4/06/2012

Sister, 4, Saves 2 Year-Old Sister From Drowning

An everyday type of event that plays out all across the country, in backyards everywhere, very nearly ends in tragedy except for the quick thinking of a heroic 4 year old. During an afternoon of playing fairytale games, sister Neveah, 4, and Kazmirah, 2, were on an adventure to find would-be princes at a nearby frog pond. The girls had been driving on their “Barbie” car and decided to head for the pond to find frogs to turn into princes. Unfortunately, the adventure took a sour turn.

While the girls were looking around, Neveah turned her back on her younger sibling for a few moments. When she looked back, her sister was gone. The siblings were searching for soon-to-be princes when the 2-year-old disappeared under the water. Neveah later told the story of what happened, saying her sister had fallen into the middle of the pond where they believed all the frogs lived.
Relying on instinct, Neveah knew she couldn’t leave her sister or she would die. Instead, she rescued her by finding a stick and using it to pull the sputtering 2 year-old.

The girls’ mother, Nikole Reynolds, described hearing screaming on the security monitor. She ran outside to find her 2 year-old daughter standing next to the pond, soaked from head to foot. In that moment, Reynolds realized she had very nearly lost one of her children. She was overwhelmed with gratitude, tears filling her eyes, by what her older daughter had done to save her little sister. Now, Neveah is the family hero.

North Sea Gas Leak: Experts Assess Climate Impact of Ongoing Accident


The infrared camera image taken by Greenpeace shows the
scale of the gas cloud from energy giant Total's Elgin platform.
The French energy company Total estimates that its North Sea Elgin field gas well is leaking about 200,000 cubic meters of natural gas per day, enough, according to the U.S. Energy Information Agency, to supply more than 100 average homes with natural gas for an entire year. Total estimates that it may take six months to stop the leak.

If the gas continues escaping at that rate, and all of it reaches the atmosphere, it would approximate the annual global warming impact of 35,000 Americans, says Carnegie Institution for Science Department of Global Ecology director, Christopher Field.

At a news conference on Monday, Total’s chief financial officer, Patrick de la Chevardiere, said that because the leak involves natural gas, which disperses into the atmosphere very quickly, and not crude oil, “the current impact on and risks for the environment are relatively low.” But climate scientists and biologists say the leak’s impact shouldn’t be dismissed just because it isn’t creating a beach- and wildlife-fouling oil slick.

The leak, detected March 25th, is at the wellhead platform of Total’s G4 well, located approximately 150 miles east of Aberdeen, Scotland. The gas is mostly methane, which is considered the second largest contributor to human-caused global warming after carbon dioxide.

The gas is believed to be coming from a rock formation almost 2.5 miles below the seabed and almost 2/3rds of a mile above the well’s main gas reservoir. The gas, however, is leaking at the platform level, rather than deep underwater. The well was plugged in February 2011 and wasn’t in production when irregular pressure was observed at the wellhead last month. Total was pumping in high-density mud to strengthen the seal when a sudden pressure increase apparently triggered the leak.

Compared to CO2, which remains in the atmosphere for hundreds of years, methane is relatively short-lived, with an atmospheric lifetime of approximately 12 years. But methane’s global warming potential is much greater than CO2’s. Scientists often make this comparison using a 100-year time scale, on which methane’s global warming potential is 25 to 33 times that of CO2. Were the Elgin well to continue leaking at its current rate for six months, Field said it would release nearly 26,000 tons of methane and have the global warming potential of 175,000 tons of carbon—equal to the average 2010 carbon footprint of 35,000 Americans.

Cornell University Professor of Ecology and Environmental Biology Robert Howarth, who has been analyzing methane emissions for the federal government’s National Climate Assessment, says the latest scientific data shows an urgent need to get methane emissions under control. If action isn’t taken in the next 15 to 35 years, said Howarth, we risk reaching “potentially dangerous tipping points in the climate systems.” Given this urgency, he said, it makes sense to compare methane and carbon dioxide on a 20-year time frame rather than the 100-year scale. Calculations using that shorter time-scale show that methane is 105 times greater than CO2 in its global warming potential, he said.

Howarth calculates that if the Elgin well leaks at its current rate for six months it would release some “25 billion grams of methane, equivalent to 2.6 trillion grams of CO2 in terms of global warming.”(Huffingtonpost.com)

US adds 120,000 jobs in March, lower than predicted


The US economy added 120,000 jobs during March, lower than estimates suggested, while the unemployment rate fell slightly to 8.2%.

Analysts had predicted a fourth straight month with job growth of more than 200,000.

Employment has been rising for the past six months, but the jobless rate has been stuck above 8% since early 2009.

The Department of Labor's data shows the smallest growth in employment since October 2011.

'Weak and troubling'
Manufacturing, the food and beverage industry and healthcare showed gains in March, but retail was down.

Analysts say the slow-down in March hiring comes as the US emerges from an unseasonably mild winter that spurred job numbers.

Many experts had expected that the unemployment rate would hold at 8.3%.

But joblessness dropped by one-tenth of a percent as the number of people actively looking for work went down.

The participation rate, which measures the proportion of the working-age population making up the labour force, ticked down slightly to 63.8% in March from 63.9% the month before.

In response to the figures, the White House said that there was "more work to be done". But it said the report provided "further evidence that the economy is continuing to recover".

Republican presidential front-runner Mitt Romney called the report "weak and very troubling", adding that it was increasingly clear that "the Obama economy is not working".

The US saw two consecutive months of robust jobs growth in January and February, with increases of well over 200,000 jobs in both months.

The BBC's Caroline Hepker says that while US companies have hired 850,000 new workers since December - the best run in two years - the sustainability of the recovery still remains a concern.

But Ben Bernanke, chairman of the Federal Reserve, has recently warned that the pace of growth seen in recent months would need sustained consumer spending in order to continue.

Mr Bernanke has not ruled out the possibility of using monetary policy to support the economy if unemployment remains high.

The employment figures come as several stock markets around the world are closed for Good Friday.

But US stock futures declined after publication of the report. (BBC)

Rare golden snapper sells for $US38,000


A CHINESE businessman has paid $US38,000 for a rare golden snapper in the Bangladeshi port city of Chittagong.

The unidentified Chinese businessman from Hong Kong bought the 37kg fish "for its tasty bladder and succulent flesh", Jahangir Saudagar, who sold the fish, said.

Saudagar, who works at the Fishery Ghat market near Chittagong port, had bought the snapper from fishermen returning from the Bay of Bengal late on Wednesday.

He purchased the fish at an auction, beating out at least 500 other traders.

"I continued to bid until everyone else gave up because I knew I could sell this fish at (a high) price. In the end, I sold it for 3.05 million taka ($US38,000)," Saudagar said.

Zoology professor Noman Siddiqui of the Marine Fisheries Academy in Chittagong said the golden colour of the snapper - usually red or silver - was the reason it commanded a high price.

Only "three or four golden snappers are caught in the Bay of Bengal" every year, Siddiqui said.

In some Asian cultures, snapper meat is considered a delicacy. (AFP)

Footballers are highly intelligent

Swedish researchers have concluded that professional footballers are considerably more intelligent than they are given credit for.

Researchers at the Karolinska Institute In Stockholm analysed the cognitive performance of footballers in Sweden's top flight as well as a lower league and concluded that the players who scored most highly in the test tended to score the most goals.

In addition, top division footballers outperformed lower division ones and footballers as a whole were in the top two percentile for the population by this measure.The measure the scientists used was broader than IQ, taking into account the players' creativity, cognitive flexibility, working memory and processing speed.

One of the scientists involved in the study, Torbjõrn Vestberg, was not surprised by the findings.
"To be a footballer you must have physical ability and speed," he said. "But that doesn't help if you don't have a brain that knows what to do."

So where does the perception that footballers are unintelligent come from? Vestberg thinks he knows the answer."They are not stupid. They are very clever. But they start to play soccer when young. They don't have time for education. That's why they sometimes appear stupid."

"They have to know where their team-mate is, where the opposing player is and what he did the last time they met, and they have to do all that quickly."

Natural Disasters - Unnatural Causes

(LiveScience) Air pollution does more than make the skies hazy, with a new study suggesting the industrial ick is linked to drought, flooding and even hurricanes.

The research, detailed this week in the journal Nature, suggests human activity can, and already has, driven large-scale regional climate changes.

The "dirty pollution," it seems, can cause changes in the temperature of the Atlantic Ocean, which in turn drives the stormy activity, say the researchers from the Met Office, the U.K.'s National Weather Service. To a lesser extent, volcanic activity also drives this temperature variation and subsequent weather phenomena.

The researchers focused on the so-called Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation, which are shifts in sea-surface temperatures that run in cycles, with warm and cold phases lasting 20 to 40 years; since the mid-1990s we've been in a warm phase, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.


A warm period in this cycle increases hurricane activity in the North Atlantic — warm water acts as fuel for the high-energy storms — and rainfall in parts of Africa, while reducing rainfall in South America. A cold phase has the opposite effects.

"Until now, no one has been able to demonstrate a physical link to what is causing these observed Atlantic Ocean fluctuations, so it was assumed they must be caused by natural variability," lead study author Ben Booth, a climate processes scientist at the MET Office, said in a statement. "Our research implies that far from being natural, these changes could have been largely driven by dirty pollution and volcanoes." [10 Climate Myths Busted]

Using a computer climate model, Booth and his colleagues looked at sea-surface temperatures in the North Atlantic between 1860 and 2005. The model, which simulates physical processes in Earth's atmosphere, reproduced these warm-cold variations in the North Atlantic. The simulations actually showed a clear link between the temperature changes in the Atlantic Ocean and the peaks and troughs in industrial pollution from surrounding countries.

Results showed that industrial aerosols and volcanic activity (to a lesser extent) could explain about 75 percent of these sea-surface temperature variations.

Here's how pollution may be linked with climate, the researchers suspect: Most clouds owe their existence to aerosols that act as tiny seeds (called cloud condensation nuclei) around which water vapor droplets can cling and condense. This mostly happens around natural aerosols, such as sea salts. However, particles in polluted air can also seed clouds. Polluted air holds much higher concentrations of water-soluble particles, and, as such, clouds formed from the polluted air tend to have more, and smaller, droplets compared with "natural" clouds, according to the NASA Earth Observatory.

The small droplets make these clouds look brighter since sunlight has many more surfaces to reflect off. With increased light scattering, these brighter clouds actually keep sunlight from reaching Earth's surface and shade the planet. Result: cooling of the ocean beneath.

If the research bears out, it could redefine some "natural" disasters.

"If so, this means a number of natural disasters linked to these ocean fluctuations, such as persistent African drought during the 1970s and 80s, may not be so natural after all," Booth said.

The researchers do caution, however, that the results are based on one computer model and that further research is needed to firm up the link between industrial pollution and climate.

The long, lonely voyage of the Japanese ghost ship is over.


A U.S. Coast Guard cutter unleashed cannon fire on the abandoned 164-foot (50-metre) Ryou-Un Maru, ending a journey that began when last year's tsunami dislodged it and set it adrift across the Pacific Ocean.

It sank into waters more than 305 metres deep in the Gulf of Alaska, more than 240 kilometres from land.

The crew pummeled the ghost ship with high explosive ammunition and, soon after, the Ryou-Un Maru burst into flames, began to take on water and list, officials said.

A huge column of smoke could be seen over the gulf.

The Coast Guard warned mariners to stay away, and aviation authorities did the same for pilots. A Coast Guard C-130 plane crew monitored the operation.

In about four hours, the ship vanished into the water, said Chief Petty Officer Kip Wadlow in Juneau.

Officials decided to sink the ship, rather than risk the chance of it running aground or endangering other vessels in the busy shipping lanes between North America and Asia.

The ship had no lights or communications system and its tank was able to carry more than 2,000 gallons of diesel fuel. Officials, however, didn't know how much fuel, if any, was aboard.

"It's less risky than it would be running into shore or running into (maritime) traffic," Webb said.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the Environmental Protection Agency studied the problem and decided it is safer to sink the ship and let the fuel evaporate in the open water.

The ship was at Hokkaido, Japan, and destined for scrapping when a magnitude-9 earthquake that struck the country in March 2011 triggered a tsunami.

The waves dislodged the vessel and set it adrift. In total, about 5 million tons of debris were swept out to sea. (AP)

'Flashback' Trojan infects .5 million macs

The ‘Flashback’ Trojan reportedly controls more than 550,000 Macs, an antivirus firm has reported.

Apple has already issued a fix for the problem, but Russian web security firm Dr Web claimed that 600,000 Macs were now infected, with 274 even identifying themselves as coming from Cupertino, California, where Apple is based.
The infection is unusual because Apple’s computers are usually much less likely to get attacked than their PC counterparts. A study by Dr Web claimed that “This once again refutes claims by some experts that there are no cyber-threats to Mac OS X”. Trojans can allow third parties to take over an individual's computer.
The latest variant of Flashback uses a known and previously unpatched vulnerability cause by an update to Java. Apple’s fix, issued earlier this week, should remove it and is installed automatically.
The Trojan poses as an installer for Adobe’s Flash player, which is required by many websites. If a user’s Apple Safari browser is set to automatically open “safe” files, such as those ending in pkg, unknowing users could find their existing security software deactivated and their machine used to report back to a central server that it has been infected.
Although the threat is currently classified as "low," Mac users have been warned not to open unfamiliar files or attachments and to turn off Safari's setting for opening safe files automatically.

Gayle resolves issue with WICB but uncertainty remains


Bridgetown, (IANS): The way has been paved for opener Chris Gayle's selection to the West Indies team but uncertainty over his actual return and grave concerns about his role in a multi-million dollar lawsuit against the West Indies Cricket Board, continue to hover ominously over the deal reached.

Chairman of CARICOM's prime ministerial sub-committee on cricket, Antigua and Barbuda's Prime Minister Baldwin Spencer announced on Wednesday evening that the year-long impasse between the embattled Jamaican and the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) had been resolved.

His announcement follows weeks of negotiations which started in St. Vincent last month between the concerned parties and which were facilitated by St. Vincent Prime Minister Ralph Gonsalves.

Gayle, however, in a statement dated March 23, said while he had signed the agreement, he remained ineligible for West Indies duty for the duration of the Indian Premier League which winds up May 27.

The former Windies captain currently has a legal case against the WICB which the Board said it wanted discontinued.

Terry's children love Messi


Chelsea captain John Terry admits that his five-year-old twins, Georgie and Summer 'love Lionel Messi'
They are proud owners of Messi shirts and the Barcelona forward and now they have to decide who to support when Chelsea take on holders Barca in the semi-finals later this month.
"My kids love him," he said. "They both have Barcelona shirts with his name on the back and they like the fact I swapped shirts with him after one of our previous games."

While many of Chelsea's players still hold bitter memories of their last meeting with Pep Guardiola's side in the 2009 Champions League semi-final, Terry isn't motivated by revenge for that controversial defeat.
Terry, whose team had several strong penalty appeals turned down in the second-leg three years ago, prefers to look at the tie as a chance to test himself against world-class talents like Messi.
"It's a pleasure because when you finish and you look back - and the guy's still going to be going strong - you've tested yourself against the best," Terry said.
"And, quite clearly for me, he's the best ever. He's a great individual, a great person as well and a credit to the sport. For me, he's got everything. He is magical."

Steve Jobs really was mad about Android, says biographer


The late Steve Jobs really was irate with Google for stealing the iPhone's thunder, according to his biographer.

Speaking last night at the Royal Institution in Great Britain, "Steve Jobs" author Walter Isaacson laid out the scenario under which Jobs' anger toward Android unfurled.

As described by MacWorld, Jobs was upset back in the old days when Bill Gates adopted Apple's graphical user interface for Windows and then licensed the OS to Dell, IBM, and a slew of other PC makers, giving Microsoft dominance in the PC market.

The late Apple chief then watched as history repeated itself, again getting upset when the iPod and other Apple devices were "almost copied verbatim by Android," Isaacson explained. "And then they licence it around promiscuously. And then Android starts surpassing Apple in market share, and this totally infuriated him," the author added. "It wasn't a matter of money. [Jobs] said: 'You can't pay me off, I'm here to destroy you.'

Isaacson's take contradicts comments made by Google CEO Larry Page this week. Speaking with Bloomberg BusinessWeek, Page claimed that the anger Jobs expressed over Android was all for public show and that he and the late Apple chief actually maintained a cordial relationship.

But Jobs certainly didn't hold back on his feelings when he spoke with Isaacson for the book.

"I will spend my last dying breath if I need to, and I will spend every penny of Apple's $40 billion in the bank, to right this wrong," Jobs told his biographer. "I'm going to destroy Android, because it's a stolen product. I'm willing to go thermonuclear war on this."

Jobs' vendetta against Android is alive and well today in the form of the bevy of patent suits being traded between Apple and various Android device makers.

Apple has been embroiled in legal battles with Motorola, Samsung, and HTC, but the ultimate target has remained Google. However, Jobs' intense anger apparently isn't shared by current CEO Tim Cook. Chiming in on the lawsuits, Isaacson expressed his belief that Cook will settle them.

A recent Bloomberg story came to the same conclusion, quoting a source who said that "Apple CEO Tim Cook does not seem to share his predecessor's passion about laying all foes to waste. Cook appears to view litigation as a necessary evil, not a vehicle of cosmic revenge." In particular, Apple and Samsung seem to be trying to make peace, with top executives from the two companies reportedly discussing how to settle their respective lawsuits.

Nonprofit “Digital Public Library Of America” To Launch In April 2013

The Google Books project always impressed me with its sheer scope. Offering modern e-books is all well and good, but that’s more of a business problem. It’s the scanning and free availability of thousands upon thousands of old books that struck me as a worthwhile endeavor.

But publishers and booksellers have been wary of the service, knowing that Google is a fan of free, and their scan-first, ask-permission-later strategy caused some consternation as well. And while access to all that knowledge is appreciated, it is lost on no one that the data is in the hands of a for-profit company.

Enter the Digital Public Library of America, which aims to create a similar catalog of works, but both more comprehensive and unimpeded by commercial motives. It’s been in the works for a while, but it seems it may finally launch as early as a year from now.

The news comes from Robert Darnton, Harvard University librarian and member of the DPLA’s steering committee, who at a recent event made a serious promise that the project would launch in April of 2013.

There’s a lot of work to be done if that’s true: the project aims to unify such disparate sources as the Library of Congress, the Internet Archive, various academic collections, and presumably any other collection that would be meaningful to include. And they have yet to even decide such issues as how near to the present their catalog will come. There is an ongoing dispute regarding so-called “orphan works” and other questions of copyright, and the problem is far from trivial.

Darnton suggests a rolling off-limits period, perhaps between five and ten years before the present, from which no books would be added to the collection. But outside that limit (and yearly, as a new publication year is added to the archive), works would be added on an opt-out basis — the same basis that caused so much anger when Google did it, scanning thousands of works whose copyright information they had not ascertained.

In fact, during the Q&A period following Darnton’s talk, the man who led the Authors Guild suit against Google, Nick Taylor, asked whether any authors had been consulted in the planning of this potentially precedent-setting policy. Darnton replied that authors as a “sector” had not been consulted, but that many of the people on the steering committee were authors themselves and sympathized with the needs of that particular set.

We’re still in the early stages of this archival process; even the Internet Archive and Google’s massive book collection are, in some ways, rather crude first steps. The DPLA is ambitious and may face serious obstacles, but it’s to be expected when they’re making it up as they go along.

Student Loan Debit Card Encourages Indebted Graduates To Shop

College graduates can now pay off their student loans by paying their bar tabs. That's the marketing pitch for a debit card aimed at those saddled with loan debt.

But borrowers should tread lightly: They'll have to spend a lot on clothing and nightlife before seeing any meaningful rewards, experts say. They also may incur high fees.

Launched Wednesday, the so-called SmarterBank Visa debit card offers graduates rewards of up to 1% on purchases, which are put towards their student loan balances. The size of those rewards will depend on several factors, including the purchases a cardholder makes -- the more they swipe for, the more they can earn in rewards -- and whether they incur one of the 20 or so fees the card -- or the checking account it's tied to -- charge. The card was launched by SimpleTuition.com, a student loan comparison company, whose executives include former student loan lenders.

Though the first student loan debit card, it's not the first product aimed at students sinking deeper into debt. The UPromise credit card, for instance, offers at least 1% back on all purchases, which cardholders can use to pay down their student loans. And more will likely roll out as student debt grows, says John Ulzheimer, president of consumer education at SmartCredit.com, a credit monitoring site. Roughly 37 million Americans have outstanding student loans, according to FinAid.org. Last year, 66% -- or 1.8 million -- of Bachelor's degree recipients had student loans, a figure that's expected to rise.

Here's how the card works: Cardholders get 0.5% rewards for signature-based purchases of up to $100 and 1% on anything over that amount. (Regular debit-card programs offer 0.5% on average in rewards, according to Bankrate.com.) To earn enough rewards to make a dent in their student loan balance, cardholders will need to spend -- a lot. Someone who swipes for $1,000 in purchases per month can get up to $10 in monthly rewards. The company says those rewards can lead to real savings: If applied to a 10-year loan of $8,500 at 6.8% interest, it could help a borrower repay that debt 16 months faster and save up to $1,500. But for the roughly two-thirds of students who graduate college with loans, which are projected to average $28,700 this year, earning $10 a month in rewards will shave just five months off their repayment period.

There are also fees. Cardholders will incur a $2 fee if they use an ATM outside the card's network, while the average out-of-network fee is $1.41, according to Bankrate.com. Checking account fees include a $5 fee to get a copy of their statement and a "research fee" of $25 per hour if the cardholder wants the bank to review their account -- something many banks don't charge for, says Ulzheimer. Some of the fees are no higher than the industry average, says Greg McBride, senior financial analyst at Bankrate.com. For instance, there's a $25 charge for insufficient funds, when the cardholder tries to withdraw more money from their checking account than they have. The average fee is $30.83, McBride says.

Consumer advocates say the idea of spending to save on student loans doesn’t make sense. “They’re using the flashy reward of paying your loans faster by spending more money, which is counterintuitive,” says Rich Williams, a higher education advocate with U.S. PIRG.

For its part, SimpleTuition.com says that the fees don’t impact the rate at which rewards are earned. The company says the SmarterBank debit card can be used in conjunction with borrowers’ overall plan to pay down their student loan debt. “They can get ahead and pay it down faster rather than carry it for 20 years,” says co-founder Patrick Kandianis.

Consumers who’d like to use earn rewards to pay down their student loan debt can consider alternative options. Community banks and credit unions tend to offer free debit cards, which also often have rewards. Another option is using credit cards, as fees have been dropping and rewards have been rising. Consumers who avoid interest charges by paying their balance in full could potentially earn more in rewards than they would with a debit card.

Google remainders its independent e-book resales



Google is nixing the reseller program that falls within the Google Books platform -- effectively cutting off an additional revenue stream (and possible lifeline) for independent booksellers.

Scott Dougall, director of product management and digital publishing at Google, explained on the Google Book Search blog that based on results to-date, "it's clear that the reseller program has not met the needs of many readers or booksellers."

This change will help us focus on building the best ebooks experience we can across hundreds of devices with millions of books. Books will continue to be a major content pillar alongside apps, music and movies in the Google Play store. And -- regardless of where they bought them -- customers will still be able to access and read their ebooks on the web, phones, tablets and compatible eReaders.


Google has sixteen reseller partners, all of whom will still be highlighted in the "Buy This Book" section of Google Book search and have access to free Books APIs. PaidContent pointed out that more than 350 independent booksellers that are members of the American Booksellers Association also participate in the program and sell e-books on their sites.

Given that Google wasn't satisfied with results from the reseller program -- whatever they might have been as they weren't officially revealed -- it's also evident that Google is taking another approach and going full-throttle with the digital bookstore on the new Google Play platform.

Thus, it makes sense to reroute all available resources there if it wants to seriously compete with the likes of Apple, Amazon, and Barnes & Noble, among others.

However, given that Google is walking away from this project, that leaves the debate open over whether or not one of its competitors can improve upon the idea. After all, based on the ABA letter published by PaidContent, it looks like there is still wide interest from independent booksellers across the country.

Meanwhile in other e-book business news, Apple is mixed up in an e-book legal battle of its own over fixed pricing for digital books. A few other publishing houses involved in the joint U.S.-E.U. investigation are likely choosing to settle, while Apple and a couple of others continue to fight antitrust claims.

Viper comes back, teeth sharpened

Fans of the old Dodge Viper may be disappointed in its rebirth. While still driven by a ridiculously powerful engine, and maintaining its cabin far to the back of the car, the 2013 SRT Viper comes with unforeseen refinement.

Instead of strict power to the wheels with no electronic interference, the new Viper comes with traction and stability control. An active suspension system lets the driver choose between street and track modes. Body work around its side pipe should even protect the legs of passengers getting out of the cabin.

But it would be foolish to lament the previously unfettered Viper, as technology has proven itself again and again in performance cars. The traction system on the new Viper enables launch control, making it possible to actually use all of the car's massive torque. The suspension system's street mode should also make possible to enjoy a Sunday drive, rather than seeking out a chiropractor the next Monday.


With the 2013 Viper, it looks like the new SRT group was challenged to build a world-class super car, able to hold its own against the Ferraris and Lamborghinis of the world. And it may have well succeeded.

The new Viper gets many refinements over the old model. While retaining the same basic body design, new aerodynamic touches reduce drag. The hood and rear deck are made of carbon fiber, while the doors are made of aluminum, all helping to shave 100 pounds of weight off the car.

Even the badge got a new design, suggested by Viper fans.

The seat shells are molded from carbon fiber and kevlar, also helping to hold down weight. SRT raised the roof over the driver and passenger seats to accommodate helmets. But the cabin is also more spacious than on the previous version of the car.

What might really bother old Viper fans are the electronics used in the cabin. The LCD instrument cluster is more GT-R than Barney Oldfield, letting the driver configure the information display using steering wheel buttons. SRT even makes Chrysler's UConnect navigation head units available for the car.

Despite all the niceties, SRT still throws big displacement under the hood with an 8.4-liter V-10. Made of aluminum, it generates 640 horsepower and 600 pound-feet of torque, the most torque of any naturally-aspirated production engine, according to SRT.

Throwing any notion of fuel economy to the wind, SRT shortened the ratios of the Viper's six speed manual transmission. As the car hits its top speed in its top gear, every gear is given its full potential, occupying its own distinct place in the powerband. SRT has not yet said what sort of fuel economy the Viper will get, and it's probably best not to ask.

The new Viper comes out in base and GTS models late this year.

Source

Wikipedia dumps Google Maps

First it was Foursquare. And then Apple. Now, it's Wikipedia's turn to switch from Google Maps to OpenStreetMap.

Wikipedia's decision, announced in a blog post, is likely to raise more questions about the company's decision to charge so-called high-volume users of its Maps APIs, which formerly were free. In March, Google started charging between $4 to $10 per additional 1,000 loads to any site pulling over 25,000 daily loads.

Explaining its decision for the switch to the community-created mapping project, Wikipedia's Yuvi Panda wrote:

Previous versions of our application used Google Maps for the nearby view. This has now been replaced with OpenStreetMap -- an open and free source of Map Data that has been referred to as "Wikipedia for Maps." This closely aligns with our goal of making knowledge available in a free and open manner to everyone. This also means we no longer have to use proprietary Google APIs in our code, which helps it run on the millions of cheap Android handsets that are purely open source and do not have the proprietary Google applications.

The announcement was held in conjunction with the debut of Wikipedia's iOS app as well as the next incarnation of its Android version.

Google did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

In late February, Foursquare announced it was ditching the Google Maps API in favor of OpenStreetMap. Soon after, Apple switched over to using OpenStreetMap data for iPhoto on the iPad and iPhone.


Segregated UK schools 'toxic for poor'

Schools in the UK are segregated along class lines, creating a "toxic" effect for the poor, a teachers' leader says. This was set to worsen as government "austerity policies" pushed more children into poverty, Association of Teachers and Lecturers head Dr Mary Bousted warned.

Teachers alone were not responsible for poor pupils' under achievement. The government said many schools had failed to address poor performance. Dr Bousted said class remained a key determining factor in educational attainment.

In her closing speech to her association's conference in Manchester, the ATL general secretary described an education system "stratified on class lines". "We have schools for the elite, schools for the middle class and schools for the working class.

"Too few schools have mixed intakes where children can learn those intangible life skills of aspiration, effort and persistence from one another." She added: "The effect of unbalanced school intake is toxic for the poorest and most dispossessed."

Dr Bousted hit out at ministers for holding teachers solely responsible for the educational outcomes of the poor. "If the poor don't make as much progress as the rich, it is the school and the teachers within it who are to blame. "This, you and I know, is a nonsense. It is a lie which conveniently enables ministers to evade responsibility for the effects of their policies."

Read more here.

UNESCO Honors Students Who Created Postquake Newspaper

UNESCO on Monday honored the children who created a newspaper to encourage evacuees at a shelter in Kesennuma, Miyagi Prefecture, after it was hit by last year's earthquake and tsunami. Four of the 12 children who worked on creating the Fight Shimbun newspaper, a colorful handwritten wall newspaper with illustrations, were invited to the headquarters of the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization in Paris to be honored by Francesco Bandarin, assistant director general for culture.

Bandarin described the children, including 8-year-old Risa Yoshida, as "a light for the future" and praised them for raising the spirits of evacuees struggling in harsh conditions.

"I would like to say thank you to the people who have helped us all this time," said Yoshida, who served as the first editor-in-chief of the newspaper, expressing gratitude on behalf of the people of Tohoku for the support received from around the globe for victims of the disaster.

Original source here.

Japan: High School Students Less Willing To Study Overseas

Japanese high school students are less willing to study abroad than their counterparts in the United States, China and South Korea, according to survey results released Wednesday. The survey conducted by the Japan Youth Research Institute found that 46 percent of Japanese high school students hope to study abroad, compared with 82 percent in South Korea, 58 percent in China and 53 percent in the U.S.

Asked why they don't want to study abroad, 53 percent of the Japanese students said that Japan is comfortable to live in, while 43 percent of Chinese respondents and 26 percent of South Koreans said the same about their countries.

The Japanese students opting to stay in Japan also said they lack the confidence to live alone and that it would be a hassle to live overseas.

Asked why they want to study abroad, only 17 percent of the students in Japan said they are in search of a better educational environment, far less than 77 percent in China, 39 percent in South Korea and 36 percent in the United States.

An official at the institute said that the attitudes of Japanese students "could change" if Japanese colleges switch the start of the academic year to conform to educational institutions overseas.

Original source here.

Discussion is under way among leading universities on whether to move the start of their academic year from spring to fall.

Universities Warn A-levels Leave Students 'Unprepared'

Universities want A-levels to be more intellectually stretching and with less spoon-feeding from teachers, according to a study from an exam board. Cambridge Assessment, which runs the OCR exam board, found many lecturers believed students arrived unprepared for degree-level work. Three-in-five lecturers said their institutions ran catch-up classes.

Education Secretary Michael Gove has called for greater involvement from universities in A-level standards. Mr Gove has told exam regulators that the content and assessment of A-levels should be shaped by universities, working alongside exam boards.

Last week he told head teachers that exams should be conferred by "institutions of academic excellence such as our best universities".

Cambridge Assessment, a department of the University of Cambridge, carried out an 18-month study of what higher education wanted from the A-level system. Over the past two decades, the design and content of qualifications has increasingly become the domain of government-funded bodies”Mark DaweOCR exam board

Lecturers want "less predictable" A-level exams, fewer re-sits and questions which are more open-ended and which would make pupils think for themselves. The study showed that more than half of lecturers believed that newly arrived students were "unprepared" for studying at degree level.

The weaknesses were in areas where students had to think creatively for themselves - in academic writing, self-directed study and independent thinking. The study found that 60% of lecturers said that their institutions had to provide "additional support classes", often focusing on writing and independent learning skills.

Original source here.

Colorado University Students’ Work Makes It To The Big Screen



The work of a talented group of University of Colorado Boulder students and staff has made it to the big screen. The really big screen -- in fact, a more than 20-meter dome.

When Kiki Lathrop started at Fiske Planetarium her freshman year, she knew that one day she might be involved in the production of shows for the facility. Little did she know that her senior year would see her working on the national premiere of the new planetarium show “Max Goes to the Moon,” based on the award-winning children’s book by local author and former CU-Boulder faculty member Jeffrey Bennett.

Lathrop, an anthropology major, was responsible for processing and gathering the images for the show. The “Max” series of books are known for their combination of engaging science education, storytelling and visuals.

In “Max Goes to the Moon,” the series’ dog hero Max the Rottweiler inspires the first manned moon mission since the Apollo era. His adventures inspire the Earth, leading to the development of a moon colony. Space-science rich, the film is particularly suited to a planetarium environment and is designed for a kindergarten through fifth grade audience.

Carson McDonough, another of the CU students on the production team, was the head video editor and animator on the project. A senior film major with a minor in technology, arts and media, McDonough was excited to find an on-campus job that directly reflected his career interests.

“I’m very excited to have a professional-level movie under my belt,” McDonough said. “Being able to work on campus for a job in my degree field is awesome.”

Funded in part by NASA through the NASA Lunar Science Institute and the Lunar University Network for Astrophysics Research, the goal of the project was to bring the science and story to life for planetarium audiences. At a preview screening for the administration at the NASA Ames Research Center earlier this month, reviews were enthusiastic.

“This project is in step with NASA’s directive to educate and excite the next generation of scientists and explorers,” said Doug Duncan, director of Fiske Planetarium. “I am so proud and excited for the team that has brought this book to life for planetarium audiences.”

The new planetarium program will be ready for free distribution to planetariums around the world after its Boulder premiere. Facilities in states including Alabama, Indiana, Wisconsin and Virginia already have made arrangements to show the new program, which also has been picked up by a planetarium in Israel.

Read article at the University Website.

Portable Audio / Video, Transportation Intel and Nissan collaborate on Infiniti's 2013 infotainment system, Atom inside


 
Intel is notorious for marking its territory on a wide array of consumer gear, but one piece of kit that's unlikely to sport that famous sticker is the infotainment system of Nissan's 2013 Infiniti lineup. Unveiled today at the New York International Auto Show, the in-vehicle computer represents a collaboration between Intel and Nissan and was showcased within the Infiniti LE concept vehicle. On the inside lurks an Atom CPU, which bucks the general trend toward ARM architecture in these systems. Both companies put their collective heads together to create cloud-based services for smartphone users such as video surveillance, vehicle control and monitoring. As another nice refinement, users will also be able to use their phone's NFC capabilities for keyless entry to the carriage -- no word on whether it can similarly activate the ignition. You'll find the full PR after the break. 
 
Infiniti is the luxury division of automaker Nissan. Infiniti officially started selling vehicles on November 8, 1989 in North America. Marketing operations have since grown to include the Middle East, South Korea, Russia, Hong Kong, Taiwan, China, Ukraine and the United Kingdom. Infiniti began sales in additional European markets in late 2008. The marketing network for Infiniti-branded vehicles now includes over 230 dealers in over 15 countries.

Source: Engadget

Wikipedia dumps Google Maps

Trend in the making as another blue chip name loses Google in favor of OpenStreetMap.

First it was Foursquare. And then Apple. Now, it's Wikipedia's turn to switch from Google Maps to OpenStreetMap.
Wikipedia's decision, announced in a blog post, is likely to raise more questions about the company's decision to charge so-called high-volume users of its Maps APIs, which formerly were free. In March, Google started charging between $4 to $10 per additional 1,000 loads to any site pulling over 25,000 daily loads.
Explaining its decision for the switch to the community-created mapping project, Wikipedia's Yuvi Panda wrote:
Previous versions of our application used Google Maps for the nearby view. This has now been replaced with OpenStreetMap -- an open and free source of Map Data that has been referred to as "Wikipedia for Maps." This closely aligns with our goal of making knowledge available in a free and open manner to everyone. This also means we no longer have to use proprietary Google APIs in our code, which helps it run on the millions of cheap Android handsets that are purely open source and do not have the proprietary Google applications.
The announcement was held in conjunction with the debut of Wikipedia's iOS app as well as the next incarnation of its Android version.
Google did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
In late February, Foursquare announced it was ditching the Google Maps API in favor of OpenStreetMap. Soon after, Apple switched over to using OpenStreetMap data for iPhoto on the iPad and iPhone.

Source: Cnet

Michael Jackson Immortal Tour: How They Uphold The Legacy

NEWARK — Since its opening, Michael Jackson: The Immortal World Tour by Cirque Du Soleil has honored the King of Pop through music, dance and acrobatics 117 times. Night after night, artists celebrate the life of the late Michael Jackson, but how do they take his iconic legacy and put it into a production? When the tour came to New York City this week, MTV News went behind the scenes to talk with the creative forces and performers to find out.
The artists (all 65 of them) had limited time to train and learn choreography -- an especially difficult feat when it's honoring MJ's signature moves. It was a kind of pressure that creative director Tara Young certainly learned to channel into a positive force.

"I think it is a pressure for sure; something I share with the whole building here is that we have nothing to prove, only to share," Young told . "We have an opportunity to share what Michael would have wanted to share and the pressure is only there to achieve excellence."
For Felix Cane, a two-time world champion pole dancer who does a captivating performance to "Danger," it was all about using that pressure to help the audience to remember the pop icon. "You are sharing this passion with them, and this love of MJ. There's times in the show when some people and I, myself, might have shed a few tears."
That pressure never felt as great as when the Jackson family sat in the front row at a show in Montreal, an experience Young described as "inspiring." When asked what MJ would think if he were sitting there with them, Young smiled, "He would feel such a sense of pride of what he has given us to work with. It evokes emotions in people that they didn't even know were going to come out."
I think everyone feels inspired, which evokes a certain feeling of change," Young added. "You feel a sadness too because he is not with us anymore, and that is an emotion that is wonderful too actually ... just to honor him."
The tour will continue in North America through the summer, before heading to Europe this fall.

Source: Mtv

Culinary Tourism: Food Among Top Traveler's Interest

Instances of architecture, landscape, museums, hospitality are some aspects of what attracts a tourist at a particular travel destination. In the recent times, we see the growing importance of culinary tourism in the economy of tourist hot spots.
Culinary tourism provides the tourists an opportunity to experience the exotic cuisines of a particular place. It is as important for tourists as aspects like accommodation, scenery, climate etc. as the tourists often dine outside. Most of them prefer to sample the local exquisite dishes. It is therefore, a great way to catch the fancy of the visitors.
Food is one of the fastest growing interests among travelers according to the International Culinary Tourism Association.  The Association offers the following evidence in support of the tremendous growth in the culinary tourism industry:
  • The number of consumer requests received via the Association’s website continue to grow and are nearly at their 2008 (pre-Recession) level.
  • The number of consumer-oriented restaurant information websites has grown from less than a dozen in 2003 to 173 today.
  • The number of culinary tour operators around the world has grown from just a handful in 2003 to nearly 150 today.
  • The Association’s membership has grown to more than 16,000 food and tourism trade professionals since 2003, when the Association was founded.
Culinary tourism definitely comprises of gourmet food but is not limited to it. It aims to provide a memorable experience for the tourists. Of all foodies, only 8% of them are gourmet food enthusiasts. Therefore, they clearly comprise the minority.
Culinary tourism is a great way to exchange cultures. To develop the culinary tourism aspect of any destination, a fourfold action plan can be adopted.
  • Parking Spots – A lack of parking spots can discourage tourists and many would drive away even without taking a second glance. To stop that, the local restaurants should provide ample parking space and advertise it too. Providing valet service is also a good strategy.
  • Ground Breaking Ideas – Way of presentation, imagination and novel notions can catch a tourist's attention. Kedonganan - Jimbaran is a fishing village in Bali that has been remodelled as a hot seat of culinary tourism. There are 24 cafes dotting the shores of the village that provide seafood delicacies.
  • Good Relations with the Locals – It would pay real well to treat the locals nicely. Employing them in the restaurants or collaborating with them would help. This would prompt them to redirect tourists to dining places and thus bring in a boom in business.
  • Collaboration with Other Restaurants – It is unwise to regard other restaurants as competition. Instead if many restaurants collaborated with each other to form a chain and entered a business relation, then it would be much more profitable for them.
In places like South Africa, Argentina, Brazil, India, Egypt, Myanmar the culinary tourism industry is gaining rapid popularity. It is an extremely viable option for cultural exchange and economic revival of a place.

Source: Tourism Review

The Firefighter Robot

Scientists from the US Naval Research Laboratory are developing a creepy firefighting robot which maybe able to tackle blazes on-board military ships. Octavia is designed to interact with people through a combination of speech and visual recognition.


Once directed to a fire by a human, the strange-looking robot uses two infrared cameras to 'see' the blaze, then shoots compressed air and water, stored on its back, at the flames through a hose.


The scientists are developing the technology in the hope that it will help humans to help tackle fires, which are particularly dangerous on-board ships.


Although the footage suggests the design is currently lacking the responsiveness necessary to help in a genuine emergency, the robot is said to be a work in progress.


According to the scientists behind Octavia, particular attention is being paid to improving the naturalness of interactions with humans and robot's ability to recognise the way fire spreads so it is better able to extinguish blazes.

Greek pensioner left note of economic despair


People lay flowers at the site where an elderly man shot himself
 at Syntagma Square in Athens.
ATHENS -- A retired pharmacist who shocked Greece by shooting himself dead on Athens' busiest square in protest over the country's economic crisis left a suicide note lamenting poverty and hopelessness, excerpts published on Thursday showed.

The 77-year-old man, who killed himself under a cypress tree on Syntagma Square on Wednesday morning, around 1,00 meters from parliament, said government austerity cuts had “wiped out” his pension and left him in penury.

He also compared the government, which is implementing an unpopular economic overhaul in return for EU-IMF loans, to the regime imposed by Greece's Nazi German occupiers in 1941.

“The occupation government ... has literally wiped out my ability to survive, based on a respectable pension which I had paid for during a 35-year period,” the pensioner said in an excerpt published in Greek newspapers.

“I find no other solution for a dignified end before I start sifting through garbage to feed myself,” he allegedly wrote in red ink.

A police source said the man had cancer.

Hundreds of thousands of Greeks have lost their jobs in the last year, and unemployment currently tops one million, a quarter of the workforce.

Authorities have been applying a tough economic overhaul since 2010, when Greece was forced to appeal to the European Union and the International Monetary Fund for bailout loans after its borrowing costs hit the roof.

To secure loan payments, Greece has been forced to drastically cut state spending and has slashed civil servant salaries and pensions by up to 40 percent.

Syntagma Square for two years has been the main rallying point for protests against austerity measures designed to haul Greece from its fiscal crisis.

About 1,000 people poured into the area early in the afternoon Wednesday, rallied by messages on social media.

They left flowers, candles and handwritten messages at the foot of the cypress tree where the elderly man had shot himself. Some of the notes placed there called for an “uprising of the people.”

Scuffles broke out with riot police after a group of around 50 youths threw stones at them. The police fired tear gas and charged the protesters after they began smashing the entrance of a nearby luxury hotel. (AFP)

Two separate figures show US jobless claims at four-year low

WASHINGTON -- The number of people seeking U.S. unemployment benefits fell to a four-year low last week, as layoffs slow and the job market strengthens.

Weekly applications dropped 6,000 to a seasonally adjusted 357,000, the Labor Department said Thursday. That's the fewest since April 2008.

The four-week average, a less volatile measure, fell to 361,750, also the lowest in four years. The average has fallen nearly 13 percent in the past six months.

When unemployment benefit applications drop consistently below 375,000, it usually signals that hiring is strong enough to lower the unemployment rate.

On Friday, the government issues its March jobs report, which is expected to show the fourth straight month of strong hiring. From December through February, employers added an average of 245,000 jobs per month. That has pushed down the unemployment rate to 8.3 percent, the lowest in three years.

Hiring is picking up as the economy is showing signs of steady growth. Consumer spending jumped in February by the most in seven months, the government said last week.

That's boosting retailers, restaurants, hotels and other service firms. The service sector expanded at a healthy pace in March, according to a private survey released Wednesday. The Institute for Supply Management (ISM), a trade group of purchasing managers, said its survey found that a measure of employment rose to nearly a six-year high.

A separate survey of manufacturing companies by the ISM found that they also stepped up hiring last month and boosted production.

Companies are investing more, boosting factory output. Businesses ordered more machinery, equipment and other capital goods in February, according to a government report this week.

But greater hiring hasn't led to bigger paychecks. Americans' income grew just 0.2 percent in February, matching January's weak increase. And after taking inflation into account, income after taxes fell for a second straight month. Consumers have boosted their spending by saving less, which economists worry isn't sustainable.

And some companies are still letting workers go. Yahoo said Wednesday that it is cutting 2,000 jobs, or 14 percent of its workforce. It is the Internet company's sixth mass layoff in the past four years. (AP)

T-rex relative was pretty plumed


PALEONTOLOGISTS in China said they have found a bizarre species of giant feathered dinosaur that weighed as much as a car and was related to the Tyrannosaurus rex.

It is by far the biggest feathered dinosaur ever to have been unearthed and raises intriguing questions as to why some of these scaly reptiles developed plumage.

Three nearly complete skeletons of the dino have been uncovered in beds of sediment in Liaoning province, northeastern China, the scientists reported in Nature.

The soil has been dated to around 125 million years ago to the mid-Cretaceous period, at the peak of the dinosaurs' long reign over the planet.

The new species has been named Yutyrannus huali, an amalgam of Latin and Mandarin which means "beautiful feathered tyrant."

"The feathers of Yutyrannus were simple filaments," said Xu Xing, a legendary fossil hunter from Beijing's Institute of Vertebrate Palaeontology and Palaeoanthropology.

"They were more like the fuzzy down of a modern baby chick than the stiff plumes of an adult bird."

The fossils include part of the Yutyrannus tail and, most valuably, its skull.

They reveal the sharp teeth, three-fingered hand and pointed head of a typical theropod -- a carnivore that walked on its hind legs.

At adult size, a Yutyrannus would have been about nine metres long and weighed around 1.4 tonnes, with feathers at least 15 centimetres long.

That makes it a midget compared to its cousin T. rex but a giant compared to the Beipiaosaurus, the previous plumed record-breaker, which was 40 times lighter.

Yutyrannus was too big to fly and in any case the feathers were too downy to even get it off the ground, says the paper.

That raises the theory that the feathers evolved for insulation at what was an unusually cool time of the long Cretaceous era.

But another idea is that the feathers were there for display, as birds use them for mating purposes.

The nearly complete skeletons came from the Yixian Formation in Liaoning, which has been a treasure trove of dinosaurs.

Discoveries there have bolstered the theory that birds today are the descendants of small feathered theropods that took to the trees, either for food or safety, and then learned to glide or fly.

"Yutyrannus dramatically increases the size range of dinosaurs for which we have definite evidence of feathers," Xu said.

"It's possible that feathers were much more widespread, at least among the meat-eating dinosaurs, than most scientists would have guessed even a few years ago." (AFP)

Fire at Penly nuclear reactor in northern France



Fire crews have been rushed to a nuclear reactor in northern France after an escape of smoke but the energy company EDF says the site is secure.

Ten fire engines were sent to the Penly site near Dieppe, where the reactor was shut down after the alarm was raised at 12:20 (11:20 GMT).

Nobody was hurt, the firm said, and the incident had "no consequences for the environment".

Two small fires had broken out but were later extinguished, the firm said.

The fires were caused by hot oil leaking from a pump inside the reactor building, an EDF spokeswoman said, quoted by Reuters news agency.

The Penly plant has two pressurised water reactors, cooled by water from the English Channel.

France obtains 75% of its electricity from nuclear power and the industry's future has become a political issue.

A release of smoke automatically shut down the No 2 reactor, according to the EDF.

Emergency services tackled the two fires at 13:15, it said on its website.

The head of the local monitoring commission (CLI) for the environment, Serge Boulanger, told AFP news agency a lack of oil in a water pump had caused it to smoke.

"There would have been smoke but no flames," he said.

Chinese websites 'defaced in Anonymous attack'


Defaced pages urged Chinese people to stage their own protests 
The Anonymous hacking group claims to have defaced almost 500 websites in China.

Targets hit in the mass defacement included government sites, its official agencies, trade groups and many others.

A message put on the hacked sites said the attack was carried out to protest against the Chinese government's strict control of its citizens.

It urged Chinese people to join Anonymous and stage their own protests against the regime.

Attack pattern
The announcement about the defacements was made via an Anonymous China account that was established in March. A list of the 485 sites affected was put on the Pastebin website. Separate Pastebin messages posted email addresses and other personal details stolen when sites were penetrated.

Sites defaced had the same message posted to them that chided the nation's government for its repressive policies.

It read: "Dear Chinese government, you are not infallible, today websites are hacked, tomorrow it will be your vile regime that will fall."

China has one of the most comprehensive web surveillance systems in the world, known as the Great Firewall of China, that reinforces its broader social controls. The system polices where Chinese people can go online and tries to restrict what they can talk about.

On defaced pages, the Anonymous attackers also posted links to advice that could help people avoid official scrutiny of what they do and say online. Much of the advice was in English so it is unclear how much help it would be.

There has been no official confirmation of the defacements. News wires reported that government officials had denied any had taken place.

However, many of the sites listed are now offline and a few others displayed a hacked page for a long time rather than their own homepage.

The Anonymous hackers reportedly successfully attacked some sites a second time once the original defacement was cleaned up. (BBC)

3,000 Dolphins Found Dead On Peruvian Beaches In 2012


More than 3,000 dolphins have been found dead on beaches in Perú this year, and environmentalists are so far stumped as to what could be the cause, Perú 21 reports.

One theory is that powerful waves caused by oil exploration ships could have resulted in internal damage for the mammals, Carlos Yaipen Llanos, science director of the marine mammal rescue group Organización Científica para Conservación de Animales Acuáticos (ORCA), told the Peruvian news source, according to Discovery News.

The first hundred dolphins washed up on the shores in February. At that time, some hypothesized they had consumed toxic fish, though testing was unable to confirm this was the case.

Yaipen Llanos told MSNBC he believes acoustic testing produced a "sonic blast" which caused internal bleeding and loss of equilibrium for the dolphins, though he has "no definitive evidence" of this.

"It is a horrifying thought that these dolphins would die in agony over a prolonged period if they were impacted by sonic blast," Hardy Johns, head of the conservation group BlueVoice.org, said in an statement obtained by MSNBC.

According to the Associated Press, the U.S. has paused similar acoustic testing for fear that it was having a fatal impact on the dolphin population.

In addition to the dolphins, MSNBC reported thousands of anchovies have also been found dead on Peruvian beaches. (Huffingtonpost.com)

The Whole Universe In One Photo


Nasa has unveiled an astounding new image of our galactic neighbourhood - a new star atlas for the entire universe.

The atlas includes a catalogue of the entire infrared sky, over half a billion stars, galaxies and more captured by the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) mission.

Edward Wright, WISE principal investigator at UCLA, said: "Today, WISE delivers the fruit of 14 years of effort to the astronomical community." Wright began working on the WISE mission in 1998.

Made up of more than 2.7 million images taken at four infrared wavelengths of light, the new image captures everything from nearby asteroids to distant galaxies.

The WISE catalogue of images covers the entire sky, and this immense image, shown below at the largest size our system can handle, took more than a decade of work.

WISE has discovered the coolest stars called Y-dwarfs, found more than 90 percent of the largest near-Earth asteroids, the first known "Trojan" asteroid to share the same orbital path around the sun as Earth and echoes of infrared light surrounding an exploded star.

Roc Cutri, who leads the WISE data processing and archiving effort at the Infrared and Processing Analysis Center at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, said: "With the release of the all-sky catalog and atlas, WISE joins the pantheon of great sky surveys that have led to many remarkable discoveries about the universe. It will be exciting and rewarding to see the innovative ways the science and educational communities will use WISE in their studies now that they have the data at their fingertips." (Huffingtonpost.com)

E-readers rise, but less people reading


AROUND 20 per cent of US adults have read an e-book since last year, according to an extensive new study.

Those who read books, newspapers and other kinds of writing in digital form also are much more likely to increase, rather than decrease, how often they read.

Meanwhile, a substantial number of people still have no interest in e-devices, no matter the cost or product.

The 68-page report, The Rise of E-Reading, was released last night and is among the most comprehensive takes on the ever-changing book market.

It's also the first of a series about e-books planned by the Pew Research Center's Internet and American Life Project, which received a grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

Future e-book studies are expected to focus on the preferences of library patrons.

"The mission of the project is to look at the social impact of technology," the Pew project's director, Lee Rainie, said.

"And the future of knowledge and how it's disseminated and how it's packaged and the future of institutions like libraries and publishing houses is deeply implicated in that kind of work."

Overall, nearly 30 per cent of those surveyed say they own a device.

E-books received a notable bump from the December holidays, when they were popular gifts.

Around 17 per cent of those surveyed had read an e-book as of December, but the number moved up to 21 per cent by February.

The percentage of those owning tablets and those with Nooks or Kindles increased much faster, nearly doubling from 10 per cent in December to 19 per cent as of mid-January, suggesting that many who purchased an e-device have yet to read on it.

"I feel like a lot of people I know who just got a device start out by watching YouTube or playing a game and then they're like, 'Oh, I can read on this,"' Maja Thomas, senior vice president of the Hachette Book Group's Hachette Digital division, said.

The most troubling result: 19 per cent of those aged 18 and up said they didn't read a book over the past year, a jump from the 16 per cent who answered the same way for a 2005 Gallup poll.

"The nation cannot afford to continue losing readers," American Library Association president Molly Raphael said.

Publishers estimate that e-books comprise around 20 per cent of trade sales, a number growing, but not as quickly as in the past two years as the market matures and the most avid e-readers are likely accounted for.

According to Pew, the typical e-book user reads 24 books a year, compared with 15 for readers of paper only.

Few are exclusive e-users. Around 90 per cent of those reading an e-book also read a print book last year.

And 30 per cent of those downloading books, newspaper articles and other written material say they now read more often. Only 7 per cent read less.

The eventual dominance of e-books has been widely predicted, but strong resistance remains.

More than 80 per cent of those who had not read an e-book - across all age groups - said they had no plans to buy a device this year.

Among non-e-book readers, roughly half say they have no interest in e-books, have a preference for paper or don't read at all.

Around 20 per cent cite cost, although the price of a Kindle has dropped from more than $400 four years ago to under $100.

Amazon.com's Kindle is the overwhelming choice among e-book fans. Around 60 per cent own a Kindle, compared with around 20 per cent for the runner-up, Barnes & Noble's Nook.

Apple's iPad remains the clear leader among tablets, around 60 per cent.

The Kindle Fire, introduced last fall, is preferred by 14 per cent of tablet readers.

The survey was based on telephone interviews, with nearly 3,000 people ages 16 and up. (AP)