Tuesday, April 30, 2013

US variants of Galaxy S4 ship with locked bootloaders CyanogenMod developed Ste...

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Jury deliberates on Philly abortion doctor accused of murder

By Dave Warner

PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) - Jury deliberations began on Tuesday in the murder trial of a Philadelphia doctor accused of killing babies and a patient during late-term abortions at a clinic serving low-income women.

Dr. Kermit Gosnell, 72, who ran the now-shuttered Women's Medical Society Clinic, could face the death penalty if convicted by the jury in Common Pleas Court in Philadelphia.

The case focuses on whether the infants were born alive and then killed.

The seven-woman, five-man jury began deliberations early in the afternoon on Tuesday after receiving instructions for about an hour and a half from Judge Jeffrey Minehart. The trial is in its sixth week.

The charges against Gosnell and nine of his employees have added more fuel to the debate in the United States about late-term abortions.

It is legal in Pennsylvania to abort a fetus up to 24 weeks into a pregnancy. Other states have recently put new restrictions on abortions, with Arkansas banning them at 12 weeks and North Dakota at six weeks.

Gosnell is charged with first-degree murder for delivering live babies during late-term abortions and then deliberately severing their spinal cords, prosecutors said.

His defense contends there is no evidence the babies were alive after they were aborted.

Defense lawyer Jack McMahon, in his closing argument on Monday, cited testimony by Medical Examiner Sam Gulino, who said none of the 47 babies tested randomly from the West Philadelphia clinic had been born alive.

"You may not like that evidence, but it is the evidence," McMahon said.

Assistant District Attorney Edward Cameron said in his closing argument that witnesses testified that one of the aborted babies was breathing before its neck was cut, another made a whining sound and another moved its arms and legs.

"You have three witnesses who saw a baby breathe and move, and he killed it," Cameron said.

'HOUSE OF HORRORS'

The clinic that prosecutors call a "house of horrors" has been cited as powerful evidence by both abortion and anti-abortion rights groups.

Reverend Frank Pavone, director of the anti-abortion group Priests for Life, said the often gory trial testimony "will change the conversation ... It'll help people engage and make them realize they're not just talking about a theoretical idea."

Abortion-rights activists said Gosnell was an outlier among predominantly safe and legal abortion providers.

"Gosnell ran a criminal enterprise, not a healthcare facility, and should be punished to the fullest extent of the law," said Eric Ferrero, a spokesman for the Planned Parenthood Federation of America.

Testimony has depicted a filthy clinic serving mostly low-income women in the largely black community. McMahon said Gosnell wanted to help the under-privileged community.

Gosnell is also charged with murdering Karnamaya Mongar, 41, of Virginia, who died from a drug overdose after going to him for an abortion, prosecutors said.

The defense lawyer said Mongar was given guideline amounts of the drug Demerol as an anesthesia during the abortion, as had hundreds of other women at the clinic.

Gosnell, who has been in jail since his January 2011 arrest, is being tried along with Eileen O'Neill, a medical graduate student accused of billing patients and insurance companies as if she had been a licensed doctor. Eight other defendants have pleaded guilty to a variety of charges and are awaiting sentencing.

(Additional reporting by Atossa Araxia Abrahamian; Editing by Barbara Goldberg, Scott Malone, Lisa Von Ahn and Ellen Wulfhorst)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/case-u-abortion-doctor-accused-running-house-horrors-000222756.html

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Sina Weibo, China's Equivalent of Facebook and Twitter, Gets $586M Investment From Alibaba

Sina WeiboSina Weibo, the micro-blogging platform that took root among China’s white-collar class, may be worth more than $3 billion today after Alibaba agreed to pay $586 million to buy preferred and ordinary shares in the company. The deal creates a strategic alliance between Alibaba, which runs the eBay of China, and Sina Weibo, which is kind of like a Facebook-Twitter hybrid. Weibo grew to 46 million daily users and earned $50 million in advertising revenue last year, according to an SEC filing last week from parent company Sina. It was 12 percent of parent company Sina’s total advertising revenue. Like Twitter and Facebook, Sina Weibo has gotten a lot more aggressive about pushing in-stream or news feed advertising. Last week, they announced a new product called ?Window Recommendations? in partnership with Alibaba’s Taobao. In that integration, about 3 to 5 ads featuring Taobao goods get pushed into a Weibo stream. The two companies say the deal happened so that both companies could better connect Alibaba merchants to their Weibo users and followers and experiment with new ideas in social commerce. The partnership could bring $380 million in advertising and e-commerce revenues to Weibo over the next three years, Sina said. Alibaba also reserves the right to bump its ownership up to 30 percent. It’s interesting because no such equivalent partnership exists in Western markets. E-commerce companies like eBay and Amazon have basic Facebook integrations but no deep strategic investments. Alibaba is also making the deal as it’s expected to go for a very highly anticipated IPO. The company recently did a management re-shuffle, putting in Jonathan Lu Xaoxi as its new CEO, after founder Jack Ma stepped down.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/jH2tfM381vk/

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Will green tea help you lose weight?

Apr. 29, 2013 ? Evidence has shown that green tea extract may be an effective herbal remedy useful for weight control and helping to regulate glucose in type 2 diabetes. In order to ascertain whether green tea truly has this potential, Jae-Hyung Park and his colleagues from the Keimyung University School of Medicine in the Republic of Korea conducted a study, now published in the Springer journal Naunyn-Schmedeberg's Archives of Pharmacology.

The active constituents of green tea, which have been shown to inhibit intestinal glucose and lipid uptake, are a certain type of flavonoid called gallated catechins. The authors had previously suggested that the amount of gallated catechins necessary to reduce blood glucose concentrations can be achieved from a daily dose of green tea. However, the amount of green tea needed to decrease lipid uptake from the gut is higher and has been shown to have adverse effects in humans. Once in the bloodstream, gallated catechins can actually increase insulin resistance, which is a negative consequence especially in obese and diabetic patients.

For their study, the researchers tested the effects of green tea extract on body weight and glucose intolerance in both diabetic mice and normal mice fed a high-fat diet. To prevent a high dose of gallated catechins from reaching the bloodstream, the authors also used a non-toxic resin, polyethylene glycol, to bind the gallated catechins in the gut to prevent their absorption. They then looked at the effects on the mice of eating green tea extract alone, and eating green tea extract plus polyethylene glycol. They compared these against the effects of two other therapeutic drugs routinely prescribed for type 2 diabetes.

Results showed that green tea extract in isolation did not give any improvements in body weight and glucose intolerance. However, when green tea extract was given with polyethylene glycol, there was a significant reduction in body weight gain, insulin resistance and glucose intolerance in both normal mice on a high fat diet and diabetic mice. The polyethylene glycol had the effect of prolonging the amount of time the gallated catechins remained in the intestines, thereby limiting glucose absorption for a longer period.

Interestingly, the effects of the green tea extract in both the intestines and in the circulation were measurable at doses which could be achieved by drinking green tea on a daily basis. In addition, the effects of green tea extract were comparable to those found when taking two of the drugs which are currently recommended for non-insulin dependent diabetes.

The authors conclude that "dietary green tea extract and polyethylene glycol alleviated body weight gain and insulin resistance in diabetic and high-fat mice, thus ameliorating glucose intolerance. Therefore the green tea extract and polyethylene glycol complex may be a preventative and therapeutic tool for obesity and obesity-related type 2 diabetes without too much concern about side effects."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Springer Science+Business Media.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Park, Jae-Hyung et al. Green tea extract with polyethylene glycol-3350 reduces body weight and improves glucose tolerance in db/db and high-fat diet mice. Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's Archives of Pharmacology, 2013 DOI: 10.1007/s00210-013-0869-9

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/health_medicine/nutrition/~3/TEmKqINLbLc/130429114739.htm

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Monday, April 8, 2013

Philadelphia gets ready to play 'Pong' on building

Shown is the Cira Centre, right, on Thursday, April 4, 2013, in Philadelphia. The classic Atari video game will come to life on the facade of the 29-story skyscraper. Hundreds of built-in LED lights at the Cira Centre will replicate the familiar paddles and ball. The effort is the brainchild of Frank Lee, a Drexel University game-design professor. Pong will be played April 19 and 24, to bookend an event called Philly Tech Week. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

Shown is the Cira Centre, right, on Thursday, April 4, 2013, in Philadelphia. The classic Atari video game will come to life on the facade of the 29-story skyscraper. Hundreds of built-in LED lights at the Cira Centre will replicate the familiar paddles and ball. The effort is the brainchild of Frank Lee, a Drexel University game-design professor. Pong will be played April 19 and 24, to bookend an event called Philly Tech Week. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

Shown is the Cira Centre on Thursday, April 4, 2013, in Philadelphia. The classic Atari video game will come to life on the facade of the 29-story skyscraper. Hundreds of built-in LED lights at the Cira Centre will replicate the familiar paddles and ball. The effort is the brainchild of Frank Lee, a Drexel University game-design professor. Pong will be played April 19 and 24, to bookend an event called Philly Tech Week. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

The Cira Centre is shown on Thursday, April 4, 2013, in Philadelphia. The classic Atari video game will come to life on the facade of the 29-story skyscraper. Hundreds of built-in LED lights at the Cira Centre will replicate the familiar paddles and ball. The effort is the brainchild of Frank Lee, a Drexel University game-design professor. Pong will be played April 19 and 24, to bookend an event called Philly Tech Week. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

(AP) ? Philadelphia is getting ready for a supersized game of "Pong" ? on the side of a skyscraper.

The classic Atari video game will be re-created later this month on the facade of the 29-story Cira Centre, where hundreds of embedded LED lights will replicate the familiar paddles and ball.

Organizers expect hundreds of onlookers as gaming enthusiasts use giant, table-mounted joysticks to play from afar. The players will be standing on the steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, a site that offers an unobstructed view of the office building from across the Schuylkill River.

"'Pong' is a cultural icon, cultural milestone," said Frank Lee, the Drexel University game-design professor behind the concept. "This is my love letter to the wonders of technology as seen through the eyes of my childhood."

Despite the buzz the idea has received since being announced Wednesday, Lee said it took five years to find people willing to make it happen. He eventually met kindred spirits at Brandywine Realty Trust, which owns the Cira Centre, and at the online news site Technically Philly.

Now, what might be the world's largest "Pong" game will be played April 19 and 24 as part of Philly Tech Week, the news website's annual series of events, seminars and workshops spotlighting the city's technology and innovation communities.

"This is one of the best things I could imagine that could make people aware that there's something happening here, and bring more people into the fold," Technically Philly co-founder Christopher Wink said.

Wink estimated about 150 people might play over the two days ? most will be chosen by a lottery, but some spots will be reserved for younger students enrolled in science, technology, engineering and math programs.

Among those playing will be 36-year-old Brad Denenberg, one of three winners picked at random during a Tech Week preview on Wednesday. Denenberg, who runs the tech startup incubator Seed Philly, confessed to some trepidation. He said he's actually not a big gamer.

"My biggest fear is that I'm going to play against some 8-year-old who will destroy me," Denenberg said.

In today's gaming era of lifelike graphics ? think "Call of Duty" ? and colorful characters ? think "Angry Birds" ? it's hard to imagine how the pixelated "Pong" qualified as revolutionary when it was introduced in 1972.

The black-and-white arcade game used simple block shapes to simulate two paddles and a ball; the object was for players to hit the ball so their opponents could not return it. A home version paved the way for the game console industry.

At the Cira Centre, the game will be re-created using hundreds of lights already embedded in its north face. The tower stands by day as a gleaming, mirrored edifice in west Philadelphia, but each night it illuminates the skyline with colored, patterned displays. A spokesman could not be reached for comment Thursday.

Lee said he was driving by the building one night five years ago when he was suddenly struck with the idea that the lights could be configured to play the shape-fitting game Tetris.

The concept grew from there. Last month, after finally securing the necessary permissions, he and two colleagues successfully tested giant versions of "Pong" as well as the classic games "Snake" and "Space Invaders." People might get to play "Snake" on April 24, Lee said.

The effort has been satisfying on a technical level, Lee said, describing "Pong" as "a large-scale interactive, light-based art project."

But he noted it was rewarding on an emotional level as well, comparing it with the excitement he felt as a boy when he would put the "Pong" game cartridge into the console. And he hopes it inspires a new generation of innovators.

"I hope kids ... will go on to be the leaders, and push technology forward and do wondrous things in the future," Lee said.

___

Online:

http://ph.ly/pong

http://phillytechweek.com/

___

Follow Kathy Matheson at www.twitter.com/kmatheson

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/aa9398e6757a46fa93ed5dea7bd3729e/Article_2013-04-04-Supersized%20Pong/id-e7b5d1aa685f49e0bdcee81d7c0ac64d

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Sunday, April 7, 2013

Exxon's duck-killing pipeline won't pay taxes to oil spill clean-up fund

post from Kmareka.com on 06 April 2013 02:00:36 PM. ? Kmareka.com



Reblogged from Climate Connections:

Click to visit the original post

By Ryan Koronowski, April 2, 2013. Source: Think Progress

A technicality has spared Exxon from having to pay any money into the fund that will be covering most of the clean up costs of its Arkansas pipelinespill.

The cleanup efforts themselves took a sobering turn as crews found injured and dead duckscovered in oil.

The environmental impacts of an oil spill in central Arkansas began to come into focus Monday as officials said a couple of dead ducks and 10 live oily birds were found after an ExxonMobil Corp.

Read more? 335 more words

Scary pipeline oil spill in Arkansas.

Read The Full Article:
http://kmareka.com/2013/04/06/exxons-duck-killing-pipeline-wont-pay-taxes-to-oil-
spill-clean-up-fund/


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Source: http://leftword.blogdig.net/archives/articles/April2013/06/Exxon__039_s_duck_killing_pipeline_won__039_t_pay_taxes_to_oil_spill_clean_up_fund.html

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Car Insurance Rate Quotes in Oklahoma on the Cheap Zach on ...

All drivers in the state of Oklahoma are required to maintain their insurance coverage from the minimum level that required by the state. The state of Oklahoma requires in minimum level of coverage rate; $25,000 for bodily injury per individual, $50,000 for all injury involves, and $25,000 for property that damage caused by accident. Besides that all driver require to carry the proof wherever they want to go all times. You can get additional fees if can?t bring it, and thus it?ll be better for you to consider some law including for getting cheap rate.

There are some ways actually that able to be done for getting cheap rate of auto insurance in Oklahoma. You may choose another coverage like collision and comprehensive coverage that regarded as expensive. It?ll be a problem actually, if you know the way to get the cheap and finding also tips for reducing premium.

It?ll be effective if you can compare low car insurance quotes in Oklahoma instantly online. There are some providers of auto insurance quotes provider that available offer their service online. You can access it on the line of internet network by using your private computer. There are some quotes actually that available for you for reducing premium after signed with certain company. It?s time for you to save time by using these auto insurance quotes providers.

Rates usually become a good and common comparison that usually considered by most people for finding the best choice. It?s also including about the rate of auto insurance coverage; despite they choose coverage which regarded is expensive but when we know the ways, we can get reduce premium by some specific action. It?ll be important to be done, especially in Oklahoma most of auto insurance are challenge.

Source: http://zachshelby.org/car-insurance-rate-quotes-in-oklahoma-on-the-cheap/

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Friday, April 5, 2013

Monetary stimulus not enough for Japan: Germany's Schaeuble

STRASBOURG (Reuters) - Japan cannot count on central bank actions alone to boost its economy and must carry through with structural reforms, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said on Thursday.

Speaking to journalists at an event on Franco-German ties, Schaeuble said Japan knows it must find a solution to its structural problems.

"If monetary policy is used instead of financial and economic changes then we run in the wrong way," he added, speaking through an interpreter.

The Bank of Japan dramatically stepped up its monetary stimulus on Thursday with plans to inject $1.4 trillion into Japan's economy in less than two years.

The central bank's plans to increase its asset-buying have irked other countries and especially France, which is concerned such actions will boost the value of the euro and make euro zone exports more expensive on international markets.

Schaeuble's French counterpart, Pierre Moscovici, told the same event in the border town that exchange rate issues should be dealt with jointly within the Group of 20 economic powers.

"I believe that over the long term exchange rates should reflect economic fundamentals," Moscovici told journalists, adding that countries should refrain from artificial ways of supporting their economies.

(Reporting by Ingrid Melander; editing by Mark John)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/japan-must-reform-not-only-count-monetary-policy-114415279--business.html

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Bradley Manning: ?New York Times? Endorsed Source, or Traitor?

Last month Private First Class Bradley Manning pled guilty to charges that could land him 20 years in prison for his role in releasing thousands of classified documents obtained and published by WikiLeaks.

Twenty years might seem like adequate punishment for a whistleblower, particularly one who exposed a trove of wrongdoing in America?s war in Iraq and its dealings around the world?exemplified by a 2007 viral video showing a U.S. Apache helicopter gunning down civilians and a Reuters journalist in Baghdad, a revelation extensively covered by The New York Times.

Two decades, however, apparently isn?t good enough for the government. Prosecutors are pursuing a life sentence for Manning, for the far-reaching charge of ?aiding the enemy.?

?

?

Noted lawyers and constitutional scholars Floyd Abrams and Yochai Benkler summed up the military?s argument against Manning in a New York Times op-ed titled ?Death to Whistleblowers?:

Under the prosecution?s theory, because Private Manning knew the materials would be published and that Al Qaeda could read them once published, he indirectly communicated with the enemy. But in this theory, whether publication is by WikiLeaks or The Times is entirely beside the point. Defendants are guilty of ?aiding the enemy? for leaking to a publishing medium simply because that publication can be read by anyone with an Internet connection.

In effect, Manning is being formally tried as a traitor because Al Queda can read the information he leaked on the Internet.

?This charge is incredibly troubling,? Trevor Timm, cofounder and executive director of the Freedom of the Press Foundation, tells TakePart. ?The charge is so vague, it doesn?t exclusively encompass classified information. It?s any information that could be accessed by ?the enemy.? That means it doesn?t just affect Manning, or even just future whistleblowers. Any active military member who writes an op-ed critical of U.S. policy could be aiding an enemy. It could affect military members on Twitter or Facebook.?

?It is troubling to see how much the mainstream media has ignored the Manning case,? says Timm. ?Manning gave the media a treasure trove of information that they have been using for the past two years. Yet many in the press have been ignoring the ?aiding the enemy? charge and how it could affect their work going forward.?

The charge, if upheld, could also fundamentally alter journalists? ability to uncover wrongdoing by the military, or the government at large. After all, newspapers are on the Internet too.

?Osama bin Laden once told all of his followers to read Bob Woodward?s book?one of the most esteemed journalists in America?for information,? says Timm. ?Woodward?s sources are high-ranking military members. He?s talking about top-secret information?often far more classified than what Manning shared.

?By this logic, Woodward?s sources are aiding the enemy.?

Despite the seemingly ominous potential consequences Manning?s case could have on future whistleblowers and the ability of journalists to conduct high-profile investigations using anonymous sources, the many news outlets are only now picking up on the broader implications of Manning?s case.

?It is troubling to see how much the mainstream media has ignored the Manning case,? says Timm. ?Manning gave the media a treasure trove of information that they have been using for the past two years. Almost every day you see a story that originated from Manning?s leak. It has enriched the public?s knowledge of what the government is doing in their name. Yet many in the press have been ignoring the ?aiding the enemy? charge and how it could affect their work going forward.?

Whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg, the man behind the Pentagon Papers, is revered in media circles and among government transparency and First Amendment advocates as a paragon of virtue. Why not Manning? Especially after news broke last year that the military was virtually torturing him in captivity.

The reason may be simple generational pettiness and old media snobbery.

?I do feel that, unfortunately, if Manning had given information directly to The New York Times [instead of the upstart WikiLeaks], his case would receive more attention,? says Timm. ?And that?s a shame, because this case will affect the world of journalism regardless of who broke the story.?

Now, with the military pursuing aiding the enemy charges full bore, it may be too late to stop the case?s chilling effect on the First Amendment.

?If the media made noise about this earlier, the prosecution may not have pursued it,? says Timm. ?Hopefully, as the trial comes close, the chorus will get louder and louder and the charges will be dropped.?

In your mind, is Bradley Manning a patriot, a traitor or something in between? Stake out a position in COMMENTS.

Related Stories on TakePart:

? 5 Funniest, Juiciest and Most Salacious WikiLeaks Revelations

? Retro Action, June 13, 1971: Decades Before WikiLeaks, New York Times Publishes Pentagon Papers

? Op-Ed: Don?t Let Whistleblowers Get Blown Away


Matthew Fleischer is a former LA Weekly staff writer and an award-winning social justice reporter in Los Angeles. Email Matt

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bradley-manning-york-times-endorsed-source-traitor-182501546.html

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Thursday, April 4, 2013

Don't call it vaporware: Scientists use cloud of atoms as optical memory device

Apr. 3, 2013 ? Talk about storing data in the cloud. Scientists at the Joint Quantum Institute (JQI) of the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the University of Maryland have taken this to a whole new level by demonstrating* that they can store visual images within quite an ethereal memory device -- a thin vapor of rubidium atoms. The effort may prove helpful in creating memory for quantum computers.

Their work builds on an approach developed at the Australian National University, where scientists showed that a rubidium vapor could be manipulated in interesting ways using magnetic fields and lasers. The vapor is contained in a small tube and magnetized, and a laser pulse made up of multiple light frequencies is fired through the tube. The energy level of each rubidium atom changes depending on which frequency strikes it, and these changes within the vapor become a sort of fingerprint of the pulse's characteristics. If the field's orientation is flipped, a second pulse fired through the vapor takes on the exact characteristics of the first pulse -- in essence, a readout of the fingerprint.

"With our paper, we've taken this same idea and applied it to storing an image -- basically moving up from storing a single 'pixel' of light information to about a hundred," says Paul Lett, a physicist with JQI and NIST's Quantum Measurement Division. "By modifying their technique, we have been able to store a simple image in the vapor and extract pieces of it at different times."

It's a dramatic increase in the amount of information that can be stored and manipulated with this approach. But because atoms in a vapor are always in motion, the image can only be stored for about 10 milliseconds, and in any case the modifications the team made to the original technique introduce too much noise into the laser signal to make the improvements practically useful. So, should the term vaporware be applied here after all? Not quite, says Lett -- because the whole point of the effort was not to build a device for market, but to learn more about how to create memory for next-generation quantum computers.

"What we've done here is store an image using classical physics. However, the ultimate goal is to store quantum information, which a quantum computer will need," he says. "Measuring what the rubidium atoms do as we manipulate them is teaching us how we might use them as quantum bits and what problems those bits might present. This way, when someone builds a solid-state system for a finished computer, we'll know how to handle them more effectively."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Jeremy B Clark, Quentin Glorieux, Paul D Lett. Spatially addressable readout and erasure of an image in a gradient echo memory. New Journal of Physics, 2013; 15 (3): 035005 DOI: 10.1088/1367-2630/15/3/035005

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/top_news/top_science/~3/caDEXIsffb0/130404092829.htm

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Is this year's NCAA tournament most unpredictable?

In this photo released by the University of Louisville, injured Louisville guard Kevin Ware lies in a hospital bed holding the NCAA Regional Championship trophy flanked by coach Rick Pitino, left, and former Louisville assistant coach Richard Pitino, Monday, April 1, 2013, in Louisville, Ky. Ware broke his leg in the first half of Sunday's Midwest Regional final when he landed awkwardly after trying to contest a 3-point shot, breaking his leg in two places. He was taken off the court on a stretcher as his stunned teammates openly wept. His teammates went on to defeat Duke 85-63 to reach their second straight Final Four. (AP Photo/University of Louisville, Kenny Klein)

In this photo released by the University of Louisville, injured Louisville guard Kevin Ware lies in a hospital bed holding the NCAA Regional Championship trophy flanked by coach Rick Pitino, left, and former Louisville assistant coach Richard Pitino, Monday, April 1, 2013, in Louisville, Ky. Ware broke his leg in the first half of Sunday's Midwest Regional final when he landed awkwardly after trying to contest a 3-point shot, breaking his leg in two places. He was taken off the court on a stretcher as his stunned teammates openly wept. His teammates went on to defeat Duke 85-63 to reach their second straight Final Four. (AP Photo/University of Louisville, Kenny Klein)

Louisville head coach Rick Pitino celebrates after Louisville defeated Duke 85-63 in the Midwest Regional final in the NCAA college basketball tournament, Sunday, March 31, 2013, in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

Trainers check on Louisville guard Kevin Ware (5) after Ware injured his lower right leg during the first half of the Midwest Regional final against Duke in the NCAA college basketball tournament, Sunday, March 31, 2013, in Indianapolis. Ware left the court on a stretcher. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

Michigan celebrates after a regional final game against Florida in the NCAA college basketball tournament, Sunday, March 31, 2013, in Arlington, Texas. Michigan won 79-59 to advance to the Final Four. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

Florida's Jacob Kurtz, left and Casey Prather react after a regional final game against Michigan in the NCAA college basketball tournament, Sunday, March 31, 2013, in Arlington, Texas. Michigan won 79-59 to advance to the Final Four. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

Welcome back to BracketRacket, your one-stop shop for all your NCAA tournament needs.

Today, we take stock of the appallingly low number of perfect Final Four picks, look back at how other underdogs have done in the national semifinals, and get John Beilein's thoughts on postgame transportation.

But first, a statistical basis for declaring that this is indeed the most unpredictable NCAA tournament in recent memory:

___

WILDEST. TOURNAMENT. EVER.

We've reached that point, according to a formula devised by Pete Tiernan over at BracketScience.com. Tiernan's formula ? he calls it the "Madometer" ? measures the unpredictability of each NCAA tournament since the field expanded to 64 teams.

On a scale of 0 to 100 ? with 0 meaning the higher seed wins every game and 100 meaning the opposite ? the 2013 tournament checks in at 21.8 so far. Tiernan says even if top overall seed Louisville wins it all, this year's tournament will break the previous Madometer record of 19.8, set in 2011. (That, you may recall, was the year Virginia Commonwealth and Butler made the Final Four, and a nine-loss Connecticut team won the title.)

The most predictable tournament might not necessarily ring a bell. It was 2007, which measured a paltry 4.1 on Tiernan's scale. That was the second of Florida's back-to-back titles. The top-seeded Gators beat top-seeded Ohio State in the title game. The other Final Four teams were No. 2 seeds, and three of the quarterfinals involved the top two seeds in those regions.

___

AND ON THAT NOTE ...

Forget filling out a perfect bracket. Even predicting the whole Final Four was almost impossible this year.

ESPN reports that 47 perfect out of 8.15 million brackets in its Tournament Challenge game made the right picks. That works out to about 1 in 173,000 brackets.

Now, for some perspective. In his 2003 book "Life: The Odds," Gregory Baer estimated that the odds of a random American man someday dating a supermodel were about 88,000 to 1.

No word on whether "I picked Wichita State" would help or hurt that American man's chances.

___

TROUBLESOME TRIPS

It takes over 10 hours to drive from Ann Arbor, Mich., to Atlanta ? per Google Maps. Luckily for Wolverines coach John Beilein, those days are over.

Beilein, who began his career coaching teams in upstate New York at Erie Community College, Nazareth and LeMoyne, was asked Monday about those long bus rides to and from games.

"You upgraded us to bus trips. There wasn't a lot of bus trips," he said. "It was more van trips. ... I often refer to the times we'd be up playing St. Lawrence or Potsdam or something, playing St. Rose or St. Michael's, being white-outs, snowstorms, listening to the Syracuse-Georgetown game. Here we're trying to make it home alive sometimes."

Now Beilein's Wolverines are set to play Syracuse ? at the Final Four in Atlanta.

Of course, Orange coach Jim Boeheim didn't want to hear about all of the obstacles Beilein dealt with early in his career.

"I'm not sure he's had any adversity," Boeheim said. "He's been successful wherever he's been."

___

HAPPY ANNIVERSARY

We've reached the point in the tournament where we can acknowledge the anniversary of title games past. So congrats to Georgetown (1984), UNLV (1990), Duke (2001), Florida (2007) and Kentucky (2012), who all won national championships on April 2.

UNLV's title came in a 103-73 rout of Duke, and none of the other title games on April 2 were decided by fewer than eight points. The most memorable April 2 game may have been a semifinal between Houston and Louisville in 1983. The Cougars, a.k.a. Phi Slamma Jamma, beat the Cardinals 94-81 in what looked like it might be a de facto national title game ? but N.C. State stunned Houston in the final, leading to those lasting images of beloved Wolfpack coach Jim Valvano desperately searching for someone to hug.

___

WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN

Former Notre Dame great Kelly Tripucka heard someone talking about how the Indianapolis Colts almost beat the Pittsburgh Steelers in an AFC championship game, but Aaron Bailey couldn't come down with Jim Harbaugh's last-ditch heave.

Tripucka had a would've-could've-should've story of his own from the NCAA tournament.

"If we beat Michigan State in the 1979 regional finals, there would've never been Magic and Bird in college," Tripucka said.

The Spartans, though, beat the Irish 80-68 and went on to win that transcendent title game featuring future NBA superstars Magic Johnson and Indiana State's Larry Bird.

The previous year, in Tripucka's first of four NCAA tournaments, he helped Notre Dame advance to the Final Four before losing ? twice.

"It was a tough weekend for us," recalled Tripucka, an analyst for Dial Global Sports. "We lost by four to Duke, then had to play in the Final Four consolation game. And, we lost to Arkansas at the buzzer."

___

CONFERENCE SUPREMACY UPDATE

We'll provide the numbers. Now let the spin begin. The Big Ten leads all conferences with 13 wins so far in the NCAA tournament. The Big East is second with 11.

So is it better to have four teams in the round of 16 but only one in the Final Four like the Big Ten ? or would you rather be the Big East, with two teams in the Final Four but five one-and-dones?

Or maybe the real winner is the Missouri Valley conference, which sent only two teams but still has a shot at an improbable national championship.

___

STAT OF THE DAY

The folks at STATS offer the following:

Wichita State is just the fifth team seeded ninth or lower ? seeding began in 1979 ? to reach the Final Four. While those low seeds are 0-4 in national semifinals, No. 8 seeds have fared quite a bit better, with a combined record of 3-2. The three eighth-seeded teams, who share the distinction as the lowest seeds to reach the title game, were UCLA in 1980, Villanova in 1985 and Butler two years ago. Villanova is the one team from that group to win the national championship, pulling off its upset of Georgetown 28 years ago on April Fool's Day.

Can Wichita State supplant that group as the lowest-seeded team to win the tournament? Well, the only other No. 9 seed to reach the Final Four was Penn in 1979, and the Quakers lost to Michigan State 101-67. Penn still shares the Final Four record for largest margin of defeat with Oregon State, which lost to Cincinnati 80-46 in 1963.

___

QUOTE OF THE DAY

"I said to him, 'You want me to bring it back or stay with you?' He said, 'It's staying with me.' I said, 'All right, just make sure you don't lose it.'" ? Louisville coach Rick Pitino, discussing injured guard Kevin Ware's desire to keep the team's regional championship trophy. Pitino visited Ware again Monday, the day after he broke his leg in a gruesome injury against Duke.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-04-02-BracketRacket-040213/id-694ff155feab45298f59d7165d8a9796

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54 killed, 90 wounded in attack on Afghan compound

Reuters

Still image from April 3, 2013 video footage shows damage at the site of an attack by Taliban suicide bombers at a courtroom in Farah province in western Afghanistan.

By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

At least 54 people were killed and 90 others wounded Wednesday in an insurgent attack on a government compound in western Afghanistan, where Taliban fighters were facing trial, local officials said.

Nine insurgents with explosives strapped to their bodies stormed the compound in Farah province, bordering Iran, Reuters reported. Explosions were followed by protracted gun battles.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack.


Among the dead were 35 civilians, 10 members of the Afghan Security Forces and the nine suicide attackers, Mohammad? Akram? Khpalwalk, governor of Farah province, said.

More than 50 people were killed in a militant attack on a government compound in western Afghanistan. NBCNews.com's Ron Allen reports.

Most of the 90 to 95 people wounded were civilians, said Dr. Abdul Jabaar, the head of the hospital where victims were taken.

The attack was the deadliest single assault in the country since 2011.

President Hamid Karzai called the attack "genocide" against fellow Afghans and said a delegation would be sent Thursday to begin an investigation and to assist victims and their families.

"Once again, terrorists shed the blood of our innocent people who went as individuals to local institutions for their work in Farah province," Karzai said in a statement.

He pledged that the perpetrators would be accountable to the nation for the killings.

NBC News' Jamieson Lesko and Akbar Shinwari?contributed to this report.

?

This story was originally published on

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653387/s/2a4fa351/l/0Lworldnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A40C0A30C17585710A0E540Ekilled0E90A0Ewounded0Ein0Eattack0Eon0Eafghan0Ecompound0Dlite/story01.htm

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Wednesday, April 3, 2013

The Connection of Economics, Risk and Lean Development | LKNA ...

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Changing technology. Business competition. Social values. Economic conditions.

They all present a complex risk ecology for businesses and organizations. Risk management helps businesses understand these various events, situations and circumstances that may influence its resource allocation decisions.

Lean development tackles resource allocation issues as well. Lean helps create IT systems which bring the maximum amount of value for customers using the fewest scarce resources possible. By applying new lean methods of forecasting, planning and tracking, managers can make better informed decisions and promises they can keep.

At Lean Kanban North America, we will delve deeply into the connections of economics, risk and lean development. We will look at how businesses and organizations have applied the concepts of lean development, risk management and decision making. We will also discuss how to actively use them to create real value for customers in these austere financial times.

Only 25 days to go! Check out all the tracks and register now!

Source: http://lkna.leankanban.com/uncategorized/the-connection-of-economics-risk-and-lean-development

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