Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Zumba trial: How much porn should jurors watch?

By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

A Maine judge is expected to decide whether to allow 577 "extremely sexual" Skype screenshots in the case of Zumba prostitution defendant Mark Strong on Tuesday.

The defense attorney for Strong, 57, warned of the graphic nature of the images and said Monday they would "drown" his client, according to the Bangor Daily News.

"I think some of this stuff is going to horrify some of these people to the point where he won't possibly get a fair trial," defense attorney Daniel Lilley said.

But prosecutors allege that the images are crucial evidence showing that Strong was involved in running a prostitution ring out of Alexis Wright's Pura Vida Zumba studio in Kennebunk. Wright is due to stand trial separately.

"The state has to prove that Mark Strong was actively involved in the prostitution [business]," Deputy District Attorney Justina McGettigan told Superior Court Justice Nancy Mills on Monday. "Part of that active involvement was that he was monitoring the prostitution from his Thomaston location through Skype."

Also to be discussed on Tuesday was a motion filed by the defense to dismiss the remaining charges against Strong. Defense attorney Lilley has accused the prosecution of missing deadlines to turn over documents related to the case.

Strong is on trial for 13 charges related to promotion of prostitution. Forty-six charges related to alleged violations of privacy were dismissed by the judge in a decision affirmed by the Maine Supreme Judicial Court on Feb. 15. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges.

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/26/17101633-zumba-trial-how-much-porn-should-jurors-watch?lite

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

Thousands demand lawmakers restore billions to Texas schools

SHANNON MURRAY / KVUE News

Posted on February 23, 2013 at 6:22 PM

AUSTIN-- People came from all over the state for the Save Our Schools Rally Saturday at the State Capitol.

The protesters are asking legislators to restore $5.4 billion in education funding, cut back on standardized testing and focus on the current public school system instead of vouchers and charter schools.

Parents at the rally say they fear more teachers will be cut if the money isn't restored. And they say Texas classrooms are already overcrowded.??

"We need to wake up and realize what's going on in our government and what's going on with our politicians and with our money that's being held hostage here in austin," said?protester Rich Rutherford.?

Just before the Save Our Schools rally, on the other side of State Capitol, a much smaller rally took place with a different message.

These school choice supporters say the issue isn't money, it's a lack of options for parents.?

"Allow parents to leave a failing school, go to private school, charter school or another school district and take part of their tax dollars with them and put their child in an education environment where they're learning," explains the Director of the Center for Fiscal Policy, Talmadge Heflin.?

The group says providing more choices will increase competition and improve all Texas schools.?

Source: http://www.khou.com/news/texas-news/192761561.html

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Lindbergh swim coach named Coach of the Year, team gets sportsmanship award | BOYS SWIMMING

Lindbergh boys swimming coach Roger Miron was named Seamount League Coach of the Year Tuesday and his team received the sportsmanship award.

Individual swimmers were also honored as part of the All-Seamount first team, including Linbergh's Aaron Jacobsen, a senior, and A.J. Lim, a junior. Jacobsen earned a fourth-place spot in the 100-yard butterfly at the 3A state meet this past weekend and Lim finished eighth in the 200-yard freestyle and ninth in the 100-yard breaststroke.

Hazen's Malcolm Mitchell and Connor Broughton were also named to the first team. Mitchell scored a seventh-place finish in the 2A 100-yard butterfly while Broughton finished ninth in the 500 freestyle.

Renton athletes were well represented on the second team as well.

Hazen's Chris Foth, Kyle Nelson, P.J. Warmhoven, Nolan Hoover and Derek Wei were all named to the second team.

Joining them were Lindbergh diver Tanner Zornes and fellow Eagle Clayton Miller, as well as Renton's Benny Souriyadeth and Dan Pham.

Source: http://feeds.soundpublishing.com/~r/rensports/~3/3gBwhi7a100/192158301.html

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Maldives denies deal with ex-president

THE Maldivian government denied any deal to allow ex-president Mohamed Nasheed to end his refuge at the Indian embassy in the capital and resume election campaigning without fear of arrest.

Presidential spokesman Abbas Riaz said Nasheed walked out of the embassy on Saturday afternoon of his own will and there was no agreement with an Indian mediator who rushed to the Maldives last week to resolve a tense standoff.

"There is no deal, absolutely no deal with the Indians or anyone else," Riaz said on Sunday, in the government's first reaction to Nasheed leaving the embassy to resume his political work.

Nasheed, 45, sought refuge at the embassy on February 13, straining ties between regional power India and its small neighbour Maldives, after an arrest warrant was issued following his failure to attend court.

He says his trial is a "politically motivated" attempt to disqualify him from an election due on September 7, a charge denied by the government.

The opposition Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) said Nasheed was meeting with visiting Western diplomats on Sunday and would start house-to-house campaigning from Monday.

"He is back on the campaign trail," said MDP spokesman Hamid Abdul Ghafoor.

"India arranged a deal to give political space for Nasheed to contest... but still there is a risk (of arrest). We don't trust this rogue regime."

The Maldivian government insists that it will not interfere with a judicial process.

India sent its special envoy, senior diplomat Harsh Vardhan Shringla, to mediate an end to the crisis after Nasheed took refuge in its high commission to avoid arrest.

Source: http://www.couriermail.com.au/news/breaking-news/nasheed-leaves-indian-embassy/story-e6freoo6-1226584306466?from=public_rss

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

Bentley says sequestration could cost Alabama 24,000 jobs; Huntsville would be hit hardest

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Source: http://feeds.bizjournals.com/~r/bizj_birmingham/~3/ESwTI2JbOo8/bentley-says-sequestration-could-cost.html

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Golf: Lewis ahead but teen star leads chase in Thailand

BANGKOK: World number three Stacy Lewis held on to her three-shot overnight lead after round two of the Honda LPGA Thailand on Friday, but was pushed hard by Thai teenager Ariya Jutanugarn who hit a flawless 66.

Teeing off last, American Lewis quickly showed Thursday's stunning 63 was no fluke when she notched a birdie at the par-five first.

She added four more birdies over the day, marred by two dropped shots, which sent her back into the clubhouse with 69 and a healthy 12-under par score overall.

But the day arguably belonged to 17-year-old Ariya, who was six shots behind the leader at the start of play but halved the deficit with a stunning 66 on the back of some hot putting which gave her six birdies.

She will pair up with Lewis on Saturday in front of the home crowd at the Siam Country Club in Pattaya.

"It's always hard to follow up a really good day. I definitely left a few out there," Lewis said.

"I didn't hit it as good today but I made some putts on the back nine and still have a three-shot lead, so I can't complain.

"I think tomorrow is going to be even crazier being in the last group and she's (Ariya) kind of the rising star from here, and I think she's going to be a great player. You have to watch out for her just like anybody else."

Spain's Beatriz Recari was joined by Korean So-Yeon Ryu and Scottish veteran Catriona Matthew poised just four shots off the pace on 136.

Recent graduate So-Yeon Ryu, who has already collected more than $1.2 million career earnings, spared a few words for her university after her flawless 68, revealing she carries its logo on her watch for inspiration.

"So it's all about my university. I think my university give me a lot of energy," she said.

Elsewhere, 15-year-old New Zealand amateur Lydia Ko had a mixed round but ended on an a promising 140.

She was three shots ahead of world number one Tseng Yani, who bounced back after a miserable first day with four birdies to finish on 143, a distance from the leader but a major improvement from a dismal round one.

The day's biggest disappointment was Frenchwoman Karine Icher who stalked Lewis on day one, going home three behind. But Icher posted one of the worst second rounds with a 77, which gave her 143 overall.

- AFP/de

Source: http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_sports/view/1255867/1/.html

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Ruling leaves Ill. grappling with concealed carry

FILE - In this March 7, 2012 file photo, gun owners and supporters participate in an Illinois Gun Owners Lobby Day rally at the Illinois State Capitol in Springfield. A federal appeals court on Friday, Feb. 22, 2013, narrowly rejected Illinois? request to reconsider a ruling that found the state?s concealed carry weapons ban unconstitutional, leaving lawmakers in the only state that still prohibits concealed carry grappling with how to proceed. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman, File)

FILE - In this March 7, 2012 file photo, gun owners and supporters participate in an Illinois Gun Owners Lobby Day rally at the Illinois State Capitol in Springfield. A federal appeals court on Friday, Feb. 22, 2013, narrowly rejected Illinois? request to reconsider a ruling that found the state?s concealed carry weapons ban unconstitutional, leaving lawmakers in the only state that still prohibits concealed carry grappling with how to proceed. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman, File)

Todd Vandermyde of the National Rifle Association speaks during the second of a series of Illinois House Judiciary Committee hearings on gun safety and concealed carry laws Friday, Feb. 22, 2013, in Chicago. A federal appeals court on Friday narrowly rejected Illinois? request to reconsider a ruling that found the state?s concealed carry weapons ban unconstitutional, leaving lawmakers in the only state that still prohibits concealed carry grappling with how to proceed. (AP Photo/Chicago Sun-Times, John H. White) CHICAGO LOCALS OUT, MAGS OUT

(AP) ? A federal appeals court on Friday narrowly rejected Illinois' request to reconsider a ruling that found the state's concealed carry weapons ban unconstitutional, leaving lawmakers in the only state that still prohibits concealed carry more certain than ever they must come up with a new law.

The 5-4 ruling by the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals gave state Attorney General Lisa Madigan the option of appealing to the U.S. Supreme Court ? a move that could affect gun laws in other states. It also came on the same day that state lawmakers held a hearing on the issue in Chicago ? a city that's drawn national attention for its gun violence and rising homicide rate, including last month's death of a 15-year-old honor student a mile from President Barack Obama's home.

Madigan said in a statement she has not yet decided whether to appeal. But she said a dissent written by four of the judges "provided a clear framework to guide the legislature in drafting a new law." Those judges said some restrictions ? including limits on who may carry and where they may do so ? could be considered constitutional.

"With the 180-day deadline still in place, it is critical that the legislature continue to work to enact a law that will protect public safety," said Madigan, a Democrat from Chicago.

In Chicago, at the second of a series of Illinois House Judiciary Committee hearings, word of the court's decision seemed to change the tenor of various speakers' comments. Advocates who for years have fought for gun control legislation took turns urging lawmakers to make sure the bill they pass prohibits guns in places such as schools, hospitals, restaurants, churches, nursing homes and commuter trains.

"It would be a recipe for disaster," Chicago Transit Authority President Forrest Claypool said of allowing guns on public transportation.

At the same time, gun rights advocates who crowded into the downtown hearing room were buoyed by the court's ruling. Many applauded several times and smiled when Todd Vandermyde of the National Rifle Association said the court ruling, along with several previous court rulings, left the state no choice but to enact a concealed carry law.

"This is a fundamentally, constitutionally protected civil right," he said.

Madigan had asked for the entire 10-judge federal appellate court to consider the case after a three-judge panel in December gave lawmakers until June 9 to legalize the concealed carry of firearms. She argued that the ruling conflicts with decisions by other federal appellate courts and goes beyond what the U.S. Supreme Court has held.

In a 5-4 decision, with one judge not participating, the court denied Madigan's request.

The majority did not expand on the opinion written by Judge Richard Posner in December, which said there is "no suggestion that some unique characteristic of criminal activity in Illinois justifies the state's taking a different approach from the other 49 states."

Richard Pearson, the executive director of the Illinois State Rifle Association, said the ruling makes clear that courts believe the prohibition violates Second Amendment rights. If Madigan opts to appeal and the U.S. Supreme Court agrees to hear the case it's possible the justices could strike down not only Illinois' ban on concealed carry, but also gun restrictions in other states, such as New York and Maryland.

"If she does (appeal), I would be happy," Pearson said. "There's a very good chance they'll rule in our favor."

Madigan has 90 days to decide whether to ask the high court to hear the case.

Lawmakers, meanwhile, are working to craft legislation that could get the approval of legislators from Chicago ? a city with some of the strictest gun ordinances in the nation ? as well as from the state's more rural and conservative areas, where there's more support for gun rights.

Some Republicans and more conservative Democrats say Illinois should be a "shall issue" state, in which anyone who meets prescribed criteria must get a permit to carry. More left-leaning Democrats want to be a "may issue" state, meaning local police could deny a permit even if the applicant's background is otherwise clear.

Gov. Pat Quinn, a Chicago Democrat, and other gun control advocates also want any new gun legislation to include a ban on assault weapons and high-capacity magazines and to prohibit concealed carry in public places such as sports stadiums and shopping malls.

Vandermyde said he would oppose many of the limits proposed by gun control advocates, saying the cumulative effect of their desired restrictions would amount to a ban ? adding that he would not be in favor of prohibiting guns on public transportation.

At least one lawmaker, State Rep. Dennis Reboletti, a Republican from the Chicago suburbs had his own reservations about banning weapons on buses and trains.

"My concern is the gang members will always carry," Reboletti said, drawing a round of applause from gun rights advocates.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-02-22-Illinois-Concealed%20Carry-Appeal/id-dbe0a22ffd444af2b5e2e751af14f5ce

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Friday, February 22, 2013

E. African nation Djibouti holds parliament polls

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) ? Voters in the tiny East African nation of Djibouti are casting ballots in the nation's parliamentary elections.

Friday's vote is notable because opposition political parties can win seats for the first time.

Djibouti ? a nation of less than 1 million people ? hosts the only permanent U.S. military base in Africa, Camp Lemonnier. The base hosts conventional forces but also special forces and aerial drones believed to be flown over Yemen and Somalia.

President Ismail Omar Guelleh won a third term in 2011 in a vote colored by an opposition boycott and a clampdown on dissent. Guelleh's critics lament changes he made to the constitution in 2010 that scrubbed a two-term limit from the nation's bylaws.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/e-african-nation-djibouti-holds-parliament-polls-124655083.html

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New way to probe Earth's deep interior proposed

Feb. 21, 2013 ? Researchers from Amherst College and The University of Texas at Austin have described a new technique that might one day reveal in higher detail than ever before the composition and characteristics of the deep Earth.

There's just one catch: The technique relies on a fifth force of nature (in addition to gravity, the weak and strong nuclear forces and electromagnetism) that has not yet been detected, but which some particle physicists think might exist. Physicists call this type of force a long-range spin-spin interaction. If it does exist, this exotic new force would connect matter at Earth's surface with matter hundreds or even thousands of kilometers below, deep in Earth's mantle. In other words, the building blocks of atoms -- electrons, protons, and neutrons -- separated over vast distances would "feel" each other's presence. The way these particles interact could provide new information about the composition and characteristics of the mantle, which is poorly understood because of its inaccessibility.

"The most rewarding and surprising thing about this project was realizing that particle physics could actually be used to study the deep Earth," says Jung-Fu "Afu" Lin, associate professor at The University of Texas at Austin's Jackson School of Geosciences and co-author of the study appearing this week in the journal Science.

This new force could help settle a scientific quandary. When earth scientists have tried to model how factors such as iron concentration and physical and chemical properties of matter vary with depth -- for example, using the way earthquake rumbles travel through Earth or through laboratory experiments designed to mimic the intense temperatures and pressures of the deep Earth -- they get different answers. The fifth force, assuming it exists, might help reconcile these conflicting lines of evidence.

Earth's mantle is a thick geological layer sandwiched between the thin outer crust and central core, made up mostly of iron-bearing minerals. The atoms in these minerals and the subatomic particles making up the atoms have a property called spin. Spin can be thought of as an arrow that points in a particular direction. It is thought that Earth's magnetic field causes some of the electrons in these mantle minerals to become slightly spin-polarized, meaning the directions in which they spin are no longer completely random, but have some preferred orientation. These electrons have been dubbed geoelectrons.

The goal with this project was to see whether the scientists could use the proposed long-range spin-spin interaction to detect the presence of these distant geoelectrons.

The researchers, led by Larry Hunter, professor of physics at Amherst College, first created a computer model of Earth's interior to map the expected densities and spin directions of geoelectrons. The model was based in part on insights gained from Lin's laboratory experiments that measure electron spins in minerals at the high temperatures and pressures of Earth's interior. This map gave the researchers clues about the strength and orientations of interactions they might expect to detect in their specific laboratory location in Amherst, Mass.

Second, the researchers used a specially designed apparatus to search for interactions between geoelectrons deep in the mantle and subatomic particles at Earth's surface. The team's experiments essentially explored whether the spins of electrons, neutrons or protons in various laboratories might have a different energy, depending on the direction with respect to Earth that they were pointing.

"We know, for example, that a magnet has a lower energy when it is oriented parallel to the geomagnetic field and it lines up with this particular direction -- that is how a compass works," explains Hunter. "Our experiments removed this magnetic interaction and looked to see if there might be some other interaction with our experimental spins. One interpretation of this 'other' interaction is that it could be a long-range interaction between the spins in our apparatus and the electron spins within the Earth, that have been aligned by the geomagnetic field. This is the long-range spin-spin interaction we were looking for."

Although the apparatus was not able to detect any such interactions, the researchers could at least infer that such interactions, if they exist, must be incredibly weak -- no more than a millionth of the strength of the gravitational attraction between the particles. That's useful information as scientists now look for ways to build ever more sensitive instruments to search for the elusive fifth force.

"No one had previously thought about the possible interactions that might occur between the Earth's spin-polarized electrons and precision laboratory spin-measurements," says Hunter.

"If the long-range spin-spin interactions are discovered in future experiments, geoscientists can eventually use such information to reliably understand the geochemistry and geophysics of the planet's interior," says Lin.

Funding for this research was contributed by the National Science Foundation (grants PHY-0855465, PHY-1205824, EAR-1056670 and EAR-1053446), the Department of Energy's Center for Energy Frontier Research in Extreme Environments (EFree), and the Carnegie/DOE Alliance Center (CDAC).

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Texas at Austin.

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Journal Reference:

  1. L. Hunter, J. Gordon, S. Peck, D. Ang, J.-F. Lin. Using the Earth as a Polarized Electron Source to Search for Long-Range Spin-Spin Interactions. Science, 2013; 339 (6122): 928 DOI: 10.1126/science.1227460

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/matter_energy/physics/~3/auvkvwBDAt8/130221143902.htm

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Kansas City restaurant explosion: Investigation could take months

A natural gas explosion destroyed a popular Kansas City restaurant on Tuesday. The explosion was felt a mile away from the scene. Earlier that day, a cable company's subcontractor hit a gas line in the area. ?

By Bill Draper,?Associated Press, Heather Hollingsworth,?Associated Press / February 20, 2013

Fire and smoke rise at an upscale shopping district in Kansas City, Mo., where a gas explosion sparked a blaze, Tuesday evening. A cable company subcontractor apparently hit a gas line more than an hour before the blast destroyed a popular restaurant.

AP Photo/The Kansas City Star, Keith Myers

Enlarge

A day after a natural gas explosion leveled a popular restaurant, investigators raced to search the rubble and tried to understand how the blast happened despite suspicions that flammable fuel had been leaking, maybe for weeks, somewhere in the busy outdoor shopping area.

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Hours before the explosion, witnesses reported a strong smell of gas, and firefighters were summoned to the scene at one point but left without ordering an evacuation.

As the cleanup got under way Wednesday, search-and-rescue crews recovered a body. Mayor Sly James declined to identify the victim, but the mother of a missing restaurant server said her family was awaiting confirmation that the remains were those of her daughter.

More than an hour before the blast, a subcontractor working for a cable company hit a gas line with underground boring equipment. Then something inside the restaurant ignited the fuel, authorities said.

Surveillance video from a nearby travel agency shows a fireball erupting from the restaurant's roof, showering the street with debris and throwing up a cloud of dust and smoke. The blast could be felt for a mile and shattered glass in neighboring buildings.

Fifteen people were injured. Six were still hospitalized Wednesday, James said.

People who live and work in the area reported smelling gas for some time before the accident.

Jeff Rogers was waiting at a bus stop down the street from JJ's when the explosion knocked him and another man to the ground.

He said he had smelled gas ? although "not strong" ? at the intersection for the past couple of weeks. Then the odor intensified Tuesday.

William Borregard, who lives with his sister and her fianc? in the apartment building nearest to JJ's, said he too had noticed a strange smell for weeks that had worsened in recent days. On Tuesday, they called the apartment manager.

"We said, it's very pungent and you should come out here and check it out," he said. "He came over and rapped on the door and said there's nothing to worry about. Stay in your apartment." The blast happened five minutes later.

Dr. John Verstraete, a physician who works at a medical practice next to the restaurant, told The?Kansas?City Star that some office employees smelled gas for several hours Tuesday afternoon. The smell grew stronger through the day.

But no one alerted the Fire Department or utility officials to the possibility of a leak until the subcontractor called 911 shortly before 5 p.m. Tuesday to report having ruptured the gas pipe, the mayor said.

Within 20 minutes, a worker for Missouri Gas Energy arrived at the scene, followed later by a backhoe to dig a hole that would allow the gas to vent into the air, MGE Chief Operating Officer Rob Hack said.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/9n81s87FQBA/Kansas-City-restaurant-explosion-Investigation-could-take-months

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Friday, February 15, 2013

Vimeo Acquires Animated GIF App Echograph As Mobile Video Sharing Space Heats Up Thanks To Vine

Screen Shot 2013-02-14 at 9.30.32 AMVimeo has acquired GIF-style video making app Echograph, in a deal whose terms were not disclosed, the company announced today. The price paid for the iPhone and iPad app from Clear-Media was not disclosed, but as a result of the deal Vimeo will now be offering the previously paid app (which was $2.99) for free via the App Store.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/6HYHXJMJHm0/

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Microsoft has no ?Plan B? for Surface

SEATTLE | Wed Feb 13, 2013 4:56pm EST

SEATTLE (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp has not made much of a dent in Apple Inc's and Google Inc's domination of mobile computing, but a top executive hinted on Wednesday that it will not stop trying and does not have an alternative strategy.

"We're very focused on continuing the success we have with PCs and taking that to tablets and phones," Microsoft's Chief Financial Officer Peter Klein said at the annual Goldman Sachs Technology and Internet Conference in San Francisco, which was webcast.

Given Microsoft's lack of success so far, he was asked if there was an alternative strategy or 'Plan B' in reserve.

"It's less 'Plan B' than how you execute on the current plan," said Klein. "We aim to evolve this generation of Windows to make sure we have the right set of experiences at the right price points for all customers."

Microsoft now has two versions of its own brand Surface tablet for sale and released its newest Windows phone software last year. But the company has not made big inroads into either market.

Gartner estimates that Microsoft sold fewer than 900,000 Surface tablets in the fourth quarter, which is a fraction of the 23 million iPads sold by Apple. Microsoft has not released its own figures but has not disputed Gartner's.

Windows phones now account for 3 percent of the global smartphone market, Gartner says, which is almost double their share a year ago but way behind Google's Android with 70 percent and Apple with 21 percent.

To grab more share, Klein said Microsoft was working with hardware makers to make sure Windows software is available on devices ranging from phones to tablets to larger all-in-one PCs.

"It's probably more nuanced than just you lower prices or raise prices," said Klein. "It's less a Plan B and more, how do you tweak your plan, how do you bring these things to market to make sure you have the right offerings at the right price points?"

Klein did not say whether Microsoft itself was planning to move into the growing small tablet market, following the success of Apple's iPad mini, Google's Nexus 7 and Amazon.com Inc's Kindle Fire tablet.

Along with its partners, Klein said only that Microsoft was "well set-up to deliver the most versatile set of experiences across form factors".

Regarding Microsoft's $2 billion loan to Michael Dell and private equity firm Silver Lake to take PC maker Dell Inc private, announced last week, Klein suggested it was simply part of its efforts to support the "ecosystem" of PC makers.

"We have a long history of participating and supporting the ecosystem and that takes different forms. Oftentimes it takes the form of co-marketing, sometimes in helping with development," said Klein. "In a very dynamic industry, our ability to support the ecosystem - particularly the ecosystem that is innovating on our devices and platforms - is a good thing and something we will continue to do."

(Reporting By Bill Rigby; Editing by Kenneth Barry)

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/loopinsight/KqJb/~3/lOMFe5dRubI/us-microsoft-cfo-idUSBRE91C1L720130213

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Did Technology Kill Traditional Dating?

Today's the day, in case you didn't notice. But we're sure your Instagram is flooded with perfectly-filtered flower and teddy bear photos, your Twitter feed's filled with sickeningly sweet hashtags, and love statuses abound on Facebook.

Yet this Valentine's Day may not be as traditionally romantic, one study says, as social networks and online dating take the place of time-honored courtship.

When did revealing the intimacies of your relationship (or lack thereof) online become the norm? How many unfamiliar acquaintances flirtatiously Facebook poke you before even starting a conversation? Technology both helps and hinders the romantic process. It may be lack of time, a call for constant connection, or just plain laziness that draws people to online dating but, without a doubt, it's shaking things up.

International online dating service AnastasiaDate conducted a survey revealing one in four men won't get off the couch to find love. The majority of men ages 35 to 55 have dated online and, of those, 65% successfully met a special someone.

The allure of the Internet, aside from speed and efficiency, also seems to be the veil of courage it provides for would-be suitors.

One quarter of men in the study say they're too nervous to speak to a woman they find attractive, but they fare much differently approaching a person online rather than a face-to-face interaction. One in five men will date "out of their league" because of the wider opportunities online dating yields.

Virtual dating has done more than ease the jitters of the first, awkward conversations, it has significantly altered the well-traveled steps of conventional courtship.

Instead of taking time to explore the welcome intricacies and surprising quirks of a date, all details are available at your fingertips. We've all googled a person before meeting them, scanning over their career history, hobbies and favorite TV shows, not to mention years' worth of Facebook albums.

Online personas allow people to fall in love at first click, even before meeting. Though conversations may not flow so naturally if you've memorized someone's musical taste without asking.

Lawrence Cervantes, chief communications officer for AnastasiaDate.com, argues the shift from traditional dating to online doesn't rid romance of its established habits, it only improves them.

"It's far more convenient, takes emotional stress away from the process, and is more efficient," Cervantes tells Mashable. "It doesn't eliminate the traditional dating ritual, just gives it a shot of Vitamin B."

The report shows most respondents believe one of the benefits is getting to know someone before committing, and 74% feel technology has made dating easier. Perhaps tweeting about your latest favorite gadget is the new alternative to dropping gift hints to your mate.

How drastically has technology impacted our relationships? Is the art of offline dating lost or does online romance improve it? Let us know your thoughts in the comments.

Image courtesy of Flickr, ImNotQuiteJack

Source: http://mashable.com/2013/02/14/technology-dating/

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Thursday, February 14, 2013

Bmi Regional to double routes from Bristol | Buying Business Travel

Bmi Regional is to double the number of routes it serves from Bristol as the airline continues its expansion.

The independent carrier is to launch flights from the West Country airport to Munich, Milan and Hannover from May in addition to the routes to Aberdeen, Frankfurt and Hamburg which had been previously announced.

The three new routes will begin on May 13 with six flights per week on each service. The Bristol to Frankfurt schedule will also increase to twice daily from the same date.

Bmi Regional?s chief executive Cathal O?Connell said: ?The launch of these routes to Munich, Milan and Hannover is a continuation of Bmi Regional?s promise to serve key economic and tourism hubs in Europe from the UK.

?We are positioning Bmi Regional for real growth in Bristol and the southwest, having already launched three routes from Bristol before Christmas. These routes have gained real momentum, and, as a result, we are doubling our frequency on the Frankfurt route to twice a day.

  • ?To read BBT?s interview with Bmi Regional?s O?Connell, click here

bmiregional.com

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Source: http://buyingbusinesstravel.com/news/1320336-bmi-regional-double-routes-bristol

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'A drop of ink on the luminous sky:' Wide Field Imager snaps cosmic gecko

Feb. 11, 2013 ? This part of the constellation of Sagittarius (The Archer) is one of the richest star fields in the whole sky -- the Large Sagittarius Star Cloud. The huge number of stars that light up this region dramatically emphasise the blackness of dark clouds like Barnard 86, which appears at the centre of this new picture from the Wide Field Imager, an instrument mounted on the MPG/ESO 2.2-metre telescope at ESO's La Silla Observatory in Chile.

This object, a small, isolated dark nebula known as a Bok globule [1], was described as "a drop of ink on the luminous sky" by its discoverer Edward Emerson Barnard [2], an American astronomer who discovered and photographed numerous comets, dark nebulae, one of Jupiter's moons, and made many other contributions. An exceptional visual observer and keen astrophotographer, Barnard was the first to use long-exposure photography to explore dark nebulae.

Through a small telescope Barnard 86 looks like a dearth of stars, or a window onto a patch of distant, clearer sky. However, this object is actually in the foreground of the star field -- a cold, dark, dense cloud made up of small dust grains that block starlight and make the region appear opaque. It is thought to have formed from the remnants of a molecular cloud that collapsed to form the nearby star cluster NGC 6520, seen just to the left of Barnard 86 in this image.

NGC 6520 is an open star cluster that contains many hot stars that glow bright blue-white, a telltale sign of their youth. Open clusters usually contain a few thousand stars that all formed at the same time, giving them all the same age. Such clusters usually only live comparatively short lives, on the order of several hundred million years, before drifting apart.

The incredible number of stars in this area of the sky muddles observations of this cluster, making it difficult to learn much about it. NGC 6520's age is thought to be around 150 million years, and both this star cluster and its dusty neighbour are thought to lie at a distance of around 6000 light-years from our Sun.

The stars that appear to be within Barnard 86 in the image above are in fact in front of it, lying between us and the dark cloud. Although it is not certain whether this is still happening within Barnard 86, many dark nebulae are known to have new stars forming in their centres -- as seen in the famous Horsehead Nebula, the striking object Lupus 3 (eso1303) and to a lesser extent in another of Barnard's discoveries, the Pipe Nebula. However, the light from the youngest stars is blocked by the surrounding dusty regions, and they can only be seen in infrared or longer-wavelength light.

[1] Bok globules were first observed in the 1940s by astronomer Bart Bok. They are very cold, dark clouds of gas and dust that often have new stars forming at their centres. These globules are rich in dust that scatters and absorbs background light, so they are almost opaque to visible light.

[2] This quotation comes from E. E. Barnard, Dark Regions in the Sky Suggesting an Obscuration of Light, Yerkes Observatory, Nov 15 1913.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by European Southern Observatory - ESO.

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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://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/02/130213082424.htm

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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Government seeks changes for malt liquor Four Loko

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The makers of a popular carbonated alcoholic drink guzzled on college campuses are going to be changing the look of its Four Loko cans to settle the government's charges of deceptive marketing.

The Federal Trade Commission said Tuesday that Chicago-based Phusion Projects will be required to put an "alcohol facts panel" on the back of flavored malt beverage cans containing more than two servings of alcohol. The panel, similar to "nutritional facts" labels found on foods, would disclose the alcohol by volume and the number of servings in the container.

Phusion also will have to redesign cans of drinks containing more than 2.5 servings of alcohol so they can be resealed and the drink wouldn't have to be consumed in one sitting.

The FTC had accused Phusion of implying in ads that its supersized 23.5-ounce can of Four Loko was equal to one or two regular 12-ounce beers. In fact, the agency says, the can ? which contains up to 12 percent alcohol ? is really more like four to five beers.

The commission had initially proposed a deal with Phusion requiring new label disclosures on products with more than 2.5 servings of alcohol. But the agency was flooded with complaints about the dangers of the supersized drinks, especially with underage drinkers ? so it lowered the disclosure trigger to more than two servings of alcohol.

The FTC also was going to require a label on the front of the can with an alcohol comparison to a regular beer, but some public commenters worried that might lead to binge drinking ? by suggesting Four Loko was a quick, cheap way to get drunk.

Four Loko gained national attention in 2010 after the hospitalization of college students in New Jersey and Washington state. Some states banned the drink, worried about the caffeine in Four Loko and its potential to mask how much alcohol one could safely consume. Amid a crackdown by the Food and Drug Administration, the drink's makers removed the caffeine and started selling Four Loko without the energy kick but still with plenty of alcohol.

In a number of public comments, the commission was urged to ban the drink altogether. But the FTC says it has no jurisdiction to force the product off the market.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/government-seeks-changes-malt-liquor-four-loko-185818966--finance.html

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Suspected College Park shooter said to be quiet, studious

Though much remained unknown about the suspect in the shootings near the University of Maryland's College Park campus, a picture emerged Tuesday of a quiet, studious young man who had completed several high-profile summer internships with NASA.

Dayvon M. Green, 23, a graduate engineering student, had studied industrial and systems engineering at Morgan State University. He was a 2010 and 2011 summer intern at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, close to the College Park campus, according to NASA.

The year before, he was a research intern at the University of Maryland Eastern Shore through the NASA program, according to his NASA profile.

"He was what students aspired to be," Jamol West, a fraternity brother, said of Green, who allegedly killed one of his roommates and wounded another before killing himself. "Very focused on academics, focused on community service. Very well-rounded."

A Morgan spokesman, Clint Coleman, described Green, who was from the Baltimore area, as a "very, very good student." According to the Phi Beta Sigma's Gamma fraternity's website, his GPA was above a 3.5.

In 2010, Green won a $3,000 scholarship through the National Space Grant Foundation and was working on building a central database for NASA.

West, a former Towson University student, said Green helped convince him to join the Phi Beta Sigma fraternity chapter on his own campus, and said the Towson and Morgan State chapters were close. Green was kind, warm and open, West said, usually present at social events even if he was not the center of attention.

"He was a behind-the-scenes person," West said. "That's how he and I bonded."

West said Green was primarily focused on his schoolwork and technology, but also enjoyed football, including the Baltimore Ravens.

Green did not have so much as a traffic ticket until he was cited for drinking in public in November by Prince George's County police, a charge that was dropped earlier this month. University of Maryland officials said Green had not sought mental health treatment through their facilities and the university was unaware of a mental health condition described by police.

Xavier Henry, a University of Maryland Eastern Shore doctoral student who oversaw Green's research during the internship, called him smart, funny and sociable.

"Hearing what happened and some of the details, it just sounds so out of character," Henry said. "We hung out; I took him and some of the other guys fishing sometimes. ... He was a cool guy."

Madhumi Mitra, an associate professor at University of Maryland Eastern Shore, added, "I have never seen any streaks of unusual behavior from him. He worked with a team and everyone was happy with his work."

Capital News Service contributed to this article.

cwells@baltsun.com

Source: http://feeds.baltimoresun.com/~r/baltimoresun/news/rss2/~3/LhOnZn1mtPU/story01.htm

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Video: Are You on the Fashion 'Lyst?'

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/50771151/

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Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Alcohol abusers' depression often related to drinking

Feb. 12, 2013 ? For problem drinkers, bouts of depressive symptoms are often the direct result of their heavy alcohol intake, according to a study in the March issue of the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs.

Experts have long known that heavy drinking can spur temporary episodes of depression -- what's known as "substance-induced depression." However, this information is not always apparent to busy clinicians, and the new findings strengthen the evidence that the phenomenon exists as well as how common and clinically important it is.

"I don't know that the average person realizes that heavy drinking can induce mood problems," said lead researcher Marc A. Schuckit, M.D., of the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine.

What's more, not every doctor might be aware of it, either. But it's important that he or she pay close attention to this problem, Schuckit said, because depression caused by heavy drinking has a different prognosis and is treated much differently from major depressive episodes that are not seen in the context of heavy drinking. Although the symptoms of independent and substance-induced depressions can be identical, if the sadness develops in the context of heavy drinking, the symptoms are likely to lift within several weeks to a month of abstinence and rarely require antidepressants to go away.

The findings come from a 30-year study of nearly 400 men who were 18 years old at the outset. About half were at increased risk for drinking problems because their fathers were alcoholics. Over three decades, about 41 percent of the men with alcoholic fathers developed alcohol abuse or dependence, and nearly 20 percent suffered at least one bout of major depression.

For men with alcohol problems, though, almost one third of those major depressive episodes were seen only while they were drinking heavily.

It's important for doctors to consider alcohol use disorders as a possible cause of patients' depression symptoms, Schuckit said -- rather than simply "reaching for the prescription pad" and recommending an antidepressant.

If alcohol is the cause, "the depression is very likely to disappear with abstinence," Schuckit said.

Many people think that some individuals drink heavily because they are depressed, and that is the case for some. But Schuckit's team actually found no evidence that people with a history of major depression were at increased risk for developing alcohol problems in the future.

"If you're an alcoholic, you're going to have a lot of mood problems," Schuckit said. "And you may be tempted to say, 'Well, I drink a lot because I'm depressed.' You may be right, but it's even more likely that you're depressed because you drink heavily."

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Journal Reference:

  1. Marc A. Schuckit, Tom L. Smith, Jelger Kalmijn. Relationships Among Independent Major Depressions, Alcohol Use, and Other Substance Use and Related Problems Over 30 Years in 397 Families. Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, 2013 [link]

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/WQnQA_Fc6gY/130212075432.htm

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ThinApp Microsoft Visio and Project 2010 while locally installed Microsoft Office 2010

While many are virtualizing Microsoft Office 2010 during a Proof Of Concept (POC) most companies decide to install Microsoft Office natively rather than virtualizing it. Both packaging method are valid but many times it?s easier and more efficient to have Office locally installed. That said, virtualizing Microsoft Visio and Project is a whole different ballgame. Virtualizing Visio/Project makes very much sense in many designs. There are quite a few KB articles and blog posts out there covering Office 2010 and it?s components. But so far I?ve yet to see a complete list of what is needed in order to build a Visio/Project package and have it coexist and to a certain degree integrate with native Office. So I started to collect all data I found on Internet. I ended up adding a couple thinks myself as well.

Follow these steps to successfully package Microsoft Visio and Project 2010 using ThinApp. Using this procedure will allow the package to coexist with natively installed Microsoft 2010 and integrate with Outlook (send email functionality).

To learn more and to read the entire article at its source, please refer to the following page, ThinApp Microsoft Visio and Project 2010 while locally installed Microsoft Office 2010- VMware ThinApp Blog

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Source: http://feeds.dabcc.com/~r/microsoft-windows-server-desktop-news/~3/uAvynfTvrDQ/article.aspx

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Why US Internet Access Is Slow and Expensive

US citizens pay more for internet access than those in many other countries—and also get worse connections for their cash. This video explains why. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/_7hHA0hV8xE/why-us-internet-access-is-slow-and-expensive

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Monday, February 11, 2013

Google Now widget possibly leaks out on Google support page

Google Now widget

There's not a lot to look at, but the minimalist is part of what makes is great. We're talking about Google Now, and the fact that reference to a widget has appeared on a Google support page answers the prayers of many an Android fan. There isn't a lot of documentation, but very little is needed. Place the widget on your homescreen just like you would any other, and a click on one of the sections will open the relevant parts in Google Now. We assume that the widget will be populated based on your Google Now card preferences.

There's no word on when we'll see this, or if it will be part of an OS update or an update available via Google Play. We're guessing the latter, which makes it readily available for carrier phones. We'll just have to wait to get the full details.

Source: Google. Thanks, @mattatwar1!



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/LGFDUcMl7bI/story01.htm

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Sunday, February 10, 2013

Collaborating for Community Health Innovation | HealthWorks ...

With the recent Super Bowl festivities and Fat Tuesday fast approaching, New Orleans conjures up images of pomp, circumstance and regalia.? While the ragin? Cajuns will always welcome celebration, the reality of everyday circumstance pales in comparison to these high dollar, high revenue activities.? As noted in The 2013 Healthcare Informatics Innovator Awards: Co-Second Place Winner: The Louisiana Public Health Institute, New Orleans is beset by poverty and poor health status.? And with the onset of Hurricane Katrina in 2005, these difficult situations were magnified.

As noted in the article, one entity that has taken purposeful steps to improve the health of the people in this community is the Louisiana Public Health Institute (LPHI).? Established in 1997, the LPHI?s mission is ?to promote and improve health and quality of life in Louisiana through diverse public-private partnerships with government, foundations, community groups, academia and private businesses at the community, parish and state levels.?? After applying for participation in the federal beacon communities project, the group was granted Beacon status and awarded a federal grant, under the auspice of the Crescent City Beacon Community (CCBC) initiative.? Armed with $13.5M, the group is working steadfastly towards the development of a metro area-wide patient centered medical home (PCMH) model.

Tackling dual goals of community quality improvement and long-term healthcare investment, the group is developing a foundation for a patient-centered, accountable, community-wide focus for care.? In order to achieve these goals, they are redesigning care management, employing the new role of care manager to facilitate communication between physicians, administrators and patients in the 20 federally qualified health centers (FQHCs) in the metro area.? And through the use of health information exchange (HIE) and electronic health records (EHR), these re-engineered teams aim to connect patient visits from the ED, hospital, primary care and specialty physician office.

Moving beyond the physical exchange, the group also remains intently focused on improving clinic processes for meaningful use of the shared data.? Instituting regular visits with community stakeholders has allowed for providers to share protocols and other tips for delivering safe, quality healthcare while maximizing workflow. ?As a Healthcare Informatics Innovator winner, LPHI has successfully leveraged healthcare technology for community quality improvement.? And while my hat is off to Dr?s Anjum Khurshid, director of the LPHI?s Health Systems, Eboni Price-Haywood, co-ED/CMO for Tulane Community Health Centers and Maria Ludwick, associate director LPHI?s Health Systems, I would be curious to know how they are engaging other providers ? pharmacists, schools, social services, long-term care, first responders, etc ? and most importantly, patients, in the design process?? Sounds like a great opportunity for the pending 2013 HIMSS conference, coming soon to the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center, located smack dab in the heart of New Orleans.

?

Source: http://healthworkscollective.com/principle-healthcare/82116/collaborating-community-health-innovation

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Tragedy for dinosaurs, opportunity for mammals, us

This 2012 artist?s rendering provided by the American Museum of Natural History shows a hypothetical placental mammal ancestor, a small, insect-eating animal. A study released Thursday, Feb. 7, 2013 details the family tree of mammals that have lengthy gestations before birth. It goes back to this shrewish critter slightly bigger than a mouse with a nasty set of teeth. And it first popped in the world a little more than 65 million years ago - just after the cosmic crash which is theorized to have caused the extinction of non-avian dinosaurs. (AP Photo/American Museum of Natural History, Carl Buell)

This 2012 artist?s rendering provided by the American Museum of Natural History shows a hypothetical placental mammal ancestor, a small, insect-eating animal. A study released Thursday, Feb. 7, 2013 details the family tree of mammals that have lengthy gestations before birth. It goes back to this shrewish critter slightly bigger than a mouse with a nasty set of teeth. And it first popped in the world a little more than 65 million years ago - just after the cosmic crash which is theorized to have caused the extinction of non-avian dinosaurs. (AP Photo/American Museum of Natural History, Carl Buell)

This 2012 artist?s rendering provided by the American Museum of Natural History shows a hypothetical placental mammal ancestor, a small, insect-eating animal. A study released Thursday, Feb. 7, 2013 details the family tree of mammals that have lengthy gestations before birth. It goes back to this shrewish critter slightly bigger than a mouse with a nasty set of teeth. And it first popped in the world a little more than 65 million years ago - just after the cosmic crash which is theorized to have caused the extinction of non-avian dinosaurs. (AP Photo/American Museum of Natural History, Carl Buell)

This undated image provided by the American Museum of Natural History shows a shrew-sized Cretaceous-age animal, Ukhaatherium nessovi, which is one of the many mammals used in a mammal tree-of-life study released Thursday, Feb. 7, 2013. The fossil was discovered in 1994 in the Gobi Desert by the Mongolian Academy and the American Museum of Natural History. A team led by Maureen O'Leary of Stony Brook University looked at 4,541 different characteristics of mammals still around and extinct and traced their DNA and their physical features back until it seemed there was a common - and hypothetical - ancestor. They never named the hypothetical creature, not even nicknamed it, but they had an expert draw it based on the features they're pretty sure it had. (AP Photo/American Museum of Natural History, S. Goldberg, M. Novacek)

In this July 6, 2012 photo provided by Courtney Sprain, Paul Renne collects a volcanic ash sample from a coal bed in Montana, within a few centimeters of the dinosaur extinction layer. Two studies published Thursday, Feb. 7, 2013 in the journal Science better explain the Earth-shaking consequences of a catastrophic cosmic collision 66 million years ago when a comet or asteroid smashed into the Gulf of Mexico. The crash seemed to end the reign of the dinosaurs, according to a study by led Renne. And it gave way to the age of mammals that probably started with a cute squirrel like critter and eventually led to us, a second study said. (AP Photo/Courtney Sprain)

(AP) ? New research pinpoints how the torch passed from one dominant creature on Earth to another, from the brutish dinosaur to the crafty mammal.

Two studies published Thursday in the journal Science better explain the Earth-shaking consequences of a catastrophic cosmic collision 66 million years ago when a comet or asteroid smashed into the Gulf of Mexico.

The crash seemed to end the reign of the dinosaurs. And it gave way to the age of mammals that probably started with a cute squirrel-like critter and eventually led to us, the researchers report.

"I think it's fair to say, without the dinosaurs having gone extinct, we would not be here," said Paul Renne, director of the Berkeley Geochronology Center, who led the research on the dinosaurs and cosmic crash. The dinosaurs' disappearance "essentially releases the little timid mammals to become the big guys."

Renne demonstrated how the timing of the cosmic crash exquisitely matches the disappearance of the slow-footed dinosaurs of Jurassic Park fame. His findings provide more evidence for the theory that an extraterrestrial crash was most responsible for the extinction of dinosaurs.

Scientists have long thought that there were 200,000 years between the big crash and the end of the dinosaurs, but Renne's more detailed examination of fossils and soil at Hell Creek in northeast Montana puts the two events within 32,000 years of each other. That strengthens the case for the space crash as the "straw that broke the camel's back" and killed off the dinosaurs, said Renne.

He said other environmental factors, such as a changing climate from volcanic eruptions, also had made life harder for the dinosaurs, but that the big final dagger was the giant collision that caused a now-filled crater more than 100 miles wide at Chicxulub, on the coast of the Yucatan peninsula.

"The asteroid really rang the bell of the planet," said Smithsonian Natural History Museum Director Kirk Johnson, who wasn't part of either study, but praised them both. Together they showed how that one event "had a profound impact on the nature of organisms that live on this planet."

Dinosaurs are a distinct grouping of species, some of which evolved into birds. Scientists don't know how long it took for the large non-avian kinds like Tyrannosaurus Rex to die off.

The second study painstakingly details the family tree of the most predominant type of mammal, those that give birth after a long gestation period. The researchers propose that the first such mammal was a shrewish critter slightly bigger than a mouse with a nasty set of teeth. And it first popped in the world a little more than 65 million years ago ? just after that cosmic crash.

When an asteroid or comet hits Earth and kills off the dinosaurs, it's both a tragedy and an opportunity, said Maureen O'Leary of Stony Brook University and lead author of the mammal study: "In some sense, we are a product of that opportunity."

O'Leary's team looked at 4,541 different characteristics of mammals still around and extinct and traced their DNA and their physical features back until it seemed there was a common ? and hypothetical ? ancestor.

"This isn't something that is just a guess; this is something that is a result of the analysis," O'Leary said. "This thing had a long furry tail. It had a white underbelly and it had brown eyes."

It was smaller than a rat, but bigger than a mouse and likely ate insects.

That first mammal evolved over the years into all sorts of different types, eventually including bats, whales, elephants and primates like us.

"Boy, did a lot happen in about 200,000 years," said study co-author Michael Novacek, curator of paleontology at the American Museum of Natural History in New York.

Unlike the slow-witted dinosaurs, which weren't known for their ability to adapt, mammals in general are more intelligent and can adapt well, O'Leary said.

Scientists examining ancient plants had already estimated that just before the dinosaurs died off world temperatures plunged by about 10 degrees Fahrenheit, causing a loss of many species. Then when the asteroid or comet hit, material spewed into Earth's atmosphere causing temperatures to spike, before dropping again.

Princeton University scientist Gerta Keller, who has been one of the most vocal critics of the impact theory, said the new work still doesn't resolve her doubts. She notes it only looks at soil in Montana.

Renne said there are no impact records anywhere else that are different from what he found in Montana.

___

Seth Borenstein can be followed at http://twitter.com/borenbears

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2013-02-07-US-SCI-Dinosaur-Mammal-Divide/id-a56c56667f204925972f80a11ce847e3

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Is The Earth Cooking Up Another Super Volcano?

A hot spring at Yellowstone National Park. The super volcano that lurks below Yellowstone has blown its top three times in the past 2 million years.

Jason Maehl

A hot spring at Yellowstone National Park. The super volcano that lurks below Yellowstone has blown its top three times in the past 2 million years.

Jason Maehl

Every few million years or so, the Earth burps up a gargantuan volcano.

These aren't like volcanoes in our lifetimes; these "super volcanoes" can erupt continuously for thousands of years. While they might be rare, you'd best look out when one hits.

The ash and volcanic gases from these volcanoes can wipe out most living things over large parts of the planet. Michael Thorne, a seismologist at the University of Utah, has some clues about what causes these big eruptions.

Thorne uses seismic waves to get a picture of what's going on about 1,800 miles beneath the Earth's surface, where the planet's core meets the outer mantle. Think of the Earth as an avocado, and the pit is the core. The stuff you make guacamole with is the outer mantle.

Thorne has been watching two enormous piles of rock that sit on the boundary between the core and the mantle. One pile is underneath the Pacific Ocean; the other under Africa.

Scientists have known about them for 20 years, but Thorne saw something different.

"I think this is the first study that might point to evidence that these piles are moving around," Thorne says.

Moving perhaps, but slowly, and the piles are maybe 3,000 miles across. Thorne thinks, in fact, that the pile under the Pacific is actually two piles crushing up against each other. And where they meet, there's a blob.

"We call it a blob of partially molten material," he says. "I mean it's big ... this one that we found is an order of magnitude, maybe 10 times larger, than any of the ones we've observed before."

The blob is the size of Florida, and there are other, smaller blobs around the edges of the piles, too.

So these great rock piles are being squished together and squeezing this huge molten blob at the middle of it like some kind of balloon, and it is going on right underneath us.

Or at least, under Samoa. So should we care about these blobs?

"A possibility is that these blobs might represent sort of a deep-seated root, to where plumes arise all the way to the surface, giving rise to hot-spot volcanism," Thorne says.

One example is the Yellowstone super volcano, which has blown its top three times in the past 2 million years.

Thorne published all this in the journal, Earth and Planetary Science Letters. He's rather calm about it, and says it is a slow process from blob to blowout ? maybe 100 million years or so.

Thorne says he has no plans to move just yet.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/02/10/171607844/is-the-earth-cooking-up-a-super-volcano?ft=1&f=1007

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