Sunday, March 31, 2013

New clues about how amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) develops

Mar. 31, 2013 ? Johns Hopkins scientists say they have evidence from animal studies that a type of central nervous system cell other than motor neurons plays a fundamental role in the development of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a fatal degenerative disease. The discovery holds promise, they say, for identifying new targets for interrupting the disease's progress.

In a study described online in Nature Neuroscience, the researchers found that, in mice bred with a gene mutation that causes human ALS, dramatic changes occurred in oligodendrocytes -- cells that create insulation for the nerves of the central nervous system -- long before the first physical symptoms of the disease appeared. Oligodendrocytes located near motor neurons -- cells that govern movement -- died off at very high rates, and new ones regenerated in their place were inferior and unhealthy.

The researchers also found, to their surprise, that suppressing an ALS-causing gene in oligodendrocytes of mice bred with the disease -- while still allowing the gene to remain in the motor neurons -- profoundly delayed the onset of ALS. It also prolonged survival of these mice by more than three months, a long time in the life span of a mouse. These observations suggest that oligodendrocytes play a very significant role in the early stage of the disease.

"The abnormalities in oligodendrocytes appear to be having a negative impact on the survival of motor neurons," says Dwight E. Bergles, Ph.D., a co-author and a professor of neuroscience at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. "The motor neurons seem to be dependent on healthy oligodendrocytes for survival, something we didn't appreciate before."

"These findings teach us that cells we never thought had a role in ALS not only are involved but also clearly contribute to the onset of the disease," says co-author Jeffrey D. Rothstein, M.D., Ph.D., a professor of neurology at Johns Hopkins and director of the Johns Hopkins Medicine Brain Science Institute.

Scientists have long believed that oligodendrocytes functioned only as structural elements of the central nervous system. They wrap around nerves, making up the myelin sheath that provides the "insulation" that allows nerve signals to be transmitted rapidly and efficiently. However, Rothstein and others recently discovered that oligodendrocytes also deliver essential nutrients to neurons, and that most neurons need this support to survive.

The Johns Hopkins team of Bergles and Rothstein published a paper in 2010 that described in mice with ALS an unexpected massive proliferation of oligodendrocyte progenitor cells in the spinal cord's motor neurons, and that these progenitors were being mobilized to make new oligodendrocytes. The researchers believed that these cells were multiplying because of an injury to oligodendrocytes, but they weren't sure what was happening. Using a genetic method of tracking the fate of oligodendrocytes, in the new study, the researchers found that cells present in young mice with ALS were dying off at an increasing rate in concert with advancing disease. Moreover, the development of the newly formed oligodendrocytes was stalled and they were not able to provide motor neurons with a needed source of cell nutrients.

To determine whether the changes to the oligodendrocytes were just a side effect of the death of motor neurons, the scientists used a poison to kill motor neurons in the ALS mice and found no response from the progenitors, suggesting, says Rothstein, that it is the mutant ALS gene that is damaging oligodendrocytes directly.

Meanwhile, in separate experiments, the researchers found similar changes in samples of tissues from the brains of 35 people who died of ALS. Rothstein says it may be possible to see those changes early on in the disease and use MRI technology to follow progression.

"If our research is confirmed, perhaps we can start looking at ALS patients in a different way, looking for damage to oligodendrocytes as a marker for disease progression," Rothstein says. "This could not only lead to new treatment targets but also help us to monitor whether the treatments we offer are actually working."

ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig's disease, named for the Yankee baseball great who died from it, affects nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord that control voluntary muscle movement. The nerve cells waste away or die, and can no longer send messages to muscles, eventually leading to muscle weakening, twitching and an inability to move the arms, legs and body. Onset is typically around age 50 and death often occurs within three to five years of diagnosis. Some 10 percent of cases are hereditary.

There is no cure for ALS and there is only one FDA-approved drug treatment, which has just a small effect in slowing disease progression and increasing survival.

Even though myelin loss has not previously been thought to occur in the gray matter, a region in the brain where neurons process information, the researchers in the new study found in ALS patients a significant loss of myelin in one of every three samples of human tissue taken from the brain's gray matter, suggesting that the oligodendrocytes were abnormal. It isn't clear if the oligodendrocytes that form this myelin in the gray matter play a different role than in white matter -- the region in the brain where signals are relayed.

The findings further suggest that clues to the treatment of other diseases long believed to be focused in the brain's gray matter -- such as Alzheimer's disease, Huntington's disease and Parkinson's disease -- may be informed by studies of diseases of the white matter, such as multiple sclerosis (MS). Bergles says ALS and MS researchers never really thought their diseases had much in common before.

Oligodendrocytes have been under intense scrutiny in MS, Bergles says. In MS, the disease over time can transform from a remitting-relapsing form -- in which myelin is attacked but then is regenerated when existing progenitors create new oligodendrocytes to re-form myelin -- to a more chronic stage in which oligodendrocytes are no longer regenerated. MS researchers are working to identify new ways to induce the creation of new oligodendrocytes and improve their survival. "It's possible that we may be able to dovetail with some of the same therapeutics to slow the progression of ALS," Bergles says.

Other Johns Hopkins researchers involved in the study include Shin H. Kang, Ph.D.; Ying Li, Ph.D.; Ileana Lorenzini, M.S.; and Lyle Ostrow, M.D., Ph.D.

This research was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health's National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NS 051509), the ALS Association, P2ALS, the Robert Packard Center for ALS Research at Johns Hopkins and the Brain Science Institute.

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Best bets: 'Mad Men' swings back onto the air

By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, NBC News

Be they demons, advertising executives, or dinosaurs -- or all of the above -- a batch of familiar faces are back again this week. Here's our pick for the three best entertainment offerings of the week ahead.

Frank Ockenfels / AMC

"Mad Men" returns for its second-to-last season.

FRIDAY: 'Evil Dead'
The original "Evil Dead" film series has some of the scariest scenes in horror-film history. Yes, you always knew there was a reason to avoid creepy cellars in isolated cabins -- but maybe you never knew how scary tree branches could be. Original director Sam Raimi and star Bruce Campbell served as producers, and Oscar-winning "Juno" screenwriter Diablo Cody reportedly helped tweak the script. Variety calls the result, "The rare remake that likely will be enjoyed most by diehard fans of its predecessor." (Opens April 5.)

FRIDAY: 'Jurassic Park 3-D'
"Jurassic Park" is a great movie by itself, but we have high hopes for the 3-D version, which hits theaters this week to celebrate the film's 20th anniversary. Sure, going back to an already filmed movie and adding the extra dimension doesn't always work out, but we can't think of a film we'd more like to see it tried upon than this one. The raptors, the T-rex, the chilling hide-and-seek in the theme park's kitchen! Objects in mirror are closer than they appear. (Opens April 5.)

SUNDAY: 'Mad Men'
It's about time season six of "Mad Men" rolled around. It's 1967 -- or it was when we left off -- a tumultous time in the nation, and surely for our characters as well. The cast must continue to deal with the fallour from Lane's suicide, and Don and Megan grapple with issues in their own marriage as her career begins to rise. ?Showrunner Matthew Weiner isn't revealing much about what's coming, but he did promise the new season will bring "a lot of insight into Don, a new dynamic, and people striving to grow up. (Premieres April 7, 9 p.m., AMC.)

Related content:

Source: http://entertainment.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/28/17505880-best-bets-mad-men-swings-back-onto-the-air?lite

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Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Wall Street worries about PayPal's real-world expansion

By Alistair Barr

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Wall Street is having second thoughts about following PayPal from its online roots into the physical world.

PayPal, a leader online, launched a push in 2011 to become a payment option in brick-and-mortar stores. The move increases PayPal's potential market by a factor of at least 10, and has been a big driver of the shares of owner eBay Inc, which surged 68 percent in 2012.

But ahead of an investor day meeting at eBay's Silicon Valley headquarters on Thursday, some investors and analysts are beginning to worry that the initiative will sacrifice profit margins for growth.

"Profitability of on-site payment will be dramatically lower than it is online," said Bill Smead of Smead Capital Management, an eBay shareholder who has been bullish on the company for several years. Smead's Seattle-based firm has trimmed its eBay position twice in the past year.

"If it's going to be a lot less profitable, PayPal may not expand there as much as previously thought," he added. "I would look for eBay to address this at the investor day."

An eBay spokesman declined to comment.

For the year, eBay's stock is up 0.6 percent, lagging behind the Nasdaq Composite Index's gain of 7.2 percent this year. Concern about lower profitability at PayPal has weighed on eBay's stock.

"Margin expansion may take a back seat to growth," Colin Sebastian, an analyst at R.W. Baird, wrote in a note previewing eBay's investor day.

BEWARE THE DIGITAL WALLET FEE

This year, eBay has been trying to control Wall Street's expectations for PayPal profitability. On January 16, the company said PayPal's 2013 margin would be 24 percent, down from a previous forecast of 25 percent to 26 percent.

In a February 1 regulatory filing, eBay mentioned a new fee that MasterCard Inc plans to impose on "digital wallet" operators like PayPal, starting in June, and warned that such changes could increase PayPal's costs and reduce profit margins.

"Any time you take a successful business and move it to other arenas, there's great opportunity and risk," said Richard Sichel, chief investment officer of Philadelphia Trust Co. "There's lots of competition out there, and it's too early to know what PayPal margins will settle down to be."

If other payment networks follow MasterCard and impose a digital wallet fee on PayPal, that could shave 2 cents a share off eBay's earnings each year, Sanjay Sakhrani, an analyst at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, estimated recently.

Even without pressure from MasterCard and Visa, PayPal's Point-of-Sale, or POS, business as it is known, will be less profitable than its online business, according to analysts.

PayPal has signed up several large retailers, including Home Depot, Toys 'R' Us and JC Penney, to accept PayPal in their stores. However, PayPal is taking a smaller cut of sales to persuade these retailers to test the service.

PayPal's POS business is only 30 percent as profitable as its online business, Brian Nowak, an analyst at Nomura, estimated in a note previewing eBay's investor day.

The bigger and potentially more expensive challenge will be to persuade consumers to drop their credit and debit cards in favor of PayPal when they shop in stores, Sebastian, Nowak and others say.

Nowak expects PayPal to develop a rewards program to give users some incentives, similar to the ones offered by big credit card companies like Capital One Financial, American Express and Discover Financial Services.

However, if PayPal offered something like that, its profit margin on offline transactions would go negative, Nowak estimated.

On Thursday, during eBay's investor day, Nowak said he will be looking for the company to explain how PayPal can fund a rewards program and still turn a profit processing in-store payments.

Merchants could share in the cost of a PayPal rewards program, but this has its limits, Nowak said.

One of the reasons merchants are trying PayPal in the first place is that it is cheaper than what is currently offered by existing payment networks like Visa Inc and MasterCard, the analyst noted.

PayPal has not disclosed what it is charging brick-and-mortar retailers, but Nowak estimates that the company takes a cut of about 1.5 percent, compared with about 2 percent to 2.2 percent charged by Visa and MasterCard.

(Editing by Jan Paschal)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/wall-street-worries-paypals-real-world-expansion-232517654--sector.html

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Monday, March 25, 2013

Vizible Is the Location-Based, Picture-Only Twitter Client of Your Dreams

When you search Twitter for specific hashtags, you'll find yourself drowning under a sea of useless results. And there's no way to narrow your search to images only, if that's what you're in the market for. Fortunately for you, Vizible takes on that role and gives you a clean view of nothing but images, all happening right around you. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/wwlP73RWDBg/vizible-is-the-location+based-picture+only-twitter-client-of-your-dreams

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Sunday, March 24, 2013

Civil Society Seeks to Influence Mexican Mining Law Reform ...

  • by Emilio Godoy (mexico city)
  • Friday, March 22, 2013
  • Inter Press Service

MEXICO CITY, Mar 22 (IPS) - Two separate bills to reform Mexico's mining laws, one from the government and the other from academics and NGOs, agree on the urgent need for major changes in the rules governing the industry.

But the two proposals part company when it comes to the mechanisms and goals of the changes to the 1992 mining law. The government's priority is to secure a greater share of the profits of the lucrative mining industry, while civil society's aim is to protect the environment and local communities in mining areas.

The bill drawn up over the space of a year by social groups and independent experts proposes a ban on opencast mining, a scheme for royalty payments on minerals and metals, and environmental remediation measures. The present law, according to its critics, offers huge incentives to mining companies and no benefits at all to the state and local communities.

"The reform must prohibit opencast mining for extracting precious metals. Priority must be given to protecting human rights, the environment, and water resources," Juan Carlos Ruiz, a researcher at the Colegio de San Luis, a public college, told IPS.

"The real cost of mineral extraction should be calculated, including the cost of water, site remediation and the economic development of the region," said Ruiz, who was involved in drafting the civil society bill.

The reform bill put forward by the government is in the hands of economy minister Ildefonso Guajardo. So far it is a declaration of the government's intentions for the new law, which the administration wants to see come into force in 2014.

Under the present legislation, Mexico has become a paradise for the mining industry, to the point that there are 25,693 concessions covering 51 million hectares, according to economy ministry statistics.

Spokespersons for the Mexican Chamber of Mines (Camimex), the industry association, told IPS that 285 companies are operating 853 mining projects in the country, generating more than 300,000 direct jobs and making a total of over seven billion dollars in investment in 2012.

In the period 2010-2012 alone, 15 new mines came into operation, while a further 22 are being built or are in the exploratory phase, the spokespersons said, adding that Camimex does not have "a public position" yet on the legal changes being discussed.

ProM?xico, the state agency for attracting foreign investment, said gross revenue from mining was 22 billion dollars in 2012, and forecast some 35 billion dollars in foreign direct investment would arrive over the next six years, mainly from Canada and the United States.

Mexico is the world's top producer of silver, in third place for bismuth, fifth for molybdenum and lead and ninth for gold, according to ProM?xico and the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC).

But mining has created friction with local communities, because of deforestation, water pollution and the generation of hazardous liquid waste, and local opposition to the mines is strong.

The economy minister said in various presentations that his ministry wishes to review the current pattern of concessions, in particular the payment of fees on commodity production and benefits for local communities.

When it comes to taxes, Guajardo said he does not think the new scheme must necessarily be based on a royalty system, although this is the international standard and is advocated as the most beneficial scheme for mining countries.

Companies operating in Mexico currently pay between 36 cents of a dollar and eight dollars a year per hectare of their concessions for extracting precious metals and minerals. The only additional tax they pay is income tax.

Reforming the mining law was one of the clauses in the Pact for Mexico, a commitment signed by conservative President Enrique Pe?a Nieto with the political parties represented in Congress when he took office in December.

The pact includes the approval of a new mining law that is to "revise the concessions scheme and payment of federal fees linked to production."

It also says "the resources arising from these fees will be used principally for the direct benefit of municipalities and communities where the mines are located."

Guajardo explained that the pillars of the new law will be: a new tax formula for mining concessions, sustainability, respect for protected natural or cultural sites, benefits for local communities and legal security for investors.

The minister is now seeking consensus on these issues before presenting his bill to Congress, where the bill proposed by the social organisations has already been tabled and will be a reference point for the debate.

ECLAC says that in Latin America, a region of vast mining wealth, the windfall revenue from the soaring minerals prices should be efficiently invested, based on the principles of social and environmental sustainability.

It also calls for building a social consensus to invest that income effectively in human capacity building, technological innovation, infrastructure and programmes for mitigation of environmental impacts.

"We have a clear understanding of the importance of mining and what it represents as the first link in the production chains of metallic and non-metallic minerals. It would be absurd to eliminate it," Ruiz, the academic, emphasised.

"But there should be effective mechanisms for society to call into question the granting of concessions, because no one ever asks the people living in an area if they agree to the concession of land," he said.

According to the Observatory of Mining Conflicts in Latin America, there are 175 socio-environmental conflicts or clashes over natural resource use ongoing in the region, involving 183 mining projects and 246 communities. Twenty-one of these conflicts are in Mexico.

ECLAC indicates that the majority of the disputes are related to silver, gold and copper mining. Agriculture is the sector most harmed by mining activity.

Pueblos y Ciudadan?a Organizada vs. la mina Esperanza Silver (People and Citizens Organised against the Esperanza Silver mine), an NGO, has collected more than 8,000 signatures on an on-line petition addressed to environment minister Juan Guerra, to put an immediate stop to the Esperanza gold mine, owned by Canada's Esperanza Silver Corporation.

This opencast mine project covers 15,000 hectares in Tetlama, in Morelos state, adjacent to Mexico City.

Environmental organisations say there are at least 25 opencast mines in Mexico, and with new concessions this figure could rise to 200, including areas where there has been no mining previously.

? Inter Press Service (2013) ? All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service

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Saturday, March 23, 2013

For Israelis, Obama has finally arrived

President Obama hit all the right notes for winning over skeptical Israelis during his first state visit to the critical ally.?

By Christa Case Bryant,?Staff writer / March 20, 2013

President Barack Obama and Israeli President Shimon Peres are photographed through a window and the crowd as they are greeted by children waving Israeli and American flags upon their arrival at the Peres' residence, March 20, in Jerusalem.

Carolyn Kaster/AP

Enlarge

Like Jerry McGuire, who won his wife back with a simple "hello," President Obama seemed to capture the hearts of Israelis with the first word of his speech upon touching down at Ben Gurion airport: Shalom.

Skip to next paragraph Christa Case Bryant

Jerusalem bureau chief

Christa Case Bryant is The Christian Science Monitor's Jerusalem bureau chief, providing coverage on Israel and the Palestinian territories as well as regional issues.

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As Obama moved into a carefully scripted speech that swept back millenniums to recognize Abraham and Sarah as the ancient claimants to the land of Israel, Amir Mizroch, editor of the English edition of Israel Hayom, tweeted: "Stop it, stop it, you had me at Shalom."?

?Obama even trotted out a bit of Hebrew, telling his listeners:?tov l'hiyot shuv b'aretz ??It's good to be back again in "the land," the colloquial term for Israel. It was the first clip played in an unusually long evening news program about his visit.

To be sure, there were hiccups as well. Obama's "beast," the super-duper secure limo that ferries him around even on foreign visits, broke down when someone ? the Israelis insist it was the Americans ? put in the wrong kind of gas. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's joke about preparing Obama a fake moustache so he could ditch his security people and secretly sample Tel Aviv's bars fell flat. And there were complaints that several ministers in the new government had asked Obama to free Israeli spy Jonathan?Pollard, to which he reportedly responded: "Nice to meet you," or "Nice to see you again."

Unlike a wedding, state visits have to be orchestrated without the benefit of the main actors rehearsing ? and sometimes it shows. Obama and Israeli President Shimon Peres, a Nobel laureate now in a largely ceremonial position, bumped into each other more than once as protocol officers pulled and prodded them into the proper formation and they tried to smoothly insert themselves into photo ops with cute kids waving the Star of David and the Stars and Stripes.?

But overall, Obama managed to sail right through the awkward moments and hit all the notes Israelis wanted to hear. He outlined his vision of a two-state solution as a strong?Jewish?state next to a sovereign Palestinian one, without mentioning anything about curbing Israeli settlements in the West Bank; promised continued foreign aid; insisted on calling Netanyahu by his nickname, Bibi; complimented his wife Sara, saying the Netanyahu boys must have gotten their good looks from her; and, in a more serious moment, recognized the sacrifice of Netanyahu's family, who lost his brother Yoni in the 1976 Entebbe operation to rescue more than 100 Israeli and Jewish passengers whose plane had been hijacked.

One senior Israeli official who was asked ahead of time about what Obama would have to do to make his visit a success, reportedly replied simply, "Land." Indeed, before Obama even addresses the Israeli public in a speech tomorrow; before he visits the Dead Sea Scrolls, thus implicitly acknowledging that Israel's right to exist here dates back thousands of years before the Holocaust; before he visits the grave of Theodor Herzl, the founder of Zionism ... in the eyes of many Israelis, his mission is already accomplished.

For the Palestinians, the feelings are quite the reverse. But more on that tomorrow.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/Q8EmxMEj8kA/For-Israelis-Obama-has-finally-arrived

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U.S. rethinking lowest-priced contract rule for guarding embassies

By Susan Cornwell

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Lawmakers are reconsidering a 1990 law that makes the State Department accept the lowest bids for contracts to provide private security at most U.S. diplomatic posts, a requirement that can lead to the hiring of thousands of guards based on how cheap they are rather than their quality.

Concerns about the policy, which was aimed at cutting costs, were heightened by the assault on the U.S. mission in Benghazi, Libya, last September, in which U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans were killed. None of the local guards was outside the lightly defended complex when it was overrun by militants, according to the results of a U.S. government inquiry.

Fifteen months earlier, at the heavily guarded U.S. Embassy in Pakistan - a walled compound within a gated diplomatic enclave - dozens of local guards refused to work for three days. The strike over pay and benefits potentially put security at risk, the U.S. State Department inspector general's office said in an audit in February 2012.

A government spending bill, which passed Congress this week, gives the State Department the flexibility to hire local guards for Afghanistan, Pakistan "and other hostile or high-risk areas" on a best-value basis, allowing for the appropriate trade-offs between cost and quality, a Senate aide said, although the provisions are due to expire at the end of September.

Senators Robert Menendez and Bob Corker, the leading Democrat and Republican on the Foreign Relations Committee, are also discussing whether to propose permanent changes to the way local guards are hired as part of embassy security legislation in the coming months, aides to both men said.

Many people think of the Marines, the sentinels at the front doors of many U.S. embassies, as the buildings' protectors. But they are there mainly to safeguard classified documents. There were no Marines at the Benghazi mission, a temporary facility.

It is the host country - and when it cannot or will not, the locally hired guards - that the U.S. government typically relies on to help keep its diplomats and buildings safe.

'POORLY PAID AND MOTIVATED'

One of the last things former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton asked Congress to do before she left office on February 1 was to change the law requiring that most local guard contracts be awarded on a "lowest price technically acceptable" basis.

The money-saving requirement applies in "dangerous places like Libya," she said.

"We have requested a change in the legislation that would allow us to use some discretion to try to deal with the varieties and vagaries of these local guard forces," she told the House Foreign Affairs Committee in January.

Corker heard complaints about the lowest-price rule from U.S. embassies during a recent trip to several African countries. He visited war-torn Mali, as well as Senegal, Algeria and Tunisia, all of which are confronted with the spread of weapons from Libya after Muammar Gaddafi's overthrow.

The lowest-priced bid requirement encourages companies to snatch a contract from a competitor by lowering the embassy guards' pay, Corker said. "You're just cutting wages of people who actually have performed well and been on the front lines," he said.

The State Department inspector general's office says that changing the law would probably end up costing more - a tough sell in the current atmosphere of fiscal tightening. There are about 30,000 local guards protecting roughly 285 U.S. diplomatic facilities worldwide, the State Department says.

During the past several years, about $500 million has been spent annually on the guards. That does not include Iraq and Afghanistan, which have been budgeted separately.

In December, a State Department-ordered inquiry into the Benghazi attack cited numerous failures, including serious leadership deficiencies at the department that led to insufficient security.

But it also labeled as "inadequate" the responses of the local guards, who worked for a British company called Blue Mountain Group. None was keeping watch outside before the attack, and it was unclear whether they sounded any alarms, the review said.

Since the Benghazi attacks, the company has repeatedly declined to comment in response to Reuters' inquiries.

The lowest-priced rule for local guard contracts "often results in poorly paid and motivated guards," Michael Raynor, former executive director of the State Department's Bureau of African Affairs, wrote last year.

"Paying guards less than living wages" not only has security costs, Raynor wrote to the State Department inspector general, but also "undercuts our Missions' broader engagement in championing human rights."

"What it allowed was cheap guarding ... from the local population, or inexpensive Third World guarding from elsewhere," said Charles Tiefer, law professor at the University of Baltimore and member of the U.S. Commission on Wartime Contracting, which examined spending in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Last year's audit by the inspector general's office related one particularly large problem at the U.S. Embassy in Pretoria, South Africa. The embassy had to issue 60 "deficiency notices" to its local guard contractor for performance problems.

Over two-thirds of 86 U.S. diplomatic posts surveyed reported some problems with guard forces, such as absenteeism and turnover, the audit said.

UNAPPROVED GUARDS POSED SECURITY RISK

The June 2011 guard strike in Islamabad, Pakistan, posed a security risk because although the contractor replaced the strikers, it did so with unapproved guards who had not undergone required background checks, another audit from the State Department inspector general's office said last year.

The strikers had been hired under a 2007 contract awarded to G4S Secure Solutions International Inc on a lowest-price basis. The protest ended when the contractor agreed to increase the guards' pay, the audit said.

Their salaries were not revealed in the unclassified version of the report. A spokeswoman for the company, a subsidiary of the British-based G4S security services firm, declined comment.

Cameron Munter, who was ambassador to Pakistan during the 2011 guard strike, said, "The obvious end result that any ambassador wants is a motivated guard force that can be depended on in a crisis to do the things it's been trained to do."

But Munter also warned that changing contracting rules was not a panacea for safety.

"If all we learn from Chris Stevens' death is that we have to spend money differently, we haven't addressed the real issue - which is, we need to be informed and we have to think hard about how we are best informed, in order to protect ourselves. This is a question of smart security," Munter said.

(Editing by Warren Strobel and Peter Cooney)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-rethinking-lowest-priced-contract-rule-guarding-embassies-050851973.html

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U.S. rethinking lowest-priced contract rule for guarding embassies (reuters)

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Friday, March 22, 2013

Schoolboy Q's Oxymoron Will Be All Work And All Play

Black Hippy MC tells MTV News he needs time to perfect the LP, but that he 'gon' have some fun' after its release.
By Maurice Bobb, with additional reporting by FLX


Schoolboy Q
Photo: MTV News

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1704133/schoolboy-q-oxymoron-album.jhtml

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Ex-convict suspected of link to Colorado slaying dies in Texas

AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - A parolee being investigated in the killing of Colorado's prison chief this week has died after a car chase and a shootout with Texas police, law enforcement officials said on Friday.

Evan Spencer Ebel, 28, died Thursday at a Fort Worth hospital of a single gunshot wound to the forehead, the Tarrant County Medical Examiner's Office said.

Police said they were investigating the ex-convict from Denver in the Tuesday evening shooting death of Tom Clements, executive director of the Colorado Department of Corrections.

Clements, 58, was killed after he answered the door at his home in secluded woods near the town of Monument, 45 miles south of Denver.

Police say the car chase that led to Ebel's killing began after he shot and wounded a Montague County sheriff's deputy during a traffic stop and fled.

Ebel had served time in prison in Colorado and investigators were examining any ties he might have had with a prison gang, said Wise County (Texas) Sheriff David Walker, whose deputies were involved in the car chase.

"I do know that he has a lengthy criminal history," Walker said in Decatur, Texas, where Ebel's final shootout with police occurred after his car collided with an 18-wheeler truck.

He was driving a Cadillac with Colorado plates.

A Texas police official said Friday the FBI was looking for links between Clements' death and the execution-style killing in January of Mark Hasse, a prosecutor in the Kaufman County District Attorney's Office. Kaufman County is east of Dallas.

The January 31 murder of Hasse occurred the same day the U.S. Department of Justice revealed the county district attorney's office was among the agencies involved in a racketeering case against the Aryan Brotherhood white supremacist group.

"The Dallas and Denver offices of the Federal Bureau of Investigation are comparing the homicides of Mark Hasse and Tom Clements to determine if there is any evidence linking the two crimes," Kaufman Police Chief Chris Aulbaugh said in a statement.

The Denver Post reported on Thursday that Ebel was a member of a white supremacist prison gang, the 211s, and had been paroled in the Denver area.

Ebel was charged in robbery and weapons cases in 2004, said Denver criminal defense lawyer Scott Robinson.

(Reporting by Jim Forsyth, Corrie MacLaggan, Alex Dobuzinskis, Dan Whitcomb and Keith Coffman; Writing by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Paul Thomasch and Doina Chiacu)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/police-probe-texas-colorado-prison-chief-killing-020226937.html

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Happy Birthday, SJP! See Her Most Iconic Looks

The fashionista turns 48 on March 25! Look back at her trend-setting -- and most talked-about! -- sartorial turns

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/sarah-jessica-parker-iconic-looks/1-b-125489?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Asarah-jessica-parker-iconic-looks-125489

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Thursday, March 21, 2013

BlackBerry 10 OS


Email addicts, IT managers, and mad multitaskers will find much to love in BlackBerry 10, the new OS from the once-leading smartphone firm that drags the venerable BlackBerry line into 2013. BlackBerry 10 maintains some of the core themes that got so many users addicted to their "CrackBerries," while taking full advantage of the latest hardware and Web technologies.

The company now known simply as BlackBerry is aiming at a specific market: productivity-focused multitaskers. That leads to some positive breakthroughs, like a user interface that makes it really easy to flip through running apps. But BlackBerry 10 tends to lack many game and entertainment service apps that are available on other platforms, and it isn't as user-configurable as Android or Windows Phone. Were the smartphone market not dominated by two major players right now, I'd say that this sleek, flowing new OS would attract a lot of fans. But with iOS and Android owning 90 percent of the market, BlackBerry 10 has a heavy rock to push up a steep hill.

If you're curious about the first BB 10 phone, check out our review of the BlackBerry Z10. Also, the BlackBerry Q10, the first BlackBerry 10 phone with a hardware keyboard, is coming to all four national U.S. wireless carriers around May.

Basic Principles
The key idea in BlackBerry OS 10 is "flow." There's no back button; you're always moving forward. The BB10 experience pivots around a page of your eight most recently used, minimized apps called the Active Frame. Swipe left to go to the BlackBerry Hub,? or the universal inbox; swipe right to go to a very iPhone-like set of application panels. If you're doing something, and you want to do something else, you swipe up, minimizing your app, to return to the Active Frame where it's easy to jump into another app. At the bottom of every screen, there's a virtual Phone button, a Universal Search button, and a Camera button.

BlackBerry OS 10's home screen, to some extent, customizes itself: Those eight recently used apps can update their pages as new information comes in, potentially making them a little like Android's widgets or Windows Phone's Live Tiles. You can't move them around, though: They're just the most recent ones you've used. On the icon pages, you can move the icons around and form folders just like in iOS, but you can't add widgets or individual contacts as icons the way you can on Android and Windows Phone.

I've spent most of my time over the past few years with Android, Symbian, and Windows Phone. I find the inability to "arrange my furniture" on BlackBerry 10 frustrating: I always want to be able to see the weather at a glance and to be able to text my wife easily. This will be less of a problem for iOS users, who have never been able to truly customize their phones.

Apps can't pop up alert badges the way they do on Android and iOS; instead, they send messages to the Hub. While listening to CBC Radio 3, I found the CBC Music app periodically dropped a message in my Hub telling me which radio station I was listening to.

Keyboards and Input
As I've used a BlackBerry Z10 over the past few weeks, I've come to the conclusion that the OS's best feature is keyboards. Two of them, actually. BlackBerry says it has the best touch keyboard in the business, and it's right. In my experience, the BlackBerry Z10's touch keyboard design is considerably easier to type on, with fewer errors, than both iOS and Windows Phone keyboards. There are a lot of different Android keyboards and I doubt I've tried them all, but I'm secure in saying that BlackBerry's is in the upper echelon.

I'm even more excited about the BlackBerry Q10's upcoming physical keyboard. Few other than BlackBerry is doing high-end phones with physical keyboards, and the short time I've spent with the Q10's keyboard make me think it'll be the best of its kind. BlackBerry 10 will include the familiar BlackBerry keyboard shortcuts, too, letting you fly even faster across the UI.

There's one caveat: If you have large fingers, you may prefer a larger Android device such as the Samsung Galaxy Note II. You can only get keys up to a certain size on a 4.3-inch screen.

The Hub, Email, Calendar, and Contacts
Out of the box, you'll set up your accounts; BB10 works with most email services as well as BlackBerry Messenger, Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, and Evernote (that last one is for integrating with the built-in notes app, called Remember). I have two Google Apps accounts, a personal one and a corporate one; the latter had to be set up as a Microsoft ActiveSync account to work correctly here.

The most "BlackBerry" thing about BB10 is the Hub, the unified inbox that has been at the heart of the BlackBerry experience for a decade. When you have a new message, a little red LED above the screen blinks, and you can jump to the Hub by swiping up and to the right in many apps. The gesture only works in portrait mode, though; if you swipe up on an app in landscape mode, it just minimizes.

The Hub stacks and combines all of your accounts (including Twitter mentions and Facebook messages) into a single stream, which can be a lot. You can easily sort by individual account or turn off particular streams, though. I'd actually suggest turning off Twitter, as you get way too many notifications and they often arrive late. The Hub supports folders, but not Gmail labels.

Instant messaging support is short; the Hub supports BBM and Facebook messaging, but not Google Talk or AIM.

BB10 supports HTML email messages as well as Microsoft Office and PDF attachments. If an email message is in plain text, it'll be properly formatted for the screen, but HTML tables tend to require a lot of horizontal scrolling.

In my tests, the OS was able to draw and merge contacts from my various email accounts, Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter, but image support was uneven: It grabbed some contacts' Facebook profile pics but not others. ?An Updates tab on each contact card shows their most recent social-networking updates, while a useful "activity" tab runs down your most recent correspondence. While you can attach three "speed dial" contacts to the dialer, there's no obvious way to pin a contact up for easy access the way you can on Android and Windows Phone. On a messaging-centric device, that's disappointing.

Calendar support is pretty solid. I loaded in Google, Facebook, and ActiveSync calendars. I could create events on the Google and ActiveSync calendars, but only invite participants on the Google Calendar, not on ActiveSync. And I couldn't see the participants' free/busy status. You can view by "working week," which is convenient, but you can't view multiple time zones, something I'd love to see in a business-centric OS.

BBM, BlackBerry's in-house social network and IM system, demands another paragraph here. BBM comes with every BlackBerry phone and reaches well beyond simple IM. On BlackBerry 10, it includes seamless VoIP and video chat?both of which worked very well over both LTE and Wi-Fi?and screen sharing, which lets you show a presentation remotely. These two features are great reasons for a company to standardize on BlackBerry 10, but as BBM is a BlackBerry-only feature, the BBM advantage fades when you're dealing with a group of friends who have a mix of iPhones, Androids, and BlackBerry devices. (Yes, I have the same problem with Apple's FaceTime.)

The Web Browser
The new BlackBerry Web browser is WebKit based and uses technology from Torch Mobile. In testing, it proved to be the equal of other leading browsers. BlackBerry is no longer behind on Web technologies.

The browser opens up to a scrolling, minimized set of your most recent eight Web pages. When you load a page, it opens up in the right view to avoid horizontal scrolling. You can have multiple tab and bookmarks, and add specific pages to your set of app icons. There's a "reader" mode that strips out ads and formatting from articles, and?whoa!?the browser supports Flash, smoothly, by default, without complaining. Hallelujah.

Other options include a private browsing mode, desktop view mode, and settable default search engine (it defaults to Bing, but you can change that). Google Maps works fine in the browser.

Performance is on par with other top browsers. I ran the Browsermark and Sunspider browser benchmarks, and got a 2,452 on Browsermark (which measures general browser performance) and 2198.4ms on Sunspider (which measures JavaScript performance). The Browsermark results were on par with dual-core Android 4.0 phones like the HTC One SV; the Sunspider results were slightly slower than competing Android phones, but not so much so that you'd notice.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/MDIEmudI9oQ/0,2817,2414752,00.asp

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Spring 2013: Physical Therapy; Music; Philosophy & Religion ...

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Krannert School of Physical Therapy: Being rewarded for excellence

Sam Kegerreis was a featured speaker at the Indiana Athletic Trainer?s Association Fall Sports Medicine Symposium and contributed to three poster presentations at the American Physical Therapy Association?s Combined Section Meeting in San Diego in January. At the January meeting, Kathy Martin ?90 ?03 also presented ?Diagnosis Dialogue for PTs in the Neurology and Pediatric Sections? and ?Best Practices in Pediatric Physical Therapy Education.? Stephanie Combs ?99, along with colleague Gammon Earhart from Washington University, St. Louis, presented ?Making Fitness Fun: Parkinson Disease and Nontraditional Community-based Group Exercise.? Combs, along with Dyer Diehl and DPT students Jacqueline Filip and Erin Long, presented ?Measuring Walking Speed in People with Parkinson Disease: Reliability, Responsiveness, and Validity.? Diehl, Combs, and DPT students Jonathon Fellmann ?10, Lindsey Prizevoits, Heidi King ?11, Stephanie Burkhart, and Erica Speer ?11 presented ?Psychometric Values of the Functional Axial Rotation Test in a Population of Active Participants with Parkinson Disease.? Combs and colleagues from Indiana University presented ?Is Walking Faster or Walking Farther More Important to Persons with Chronic Stroke?? Margaret Finley and Combs presented ?Reliability and Minimal Detectable Change of Three-Dimensional Reaching Assessment in Individuals with Impairment from Chronic Stroke.? Combs and co-author Eric Dugan from Boise State University published ?Effects of Body-Weight Supported Treadmill Training on Kinetic Symmetry in Persons With Chronic Stroke? in Clinical Biomechanics.

In October Combs and Anu K. Parameswaran ?12, Dawn Colburn ?12, Tara Ertel, Amanda Harmeyer ?10 ?12, Lindsay Tucker ?10 ?12, and Arlene Schmid from Indiana University presented ?Walking Function Improves with Body Weight Supported Treadmill Training or Overground Walking Training after Stroke? at the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine/American Society of Neuro-Rehabilitation Annual Conference in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

In October Julie Gahimer ?85 and Candy Beitman (School of Occupational Therapy) traveled to multiple cities in Belize. They met with community partners and followed up with formal interviews related to the Seminar in International Practice course in which several College of Health Science students and faculty participated last July. In November Gahimer presented ?Health Promotions for Persons with Disabilities? for students in the School of Nursing at St. Louis University in Madrid, Spain.

In November Stacie Fruth ?95 ?05 attended the European Congress on Physiotherapy Education in Vienna, Austria, and presented ?Onsite Presentations Led by Physical Therapy Students Can Positively Influence Clinicians? Confidence in Aspects of Evidence-Based Practice,? ?Go Fish! A Classroom Activity to Challenge Assumptions About and Enhance Empathy for Patients/Clients in Physical Therapy Students,? ?From the U.S. to Tanzania: The Personal and Professional Impact of a Three-Week International Service Trip on DPT Students Before and After Graduation,? and ?Practitioner and Patient Impressions of Physical Therapy Practice in the Emergency Department of a Level 1 Trauma Hospital: A Rapidly Emerging Practice in the United States.? Her book Fundamentals of the Physical Therapy Examination: Patient Interview and Tests & Measures was published by Jones and Bartlett in February.

In January Peter Rundquist, Linda Biggers ?09, and students Connor Ertel ?10 ?12, Jennifer Lebryk ?12, and Jordan Schaaf ?10 ?12 received the Stephen Gudas Award for Outstanding Publication in Rehabilitation Oncology. They published the article ?Effects of Lymphedema on Shoulder Kinematics and Function in Survivors of Breast Cancer: An Observational Study? in a 2012 issue of Rehabilitation Oncology. The award recognizes people whose written publications in Rehabilitation Oncology have resulted in advancement of the practice of oncology physical therapy.

Emily Slaven had her paper ?Prediction of Functional Outcome Six Months Following Total Hip Arthroplasty? published in Physical Therapy Journal in November and was invited to participate in a podcast with the editor of the magazine on the topic of prediction of outcome following total hip replacement.

Stephanie P. Kelly ?91 ?92 was was named to the Board of Directors for Fletcher Place Community Center and also was elected to the Board of Directors for the Academic Council of the American Physical Therapy Association. She began her term following an induction ceremony at the APTA Combined Sections Meeting in January. Also at the Combined Sections Meeting, Kelly presented the poster ?Perspectives of Academic Faculty and Clinical Instructors on Entry-level DPT Preparation for Pediatric Physical Therapist Practice? with Lisa Kenyon ?98 of Grand Valley State University and Robin Dole ?95 of Widener University. Kelly also presented ?Anatomy Teaching Strategies in Physical Therapist Education? with Kate Decleene (School of Occupational Therapy) and OT graduates Katelyn Alexander Williams ?12, Anne Bamidele ?12, Jennifer Bartlett ?12, Julie Bernhardt ?11 ?12, and Kourtney Maddox ?10 ?12.

Music: Statewide honors

UIndy?s Collegiate Chapter of the National Association for Music Education was awarded the 2013 Outstanding Collegiate Chapter of the Year for the state of Indiana. Senior choral Music Education student Katie Dunlap was one of three collegiate members from the state to be awarded Outstanding Future Music Educator of the year. Music Education major Savannah Shively was elected collegiate representative with voting privileges to the IMEA Board of Directors by the collective statewide collegiate body and will serve a two-year term. Upperclassmen Zachary Cardwell, Amanda Douglas, Katie Dunlap, Andrew Moran, and Allison Ritzline, and alumni Jacklyn Boskamp-Richardson ?11 and Amanda Vidal ?11 presented ?Weathering the Storm: Successful Navigation of the Undergrad MusEd Degree? at the 2013 IMEA/NAfME professional development conference.

Brenda Clark was selected as the 2013 Outstanding Collegiate Music Educator of the year by the Indiana Music Education Association. She also presented ?Strategic Solutions to Challenges Faced by Urban Music Educators? at the IMEA/NAfME conference. Music Education students hosted IPS School 65?s Christmas program in Ruth Lilly Performance Hall as part of the Performance Plus Series.

Tamara Thweatt, Mitzi Westra, and Rebecca Sorley performed a recital of music inspired by birds, titled, ?Fine Feathered Friends,? with video collected by biology professor Roger Sweets for the College Music Society Convention at the University of Texas/Brownsville in March.

Philosophy & Religion: A necessary condition for knowledge

Peter Murphy presented ?Reliabilism and Suspended Judgment? in November at the fall meeting of the Indiana Philosophical Association. He also published ?Sensitivity Meets Explanation: An Improved Counterfactual Condition on Knowledge? in The Sensitivity Principle in Epistemology, published by Cambridge University Press.

Physics & Earth-Space Science: Hunters, fishers, and gatherers

Christopher Moore ?04 and co-author Victor Thompson (University of Georgia) published ?Animism and Green River Persistent Places: A Dwelling Perspective of the Shell Mound Archaic? in the international peer-reviewed Journal of Social Archaeology. His article ?History Beneath Us: Public Archaeology at the Lew Wallace Study & Museum in Crawfordsville,? co-authored by Anne (Shaw) Moore ?03 and student Zachary Gross, was republished in the online journal Indiana Archaeology. His article ?Hickory Nuts, Bulk Processing, and the Advent of Early Horticultural Economies in Eastern North America,? co-authored with Victoria Dekle (University of Kentucky), was republished in Cengage Learning?s online CourseReader: Anthropology. Moore co-authored a paper presented by Anne Moore at the Midwest Historical Archaeology Conference at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.

School for Adult Learning: Marketing accelerated learning

Laurie Daeger was recognized for her marketing expertise at the 2012 Council for Accelerated Program?s National Conference and was asked to present marketing strategies for accelerated learning programs. It included information on implementing a systematic marketing program and best practices used in the School for Adult Learning. In addition, Daeger was elected to the board of the Beech Grove Chamber of Commerce, where she will serve as chair of the Education/Communication Committee.

Kathy Simpher ?98 ?01 will present at the summer Commission for Accelerated Programs conference addressing effective strategies for advising and retaining students. She will discuss best practices for advisors and suggest ways for more interaction between advisors and students. Her presentation will also address the value of CLEP and DSST testing, Prior Learning Assessments, and portfolios as a means of increasing retention. Simpher recently earned certification in Prior Learning Assessment through the Council for Adult and Experiential Learning, an organization that monitors, develops, and offers quality standards for academic institutions serving nontraditional students. Her next level of certification will be completed by early summer, at which time she will be Master Certified in Experiential Learning.

Dr. Louis Holtzclaw, the first dean of UIndy?s School for Adult Learning from 1998 to 2000, passed away in January. He was 79 and lived in Greenfield, Ind., with his wife of 59 years, Marlene. Dr. Holtzclaw was an educator and Baptist minister who helped establish Indiana University?s adult education system. He brought that experience to UIndy and was instrumental in starting its School for Adult Learning.

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Source: http://portico.uindy.edu/2013/03/20/spring-2013-physical-therapy-music-philosophy-religion-physics-earth-space-science-school-for-adult-learning/

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Logo Design Business / Revenue $800 Month / 10627 ... - Flippa

NO RESERVE!!!?NO RESERVE!!!

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Short 5 day auction with NO RESERVE!!!

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TechUniqueGraphics.com, Just launched!!!

You are bidding on a business that already made $858 USD the last month a +$3,000 per month potential easily!

The site is run on PPC traffic, budgeted between $80 - $100/month, with logo designs outsourced to a 3rd party. The site doesn't require any maintenance from you to operate, all that needs to be done is to make sure the worker is keeping up with incoming requests and sending completed orders to customers in a timely manner.

Because the site is simple to run and doesn't require any knowledge of design or programming, it's perfect for anyone.?

This includes people with little or no experience on online business.? Everything that's needed to run the site is included in the auction.

?

Quick reasons to buy this website.

1) $858 USD revenue in logo design services a +$3,000 USD per month potential easily!
2) Profitable in demand niche.
3) 100% dedicated 30 days free support from us.
4) Hands off business.
5) No technical knowledge needed.
6) Premium proven and tested marketing plan.
7) Great bonuses.
8) Low maintenance & low monthly costs. (Outsourcing, hosting and advertising).
9) Unexplored reseller/affiliate potential.

?

Sale Facts.

[+]?Website ready to start making money.
[+] Total revenue?$858 USD a +$3,000 USD per month potential easily!
[+] Quality domain name. (EXCELLENT ALEXA RANK).
[+] Full marketing strategy used provided. (step by step detailed plan)?(GREAT BONUS).
[+] Free VPS hosting for 60 days.?(GREAT BONUS).
[+] Free transfer of website and domain. (if you choose to use your own hosting).
[+] Supplier information.?
[+] Amazing BIN bonus.

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Why we sell it?

I am a professional who make businesses like this to sell to you. So I make websites, show you the potential of them making money and sell them to you at a dirt cheap price.

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Running this business is as simple as this.

Implement provided marketing strategy?>?Receive visitors and make sales?>?Forward orders to the supplier?>?Deliver order to your client?>?Enjoy your profits!

?

What is the secret to?our earnings?

Obviously?we can only disclose the details with the winner, but I can tell you that the secret is a combination of our very specific marketing strategy and the structure of our website?s design. We have a strategy that has be tested improved and tested again for over 5 years of doing internet marketing, so the value of this plan alone could very well match the BIN price of this auction.

?

Traffic.

Traffic has come from our advertising campaigns both free and paid strategies have been used. I want to be clear, this is no rocket science, it is very easy to follow but you DO have to advertise in order to make sales, with either free or paid strategies.

The new owner will get a Proven Marketing Blueprint with?a Marketing Business Plan which includes the exact?strategies and all the keywords that I use for this website.

Top Marketing Strategy Video:?Click here

?

Costs.

The costs included are for advertising and the supplier fee. We have spent $80 - $100 average?on Pay Per Click advertising. All details such as PPC Network used, title, ad description, keywords and specified strategy will be shared with the winner.

Starter Logo Package?>?Your Cost $5?>?Sale Price $59?>Your Profit = $54

Professional Logo Package?>?Your Cost $20?>?Sale Price $89>?Your Profit = $69

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***BONUS***

[+] You will receive our very specific marketing strategy plan with a list of exclusive marketing, SEO guides and tutorials that are worth over +$2,500 USD. You can implement this plan to any websites that you own and turn them into killer money earning machines.
[+] Free VPS hosting account 60 days 100% FREE!
[+] 30 days of 100% FREE support.
[+] Free transfer of website files and domain.
[+] I actually have a lot of experience in this industry and will give you an advice that will save you a lot of time, money and frustrations.

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***AMAZING BUY IT NOW (BIN) BONUS***
***BIN VALUE: 2 MONTHS OF REVENUE = $1,600 USD***

1) I will cover the first 3 months of advertising.
2) FREE! 6 months of personal coaching one on one to run and start your own businesses online - I have over 5 years of Internet Marketing?Experience?(Skype Access 24-7) +$5,000 USD Value!
3) Elite & Premium Internet Marketing Courses.?HOT!
4) Elite & Premium Software.?HOT!

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Payment and Transfer.

After payment has been completed, I will help you to transfer domain. Also you will need a?Godaddy.com account in order?to push the domain?name to you. And you'll get all data site, database name and supplier details.

All bidders must know?I only accept payment method just trough?PayPal.?Any bidder understands the terms of use of Flippa.com and agrees to the terms of this auction. The winner is obligated to pay for the website after the auction ends, a dispute of the sale will be submitted if there is lack of response in a 24 Hour period.

If you are a new Flippa.com user please contact me first by private message to certify your interest on the purchase of this website.

This site is for serious buyers only.?Since it's a real opportunity to get a site that will make you real money, it's not a site that should be taken lightly.?Please don't make a bid if you not serious.

If you use?BUY IT NOW,?you will directed to PayPal and you should make payment. This auction will end soon after your payment is complete.

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What is not included.

3 unfinished logo design projects that are currently in progress. I have decided that we need to finish these clients on our own, because the clients have already been working with us and it would be uncomfortable for them to start over with a new owner.

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NOTE:

PS:?In case you have any questions specific to the website, please send me a Private Message and I will get back to you with a detailed answer as soon as possible. However, please DO NOT leave a public comment, as competitors are reading those too, and this can seriously hurt the new owner of the site.

Many users will ask me a lot of questions, while only a small amount are actually serious. Others are just spying for niche ideas. Very bad.

I only deal with serious buyers. I have no interest in wasting your time and would appreciate the same respect in return.

Bid with Confidence.

?

Your friend;

JMM.

To express your interest to the seller, or post a public comment, you need to log in or sign up.

Source: https://flippa.com/2903506-logo-design-business-revenue-800-month-10-627-uniques-a-real-masterpiece

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Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Sharp will miss deadline for $60M Qualcomm investment, is getting an extension instead

If you recall, Sharp hit the jackpot back in December, when Qualcomm promised to invest around $120 million in the troubled company in exchange for a five percent stake. Sharp already received the first half of that windfall at the tail end of 2012, whereas the remaining $60 million wasn't going to distributed until "sufficient progress has been made." If that last bit sounds vague, Sharp was actually being held to some clear terms: it had until March 29th to finalize specifications for new power-saving screens that will be used in both tablets and smartphones, and which Qualcomm will help produce. Sharp also needed to generate an operating profit of 100 billion yen ($1.05 billion) in the second half of its fiscal year, though a company spokesperson confirmed that's not the reason this payment has been stalled. Fortunately, like those of us who ever started a paper too late, Sharp is getting an extension, with a new deadline of June 30th. In the meantime, though, its problems are festering: a deal for Foxconn to buy a 9.9 percent stake appears to have fallen through.

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Source: Reuters

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

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Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Lindsey Vonn: I'm Dating Tiger Woods!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/03/lindsey-vonn-im-dating-tiger-woods/

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Experts: Fla. election cyberattack is 1st known case

Tim Chapman / Miami Herald

About 2,000 rejected absentee ballots at Miami-Dade Elections Department, mostly for lack of signatures or review of signatures from the last election.

By Gil AegerterStaff Writer, NBC News

An attempt to illegally obtain absentee ballots in Florida last year is the first known case in the U.S. of a cyberattack against an online election system, according to computer scientists and lawyers working to safeguard voting security.

The case involved more than 2,500 ?phantom requests? for absentee ballots,?apparently sent to the Miami-Dade County elections website using a computer program,?according to a grand jury report on problems in the Aug. 14 primary election. It is not clear whether the bogus requests were an attempt to influence a specific race, test the system or simply interfere with the voting. Because of the enormous number of requests ? and the fact that most were sent from a small number of computer IP addresses in Ireland, England, India and other overseas locations ? software used by the county flagged them and elections workers rejected them.

Computer experts say the case exposes the danger of putting states? voting systems online ? whether that?s allowing voters to register or actually vote.


?It?s the first documented attack I know of on an online U.S. election-related system that?s not (involving) a mock election,? said David Jefferson, a computer scientist at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory who is on the board of directors of the Verified Voting Foundation and the California Voter Foundation.

Other experts contacted by NBC News agreed that the attempt to obtain the ballots is the first known case of a cyberattack on voting, though they noted that?there are so many local elections systems in use that it's possible that a similar attempt has gone unnoticed.

There have been allegations of election system hacking before in the U.S., but investigations of irregularities have found only software glitches, voting machine failures, voter error or inconclusive evidence. Where there has been evidence of a computer security breach -- such as a 2006 incident in Sarasota, Fla., in which??a computer worm that had been around for years raised havoc with the county elections voter database -- it was unclear whether the worm's appearance was timed to interfere with the election.

In any case, experts say they?ve been warning about this sort of attack for years.

?This has been in the cards, it?s been foreseeable,? said law Professor Candice Hoke, founding director of the Center for Election Integrity at Cleveland State University.

The primary election in Miami-Dade County in August 2012 involved state and local races along with U.S. Senate and congressional contests (see a sample ballot here). The Miami Herald, which first reported the irregularities, said the fraudulent requests for ballots targeted Democratic voters in the 26th?Congressional District and Republicans in Florida House districts 103 and 112. None of the races? outcomes could have been altered by that number of phantom ballots, the Herald said.

Overseas ?anonymizers? -- proxy servers that make Internet activity untraceable -- kept the originating computers? location secret and prevented law enforcement from figuring out who was responsible, according to the grand jury report, issued in December. The state attorney?s office closed the case in January without identifying a suspect.

Read the Miami-Dade County grand jury report (PDF)

Then came the Herald report, which said that three IP addresses in the United States had been identified among those sending the requests and that there had been a delay in getting that information to investigators, which a Miami-Dade elections official confirmed to NBC News. Terry Chavez, spokeswoman for the state attorney?s office for Miami-Dade County, also confirmed to NBC News that the investigation was reopened to look into those IP addresses. Chavez said she could release no details on the investigation.

Rep. Joe Garcia won the Democratic primary in the 26th District and went on to win the general election. Jeff Garcia, his chief of staff and no relation, said last week that no state or federal investigators had contacted the congressman's office about the case.

State Rep. Jose Javier Rodriguez, a Democrat who won the District 112 seat, said Thursday that his office had not heard from investigators about the case either. A message left at the legislative office of state Rep. Manny Diaz Jr., the Republican who won the primary and the general election?in District 103, was not immediately returned.

The Herald report said that as the requests began coming in, elections officials figured out that they were improper and started blocking the IP addresses. ?I guess they finally gave up,? the newspaper quoted Bob Vinock, an assistant deputy elections supervisor for information systems, as saying.?

People who study election security say the fact that this attempt did not succeed should be of little comfort to election officials. They warn that attempts to attack voting systems are likely to increase.

?In this case the attack was not as sophisticated as it could have been, and it was easy for elections officials to spot and turn back,? said J. Alex Halderman, an assistant professor of computer science and engineering at the University of Michigan who studies the security of electronic voting. ?An attack somewhat more sophisticated than the one in Florida, completely within the norm for computer fraud these days, would likely be able to circumvent the checks.?

Fraudulently obtaining absentee ballots is just one way elections might be subverted by digital means, experts say. Among the other methods and attack points:

  • ?Malware. Rogue software infects millions of home computers across the country. Jefferson said hackers could use malware to change votes or prevent them from being cast in an online election.
  • Denial of service attacks. Jefferson said that hackers could use botnets to prevent election-system servers from working for hours, or perhaps longer. In fact, during an election in June 2012, a DOS attack hit the San Diego County Registrar of Voters' website, preventing voters from tracking the results.
  • ?Spoofing? of election websites. For example, Hoke said, legitimate requests for absentee ballots could be misdirected to another site. The data then could be misused, or the requests could hit a dead end, and voters would be left wondering where their ballots were.
  • Exploiting software flaws in digital voting machines, known as DREs. The flaws could allow insertion of viruses or alteration of programming code that would change votes or delete them. (Read one description of hacking a voting machine.)
  • Tampering with email return of marked ballots. Experts say email return is?troublesome because of the multiple points for attack along the ballots? electronic path. ?The overwhelming consensus of the computer science community is don?t do it, it?s a bad idea,? said Jeremy Epstein, a senior computer scientist at SRI International. But in about half the states, email absentee ballot return is an option for members of the military and their families, along with some other U.S. citizens living overseas.
  • Wholesale hijacking of an online voting system. In 2010, the District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics tested an Internet-based voting system for a week, asking computer experts to probe it for flaws. It took only 48 hours for a team led by Halderman to break in and take control of the site ? even altering it so that the University of Michigan fight song played after a vote was cast.

Read the University of Michigan researchers? report on the DC hack (PDF)

In terms of illegally getting access to absentee ballots, Epstein said, the attacker or attackers who failed in Florida might have had an easier time with Washington state and Maryland.

He said that last summer he demonstrated to the FBI a method of changing individual voters? addresses and other information online in those two states by predicting their driver?s license numbers.

J Pat Carter / AP file

Absentee ballots for the general election marked for delivery to the U.S. Postal Service for mailing are seen at the Miami-Dade County election center in Doral, Fla., on Oct. 5.

First he used publicly available information to gain a voter?s full name and address. Then, he predicted the individual?s driver?s license number ? which is based on a combination of the person?s name and numbers and letters -- and used the information to access their voter registration online. From there, he said, he could have changed their addresses?and?had absentee ballots sent out.

?Imagine if (attackers) changed the address for 2,500 votes. It could be completely automated, and they have the ballots sent to a post office box or whatever,? Epstein said. ?Then the registered voters would have no idea until they tried to vote.?

In October, Halderman and other researchers sent letters warning elections officials in both states of?the danger of staking system security on driver?s license numbers.

The letter to Washington officials (read it here in PDF) also said that other security features in the state?s MyVote system would be only a speed bump to a dedicated hacker.

?Although the MyVote system uses a CAPTCHA, an image of distorted text intended to deter simple automated attacks, this provides only minimal defense,? the letter says. ?Attackers can use commercial services to defeat the CAPTCHA at a cost of less than $0.001 per voter.?

Shane Hamlin, assistant director of elections in the Washington Secretary of State's Office, told NBC News that state election officials have acted on the recommendations in the October letter and will require additional information to register to vote or change registration online.

Maryland election officials did not immediately return a call from NBC News seeking comment, but the Washington Post reported last month that Ross K. Goldstein, deputy administrator of the Maryland State Board of Elections, acknowledged the security hole and said the online voter registration system was being updated to address the issue.

?I believe technology can solve problems, and there are steps that we definitely can, and plan to, take to mitigate the risks,? the newspaper quoted him as saying.

While elections officials are attracted to the savings that online voting and registration systems promise, the cost of guarding online registration and voting systems is large, Hoke said. And that might negate the financial advantage of online balloting touted by some elections officials and vendors who want to sell electronic voting products.

?It?s cheap, if you don?t care whether elections are stolen,? she said.

That possibility -- of an election being stolen through digital means -- haunts researchers. For Jefferson, it?s a matter of national security.

?The legitimacy of government depends on it being impossible for single parties to change the results of elections,? he said.

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Source: http://openchannel.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/18/17314818-cyberattack-on-florida-election-is-first-known-case-in-us-experts-say?lite

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