Monday, December 31, 2012

Pakistan releases 8 Afghan Taliban prisoners

(AP) ? Pakistan released eight members of the Afghan Taliban from prison on Monday, including the former justice minister under the Taliban, in a bid to boost the peace process in neighboring Afghanistan, the government said.

Pakistan is seen as a lynchpin in efforts to bring about peace in Afghanistan as foreign troops plan to depart the country in 2014. Kabul has been pressing its neighbor to release more prisoners who they hope would bring the Taliban to the negotiating table before the U.S. troops go home.

The Pakistanis appear to have an interest in promoting peace across the border, as a resumption of the civil war there could bring harsh consequences on its side as well.

"We have released some more Taliban prisoners today as our help in the peace process in Afghanistan," Pakistan Foreign Office spokesman Moazzam Khan said.

In a statement, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said eight detainees were released, including Nooruddin Turabi, the justice minister under the Taliban.

Mohammad Azeem, a former guard of Taliban leader Mullah Omar, was also among those released, according to a Taliban official. He spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to reporters about the sensitive subject.

It was not clear what role the eight released prisoners might play in bringing Taliban leaders to the negotiating table or what links they have to the group's current leadership.

Pakistan has longstanding ties to the Taliban and its support is key to any future reconciliation, just as its opposition would likely block any progress. For example, Pakistan could facilitate travel for Taliban leaders ? many who are believed to reside in or travel to Pakistan frequently ? to third countries for peace talks.

Last month, Pakistan released 18 prisoners at the request of the Afghan High Peace Council, the Pakistani Foreign Ministry said in its statement. In early December it promised to release more members of the group.

Both developments were seen as signs that Pakistan, long accused of backing militants, was supporting a new push to bring peace to a country with which it shares a long border and tumultuous history. The Afghan and U.S. governments accuse Islamabad of backing insurgents ? an allegation Pakistan denies ? and say many militant leaders are hiding in the country.

So far the militant group's former deputy leader, Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, has not been released, although Afghanistan has been pressuring Pakistan to set him free.

The Afghan peace process has made little headway since it began several years ago, hobbled by distrust among the major players, including the United States.

Part of the reason Pakistan is seen to be actively helping the process is that government and military officials are worried that if American troops leave without a plan in place, Afghanistan could deteriorate into another round of vicious infighting. After the Soviets pulled out in 1989, many of the militants who had helped best that superpower then turned on each other in what played out as a vicious war across the country.

A repeat of that scenario could have horrific consequences for Pakistan, such as a flood of Afghan refugees across its borders and increased fighting in Pakistan's tribal areas, where the military is already trying to suppress a stubborn insurgency.

Pakistani intelligence officials said Monday that they found the bodies of nine militants dumped in the North Waziristan tribal region.

The men were shot several times in the head and chest, said three Pakistani intelligence officials. Their bodies were found Monday off a road in Pir Kili village. The officials said the dead men were linked to the Pakistani Taliban, a militant group affiliated with the Taliban in Afghanistan but focused on fighting the Pakistani government.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to speak to reporters.

North Waziristan is a hub of militant activity near the Afghan border.

The militants' bodies were found one day after 21 tribal police personnel who had been abducted were found dead in another tribal region.

___

Associated Press writers Kathy Gannon and Rebecca Santana in Islamabad and Rasool Dawar in Peshawar contributed.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-12-31-Pakistan/id-b8533607d40f40f0964583738be0e7f7

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'Fiscal cliff' no more? Americans vote to banish the term, at least.

'Fiscal cliff,' 'spoiler alert,' and 'boneless wings' all made a list of overused terms and phrases that is compiled annually by Lake Superior State University.

By Mark Trumbull,?Staff writer / December 31, 2012

President Barack Obama pauses as he speaks about the fiscal cliff, Monday, in the South Court Auditorium at the White House in Washington. 'Fiscal Cliff' was one of the words on Lake Superior State University's list of overused terms and phrases.

Carolyn Kaster/AP

Enlarge

As we ring in a new year, it might be a good time to ring out some tired old words and phrases.

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That's the theory behind the new "List of words to be banished from the queen's English for misuse, overuse and general uselessness," which a Midwestern university issues each year in an effort to dispense with some of the worst verbal clutter.

Topping the 38th annual list is "fiscal cliff," the phrase that Americans nominated, more than any other this year, to be nixed from our everyday vocabulary. Are you listening, Congress?

Rounding out the list are 11 other coinages, in this order:

2. Kick the can down the road

3. Double down

4. Job creators/job creation

5. Passion/passionate (as in the way a business claims to feel about the service it delivers)

6. YOLO (short for "you only live once")

7. Spoiler alert

8. Bucket list ("It's such a grim way of looking at 'what I want to do,' and often it is in selfish terms," wrote nominator Shea Hoffmitz of Hamilton, Ontario.)

9. Trending

10. Superfood

11. Boneless wings ("Can we just call them chicken (pieces)?" wrote John McNamara of Lansing, Mich.)

12. Guru ("Unless you're teaching transcendental meditation, Hinduism or Buddhism ...," wrote Mitch Devine of Rancho Santa Margarita, Calif.)

The problem, of course, is that just saying certain words should be expunged doesn't mean they will be.

As people complain about hearing "fiscal cliff" and related budget jargon too often, it's worth noting that "deficit reduction plan" made the banished-word list back in 1991, and "sequestration" in 1987. Those will probably continue to surface in the language whenever budget pressures are the big topic in politics.

Still, at a time when people are communicating more than ever thanks to social media, it's useful to get this annual vocabulary critique, which is issued by wordsmiths at Lake Superior State University in Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., each year.

Think of it this way: Amid the thousands of tweets and news flashes and blogs arising each minute, someone is hitting the pause button and asking us all to use words that are clearer, fresher, and more fun to read. The language does tend to renew itself over time, as phrases fall in and out of favor, but efforts to shape and speed the process are welcome. (Confession: This writer has aided and abetted the publication of "fiscal cliff" many times. But in so doing, it's become more apparent that people don't need to be reading that so often.)

How about picking one or two items from that list and banishing them from your communications? And we all might think of additional clich?s or imprecisions to start avoiding.

In fact, Lake Superior State is already accepting nominations for its next list. (To submit nominations, click here. Before writing, the university asks that you check the "complete list" in an adjacent link, to make sure your nomination hasn't already been banished.)

Plenty of phrases that were fit to be banished in years past have indeed largely faded out. Examples include "happy camper" (from the 1993 list) and "been there, done that" (1996).

Don't be surprised, though, if efforts to banish certain items are unsuccessful. Past lists have included "absolutely!" (1993), "political reality" (1983), and "cult classic" (1989). Over the past year, the adjoining of "political" and "reality" has occurred more than 1,000 times in major newspapers alone, according to the Nexis database.

To help get the next list going, here's a suggestion: Maybe prose writers can refrain from highlighting a big thought by putting a period after every word in what once would have been a sentence (as in, "Please. Stop. Writing. Like. This.").

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/AOJmwal5zfc/Fiscal-cliff-no-more-Americans-vote-to-banish-the-term-at-least

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What I Would Like To See In Android 5.0 Key Lime Pie

android_evo

Google is more than likely working on Android 5.0 Key Lime Pie, and hopefully they?ll be adding some much needed improvements Do not get me wrong, past firmware upgrades have been outstanding and have often exceeded expectations. Ice Cream Sandwich brought an astonishing UI revamp while Jelly Bean brought better performance with Project Butter. I sincerely hope Android 5.0 Key Lime Pie will bring even more performance changes though. I find myself somewhat jealous of the locked (most of the time) 60 fps (frames per second) that most iOS devices tout. Here is my wishlist for the next Android firmware upgrade, presumably Android 5.0:

Increased Performance

Android is an outstanding operating system, but something we can all agree on is that it has its own quirks, just like any other operating system out there. Those who are able to admit that Android has its own shortcomings have probably noticed that the software does not talk?properly?with the hardware, which is one advantage iOS has over Android. It?s hardly a reason to jump ship and grab a iOS device though. iOS often has its own problems too. The update to Jelly Bean fixed a lot of?performance?issues, but it would be nice to see that taken a step further. It would be incredible to see the majority of FPS issues taken care of in the next firmware upgrade.

A New UI

I for one, love seeing new UI?s come alongside new firmware updates. It?s a refreshing experience. I loved and still love the UI from Ice Cream Sandwich, but it is time to introduce something new. Granted, a lot of the UI depends on what the manufacturer does with it (e.g. Samsung?s TouchWiz UI and etc).

Better App Management

The current app management system bugs me. I hate that most of the day you have processes or in Android?s case, services, running until the user manually closes them. A great way to conserve battery life would be to have those running services terminated every 10 ? 20 minutes or so. That way, there isn?t an app running on your smartphone constantly. As always though, there are some select people who would protest the idea, which is why I think implementing an option to automatically terminate running services in intervals of time would be fantastic instead of forcing it on a user who likes to have their apps minimized or not on the foreground.

These are just a few things that I?d like to see in the next Android version. Albeit while a UI isn?t likely, it?d be extremely nice to see. You could also argue that we already have great app management through the built in application manager. And we do, but there?s no way ? to my knowledge ? to kill certain apps in intervals, which is what I would like to see in the next version of Android.

Tags: Android 5.0, Key Lime Pie, Speculations

Category: Rumors

Source: http://thedroidguy.com/2012/12/what-i-would-like-to-see-in-android-5-0-key-lime-pie/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=what-i-would-like-to-see-in-android-5-0-key-lime-pie

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Days before deadline, Obama urges Congress to act on 'fiscal cliff' (Washington Bureau)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/273755125?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Sunday, December 30, 2012

Sunni protesters attack Iraq official's convoy, guards wound two

RAMADI, Iraq (Reuters) - Bodyguards for Iraq's deputy prime minister wounded two people when they fired warning shots at Sunni protesters who pelted his convoy with bottles and stones on Sunday, witnesses said.

The incident took place the city of Ramadi in western Anbar province, to where Deputy Prime Minister Saleh al-Mutlaq had travelled to address people in an attempt to defuse sectarian tensions.

Thousands of Iraqi Sunnis have taken to the streets and blocked a main highway over the past week in protest against Shi'ite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, whom they accuse of discriminating against their community and being under the sway of non-Arab neighbor Iran.

"Leave! Leave!" the protesters shouted at Mutlaq, himself a Sunni.

Mutlaq's guards opened fire to disperse the crowd after they threw objects at his convoy. Two people were wounded, the witness said

"It's only now Mutlaq comes to attend the protest and after seven days. He came to undermine the protest," Saeed al-Lafi, a spokesman for the protesters, told Reuters.

Protesters are demanding an end to marginalization of Iraq's Sunni minority, which dominated the country until the U.S.-led invasion of 2003 that toppled Saddam Hussein.

They want Maliki to abolish anti-terrorism laws they say are used to persecute them.

Echoing slogans used in popular revolts that brought down leaders in Egypt, Yemen, Tunisia and Yemen, protesters have also been calling on Maliki to step down.

"Is this the way to deal with peaceful protesters? To shoot them? This is really outrageous," said protester Ghazwan al-Fahdawi, displaying empty bullet casings from shots he said had been fired by Mutlaq's guards.

In the northern city of Mosul, the provincial council called a three-day strike starting from next Friday to press Baghdad to release women prisoners and stop targeting Sunni politicians.

Protests flared last week in Anbar province after troops loyal to Maliki detained bodyguards of his finance minister, a Sunni.

That came just hours after Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd seen as a steadying influence on the country's tumultuous politics, was flown abroad for medical care.

A year after U.S. troops left, sectarian friction, as well as tension over land and oil between Arabs and ethnic Kurds, threaten renewed unrest and are hampering efforts to repair the damage of years of violence and exploit Iraq's energy riches.

(Reporting by Kamal Naama, Ahmed Rasheed and Sufyan al-Mashhadani in Mosul; Writing by Isabel Coles; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sunni-protesters-attack-iraq-officials-convoy-guards-wound-123953633.html

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Saturday, December 29, 2012

50Plus : Health : Top fitness trends for 2013

Just in time for your New Year?s resolutions for better health and wellness, we look ahead to 2013?s top fitness trends.

What trends will shape the fitness market in 2013? Each year, the editors at the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM)?s Health & Fitness Journal survey fitness professionals around the world to see which trends they think will be popular in the months ahead. Nearly 3,350 professionals across clinical, corporate, community and commercial sectors took part in the online poll this year. As usual, participants were asked to rank a selection previous top trends and emerging trends on a scale of 1-10 based on how influential those trends would likely be in 2013.

Here?s how the ranking shaped up:

1. Educated, Certified, and Experienced Fitness Professionals
We bet you aren?t surprised this trend continues to hit #1, given who the poll?s participants are. Experts attribute the acclaim to the ?exponential growth? of educational programs that are now officially accredited by governing organizations ? not to mention the fast-growing market for qualified professionals. While more people are getting wise to the benefits of fitness, larger clients like corporation continue to seek the services of professionals.

2. Strength Training
We?re always hearing about the benefits of strong muscles, so it?s no surprise strength training holds the #2 spot for a second year. After all, the activity is good for the metabolism, helps with balance, keeps our bones strong and protects against injury. More people are realizing that ?pumping iron? is an essential part of their fitness routine, and strength training has also become an integral part of rehabilitation programs.

3. Body Weight Training
Think you need a lot of equipment for strength training? While using your body weight and resistance to build muscle isn?t anything new ? think push-ups and pull-ups ? it?s the first time body weight training has surfaced as a trend. Why? This ?back to basics? approach is now the focus of new fitness programs, and may be gaining favour over expensive programs like Pilates.

4. Children and Obesity
Up one place from #5 last year, programs that target childhood obesity are predicted to be popular well through 2013. Last year, experts predicted that schools would take on much of the responsibility, but continuing cutbacks in education mean that community and commercial programs will likely need to fill in the gaps. For example, employers may start to look for programs that cater to their employees? entire families, not just employees themselves.

5. Exercise and Weight Loss
If you?re looking to shed a few pounds in 2013, you can expect that any weight loss program or regime you try will include an exercise component. Experts have long known that healthy eating and regular physical activity are key components of obtaining and maintaining a healthy weight. This trend fell from #4 since last year, but it appears to be here to stay for a while yet.

Copyright 2012 All Rights Reserved - ZoomerMedia Limited.

Source: http://www.50plus.com/health/top-fitness-trends-for-2013/199809/

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Is White after Labor Day a "No-No" in Florida?

It must be time to pull out the movie "Serial Mom", a great John Waters film starring Kathleen Turner.

I like the scene where she sees Patty Hearst wearing white after labor day and starts to go beserk.

No matter how hot it is, watch out for the Kathleen Turners of the world.

Source: http://www.fodors.com/community/fodorite-lounge/is-white-after-labor-day-a-no-no-in-florida.cfm

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Telling History vs. Making Art: Fictions and Histories | Scholars and ...

Final part of a?series

?[H]istory and historical fiction,? says historian Paul Ashdown, ?are alternate ways of telling stories about the past.??In that context, Ulysses S. Grant spoke more truth than he realized when he said ?Wars produce many stories of fiction.?

Aside from yarn-spun anecdotes about apple-tree surrenders and lemon-sucking generals, war also produces ?stories of fiction? in a literal way as a source of inspiration: ?An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge,??The Red Badge of Courage, Gone with the Wind, Shiloh, The Killer Angels. Both kinds of stories present themselves as true, and both may even be based on facts. ?Fact and fiction comingle, reminding us that history, like news, is only a part of the story.??Art, too, offers another part of the story.

Ashdown points specifically at Charles Frazier?s novel?Cold Mountain, which is based very loosely on the real story of William Pinkney Inman, an ancestor of Frazier?s. Facts on Inman were scarce. All Frazier knew for certain about him ?could be written on the back of a postcard.????Facts? could not begin to tell the real story,? Frazier wrote in the book, ?and you could tell such things on and on and yet no more get to the full truth of the war than you could get to the full truth of an old sow bear?s life by following her sign through the woods.?

Starting with those few scant facts, though, and then tapping into other resources, Frazier began inventing a story. ?By making use of folklore, yarn, legend, myth, and what we can know of history, Frazier shows that although we can never know all that happened, or why it happened, we can at least obliquely participate in a continuing story,? Ashdown says.

Frazier?s story grew beyond the facts, which he was willing to sacrifice in service to the larger truth. For instance, he chose to drop Inman?s first and middle names. ?The use of the last name throughout the book suggests?a mythic universalism,? says Ashdown. ?The point is not so much to detach Inman from the past as it is to detach him from William P. Inman and historicity.?

Coal Black Horse, about a 14-year-old boy?s journey to manhood as he travels from western Virginia to get his father from the battlefield at Gettysburg, does something similar. Because author Robert Olmstead avoids almost all mention of specific places, his protagonist, Robey, travels across a mythic landscape, which suits the novel well because of the slightly surreal quality of the characters. Facts would ground the world too much. Olmstead doesn?t even mention Gettysburg by name until page 145?two-thirds of the way through the book?s 218 pages?well after Robey has arrived on site and well after the battle.

Conversely, a writer can deluge a reader with facts, as Paulette Jiles does in?Enemy Women, a novel about the Civil War?s guerilla conflict in Missouri. Jiles quotes extensively from?Inside War: The Guerilla Conflict in Missouri, 1861-1865?by Michael J. Fellman, which she includes as epigrams before each chapter as a way to provide background information and context. While those facts allow her to avoid exposition of her own, they still disrupt the flow of her narrative and interfere with her authorial voice. Facts, at least as Jiles uses them, can become too much.

As a historical story gets further from the facts, the harder it is to take the work seriously as history, but the easier it is to accept purely in terms of entertainment value. Nowhere is this more evident in the burgeoning science fiction subgenre of ?alternative history.? Harry Turtledove?s?Guns of the South, for instance, which pays meticulous attention to accuracy with its discussion of firearms and aspects of daily life, is clearly ?alternative history? because of time travelers who bring A-K 47s to Robert E. Lee?s army from Apartheid-era South Africa. I know historians who think the premise is ludicrous, but they never accuse the book of trying to dress itself up as history, either.

Other alternative histories of the war typically hinge on ?what ifs? less outlandish: in Turtledove?s?How Few Remain, the Federal army never finds the ?Lost Order? that outlines Lee?s plans for invasion into Pennsylvania; in Newt Gingrich and William Forestchen?s?Gettysburg, Lee takes Longstreet?s advice and swings southward to better ground after the first day of fighting in Gettysburg; Peter Tsouras?s?Gettysburg?gives the battle a full reimagining while Douglas Gibboney?s?Stonewall Jackson at Gettysburg?puts the legendary General in the thick of it; Kevin Wilmott?s biting satiric film?C.S.A.explores modern America if the entire country, not just the South, had legalized slavery. An author with no less prestige than MacKinlay Kantor, who won the Pulitzer Prize for his Civil War prison novel?Andersonville, imagined?If the South Had Won the Civil War, basing his plot twist on a horseback riding accident that kills Union General Ulysses S. Grant.

Gingrich calls alternative history ?a way of breathing life back into the adventure, to reopen the book on page one,? but he?insists that in order for them to be of any value beyond mere escapism,??internal logic, consistency, and a rigid adherence to reality must still be maintained. Otherwise, we fall off the track and it becomes an exercise in fantasy.? For instance, he says an aggressive George McClellan would?ve probably won Antietam, but McClellan was??driven far more by his fear of failure than by the dream of success.? To write his character any other way ?is a denial of everything we know about him and becomes an exercise in fantasy.? Likewise, the ?magic bullet? scenario?Grant dying in a horseback riding accident, Jackson surviving Chancellorsville, Lincoln?s mother not dying of the milk sickness?is little more than an exercise in fantasy.

I mention these alternate histories only as a way of probing the outer boundaries of history and fiction, where art clearly stands as art and facts are clearly false. At the other end, I could likewise cite James McPherson?s Pulitzer-winning?Battle Cry of Freedom?or Drew Gilpin Faust?s?This Republic of Suffering?as examples that clearly stand in the realm of history and where facts are clearly true. One pole privileges story over fact, the other fact over story. Somewhere in between rest the examples I?ve discussed in this series. All of them, fiction and nonfiction alike, strive to strike a balance between fact and story in the service of a particular truth.

?People interested in the Civil War become obsessed with facts and don?t have much patience with fiction,? Ashdown says.?They criticize art for being ?unfactual? (just as artists criticize history for being ?boring?). Before they insist on sacrificing art on the altar of fact, though, they?d do well to keep in mind the lesson Grant knew well: facts themselves are hard things to hold on to and can be interpreted into all sorts of happy and unhappy truths. His favored view of the war?s meaning, the Union Cause, faded from collective memory. The Reconciliation Cause subsumed the Emancipation Clause even as it itself was co-opted by the Lost Cause. Truths compete with truths.

?Today, professional historians call truth ?Interpretation,?? historian Joan Waugh says?but what interpretations are true? What?kinds?of interpretations lead to the best kinds of truth? What truths are true?

What to do with facts and how to interpret those facts into truths are central issues for storytellers of all sorts, whether historians or novelists, documentarians or feature filmmakers. ?Historical sense and poetic sense should not, in the end, be contradictory,? Robert Penn Warren said, ?for if poetry is the little myth we make, history is the big myth we live, and in our living, constantly remake.?

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Source: http://scholarsandrogues.com/2012/12/28/telling-history-vs-making-art-fictions-and-histories/

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G-cluster delivers cloud gaming to the masses ? Coolest Gadgets

by Edwin - on December 28th, 2012

Don?t you miss the good old days when certain words had meanings that are so far removed from today? For instance, ?gay? meant happy and without a care in the world, and ?cloud? was a noun used to describe those fluffy white things in the sky, and if you looked closely enough, you would be able to find angels strumming their harps and lyres while humming a soothing tune. Well, fast forward to the 21st century, ?cloud? has taken on an entirely different meaning, where it is now widely accepted in the computing world as a platform where your data and even processing can be done remotely, as everything is connected via the Internet to the cloud. It is an ideal way to work with your files stored on the cloud, and you need not worry about folks stealing some crucial files when you are on the move. Since we are on the topic of cloud services, how about moving from something serious like work to a more casual activity like gaming?

G-cluster is currently inviting IPTV and wireless operators and game publishers to jump aboard the cloud bandwagon, especially at CES 2013 that is happening in Las Vegas early next year. Basically, G-cluster is best described to be a fully-featured white label service that offers the largest deployments at scale, sporting the most deployed catalog of casual and AAA games, and they fully intend to debut their Game Machine platform so that operators are able to deliver premium and casual games to the TV, all done without having to own a gaming console in your living room in the first place.without the need for a gaming console.

You will still need the G-cluster Game Machine as an intermediary, however, where it will plug into the HDMI port on HDMI-equipped televisions while connecting to the home Wi-Fi network in order for one to access the service. You can then use a game pad with a wireless receiver, or smartphones or tablets, in order to dictate the gameplay on the TV, where you can choose to fly solo or with friends, where they will rely on other devices such as PCs, smartphones, or tablets.

Press Release

Source: http://www.coolest-gadgets.com/20121228/gcluster-delivers-cloud-gaming-masses/

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Friday, December 28, 2012

Birdsong study pecks theory that music is uniquely human

Dec. 27, 2012 ? A bird listening to birdsong may experience some of the same emotions as a human listening to music, suggests a new study on white-throated sparrows, published in Frontiers of Evolutionary Neuroscience.

"We found that the same neural reward system is activated in female birds in the breeding state that are listening to male birdsong, and in people listening to music that they like," says Sarah Earp, who led the research as an undergraduate at Emory University.

For male birds listening to another male's song, it was a different story: They had an amygdala response that looks similar to that of people when they hear discordant, unpleasant music.

The study, co-authored by Emory neuroscientist Donna Maney, is the first to compare neural responses of listeners in the long-standing debate over whether birdsong is music.

"Scientists since the time of Darwin have wondered whether birdsong and music may serve similar purposes, or have the same evolutionary precursors," Earp notes. "But most attempts to compare the two have focused on the qualities of the sound themselves, such as melody and rhythm."

Earp's curiosity was sparked while an honors student at Emory, majoring in both neuroscience and music. She took "The Musical Brain" course developed by Paul Lennard, director of Emory's Neuroscience and Behavioral Biology program, which brought in guest lecturers from the fields of neuroscience and music.

"During one class, the guest speaker was a composer and he said that he thought that birdsong is like music, but Dr. Lennard thought it was not," Earp recalls. "It turned into this huge debate, and each of them seemed to define music differently. I thought it was interesting that you could take one question and have two conflicting answers that are both right, in a way, depending on your perspective and how you approach the question."

As a senior last year, Earp received a grant from the Scholars Program for Interdisciplinary Neuroscience Research (SPINR), and a position in the lab of Maney, who uses songbirds as a model to study the neural basis of complex learned behavior.

When Earp proposed using the lab's data to investigate the birdsong-music debate, Maney thought it was a great idea. "Birdsong is a signal," Maney says. "And the definition of a signal is that it elicits a response in the receiver. Previous studies hadn't approached the question from that angle, and it's an important one."

Earp reviewed studies that mapped human neural responses to music through brain imaging.

She also analyzed data from the Maney lab on white-throated sparrows. The lab maps brain responses in the birds by measuring Egr-1, part of a major biochemical pathway activated in cells that are responding to a stimulus.

The study used Egr-1 as a marker to map and quantify neural responses in the mesolimbic reward system in male and female white-throated sparrows listening to a male bird's song. Some of the listening birds had been treated with hormones, to push them into the breeding state, while the control group had low levels of estradiol and testosterone.

During the non-breeding season, both sexes of sparrows use song to establish and maintain dominance in relationships. During the breeding season, however, a male singing to a female is almost certainly courting her, while a male singing to another male is challenging an interloper.

For the females in the breeding state every region of the mesolimbic reward pathway that has been reported to respond to music in humans, and that has a clear avian counterpart, responded to the male birdsong. Females in the non-breeding state, however, did not show a heightened response.

And the testosterone-treated males listening to another male sing showed an amygdala response, which may correlate to the amygdala response typical of humans listening to the kind of music used in the scary scenes of horror movies.

"The neural response to birdsong appears to depend on social context, which can be the case with humans as well," Earp says. "Both birdsong and music elicit responses not only in brain regions associated directly with reward, but also in interconnected regions that are thought to regulate emotion. That suggests that they both may activate evolutionarily ancient mechanisms that are necessary for reproduction and survival."

A major limitation of the study, Earp adds, is that many of the regions that respond to music in humans are cortical, and they do not have clear counterparts in birds. "Perhaps techniques will someday be developed to image neural responses in baleen whales, whose songs are both musical and learned, and whose brain anatomy is more easily compared with humans," she says.

Earp, who played the viola in the Emory orchestra and graduated last May, is now a medical student at the Cleveland Clinic.

So what music makes her brain light up? "Stravinsky's 'Firebird' suite," Earp says.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Emory University. The original article was written by Carol Clark.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Sarah E. Earp, Donna L. Maney. Birdsong: Is It Music to Their Ears? Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience, 2012; 4 DOI: 10.3389/fnevo.2012.00014

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/strange_science/~3/NQfpAL3gUUg/121227080110.htm

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Sudan says to get loan from Chinese state oil firm

KHARTOUM (Reuters) - Sudan will get a large loan from Chinese state oil firm China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC), the main oil operator in the Arab African country, state news agency SUNA reported.

Finance Minister Ali Mahmoud gave no details but said the loan would help stabilise the economy, which has been hit hard by the loss of most oil reserves to South Sudan, and the foreign exchange rate of the Sudanese pound, SUNA said on its website.

The loan would "lead to a radical change in the structure of the Sudanese economy," he said.

The finance minister also said CNPC, which was not immediately available for comment, had agreed to postpone repaying its previous loans for five years.

China is Sudan's most important trading partner apart from Gulf Arab countries and the biggest investor in the local oil industry.

Sudan has been struggling with a severe economic crisis since losing three quarters of oil production when South Sudan seceded in July 2011. Oil revenues were the biggest source for state revenues and foreign currency needed to fund food imports.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sudan-says-loan-chinese-state-oil-firm-101100419--finance.html

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Thursday, December 27, 2012

Amazon deforestation brings loss of microbial communities

Dec. 24, 2012 ? An international team of microbiologists led by Klaus N?sslein of the University of Massachusetts Amherst has found that a troubling net loss in diversity among the microbial organisms responsible for a functioning ecosystem is accompanying deforestation in the Amazon rainforest.

N?sslein, an expert in tropical rain forest microbial soil communities, says, "We found that after rainforest conversion to agricultural pastures, bacterial communities were significantly different from those of forest soils. Not only did the pasture soils show increased species numbers, these species were also less related to one another than in rainforest soil. This is important because the combination of lost forest species and the homogenization of pasture communities together signal that this ecosystem is now a lot less capable of dealing with additional outside stress."

He and colleagues studied a large farm site over the past four years at the frontier where farmers drive agriculture into pristine rainforest in Rondonia, Brazil, to convert rainforest to agricultural use. Findings in part validated previous research showing that bacteria in the soil became more diverse after conversion to pasture. However, in its fourth year, their study overcame limitations of earlier investigations to show that changes in microbial diversity occurred over larger geographic scales. Results appear in the current issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

In addition to N?sslein at UMass Amherst, the research group includes first author Jorge Rodrigues at the University of Texas at Arlington with Brendan Bohannan at the University of Oregon, James Tiedje at Michigan State University, and others at the University of Sao Paulo. Lead investigators N?sslein and Rodrigues emphasize that the study is an equal collaboration among the four research groups.

Findings do not support earlier study conclusions, instead they show that the loss of restricted ranges for different bacteria communities results in a biotic homogenization and net loss of diversity overall. Scientists worry that the loss of genetic variation in bacteria across a converted forest could reduce ecosystem resilience. The researchers hope their work will provide valuable data to those making decisions about the future of the Amazon rainforest.

Biologist and first author Jorge Rodrigues of the University of Texas at Arlington adds, "We have known for a long time that conversion of rainforest land in the Amazon for agriculture results in a loss of biodiversity in plants and animals. Now we know that microbial communities which are so important to the ecosystem also suffer significant losses."

As N?sslein and colleagues point out, the Amazon represents half of the world's rainforest and is home to one-third of Earth's species, yet the Amazon has one of the highest rates of deforestation. Agriculture is one of the largest and most dynamic parts of Brazil's economy, so dealing with standing rainforests in the tropics will be tricky, but nevertheless, it is vital that the issue is tackled."

Rodrigues says he and colleagues are currently compiling findings about the potential for recovery of the microbial diversity after pastureland is abandoned and returned to "secondary forest." At the same time, N?sslein and colleagues are leading an effort to investigate how the redundancy of functions provided by soil microbes provides resilience to the effects of agricultural land use change to support a stressed ecosystem to recover stability.

"Whether bacterial diversity will completely recover from ecosystem conversion will depend in part on whether the taxa lost due to conversion are truly locally extinct or whether they are present in the pasture sites but of such low abundance that they are undetectable in our study," the authors write.

This work was supported by grants from the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture and the Research Support Foundation of the State of S?o Paulo.

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/bNOdEgsL0s4/121226080908.htm

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Simple Abundance Exercises Can Change Your Mindset

Article title: Simple Abundance Exercises Can Change Your Mindset
Article Category: Self-Improvement

5 free summer clipart illustration of a happy smiling sun Simple Abundance Exercises Can Change Your Mindset

When you feel more prosperous, you will lead life of improved health, happiness and prosperity. However, when most of us think about our finances, most of the time we don?t have thoughts of prosperity.
Continue reading this article?

Source: http://www.medicalguide.pro/3210/simple-abundance-exercises-can-change-your-mindset-4.html

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Source: http://kaokely.posterous.com/simple-abundance-exercises-can-change-your-mi

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Source: http://skysportsanswers.falyorumlari.com/773/simple-abundance-exercises-can-change-your-mindset-kaokelys/

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Source: http://logaker.posterous.com/simple-abundance-exercises-can-change-your-mi

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Source: http://capitalization-frugality.blogspot.com/2012/12/simple-abundance-exercises-can-change.html

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Florida is a vacation paradise for dogs

FORT DE SOTO PARK, Fla. (AP) ? Picture this: You're sitting on a white sand beach, warm sun on your skin. Coconut-scented sunscreen wafts through the air. A splashing noise comes from the blue Gulf of Mexico. It's your dog, happily retrieving his favorite ball from the water.

This could be your vacation, with a bit of planning.

With miles of sandy beaches, endless winter sunshine and a laid-back vibe, there's no reason to leave your four-legged friend behind when you vacation in Florida. From lodging that offers special pet beds, to beaches with off-leash play, to theme parks with nearby kennels, many places around the state accommodate visitors with pets. Many Florida state parks also allow leashed dogs.

Lodging with your dog can be as rustic as a campground or as ritzy as, well, the Ritz Carlton. In places like Key West or Sanibel Island ? where all beaches are open to leashed dogs ? unique and funky pet-friendly accommodations are easy to find in various price ranges.

Most counties have their own tourism boards and many have specific pages on their websites about pet-friendly activities, restaurants and hotels. Visit Florida has lots of information at http://www.visitflorida.com/Pet_Friendly_Florida.

Jeannette Scott, a fashion blogger from Orlando, took her shih tzu-Yorkie mix named Bella on a three-day trip in June. Together, they drove three hours to Fort Myers, boarded a ferry to Key West, stayed at a Sheraton that offered a doggie bed for Bella, and posed for photos in front of a frozen yogurt stand that carried Yoghund, a froyo for doggies.

"She thought it was really fun to get away and go on adventure instead of staying at home," said Scott.

If your dog might enjoy the same, here are some dog-friendly destinations around Florida, along with lodging advice and general tips for traveling here with pets.

DESTINATIONS

?Dog Beach and Paw Playground at Fort De Soto State Park. In 2010, Southern Living magazine named this spot in Pinellas County on Florida's West Coast one of the top five dog beaches in the South. You only need to set one paw onto the sugary sand to know why: It's a gorgeous and peaceful place. The Gulf of Mexico is usually warm and calm, and dogs of all sizes love to play in the soft surf. Dogs can run on the beach and swim off-leash, then enjoy a large, adjacent fenced-in grassy dog park area. There are water fountains, waste bags and a place to wash salt out of dog fur. Admission to the park area is $5.

?Dinosaur World in Plant City. Who loves dinosaurs? Dogs, that's who. Located halfway between Tampa and Disney, Dinosaur World is a park featuring 150 giant dinosaur statues and trails winding through the lush Florida landscape. Leashed dogs are welcome on the trails and it's a great opportunity to snap a photo of your pooch with a giant Stegosaurus (some intrepid bloggers have gotten shots of their dogs posing inside a dinosaur's mouth). Tickets are $14.95, dogs are free; open daily.

?Dog Wood Park, Jacksonville. This 25-acre, privately owned park is heaven for dogs. It's all off-leash and entirely fenced in, from the pond to the grassy knoll to the trails. A separate small area nearby has chairs where owners can sip coffee and chat. There are two ponds, Lake Bow Wow for the big dogs and Lake Fifi for little ones, plus doggie sand piles, shady areas and tires for dogs to climb on. Day visits are $11, including tax. Additional services, like use of the park's indoor dog wash area, are extra.

?The Fountain of Youth in St. Augustine. Spanish explorer Pedro Menendez de Aviles discovered this spring in 1565 and the Timucua Indians lived here for 4,000 years before that. You and your dog can sniff around and drink from the fountain. Tickets are $12.

?Downtown Naples. A great place to stroll with your pet while embracing tropical Florida, downtown Naples has lots of outdoor cafes, bars and restaurants where you can dine al fresco with your dog. Several stores ? Diva Doghouse, For Footed Friends, Pucci & Catana and Fergie's Closet Doggie Boutique ? specialize in upscale pet accessories, clothing and food.

?Lincoln Road, Miami. Located on South Beach, this pedestrian-friendly shopping area is the place to watch all of the beautiful people and their designer dogs. Outdoor restaurants and tropical drinks abound.

?Jonathan Dickinson State Park, Hobe Sound. This sprawling park on Florida's East Coast, north of tony Palm Beach, offers miles of trails that showcase how Florida looked before development. Dogs must be leashed. Admission is $6 per vehicle.

?Panama City Beach dog playground. This Florida Panhandle spring break favorite offers 400 feet of beachfront for leashed dogs and the new Panama City Beach Conservation Park with 12 trails (dogs must be leashed there).

?Miccosukee Canopy Road Greenway, Tallahassee. This park in the state's capitol is popular with local dog owners because of its beautiful trails and secluded grassy areas.

LODGING

?Disney's Fort Wilderness Resort, Lake Buena Vista. Located on 750 acres near the theme parks, this campground allows RVs with full hookups and tent camping. Some spaces allow pets, but those spaces are limited and should be reserved well in advance. Leashed dogs are allowed on some trails near the campground. There is also an off-leash dog park, Waggin' Tails Dog Park, within the campground.

?Best Friends Pet Resort, Lake Buena Vista. Best Friends provides day and overnight care for pets (not just dogs) in the Orlando area. Discounts are available for Disney World Resort guests, but anyone can use the service, which starts at $27 for doggie daycare.

?Loews hotels at Universal Orlando Resort. All three are pet-friendly.

?La Quinta. This ubiquitous and affordable chain, found throughout Florida, is probably the best-known pet-friendly chain, with free stays for dogs.

?Aloft Hotels. This Starwood boutique hotel chain offers hip decor and sophisticated style and it's also pet-friendly. Aloft offers two locations in Jacksonville (one not far from Dog Wood Park), one in Tallahassee and several opening in Miami and Orlando in the coming year. A recent weekday room rate in Jacksonville was $69, not including taxes. Aloft policies vary regarding weight restrictions for dogs, fees and deposits.

?Luxury hotels. Pampered people have pampered pooches. For small dogs who need luxury (under 25 pounds) try Ritz Carlton hotels in Sarasota, Fort Lauderdale, Orlando and Miami Beach. Non-refundable pet fees vary, but hover in the $250 range. The Mandarin Oriental in Miami ? a swanky hotel frequented by celebrities like Jennifer Anniston ? also accepts pets up to 25 pounds. The Mandarin sells dog T-shirts bedazzled with Swarovski crystals in its gift shop and the concierge can book doggie boot camp appointments and dog massages.

GENERAL TIPS

While it might seem like you are in a remote area as you hike through jungle-like trails or play on deserted beaches with your dog, you're actually never far from civilization in Florida. There's usually a veterinarian, big-box pet store and pet-friendly hotel within a short drive. A quick Google search or sites like http://www.bringfido.com or http://www.dogfriendly.com can help locate them.

Larger theme parks such as Busch Gardens in Tampa offer kennel services; make sure to bring your pet's vaccination record along.

Other essentials for a Florida vacation with your dog: Drinking water, heartworm medicine and even sunscreen. With temperatures in the 70s and 80s in many Florida locations during the winter, dogs (and people) can easily become dehydrated. Specially-formulated sunscreen for dogs isn't a bad idea, especially if your furry friend has a short, fair coat and pink skin.

Take shady breaks, put ice cubes in the water dish and let dogs sprawl on cool tiles. Never, ever, leave your dog in a car in Florida, even for a few minutes. Temperatures inside cars can heat up to 120 degrees and kill animals quickly.

Heartworm, a disease transmitted by mosquitoes, is endemic to Florida. Plan to visit a vet before your trip to get a heartworm test and pills to prevent infection.

Many beaches in Florida allow leashed dogs on the sand, but check first. In some places, you can receive a heavy fine. Dogs are welcome in many places at outdoor cafes and along pedestrian malls.

___

Follow Tamara Lush on Twitter at http://twitter.com/tamaralush

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/florida-vacation-paradise-dogs-161241812.html

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Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Triton plans special education workshops ? Local News ...

Triton?s office of special education, along with the Massachusetts Association of Special Education Parent Advisory Councils, will present a Basic Rights Workshop at Triton Regional High School on Thursday, Jan. 10, from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and again on Wednesday, Jan. 16, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.

The presentation will be given jointly by David Magee, Triton?s administrator of special education, and Leslie M. Leslie of MassPAC. Magee also will invite parents of students receiving special education services to participate in establishing a vision for Triton?s Special Education Parent Advisory Council.

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Have a favorite holiday recipe? Consider submitting it to be part of the Rowley Historical Society?s updated cookbook. Recipes, along with your name and a short comment about the dish, if desired, should be sent to Diane McMahon, 14 Forest St., Rowley 01969.

---

The Rowley Public Library Book Club will meet tomorrow at 6:30 p.m. to discuss the memoir, ?Blood, Bone & Butter.? Author Gabrielle Hamilton, chef-owner of Prune restaurant, writes of the unexpected places life can take you when you are least expecting it and of the comfort that food can bring along the way. All are welcome to join in the club discussion.

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In observance of the holiday, the Rowley Public Library will be closed on Monday, Dec. 31, and Tuesday, Jan. 1.

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Rowley Family Connection is working with other sponsors on a fun-filled event for young children enamored of teddy bears. The Teddy Bear Clinic will be held on Saturday, Jan. 12, from 10 a.m. to noon in the Salisbury Elementary School cafeteria.

Children are invited to bring their favorite bear for a check-up, a meet and greet with Dr. Teddy that promises plenty of photo opportunities, a session of kid aerobics and enjoyment of healthy snacks.

The interactive clinic sponsored by Triton District Family Connection Agencies and Anna Jaques Hospital in Newburyport is designed to help children feel comfortable when visiting a doctor.

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It?s not too early to think spring. Registrations are being accepted for Triton Youth Lacrosse, which is open to both boys and girls in grades 1 through 8 in the surrounding communities. Also, volunteers are needed for such positions as the group?s president, treasurer and secretary, in order to continue the successful operation of the program. For more information, visit www.tri-lax.com or contact Tom Galligan at 617-548-1407 or trilax@comcast.net.

---

Michelle Pelletier Marshall reports on the town of Rowley for The Daily News. She can be reached at marshallsinmass@comcast.net.

Source: http://www.newburyportnews.com/local/x1746070211/Triton-plans-special-education-workshops

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Xmas Camera: Deck Your Photos With Boughs of Holly

Merry Christmas! Today your day is all about friends and family and you're probably taking a lot of pics. We've got a little something for you to give those snaps a little extra holiday cheer. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/5SzM5k_i1Yg/xmas-camera-deck-your-photos-with-boughs-of-holly

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Reformist leader says Myanmar needs transformation

YANGON (Reuters) - Myanmar's president called on Wednesday for a shake-up in the running of his fast-changing country, which he said was still mired in corruption and inefficiency and lagging behind its international peers.

Thein Sein, the unlikely reformer to emerge from within a military junta 19 months ago, called for big improvements across Myanmar's outdated bureaucracy to strengthen democracy and the economy, as foreign firms weigh whether to invest in the resource-rich country.

"When it comes to measuring good governance, our country still falls far short of the international standards," the former general told a meeting of cabinet ministers, regional leaders and civil service chiefs aired on television and radio.

"There is still a lack of the characteristics of clean government and good governance ... reforms are needed from the grassroots to the union (national) levels."

World leaders like U.S. President Barack Obama have praised Thein Sein for spearheading political, democratic and social reforms since the military stopped ruling, but his government faces problems in ridding Myanmar of its reputation for being an army-dominated state and a risky place to do business.

Western diplomats and analysts believe the central government has the political will to drive reforms but question the limits of its influence, pointing to several standoffs with parliament, sectarian violence in Rakhine state, heavy-handed police and the president's inability to halt fighting between the army and ethnic Kachin rebels as signs of problems ahead.

Another challenge was implementing a raft of policy changes complicated by an outdated and inefficient bureaucracy, which Thein Sein said would need to be vastly improved, from top to bottom.

"For the prevalence of democratic practice and for the development of the nation, it is necessary to transform the administration system, under which the people can participate and cooperate," he said.

(Reporting by Aung Hla Tun; Writing by Martin Petty; Editing by Robert Birsel)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/reformist-leader-says-myanmar-needs-transformation-064656467.html

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Tuesday, December 25, 2012

Games.com's Best of 2012: Console Game of the Year

Best Console Games 2012Amid complaints of sequelitis, on-disc DLC, botched endings and online passes, 2012 may have been the best year in console gaming in a long time. It was a year in which we not only saw smaller studios prove themselves with enormous franchises, but game makers transform our expectations of just what games can achieve. With a little help from our friends, here are Games.com's best console games of 2012.

Halo 4Halo 4

With Bungie out of the picture for good, it was safe to be worried whether the next release in the Halo franchise would be up to snuff. That is, until Nov. 6, when Microsoft's 343 Industries more than met expectations of what a Halo game should be. The result was a booming battle for the galaxy with arguably the best story told in a Halo game to date. Better yet, countless expansions and improvements on the multiplayer made for one of the stickiest shooters around once again.

The Walking DeadThe Walking Dead

If you were to predict last year that an adventure game would be in the running for Console Game of the Year, you'd have been called crazy. Leave it to Telltale Games to shatter our assumptions of what video games can do. Many knock The Walking Dead for its mechanics. But few games, if any, have crafted such tension and drama through breakneck, gripping choices that shape some of the most emotional relationships in interactive storytelling.

DishonoredDishonored

Stealth game makers: Take notes while playing Arkane Studios' steampunk-style adventure. The amount of agency granted to players in Dishonored is unparalleled by almost any game of 2012. Foregoing the tired model of rewarding or punishing players dependant upon their stealth skills, Dishonored allows players to adapt to situations on the fly while reacting to their play styles in return. Ultimately, this fosters some of the most believable combat scenarios in gaming.

Mass Effect 3Mass Effect 3

The culmination of five years worth of story, choices and promises ultimately ended up a disappointment for fans and critics alike. But that was just the ending. The journey there packed more dramatic and moving moments into a single game than any in the series to date. But what Mass Effect 3 did best was realize one of the most sprawling, detailed and engrossing universes in not just video games, but sci-fi properties, ever.

JourneyJourney

There's beauty, and sometimes depth, in simplicity. Thatgamecompany's follow-up to Flower embodies that mantra throughout, presenting a painting in motion with much more beneath the surface. Journey tells its story without words, a story about camaraderie. Journey, through creating a fascinating, captivating yet empty world, spurs collaboration between strangers in ways that games haven't ever before. Journey is watershed moment for games, and therefore is Games.com's Best Console Game of 2012.

Games.com Best of 2012 Advisory Board


Readers' Choice



Have something unique to add to the debate? Sound off in the comments. Add Comment.

Source: http://blog.games.com/2012/12/24/best-console-game-2012/

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Aerobic Cardio Fitness: Proper Aerobic Training Will Require during ...

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

Source: http://chamsoji1.blogspot.com/2012/12/aerobic-cardio-fitness-proper-aerobic.html

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Google vs. Microsoft: Santa-trackers out of sync

9 hrs.

Not even Santa Claus can avoid getting drawn into the tech clash between Google and Microsoft: The two companies have set up separate online systems to track where the Jolly Old Elf has been on Christmas Eve?? but they show him simultaneously at widely separated locations, delivering presents at a dramatically different rate.

On the official "NORAD Tracks Santa" website, powered this year by Microsoft, Santa Claus was in Rome, well past the 3-billion-present mark in his holiday rounds. At the same time, Google's Santa Tracker showed him buzzing through Agadez in the African country of Niger, not quite up to the 1-billion-present mark.

They can't both be right. Can they? Here's the word from Search?Engine?Land's Danny Sullivan, who has been tracking the discrepancy in this year's?Santa-tracking software:

"NORAD explains that it uses everything from radar to jets to track Santa. Google doesn?t explain its technology, but I suspect it tries to triangulate Santa using his cell phone signal or use of wifi hotspots.

"As for why NORAD shows Father Christmas delivering three?times the number of gifts that Google is listing, perhaps NORAD?s radars can better pinpoint presents while Google might be doing estimating.?Meanwhile? both services sometimes show presents being delivered over oceans! And why is NORAD showing Santa arriving in some places at 9pm rather than midnight, as has been the case in the past?"

Maybe this is just the sort of thing that happens when you switch software: NORAD (also known as the North American Aerospace Defense Command) has been monitoring Santa's flight as a public service since 1955, and five years ago, it teamed up with Google to keep up with the crush of Web traffic. This year, however, the NORAD Santa operation parted ways with Google and partnered with Microsoft instead.

Google stayed in the Santa game by setting up its own tracking system for "Santa's Dashboard" and Google Maps?? a system that doesn't make use of NORAD's tracking data.

Today, Canadian Maj. Gen. Andre Viens, a spokesman for NORAD, declined to intervene in the Santa-tracking war.

"It's not affecting our tracking," Viens told MSNBC. "We're not in competition with anyone. Our role, and we've been doing that for more than?50 years, is to track Santa and make sure that he has a safe and secure journey throughout the world, and throughout North America in particular."

TODAY:?Follow Santa's Christmas Eve flight

PhotoBlog: Inside NORAD's command center

Maybe it shouldn't be surprising to find?that it's so difficult to get a firm fix on Santa's position, considering how many presents he has to deliver in so little time. Some experts have speculated that the only way Santa could ?deliver gifts (or lumps of coal) to billions of homes in the course of just a few hours would be if he somehow harnessed quantum teleportation. And once you accept that, it's not that big of a leap to detect Santa in two places at once.

Alan Boyle is the science editor for NBC News Digital, and has been tracking NORAD's Santa tracker since 1998.?Boyle's usual online?hangout is over at Cosmic Log.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/google-vs-microsoft-santa-tracking-systems-go-out-sync-1C7657754

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Monday, December 24, 2012

Riot police pets

Why don't they use riot police with the face masks as pet walkers like michonne did?

They haven't had any reason to yet. I feel that if any lurkers or anything like that are going to be used, it will be in the impending skirmish between the prison group and the Woodbery militia.

If we don't see anything like that, it is clearly the writers' choice, and it would appear that we are unlikely to see any such ingenuity in living vs living warfare.

It is a fantastic opportunity to see such wondrous and bizarre inventions, though. I really hope we do.

Can't help feeling that the Woodberry clan have the opportunity to use attack dogs, too.

Source: http://www.walkingdeadforums.com/forum/f36/riot-police-pets-5927.html

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Critical Review

An article review of Yunfei? Chong ,2011.? ? The Research on how Chinese vocational education break through the current bottleneck of its development , Concurrent discussion on how to establish the mechanism of school enterprise cooperation in Chinese vocational education?. ????Zhengzhou Railway Vocational and Technical College

This article focuses on ?how to develop Chinese Vocational Education by establish the mechanism of school-enterprise cooperation . The authors have stressed the cooperation between schools and enterprises that appear to have a problem in creating a program of bilateral cooperation which respectively provide help to achieve a common goal or a win-win due to? the failure of the government to encourage partnerships between schools and enterprises.; government-lead ?. The author aims to highlight the collaboration between industry and academia like ?Dual System?? vocational education models in Germany that provide job internship ,one of the reason for difficulty of school-enterprises cooperation; administrative subordination;. Yunfei mentions that perhaps almost vocational colleges perfom actively, but it not accompany with enterprise or industry that did not contact the colleges forwardly.

This article is significant given that the difficulties of school-enterprise cooperation is lack of talent training as well as evaluated by educational expert. ?However as a result of somewhat abstract implications, the article would perhaps only be of interest on ?co-sponsorship mechanism and policy guarantee especially on government-lead.? The authors have used ?vocational education models to describe the government- lead in developing countries like ;Amerika, England, Germany and Japan; and to compare the efficient model of personnel training.Although showing differences in ??implementation but strives to achieve the common goal of providing provisions to ensure the training is going well.The author mention it provides good reference to strengthen the government ?lead, strengthen the legislation of vocational education, strengthen the overall plan and supervise, and establish the cooperation mechanism.

The author has started writing specifying keywords should be known and so began a discussion on the topic. The author have a very good in processing due to problems in school-enterprise Cooperation is more specific that can identify the cause of how the occurrence constraints to progress chinese vocational education. The topic has an objective to be achive.The author has made a claims that government-lead is the only way to break through the current bottleneck of vocational education development but ?an evidence was provided is not reliable. The conclusion also are drawn just a simple word and not complement. The principal of the text can be better organized

As a conclusion it can be said that the author has managed to transfer information on how to solve the bottleneck problem as experienced by chinese vocational education which should strengthen the school-enterprise cooperation.? To the success of this cooperation must be the government in terms of provision of assistance and reform The author seems to only look to the government-lead, although the schools are supposed to provide entrepreneurship education as recommended by Robert Kowasaki in her book, rich dad, poor dad where he suggested that education for entrepreneurship have since translated children from school. Similarly, vocational education should start at school with teachers who are trained as discussed by Qiu Feiyue and Lifang Le (2010). Quality education will produce a quality student . I am? agree with Malaysia system vocational school that was up grade to be a college and develop the teachers skill.

Source: http://citve1213.blogspot.com/2012/12/criticle-review-1-ahmad-sashwani-azmi.html

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Source: http://oromo-news.blogspot.com/2012/12/selamat-datang-ke-mpk2053-current.html

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