California, Santa Cruz, suggests that dietary flexibility may have been an important factor giving wolves and bears an edge over saber-toothed cats and cave lions.

"We found that dietary flexibility was strongly species-specific, and that large cats were relatively inflexible predators compared to wolves and bears. This is a key observation, as large cats have suffered severe range contractions since the last glacial maximum, whereas wolves and bears have ranges that remain similar to their Pleistocene ranges," said Justin Yeakel, first author of a paper on the new findings published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

Yeakel, now a postdoctoral researcher at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia, worked on the study as a graduate student at UC Santa Cruz with coauthor Paul Koch, professor of Earth and planetary sciences at UCSC. The other coauthors are Paulo Guimar?es of the University of S?o Paolo, Brazil, and Herv? Bocherens of the University of T?bingen, Germany.

The researchers based their findings on an analysis of stable isotope ratios, chemical traces in fossil bones that can be used to reconstruct an animal's diet. They used previously published stable isotope datasets to reconstruct predator-prey interactions at six sites located from Alaska to western Europe. The sites covered a range of time periods before, during and after the last glacial maximum, the period around 20 to 25 thousand years ago when the ice sheets reached their greatest extent.

The study found that the diets of the large cats were similar in different locations, especially in the post-glacial period. Wolves and bears, in contrast, ate different things in different locations. Prey species on the mammoth steppes included bison, horses, yaks, musk oxen, caribou, and mammoths. The researchers noticed changes in predator diets coinciding with an increase in caribou abundance starting around 20,000 years ago.

"During and after the last glacial maximum, many predators focused their attention on caribou, which had been a marginally important prey resource before then," Yeakel said. "Large cats began concentrating almost solely on caribou in both Alaska and Europe. Wolves and bears also began consuming more caribou in Alaska, but not in Europe."

The cave lions and saber-toothed cats of the mammoth steppes were morphologically similar to modern lions, but they went extinct within the past 10,000 years. There were bears similar to modern bears, as well as the short-faced bear, which was larger than a polar bear and has since gone extinct. Interestingly, the short-faced bear is the only species that did not focus on caribou in the post-glacial period.

After the last ice age, a growing human population coincided with the demise of the mammoths and other large fauna of the mammoth steppes. Many species are still around, however, including wolves and bears. According to Yeakel, studies of past ecosystems can inform scientists' understanding of modern carnivores and their capabilities.

"If you look at wolves today, they are specialist carnivores preying on large herbivores like deer and elk, but when we look in the fossil record we see that wolves are remarkably flexible. Their environment today is fairly artificial compared to when they evolved," he said.

The study found that large-scale patterns of interactions differed between locations, but remained stable over time. In Alaska, there was relatively little overlap in the preferred prey of different predator species, whereas predator-prey interactions were less "compartmentalized" in Europe.

"The large-scale patterns don't seem to change, which suggests this community was resilient to the climate changes associated with the last glacial maximum. That makes sense, because it survived multiple ice ages further back in time," Yeakel said.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/X3jwQd7sf60/130508151400.htm

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Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Doctors OK Guidelines for Treating Acne in Younger Kids - Health.com

woman squeezing zit 400x400 Doctors OK Guidelines for Treating Acne in Younger Kids

By Amy Norton
HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, May 6 (HealthDay News) ? Pimples have long been the bane of teenage existence, but pediatricians say there is now enough evidence on effective treatments to put out the first guidelines on battling acne in children.

There is a range of medications that can clear up even severe cases of acne, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP). Writing in the May issue of its journal Pediatrics, the group throws its support behind new guidelines from the American Acne and Rosacea Society that detail how to treat acne in children and teens of all ages.

That ?all ages? part is important because acne is becoming more and more common in pre-teens, too, said Dr. Lawrence Eichenfield, the lead author of the AAP report. One study of 9- and 10-year-old girls found that more than three-quarters had pimples.

It?s thought that it may be because boys and girls are, on average, starting puberty earlier compared with past generations, said Eichenfield, a pediatric dermatologist at Rady Children?s Hospital in San Diego.

According to the AAP, mild acne often can be tackled with over-the-counter fixes. Washes, lotions and other products containing benzoyl peroxide are the best studied, and the best place to start, the group said.

?It?s a pretty effective agent, especially for mild acne,? Eichenfield said. Benzoyl peroxide is also the most common ingredient in over-the-counter acne fighters. Another common one is salicylic acid, but there has not been much research on it. When it has been tested head-to-head against benzoyl peroxide, Eichenfield said, the latter has won out.

If over-the-counter products do not do the job, the next step could be topical retinoids ? prescription medications like Retin-A, Avita and Differin. They are vitamin A derivatives and work by speeding up skin cell turnover, which helps unclog pores.

The main side effects of all the topical treatments are skin irritation and dryness, the AAP said.

If the acne is moderate to severe, oral antibiotics could be added to the mix because bacteria that live on the skin play a role in acne. When pores become clogged with oil and skin cells, bacteria can grow in the pore and cause inflammation. Antibiotics help by killing bacteria and soothing inflammation.

But, Eichenfield said, ?it?s important to use antibiotics appropriately.? One reason is because acne-causing bacteria have become less sensitive to common antibiotics in the past couple decades, due to widespread use of the drugs.

Another is that antibiotics can have side effects, such as stomach upset, dizziness and, in girls, yeast infections.

When acne is severe and other treatments have failed, the AAP said, doctors and parents might consider the prescription drug isotretinoin ? brand-names including Roaccutane (formerly known as Accutane) and Claravis.

The drug is very effective, but it can cause birth defects, so girls and women have to use birth control and get regular pregnancy tests if they go on the medication. Isotretinoin also has been linked to inflammatory bowel disease, depression and suicidal thoughts in some users ? although it?s not clear the drug is to blame, the AAP said. (Severe acne itself can cause depression and suicidal thoughts, for example.)

Dr. David Pariser, a dermatologist not involved in the recommendations, said they are ?based on sound evidence? and reflect the ?best practices? in battling acne.

When should parents consider taking their child to a doctor for acne treatment? It depends on how severe the problem is, and how bothered the child is, said Pariser, who sits on the board of directors of the American Academy of Dermatology.

Some kids can deal with skin eruptions, but Pariser said he sees others who refuse to leave the house.

Both he and Eichenfield said it?s important to dispel kids? (and sometimes parents?) acne myths. ?Acne is not caused by dirt or poor hygiene,? Eichenfield said, and harshly scrubbing your face will probably make the situation worse.

It?s best to wash your face gently twice a day, with a soap-free pH-balanced cleanser, the AAP said. Facial toners ? which commonly come in pre-packaged acne regimens ? can help clear away oil. But the group suggested going easy on toners, since they can irritate the skin.

And what about food? ?The medical community has swung back and forth on that over the years,? Pariser said. Years ago, people thought that certain foods, like chocolate, sugar and iodine, promoted breakouts, but studies starting in the late 1960s failed to confirm that.

?The idea that food plays a role became relegated to myth,? Eichenfield said. But recently, he added, some researchers have been revisiting the issue. There is some evidence that a sugary diet may promote acne, for example. But for now, it?s not clear whether any diet changes will actually help keep kids? skin clear, Eichenfield said.

The bottom line, he said, is that many treatment options are available. ?There?s no reason that children have to live with acne that is severe and troubling to them,? he said.

More information

Learn more about acne from the U.S. National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases.

HEALTHDAY Web XSmall Doctors OK Guidelines for Treating Acne in Younger Kids

Source: http://news.health.com/2013/05/06/pediatricians-endorse-new-acne-treatment-guidelines/

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South Africa to investigate private health market

CAPE TOWN (Reuters) - South African competition authorities will launch an investigation into the private healthcare industry, where early evidence showed high prices and market distortions, Economic Development Minister Ebrahim Patel said on Tuesday.

The ruling African National Congress (ANC) is working on a long-term nationwide health insurance plan, but the $28 billion scheme will not be in place until 2025.

Until then, the ANC wants to reduce the cost of healthcare for the millions of South Africans who cannot afford to go private, Patel said.

"Various stakeholders have raised concerns about pricing, costs and the state of competition and innovation in private healthcare," he told reporters.

Patel said competition authorities had ruled previously that the practice of setting up common tariffs for medical procedures was uncompetitive.

"In reality we've seen a growing trend of healthcare prices and cost increases and some commentators have made the point to us that health markets contain a massive asymmetry of power," he said.

Patel said preliminary evidence showed that some that in some cases competition was "prevented, distorted or restricted."

Private health providers in Africa's largest economy include Life Healthcare, Mediclinic International and Netcare Ltd, all of whom have benefitted from the growth of the middle classes.

The Competition Commission, which can impose administrative fines, is expected to launch the "market inquiry" before September 2013. ($1 = 9.0222 South African rand)

(Reporting by Samantha Lee; writing by Wendell Roelf)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/south-africa-investigate-private-health-market-133606023.html

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To Fund Gaming Habit, Two Teens Steal Electrical Cables - Kotaku

S

There's no doubt that China is currently going through an industrial revolution of sorts. Pretty much every city in the country is undergoing a construction boom. Taking advantage of this "boom", two teenagers in east China's Jiangsu province stole over 300 meters of construction grade electrical cable to fund their gaming habit.

JsChina.com first reported that on the morning of April 27, electrical wiring and cables were stolen from a special economic zone construction site in Jiangsu province's Suqian city. The wires weren't just laying out and about for anyone to take. According to police, the wires were situated on poles about two to three-stories tall. The theft brought the construction project to a halt.

After a series of investigations, police discovered that the theft was perpetrated by two young people with an affinity for online gaming. The two suspects, 16 year-old Hu and 17 year-old Li, were detained by police soon after. It's unclear how police came to the conclusion that it was Hu and Li, but the duo confessed to the crime.

According to JsChina.com, Hu says he wanted some extra money to spend on online games and general websurfing. Hu met Li at an internet cafe and the two concocted a plan to steal electrical cables, cables used for telecommunications, electricity and various other infrastructure needs.

The duo determined that the longer the wire the more money they would receive. Thus they decided to attack Suqian's new special economic zone.

Once their target was determined, the duo set out to execute their plan. Police said what the duo did was particularly dangerous. Supposedly Hu would climb one two-story pole while Li climbed another. Once atop the poles, one of the two would cut the wire at one end and swing it over to the other. Then, after receiving the wire, one half of the duo would wrap the wire across their body and slowly climb down and move onto the next pole. The reason they didn't just cut the wires between, say, two poles, is because the wires falling down would cause a lot of noise and because the longer the wire the more money it is worth. Police said the duo risked more than just falling to their deaths; they also risked death by electrocution if the wires were "live".

Unfortunately for the construction company, when police found Hu and Li, they had already sold off the wires and spent the profits on online games. While Hu and Li were correct on their assumption that electrical cables were worth money, according to the police, Hu and Li didn't exactly know how much it was worth - they completely undersold their loot.

[???????? ???????????] [JSChina.com via People's Daily]

Kotaku East is your slice of Asian internet culture, bringing you the latest talking points from Japan, Korea, China and beyond. Tune in every morning from 4am to 8am.

Source: http://kotaku.com/to-fund-gaming-habit-two-teens-steal-electrical-cables-493087441

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Kluwe says he's been released by Vikings

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) ? The Vikings released punter Chris Kluwe on Monday, bringing an end to his colorful and outspoken eight-year stay in Minnesota.

Kluwe announced the news on Twitter shortly after meeting with Vikings GM Rick Spielman, a move that had been expected ever since the team spent a fifth-round draft pick on punter Jeff Locke at the end of last month.

"Thank you to all the fans, my teammates, and the Wilf family for the past 8.5 years," Kluwe tweeted. "I wouldn't have traded it for anything."

The 31-year-old Kluwe averaged 44.4 yards per punt over his career in Minnesota, including a career-high 39.7 yard net average last season. But he ranked just 17th in the NFL in punting and was due to make $1.45 million this season, making him a prime target to be cut.

During his time with the Vikings, Kluwe earned a reputation as one of the most opinionated players in the league. He criticized union leadership during the lockout, wore a patch on his uniform to protest the lack of punters in the Hall of Fame and, most notably, became a vocal supporter of gay rights, penning a number of thoughtful, and occasionally profane, columns on the issue for various websites. He also plays in a rock band in his spare time and is an avid video gamer.

"And thank you everyone for your support," Kluwe tweeted. "Remember, one label does not define who you are as a person."

Kluwe's release means the league's two most vocal advocates for gay rights are now out of work. Linebacker Brendon Ayanbadejo was cut by Baltimore in April.

Vikings special teams coordinator Mike Priefer made it clear later last season that Kluwe's headline-grabbing nature was wearing thin with him. When Kluwe was fined more than $5,000 for putting a "Vote Ray Guy" over a patch on his jersey commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Pro Football Hall of Fame in December, Priefer voiced his displeasure.

"Those distractions are getting old for me, to be quite honest with you," Priefer said. "Do I think Ray Guy deserves to be in the Hall of Fame? Absolutely. But there's other ways of going about doing it, in my opinion."

When the Vikings drafted Locke, Spielman was asked if Kluwe's outspoken nature would factor at all into the decision to keep him or cut him.

"I have no issues if Chris Kluwe wants to express his opinion," Spielman said then. "That's his right. That's his freedom of speech. This is just a football decision to bring in a guy and come in and compete."

In the end, Kluwe didn't get much of a chance to compete. Locke attended the team's first rookie camp over the weekend, and Kluwe was out a few days later. It was a move similar to last season when the Vikings drafted kicker Blair Walsh in the sixth round and quickly released the more experienced, and more expensive, Ryan Longwell.

Also factoring into the decision is the Vikings will be playing their final season in the Metrodome before moving outdoors to the University of Minnesota's TCF Bank stadium while their new stadium is built. Kluwe seemed to have a more difficult time punting outdoors and the Vikings hope the move to the younger Locke will help them in that area.

___

Follow Jon Krawczynski on Twitter: http://twitter.com/APKrawczynski

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kluwe-says-hes-released-vikings-185940078.html

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Friday, May 3, 2013

Gathering cockles at low tide

The season for visiting the beach and searching in the sand at low tide is upon us, so Research Panel?s Day Research asked if people had ever done so, with 137,387 people from their panel answering the question. 70.3% had done so, 28.8% had not, and 0.9% didn?t know what it was. Note that the literal Japanese phrase is ?gathering at low tide?, with the shellfish implied, which might suggest why some people were unaware of the term. Furthermore, 4.1% of the teens who answered the question didn?t know what it was, and a higher percentage of the younger age groups had never done so; specifically almost a half of those in their twenties and thirties.

Gathering shellfish - ????

This is probably not too surprising a result, and furthermore on the television news at the weekend I watched a short item on people gathering them from Osaka bay, but the voice-over pointed out that the shellfish were over the safe limit for some shellfish toxin, so people could swap their haul for edible shells at a stand on the beach!

Read more on: research panel,shellfish

Permalink

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/WhatJapanThinks/~3/6SSgNsPQvvM/

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Transfer of ultraprecise time signals over a wireless optical channel demonstrated

May 1, 2013 ? By bouncing eye-safe laser pulses off a mirror on a hillside, researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have transferred ultraprecise time signals through open air with unprecedented precision equivalent to the "ticking" of the world's best next-generation atomic clocks.

Described in Nature Photonics, the demonstration shows how next-generation atomic clocks at different locations could be linked wirelessly to improve geodesy (altitude mapping), distribution of time and frequency information, satellite navigation, radar arrays and other applications. Clock signals of this type have previously been transferred by fiber-optic cable, but a wireless channel offers greater flexibility and the eventual possibility of transfer to and from satellites.

The stability of the transferred infrared signal matched that of NIST's best experimental atomic clock, which operates at optical frequencies. Infrared light is very close to the frequencies used by these clocks, and both are much higher than the microwave frequencies in conventional atomic clocks currently used as national time standards. Operating frequency is one of the most important factors in the precision of optical atomic clocks, which have the potential to provide a 100-fold improvement in the accuracy of future time standards. But the signals need to be distributed with minimal loss of precision and accuracy.

The signal transfer demonstration was performed outdoors over a two-way wireless link using two laser frequency combs. A frequency comb generates a steady stream of ultrashort optical pulses with a spacing that can be synchronized perfectly with the "ticks" of an optical atomic clock. In the experiment, the two combs were synchronized to the same stable optical cavity, which serves as a stand-in for an optical atomic clock. Each comb pulse was sent from one of two locations on NIST's campus in Boulder, Colo., reflected off a mirror on a mesa behind the campus, and returned to the other site, traveling a total distance of two kilometers.

Researchers measured travel times for pulses traveling in opposite directions between the two sites. The cumulative timing differences and frequency instabilities were infinitesimal, just one million-billionths of a second per hour, a performance level sufficient for transferring optical clock signals.

The transfer technique overcomes typical wireless signal problems such as turbulence in the atmosphere -- the phenomenon that makes images shimmer when it's very hot outside. Because turbulence affects both directions equally, it can be cancelled out. The transfer technique can also withstand signal losses due to temporary obstruction of the light path. The method should be able to operate at much longer distances, possibly even over future ground-to-satellite optical communication links as an added timing channel, researchers say.

The combs potentially could be made portable, and the low-power infrared light is safe for eyes. The research is funded in part by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Fabrizio R. Giorgetta, William C. Swann, Laura C. Sinclair, Esther Baumann, Ian Coddington, Nathan R. Newbury. Optical two-way time and frequency transfer over free space. Nature Photonics, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/nphoton.2013.69

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/exoA3Uccaz8/130501145116.htm

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