Thursday, October 31, 2013

Cloudera pitches Hadoop for everything. Really?



When you have a big enough hammer, everything begins to look like the same kind of nail.


That's one of the potential problems with Hadoop 2.0, the greatly reworked big data processing framework that's been at the center of a whole storm of developer and end user interest. Cloudera in particular has plans to make it into a hammer for all kinds of nails.


There's no question that Hadoop 2.0 is a major leap over its predecessor. Instead of being a mere batch data processing framework for MapReduce jobs (limited, boring), it's now turned into a general framework for deploying applications across a multi-node system, with MapReduce just being one of the many possible things that can be run across those nodes (flexible, exciting).


Cloudera's clearly excited by the possibilities inherent in such an arrangement. During a keynote presentation at the O'Reilly Strata-Hadoop World conference in New York City this past Tuesday, the company described an "enterprise data hub" powered by Hadoop, one where all manner of data could be funneled in, processed in place, and extracted as needed.


Sounds great, but how feasible is it? Especially given Hadoop's status as the shiny new big data toy on the block? Such a hub may be a long way off for any company that's late to the big data party and has only just now found a place forits  multi-mega-terabyte data farms to live. Turning those "silos" (as Cloudera refers to legacy data repositories, with a near-audible sniff) into Hadoop installations isn't trivial.


The single biggest obstacle to making all that happen isn't Hadoop itself, although that's still a fairly major obstacle. In talking with vendors and users alike at Strata-Hadoop, it's clear Hadoop is still seen on all sides as a bucket of parts that needs major lifting and welding to be fully useful.


The most fruitful uses of Hadoop have been through the third parties that turn it into a ready-to-deploy product -- not just Cloudera or its quasi-rival Hortonworks, but cloud providers like Microsoft (a major Hortonworks partner), Amazon, SoftLayer, Rackspace, and just about every other name-brand cloud outfit. And few of them have yet to offer the kinds of really high-level abstraction we associate with powerful software tools, where the likes of Puppet or Python scripting are options rather than requirements.


The sheer number of moving parts and pointy edges that pop up out of Hadoop, even for smaller deployments, is still intimidating. A panel given by Dan McClary (principle product manager, Oracle) about Oracle building Hadoop appliances shed a lot of light on how much blood has to be shed, even by the likes of Oracle, to make Hadoop into a deliverable product. McClary was fairly sure over time Hadoop's rough edges would get sanded down by back-pressure from the community and vendors alike, but that time had definitely not arrived yet.


But the single biggest obstacle remains moving apps into Hadoop. The new infrastructure within Hadoop for applications, YARN, is far more open-ended than before, but it isn't trivial to rewrite an application to run there. It's not impossible there could be jury-rigs to accelerate that process -- e.g., some kind of virtualization wrapper that would allow apps to be arbitrarily shoehorned into the framework -- but that's not trivial work either.


Small wonder, then, that a great deal of work right now is being done to make Hadoop play well with existing apps -- connectors, data funnels, and the like. Very little of the discussion I encountered focused on moving existing apps into Hadoop, although few disagreed that it would happen eventually; most of it revolved around taking one's existing analytics and connecting them to Hadoop. There are, I imagine, far more people who want to do that than there are people who want to scrap everything and start over.


That said, the sheer level of bustle at the O'Reilly conference was a tipoff as to how soon that might happen. By this time next year, when the conference moves to the far-larger Javits Convention Center in Manhattan, some of Cloudera's pronouncements may seem a little less wildly optimistic. But until then, the trend right now is toward using Hadoop as a complement to existing big-data systems, not as a forklift upgrade for them.


This story, "Cloudera pitches Hadoop for everything. Really?," was originally published at InfoWorld.com. Get the first word on what the important tech news really means with the InfoWorld Tech Watch blog. For the latest developments in business technology news, follow InfoWorld.com on Twitter.


Source: http://www.infoworld.com/t/hadoop/cloudera-pitches-hadoop-everything-really-229879?source=rss_infoworld_top_stories_
Category: NBA 2K14   Wally Bayola scandal  

Kate Bosworth Fronts Los Angeles Confidential

With her new film "Big Sur" slated to hit theaters this Friday (November 1st), Kate Bosworth soaked up the spotlight by covering the November 2013 issue of Los Angeles Confidential magazine.


During her interview with the publication, the 30-year-old actress opened up about her relationship with husband Michael Polish and her new life as a married woman.


Check out a few highlights from Miss Bosworth's Q&A session below. For more, be sure to visit Los Angeles Confidential!


On her new home:

"One of the last untamed territories in America - we'll have grizzlies roaming around. We're on a lake, so we can just go ice-skating. It's beautiful, so as we start a family, we can really create a special place there together."


On Jasper:

"I've never had an older sister or brother, and she's an only child, so I feel we really understand each other in a special way. If I can make a positive impact on her life, that will me incredibly happy. Having Jasper in my life takes me right back to being that age. It's challenging - its a time when you're so hard on yourself, and not for a great reason, but because you haven't experienced enough to be able to understand a lot of things."


On Michael:

"I knew I didn't want to mess anything up because I wanted to work with him again. There's this moment where you think, I hope this is everything that I think it is, and then we both sort of looked at each other - that was the moment when you decide to really trust, where we said, 'Yes this is it.' I feel like I've known him my whole life, and he feels like he's known me my whole life. And that's something very special that's difficult to describe without sounding like a Hallmark card."


Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/kate-bosworth/kate-bosworth-fronts-los-angeles-confidential-1075157
Tags: Rebel Wilson   broncos   diana nyad   Miley Cyrus Vmas 2013 Youtube   Eydie Gorme  

IOC members urge action after Sochi dump report


LONDON (AP) — Senior IOC members have urged the Olympic body and Russian authorities to investigate the dumping of construction waste that has raised concerns of possible contamination of the water supply in the Winter Games host city of Sochi.

The Associated Press revealed Tuesday that Russia's state-owned rail monopoly is dumping tons of waste into an illegal landfill in Akhshtyr, just north of Sochi, in violation of organizers' "Zero Waste" pledge for the Olympics. On a visit last week to the site, AP reporters saw trucks dump concrete slabs into a gigantic Russian Railways-operated pit filled with spray cans, tires and foam sheets.

"If this is true, I am astonished," Gerhard Heiberg, a senior Norwegian IOC member and marketing commission chairman, told the AP on Thursday. "This would be a breach of confidence between the Russian authorities and the IOC."

"I really hope we will be able to solve this and work together with the Russian authorities to hopefully do something about it, so they can keep their promise of zero-waste program," Heiberg, who organized the 1994 Winter Games in Lillehammer, said in a telephone interview.

"Somebody from the IOC should go and see this for him or herself and evaluate the situation," Heiberg said.

Canadian IOC member Dick Pound called for urgent action to determine the safety of the water supply.

"If you're the IOC, you say, 'Look, we've got this report. We're not in a position from Lausanne to assess it, but if it's true, this really does compromise your own citizenry and it compromises the games. Could you please give us a quick and reliable report on what the hell is going on?"

As a centerpiece of its Olympic bid, Russia promised the cleanest games ever, saying it would refrain from dumping construction waste and rely on reusable materials.

In a letter obtained by the AP, the Environmental Protection Agency in the area where Sochi is located told the Black Sea resort's environment council in late August that it had inspected the Akhshtyr landfill and found "unauthorized dumping of construction waste as well as soil from excavation works."

The village lies in an area where dumping construction waste and soil is forbidden under the Russian Water Code. Moisture from the landfill seeps into underground springs that feed the nearby Mzymta River, which provides up to half the water supply in Sochi.

"It is important for the IOC that organizing committees deliver the games in a sustainable way and with respect for the environment," IOC spokesman Mark Adams said in an emailed statement to the AP on Thursday. "Sochi 2014's zero waste objective is linked to its operational waste at games-time and they have given us every assurance of their commitment to that objective."

Regarding the Ahshtyr site, Adams said, "We understand that this was an illegal dump, which was handling construction waste and that the organizations responsible have been fined."

He said it would be up to the "relevant local authorities" to resolve the issue.

The report on the dumping came during a week in which Sochi marked the 100-day countdown to the Feb. 7-23 games. It also comes as the International Olympic Committee and Russian organizers hold the World Conference on Sport and the Environment in Sochi, a meeting intended to highlight positive steps in making the games more ecologically friendly. New IOC President Thomas Bach is among those attending the conference.

Bach spoke at the three-day environment conference in Sochi, urging Olympic bodies to work together on green projects.

"Sport has long been well aware of this responsibility, and is moving forward with many like-minded partners by setting a good example," he said, according to an IOC release. "The Olympic Movement has already shown the international community how sport can make a tangible contribution to reducing environmental impacts. We are helping in the search for sustainable solutions by providing highly practical guidelines and strategies, for implementation globally, but also locally."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ioc-members-urge-action-sochi-dump-report-175232064--spt.html
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Driver expects to fight Google Glass ticket


LOS ANGELES (AP) — An early adopter of Google's Internet-connected eyeglasses plans to fight a citation for wearing the device while driving in San Diego, saying the technology makes navigation easier than smartphones and GPS devices.

Driver Cecilia Abadie was pulled over for speeding Tuesday evening, when a California Highway Patrol officer noticed she was wearing Google Glass and tacked on a citation usually given to drivers who may be distracted by a video or TV screen.

A challenge to what may be a first-of-its-kind citation could force authorities to re-examine laws and consider how best to regulate evolving gadgetry that will one day become mainstream.

The lightweight eyeglasses, which are not yet widely available to the public, feature a hidden computer and a thumbnail-size transparent display screen above the right eye. Users can scan maps for directions — as well as receive web search results, read email and engage in video chats — without reaching for a phone.

About 10,000 have been distributed so far in the United States to "explorers" like Abadie, and this week Google announced another 30,000 would be available for $1,500 apiece. Abadie, a software developer, got what she describes as the life-changing technology in May.

In an interview Thursday, she said she was not using her Google Glass when she was pulled over for allegedly going about 80 mph in a 65 mph zone on the drive home to Temecula after visiting a friend.

"The Glass was on, but I wasn't actively using it" to conserve the battery, she said. The device becomes inactive if it's not asked to perform a task.

Abadie expressed surprise that wearing the glasses while driving would be illegal and said she's "pretty sure" she will fight the ticket. First, she said, she needs to seek legal counsel. In the flurry of online commentary her traffic stop has generated, several people saying they are attorneys offered their services.

"The law is not clear, the laws are very outdated," Abadie said, suggesting that navigating with the device could be less distracting than with a GPS unit or phone because drivers don't have to glance down.

"Maybe Glass is more a solution to the cellphone problem than a problem," she said.

It's unclear whether a citation for Google Glass has been issued before. The CHP said it is not sure whether an officer within its own ranks has written one, and an agency spokesman pointed out hundreds of law enforcement agencies in California alone can write traffic tickets.

What is clear, CHP Officer Marc Hale said, is that drivers should not use Google Glass.

"Anything that takes your attention away from the motoring public in front of you is a distraction," Hale said.

Though Google Glass users can continue looking ahead, by glancing at the screen they still divert attention from the roadway and that can make the headgear dangerous, according to David Strayer, director of the University of Utah's Center for the Prevention of Distracted Driving.

"Your eyes aren't looking where they need to look," said Strayer, who has tried Google Glass (though not behind the wheel). Like Abadie, he noted that the law lags far behind the technology.

Legislators in at least three states — Delaware, New Jersey and West Virginia — have introduced bills that would specifically ban driving with Google Glass.

A spokesman for Google did not reply to a request for comment. On its website, Google says this about using the headgear while driving: "Read up and follow the law. Above all, even when you're following the law, don't hurt yourself or others by failing to pay attention to the road."

___

Associated Press researcher Rhonda Shafner in New York contributed to this report.

___

Follow Justin Pritchard at https://twitter.com/lalanewsman

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/driver-expects-fight-google-glass-ticket-182118682--finance.html
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Mick Jagger says he never hit on Katy Perry at 18

(AP) — In her teenage dream? Mick Jagger says he never hit on Katy Perry when she was 18.

During an interview with an Australian radio show this week, the pop star said she sang backing vocals for Jagger's 2004 song "Old Habits Die Hard." Perry said she had dinner with the veteran rocker and that "he hit on me when I was 18."

In a statement Thursday, a representative for Jagger says he "categorically denies that he has ever made a pass at Katy Perry." The rep adds: "Perhaps she is confusing him with someone else."

Perry was one of the singers to make a guest appearance on the Rolling Stones' tour this year. The 29-year-old singer also said in the interview that the 70-year-old Jagger has been "very kind" to her.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-10-31-People-Katy%20Perry-Mick%20Jagger/id-b9a53204e0cf4b1c8531dcfee2311695
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DoubleX Gabfest: The Juice Cleanse Edition


TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 2010, AT 6:19 PM
Tornado Kills at Least Five in Oklahoma






FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 2011, AT 3:07 PM
Obama Gets Firsthand Look at a Tornado Damage






TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 2010, AT 6:19 PM
Tornado Kills at Least Five in Oklahoma. Very long title. Long long long. Tornado Kills at Least Five in Oklahoma. Very long title. Long long long.






TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 2010, AT 6:19 PM
Tornado Kills at Least Five in Oklahoma. Very long title. Long long long. Tornado Kills at Least Five in Oklahoma. Very long title. Long long long.



Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/podcasts/doublex_gabfest/2013/10/rape_victims_speaking_out_juice_cleanses_and_the_rise_of_the_female_business.html
Category: Tara Lynn   GTA 5 review  

Jennifer Connelly Brings Taller Son Kai, 16, as Date to NYC Event: Picture


Who's the handsome man on Jennifer Connelly's arm? Her 16-year-old son! The 42-year-old actress brought her eldest son, Kai, as her date to the 19th annual Artwalk in New York City on Tuesday, Oct. 29.


PHOTOS: Celebrities and their lookalike kids


The mother and son posed for a photo together, and Connelly looked noticeably shorter than her teenage son -- even in heels. The Dilemma actress looked like a proud mother as she held Kai's arm, and showed off her classy little black dress and short new hairdo. Kai looked handsome in a black suit and tie while giving a big smile to photographers.


PHOTOS: 10 sexiest Jennifers in Hollywood


Kai is Connelly's only child from a previous relationship with photographer David Dugan. The New Yorker is also mom to son Stellan, 10, and daughter Agnes, 2, with husband Paul Bettany, whom she wed in 2003. 


PHOTOS: Celeb moms on the go


In a recent interview with Redbook, the Oscar winner and busy mom of three said she doesn't think about aging too much. "When I do, it's to wonder what we [as a family] want out of life," she shared. "Are we doing the things that we enjoy? I don't want to put happiness off to the future, because you never know what life will bring. As I get older, I have a clearer sense of what's important to me."


Source: http://www.usmagazine.com/celebrity-moms/news/jennifer-connelly-brings-taller-son-kai-16-as-date-to-nyc-event-picture-20133110
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Eddie Alvarez on his battle with Bellator: 'I don't regret any of it'


Lost amidst the cacophony of jeers from a portion of the mixed martial arts community ahead of what was supposed to be Bellator's pay-per-view debut, which clumsily turned into a Spike TV broadcast is the story of the return of Eddie Alvarez, the organization's distanced and former champion.


Once Bellator's golden boy, Alvarez's position in the company and career has not been the same since his last encounter with the man some suggest took his spot, Michael Chandler, in November of 2011. Alvarez would go on to earn two more high-profile, impressive victories after that brutal loss, but would soon be mired in a protracted, ugly and often public legal dispute with Bellator CEO Bjorn Rebney and the company over what he argued was a failure to match a lucrative contract offer from the UFC.


The fires of that battle have since been extinguished, but the path to get there was bloody and the road forward for Alvarez isn't clear. A rumored new contract signed could see him exit the promotion with a loss, but UFC President Dana White has stated he has little interest in Alvarez under those circumstances. A win would allegedly require him to immediately defend that title again.


Still, a win in his rematch Saturday could be redemptive in ways few have even considered. Alvarez isn't simply trying to reclaim his spot in the rankings or get revenge on a fighter who beat him. This is his chance to remind everyone of who he used to be and demonstrate he's still that fighter. And depending on one's perspective, this is also an opportunity to get back at everyone Alvarez views as having forgot about him or unfairly attempted to manipulate him in the most important moment of his fighting career.


In this interview with MMA Fighting, Alvarez is adamant he has not a single regret about how he conducted himself in a battle with his still current promoter, how he spent his down time, what the turning point was in negotiations and what he thinks of Michael Chandler, Bellator lightweight champion.


Full audio and partial transcript below.


Star-divide



You sound like you're in a good mood.


Always am, man. No reason to be in a bad mood.


This past year. How would you characterize it?


As a roller coaster, man; roller coaster of emotions. It was a busy year for me. I got a lot done, relocated here to Florida. Had to renovate a bunch of homes in Philly so I could make that happen. Had to sell a home in Philly to make that happen.


On my time off from fighting, I was still really busy doing other things, but I'm here where I'm at now in south Florida training, where I want to be with the best team in the country and seven days away from a world title fight. I'm happy.


Given all those challenges, how consistent was your training?


In life in general, there was probably about about a 6-7 weeks where I just was renovating, working on that whole aspect. But in between renovating I was helping Edson Barboza and Frankie Edgar, they had fights coming up, so I was going over there and giving them some rounds trying to put my best foot forward to give them guys rounds to get them prepared for their fight.


Never completely down and out. There was some time where I just needed to focus on renovating the home, selling some homes. I needed to concentrate my focus on that just so I can keep afloat and get down here to Florida.


Technically speaking, was there you worked on the most to develop in this last year while you were 'off' from a competitive schedule?


There is one thing I changed in my training. I laid off strength and conditioning, which I never really have in the past. Really focused on functional training. I found in the past that strength and conditioning was making me fatigue and tired and was interrupting my functional training: my sparring sessions, my things that I held to the highest importance.


The more I came to Florida, the more I laid off strength and conditioning and focused my mind on getting more MMA rounds in. Five, five-minute rounds, getting a bunch of rounds in, dealing with the adversity of being in the fourth, being in the fifth. Knowing how I can recover from going to an explosive movement, how long it's going to take to recover from that explosive movement.


Just more sparring rounds in general and I feel like it has evolved my game so much and helped my game so much. Being able to them rounds with some of the best guys in the world, that doesn't hurt either. Being where I'm at really helps me.


Does that mean you've had a chance to heal any nagging injuries with the time that's past?


Yeah, that, too. I didn't even think about that, but yeah, that, too. This is one of the first fights I'm going into uninjured. No dings, no injuries. There could be something there. Maybe, maybe not, but I just feel f--king great.


I really did do a lot of strength and conditioning in the past and I kind of cut it out. A guy told me one time that 'You don't see a runner come into a MMA gym to get better at running', so why should we do anything else other than fights to get better at fighting? That's sort of what I'm concentrating on and what I have been.


Circling back to this past year, if you could do it all over again, would you do it differently?


No, no. No, I don't regret any of it. It was necessary. I don't regret any of it.


I believed in everything I was doing. Every action I made, I believed in. I thought I was doing the right thing. I think my best foot forward to do what I had to go to get to number one in the world and if anybody wants to blame me for that, then they can blame me for that, but I'm just trying to do my best to get to the number one spot.


I'm willing to be relentless. I'm willing to do what it takes to get there. I don't regret any of it.


What did that entire process teach you?


It taught me the court system, in general, is no way to settle anything. Normally, if you want to settle something, the best way to do it is sit down as men and talk, continue to keep an open line of communication and continue to talk, regardless of your differences.


But, 100 percent, the court system is no way to settle your differences. Unless you got a lot of time and a lot of money on your hands, going that route is no way to go.


Let's say you knock out Michael Chandler in the first round and now you're the champion again. How's it going to be dealing with Bjorn Rebney? How is it going to be dealing with Bellator management? Do you find that to be an issue?


No! It'd be perfectly fine. Look, I don't have to like Bjorn. Bjorn don't have to like me. I work for myself. Every fighter who fights in the world works for themselves. Regardless, I'm going to be a professional and do what I have to do, but I'm an independent contractor. I'm my own brand and I work for myself just like any other fighter.


Bjorn is a promoter and he works for himself. He don't have to like me, I don't have to like him, but what needs to happen is fights need to be made that fans want. As long as we can both agree upon that - if me and Bjorn don't agree upon anything and we just agree upon giving the fans the fights that they want - then that's all we need to agree upon. That's all we need to come an agreement with, is that.


What was the moment where you said, 'Ok, we have to settle this. We have to move forward'?


I think when I finally made my way down here to Florida because I sold an investment property. I got out of my house and the only reason I came here to south Florida, my only goal in mind was to be a world champion again, you know? To get a world championship belt, to get back to the top, that was my only goal coming here.


I told my wife that. I told my kids that. They made the move with me, supported me along the way and as soon as I got down here I began training. I talked to my management. I said, 'Let's fight. Let's get a fight. To hell with it. Let's get this over with and let's start fighting.'


You can't become a world champion not fighting, so regardless, we had to fight.


Let's talk about Michael Chandler a bit, technically speaking. From the guy you fought to what you have seen today, how would you describe his evolution?


We haven't got to see much of him, so the truth is he don't a have a lot of ring experience. He's getting guys out of there pretty quickly. It's hard to say how good Mike has gotten in the last year and half or two years that we fought.


From my eyes, I'm sure in the gym, he's`been training, getting better, working on some things. But I've been in this sport for 11 years. I know it's very slow moving. You don't evolve overnight. It takes years just to maybe get confident enough in a move or technique to use it in a live fight situation.


It's not going to be too much different except myself, you're going to see a huge difference in myself, in my spirit, in my conditioning, and everything else. Mike, the truth is we haven't got a whole lot of minutes of him in the cage. Can't really tell how much he's evolved or hasn't, but I'm counting on that he's evolved and he's a better guy on Nov. 2nd.


For sure in your mind, what do you know you do better than Chandler?


I just feel like I have a better knowledge, a better overall knowledge of the sport. I just feel like I have a better overall knowledge of the sport, period.


I feel like I'm a better striker. I feel like I'm better at jiu-jitsu. People may laugh at that because I did get choked, but I got caught in the fourth round, which jiu-jitsu doesn't play too much of a factor. I feel like I have better jiu-jitsu, better striking. Just a better all around game. It's really just up to me to go out there and show it, but in my own opinion, I feel like I'm better than Mike altogether. Nov. 2nd, it's time to show it.


When you hear Bjorn Rebney say 'Michael Chandler is the best lightweight in MMA', you respond with...?


No, Bjorn Rebney will say that about anybody. He said that about me five minutes before I lost that fight. It just sort of needs to be said.


I believe - I really believe - Mike's arguably the top lightweight out there. And when I beat him, I'll be the top lightweight. I really believe Mike's at the top of his game. He's top notch. He's one of the best lightweights out there right now. When I win my title back, I will be.


The biggest takeaway from your first fight with Mike was what? What happened that you didn't count on or what was the biggest lesson?


To be more focused, to not let things outside of fighting control my training, control my thoughts, control what's important. Too many external things going on.


I always call the gym my sanctuary. It's the one place where I can focus and just concentrate on fighting and I let things outside come to my sanctuary and disrupt what was going on. That's a big part of the reason I came to Florida, is to just be able to focus on fighting.


If you win on November 2nd, you win the belt back. But if I asked you what you gain, what you get back besides that, what would you say?


I think it's the same feeling after I rematched [Shinya] Aoki. It's personal. It's not personal with Mike Chandler. It's not personal with Bjorn Rebney or the promotion. It's personal with myself. It's important in general just as a human being to fail. And it's important to learn from it, bounce back and do better. It's just a lesson that I want put in action, show myself it's ok to fail as long as you learn from it and come back stronger and do better. This is a lesson I tell my kids all the time, I tell myself, I tell my training partners and it's important for me just to put it in action. Talk the talk and walk the walk.


Is it fair to say as a bonus to winning, do you want to stick it to a few people?


Yeah, why not? I always smile in the back of my head. All of the smirk going on inside and it'll feel good.


During this past year with all the changes and challenges, there have to be some people in your life that have gotten no press but have been instrumental in their help. Who are they?


First and foremost, it's my wife, my biggest supporter of all. My wife and kids. My kids don't have much of a choice. If me and my wife decide, they pretty much have to go. It's been my wife more than anything who has been behind me through this and she's just one of them down ass chicks who, she's for the dream. She's for the goal. She's on board no matter what. She picked her own three kids up, left her home and everything, left everything that's comfortable to her to pursue this dream of ours, not just mine. It's my wife first and foremost.


It's also Glenn Robinson at Authentic Sports Management. He's had my back from the very beginning. He has my best interest in mind. He's not so worried about anything else. A lot of managers are worried about making money, doing this, doing that. He's truly a guy who has your best interest in mind. I wouldn't have been able to get through this without Glenn, Frank and one of my very good friends, Josh. These three guys worked really hard to get us through this past year and I owe a lot to them. I owe a lot to my family.


Someone said to me it's almost as if Michael Chandler not only beat Eddie Alvarez, but took his place in the organization. In some ways, took that part of your life. Do you believe by beating Michael you get that back?


No, no. My spot never leaves me. I am my spot. Regardless of win, loss, whatever. It might change for you guys. It might change for the media, for the common fan, the way you think and feel about me. It never changes for me. I live in a bubble. I think the world of myself. I think I'm number one in the world and no one's ever going to change that for me. I understand my spot. I know what I'm capable of and I'll always be a champion, with or without a belt. That sort of thought don't change. That's silly to even think that.


Source: http://www.mmafighting.com/2013/10/31/5046662/eddie-alvarez-on-his-battle-with-bellator-i-dont-regret-any-of-it
Category: Rihanna Pour It Up Video   darren sproles   philadelphia eagles   Miley Cyrus Wrecking Ball   Allison Micheletti  

Apple censors Lawrence Lessig's discussion of iOS 7 Wi-Fi problems


October 31, 2013









Just when you thought Apple couldn't get more censorious or heavy-handed, it surprises you and takes things to a whole new level.


Creative Commons founder Lawrence Lessig found himself being thrown into Apple's memory hole this week when he tried to draw attention to a way in which some Apple users could regain Wi-Fi functionality in the wake of iOS 7's problems with same.


According to Violet Blue at ZDNet, some Apple users who upgraded to iOS 7 have been plagued with malfunctioning Wi-Fi, and since September have had their questions consistently ignored on Apple's official forums. Lessig was one of those bitten by this bug.


Lessig found that for U.K. users at least, one possible form of redress might be available in the form of returning the device under warranty laws in the U.K. Almost immediately after posting that comment on Apple's forums, it vanished. Lessig reposted the comment, only to have it deleted once again -- and this time, Lessig received a warning from Apple that "these posts are not allowed on our forums."


Astounded, Lessig wrote about his experiences on his blog, and expressed dismay at the way comments were being scrubbed from the forums for no defensible reason. "When did it become inappropriate to inform people about legally protected rights related to technical issues?" he declared. "Is talking about legal rights the new porn?"


Lessig also echoed a complaint others have made about Apple: The company remains frustratingly tight-lipped about most every issue raised. "Unlike really helpful companies which try to reward people who spend time making community boards the best source for technical support by engaging with posts, and at least acknowledging the problems," Lessig wrote, "Apple’s policy seems to be a 'never comment' policy. Which leads its users -- and again, people who are volunteering their time to help lower Apple’s customer support cost -- to express increasing exasperation at the unanswered problems."


Since his experience, other posts in the same vein also have been deleted, according to Lessig.




Source: http://www.infoworld.com/t/ios/apple-censors-lawrence-lessigs-discussion-of-ios-7-wi-fi-problems-229905?source=rss_infoworld_blogs
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Apple censors Lawrence Lessig's discussion of iOS 7 Wi-Fi problems


October 31, 2013









Just when you thought Apple couldn't get more censorious or heavy-handed, it surprises you and takes things to a whole new level.


Creative Commons founder Lawrence Lessig found himself being thrown into Apple's memory hole this week when he tried to draw attention to a way in which some Apple users could regain Wi-Fi functionality in the wake of iOS 7's problems with same.


According to Violet Blue at ZDNet, some Apple users who upgraded to iOS 7 have been plagued with malfunctioning Wi-Fi, and since September have had their questions consistently ignored on Apple's official forums. Lessig was one of those bitten by this bug.


Lessig found that for U.K. users at least, one possible form of redress might be available in the form of returning the device under warranty laws in the U.K. Almost immediately after posting that comment on Apple's forums, it vanished. Lessig reposted the comment, only to have it deleted once again -- and this time, Lessig received a warning from Apple that "these posts are not allowed on our forums."


Astounded, Lessig wrote about his experiences on his blog, and expressed dismay at the way comments were being scrubbed from the forums for no defensible reason. "When did it become inappropriate to inform people about legally protected rights related to technical issues?" he declared. "Is talking about legal rights the new porn?"


Lessig also echoed a complaint others have made about Apple: The company remains frustratingly tight-lipped about most every issue raised. "Unlike really helpful companies which try to reward people who spend time making community boards the best source for technical support by engaging with posts, and at least acknowledging the problems," Lessig wrote, "Apple’s policy seems to be a 'never comment' policy. Which leads its users -- and again, people who are volunteering their time to help lower Apple’s customer support cost -- to express increasing exasperation at the unanswered problems."


Since his experience, other posts in the same vein also have been deleted, according to Lessig.




Source: http://www.infoworld.com/t/ios/apple-censors-lawrence-lessigs-discussion-of-ios-7-wi-fi-problems-229905?source=rss_infoworld_blogs
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Teen guilty of stealing Guy Fieri's Lamborghini

(AP) — A jury on Wednesday found a Northern California teen guilty of stealing celebrity chef Guy Fieri's Lamborghini sports car from a San Francisco dealership.

The Marin County panel found Max Wade, 19, guilty of commercial burglary and auto theft, after hearing evidence that Wade had rappelled into British Motors in 2011 to purloin the $200,000 convertible. The car was in the shop for repairs at the time.

Wade was also found guilty of attempted murder and firing a gun into an occupied vehicle in an unrelated drive-by shooting of a man who was dating a girl Wade desired. The man wasn't injured.

Marin County prosecutor Yvette Martinez said Wade had stolen the yellow Lamborghini to impress the girl and was willing to kill to get her attention.

Wade pleaded not guilty to all of the charges. He now faces up to 30 years in prison.

Detectives testified during the trial that they found the gun used in the shooting, two assault weapons and shotgun shells, as well as climbing gear.

Fieri, a star of Food Network, testified during the trial that he had never met Wade and never gave him permission to drive his car.

The teen made news again last year after at least two people tried to break into Marin County's juvenile hall with sledgehammers in an unsuccessful attempt to free him.

Authorities took extra measures to ensure security in the courtroom during the trial, keeping Wade tethered to a chair bolted to the floor.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-10-30-Chef's%20Stolen%20Lamborghini/id-ab74857d7a0c4468b6e6ee55c1067fe2
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Mavericks Can Be Fountain of Youth for Old Macs

By John P. Mello Jr.
MacNewsWorld
Part of the ECT News Network
10/29/13 5:00 AM PT

Mavericks has a new memory compressing scheme that allows a Mac to get more out of its existing RAM. With only 2 GB of memory in my MacBook Air, this feature is heaven sent. It works like this: As a Mac approaches its memory limits, Mavericks compresses memory being used by idle programs to provide more RAM for your system. That allows you to get more bang for the memory you have in your Mac.


OS X Mavericks is available from Apple for free.




As someone with a reluctance to upgrade his hardware as often as Apple would appreciate, two aspects of OS X 10.9 Mavericks immediately caught my attention: its memory management and battery-life enhancements.

Mavericks makes a number of changes in power management that improve battery life substantially -- even on my old 2009 13-inch MacBook Air.


It has reduced demands on a system's central processing unit through something called "Timer Coalescing." The technology squeezes more time out of a battery charge by grouping together low-level operations -- transitions and interrupts, for instance -- to allow the CPU to enter a low-power state more often. It can reduce CPU activity by as much as 72 percent, according to Apple.


Another major juice saver in Mavericks is App Nap. What that does is slow down inactive apps when they're not working in the foreground. It reduces demands on a processor even more and decreases energy consumption by as much as 23 percent.


Mavericks also adds some additional information under the power icon on the OS X toolbar that I found very handy. Along with the an estimate of the battery life remaining in your current charge, it tells you what apps are using significant energy on your system.


Doubled My Battery Life


While those claims sound good, I've always been a doubting Thomas when it comes to battery-life claims. Claims can be fudged or can be the fruit of lab conditions that don't emulate the real world.


That's not the case with Mavericks. Amazingly, I easily doubled the battery life on my MacBook Air. From averaging two to two-and-a-half hours, my battery life was suddenly in the four-to-five hour range.


On the memory side of the ledger, Mavericks has a new memory compressing scheme that allows a Mac to get more out of its existing RAM. With only 2 GB of memory in my MacBook Air, this feature is heaven sent. It works like this: As a Mac approaches its memory limits, Mavericks compresses memory being used by idle programs to provide more RAM for your system. That allows you to get more bang for the memory you have in your Mac.


An added benefit of memory compression is it cuts down on disk access. That's because the more tasks you can perform in memory, the fewer you'll have to swap off to disk. All of that is supposed to improve your system's performance. If it did, I didn't notice it.


Tabbed Finding


In recent times, Apple has been trying to offer alternatives to doing grunt work in the Finder. After all, folders and files are so 20th century. However, Mavericks has added some Finder features that can make working with folders and files more efficient.


Both tabs and tags are now part of the Finder's repertoire. Tabs were originally introduced in browsers to cut down on screen clutter. They've proven to be useful in other kinds of software, too, such as email programs.


In Mavericks, Finder windows can be set up as tabs. For example, you could set up tabs for a Dropbox disk, your Desktop and document folder. Then you could jump to those areas with a click without hunting for them in the Finder's sidebar.


Tabs make moving files easier, too. You can drag items from an open Finder window to a tab, and the item will be moved to the tabbed location.


In a browser, you can choose to have new windows opened automatically in a tab; not so in the Finder -- you have to create them manually. That's done by selecting the item you want to be the focus of the tab and using Command-T or Command-double click.


Finding With Tags


Just as tabs make navigating in the Finder easier, tags can make finding items snappier. Tags are words used to identify an item. "St. Bart, Caribbean, vacation, 1995," for example, might be tags used to identify pictures from a memorable event from your past.


Tags can be added to files and folders in Mavericks. In a Finder window, you can select an item, press control-click and choose the tags item from the pop-up menu. When saving a file, a field will appear in the save box for adding tags.


You can add as many tags as you like. You just need to separate them by commas. Comma separation also allows you to use more than one word as a tag.


In addition to tagging items with words, you can tag them with colors. Since you only have a limited color palette to work with, I found that feature marginally useful.


More Than 200 New Features


Mavericks adds a new Tags section to the Finder's sidebar. You can specify which tags you'd like to appear there. That's a good thing, since as you create more and more tags, the sidebar could get flooded with them.


In the Tags section, though, there's an All Tags item. It will open a window in the Finder that shows all your tags. In that window you can search for tags, edit them, and display items associated with them -- wherever those items are located on your system.


These are just a few of the goodies that can be found in Mavericks. Interactive notifications have been added. Passwords, usernames and credit card information can be stored across devices with iCloud Keychain. There's even iOS favorites like iBooks and Apple Maps.


In fact, Apple says it has added more than 200 new features to the latest version of OS X. However, for my money -- oops, did I mention the upgrade was for free? -- the improved battery life and memory compression features alone make upgrading to Mavericks worthwhile.



John Mello is a freelance technology writer and former special correspondent for Government Security News.


Source: http://www.technewsworld.com/rsstory/79290.html
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Let Them Eat Candy!

Children go trick-or-treating for Halloween in Santa Monica, California, October 31, 2012.
A girl trick-or-treats in Santa Monica, Calif., on Oct. 31, 2012.

Photo by Lucy Nicholson/Reuters








As a parent, I have a love-hate relationship with Halloween. I love seeing my son dress up—this year he’ll be a most adorable green dinosaur—and I enjoy watching my community come together to celebrate with its kids. But I hate that this holiday drowns kids in candy. We’re desperately trying to teach our children healthy eating habits and the importance of consuming food in moderation, and then, once a year, we’re like, Hey, honey, want to go out and collect ungodly amounts of sweets so you can devour them in 48 hours? Yeah, that makes a lot of sense.














Sure, there are clever ways around the candy problem. You can have your kids swap treats for toys with the tooth fairy, for instance. Or you can use the candy to do cool science experiments—did you know that when you drop a Skittle in water, the S floats to the top? Some parents go so far as to buy the candy from their kids, although that approach could backfire (more on that later).










But what if your kids don’t want to barter with the tooth fairy or set off controlled Kit-Kat explosions or sell you their Butterfingers? What if they really, really want to eat 8 pounds of candy? Right now I bet some of you are thinking—commenting, probably—What’s the big deal, lady? Chill out and let your kid eat some candy. (I know former Slate contributor KJ Dell’Antonia would agree.) And you know what? Research suggests that you might be right. As much as I’m going to hate watching my kid swallow eight Snickers bars in 90 seconds, letting go of my controlling tendencies may be the best thing for my son’s long-term well-being. That’s because when parents try to restrict their otherwise healthy children from certain foods, or when we actively pressure or coerce them to eat what we want, kids retaliate. Worse, our well-meaning interventions may cause our kids to develop abnormal relationships with food, increasing their risk for emotional eating and eating disorders.












First, let’s talk about what happens when your kid eats eight Snickers bars in 90 seconds. Assuming he’s otherwise healthy, he’ll survive (and hopefully, so will you). Table sugar and high-fructose corn syrup are comprised of two sugar molecules in similar quantities: glucose and the much sweeter fructose. In response to the cornucopia of glucose, your kid’s pancreas will release the hormone insulin, which will sweep the glucose out of his bloodstream and shuttle it into cells, where it will be stored for future energy needs. Some glucose may also get turned into triglycerides (fat blobs) and returned to the bloodstream. Ultimately, the insulin spike and blood sugar drop may leave your child’s blood sugar lower than it was before, so he may get grumpy, but what did you expect? As for the fructose—the other sugar molecule—it will go straight to the liver, which will turn much of the sugar into fat. Some will get stored in the liver, and some will be sent back into the bloodstream. The fructose may also blunt his body’s release of appetite-controlling hormones called leptin and ghrelin, making him feel peckish despite the 1,800 calories he just ate. As for the fat from the candy, his body will convert it into fatty acids and cholesterol and then store it as fat inside fat cells. The three processes I described—the blood sugar spike and drop as a result of the glucose, the fructose being turned into fat and pumped into the bloodstream, and the fats being stored inside fat cells—are not particularly good for your child, for sure, but they only truly become dangerous when they happen over and over again. If your kid doesn’t have the opportunity to scarf down insane amounts of sugar and fat very often and doesn’t have other health concerns, there’s no reason to be worried about a once-a-year Halloween binge.










Plus, letting your kids eat crazy amounts of candy on Halloween may make them want less of it the next day. That’s not just because of they’ll associate Reese’s Pieces with stomachaches—it’s because kids can get obsessed with foods that they’re not allowed to eat and conversely crave foods less that they’re allowed. “When kids know they will be able to have unrestricted access to candy from time to time, it will greatly reduce the lure,” explains Natalia Stasenko, a pediatric nutritionist with Tribeca Nutrition in Manhattan.










This idea isn’t just based on speculation. In a 1999 study, Penn State researchers identified three types of snacks—wheat crackers, cheese fish-shaped crackers, and pretzel fish-shaped crackers—that a group of 4- to 6-year-olds found equally tasty. Then they split the kids into groups and seated them around tables. They allowed all of the kids as many wheat crackers as they wanted but put either the cheese fish-shaped crackers or pretzel fish-shaped crackers in a clear container in the middle of the table and told the kids they couldn’t have them. After several minutes, a bell rang and the groups were each allowed to eat as many of the formerly banned crackers as they wanted in addition to the wheat crackers. The researchers found that the kids talked positively about, asked for, and ate whichever type of cracker they had been denied—far more than the always available wheat crackers. Interestingly, the kids who became most preoccupied with the forbidden crackers were those who had parents who restricted certain foods at home.










What about when kids don’t even love the restricted food—like if you take away your daughter’s candy corn when she likes chocolate better anyway? Doing so could make her heart swell for candy corn. In 2008, Dutch researchers put kids into private rooms and placed bowls of fruit and sweets in front of each of them. They told one-third of the kids to eat whatever they wanted from the bowls, told another one-third to only eat the fruit, and told the last third to only eat the sweets. Five minutes later, they lifted the restrictions and told all the kids to eat whatever they wanted. The kids who had been told they couldn’t eat the fruit then ate 60 percent more fruit than sweets, even though these same kids, before the experiment, said they didn’t like fruit as much as sweets. Most importantly, the kids who had not been given any restrictions ate less food overall than did the kids who had been restricted from either food.


















Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/the_kids/2013/10/halloween_candy_let_your_kids_eat_it.html
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NASA advances world's first spaceborne sodium lidar

NASA advances world's first spaceborne sodium lidar


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PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

30-Oct-2013



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Contact: Cynthia O'Carroll
cynthia.m.ocarroll@nasa.gov
301-286-4707
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center






It's used as a coolant in nuclear power plants and as a desiccant to remove humidity that otherwise would ruin moisture-sensitive products. Found in every cell in the human body, it transmits nerve impulses and regulates blood pressure. And as it turns out, sodium the sixth most abundant element in Earth's crust also is useful as a tracer for characterizing Earth's mesosphere, a poorly understood region of Earth's atmosphere that's sensitive to both the influences from the sun above and the atmospheric layers below.


A team of scientists at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., now wants to develop the world's first spaceborne sodium lidar that would illuminate the complex relationship between the chemistry and dynamics of the mesosphere that lies 40-110 miles above Earth's surface the region where Earth's atmosphere meets the vacuum of space.


Though this relatively small region contains other granules of metals, including iron, magnesium, calcium, and potassium all produced by the evaporation of extraterrestrial dust when it encounters Earth's atmosphere sodium is easiest to detect. This dust is part of the so-called Zodiacal Dust Cloud that originates from the debris produced by asteroids and comets.


"There is literally a layer of atomic sodium in the mesosphere," said Principal Investigator Diego Janches, who is leading the lidar-development team. "When you shoot yellow light into the region, the light bounces off the sodium particles, causing them to resonate, or glow. By detecting the glow-back, you can measure how much sodium is in the mesosphere, its temperature, and the speed at which it's moving."


And because of its relative abundance, sodium provides higher-resolution data that reveals more information about the small-scale dynamics occurring in the upper atmosphere. From this, scientists can learn more about the influence of the Sun's energy, helping to differentiate its effects from that of humans.


Although scientists have used sodium lidars in ground-based measurements for at least four decades, they never before have gathered data from a spaceborne instrument. As a result, the data is limited in time and space and does not offer a global picture of the dynamics. "We want to do this from space," Janches added. "We want to map the entire mesosphere by the fluorescence of sodium."


To achieve that end, the team is using Goddard research-and-development program funding to advance the lidar technology, with the aim of first demonstrating it on the International Space Station. In addition to studying the influences of the sun on Earth, the instrument is ideal for studying other planetary atmospheres, Janches added.


Although NASA'S Thermosphere, Ionosphere, Mesosphere Energetics and Dynamics (TIMED) spacecraft whose mission NASA has extended several times since its launch in 2001 has given scientists their first long-term look at this poorly understood region of Earth's atmosphere, the team believes its instrument concept is the logical next step.


"Because of TIMED's high inclination, it takes 60 days for the satellite to cover all longitudes at all local times. As a result, data from the satellite's SABER instrument (Sounding of the Atmosphere using Broadband Emission Radiometry) assume that the dynamics are constant during that time," Janches said. "In addition, SABER is a scanning-type instrument. In other words, it looks at the horizon, gathering signals from all parts of the atmosphere."


In sharp contrast, the sodium lidar will illuminate a specific spot and gather data from that spot only. "Because of this, we get small-scale dynamics, which are the biggest unknowns," Janches explained. "And they are important. They are believed to be the major driver of circulation in the upper atmosphere."


Team Leverages Instrument Heritage


Mike Krainak, a team member and recognized expert in laser technologies, also believes NASA would benefit from such a spaceborne instrument, which he says poses few technological risks.


"We have a lot of leverage from other missions we've done," he said, adding that his colleagues already have developed laser-related technologies for the Geoscience Laser Altimeter System on the NASA ICESat (Ice, Cloud, and land Elevation Satellite) mission and the Atmospheric Laboratory for Applications and Science, a space shuttle payload. The laser itself, developed in large part by team member Tony Yu, is a modified version of the lasers flown on NASA missions to Mercury and Mars.


"All of the laser components are the same," Janches said. "This work has put us 20 years ahead and saved us $30 million in development costs. We have a general idea of what's going on," he continued. "We just want to get a bigger picture."



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NASA advances world's first spaceborne sodium lidar


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

30-Oct-2013



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]


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Contact: Cynthia O'Carroll
cynthia.m.ocarroll@nasa.gov
301-286-4707
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center






It's used as a coolant in nuclear power plants and as a desiccant to remove humidity that otherwise would ruin moisture-sensitive products. Found in every cell in the human body, it transmits nerve impulses and regulates blood pressure. And as it turns out, sodium the sixth most abundant element in Earth's crust also is useful as a tracer for characterizing Earth's mesosphere, a poorly understood region of Earth's atmosphere that's sensitive to both the influences from the sun above and the atmospheric layers below.


A team of scientists at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., now wants to develop the world's first spaceborne sodium lidar that would illuminate the complex relationship between the chemistry and dynamics of the mesosphere that lies 40-110 miles above Earth's surface the region where Earth's atmosphere meets the vacuum of space.


Though this relatively small region contains other granules of metals, including iron, magnesium, calcium, and potassium all produced by the evaporation of extraterrestrial dust when it encounters Earth's atmosphere sodium is easiest to detect. This dust is part of the so-called Zodiacal Dust Cloud that originates from the debris produced by asteroids and comets.


"There is literally a layer of atomic sodium in the mesosphere," said Principal Investigator Diego Janches, who is leading the lidar-development team. "When you shoot yellow light into the region, the light bounces off the sodium particles, causing them to resonate, or glow. By detecting the glow-back, you can measure how much sodium is in the mesosphere, its temperature, and the speed at which it's moving."


And because of its relative abundance, sodium provides higher-resolution data that reveals more information about the small-scale dynamics occurring in the upper atmosphere. From this, scientists can learn more about the influence of the Sun's energy, helping to differentiate its effects from that of humans.


Although scientists have used sodium lidars in ground-based measurements for at least four decades, they never before have gathered data from a spaceborne instrument. As a result, the data is limited in time and space and does not offer a global picture of the dynamics. "We want to do this from space," Janches added. "We want to map the entire mesosphere by the fluorescence of sodium."


To achieve that end, the team is using Goddard research-and-development program funding to advance the lidar technology, with the aim of first demonstrating it on the International Space Station. In addition to studying the influences of the sun on Earth, the instrument is ideal for studying other planetary atmospheres, Janches added.


Although NASA'S Thermosphere, Ionosphere, Mesosphere Energetics and Dynamics (TIMED) spacecraft whose mission NASA has extended several times since its launch in 2001 has given scientists their first long-term look at this poorly understood region of Earth's atmosphere, the team believes its instrument concept is the logical next step.


"Because of TIMED's high inclination, it takes 60 days for the satellite to cover all longitudes at all local times. As a result, data from the satellite's SABER instrument (Sounding of the Atmosphere using Broadband Emission Radiometry) assume that the dynamics are constant during that time," Janches said. "In addition, SABER is a scanning-type instrument. In other words, it looks at the horizon, gathering signals from all parts of the atmosphere."


In sharp contrast, the sodium lidar will illuminate a specific spot and gather data from that spot only. "Because of this, we get small-scale dynamics, which are the biggest unknowns," Janches explained. "And they are important. They are believed to be the major driver of circulation in the upper atmosphere."


Team Leverages Instrument Heritage


Mike Krainak, a team member and recognized expert in laser technologies, also believes NASA would benefit from such a spaceborne instrument, which he says poses few technological risks.


"We have a lot of leverage from other missions we've done," he said, adding that his colleagues already have developed laser-related technologies for the Geoscience Laser Altimeter System on the NASA ICESat (Ice, Cloud, and land Elevation Satellite) mission and the Atmospheric Laboratory for Applications and Science, a space shuttle payload. The laser itself, developed in large part by team member Tony Yu, is a modified version of the lasers flown on NASA missions to Mercury and Mars.


"All of the laser components are the same," Janches said. "This work has put us 20 years ahead and saved us $30 million in development costs. We have a general idea of what's going on," he continued. "We just want to get a bigger picture."



###


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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.




Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/nsfc-na103013.php
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Brick-And-Mortar Bookstores Play The Print Card Against Amazon





Barnes & Noble is one of several stores that have refused to carry Amazon Publishing's books.



Karen Bleier/AFP/Getty Images


Barnes & Noble is one of several stores that have refused to carry Amazon Publishing's books.


Karen Bleier/AFP/Getty Images


When it comes to book publishing, all we ever seem to hear about is online sales, the growth of e-books and the latest version of a digital book reader. But the fact is, only 20 percent of the book market is e-books; it's still dominated by print. And a recent standoff in the book business shows how good old-fashioned, brick-and-mortar bookstores are still trying to wield their influence in the industry. You might even call it brick-and-mortar booksellers' revenge.


At the center of this story is Amazon, and it's no secret that there's little love lost between the traditional book world and the giant online retailer: Publishers and booksellers think Amazon wants to put them out of business. When the Justice Department brought suit against Apple and five major publishing companies for price fixing, a lot of people in the book business were apoplectic: They firmly believe that if an antitrust lawsuit should be brought against anyone, it's Amazon.


So many within the industry are happy to look for any weakness they can find when it comes to Amazon. Recently, they found it in Amazon's decision to not just sell books, but also publish them.


About two years ago, Amazon hired a well-known literary agent, Larry Kirshbaum, to launch the New York branch of their fledgling publishing business, which until then had been based in Seattle. This was seen as a big move because New York is the capital of the publishing business, and Kirshbaum was a major player there. Everyone figured he could use his clout to attract big-time authors to Amazon's trade publishing brand, and everyone was watching very closely to see what happened.



And that's where the revenge part of this story comes in. A lot of booksellers said enough is enough: Not only is Amazon trying to take over the retail side of the book business, it's also going to take over publishing? Some independent bookstores decided they wouldn't carry Amazon Publishing's books and, even more importantly, Barnes & Noble — the country's biggest bookstore chain — and some big-box stores followed suit. Neither Amazon nor its authors expected that kind of backlash, and a couple of pretty big Amazon releases never really took off.


That's where things stood last week when the news broke that Kirshbaum was leaving Amazon to become a literary agent again. His departure was widely viewed as a sign that Amazon Publishing could be in trouble, done in by the likes of Barnes & Noble. Amazon quickly stepped in to say that reports of the demise — or near demise — of its publishing business were greatly exaggerated. In fact, Amazon says it plans to expand its New York business.


Jeff Belle, vice president of Amazon Publishing, says the publishing house's business model isn't dependent on big-box stores like Costco and Target, or on selling books outside its own platform. (It's certainly true that Amazon has cornered the online bookselling business and dominates the e-book market.)


But powerful as it may be, some writers really do want to see their books on the shelves of certain stores. And those authors might be inclined to stick with traditional publishers. So, even in this digital day and age, the bookstore still has some clout.


Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/30/241786954/brick-and-mortar-bookstores-try-for-revenge-against-amazon?ft=1&f=3
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NIH awards $1.7 million to neuroscientist for visual perception research

NIH awards $1.7 million to neuroscientist for visual perception research


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Contact: Bettye Miller
bettye.miller@ucr.edu
951-827-7847
University of California - Riverside



Work by UCR psychology professor Aaron Seitz holds promise of new therapies for individuals with low vision




RIVERSIDE, Calif. A University of California, Riverside neuroscientist has been awarded a five-year, $1.7 million grant by the National Institutes of Health to continue groundbreaking research that may lead to new therapies for individuals with amblyopia (lazy eye), dry macular degeneration and cataracts.


Research by Aaron Seitz, associate professor of psychology, already is influencing what scientists know about perceptual learning as it relates to low vision. Perceptual learning a field of research that emerged about 30 years ago is important to understanding brain processes, mechanisms of learning, the development of training techniques for tasks requiring specialized sensory skills, and the development of clinical applications to rehabilitate patients with sensory deficits.


His NIH research grant, "Integrating Perceptual Learning Approaches into Effective Therapies for Low Vision," will support further study of how different mechanisms of perceptual learning interact, and will explore better treatment options for individuals with visual defects. This integrated approach into understanding brain plasticity how the brain changes physically, chemically and functionally due to aging, injury or disease and perceptual learning so far has been lacking in neuroscience research.


"Science research typically examines isolated processes," he said. "Taking a broader, integrated view requires totally different tools. We need to develop a new model that combines multiple processes or mechanisms for perceptual learning. With this grant I hope we will better understand how these mechanisms can be tuned to train the brain to be more effective."


Earlier research by Seitz challenged the popular assumption that adults learn only by paying attention to something. He found that pairing a visual stimulus with a reward is enough to cause learning, even when an individual is unaware of the stimulus paired with the reward.


"I'm truly excited about this research," said Seitz, who joined the UCR faculty in 2008. "The science is fascinating and has tremendous potential to help people."


Working with Dr. Stacy Pineles at the Jules Stein Eye Institute at UCLA, Dr. Pinakin Davey at the College of Optometry at Western University College of Health Sciences in Pomona and Peggy Seris at the Institute for Adaptive and Neural Computation at University of Edinburgh, Seitz hopes to develop new therapies involving brain training to improve vision of individuals with amblyopia (lazy eye), dry macular degeneration and cataracts.


For example, amblyopia is a visual deficit that occurs in the cortex of the brain, not the retina. Can the lazy eye be taught to "compete" with the dominant eye? Can the brain be trained to "straighten" the curved lines observed in dry macular degeneration? Can brain training speed up vision restoration after cataract surgery?


Seitz believes the answer to these questions is yes.


By the end of the grant, he hopes to have developed a broader understanding of how multiple sensory systems collaborate; have defined better treatment options for people with low vision; and have developed new models that better explain how multiple areas in the brain contribute to perceptual learning and what training would be beneficial.


"This contribution is significant because the development of effective therapies to treat the brain-based aspect of low vision can lead to life-altering benefits for many millions of people worldwide," he said. "This research should also catalyze a paradigm shift in vision research, providing a new framework to understand more ecological forms of learning."


Seitz has worked with the Los Angeles Police Department helicopter pilots and fingerprint examiners to improve visual acuity. His research also will take him to the Riverside Police Department where he will work with patrol officers to improve attention and vision in a sensory environment cluttered with radios, computers and cell phones. Additionally, Seitz has used vision-training exercises he developed to help members of the UC Riverside baseball team improve performance.


He also has founded a company, Carrot Neurotechnology, that creates brain-training video games to improve vision. The company is gearing up for a wide release of tools that can be downloaded to help people with low vision improve their vision or to optimize vision in normally seeing individuals, such as athletes, individuals in law enforcement and others, who are looking to achieve better-than-normal vision.



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NIH awards $1.7 million to neuroscientist for visual perception research


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PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

30-Oct-2013



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Contact: Bettye Miller
bettye.miller@ucr.edu
951-827-7847
University of California - Riverside



Work by UCR psychology professor Aaron Seitz holds promise of new therapies for individuals with low vision




RIVERSIDE, Calif. A University of California, Riverside neuroscientist has been awarded a five-year, $1.7 million grant by the National Institutes of Health to continue groundbreaking research that may lead to new therapies for individuals with amblyopia (lazy eye), dry macular degeneration and cataracts.


Research by Aaron Seitz, associate professor of psychology, already is influencing what scientists know about perceptual learning as it relates to low vision. Perceptual learning a field of research that emerged about 30 years ago is important to understanding brain processes, mechanisms of learning, the development of training techniques for tasks requiring specialized sensory skills, and the development of clinical applications to rehabilitate patients with sensory deficits.


His NIH research grant, "Integrating Perceptual Learning Approaches into Effective Therapies for Low Vision," will support further study of how different mechanisms of perceptual learning interact, and will explore better treatment options for individuals with visual defects. This integrated approach into understanding brain plasticity how the brain changes physically, chemically and functionally due to aging, injury or disease and perceptual learning so far has been lacking in neuroscience research.


"Science research typically examines isolated processes," he said. "Taking a broader, integrated view requires totally different tools. We need to develop a new model that combines multiple processes or mechanisms for perceptual learning. With this grant I hope we will better understand how these mechanisms can be tuned to train the brain to be more effective."


Earlier research by Seitz challenged the popular assumption that adults learn only by paying attention to something. He found that pairing a visual stimulus with a reward is enough to cause learning, even when an individual is unaware of the stimulus paired with the reward.


"I'm truly excited about this research," said Seitz, who joined the UCR faculty in 2008. "The science is fascinating and has tremendous potential to help people."


Working with Dr. Stacy Pineles at the Jules Stein Eye Institute at UCLA, Dr. Pinakin Davey at the College of Optometry at Western University College of Health Sciences in Pomona and Peggy Seris at the Institute for Adaptive and Neural Computation at University of Edinburgh, Seitz hopes to develop new therapies involving brain training to improve vision of individuals with amblyopia (lazy eye), dry macular degeneration and cataracts.


For example, amblyopia is a visual deficit that occurs in the cortex of the brain, not the retina. Can the lazy eye be taught to "compete" with the dominant eye? Can the brain be trained to "straighten" the curved lines observed in dry macular degeneration? Can brain training speed up vision restoration after cataract surgery?


Seitz believes the answer to these questions is yes.


By the end of the grant, he hopes to have developed a broader understanding of how multiple sensory systems collaborate; have defined better treatment options for people with low vision; and have developed new models that better explain how multiple areas in the brain contribute to perceptual learning and what training would be beneficial.


"This contribution is significant because the development of effective therapies to treat the brain-based aspect of low vision can lead to life-altering benefits for many millions of people worldwide," he said. "This research should also catalyze a paradigm shift in vision research, providing a new framework to understand more ecological forms of learning."


Seitz has worked with the Los Angeles Police Department helicopter pilots and fingerprint examiners to improve visual acuity. His research also will take him to the Riverside Police Department where he will work with patrol officers to improve attention and vision in a sensory environment cluttered with radios, computers and cell phones. Additionally, Seitz has used vision-training exercises he developed to help members of the UC Riverside baseball team improve performance.


He also has founded a company, Carrot Neurotechnology, that creates brain-training video games to improve vision. The company is gearing up for a wide release of tools that can be downloaded to help people with low vision improve their vision or to optimize vision in normally seeing individuals, such as athletes, individuals in law enforcement and others, who are looking to achieve better-than-normal vision.



###


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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.




Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/uoc--na103013.php
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