Friday, January 25, 2013

Boating Safety Class enrollment opens | Batavia Sports ...

Jet fuel, plastics exposures cause disease in later generations; Reproductive diseases, obesity

Jan. 24, 2013 ? Washington State University researchers have lengthened their list of environmental toxicants that can negatively affect as many as three generations of an exposed animal's offspring.

Writing in the online journal PLOS ONE, scientists led by molecular biologist Michael Skinner document reproductive disease and obesity in the descendants of rats exposed to the plasticizer bisephenol-A, or BPA, as well DEHP and DBP, plastic compounds known as phthalates.

In a separate article in the journal Reproductive Toxicology, they report the first observation of cross-generation disease from a widely used hydrocarbon mixture the military refers to as JP8.

Both studies are the first of their kind to see obesity stemming from the process of "epigenetic transgenerational inheritance." While the animals are inheriting traits conveyed by their parents' DNA sequences, they are also having epigenetic inheritance with some genes turned on and off. Skinner's lab in the past year has documented these epigenetic effects from a host of environmental toxicants, including plastics, pesticides, fungicide, dioxin and hydrocarbons.

The recent PLOS ONE study found "significant increases" in disease and abnormalities in the first and third generations of both male and female descendants of animals exposed to plastics. The first generation, whose mother had been directly exposed during gestation, had increased kidney and prostate diseases. The third generation had pubertal abnormalities, testis disease, ovarian disease and obesity.

The study also identified nearly 200 epigenetic molecular markers for exposure and transgenerational disease. The markers could lead to the development of a diagnostic tool and new therapies.

The Reproductive Toxicology study exposed female rats to the hydrocarbon mixture as their fetuses' gonads were developing. The first generation of offspring had increased kidney and prostate abnormalities and ovarian disease. The third generation had increased losses of primordial follicles, the precursors to eggs, polycystic ovarian disease and obesity.

The study, said Skinner, "provides additional support for the possibility that environmental toxicants can promote the epigenetic transgenerational inheritance of disease."

"Your great-grandmothers exposures during pregnancy may cause disease in you, while you had no exposure," he said. "This is a non-genetic form of inheritance not involving DNA sequence, but environmental impacts on DNA chemical modifications. This is the first set of studies to show the epigenetic transgenerational inheritance of disease such as obesity, which suggests ancestral exposures may be a component of the disease development."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Washington State University. The original article was written by Eric Sorensen.

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


Journal References:

  1. Mohan Manikkam, Rebecca Tracey, Carlos Guerrero-Bosagna, Michael K. Skinner. Plastics Derived Endocrine Disruptors (BPA, DEHP and DBP) Induce Epigenetic Transgenerational Inheritance of Obesity, Reproductive Disease and Sperm Epimutations. PLoS ONE, 2013; 8 (1): e55387 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0055387
  2. Carlos Guerrero-Bosagna, Trevor R. Covert, Md. M. Haque, Matthew Settles, Eric E. Nilsson, Matthew D. Anway, Michael K. Skinner. Epigenetic transgenerational inheritance of vinclozolin induced mouse adult onset disease and associated sperm epigenome biomarkers. Reproductive Toxicology, 2012; 34 (4): 694 DOI: 10.1016/j.reprotox.2012.09.005

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/top_news/top_health/~3/nhS_5chaCz8/130124183630.htm

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Sunday, January 20, 2013

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Source: http://www.rssmicro.com/rss.web?q=Mayor

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Justin Bieber 'Take You' Acoustic: Singer Posts New Video In Honor Of '6 Years Of Kidrauhl' (VIDEO)

In honor of the sixth birthday of his YouTube channel "Kidrauhl" on Friday, Justin Bieber posted a special acoustic video for his fans. The song, "Take You," will be featured on his new acoustic album set to be released on January 29th.

Bieber posted this note below the video:

It has been 6 years since i started this youtube channel and in those years you have all taken a small town kid from Canada who didnt even know dreams were possible and let me live a life that i am forever grateful for. I promise that as long as you are there for me I will always try to do better and to keep going. Thank you for the last 6 years and look for many more to come. #alwaysKidrauh

JB owes his success largely to the early popularity of his YouTube channel, which attracted the attention of his now-manager Scooter Braun in 2008 and led to a meeting with Usher Raymond that changed his life forever.

To give you an idea of just how far he's come, check out the first video Biebs posted to YouTube in 2007, below, covering the song "So Sick by Ne-yo. He's so little!

Beliebers: What do you think of his new acoustic vid? What song are you most looking forward to on the new album? Sound off in the comments below or tweet @HuffPostTeen!

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/20/justin-bieber-take-you-ac_n_2517228.html

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Best Science Books 2012: Teaching Biology, Part 3 ? Confessions ...

Another list for your reading, gift-giving and collection development pleasure.

Every year for the last bunch of years I?ve been linking to and posting about all the ?year?s best sciencey books? lists that appear in various media outlets and shining a bit of light on the best of the year.

All the previous 2012 lists are here.

This post includes the following: Top Books of 2012: History of Science, Paleontology , Zoolology.

  • Islam, Science, and the Challenge of History by Ahmad Dallal
  • Smoking Ears and Screaming Teeth: A Celebration of Scientific Eccentricity and Self-Experimentation by Trevor Norton
  • The Abacus and the Cross: The Story of the Pope Who Brought the Light of Science to the Dark Ages by
    Nancy Marie Brown
  • Science in the 20th Century and Beyond by Jon Agar
  • A History of Science in Society: From Philosophy to Utility, Second Edition by Lesley B. Cormack, Andrew Ede
  • Fear of Food: A History of Why We Worry about What We Eat by Harvey Levenstein
  • Inventing Chemistry: Herman Boerhaave and the Reform of the Chemical Arts by John C. Powers
  • War Against the Weak: Eugenics and America?s Campaign to Create a Master Race, Expanded Edition by Edwin Black
  • Pathfinders: The Golden Age of Arabic Science by Al-Khalili
  • The Secrets of Alchemy by Lawrence M. Principe
  • The Evolution of Primate Societies by John C. Mitani, Josep Call, Peter M. Kappeler and Ryne A. Palombit
  • Living in a Dangerous Climate: Climate Change and Human Evolution by Ren?e Hetherington
  • Race, Monogamy, and Other Lies They Told You: Busting Myths about Human Nature by Agustin Fuentes
  • The Complete World of Human Evolution (Second Edition) by Chris Stringer and Peter Andrews
  • Consider the Fork: A History of How We Cook and Eat by Bee Wilson
  • Human Biology: An Evolutionary and Biocultural Perspective by Sara Stinson, Barry Bogin and Dennis O?Rourke
  • Genetics of Original Sin: The Impact of Natural Selection on the Future of Humanity by Christian de Duve, Neil Patterson and Edward O. Wilson
  • Evo-Devo of Child Growth: Treatise on Child Growth and Human Evolution by Z. Hochberg
  • Origin of Our Species by Chris Stringer
  • Evolving Human Nutrition: Implications for Public Health by Stanley Ulijaszek, Neil Mann and Sarah Elton
  • The Dawn of the Deed: The Prehistoric Origins of Sex by John A. Long
  • Dinosaurs: A Concise Natural History by David E. Fastovsky and David B. Weishampel
  • Embryos in Deep Time: The Rock Record of Biological Development by Marcelo R. S?nchez
  • Rereading the Fossil Record: The Growth of Paleobiology as an Evolutionary Discipline by David Sepkoski
  • Piltdown Man and Other Hoaxes: A book about Lies, Legends, and the Search for the Missing Link by Jonathan Maxwell
  • Return to the Sea: The Life and Evolutionary Times of Marine Mammals by Annalisa Berta, James L. Sumich and Carl Buell
  • African Genesis: Perspectives on Hominin Revolution by Dr Sally C. Reynolds and Andrew Gallagher
  • A World of Insects: The Harvard University Press Reader by Ring T. Card?, Vincent H. Resh, Bert H?lldobler and Edward O. Wilson
  • Animal Architects: Building and the Evolution of Intelligence by James L. Gould and Carol Grant Gould
  • Animal Eyes by Michael F. Land and Dan-Eric Nilsson
  • Horseshoe Crabs and Velvet Worms: The Story of the Animals and Plants That Time Has Left Behind by Richard Fortey
  • Learning From the Octopus: How Secrets from Nature Can Help Us Fight Terrorist Attacks, Natural Disasters, and Disease by Rafe Sagarin
  • How Not to Be Eaten: The Insects Fight Back by Dr. Gilbert Waldbauer and James Nardi
  • Walking Sideways: The Remarkable World of Crabs by Judith S. Weis

I?m always looking for recommendations and notifications of book lists as they appear in various media outlets. If you see one that I haven?t covered, please let me know at jdupuis at yorku dot ca or in the comments.

I am picking up most of my lists from Largehearted Boy.

For my purposes, I define science books pretty broadly to include science, engineering, computing, history & philosophy of science & technology, environment, social aspects of science and even business books about technology trends or technology innovation. Deciding what is and isn?t a science book is squishy at best, especially at the margins, but in the end I pick books that seem broadly about science and technology rather than something else completely. Lists of business, history or nature books are among the tricky ones.

And if you wish to support my humble list-making efforts, run on over to Amazon, take a look at Steve Jobs or The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks or maybe even something else from today?s list.

(I think this is the last one so I?ll give it a day or two and then call it closed for purposes of the summary post. I?m hoping to have that by the end of the month.)

Source: http://scienceblogs.com/confessions/2013/01/19/best-science-books-2012-teaching-biology-part-3/

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Obama backers aim to outflank NRA on gun control

FILE - This Jan. 16, 2013 file photo shows President Barack Obama, accompanied by Vice President Joe Biden, gesturing as he talks about proposals to reduce gun violence, in the South Court Auditorium at the White House in Washington. Supporters of President Barack Obama's gun control plans are plotting a methodical, state-by-state campaign to try to persuade key lawmakers that it's in their political interest to back new restrictions. To do that, they have to overcome two decades of conventional wisdom that gun control is bad politics _ and the National Rifle Association is confident its supporters will prevail. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster, File)

FILE - This Jan. 16, 2013 file photo shows President Barack Obama, accompanied by Vice President Joe Biden, gesturing as he talks about proposals to reduce gun violence, in the South Court Auditorium at the White House in Washington. Supporters of President Barack Obama's gun control plans are plotting a methodical, state-by-state campaign to try to persuade key lawmakers that it's in their political interest to back new restrictions. To do that, they have to overcome two decades of conventional wisdom that gun control is bad politics _ and the National Rifle Association is confident its supporters will prevail. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Supporters of President Barack Obama's gun-control proposals are planning a methodical, state-by-state campaign to try to persuade key lawmakers that it's in their political interest to back his sweeping effort to crack down on firearms and ammunition sales and expand criminal background checks.

To succeed will require overturning two decades of conventional wisdom that gun control is bad politics.

The National Rifle Association is confident that argument won't sell. But with polls showing majorities supporting new gun laws a month after the Connecticut shooting deaths of 20 schoolchildren and six adults, gun-control activists say the political calculus has changed. Their goal in coming weeks is to convince lawmakers of that, too, and to counter the NRA's proven ability to mobilize voters against any proposals limiting access to guns.

The gun-control advocates are focused first on the Senate, which is expected to act before the House on Obama's gun proposals. How Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., proceeds will depend in part on what he hears from a handful of Democrats in more conservative states where voters favor gun rights. These include some who are eyeing re-election fights in 2014, such as Mark Pryor of Arkansas, Mark Begich of Alaska and Max Baucus of Montana.

"We need to tell our members of Congress that they've got to stand up for sensible gun laws, and if they do that, we will stand up for them, and if they don't we will stand up for whoever runs against them," New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg told the U.S. Conference of Mayors Friday. "Because that's exactly what the NRA is trying to do."

Bloomberg's group, Mayors Against Illegal Guns, is among a coalition of some 50 labor unions, advocacy groups and others that have been meeting since before Christmas to plot strategy, in loose coordination with the White House, according to people involved.

Just hours after Obama rolled out his gun proposals on Wednesday, the group gathered at the headquarters of the National Education Association to game out their plans. As of Friday, voters' calls to Reid's office were running two-to-one against Obama's proposals, a Reid aide said.

Never far from such Democrats' minds is what happened in 1994, when the party suffered widespread election losses after backing President Bill Clinton's crime bill featuring a ban on assault weapons. Clinton and others credited the NRA's campaigning with a big role in those Democrats' defeats. And when the assault weapons ban came up for congressional renewal in 2004, it failed.

The goal of gun-control supporters will be to convince Democrats like Pryor, Begich and Baucus through phone calls, appearances at town hall meetings, print and TV ads and other means that voters in their state will support them if they back Obama's plans.

One group involved, the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence, ran print ads in North Dakota newspapers criticizing newly elected Democratic Sen. Heidi Heitkamp after she expressed doubts about Obama's proposals.

Activists have also identified a few Senate Republicans they hope to sway, including Mark Kirk of Illinois and Susan Collins of Maine. In the House, they're focused on 35 to 40 Republicans in suburban areas or districts carried by Obama, where voters might be more supportive of gun-control measures.

"We have a million grass-roots supporters who have sent almost 200,000 emails to Congress, tens of thousands of phone calls and are ready to go to town hall meetings and camp out if they have to," said Mark Glaze, director of the mayors group. He said of lawmakers: "In the end I'm confident that enough of them will look past the NRA's $2,000 contribution and do what the public is demanding."

But the NRA, which claims some 4 million members, has already activated its base, issuing a fiery appeal this week in which Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre warned backers: "It's about banning your guns, PERIOD! ... I warned you this day was coming and now it's here. This is the fight of the century."

As publicity spreads about Obama's proposals the NRA has been adding about 8,000 members a day, according to the group's president, David Keene. The NRA grades lawmakers on votes and has had apparent success in swaying congressional debates for years.

"We support the folks who've helped us in the past, and we remind them that we're also interested in what they do today and tomorrow," Keene said. "I'm convinced that once this thing gets debated the folks who've been with us in the past are probably going to be with us in the future."

Obama's call for an assault weapons ban is a particularly heavy lift, but backers are more optimistic about increased background checks, which were favored by 84 percent in an Associated Press-GfK poll this week.

Supporters hope those kinds of poll numbers will help move lawmakers to buck history and the NRA and vote in favor of gun-control bills.

"We definitely have our work cut out for us. The math's not with us right now in terms of the votes," said Andy Pelosi, president of Gun Free Kids. "It's going to be difficult, but I am optimistic. I think the tone in the country is much, much different, and you can't underestimate that."

___

Associated Press writer Ken Thomas contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-01-18-Gun%20Control/id-3e90ce4052344137a98bbd31f5d97489

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Climate events drive a high-arctic vertebrate community into synchrony

Friday, January 18, 2013

Climate change is known to affect the population dynamics of single species, such as reindeer or caribou, but the effect of climate at the community level has been much more difficult to document. Now, a group of Norwegian scientists has found that extreme climate events cause synchronized population fluctuations among all vertebrate species in a relatively simple high arctic community. These findings may be a bellwether of the radical changes in ecosystem stability that could result from anticipated future increases in extreme events. The findings are published in the 18 January issue of Science.

The Norwegian scientists, with lead authors from the Centre for Conservation Biology at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), wanted to know how climate and weather events influenced an overwintering vertebrate community on the high arctic island of Spitsbergen, Svalbard, at 78 degrees N latitude.

They chose this simple ecosystem because it is composed of just three herbivores in the winter -- the wild Svalbard reindeer (Rangifer tarandus platyrhynchus), the Svalbard rock ptarmigan (Lagopus muta hyperborea), and the sibling vole (Microtus levis), and one shared consumer, the arctic fox (Vulpes lagopus).

The community's population fluctuations were mainly driven by rain-on-snow events, the researchers found. Rain-on-snow is an extreme climatic occurrence that causes icing on the deep-frozen arctic tundra. The ice keeps reindeer from grazing on their winter pastures and also reduces food accessibility for the rock ptarmigan and sibling vole populations, causing extensive simultaneous population crashes in all three species in the winter and spring after the extreme weather.

However, the arctic fox, which mainly relies on reindeer carcasses as its terrestrial winter food source, didn't see a decline in its population size until a year after the herbivore die-offs. Even though the synchronized die-offs decrease the number of live prey available for foxes to eat, the high number of reindeer carcasses generates an abundance of food for foxes during icy winters and the subsequent spring and summer. This leads to high fox reproduction.

But almost no reindeer carcasses will be available during the following winter, mainly because those reindeer that survived the previous winter are more robust and also subject to reduced competition for food resources. At the same time, none of the other herbivores is able to recover in the summer after the icing. The net result is low fox reproduction and a strong reduction in the arctic fox population size one year after the herbivore die-offs.

"We have known for a long time that climate can synchronize populations of the same species, but these findings suggest that climate and particularly extreme weather events may also synchronize entire communities of species," says lead author Brage Bremset Hansen, from NTNU's Centre for Conservation Biology. "Svalbard's relatively simple ecosystem, which lacks specialist predators, combined with large weather fluctuations from year to year and strong climate signals in the population dynamics of herbivores, are the likely explanations for how such clear climate effects can be observed at the ecosystem level."

In other, more complex systems, he says, community-level effects of climate can be present but are likely masked by other factors that tend to obscure the synchronizing effects of climate, which thus complicates the picture.

Extreme rain-on-snow events are rare in most of the Arctic compared with Svalbard, where the climate is oceanic and mild for the latitude. However, because the frequency of such rain-on-snow events leading to icing is closely linked to a rapidly warming arctic climate, the authors warn that changes in winter climate and extreme events may have important implications for ecosystem functioning and stability in the circumpolar Arctic in the future.

"Previous studies have shown that rain-on-snow and icing can also cause vegetation damage and reduce survival of soil microbiota," says Hansen. "But more importantly, we suspect that the strong effects of icing on the overwintering vertebrate community have the potential to indirectly influence other species and cascade throughout the food web. The die-offs among resident herbivores shape predator abundance, which could in turn affect the migratory prey that reside in the area in the summer, such as sea birds and barnacle geese."

###

Norwegian University of Science and Technology: http://www.ntnu.edu

Thanks to Norwegian University of Science and Technology for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 57 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/126355/Climate_events_drive_a_high_arctic_vertebrate_community_into_synchrony

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Saturday, January 19, 2013

Online Takes Over the World of Retail | OnTop Media Blog

The future of the high street is a bleak one. While a dystopian depiction of the desolate remains of a once bustling hive of activity, ruefully scattered with mournful shoppers carrying sandwich boards emblazoned with apocalyptic statements exclaiming that ?The end is nigh? is, admittedly, a little on the dramatic side, it?s safe to say that the internet has irreversibly changed the world of retail.

But is this dreary prediction (minus the proclamations of impending doom) all that unbelievable? A number of once popular chains have already collapsed in a year that is still in its infancy, leaving yet more gaping holes in the already beleaguered high street. Can physical stores escape from the shadow cast by the looming cloud of the internet? Probably not. Thousands of shops face closure in the coming years as online shopping surges in popularity, blurring the lines between physical and virtual in a move that has long been forecast.

In order to avoid The Death of The High Street, retailers need to embrace change rather than try to fight against it. As technology evolves, shops must adapt to make it work in their favour in order to meet the changing demands of the consumer; while the internet may represent a challenge to offline retailers, it also brings with it the opportunity for growth and expansion.

So how can bricks and mortar stores make the most of the internet? Providing customers with in-store features that enhance their shopping experience is a great way of encouraging customers onto the high street. Many shops are now offering free Wi-Fi to customers, allowing them to use their smartphones whilst in the shop to check prices and read reviews about potential purchases. Stores that are managing to keep up with technology already have smartphone apps or mobile sites which enable customers to order products while on the move, while some department stores provide a ?click and collect? service where shoppers order online and then pick their items up from a store.

But ? and this is a big ?but? ? there?s little chance of physical shops regaining the glory days they enjoyed pre-internet. Like your Nan would tell you, ?things aren?t what they used to be?, and while we?re not quite at the tumbleweed stage of high street desertion just yet, the numbers are certainly dwindling. Online sales are predicted to reach ?43bn by 2015, and on the back of the most successful Christmas period that e-commerce has ever experienced, it?s looking increasingly likely that this forecast will be exceeded. The demand for physical stores is decreasing steadily as consumers become savvier to the bargains that are available online, and, as the recent victims prove, businesses that don?t successfully bridge the gap between online and physical retail become prey to the predators of the web.

Any business that is not selling online needs to ask itself why not. Whichever way you look at it, the internet has changed the way we think about shopping ? the effect of this being that it has become a much more technology-based process. A survey by Econsultancy revealed that nearly a quarter (24%) of UK consumers used a mobile device to carry out their Christmas shopping in 2012, with 11% using a smartphone and 13% a tablet. The numbers will continue to grow as the internet becomes more accessible and devices get smarter, making shopping an increasingly more out-of-store experience.

Whether you run a retail business from a physical shop location or trade solely online, your focus for 2013 should be on creating a stable internet presence from which you can successfully sell products and build your brand. Digital is now a major part of the shopping process, and it is vital to the success of any retailer that they implement an online strategy. We provide some of the most extensive e-commerce packages around, so if you?re thinking of selling online or would like a brand new website for 2013, get in touch to see how we can help. Heed our warning: online is the future.

Discover the wonderful world of e-commerce here:?www.ontopecommerce.co.uk

Source: http://www.ontop.co.uk/blog/ecommerce/online-takes-over-the-world-of-retail/

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Chicago Teachers' Pension to dump gun investments

CHICAGO (AP) -- The Chicago Teachers' Pension Fund board has voted to liquidate its investments in gun manufacturers.

The fund's $9.5 billion portfolio includes about $146,000 invested in Sturm Ruger & Co. and Smith & Wesson Holding Corp.

Board members approved a resolution Thursday that says they are sensitive to "significant reputational, regulatory, and statutory risks" that may diminish shareholder value in companies that produce assault weapons. They say they are obligated to minimize the risk of investment losses.

The decision comes in the wake of last year's school shooting in Connecticut and as Democrats - including President Barack Obama and Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel - push for stronger gun control measures.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chicago-teachers-pension-dump-gun-152527352.html

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Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Baidu Invests in Kingsoft, Moves Into Web Security, Qihoo's CEO ...

If anyone had any doubt there was bad blood between Baidu (NASDAQ:BIDU) and Qihoo 360, here?s some more evidence to convince you: after its recent move into security software in Southeast Asia, Baidu is looking to take on Qihoo 360 on its home turf with an investment in Qihoo security rival Kingsoft. According to some reports, Tencent is even involved in the deal, which will see the companies partnering up to launch a security suite that will compete directly with Qihoo?s line of products.

Qihoo CEO Zhou Hongyi is, unsurprisingly, not particularly happy about this. In an interview with Sina Tech, he said of the Baidu-Kingsoft partnership:

We wish that Baidu would compete with Qihoo directly. Two big monopolies joining hands to create a pawn in order to monopolize [the security market], all in the name of breaking [Qihoo's] monopoly?that?s the biggest joke on the Chinese internet.

It?s understandable that Zhou would be upset. Qihoo stock (NASDAQ:QIHU) dropped six points on the news of the Baidu-Kingsoft investment, and it has recovered only slightly since then. But Zhou may yet get a shot at revenge; rumor has it that Qihoo is working on a potential partnership with Google. And so the war rages on?

[via Sina Tech]

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About C. Custer

C. Custer is the founder and editor of ChinaGeeks.org. He also is a documentary filmmaker, and a freelance writer, reporter, translator, and video producer on all things China. You can follow him on Twitter as @ChinaGeeks

Source: http://www.techinasia.com/baidu-invests-kingsoft-moves-web-security-qihoos-ceo-calls-big-joke/

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Rodio: meddle fred: TODDLER DANCE | Branford Sports & Recreation

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Source: http://meddle-fred.blogspot.com/2013/01/toddler-dance-branford-sports.html

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Source: http://ceryvutete.posterous.com/meddle-fred-toddler-dance-branford-sports-rec

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Source: http://ethancampbelll.blogspot.com/2013/01/meddle-fred-toddler-dance-branford.html

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Source: http://fourteen-furn.blogspot.com/2013/01/rodio-meddle-fred-toddler-dance.html

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Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Best Dressed Of The Week ? Ryan Gosling In Gucci & Kerry Washington In Giles

BDOTW

This week we agreed that Ryan Gosling and Kerry Washington were the best dressed.

Ryan for making us fall in love with a brown suit, and for taking his mum to the premiere as his plus one.

And Kerry for her artful Giles unique dress and impeccable styling.

Credit: Getty

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RedCarpetFashionAwards/~3/Wvb2mCO77W4/

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Saturday, January 12, 2013

The Boy Who Cried Facebook Phone

GollumSS8In The Lord of the Rings, when Sauron?s forces capture Gollum, they torture him in Mordor but are only able to get two things out of him: ?Shire? and ?Baggins?. Over the past few days, we?ve had similar frustrations in trying to track down the content of the Facebook event taking place this coming Tuesday. Despite hounding a number of people who might be in the know, the only discernible things we were able to come up with was: ?big deal? and ?mobile?. Interesting, but way too vague. But we endured. And now we have a bit more information. And that information points to a Facebook Phone ...of some sort.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/g-JwNZhmXrk/

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DWP will allow customers to sell back excess solar energy

Los Angeles Department of Water and Power customers for the first time will be able to sell back excess solar energy created on rooftops and parking lots under a new program approved Friday by the city utility's board of commissioners.

Described as the largest urban rooftop solar program of its kind in the nation, the so-called feed-in-tariff program would pay customers 17 cents per kilowatt hour for energy produced on their own equipment. The DWP has already accepted more than a dozen applicants and will be taking dozens more as it accepts contracts for up to 100 megawatts of solar power through 2016.

Environmentalists, business supporters and solar vendors were thrilled by the vote. Feed-in-tariff programs help generate jobs and economic activity while decreasing greenhouse gas emissions, they say.

"Today's vote is a major step forward for the economic and environmental sustainability of Los Angeles," said Mary Leslie, President of the Los Angeles Business Council, a group advocating the Clean LA Solar program since 2009.

Fred Pickel, the city's ratepayer advocate, told commissioners that 17 cents per kilowatt hour was above market rates and could force significant rate increases on DWP customers. Higher DWP bills could drive jobs away, Pickel told the board.

But the board unanimously decided to move ahead, and to reassess the program at regular intervals.

In March, the commission will decide whether to add an additional 50 megawatts of energy to the buyback program. The full 150-megawatt program would create enough solar energy to power 34,000 Los Angeles homes, advocates say.

Once qualified, DWP customers with large multi-family dwellings, warehouses, school facilities and parking lots can sell solar energy at 17 cents per kilowatt hour. The DWP is offering a tiered-pricing schedule that drops to 13 cents per kilowatt hour as energy contracts are reserved, DWP officials said.

Single-family homes generally don't produce enough energy to qualify.

Some of the contracts will be set aside for smaller solar producers to give them a better chance at winning slots, officials said. Customers participating in other solar-incentive initiatives, such as net-metering, do not qualify for the buyback contracts, DWP officials said.

Environmental groups have long pushed for a feed-in-tariff, arguing that it would spur more commercial property owners to go solar. Sacramento and San Diego have their own versions, and Florida is experimenting with buybacks.

Evan Gillespie, campaign representative for the Sierra Club's Beyond Coal Campaign, said the vote will allow the DWP to curtail its dependence on out-of-state energy generators. In addition, it promises 4,500 jobs and $500,000 in new economic activity for the city, he said.

"In the 21st century, it is simply unacceptable for 40% of L.A.'s energy to come from aging out-of-state polluting coal-fired power plants,'' Gillespie said.

After the vote, Toronto-based Solar Provider Group announced that it would expand its operations in Los Angeles by opening an office and hiring 30 people. The company plans to invest up to $50 million by the end of 2016, said President Christian Wentzel.

"This program provides us with the stability we need to enter the U.S. solar market,'' he said.

DWP staffers recommended a 17-cents-per-kilowatt-hour rate as a starting point to reflect the relatively higher cost of buying solar energy compared to other commodities. The cost of getting the program up and running will raise the average residential monthly electric bill by about 4 cents, according to a staff report.

The DWP will hire an administrator and about 30 other people to operate the program, but most of those costs will be reimbursed by program participants, the report said.

Expanding local solar power is a key strategy for the DWP to meet the state-mandated renewable energy level of 33% by 2020.

catherine.saillant@latimes.com

Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/science/la-me-solar-rooftop-20130112,0,2750277.story?track=rss

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NCAA Mens Basketball: Portland State 87 vs Sacramento St 69

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    John Dickson #32 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    John Dickson #32 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Aaron Moore #21 & Mikh McKinney #10 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Mikh McKinney #10 & Michael Harthun #4 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Konner Veteto #41 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Julian Demalleville #11 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Konner Veteto #41 & Renado Parker #30 (NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Joey Quigley #4 & Michael Harvey #13 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    John Dickson #32 & Aaron Moore #21 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    John Dickson #32 & Aaron Moore #21 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    John Dickson #32 & Aaron Moore #21 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    John Dickson #32 & Aaron Moore #21 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Dylan Garrity #5 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Konner Veteto #41 & Brandon Cataldo #44 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Dylan Garrity #5 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Cody Demps #2 & Dre Winston #3 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Konner Veteto #41 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Cody Demps #2 & Dre Winston #3 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Lateef McMullan #1 & Dylan Garrity #5 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Aaron Moore #21 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Aaron Moore #21 & John Dickson #32 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Aaron Moore #21 & John Dickson #32 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Aaron Moore #21 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Gary Winston #14 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Lateef McMullan #1 & John Dickson #32 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Renado Parker #30 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Aaron Moore #21 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Lateef McMullan #1 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Michael Harthun #4 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Martin Whitmore #23 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Renado Parker #30 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Gary Winston #14 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Dre Winston #3 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Renado Parker #30 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Aaron Moore #21 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Michael Harthun #4 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Brandon Cataldo #44 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Dre Winston #3 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Alyx Foster #12 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

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    Alyx Foster #12 ( NCAA Mens Basketball, Portland St 87 vs Sacramento St 69, Stott Center, Portland, OR Jan 10, 2013 )

  • Source: http://www.sportspagemagazine.com/content/bb/mc-bb/gal-mc-bb/ncaa-mens-basketball-portland-state-87-vs-sacramen.shtml?55442

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    Thursday, January 10, 2013

    They said the London Underground would never work

    Roads were sliced open; tenements were flattened; the River Fleet was held in check. One commentator noted that it was like operating on a human body, for below London lay ?the veins and arteries? of pipes. The driving visionary was Charles Pearson, solicitor to the City of London and sometime radical MP for Lambeth. In the 1850s, seeing how London?s streets were also being jammed with railway passengers arriving from all over the country, he campaigned for a line between Paddington and the City. In 1854, the idea finally got parliamentary assent. Pearson died in 1862, one year before his dream was thrown open to the public on January 9 1863. By the end of the first year of operation, there were nine million passengers.

    It took a while, but other British cities followed. Liverpool got a series of underground stations linked to the surface lines, with a tunnel beneath the Mersey, in 1886; those tunnels are now part of the modern Merseyrail system. In Hungary in 1896, Budapest opened its own underground network. In the same year, Glasgow swiftly followed with a circular tunnel system that swooped under the Clyde twice. As a child in the Seventies visiting Scottish relatives, I recall the unmodernised, ancient-seeming island platforms, and the little trains painted bright red. The later, more modern trains were tangerine, and the Glasgow loop system became known as the ?Clockwork Orange?.

    The Paris M?tro started taking passengers in 1901 and swiftly expanded, its map swirling madly in all directions, the history and soul of the nation marked down in those romantic station names, from Austerlitz (named after the battle) to Alexandre Dumas (one of several authors thus commemorated). In Russia, the grandiose proportions and over-decorated chintzy chandeliers of the Moscow metro were first built in the Thirties, at the height of Stalin?s genocidal rule. These glitzy stations were said to be intended as ?palaces for the people?.

    Back in London, and after the pioneering sub-surface lines built beneath the roads, there came the Tubes ? the first deep line was the City and South London (now the Northern Line), opened in 1890, with electric locomotives. These tunnels, sometimes hundreds of feet beneath the surface, remain unique. As a Victorian commentator cheerfully noted, it was now possible for people to travel ?below the level of graveyards?. Tube publicity always sought to veer away from such morbid notions: one Twenties poster carried a beautiful painting of a glowing Tube station entrance on a dark wet night. The tagline was: ?Where it is warm and bright.?

    To this day, an underground railway is a city?s badge of status, and every system has its own distinct atmosphere. Washington DC, for instance, has a sober, cool, refined network with wide, airy passages and well-lit platforms. Toronto is similarly calm and reserved ? even, dare it be said, a trifle flavourless. But some undergrounds will always inspire anxiety. New York?s aggressively utilitarian subway ? no fancy station names, and dim stations barely decorated in any way ? has spawned urban legends of homeless people forming communities in disused tunnels. These tales can also be found in Paris and London; there are even stories of children born underground, growing up albino and speaking in guttural tongues.

    Not that long ago, the Paris M?tro was held up as an example of elegance and sophisticated efficiency. Now it is grubby and dangerous and can feel sinister. In his highbrow thriller Foucault?s Pendulum, Umberto Eco speculated that the M?tro was built according to a Knights Templar design, the weaving tunnels actually forming a map to a deeper, darker secret to do with untapped mystical forces.

    On the other hand, London?s Tube ? formerly decaying, peeling, raucous and filthy ? seems to have found new, more beautiful, sometimes exquisite life in recent years. There is the restored Victorian splendour of the Circle Line ? fantasias of pale yellow brickwork and green-painted wrought iron. There is the dripping gothic thrill of Marc and Isambard Kingdom Brunel?s twin tunnels under the river at Wapping. Gants Hill, in the east, is a sly Forties austerity satire on Moscow?s absurd grandeur. Uxbridge is a fascinating Thirties experiment in brutalist concrete ? as well as being immortalised in Radio 4?s I?m Sorry I Haven?t a Clue?s Uxbridge English Dictionary. Clue fans might also want to visit the show?s ultimate shrine: Mornington Crescent, south of Camden Town, once the hangout of scary drunks and addicts, but now a charmingly restored example of the finest Edwardiana.

    Meanwhile, modern Canary Wharf has the breathtaking operatic scale of a Bond villain?s lair. Perhaps thus inspired, the most recent 007 adventure Skyfall featured the villain using the Tube system as a means to try to kill Bond. It could have been worse. In the 1967 Hammer film Quatermass and the Pit, a new Tube extension to ?Hobb?s Lane? uncovers a long-buried spaceship and ancient visions of the Devil himself.

    And naturally there are plenty of ghost stories even today: the baleful presence felt by drivers in the darkness on the Kennington loop; the spectre on the stairs at Russell Square. There is even said to be a glowing-eyed vampire lurking in a disused tunnel near Whitechapel ? this notion thanks to the poet/novelist Iain Sinclair.

    In real life, that faintly pleasurable unease will never quite go away. When you stand at the end of the platform and stare into the fathomless darkness of the Tube tunnel, waiting to feel the stale air of an oncoming train, there is always a slight sense of the macabre. Of all the ways to travel, there is something counter-intuitive about plunging into the depths. But the fascination and the allure is enduring, too. Why else should crowds of children spend hours in the London Transport Museum, poring over those first ever Harry Beck-designed Tube maps from the Thirties, or gawping at the original Victorian windowless Tube carriages, dubbed ?padded cells?? And what visitor to the capital has not laughingly intoned, in fruity received pronunciation, the instruction: ?Mind the Gap?? The underground has a way of getting under everyone?s skin.

    For details of the London Underground?s 150th anniversary celebrations, visit www.ltmuseum.co.uk/whats-on/tube150

    Source: http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/579330/s/275f44bc/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Cnews0Cuknews0Croad0Eand0Erail0Etransport0C9790A9180CThey0Esaid0Ethe0ELondon0EUnderground0Ewould0Enever0Ework0Bhtml/story01.htm

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    Preacher alarms many in Egypt with calls for Islamist vice police

    CAIRO (Reuters) - Many Egyptian viewers were horrified when preacher Hisham el-Ashry recently popped up on primetime television to say women must cover up for their own protection and advocated the introduction of religious police.

    That an obscure preacher could get publicity for such views was seen as another example of the confused political scene in Egypt since the revolt that toppled Hosni Mubarak gave birth to a cacophony of feuding voices.

    "I was once asked: If I came to power, would I let Christian women remain unveiled? And I said: If they want to get raped on the streets, then they can," Ashry told Nahar TV last week.

    Introducing a Saudi-style anti-vice police force to enforce Islamic law was "not a bad thing", he said, and added: "In order for Egypt to become fully Islamic, alcohol must be banned and all women must be covered."

    Few take Ashry, who admits he flew to the United States dreaming of a Western lifestyle and romance but instead found truth in preaching, seriously. But his views have stirred emotions.

    With the economic downturn and rising food prices putting pressure on the government, moderate Muslims, Christians and others worry their new-found political freedom is at risk of being exploited by hard-line Islamists bent on imposing their values on a society that has been traditionally moderate.

    Watching a recent television interview in which Ashry expounded his ideas on women and sharia law, members of one family jumped to their feet in outrage.

    "Look at this crazy man! Where do you think we live! In a jungle? Or are all men like you, animals, unable to control their instincts?" Mona Ahmed, 65, shouted at the television screen in her living room.

    "If I see him annoying any unveiled woman on the street I would punch him in the face. Wake up, man, this is Egypt, not Saudi Arabia," she yelled as her children tried to console her.

    Ahmed, like many women in Egypt, has chosen on her own to cover her hair with the Islamic headscarf.

    Egypt's top Islamic institutions, such as al-Azhar, the highest authority in Sunni Islam, and Dar al Ifta, the central authority for issuing religious rulings, have long said religious practices should not be imposed on people.

    "IDIOTIC THINKING"

    Egypt's Grand Mufti, the country's most senior Islamic legal official, has dismissed the self-styled preacher's views.

    "This sort of idiotic thinking is one that seeks to further destabilize what is already a tense situation," Grand Mufti Ali Gomaa said in a statement to Reuters.

    "Egypt's religious scholars have long guided the people to act in ways that conform to their religious commitments, but have never thought this required any type of invasive policing."

    The Muslim Brotherhood of President Mohamed Mursi, who was brought to power in an election last year, has also distanced itself, if somewhat cryptically.

    "The case of promotion of virtue and prevention of vice is within the jurisdiction of the authorities and not individuals or groups," said Brotherhood spokesman Mahmoud Ghozlan. "It is not anyone's right to intervene."

    Mursi has pledged not to impose Islamic codes of behavior and to protect adherents of all religions equally. But he has also enacted a new constitution that has more Islamic references than its predecessor and that critics say fails to protect freedoms and the rights of Christians and other minorities.

    Activists say although Mursi's camp is not keen on religious austerity, stronger condemnation is required at this sensitive time.

    "As long as such actions are not seriously condemned by the officials in public speeches, it leaves room for radicals to freely act and impose things on people," said human rights activist Gamal Eid.

    The image of Egypt's bearded leadership flanked by their fully veiled wives sends a powerful psychological message that may belie their official words, they say.

    "Islamist officials need to take a clearer stand on their views about rights and freedoms and act strictly if those rights and freedoms were threatened."

    CONVERTING CHRISTIANS

    Ashry left Egypt for New York in the 1990s, when the country was still firmly under Mubarak's rule, in search of a better life.

    "I went there with a dream to get a blonde girl and a big car," he said in one of his televised interviews. "(But) I was advised on the plane to cherish my religion and not get taken by the USA or risk being spoiled and losing my faith."

    His religious convictions grew stronger over the next 15 years in the United States, he said.

    "I had, thanks to God, guided many Christians to Islam. I can't tell how many as I stopped counting when their number exceeded 100," he said.

    It was when he was working at a men's clothing factory in New York that he became convinced that Egypt needed a Saudi-style anti-vice force.

    "(My goal was) to make all Egyptians love it," he said.

    A few find him inspiring.

    "He advocates what I believe is right," said Ahmed Mahmoud, 18, in Cairo. "It is about time to enforce God's law in order to be rescued from all the corruption we live in."

    Ashry is just one conservative influence among many. In the six months since Mursi came to power, preachers and vigilante groups have been flexing their muscles on the streets.

    In July, a young man holding hands with his fianc? was stabbed to death in Suez, and in October, a face-veiled teacher cut the hair of two 12-year-old girls who were not wearing scarves. Just last month, an Islamist group in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula threatened to launch a campaign against cigarette smoking and drug use in the lawless desert region.

    Radical Salafi figures called for Muslims not to greet Christians at Christmas, celebrated by Egypt's Copts on January 7. Christians make up about 10 percent of Egypt's 84 million population, which is majority Sunni-Muslim.

    "Such comments scare us to death of course," said Christian activist Peter el-Naggar.

    "But we don't think such people are right or will have any strong grassroots support. Egypt has always been home to moderate and tolerant Islam. By God's will it will remain so."

    Those who rely on the tourism industry in Cairo and at the luxury beaches of the Red Sea are defiant and anxious at the same time.

    "Only we can control ourselves," said taxi driver Waleed Mahmoud, 36. "No human being can force another to pray or beat them to pray. It doesn't work."

    (Editing by Maria Golovnina and Sonya Hepinstall)

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/preacher-alarms-many-egypt-calls-islamist-vice-police-140724660.html

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    Wednesday, January 9, 2013

    iWatchLife with Samsung SmartCam monitoring system hands-on (video)

    Today we got a first look at iWatchLife's just-announced partnership with Samsung Techwin. The new service pairs the Samsung SmartCam SNH-1011 with iWatchLife's cloud-based server to provide all the home-monitoring data your paranoid heart requires. Sure, motion-detection systems are nothing new, but the distinction here is that you can record intelligently; just specify the areas you'd like to watch, and iWatchLife software will report back when activity happens in these -- and only these -- places. The company notes that this saves bandwidth, but it also means you won't be hunting through hours of infrared footage looking for possible intruders on your front lawn.

    Setup is straightforward: connect the camera(s) to your network, set up the shooters in your places of interest -- and then monitor all activity on your WiFi-enabled devices. iWatchLife's cloud-based server displays all your cameras, and other users can grant you access to their cams. The SmartCam itself is $150, while the online service costs $5 per month for each user account. Take a look at the setup in our hands-on video and gallery below.

    Continue reading iWatchLife with Samsung SmartCam monitoring system hands-on (video)

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    Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/08/iwatchlife-samsung-smartcam-monitoring-hands-on/

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