Thursday, February 28, 2013

Retirees turn to communal living in NY

CHESTNUT RIDGE, N.Y. - At the Fellowship Community's adult home, workers are paid not according to what they do, but what they need; aging residents are encouraged to lend a hand at the farm, the candle shop or the pottery studio; and boisterous children are welcome around the old folks.

It's a home for the elderly in a commune-like setting ? 30 miles from Manhattan ? that takes an unusual approach, integrating seniors into the broader community and encouraging them to contribute to its welfare.

"It's a great place to live, and I think there's probably no better place in the world to die," says Joanne Karp, an 81-year-old resident who was supposed to be in her room recovering from eye surgery but instead was down the hall at the piano, accompanying three kids learning to play the recorder.

The 33-bed adult home is at the center of Fellowship Community, a collection of about 130 men, women and children founded in 1966 that offers seniors ? including the aging baby boom generation ? an alternative to living out their final years in traditional assisted-living homes or with their grown sons and daughters.

At most adult homes, a resident in decline would eventually have to go to a hospital or nursing home. But Fellowship has an exemption from state law that allows dying residents to stay there because "people have wanted to stay, and we have wanted to keep them," said administrator Ann Scharff, who helped found the community.

"We provide a space in which people can prepare to die in a way that is accepted and nourishing to them and fraught with meaning," Scharff said. "It's not something you run away from, but it's part of the whole spectrum of life, just as birth is part of life and is prepared for."

Like living in a village
Situated on a hilltop in suburban Rockland County, Fellowship looks a bit like a village out of the past. Besides the farm and the pottery and candle shops, there are a dairy barn with 10 cows, a print shop, a metal shop, a "weavery" and a wood shop.

The 33-acre farm goes beyond organic, running on "biodynamic," or self-sustaining, principles, as much as a small farm can, said Jairo Gonzalez, the head gardener. Solar panels sparkle on the barn roof, and cow manure becomes compost.

Most of the adult home workers live in buildings surrounding it, as do about 35 independent seniors who don't yet need the services but plan to live out their days in the community. At meals, elders, workers and children dine together.

"We don't subscribe to 'Children should be seen and not heard,'" Scharff said.

Caring for the elderly is the main activity, but all the workers also have other responsibilities.

"In a typical work week, someone will be inside helping the elderly, meaning bringing meals, bathing, meds," said Will Bosch, head of the community's board of trustees. "But they'll also be doing building and grounds maintenance, planting, harvesting, milking."

Organizers decline to call it a commune but concede the spirit is similar. The philosophy behind it is called anthroposophy, "a source of spiritual knowledge and a practice of inner development," according to The Anthroposophical Society in America.

Elder care is practiced in somewhat similar fashion in at least two other anthroposophy-inspired communities: Camphill Ghent in Chatham, N.Y., and Hesperus Village in Vaughan, Ontario, near Toronto.

The area around Fellowship has several other organizations with ties to anthroposophy, including a private school, a bookstore and a co-op grocery that sells some of the community's crops. Fewer than half the adult home residents at Fellowship Community have any connection to anthroposophy, at least when they enter, Scharff said.

"We're an age-integrated community built around the central mission of care of the elderly," Bosch said. "The members want to be of service. They come because they know this is a place where they can contribute."

So Karp, the 81-year-old, teaches music and entertains the community at the piano.

"I think the reason people really appreciate this place is because they can be active and they can contribute and there's always something that needs doing," Karp said. "And it's nice when kids are glad to see you."

Importance of community
Other residents, or members, as they're called, have found similar niches.

Gwen Eisenmann, 91, a retired poet, leads poetry discussions and also likes to set the table before meals. Larry Fox, 74, a psychologist, treats patients at the Fellowship's medical office and said, "Where could I be at my age and be so happy to get up in the morning and look forward to the day?"

It's difficult, Bosch said, to find people to sign up for the communal life and work. It appeals to "people who are dismayed with the materialism of the world and are trying to get above it," he said. "People who are interested in an alternative lifestyle , not based on pocketing the most money they can for the least amount of work."

When elders come in, they pay a "life lease" of $27,500 to $50,000, depending on the space they will occupy in the adult home or the "lodges" surrounding it. In addition, they pay $700-$1,500 per month in rent, and up to $3,000 a month for care, depending on what they need.

Revenue from the adult home provides 60 percent of the nonprofit Fellowship Community's $3 million operating budget, with the rest coming from donations and the sale of produce, milk and crafts, home officials said. Donations completely fund the capital budget, make up any annual shortfall and subsidize the adult home.

The adult home is licensed and inspected by the state and is in good standing. It doesn't accept federal or state aid. Workers are paid according to need, and their housing, food and transportation ? there are community cars ? are included.

"Two people doing the same job might get very different stipends," Bosch said. "One might have children, one might not."

Matt Uppenbrink, 44, a former businessman in the fashion world who now lives at Fellowship with his wife and two children, is on the community's "financial circle" but also does his bit in the adult home.

"When I got my MBA, I didn't think I'd be helping somebody to go to the toilet," he said. "But years ago, with Grandma and Grandpa in the house, that's how it was done. What we do here is like helping a friend or helping a loved one. My dad is in a nursing home, and I wish he had this instead."

Rachel Berman, a 47-year-old former New York City teacher, lives at the community with her 10-year-old daughter.

"We cook, we farm, we care for the elderly," Berman said. "I was in the Peace Corps, and I lived for a while on a kibbutz in Israel, so community life was important to me."

The workers "get to see the stages of an elder's journey, different approaches to the end of life," Uppenbrink said. "You get to see the process happen. It gives you something to work with in terms of your own future."

? 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/retirees-turn-communal-living-ny-1C8595106

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What's at Stake in the Voting Rights Act Battle

As the Supreme Court prepares to hear arguments in a case challenging the Voting Rights Act of 1968, civil rights advocates are rising to support the anti-discriminatory law. But why? This hardly the first time that the 45-year-old law has been challenged. It's been just four years since the country's highest court stopped just short of striking down the Voting Rights Act altogether, choosing instead to make a decision on narrow grounds. On Wednesday, the justices will get a second chance in the case of?Shelby County v. Holder?? Shelby County is in Alabama ??which seeks to determine if Congress overstepped its authority when it passed the 25-year-long renewal of the Voting Rights Act passed by Congress is 2006. In other words, the case should decide whether or not the Voting Rights Act is constitutional. This is a big deal for a lot of people.

RELATED: Civil Rights Leader Fred Shuttlesworth Dies

What's at Stake

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The Voting Rights Act is one of the pilars of the civil rights legislation passed after President John F. Kennedy's death. It was aimed at discriminatory election districts, many of which prevented blacks from voting through a number of devices, including literacy tests at the polls. "The act's central innovation was its requirement that jurisdictions with a history of discrimination get permission from the federal government ? the Justice Department or a federal court in Washington ? before making changes to voting procedures,"?explains Adam Liptak at?The New York Times. "The requirement, in Section 5 of the law, applied to changes large and small, from moving a polling place to redistricting an entire state." A jurisdiction that's marked as discriminatory can request that designation to be lifted after ten years, and every single one that's tried has been granted amnesty.?

RELATED: Just How Bad Was Bush v. Gore?

Put quite simply, if the Voting Rights Act is deemed unconstitutional, our democracy will be thrown half a century back into the past. Not literally, of course. But over the years, Congress has continued to find jurisdictions that qualify as discriminatory and has worked with those jurisdictions to make sure they're carrying out elections fairly. NPR provides a nice, short list of the kinds of things the law has prevented: "The Voting Rights Act in recent years has been used to block efforts that have included a photo ID law change in South Carolina, early voting curtailment in Florida, and, perhaps most significantly, Texas redistricting that federal officials found intentionally discriminatory."

RELATED: Elena Kagan's Senior Thesis: 'Socialism' and Beyond

What the Critics Are Saying

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Critics will say that the Voting Rights Act blatantly violates states' rights and ought to be done away with. Furthermore, the original law was only supposed to be in place for five years, but extension after extension means that it will endure. Pending any Supreme Court intervention, the latest extension carries us through 2031. That's getting darned close to a century since 1965! Haven't we, as a nation, moved beyond the need to police racism at the polls? Lots of Southern states that have been targeted by the Voting Rights Act would say yes. Segregation is long gone, and we have a black president. We've actually gone from less than 1,500 black elected officials in 1965 to more than 10,500 today. And we have a black president!

Seriously, though, Southern states view being flagged by the Voting Rights Act as a scarlet letter of sorts, an unnecessary reminder of past mistakes, mistakes that have long been addressed. "Things have changed in the South,"?Chief Justice?John Roberts?wrote in the decision that did not determine whether or not the law was unconstitutional. "Voter turnout and registration rates now approach parity. Blatantly discriminatory evasions of federal decrees are rare. And minority candidates hold office at unprecedented levels." However, not everybody in the South agrees.

What the Proponents Are Saying

Some parts of the country still have discriminatory tendencies, plain and simple. And it's just minorities that are affected. Perhaps the most troubling examples come in the form of voter ID laws that stand to disenfranchise young people, poor people and old people, not to mention minorities. We saw last year how a number of states would like to put these sorts of restrictions in place, and courts prevented them from doing so, citing Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act. Another issue that's been debated lately is lines at the poll. The Times likened long lines at voting stations to "a sort of poll tax" that rich people could afford to pay. (Most rich people aren't earning hourly wages.) Obama thought this issue was important enough to invite a 102-year-old woman who waited six hours to vote last year to the State of the Union address. Changes to early voting procedures also stand to disenfranchise certain groups.

So it's not just about race, and it's not like we're perfect. Leaders in some parts of the country, especially Alabama from where the latest challenge to the Voting Rights Act hails, say that the Voting Rights Act has been integral to promoting diversity. "There's no question that had it not been for Section 5, had it not been for a Justice Department that was going to make sure the state was going to comply with the Voting Rights Act, we wouldn't have the number of black officials we have, we wouldn't have the number of black people voting we have,"?Rep. John Knight told The Washington Post this week. Knight added that there was more to be done, "When you look at the Alabama Supreme Court, there are no blacks there. When you look at the governor's Cabinet, very few blacks in the Cabinet.???We have an economic development department in the state of Alabama that's lily-white."

What Happens Now?

Well, the Supreme Court will hear arguments from both sides. Then they'll make a decision. The ultimate outcome will probably not be so simplistic as the Voting Rights Act getting to exist as is or the law being struck down altogether. There's a possibility that the court could strike down the controversial Section 5 or other sections to fit the specifics of the Shelby County case. (Read this for a great breakdown of possible outcomes.) From a practical point of view, it would be silly for the Supreme Court to do away with the law altogether. When Congress renewed the law in 2006, it did so with an?overwhelming majority of lawmakers' support ??390 to 33 in the House, 98 to 0 in the Senate.?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/whats-stake-voting-rights-act-battle-043622345.html

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

Why Snacking at Night Is Bad For You

Eating that bowl of Cocoa Puffs at night may be much worse than having it in the morning. The body tends to turn more of that food into fat at night, while turning it into fuel during the day, new research suggests.

The study, published yesterday (Feb. 21) in the journal Current Biology, found that mice's ability to regulate their blood sugar varied throughout the day. In addition, disrupting their circadian clock, which signals sleep and wakefulness among other things to the body, caused them to put on more fat.

The findings could explain why night-shift workers are more prone to diabetes and obesity.

"Disrupting your biological clock leads to a disruption of metabolism such that there's more of a tendency to put on fat," even with the same amount of caloric intake or diet, said study co-author Carl Johnson, a chronobiologist at Vanderbilt University. "It's not only what you eat but when you eat it that's important."

Night creatures

Several studies in the past have shown that shift workers gain more weight and are likelier to develop diabetes. Past work also showed that mice (which are nocturnal) put on more fat if they can only eat during the day, even at the same caloric intake. Researchers suspected the circadian clock played a role, though exactly how was a mystery.

To find out, Johnson and his colleagues tested how well mice's bodies processed food across the 24-hour cycle. During daylight hours, when mice wouldn't normally eat, they were less reponsive to insulin, a hormone that tells the body's tissues to take sugar from the blood so it can be used as energy. (The excess sugar not used as energy gets turned into fat.)?

In addition, when they disrupted the mice's circadian clocks by keeping them in dim red light all day, the mice developed signs of?insulin resistance, meaning the tissues didn't respond to insulin's signal to take up sugar, and they put on more fat. Insulin resistance has also been tied to diabetes and heart disease in humans.

Eat early

The findings hint that snacking late into the night may be worse for people than eating earlier in the day, Johnson said.

The study is impressive, Satchidananda Panda, a biologist at the Salk Institute in La Jolla, Calif., who was not involved in the study, wrote in an email.

"This paper for the first time conclusively shows there is a circadian rhythm in insulin sensitivity in animals and potentially in humans as well," he wrote.

Because older studies have shown that humans have daily rhythms in their blood glucose, even with constant sugar infusion, researchers already suspected that insulin sensitivity waxed and waned throughout the day, he said.

Follow LiveScience on Twitter @livescience. We're also on Facebook?& Google+.?

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/why-snacking-night-bad-002541339.html

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Friday, February 22, 2013

Cure for common hangover? 'Pill' mimics action of human liver in fighting alcohol intoxication

Feb. 20, 2013 ? In a discovery that could promise a quick fix to the common hangover, a team of researchers led by UCLA engineers has identified a method for speeding up the body's reaction to the consumption of alcohol.

In a paper published online Feb. 17 in the peer-reviewed journal Nature Nanotechnology, Yunfeng Lu, a professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering at the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science, and his colleagues describe successfully placing two complementary enzymes in a tiny capsule to speed up the elimination of alcohol from the body. The enzyme combination within the capsule essentially processes alcohol the way the liver does.

Lu, the principal investigator, said the enzyme combination could be ingested as a pill, chemically altering alcohol in the digestive system, even as the liver does its work.

"The pill acts in a way extremely similar to the way your liver does," Lu said. "With further research, this discovery could be used as a preventative measure or antidote for alcohol intoxication."

Naturally occurring enzymes within cells often work in tandem to transform molecules or eliminate toxins. Lu's group assembled multiple enzymes to mimic the natural process. An enzyme known as an alcohol oxidase, for example, can promote the oxidization of alcohol but also produces hydrogen peroxide, which is toxic. Another type of enzyme, a catalase, prompts the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide into water and oxygen. Placing the two enzymes next to each other can effectively remove alcohol.

The researchers placed the two enzymes in a polymer capsule measuring just tens of nanometers in diameter. The wall of the polymer capsule is only one nanometer thick -- about 100,000 times thinner than a strand of human hair. The capsule protects the enzymes and allows them to freely enter an alcohol molecule. In this way, the nanocapsule mimics an organelle, a structure found in cells that spurs chemical reactions.

The researchers used a mouse model to test how well the enzyme package worked as an antidote after alcohol was consumed. They found that blood alcohol levels in mice that received the enzyme package fell more quickly than in mice that did not. Blood alcohol levels of the antidote test group were 15.8 percent lower than the control group after 45 minutes, 26.1 percent lower after 90 minutes and 34.7 percent lower after three hours.

In a test of how well the enzyme delivery system worked as a prophylactic when consumed at the same time as alcohol, the researchers found that blood alcohol levels in the mice that received the enzymes were 10.1 percent lower than in control-group mice after 45 minutes, 31.8 percent lower after 90 minutes and 36.8 percent lower after three hours.

"Considering the vast library of enzymes that are currently or potentially available," the authors write, "novel classes of enzyme nanocomplexes could be built for a broad range of applications."

The study's lead authors included Yang Liu and Juanjuan Du of UCLA Engineering's chemical and biomolecular engineering department.

Additional authors of the research include Wei Wei of UCLA Engineering; Ming Yan of UCLA Engineering and the UCLA Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Molecular Genetics; Mo Yin Lau, Jay Hu, Hui Han and Cheng Ji of the Keck School of Medicine at the University of Southern California; Dr. Otto O. Yang of the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA; Sheng Liang and Hui Wang of Xinhua Hospital, affiliated with China's Shanghai Jiao Tong University; Jianmin Li and Wei Chen of China's Beijing Institute of Biotechnology; Xinyuan Zhu of Shanghai Jiao Tong University; and Linqi Shi of China's Ministry of Education and Nankai University.

The research was partially supported by the Defense Threat Reducing Agency, the National Institutes of Health, the National Natural Science Foundation of China, and the National Basic Research Program of China.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of California, Los Angeles. The original article was written by Bill Kisliuk.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Yang Liu, Juanjuan Du, Ming Yan, Mo Yin Lau, Jay Hu, Hui Han, Otto O. Yang, Sheng Liang, Wei Wei, Hui Wang, Jianmin Li, Xinyuan Zhu, Linqi Shi, Wei Chen, Cheng Ji, Yunfeng Lu. Biomimetic enzyme nanocomplexes and their use as antidotes and preventive measures for alcohol intoxication. Nature Nanotechnology, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/nnano.2012.264

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/living_well/~3/0ZLTSiBDES0/130220114337.htm

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Thursday, February 21, 2013

Rationalisation of pay and allowance to licensed category of employees of Air India in line with Industry practice and standard over and above the DPE guidelines

The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs has approved that in addition to pay and allowances admissible under Department of Public Enterprises (DPE) Guidelines as recommended by Dharmadhikari Committee, flying allowance shall also be admissible to pilots at different rates as per their seniority. The pilots would also be paid lay over allowance and special allowance. The pilots flying wide body aircraft would also be admissible to wide body allowance. The aircraft maintenance engineers and technical officers would be admissible to a special allowance depending upon their grade, seniority and level of qualification like number of licences they may acquire to perform their specialised nature of duties.

Similarly, the cabin crew would also be paid, in addition to salary and allowances as per DPE Guidelines, flying allowance depending upon their seniority and slab seniority system being followed in Air India.

The CCEA has also approved that the rate of layover allowance shall be the same as is admissible under applicable Government of India Rules for daily allowance. Keeping in view the fact that the aviation sector is highly competitive and dynamic, it has also been approved that the management of Air India in future would periodically evaluate the pay, allowances and perks, based on prevalent market standard, of its licensed category employees after taking prior approval of Ministry of Civil Aviation.

Consequent upon merger of erstwhile Air India and Indian Airlines in 2007, various processes of the two airlines were to be integrated within 18-24 months of the merger. One of the significant areas of focus was the human resource integration of the two airlines. The Ministry of Civil Aviation constituted a committee of external experts under the Chairmanship of Justice (Retired) D.M.Dharmadhikari to address various human resources and industrial relations issues in the merged company. The Committee submitted its report on 31.12012, which was further examined by a 3-member Inter-Ministerial Committee, comprising of a representative each of Ministry of Civil Aviation, Department of Public Enterprises and an independent human resources expert, with a view to recommend a time schedule for its implementation. The Inter-Ministerial Committee submitted its report on 31.5.2012. An Implementation-cum-Anomaly Rectification Committee has been constituted in Air India to implement the recommendations of the Committee.

For the licensed category of employees of Air India, Dharmadhikari Committee has recommended implementation of the revised pay scales, as per Department of Public Enterprises Guidelines dated 26.11.2008, with effect from 01.04.2007, which is the effective date of merger of the two erstwhile airlines. In view of the fact that the maximum emoluments admissible as per DPE Guidelines to the licensed category employees like pilots, engineers, cabin crew etc would be considerably less than their counter parts in the aviation sector. The Dharmadhikari Committee has recommended payment of certain allowances to these categories so as to bring their emoluments close to the industry standards. Since these emoluments are not covered by the DPE Guidelines, Government's approval was sought for payment of these allowances by Air India.

***

SC/SK
(Release ID :92366)

Source: http://pib.nic.in/newsite/erelease.aspx?relid=92366

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Square Enix's Shinji Hashimoto announces.. that he has a Final Fantasy PS4 announcement for E3

Square Enix's Shinji Hashimoto announces that he has a Final Fantasy PS4 announcement for E3

What a tease. Brand director Hashimoto-san, who's worked on the likes of Kingdom Hearts, Chrono Trigger and a raft of Final Fantasy titles over the years, took to the stage. And what did he have to tell us? Could Square Enix be working on yet another Final Fantasy title for Sony's new PlayStation 4? Well, yes. Naturally. But that was about it, adding that they are "preparing for development of a Final Fantasy title. Please be excited for E3 this year." What's another few months? Right?

Check out our liveblog of Sony's event to get the latest news as it happens!

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/w6Ub6hAzdg8/

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Air Canada, Lufthansa, United tie-up likely to win EU approval: source

BRUSSELS ? Lufthansa, United Airlines and Air Canada are set to win approval from the European Union?s competition regulator for their transatlantic tie-up with their offer to give up airport slots, a person familiar with the matter said on Wednesday.

The three airlines last year proposed giving up landing and take-off slots at Frankfurt and New York?s airports following a three-year investigation by the European Commission into their revenue-sharing, pricing and capacity pacts.

The EU antitrust authority sought feedback from rivals and third parties in December last year.

?The Commission is likely to accept the airlines? proposal with some fine tuning,? said the person who declined to be named because of the sensitivity of the matter.

Regulatory approval means the airlines will not be found guilty of anti-trust infringement and will not face fines which could reach 10% of a company?s global revenues.

The Commission spokesman for competition policy could not immediately be reached for comment.

The three carriers are all members of the Star Alliance of airlines, the biggest such marketing group with 27 members accounting for a quarter of global airline capacity.

Such alliances were set up in the 1990s to enable airlines to extend their apparent networks without having to overcome the industry?s peculiar restrictions on international mergers.

This would be the second airline network cleared by the Commission. It approved a tighter transatlantic tie-up between British Airways, American Airlines and Iberia in July 2010.

All three are members of the broader oneworld alliance.

The EU watchdog is also currently investigating a transatlantic joint venture between Air France-KLM, Alitalia and Delta Airlines.

? Thomson Reuters 2013

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/FP_TopStories/~3/FpsMJk0r7os/

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

BlackBerry granted gesture recognition patent for touch-free image manipulation

BlackBerry granted gesture recognition patent for touchfree image manipulation

If BlackBerry lives to see 2014 (and beyond), it could end up delighting smartphone users with some neat gesture recognition tech. In a recently surfaced patent filing, the company formerly known as RIM outlines a method for selecting onscreen images using hand or finger movements above a display. By synthesizing a combo of images -- one taken with IR, the other without -- the software would be able to determine the intended area of selection. And just in case there was any doubt this feature would be headed to smartphones and tablets, the docs go on to specify its use within "a mobile communications device, comprising: a digital camera... [and] a cellular subsystem." So there you have it -- you'll either potentially see this hands-off editing tool pop up in future BB devices or BB simply stands to make a some nice coin in licensing fees.

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Source: USPTO

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/ia3nYVXP1fs/

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HTC One software hands-on: Sense 5, BlinkFeed, Sense TV and new Sync Manager

DNP HTC One's software features explained Blink, TV, Get Started and new Sync Manager

Now that you're done drooling over the HTC One's shiny body, let's take a look at the phone's generous bundle of software features. Sense 5 on Android 4.1.2 is quite possibly the boldest step HTC's ever taken in terms of Android interface, in the hopes of offering a radically simple experience out of the box. First off, the phone comes with just two soft keys: Back and Home. You can still access the app-switching page by double-tapping the Home key, but instead of the old 3D interface with dozens of app cards, you'll now only get a grid of nine app cards to keep things simple. And like before, simply flick the cards up to dismiss the corresponding apps. Read on for more, and keep an eye out for our upcoming hands-on video.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/19/htc-one-software-hands-on-sense-5-blinkfeed-sense-tv-and-new/

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BBC Two HD replaces BBC HD channel on March 26th

BBC Two HD replaces BBC HD channel on March 26th

The BBC has decided it can do without a HD channel just to showcase its gorgeous nature documentaries. As such, it's turning BBC HD into a high-definition simulcast of BBC Two, starting March 26th. As it's already been doing that job for a while now, it's hardly surprising -- but does make us wonder where HD shows from BBC Three and Four will be housed in the future. The corporation did tell us that it's evaluating adding more HD channels, but we don't imagine that'll be happening in the near future. BBC Two HD will remain on the same channel as BBC HD, Sky: 169, Virgin: 187, Freesat: 109, Freeview: 102 -- so you don't need to rescan your box to keep watching Eggheads.

BBC Two HD replaces BBC HD channel on March 26th

Show full PR text

BBC Two HD Channel to launch 26 March

The BBC today announces it will launch BBC Two HD at 6am on Tuesday 26 March. BBC Two HD will be available on Sky HD (169), Freeview HD/YouView (102), Virgin Media (187), Freesat HD (109) and BT Vision (852).

The announcement follows the successful launch of BBC One HD on 3 November 2010.

BBC Two HD will replace the existing BBC HD Channel and will be available subscription-free on all digital television platforms offering HD channels.

Janice Hadlow, Controller of BBC Two, says: "BBC One HD has already proved to be highly valued by our audiences and I'm delighted that we're able to follow this with the launch of BBC Two in HD. The launch of BBC Two HD will allow us to showcase more of our programmes at their very best - helping to highlight our commitment to high quality, engaging and ambitious programmes on BBC Two."

The BBC Two HD channel will be a simulcast network version of the BBC Two schedule with a raft of new programmes available in HD for the first time including Paul Hollywood - Bread, The Fall, Science Britannica and Keeping Britain Alive. Old favourites such as Mock The Week, QI and Springwatch will also remain at the heart of the channel's offer.

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Source: Lauren Gildersleve (Twitter)

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/VT6VE7n5ez0/

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Burger King Twitter Account Hacked

Burger King Twitter Account Hacked

Have all your major hacking attempts failed? Couldn't halt the State Of The Union address as promised? Don't worry, there is always low hanging fruit like the Burger King Twitter account. roll eyes (sarcastic)

The online hacktivist collective Anonymous appeared to take responsibility for the hack in a tweet that mentioned a new operation dubbed #OpMadCow, although it was not immediately clear what the aim of that campaign was.

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Posted by Steve 6:51 PM (CST)??

Source: http://www.hardocp.com/news/2013/02/18/burger_king_twitter_account_hacked/

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Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Artists with London connections among Juno Award nominees 0

London is on the Juno radar ? with a flurry of hopefuls with local ties in the 2013 Junos field announced Tuesday.

London-tied performers with Juno noms range from London, England?s Dan Snaith ? a Juno- and Polaris Music Prize winner with Caribou ? whose Daphni project is up in the electronic album category to vocalist Aviva Chernick, nominated with Toronto?s Jaffa Road in the world music category.

The London hopes this year aren?t as strong as the 2011 edition of the Junos. That year four Junos went to London-tied performers ? Caribou, Lara St. John, Shad and Meaghan Smith. But even an early, and likely partial, list for 2013 shows there are contenders in several fields.

Another former Londoner, Justin Broadbent, is up for his work on Metric?s Synthetica in the record package of the year category.

?Nominated for a Juno for best album artwork (Metric)! Wooh! #Juno2013 #JUNOAwards,? Broadbent said Tuesday on his Facebook page.

Former Western student Tony Dekker?s Great Lake Swimmers is nominated for roots & traditional album with New Wild Everywhere. The band includes violinist Miranda Mulholland, who studied opera at Western?s Don Wright music faculty.

Toronto?s Tafelmusik Baroque orchestra and chorus are up in classical categories with former Londoner Charlotte Nediger, harpsichord, and Julia Wedman, violin, among the London- and Western-tied members in the ensemble. Former Western music student Ivars Taurins directs the Tafelmusikc choir.

Toronto jazz vocalist Elizabeth Shepherd and pop album nominee Victoria Duffield, of B.C., are among the contenders with family and other ties to London. Duffield is nominated in the same category as Canadian superstars Justin Bieber and Carly Rae Jepsen.

james.reaney@sunmedia.ca

Twitter.com/JamesatLFPress

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OIART ROCKS THE JUNOS

What: Following are details including artist and recording of London-based Ontario Institute of Audio Recording Technology (OIART) ties through its former students with the 2013 Juno nominations:

SINGLE OF THE YEAR

Billy Talent - Viking Death March, assistants Kevin O?Leary (2009) and Alex Krotz (2011)

INTERNATIONAL ALBUM OF THE YEAR

Taylor Swift - Red, mix assistant Matty Green (2003)

ALTERNATIVE ALBUM OF THE YEAR

Stars - The North, Engineer, Producer Graham Lessard (2002)

ROCK ALBUM OF THE YEAR

Billy Talent - Dead Silence, assistant Kevin O?Leary(2009) , additional production Alex Krotz (2011)

Rush - Clockwork Angels, engineer Jason DuFour (2007)

The Tragically Hip - Now For Plan A, editor Alastair Sims, assistants Kevin O?Leary(2009) , Alex Krotz (2011)

ROOTS AND TRADITIONAL ALBUM OF THE YEAR: GROUP

Great Lake Swimmers - New Wild Everywhere, Engineer, Mixer, Producer, Baritone Guitar, BG Vocals - Andy Magoffin (1995)

ELECTRONIC ALBUM OF THE YEAR

Crystal Castles - III, engineer, Alex Bonenfant (2004)

METAL/HARD MUSIC ALBUM OF THE YEAR

Woods of Ypres - Woods 5: Grey Skies & Electric Light, Producer, Engineer Seigfried Meier (1999)

-- source: OIART staff

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Source: http://www.lfpress.com/2013/02/19/artists-with-london-connections-among-juno-award-nominees

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Janay Mcfarlane Killed the Same Day Sister Attended Obama Gun Control Speech

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/02/janay-mcfarlane-killed-hours-after-sister-attended-obama-gun-con/

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Evolution of PlayStation, Sony Builds Up Hype For Next-Gen

PS-Future-Feb-20

Sony have been running a juggernaut of a hype train this last two weeks and the internet is now at fever pitch as anticipation builds for the ?the next big thing? presentation that will take place on 20th of this month in New York.

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Their next gen console has already seen leaked specifications, images of their working model for the new controller and even pictures of the dev?kit, of course none of this has been confirmed, Sony are staying super tight lipped about their work in progress, that is of course until the 20th of this month.

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Over the last week, Sony have been teasing us every two days with a video that details the past and present of the PlayStation brand, starting with the PlayStation 1, 2 and last night the PlayStation 3, in what we can only assume means PlayStation 4 will follow in 48 hours, on the 20th.

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Sony have booked a huge venue that holds a couple of thousand people, inviting the worlds top gaming and social press, as well as investors, developers and a few well known industry figures, what ever they announced, its going to be huge.

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Sony have been working on their next-gen hardware for some time now, many developers have already spoken out about next-gen projects and lets not forget that Sony spend $380 million last year buying Gaikai, the cloud based game streaming service that is tipped to be used to Stream classic PlayStation games to a whole range of devices.

I?ll be sitting up late on Wednesday for the 11pm (GMT) showing of the Live Stream of the PlayStation presentation, because what ever they have to show, its going to be big.

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Source: http://www.eteknix.com/evolution-of-playstation-sony-builds-up-hype-for-next-gen/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=evolution-of-playstation-sony-builds-up-hype-for-next-gen

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PS Vita price drop announced for Japan

PlayStation Vita will receive a price cut in Japan from its 24,980 yen ($269, which rounded to $250 in North America) to 19,980 yen ($215, should round to about $200 in North America) for both the 3G/Wi-Fi and Wi-Fi models, Sony has announced.

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Source: http://gematsu.com/2013/02/ps-vita-price-drop-announced-for-japan

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Monday, February 18, 2013

Sentencing set in church vandalism case

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Source: http://theadvertiser.com/article/20130216/NEWS01/130216011/-1/rss01

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Refresh Roundup: week of February 11th, 2013

Your smartphone and / or tablet is just begging for an update. From time to time, these mobile devices are blessed with maintenance refreshes, bug fixes, custom ROMs and anything in between, and so many of them are floating around that it's easy for a sizable chunk to get lost in the mix. To make sure they don't escape without notice, we've gathered every possible update, hack, and other miscellaneous tomfoolery we could find during the last week and crammed them into one convenient roundup. If you find something available for your device, please give us a shout at tips at engadget dawt com and let us know. Enjoy!

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/17/refresh-roundup/

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Sunday, February 17, 2013

Bowling Green coach accepts apology over graffiti

BOWLING GREEN, Ohio (AP) - Bowling Green men's basketball coach Louis Orr says he's accepted apologies from two boys who scribbled racist graffiti on a sidewalk in front of his house.

A judge ordered the two teens to perform community service and put them on probation Friday after finding them delinquent of criminal mischief.

Authorities say the boys wrote "white power" and drew a swastika with chalk in front of the black coach's house last October.

Orr recently met with both of them. He tells The Blade newspaper in Toledo (http://bit.ly/XMP1Jy ) that he hopes the boys will learn from what happened.

He says young people don't always understand the consequences of their actions.

Orr has been Bowling Green's coach since 2007. His son Chauncey is a starter on this year's team.

Information from: The Blade, http://www.toledoblade.com/

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.fox19.com/story/21224261/bowling-green-coach-accepts-apology-over-graffiti

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