Tuesday, April 30, 2013

BlackBerry CEO expects to sell ?tens of millions? of Q10s

BERLIN, April 29 (Reuters) - Barcelona will try every trick in the book to overturn a 4-0 first-leg deficit against Bayern Munich in their Champions League semi-final return leg on Wednesday, honorary Bayern president Franz Beckenbauer warned on Monday. Bayern crushed the Spaniards last week in a surprisingly one-sided encounter but Beckenbauer, former player, coach and president of Germany's most successful club, warned that Barcelona were not ready to surrender. "Barca will try everything to throw Bayern off balance," he told Bild newspaper. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blackberry-ceo-expects-sell-tens-millions-q10s-203525889.html

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42 Is The Answer To Everything?In Personalized Analytics For Retail

42 logoAn online retailer platform called simply “42” is debuting today at TechCrunch Disrupt NY with new ideas about how to bring the intelligence of online e-commerce tools to brick-and-mortar merchants. The B2B platform provides businesses and brands a way to better connect and personalize their interactions with customers, as well as to gain broader insight into consumer buying patterns, customer loyalty, and more. The company was founded just this February by a team which includes Cathy Han, formerly of Procter & Gamble, and Nick Porter, previously of mobile customer engagement solutions provider Benbria. There are two part-time co-founders involved as well: Lucas Lemanowicz of Palantir and Sarah Hum of Google. Han explains that the inspiration for building 42 – which, yes, is a nod to The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy?- arose from her work at P&G, whose clients include several large retailers. “My job was to look at the data, and look at where the gaps in their businesses were. It was a huge realization that, as it turns out, a lot of these brick-and-mortar businesses don’t have access to a suite of online tools,” she explains. “They could use technology a lot better to help engage their customers and drive their sales.” She felt there was not only an opportunity in developing a suite of online tools for this underserved market, but also because there were few who really understood the industry from both the technology and the retailers’ side. 42 today is an online B2B platform which uses data from retailers’ point-of-sale systems. That data is manually exported and uploaded into 42′s systems, but the eventual goal is to automate that process. Once online, the business can view a snapshot of key trends among customers and sales in a visual and intuitive dashboard interface. The main screen shows things like total sales, margins, average sales per customer, growth drivers, popular items and best sellers, among other things. Another part of the 42 interface offers more granular data about the store’s top customers, including demographic and contact information, past purchases, and more. On the consumer side, the system relies on collecting a shopper’s email information at checkout – which could be a challenge given that, historically, this information has only been used to add consumers to mass mailing lists which offered little value. So it will be up to the retailers themselves to explain to customers the benefits

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/QIsOMC2zD8g/

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Monday, April 29, 2013

Euro mayors try to keep youths from going to Syria

MECHELEN, Belgium (AP) ? From his city hall under Belgium's most imposing cathedral, Mayor Bart Somers is wracking his brains trying to figure out how to keep young Muslims from going to fight "holy war" in Syria against the Assad regime.

Through much of western Europe, scores of Islamic youths have heeded the call to take up arms for a cause that is only a few hours away by plane. The phenomenon has alarmed authorities amid signs that the insurgency is becoming increasingly radicalized, with strong infiltration by al-Qaida. European authorities see a double danger, one that's summed up by Somers who describes the youths as "cannon fodder" in Syria ? and potential "full-blown terrorists" if they make it back home alive.

But it all raises a conundrum: In a free society, how can you prevent these young people from packing up and leaving?

"The major challenge of each democrat is to see what we can do in the fight against fundamentalism without sacrificing our own democratic laws," said Somers. "Otherwise we play into the hands of the terrorists."

That dilemma was again put to the test two weeks ago when Belgian authorities organized a major anti-terror sweep seeking to weed out agitators inciting young Muslims to fight against the Assad regime. In a high-profile raid of four dozen homes, police put six people behind bars, raising criticism among some that they had overstepped their bounds by infringing on freedom of speech.

In the Brussels municipality of Schaarbeek, the mayor even banned a soup kitchen for the needy, among them young Muslims, fearful that the charity workers were inciting youths to fight in Syria. The action came after two Muslim schoolboys disappeared, apparently to Syria ? departures that Mayor Bernard Clerfayt linked to soup kitchen recruitment.

There have been mounting calls to confiscate passports from youths who seem on the verge of leaving, something that many civil libertarians criticize as an anti-democratic restriction on movement.

Those who do go to fight often leave behind distraught parents. At least one Belgian father went to look for his son, to no avail. Concerned families seek any help to prevent the outflow of young people to Syria.

"We do not want people to go, especially the young men," said Abu Yamen, a Syrian who runs the El Rass pharmacy in Schaarbeek.

But the daily suffering shown on television can push the young into extreme, foolhardy decisions, mayor Somers said. The fighting has exacted a huge toll on the country, killing more than 70,000 people, laying waste to cities, towns and villages, and forcing more than a million people to seek refuge abroad. It has all created an opportunity for al-Qaida to win new converts to its cause, as the hardcore Syrian regime has also tried to present itself as one of the Middle East's most secular.

Insurgencies in Iraq and Libya also attracted foreign fighters. What is different in Syria is the extent to which fears are rising of the rebellion being hijacked by radical Islamist elements under the thumb of al-Qaida.

At Friday prayers in Brussels, Sheikh Mohamed El Tamamy has sought to discourage youths from leaving. "Some of these youngsters think that is jihad, when youngsters go from Belgium or Holland to Syria," he said. "But in truth, jihad in Islam has conditions and rules. For jihad, you must get permission from the authorities."

Many Europeans, however, fear fighters coming back more than volunteers heading to Syria.

The EU's law enforcement agency, Europol, said in the EU Terrorism Situation and Trend Report it published last Friday that returning fighters "have the potential to utilize their training, combat experience, knowledge and contacts for terrorist activities inside the EU."

The International Centre for the Study of Radicalization, an international group of five major academic institutions, estimates that up to 590 Europeans have left, accounting for about 10 percent of the foreign fighter total in Syria. Europol said Friday that in 2012, "Syria emerged as a destination of choice for foreign fighters."

This month's bombings at the Boston Marathon reinforced Europe's fears about youths leaving the West to be radicalized overseas, and coming back to carry out attacks. U.S. authorities are investigating whether one of the suspects, ethnic Chechen Tamerlan Tsarnaev, was influenced by religious extremists when he spent six months in Russia's Caucasus in 2012.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said after a meeting with his Belgian counterpart, Didier Reynders, that "we just had a young person who went to Russia and Chechnya who blew people up in Boston. So he didn't stay where he went, but he learned something where he went and he came back with a willingness to kill people."

It's a trajectory that some Europeans fear carries parallels to the youths traveling to Syria to fight in the insurgency.

"We have to follow them to protect our society," said Reynders. "We have a real terrorist risk because of such behavior."

In the neighboring Netherlands, anxiety has spread to the historic city of Delft, until recently known for its blue-and-white pottery, canals, and burial site of kings and queens. Now, you can add suspected jihadists as well.

In the Netherlands, as in Belgium, there has been alarm over some Muslim youths leaving for Syria, with estimated departures going as high as 100. "It was known that some Delft youngsters were radicalizing," Delft mayor Bas Verkerk wrote to his city council, after unconfirmed reports that two fighters from Delft had died.

And last month the nation raised its terror alert to "substantial," with the terrorism coordinator citing "signs of youngsters radicalizing in the Netherlands and the increased number of jihad travelers to Syria."

As a liberal, Somers is hesitant to choose between freedom and added security and intrusion into people's lives. But he is also sensitive to the need for strong surveillance ? and is seeking compromises.

Somers says he wants security personnel to be "the eyes and ears in our cities" to see who plans to leave ? "and then we try to influence him in a positive way."

"We try it with the police and the secret service. We try to find out who is behind those people," he said. Somers is now coordinating surveillance and outreach efforts with the mayors of Antwerp and Vilvoorde, which is close to Brussels.

But some human rights organizations argue that fundamental rights are being trampled in the process.

"We are talking about views that these youngsters hold, and you cannot change opinions with a repressive approach," said Jos Vander Velpen, the chairman of the Belgian League of Human Rights. "To the contrary, they will become even more convinced, and win more status because of it."

___

AP videojournalists Bishr Eltouni and Mark Carlson contributed to this article.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/euro-mayors-try-keep-youths-going-syria-154244490.html

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Sharing examination questions threatens trust in medical profession

Sharing examination questions threatens trust in medical profession [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 29-Apr-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Rachael Zaleski
mcpmedia@elsevier.com
215-239-3658
Elsevier Health Sciences

Experts call for medical leaders to establish guidelines, embed honesty in academic cultures, reported in Mayo Clinic Proceedings

Rochester, MN, April 29, 2013 Unethical behavior among physicians-in-training threatens to erode public trust and confidence in the medical profession, say two academic physicians in the current issue of Mayo Clinic Proceedings. Reacting to CNN reports last year about the widespread use of "recalls" and "airplane notes" by radiology and dermatology residents, Gregory W. Ruhnke, MD, MS, MPH, of the Department of Medicine, University of Chicago, and David J. Doukas, MD, of the Department of Family and Geriatric Medicine, University of Louisville, call on leaders in medical education to establish guidelines and change the culture of medical school and training programs.

Illegal reproduction and transmission of board certification examination questions have received wide public attention recently. In 2010, the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) suspended or revoked the certification of 139 physicians found to be disclosing or soliciting examination questions for a board review prep company in New Jersey; the company encouraged physicians to recall questions from memory and convey them to the course director for inclusion in course materials. In early 2012, CNN revealed that doctors training to become dermatologists and radiologists had for years shared exam questions by memorizing them and writing them down after their board certification examinations.

Ruhnke and Doukas say there is a crucial distinction between cheating and guided study, noting that historical test questions are routinely used throughout higher education. They cite the American College of Physicians' Medical Knowledge Self-Assessment Program, which includes a summary of high-yield information vetted by post-examination residents to choose material likely to appear on future examinations. Some physicians have defended the use of "recalls." Moreover, "the difference between the use of questions reproduced verbatim and a focused study guide based on examinee input lies in the detail and specificity of information transmitted," they say.

The authors review the literature and discuss what drives dishonest behavior. Cheating is surprisingly common among medical students, with estimates ranging widely between five and 88%. Of medical students surveyed, 59% believed that cheating was impossible to eliminate because of its pervasiveness. Perhaps of greatest concern for the public, cheating on examinations by medical students correlates with falsifying information in a patient's medical record.

"Difficult exam content unnecessary for clinical care, the desire to assist friends, and peer behavior are important factors," says Ruhnke. For example, subjects not immediately relevant for clinical care, such as biochemistry and pharmacology, are seen as a "rite of passage." Assignment and test content that medical students view as unnecessary for clinical care makes them more likely to cheat.

The authors consider a number of potential interventions that might reduce the impetus to reproduce questions in verbatim form, such as not reusing test questions and the return of oral examinations, but recognize separate challenges of such solutions. Avoiding the reuse of test questions might threaten the statistical reliability and consistency of passing standards. In addition, harsh punishments are unlikely to be completely effective because their impact on peer behavior is not sufficiently powerful.

The authors urge the American Board of Medical Specialties and the Association of American Medical Colleges to establish guidelines regarding the detail and specificity of information that examinees may ethically disclose, and to be proactive in requiring examinees to acknowledge that reproduction or dissemination of test materials is both illegal and a violation of professional standards.

"Successful certification must demonstrate that physicians are vested with the trust of their peers but also the public. Sponsoring rigorous examinations that cover material critical for patient care will bolster what the profession provides to patients," according to the authors. "The literature suggests that this can best be achieved by embedding academic honesty into institutional cultures. Ultimately, the sanctity of our profession and the faith that patients place in us as physicians demands the highest moral standards."

In an accompanying Editorial, Christine K. Cassel, MD, Eric S. Holmboe, MD, and Lorie B. Slass, MA, of the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM), Philadelphia, welcome the work of Ruhnke and Doukas as an important "call to action" for academic medicine to actively, and intentionally, strengthen the culture of medical school and training programs to value integrity and to respect the need for examinations to demonstrate competence throughout a professional career.

In its legal actions and information campaign related to the board review prep company transgressions, "ABIM conveyed a clear message to the physician community that ABIM will not tolerate unethical behavior from board candidates, that test takers need to know that this kind of 'brain dumping' is grossly unethical, and that any physician who seeks to compromise the integrity of the ABIM examination process will face swift and serious consequences," explains Cassel.

"The certifying examination is one of the first tests of professionalism for physicians. 'Everyone does it' is never a sufficient answer when faced with an ethical dilemma, and if the profession is to meet its societal obligation to uphold the highest ethical standards, we most certainly cannot accept such an excuse from board certified physicians," she concludes.

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


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.


Sharing examination questions threatens trust in medical profession [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 29-Apr-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Rachael Zaleski
mcpmedia@elsevier.com
215-239-3658
Elsevier Health Sciences

Experts call for medical leaders to establish guidelines, embed honesty in academic cultures, reported in Mayo Clinic Proceedings

Rochester, MN, April 29, 2013 Unethical behavior among physicians-in-training threatens to erode public trust and confidence in the medical profession, say two academic physicians in the current issue of Mayo Clinic Proceedings. Reacting to CNN reports last year about the widespread use of "recalls" and "airplane notes" by radiology and dermatology residents, Gregory W. Ruhnke, MD, MS, MPH, of the Department of Medicine, University of Chicago, and David J. Doukas, MD, of the Department of Family and Geriatric Medicine, University of Louisville, call on leaders in medical education to establish guidelines and change the culture of medical school and training programs.

Illegal reproduction and transmission of board certification examination questions have received wide public attention recently. In 2010, the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) suspended or revoked the certification of 139 physicians found to be disclosing or soliciting examination questions for a board review prep company in New Jersey; the company encouraged physicians to recall questions from memory and convey them to the course director for inclusion in course materials. In early 2012, CNN revealed that doctors training to become dermatologists and radiologists had for years shared exam questions by memorizing them and writing them down after their board certification examinations.

Ruhnke and Doukas say there is a crucial distinction between cheating and guided study, noting that historical test questions are routinely used throughout higher education. They cite the American College of Physicians' Medical Knowledge Self-Assessment Program, which includes a summary of high-yield information vetted by post-examination residents to choose material likely to appear on future examinations. Some physicians have defended the use of "recalls." Moreover, "the difference between the use of questions reproduced verbatim and a focused study guide based on examinee input lies in the detail and specificity of information transmitted," they say.

The authors review the literature and discuss what drives dishonest behavior. Cheating is surprisingly common among medical students, with estimates ranging widely between five and 88%. Of medical students surveyed, 59% believed that cheating was impossible to eliminate because of its pervasiveness. Perhaps of greatest concern for the public, cheating on examinations by medical students correlates with falsifying information in a patient's medical record.

"Difficult exam content unnecessary for clinical care, the desire to assist friends, and peer behavior are important factors," says Ruhnke. For example, subjects not immediately relevant for clinical care, such as biochemistry and pharmacology, are seen as a "rite of passage." Assignment and test content that medical students view as unnecessary for clinical care makes them more likely to cheat.

The authors consider a number of potential interventions that might reduce the impetus to reproduce questions in verbatim form, such as not reusing test questions and the return of oral examinations, but recognize separate challenges of such solutions. Avoiding the reuse of test questions might threaten the statistical reliability and consistency of passing standards. In addition, harsh punishments are unlikely to be completely effective because their impact on peer behavior is not sufficiently powerful.

The authors urge the American Board of Medical Specialties and the Association of American Medical Colleges to establish guidelines regarding the detail and specificity of information that examinees may ethically disclose, and to be proactive in requiring examinees to acknowledge that reproduction or dissemination of test materials is both illegal and a violation of professional standards.

"Successful certification must demonstrate that physicians are vested with the trust of their peers but also the public. Sponsoring rigorous examinations that cover material critical for patient care will bolster what the profession provides to patients," according to the authors. "The literature suggests that this can best be achieved by embedding academic honesty into institutional cultures. Ultimately, the sanctity of our profession and the faith that patients place in us as physicians demands the highest moral standards."

In an accompanying Editorial, Christine K. Cassel, MD, Eric S. Holmboe, MD, and Lorie B. Slass, MA, of the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM), Philadelphia, welcome the work of Ruhnke and Doukas as an important "call to action" for academic medicine to actively, and intentionally, strengthen the culture of medical school and training programs to value integrity and to respect the need for examinations to demonstrate competence throughout a professional career.

In its legal actions and information campaign related to the board review prep company transgressions, "ABIM conveyed a clear message to the physician community that ABIM will not tolerate unethical behavior from board candidates, that test takers need to know that this kind of 'brain dumping' is grossly unethical, and that any physician who seeks to compromise the integrity of the ABIM examination process will face swift and serious consequences," explains Cassel.

"The certifying examination is one of the first tests of professionalism for physicians. 'Everyone does it' is never a sufficient answer when faced with an ethical dilemma, and if the profession is to meet its societal obligation to uphold the highest ethical standards, we most certainly cannot accept such an excuse from board certified physicians," she concludes.

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


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/2013-04/ehs-seq042913.php

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World's longest-running plant monitoring program now digitized

Apr. 29, 2013 ? Researchers at the University of Arizona's Tumamoc Hill have digitized 106 years of growth data on individual plants, making the information available for study by people all over the world.

Knowing how plants respond to changing conditions over many decades provides new insights into how ecosystems behave.

The permanent research plots on Tumamoc Hill represent the world's longest-running study that monitors individual plants, said co-author Larry Venable, director of research at Tumamoc Hill.

Some of the plots date from 1906 -- and the birth, growth and death of the individual plants on those plots have been periodically recorded ever since.

The century-long searchable archive is unique and invaluable, said Venable, a UA professor of ecology and evolutionary biology who has been studying plants on Tumamoc since 1982.

"You can see the ebb and flow of climate, and you can see the ebb and flow of vegetation," he said.

Lead author Susana Rodriguez-Buritica said, "Long-term data sets have a special place in ecology."

The records have allowed scientists to estimate life spans for desert perennials, some of which are very long-lived, Venable said.

In addition, data from the plots on Tumamoc Hill reveal changes in the Sonoran Desert and have been important to key advances in the science of ecology.

For example, the Tumamoc plant censuses helped overturn the long-standing idea that plant communities progress through a series of steps to a stable collection of species known as a climax community.

"The desert wasn't progressing toward a climax community," he said. Instead of being in synch, each species and plot was changing to its own rhythm.

Rodriguez-Buritica, a postdoctoral research associate in the UA department of ecology and evolutionary biology, Venable and their co-authors Helen Raichle and Robert H. Webb of the U.S. Geological Survey and Raymond M. Turner, formerly of USGS, have published a description of their data in the Ecological Society of America's journal Ecology and archived the data set with the society at http://www.esapubs.org/archive/ecol/E094/083/.

The title of their paper is, "One hundred and six years of population and community dynamics of Sonoran Desert Laboratory perennials." The National Science Foundation, the USGS and the U.S. National Park Service funded the archiving.

Landmark research on the physiology and ecology of desert plants has been conducted on Tumamoc Hill ever since the Carnegie Institution of Washington established the Desert Laboratory there in 1903 to study how plants cope with living in the desert.

The first permanent plots, generally 33 feet by 33 feet (10 meters by 10 meters), were established in 1906 by Volney Spalding; nine of his original plots remain to this day. Additional plots were established by Forrest Shreve in the 1910s and 1920s. Two more plots were added in 2010. Currently, there are 21 plots.

For every perennial plant within each plot, the ecologists recorded the species, the area the plant covered and its location. Even seedlings were identified and mapped.

In addition to the written records, repeated photographs of the plots have been taken since 1906. Those photographs are in the Desert Laboratory Collection of Repeat Photography at the USGS in Tucson, Ariz.

Over the years, botanists and ecologists have helped census and re-census the plots. Co-author Turner took over the work when he came to the UA as a botany professor in 1957, continued while a botanist for USGS and continues to do in retirement. In 1993, co-author Webb took up the project and is keeping the censuses going.

Sorting through data recorded from 2012 back to 1906 was a huge challenge, said Rodriguez-Buritica. She had something to build on: Janice Bowers of USGS had begun to archive the records but retired before finishing. Initially, Rodriguez-Buritica and Venable thought a year would do it -- but the task ended up taking much longer.

The records were in several places -- some at the library or in storage at Tumamoc and some in the UA library's Special Collections.

One of the challenges Rodriguez-Buritica faced is that methods of collecting and recording information about plants have changed over time.

Spalding, who established the very first plots in 1906, worked long before the age of computers -- he recorded his observations in a small notebook. Ecologists continued to record their field observations in paper notebooks and created maps on graph paper well into the latter part of the 20th century.

All those paper records had to be digitized.

Only in the last 20 years have scientists been pinpointing plant locations and other observations directly onto a map within their computers by using GPS and GIS technology.

Upon reviewing and checking the data, Rodriguez-Buritica realized that she needed to standardize the information collected over a century so that other scientists could analyze it. Her expertise in applied statistics and spatial ecology was perfect for the job.

She also computerized the series of maps created over time so new investigators could see all the plant location maps created since 1906.

By putting all the information into a standardized digital format and making it easily accessible on the Web, Rodriguez-Buritica, Venable and their colleagues have ensured that other researchers can build on and expand this unique data set.

Tumamoc Hill is one of the birthplaces of plant ecology, Venable said.

"In the first half of the 20th century, all the great plant ecologists either worked here or came though here," he said. "Plant ecologists from the Desert Lab were key in founding the Ecological Society of America and its flagship journal, Ecology. It is satisfying to see the project come full circle and be permanently archived 100 years later by the journal that these researchers started."

The Desert Lab and Tumamoc Hill have been designated as a National Environmental Study Site, a National Historic Landmark, an Arizona State Scientific and Educational Natural Area and are on the National Register of Historic Places.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Arizona. The original article was written by Mari N. Jensen.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Susana Rodriguez-Buritica, Helen Raichle, Robert H. Webb, Raymond M. Turner, Larry Venable. One hundred and six years of population and community dynamics of Sonoran Desert Laboratory perennials. Ecology, 2013; 94 (4): 976 DOI: 10.1890/12-1164.1

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/gB0eib4XVUM/130429154218.htm

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'Print' almost anything | Science News for Kids

3-D printers allow people to build almost anything they can imagine ? from toys to food, buildings to body parts

By Stephen Ornes / April 28, 2013

Caption: For Valentine’s Day this year, a Japanese company used a 3-D printer to produce chocolate copies of people’s faces. Credit: FabCafe/Think 3D/K’s Design Lab

For Valentine?s Day this year, a Japanese company used a 3-D printer to produce chocolate copies of people?s faces. Credit: FabCafe/Think 3D/K?s Design Lab

Imagine having a printer hooked up to your computer that could make anything. Tired of your toothbrush? No problem. Print a new one. Want a chocolate treat? Print it. Need a new dress, new shoes or maybe just new cleats for soccer? Just choose a style and size. Then print, print and print some more.

And why stop there? You might print a fake dinosaur bone. You might also print out a life-size copy of your own head. You could print another printer for a friend. And if your printer was big enough, it could print out the body of a car or even a new house.

No one machine can make all of these things, but three-dimensional printers are getting very close. Engineers have printed every single thing listed above ? except the house. (And architects plan to knock that one out by the end of 2013.)

Traditional printers work by putting ink (or toner) on paper. Not 3-D printers. They work with plastic, metal, ceramic or other materials, including food. The printers lay down these novel ?inks,? thin layer after thin layer, starting from the bottom up. Eventually a solid object emerges. 3-D printing is an exciting, new technology. It is also taking the manufacturing world by storm.

Dawn of a new technology

Until recently, 3-D printers were so expensive that only large companies could afford them. In just the last year or two, their cost has dropped dramatically. Today, you can buy a 3-D printer for as little as $300. The technology offers the potential to print anything at home, when you want it, without having to buy it in a store or order it from a factory.

Of course, there?s a catch. It has to do with the word ?potential.?

Not all 3-D printers are created equal. Low-cost models cannot always make high-quality objects. They may not be very precise, and they run on cheaper materials, such as plastic (and sometimes food, but more about that later). More expensive printers may use exotic metal or ceramic powders.

Scientists at Cornell University used a 3-D printer loaded with cheese “ink” to print a tiny, edible space shuttle. Credit: Creative Machines Lab (Cornell University)/French Culinary Institute

Scientists at Cornell University used a 3-D printer loaded with cheese ?ink? to print a tiny, edible space shuttle. Credit: Creative Machines Lab (Cornell University)/French Culinary Institute

The more affordable printers ?are not the greatest printers ever. Some of them kind of stink,? says Jennifer Lewis. An engineer at Harvard University, Lewis has led the development of new kinds of materials that can be used as ink in 3-D printers.

Even the sometimes poor quality of low-cost printers may change, and soon. 3-D printing is just getting started, Lewis points out. The technology has a long way to grow, as did personal computers when they debuted 40 years ago.

?When desktop computers first came out, they couldn?t do very much,? Lewis says. Now, even an inexpensive desktop computer can be as powerful as the first supercomputers.

Computing power has made 3-D printing possible. A person with an idea can easily design a 3-D object using computer software, or even from a digital copy of an existing object with a 3-D scanner. The process is fairly easy. And that is why 3-D printing could drastically change the world of manufacturing a few years from now.

Already, creative people around the world? ? known as ?makers? ? have formed virtual communities around 3-D printing. They share design ideas over the Internet, swap files and even improve upon each other?s work. Together, these makers are generating ideas (and real objects) that would have been hard to imagine even a few years ago.

Recent magazine and newspaper articles have called 3-D printing the ?next industrial revolution.? Like the original Industrial Revolution that began in the mid-1700s, this modern revolution could lead to major changes in how things are made. In fact, in his 2013 State of the Union address, President Barack Obama said 3-D printing ?has the potential to revolutionize the way we make almost everything.?

Layer by layer

According to legend, the French sculptor Auguste Rodin was once asked about his work. ?I choose a block of marble and chop off whatever I don?t need,? he replied. In other words, he used subtraction to create. 3-D printing is the opposite: It?s all about addition.

In this illustration, a 3-D bioprinter prints a new heart. The cartridges include the different types of cells needed to build the organ. Credit: Christopher Barnatt

In this illustration, a 3-D bioprinter prints a new heart. The cartridges include the different types of cells needed to build the organ. Credit: Christopher Barnatt

To understand how 3-D printers work, imagine you want to sculpt a loaf of bread from clay. Only you don?t just mold a single, large lump of clay into a loaf shape. Instead, you start by shaping a single slice out of clay, and laying it down. Then you form the next slice ? and place it on top. Keep going until you have a neat stack of thin layers of clay that together resemble a bread loaf, standing on end.

That is sort of the idea behind 3-D printers. Except machines print and assemble the object. A person?s job is to use computer software to describe the thing she wants the printer to print.

This blueprint includes the size and shape (and sometimes color) of the object. Next, a computer program digitally ?slices? the object described in that file, chopping it up into layers. It then feeds that information to the printer, and the printer tackles each layer, one by one.

The printer moves back and forth, side to side and up and down. A small nozzle deposits a single, thin layer of heated liquid material that hardens as it cools. (It?s a little like letting wet sand dribble out of your fingers when building a drip castle.) Once the bottom layer is in place and solid, the printer ?prints? the next layer on top of it. And so on. Each layer adds to the object. This process gives 3-D printing another name: additive manufacturing.

Key to 3-D printing are the ?inks? used ? and no, they don?t include bread (though some do use sand). The simplest inks consist of plastics that flow when heated, but harden when cooled. More complex printers use powdered metals or ceramics that can be heated and fused, in a process called sintering. Some scientists are even figuring out how to create biological inks that contain cells. These inks could be used to print new living tissues.

3-D printing can be fun too. For Valentine?s Day this year, a Japanese company used a 3-D printer to make chocolate copies of people?s faces. (Talk about a chocolately chip off the old block!) Meanwhile, researchers at Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y., have been refining the use of edible inks ? liquids made from finely ground foods. For example, they have printed out miniature, gourmet space shuttles using ink made from scallops and cheese. They have also made cookies with secret messages hidden inside.

At the recent Fashion Week in Paris, a yearly fashion event, 3-D printing turned stylish too. A Dutch fashion designer named Iris van Herpen worked with architects and artists to design and print clothes. They included a dress, skirt and cape. The dress is made from plastic fibers fused together with a laser within a 3-D printer. The skirt and cape both combine soft and hard materials, again produced using a 3-D printer. The clothes were made for show, and not necessarily everyday use. But that could soon change. Van Herpen believes ?it will only be a matter of time before we see the clothing we wear today produced with this technology.?

3-D printing likely will change the way we think about a lot of things, including weapons. Cody R. Wilson, a law student in Texas, has used 3-D printing to manufacture an important part of a semi-automatic gun. Wilson then shared his plans on the Internet, and more than 10,000 people downloaded them. For now, it?s still cheaper to buy a finished gun from a store. Still, Wilson?s project shows that one day it will be possible to print out an entire weapon at home. Some people worry that the technology could put guns into the hands of criminals. So it is easy to understand how 3-D printing is also controversial.

These organs don?t bleed red ink

These new printers aren?t all about fashion, firearms and food, however. In research laboratories around the world, scientists and engineers are studying ways to use 3-D printing to make things found only in nature.

Researchers at Cornell University printed an ear out of collagen, creating a scaffold. Eventually cartilage grew on the 3-D printed scaffold, forming an otherwise real ear. Credit: Lindsay France/Cornell University Photography

Researchers at Cornell University printed an ear out of collagen, creating a scaffold. Eventually cartilage grew on the 3-D printed scaffold, forming an otherwise real ear. Credit: Lindsay France/Cornell University Photography

Ibrahim Ozbolat, for instance, wants to print human organs. As a start, he and his collaborators are creating biological ?inks? that consist of living cells. Eventually, their goal is to harness a 3-D printer that uses those inks to build a living, functioning body part.

Ozbolat in particular wants to print a new organ that could do the job normally done by the pancreas, the organ that produces insulin. That hormone plays a role in helping the body use blood sugar, an energy source. A person whose pancreas cannot produce enough insulin develops one type of a dangerous disease called diabetes. Ozbolat says that implanting a printed pancreas into people with that type of diabetes might help them produce enough insulin to keep their blood-sugar levels in check.

Printing with cells takes a long time, Ozbolat notes, and ?after six or seven hours, the cells can get damaged.? His solution was to design a new type of 3-D printer. One of his students recently built a prototype. The printer has two arms, each with a nozzle-like printer head at its end that acts like a separate device. Ozbolat?s printable pancreas isn?t ready yet, but his custom printer is a step in the right direction.

?We are trying to construct the organ-like structure using two printers,? Ozbolat explains. As one arm lays down the cells to build the pancreas, the other installs blood vessels. Those vessels can deliver oxygen and nutrients to the newly printed cells, keeping them alive during the printing process. This way, layer by layer, Ozbolat hopes to build a living organ.

A printed pancreas is just the beginning. If Ozbolat?s idea works, he imagines moving on to building more complicated organs ? such as living, breathing lungs or even a beating heart. Right now, if transplant patients need a new lung, heart or other vital organ, they must wait for a donor to become available. Unfortunately, that usually happens only when someone dies. In the future, 3-D printing may eliminate such ghoulish waits. A biomedical engineer might simply tweak the computer file to match a patient?s need, and then click ?print.?

Call it III-D

Using 3-D printing to copy human tissue can even help other areas of science, including archaeology. Earlier this year, researchers in the United Kingdom used the technology to help solve the mystery of a king?s death many centuries ago.

Scientists at the University of Notre Dame in Indiana used a CT scanner to create an image of a living rat’s skeleton. They then printed a replica of that skeleton. Credit: Doney, E., et al.

Scientists at the University of Notre Dame in Indiana used a CT scanner to create an image of a living rat?s skeleton. They then printed a replica of that skeleton. Credit: Doney, E., et al.

Digging beneath a parking lot, scientists from the University of Leicester in England recently discovered the remains of King Richard III, who had ruled over England for two years in the 15th century.

This past February, scientists at Loughborough University, also in England, scanned the king?s skull and then used a 3-D printer to create a plastic replica. Once fully assembled, the skull showed the battle wounds that probably ended the monarch?s life in 1485.

Richard Harris, an expert in 3-D printing at Loughborough University, led the project. The researchers? first step was to create a virtual 3-D computer model. Later, as a 3-D printer began its work, ?seeing the skull of Richard III emerge ? was incredible,? Harris says.

Copies of the skull could be studied by other researchers or displayed in museums for a long time to come.

The future

For now, 3-D printing is still in its infancy. But it has the potential to mature very quickly.

As exciting as today?s projects are, they may pale in comparison to those on the horizon ? and beyond.

Perhaps the most radical idea is to take 3-D printing to space. In February, the European Space Agency (ESA) announced it was teaming up with architects to design a printed moon base. The idea is to send a large 3-D printer to the moon. Once there, it would use lunar soil and other ingredients for ink. This ?ink? would be laid over an inflatable dome ? building a stony covering, layer by layer.

Space agencies in the United States and Europe say 3-D printing may be used to build a base on the moon. This illustration shows what such a base might look like. Credit: ESA

Space agencies in the United States and Europe say 3-D printing may be used to build a base on the moon. This illustration shows what such a base might look like. Credit: ESA

NASA, the American space agency, is also interested in 3-D printing, and not just for bases on the moon, but also for those on Mars and asteroids too.

Imagine life on such a base. Astronauts could print their own meals, clothes and tools. They could print replacement parts for their spacecraft or even all the components needed to build a brand-new rover.

These futuristic scenarios, right now, are ideas communicated using words. While traditional printers can put those words on paper, 3-D printers can turn those ideas into reality. And as these machines grow in sophistication (and shrink in price), they will allow many more people to realize ever more complicated ideas.

So what?s yours?

Power Words

cell The smallest structural and functional unit of an organism, typically too small to see with the human eye.

technology The application of scientific knowledge for practical purposes, especially to create products or industrial processes.

laser A device that generates an intense beam of single-colored light. Lasers are used in drilling and cutting, alignment and guidance ? even in surgery.

sintering Using heat to turn a powdered material into a solid.

biology The study of living things.

manufacturing The making of things, usually on a large scale.

engineering The use of math and science to solve practical problems.

Source: http://www.sciencenewsforkids.org/2013/04/3-d-printers-allow-people-to-build-almost-anything-they-can-imagine-from-toys-to-food-buildings-to-body-parts/

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Negotiation Expert To Present Public Lecture | Bernews.com

Mario MoussaThe Penn & Wharton Bermuda Alumni Association presents ?Negotiation: How to Get What You Want? with Mario Moussa, MBA, PhD on Wednesday, May 8 from 6pm onward at Fairmont Hamilton Princess ? Harbourview Ballroom.

Admission is free, please register here.

We are pleased to share with Bermuda insights from one of the world?s leading experts in negotiations, business strategy, and collaboration. Everyone is welcome to join Dr. Moussa?s presentation to build skills at using negotiations to create win-wins and get what you want.

Dr. Mario Moussa is a Senior Fellow at Wharton Executive Education, University of Pennsylvania. He teaches negotiation, influence, strategy, change, and corporate culture and is co-director of the Wharton School?s Strategic Persuasion Workshop: The Art and Science of Selling Ideas. A specialist in large-scale organizational change initiatives, he has consulted to many of the world?s leading corporations, universities, and foundations. He is co-author of The Art of Woo: Using Strategic Persuasion to Sell Your Ideas.

The University of Pennsylvania is one of the oldest universities in America and, as a member of the Ivy League, one of the most prestigious institutions of higher learning in the world. Approximately 35 Penn alumni currently live in Bermuda. www.upenn.edu

Founded in 1881 as the first collegiate business school, the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania is recognized globally for intellectual leadership and ongoing innovation across every major discipline of business education, including undergraduate, MBA, executive MBA, and doctoral programs. www.wharton.upenn.edu

For more information please contact PennBermuda@gmail.com

Read More About: Bermuda business

Category: All, Business

Source: http://bernews.com/2013/04/negotiation-expert-to-present-public-lecture/

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Sudan's Kenana plans to raise $200 mln in Johannesburg IPO

KHARTOUM (Reuters) - Kenana, Sudan's biggest sugar producer, plans to raise around $200 million in an initial public offering in Johannesburg next year, its managing director said.

Last week, the Khartoum-based firm said it planned to make next year a stock market offer in Johannesburg with a secondary listing in Dubai, without giving details.

Mohamed El Mardi El Tegani told Reuters by mail on Saturday Kenana wanted to raise "around $200 million".

The firm, which is mainly owned by the governments of Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Sudan, has appointed Russia-focused Renaissance Capital and Dubai investment bank Shuaa Capital to manage the offering.

Kenana wants to use the money from the share offer to help fund an expansion to more than double its annual sugar output to 1 million tonnes and triple its biofuel production by 2015.

Kenana expects also to get $500 million in a capital injection this year from its main shareholders, to help fund expansion.

Last year the firm had eyed a stock market listing in Hong Kong but gave up the plan due to U.S. sanctions which deterred firms from dealing with Sudan.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sudans-kenana-plans-raise-200-mln-johannesburg-ipo-145929972.html

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Ten dead, dozens hurt during Mexican prison riot

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Ten people were killed and dozens wounded in a prison riot early Saturday in the central state of San Luis Potosi, local officials said.

State police said they had re-established control in an cell block of La Pila prison in the state capital of San Luis Potosi after a fight broke out between prisoners, according to a posting on the security ministry's official social media page.

Authorities were investigating the cause of the riot and it was unclear if inmates belonged to rival drug gangs, whose battles have sparked violence across Mexico.

Deadly riots have repeatedly rocked the country's overcrowded prisons, which house inmates from different drug gangs that have been fighting over trafficking routes and local turf.

Killings linked to organized crime fell 14 percent to 4,249 in the first four months of the presidency of Enrique Pena Nieto, who took over in December and vowed to reduce the violence that has marred Latin America's second biggest economy.

Former president Felipe Calderon sent the military out to fight drug cartels during his 2006-2012 term, when nearly 70,000 people died in battles and executions, and up to another 27,000 are missing, according to official data.

(Reporting by Anahi Rama; Editing by Bill Trott)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ten-dead-dozens-hurt-during-mexican-prison-riot-161242923.html

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Chris Brown?s Dad Doesn?t Approve Of Rihanna?

Chris Brown’s Dad Doesn’t Approve Of Rihanna?

Chris Brown and Rihanna to end badlyChris Brown’s father, Clinton Brown, doesn’t feel his son should have reunited with Rihanna. Clinton said he feels Rihanna and Chris are too similar, worrying that their toxic romance could end up tragically. Clinton spoke to the British paper The Sun, saying he thinks his son and Rihanna are not good together. He also hinted ...

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Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/04/chris-browns-dad-doesnt-approve-of-rihanna/

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Mississippi man charged with attempted use of biological weapon

By Robbie Ward

TUPELO, Mississippi (Reuters) - A Mississippi martial arts instructor was charged on Saturday with attempting to use a biological weapon after a ricin-laced letter was sent to President Barack Obama earlier this month, the U.S. Department of Justice said.

James Everett Dutschke, age 41, was arrested early on Saturday, following searches of his home and a former business as part of the ricin letter investigation.

Dutschke was taken into custody by FBI agents at his Tupelo home shortly after midnight FBI spokeswoman Deborah Madden said in a statement.

He was later charged with "acquiring, retaining and possessing a biological agent ... ricin, and with attempting, threatening and conspiring" to use it as a weapon, according to a joint announcement by Felicia C. Adams, the United States Attorney for the Northern District of Mississippi, and Daniel McMullen, Special Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in Mississippi.

If convicted, Dutschke faces maximum possible penalties of life imprisonment and a $250,000 fine.

The announcement did not specify if Dutsche was being charged in relation to the ricin letters, but it said the investigation had been conducted jointly by several federal agencies including the U. S. Postal Inspection Service, and the U. S. Capitol Police.

Dutschke is expected to appear in the United States District Court in Oxford, Mississippi, on Monday.

U.S. prosecutors dropped charges on Tuesday against another Mississippi man, Elvis impersonator Kevin Curtis, who was released from jail after a search of his home in nearby Corinth revealed no incriminating evidence.

Prosecutors said at the time that the investigation had "revealed new information" but provided no details.

Dutschke's attorney, Lori Basham, did not return calls seeking comment but she told Reuters earlier in the week that her client denied having anything to do with the ricin letters.

Agents from the FBI and the U.S. Capitol Police, as well as members of an anti-terrorist response team from the Mississippi National Guard, some wearing hazardous material suits, had searched Dutschke's home on Tuesday and Wednesday, as well as the premises of a former martial arts studio Dutschke ran in the city.

Dutschke was cooperating with federal officials during the searches this week, the attorney said.

Agents in unmarked vehicles were stationed in streets surrounding Dutschke's home on Friday afternoon and all evening. He was arrested at 12:50 a.m. CDT (0150 EST), the FBI said.

Letters addressed to President Barack Obama and Senator Roger Wicker, a Mississippi Republican, were retrieved last week at off-site mail facilities before reaching their intended victims. A Mississippi state judge also received a ricin-laced letter.

The discovery added another layer of anxiety as authorities were already dealing with bombings at the Boston Marathon.

Ricin, which is made from castor beans, can be deadly to humans and is considered a potential terror weapon, particularly if refined into an aerosol form.

The case has brought extra scrutiny on the FBI almost 12 years after a 2001 letter-borne anthrax attack that killed five people and took seven years to solve. The anthrax investigation also came in the wake of the September 11, 2001, hijacked plane attack on the United States.

RUNNING FEUD

Dutschke's name first surfaced in a federal court hearing on Monday for Curtis where his attorney suggested her client had been framed by someone. She mentioned a running feud between Dutschke and Curtis, albeit over a number of seemingly petty issues.

Suspicion had originally fallen on Curtis because of wording contained in all three ricin letters.

"Maybe I have your attention now / Even if that means someone must die," the letters read in part, according to the affidavit. The letters ended: "I am KC and I approve this message."

The mention of "KC" led law enforcement officials to ask Wicker's staff if they were aware of any constituents with those initials, and the focus of the investigation then turned to Curtis, according to an affidavit from the FBI and the Secret Service.

In 2007, Dutschke ran unsuccessfully as a Republican candidate against Stephen Holland, an incumbent Democratic state representative from the Tupelo area. Holland's mother, Sadie, is the judge to whom one of the ricin-tainted letters was mailed this month.

Dutschke has told local media that he knew Curtis but had only had contact with him three times, and not since 2010.

Curtis, 45, told the Northeastern Mississippi Daily Journal that he believed Dutschke deliberately sabotaged his career as a performer by calling sponsors and telling them about Curtis' numerous prior arrests. "I lost 12 really big shows in 2011 and eight in 2012 directly linked to him," Curtis told the newspaper.

Dutschke is also musical and fronted a two-man blues band in Tupelo called RoboDrum.

"MISSING PIECES"

Curtis's brother and fellow Elvis impersonator, insurance agent Jack Curtis, worked for a time with Dutschke and says he believes the feud with Dutschke is related to his brother's efforts to publicize allegations about a black market for body parts at a local Mississippi hospital.

Kevin Curtis was fired as a janitor from North Mississippi Medical Center in Tupelo after raising questions about body parts he said he observed there. The hospital strongly denied the allegations.

Dutschke faces other charges related to an April 1 indictment for fondling three different children between ages 7 and 16, from 2007 to 2013, according to court records. He was released on $25,000 bond in that case.

One of Dutschke's alleged child molestation victims was 7 years old at the time and was a female student in his tae kwon do class, court documents show.

(Additional reporting by Emily Lane in Jackson, Mississippi; Writing by David Adams; Editing by Bill Trott and Sandra Maler)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mississippi-man-targeted-ricin-letters-investigation-arrested-145219248.html

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Sunday, April 28, 2013

OpenMobile ACL for webOS resurrected on Kickstarter, hopes to bring Android apps to HP Touchpad

OpenMobile ACL for webOS resurrected on Kickstarter, hopes to bring Android apps to HP Touchpad

The promise of OpenMobile's Application Compatibility Layer is inciting: seamlessly run Android apps on another operating system as if it was meant to be there. Unfortunately for fans of Palm's last hurrah, the project's webOS port died with the HP Touchpad. That won't stop dedicated fans, however -- Phoenix International Communications plans to resurrect webOS ACL. Taking the project to Kickstarter, the team has showed an early build of the project on an HP Touchpad, seamlessly running Android apps in cards alongside native webOS applications. Phoenix hopes that a functional ACL will reduce Touchpad owner's reliance on dual-booting Android, giving them the freedom to enjoy webOS without sacrificing functionality. The team is promising a relatively short development time, thanks to OpenMobile's early work, and hopes to deliver a consumer ready build in July. But first the Kickstarter campaign will need to meet its $35,000 goal. Interested in pitching in? Check out the Kickstarter link at the source.

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Source: Kickstarter

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/qcUvqY4TqGI/

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FAA: Air traffic system soon at full operation

A United Airlines jet departs in view of the air traffic control tower at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport Tuesday, April 23, 2013, in Seattle. A day after flight delays plagued much of the U.S., air travel is smoother Tuesday. But the government is warning passengers that the situation can change by the hour as it runs the nation's air traffic control system with a smaller staff. Airlines and members of Congress urged the Federal Aviation Administration to find other ways to make mandatory budget cuts besides furloughing controllers. While delays haven't been terrible yet, the airlines are worried about the long-term impact late flights will have on their budgets and on fliers. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

A United Airlines jet departs in view of the air traffic control tower at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport Tuesday, April 23, 2013, in Seattle. A day after flight delays plagued much of the U.S., air travel is smoother Tuesday. But the government is warning passengers that the situation can change by the hour as it runs the nation's air traffic control system with a smaller staff. Airlines and members of Congress urged the Federal Aviation Administration to find other ways to make mandatory budget cuts besides furloughing controllers. While delays haven't been terrible yet, the airlines are worried about the long-term impact late flights will have on their budgets and on fliers. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

The control tower stands in the background as a passenger lays on the pavement outside the international terminal at Hartsfield-Jackson airport, Friday, April 26, 2013, in Atlanta. Congress easily approved legislation Friday ending furloughs of air traffic controllers that have delayed hundreds of flights daily, infuriating travelers and causing political headaches for lawmakers.(AP Photo/David Goldman)

A passenger sits at right in the international terminal at Hartsfield-Jackson airport, Friday, April 26, 2013, in Atlanta. Congress easily approved legislation Friday ending furloughs of air traffic controllers that have delayed hundreds of flights daily, infuriating travelers and causing political headaches for lawmakers.(AP Photo/David Goldman)

The control tower stands in the background as a passenger paces while on the phone outside the international terminal at Hartsfield-Jackson airport, Friday, April 26, 2013, in Atlanta. Congress easily approved legislation Friday ending furloughs of air traffic controllers that have delayed hundreds of flights daily, infuriating travelers and causing political headaches for lawmakers.(AP Photo/David Goldman)

(AP) ? The Federal Aviation Administration said that the U.S. air traffic system will resume normal operations by Sunday evening after lawmakers rushed a bill through Congress allowing the agency to withdraw furloughs of air traffic controllers and other workers.

The FAA said Saturday that it has suspended all employee furloughs and that traffic facilities will begin returning to regular staffing levels over the next 24 hours. The furloughs were fallout from the $85 billion in automatic-across-the-board spending cuts this spring.

The furloughs started to hit air traffic controllers this past week, causing flight delays that left thousands of travelers frustrated and furious. Planes were forced to take off and land less frequently, so as not to overload the remaining controllers on duty.

The FAA had no choice but to cut $637 million as its share of $85 billion in automatic, government-wide spending cuts that must be achieved by the end of the federal budget year on Sept. 30.

Flight delays piled up across the country Sunday and Monday of this week as the FAA kept planes on the ground because there weren't enough controllers to monitor busy air corridors. Cascading delays held up flights at some of nation's busiest airports, including New York, Baltimore and Washington. Delta Air Lines canceled about 90 flights Monday because of worries about delays. Just about every passenger was rebooked on another Delta flight within a couple of hours. Air travel was smoother Tuesday.

Things could have been worse. A lot of people who had planned to fly this week changed their plans when they heard that air travel might be difficult, according to longtime aviation consultant Daniel Kasper of Compass Lexicon.

"Essentially what happened from an airline's perspective is that people who were going to travel didn't travel," he said. But canceled flights likely led to lost revenue for airlines. Even if they didn't have to incur some of costs of fueling up planes and getting them off the ground, crews that were already scheduled to work still had to paid.

"One week isn't going to kill them, but had it gone on much longer, it would have been a significant hit on their revenues and profits," Kasper said.

The challenges this week probably cost airlines less than disruptions from a typical winter storm, said John F. Thomas, an aviation consultant with L.E.K. Consulting.

"I think the fact that it got resolved this week has minimized the cost as it was more the inconvenience factor," Thomas said.

The budget cuts at the FAA were required under a law enacted two years ago as the government was approaching its debt limit. Democrats were in favor of raising the debt limit without strings attached so as not to provoke an economic crisis, but Republicans insisted on substantial cuts in exchange. The compromise was to require that every government "program, project and activity" ? with some exceptions, like Medicare ? be cut equally.

The FAA had reduced the work schedules of nearly all of its 47,000 employees by one day every two weeks, including 15,000 air traffic controllers, as well as thousands of air traffic supervisors, managers and technicians who keep airport towers and radar facility equipment working. That amounted to a 10 percent cut in hours and pay.

Republicans accused the Obama administration of forcing the furloughs to raise public pressure on Congress to roll back the budget cuts. Critics of the FAA insist the agency could have reduce its budget in other ways that would not have inconvenience travelers including diverting money from other accounts, such as those devoted to research, commercial space transportation and modernization of the air traffic control computers.

President Barack Obama chided lawmakers Saturday over their fix for widespread flight delays, deeming it an irresponsible way to govern, dubbing it a "Band-Aid" and a quick fix, rather than a lasting solution to the spending cuts known as the sequester.

"Republicans claimed victory when the sequester first took effect, and now they've decided it was a bad idea all along," Obama said, singling out the GOP even though the bill passed with overwhelming Democratic support in both chambers.

He scolded lawmakers for helping the Federal Aviation Administration while doing nothing to replace other cuts that he said harm federal employees, unemployed workers and preschoolers in Head Start.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-04-27-US-FAA-Furloughs/id-ff266ec5f2524584b286063a61123c2e

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Greece starts firing civil servants for first time in a century

The Greek government began its first mass-firing of public-sector workers in more than 100 years this week, part of an effort to lay off 180,000 by 2015 under Europe-imposed austerity.

By Nikolia Apostolou,?Correspondent / April 26, 2013

Municipal workers dressed in traditional costumes protest in Athens today against the government?s plan to layoff thousands of public sector workers as part of its austerity reform program.

John Kolesidis/Reuters

Enlarge

Pushed by its European creditors amid its crippling economic crisis, Greece began this week to do something it hasn't done in more than 100 years: fire public-sector workers en masse.

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Following weeks of tough negotiations with its lenders ? the "troika" of the International Monetary Fund, the European Union, and the European Central Bank ? the Greek government started laying off public-sector workers in an effort to implement the austerity that the troika has demanded. The first two civil servants were let go on Wednesday under a new law that speeds up the process ? one, a policeman, for stealing debit cards, and the other for 110 days of unexcused absence.

The mass layoffs were announced last week in a televised address by the Greek prime minister himself, Antonis Samaras. Despite the massive unemployment in Greece, the goal of the government has become the laying off of 180,000 civil servants by 2015. ?This is not a human sacrifice," said Prime Minister Samaras. ?It?s an upgrading of the public sector and it?s one demand of Greek society.?

Samaras though, promised new positions to be created: ?An equal number [of employees] will be hired on merit,? he added.

A century without layoffs

Civil servants? jobs have been protected by a law that dates back to the 1880s, which became enshrined in the century-old Greek constitution. Until that provision became law, each newly elected government would sack the civil servants hired by the previous government to replace them with their own party members, creating civil unrest and a dysfunctional state.

?The logic [behind this law] was that the public administration has to be politically independent, feel secure, and ensure the state?s continuity,? said Dimitris Charalambis, professor of political science at the University of Athens.

Even though the 19th-century law was initially intended to fight nepotism, it caused its own problem: Each successive government hired its own people, adding to a continually expanding civil service without making the public sector any more effective. As a result, the Greek public sector became infamous for being dysfunctional and bureaucratic.

Further, although the law had allowed the firing of civil servants convicted of misappropriation of public funds and other serious crimes or when their jobs are phased out, the civil servants were still guaranteed a right to appeal. The appeal process could take two to three years, during which they were able to remain at work.

The law was changed last November to speed up the appeal process and suspend civil servants charged with crimes. A separate effort today to remove the appeal entirely was blocked by the justice minister as unconstitutional, however.

?[The civil servants], who are charged for disciplinary offenses, have the right to a hearing before the disciplinary council of the civil service and a right to appeal,? says George Katrougalos, professor of law at the Demokritos University of Thrace. ?Until the final decision is reached, they cannot be fired.?

But while the law now strengthens the government's ability to fire civil servants, it also makes the workers more vulnerable ? a particular problem amid Greece's politically charged economic struggles. This week, for example, a teacher was suspended after he was arrested during an anti-austerity demonstration ? a situation more common as of late.

Not a size problem?

Since 2010, when the economic crisis started, public debate over the public sector?s size has grown.

And while the troika has demanded the Greek government shed jobs over the past few years, it had previously done so via civil servants going early into retirement and the expiration of fixed-term employment contracts that some public-sector workers had with the state.

?The public administration has lost about 140,000 posts, from a total of about 700,000. [And now] as the minister of administrative reform has admitted, there are serious problems in many [public] services, especially social ones,? says Katrougalos.

Still, despite its reputation of being overgrown, the Greek public-sector workforce is actually smaller than the European Union average. According to ECB statistics from 2011, Greece employed 29 percent of its labor force in the public sector ? smaller than Belgium's 38 percent and France's 31 percent during the same period.

?The problem is not its size," says Katrougalos, "but the fact that it is irrationally organized, overgrown in some areas and underdeveloped in others, especially in the welfare sector."

? Marina Rigou contributed to this report.

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Stunning NASA Video Shows 3 Years of the Sun in 3 Minutes

A mesmerizing new video showcases the sun's life over three years, stitched together from gorgeous snapshots taken by a NASA spacecraft in orbit around our nearest star.

The video is made up of photos captured by NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) ? two images a day for three years. The eye-catching images offer an unprecedented glimpse of the daily commotion waxing and waning on the surface of the sun.

SDO's Atmospheric Imaging Assembly records an image of the sun every 12 seconds in 10 different wavelengths, according to NASA officials. The images seen in the video are in the extreme ultraviolet range.

"In this wavelength it is easy to see the sun's 25-day rotation as well as how solar activity has increased over three years," agency officials said in a statement.

In the video, the size of the sun appears to subtly fluctuate. These changes are caused by the variation over time in the distance between SDO and the sun. Despite these tiny variations, the shots are fairly stable and consistent.

With SDO maintaining this steady and unbroken gaze, heliophysicists regularly observe the sun's active regions, and have been able to watch solar storms as they occur. By closely monitoring changes in the sun's activity, researchers can catch solar flares and other major spaceweather events in the act.

"SDO's glimpses into the violent dance on the sun help scientists understand what causes these giant explosions ? with the hopes of some day improving our ability to predict this space weather," NASA officials said.

NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory was launched in February 2010 and is equipped with a suite of instruments to stare at the sun for 24 hours a day, seven days a week. This type of uninterrupted coverage allowed scientists to monitor the star as it ramps up toward a period of solar maximum this year in its regular 11-year cycle of activity.

Follow Denise Chow on Twitter?@denisechow. Follow us?@Spacedotcom,?Facebook?or?Google+. Originally published on SPACE.com.

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/stunning-nasa-video-shows-3-years-sun-3-124027921.html

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