Thursday, February 28, 2013

Millionaire to send married couple past Mars

Animations from the Inspiration Mars Foundation trace the trajectory for a 501-day round trip to Mars.

By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

Millionaire space tourist Dennis Tito's plan to send two astronauts on a 501-day flight that zooms past Mars and swings back to Earth?would set plenty of precedents on the final frontier?? but the most intriguing precedent might have to do with the astronauts that are to be sent: one man and one woman, preferably a married couple beyond childbearing years. We're talking about sex in space, folks.

And if that's not intriguing enough, consider this: There are already a couple of candidates for the job.

"We'll certainly throw our hat in the ring," said Taber MacCallum, who's a member of the development team for the 2018 mission that Tito has in mind.


MacCallum and his wife, Jane Poynter, were crew members together in Biosphere 2, the controversial two-year-long experiment in long-term environmental containment. They went on to become co-founders of Paragon Space Development Corp., a company specializing in life-support systems for spacecraft. Their expertise in life support is why they're involved in Tito's "Mission for America," which was officially unveiled on Wednesday at the National Press Club in Washington. But it just so happens that they also fit the profile for the trip: Poynter is about 50, and MacCallum will turn 49 on July 20, the anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing.

The couple won't be the only candidates in the running. "When we tell people we're proposing to send a man and a woman on a mission to Mars, as a married couple, people line up. ... That chord gets struck over and over again," MacCallum said.

MacCallum explained that Tito wants the crew on humanity's first trip to Mars to be representative of humanity, and because the current concept for the trip calls for two spacefliers, that means a man and a woman. A married couple would be ideal, MacCallum said, because of the "whole issue of companionship." MacCallum didn't refer specifically to sex, but that would presumably be part of the companionship package.

"When you're out that far, and the Earth is a tiny, blue pinpoint, you're going to need someone you can hug," Tito told Space.com. During Wednesday's briefing, Tito told reporters that he envisioned Dr. Phil giving the couple "marital advice" during the trip.

Paragon

Taber MacCallum and his wife, Jane Poynter, are part of the planning team for a mission to Mars in 2018. They're also potential candidates to take the trip.

In addition to their experience with life-support systems (and with each other), MacCallum and Poynter can draw upon their experience with life in isolation during the Biosphere 2 experiment in Arizona, which lasted from 1991 to 1993. The isolation inside a two-room spacecraft for 501 days will be even deeper. Even though the Biosphere 2 crew was separated from the outside world, "we could walk out at any time," MacCallum pointed out.

That's not the only challenge: Even with radiation shielding in place, the round trip to Mars is likely to involve exposure levels higher than NASA's limits, MacCallum said. (That's why the astronauts should be beyond their childbearing years and willing to accept an increased risk of cancer.)

Then there's the exposure to the health effects of long-term weightlessness, including bone loss and muscle loss. The astronauts who fly past Mars will surpass Soviet cosmonaut Valery Polyakov's 437-day record for continuous time in microgravity, set in 1994-1995 aboard the much roomier Mir space station.?

"We're definitely pushing boundaries," MacCallum said. "It's definitely going to be hard and challenging. But we can rely on elegance and simplicity."

When, where and how?
The details of the mission plan have come to light just in the past few days, but MacCallum said that Tito has been mulling over the idea for years. Tito started out as an engineer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, helping to design trajectories for the Mariner missions to Mars in the 1970s. Then he put his math genius to work in the investment world, building California-based Wilshire Associates into a multibillion-dollar powerhouse. In 2001, he spent around $20 million of his fortune for a seat on the Russian Soyuz spacecraft traveling to and from to the International Space Station.

After his eight-day space tour, Tito got back to business. But he also started working out a trajectory that could send a spaceship directly from Earth to Mars for a fly-by within 100 miles (160 kilometers) of the Red Planet's surface, and then back to the home planet 501 days after launch. Once the spaceship was on its way, only minor course corrections would be needed. There'd be no need for undocking or redocking ... no landing ... no do-or-die engine burn for the return from Mars.

There's one big catch, though: The trip will have to be started when the planets were aligned just right. One opportunity will come in 2016. Then there's another one in 2018. After that, the next chance won't come around until 2031.

Planning for a launch in January 2018 looked particularly attractive, and not just because that could plausibly provide enough time to put the mission together. That's also a time frame when solar activity is expected to be at a minimum, reducing the level of radiation exposure. So Tito assembled a team from Paragon as well as NASA's Ames Research Center and other space ventures to flesh out the mission plan.

The plan calls for launching the two astronauts in a crew capsule with a transfer rocket stage. If the launch vehicle is powerful enough ? say, the size of SpaceX's Falcon Heavy ? the upper stage and the crew capsule could be launched in one go. If the rocket doesn't have that much oomph, the capsule and the upper stage could be launched separately and then linked up in Earth orbit for the push onward to Mars.

Inspiration Mars

An artist's conception shows how the spacecraft for the Inspiration Mars Foundation's "Mission for America" might be configured ? with a crew capsule, an inflatable module similar to the ones built by Bigelow Aerospace, and an attached upper stage that could provide radiation shielding. The actual design has not yet been set.

Source: http://cosmiclog.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/27/17107722-millionaire-dennis-tito-plans-to-send-woman-and-man-to-mars-and-back?lite

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Huge crowds at Vatican for pope's final audience

By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

Tens of thousands of people were gathering in St. Peter's Square in Vatican City Wednesday to witness Pope Benedict XVI?s final general audience before his historic abdication.

Blue skies welcomed Catholic pilgrims and onlookers from around the world in the square, which he due to address from St Peter?s Basilica from 10:30 a.m. local time (4:30 a.m. ET).

Benedict will use his "popemobile" to greet some of the crowd, but the size of the event means there is not expected to be any kissing of the pontiff?s hand as is traditional after papal audiences, the BBC reported.

The Vatican said more than 50,000 had applied for official tickets for Wednesday?s event ? eight times the usual number of applications - and that 200,000 were expected to pack the fringes of the square and surrounding streets.

Papal audiences are normally held inside a Vatican hall in the winter.

Pope Benedict will formally abdicate on Thursday, becoming the first pontiff to do so for almost 600 years, and will travel by helicopter to his summer residence at Castel Gandolfo, about 15 miles south-east of Rome.

Tens of thousands were in the square from early Wednesday in the hope of securing a good place from which to see the moment. Among the crowd already in the square were Germans from Pope Benedict?s home region of Bavaria.

Balthasar Bauer, 23, from Bavaria, who was in traditional dress, lederhosen, said: "You can't change it - this will likely be the last Bavarian pope, so I had to come here to see him for one last time."

Related:

Papal historian: Cardinals likely to choose an 'extrovert'

'Amateur hour': Vatican conclave drama is one for the history books, experts say

Pope says Vatileaks probe will stay secret

Carlo Angerer and Andy Eckardt, NBC News, contributed to this report.

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/27/17113318-huge-crowds-at-vatican-for-pope-benedicts-final-audience?lite

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Family daycare what should it be like


I was having his discussion with a friend today actually.

My experience with family daycare are not good ones.

The carer frequently pulled out of care and with no backup carer I still had to take time off work not only for my daughters ailments but also the carers too!

Then with my younger child I explored a local one and I too saw that it was filthy with the nap room full of mattresses strewn all over the floor and the area the kids played had no structure or function essentially it was a pile of kids dumped in one cornered off area of the house. Needless to say my daughter did not go there and I took them both to traditional proper care.

I don't trust family daycares ( by trust I mean trust that I won't be let down)
And I don't think they offer the same level of education and learning as traditional centers.

That's my opinion though and I say this only having experienced what I have, and I know probably not all family daycares are like this but it's all I've seen so obviously that's why my opinion is formed. I apologize in advance if I offend.

Source: http://www.bubhub.com.au/community/forums/showthread.php?489320-Family-daycare-what-should-it-be-like

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5 Easy Tips to Simplify Your Business Accounting | Young ...

After starting three small businesses, I?ve learned firsthand the headaches that accounting causes for most small business owners. It?s one of those back-office tasks that never cross your mind when you decide to run your own business, and yet it sucks up your day and makes running a successful business that much harder.

But there?s hope, and it starts with getting organized.?Here are 5 tips I?ve learned by helping business owners trying to tackle their accounting:

  1. Keep it separate.?That new backpack for your kids isn?t a business expense, but your business credit card was handy so you used it. Sure, you can pay back your business for a personal expenditure, or the other way around, but if you?re going to do it right you actually have to record an accounting transaction. Things get complicated fast, and you don?t need that headache. By keeping separate bank and credit card accounts for business and personal, you?ll save yourself hours of work and make it easy to keep track of deductible expenses in one place.?Some applications can automatically handle the behind-the-scenes accounting for crossover expenses, but even so, we recommend handling business and personal finances as independently as possible.
  2. Call in a pro.?Since the days of the abacus, accountants have been trusted and respected allies to small business owners everywhere. Their intimate knowledge of the profession as well as tax laws in their jurisdiction will save you money almost every time. I know how tempting it can be to save a buck and do it yourself, but it?s almost never more cost-efficient in the end. An accountant will almost always find more deductions and keep you penalty-free.?On that note, the cleaner your records, the fewer billable hours you?ll have to pay, so make sure you?re organized year-round. But when things get technical or taxes are due, save yourself the money, time and headaches and call in a trusted professional.
  3. Pencil it in.?Actually, use a pen. A permanent marker even. Set aside about 15 minutes every week ? that?s the equivalent of just one Facebook visit every seven days ? to organize your finances, and don?t let other things take priority during this time.? You?ll have more insights into your business, be able to make more informed financial decisions and have everything organized when tax time approaches.?Something always feels more pressing than your finances. But when you find the time every week, you?ll feel your stress levels ? now and at year-end ? fall fast.
  4. Consider your people.?When you?re looking for insights into your businesses spending, don?t forget to properly track what is likely one of your biggest expenses: labor.?Whether you?re paying a full staff or you?re the only one on the payroll, make sure you?re tracking the costs of wages, benefits, overtime and any other costs associated with labor.?By tracking your spending on labor, perks and benefits, you may find you have more money to incentivize your employees ? or that you?re outspending your budget. Either way, doing the math now can help you make better decisions later.
  5. Finally, don?t forget to get paid.?This one seems pretty obvious, but you would be shocked at how many small business owners don?t properly track invoices and customer payments. If you?re not keeping proper records that you can make sense of at a glance, it could be months before you realize you have outstanding invoices.?You could be collecting payments late, or missing some altogether. Make sure you?re properly tracking all payments due and recording when each invoice is paid, how long customers generally take to pay, and which customers you?ve had difficulties collecting payments from in the past.

Kirk Simpson is the co-founder and CEO of Wave Accounting. Wave is Kirk?s third start up. In between entrepreneurial ventures, he worked with some of Canada?s biggest media and corporate brands, primarily in strategic alliances, business development, sales and marketing.?

The?Young Entrepreneur Council (YEC)?is an invite-only organization comprised of the world?s most promising young entrepreneurs. In partnership with Citi, the YEC recently launched?#StartupLab, a free virtual mentorship program that helps millions of entrepreneurs start and grow businesses via live video chats, an expert content library and email lessons.

Photo By: Sami

Kirk Simpson is the co-founder and CEO of Wave Accounting. Wave is Kirk's third start up. In between entrepreneurial ventures, he worked with some of Canada's biggest media and corporate brands, primarily in strategic alliances, business development, sales and marketing.

Source: http://theyec.org/5-easy-steps-to-simplify-your-business-accounting/

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This week's sidebar poll: Who brought the best devices to show us at MWC 2013?

MWC 2013

While some notable big names in Android were mostly missing, Mobile World Congress 2013 still had a lot of Android to show off -- not counting what was in Phil's shoulder bag. We saw this years upcoming gear from Huawei, ZTE, ASUS, and more. Some of it looks absolutely fabulous, some not so much. But that's just our opinion, and we want to hear yours.

We've set up a poll so you can sound off and tell us what you liked best. Will it be the Fonepad from ASUS? How about the ZTE Grand Memo? Hit the break, or look for the poll in the sidebar to the right and let us know, then discuss it all in the comments.

read more



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/W3rQ7UmoSOs/story01.htm

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Fierce clashes near landmark mosque in Syria

A Syrian woman walks past a house destroyed from a government airstrike, at Jabal al-Zaweya village of Sarjeh, in Idlib, Syria, Monday Feb. 25, 2013. Syria is ready to hold talks with the armed opposition trying to topple President Bashar Assad, the country's foreign minister said Monday, in the government's most advanced offer yet to try to resolve the 2-year-old civil war through negotiations. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

A Syrian woman walks past a house destroyed from a government airstrike, at Jabal al-Zaweya village of Sarjeh, in Idlib, Syria, Monday Feb. 25, 2013. Syria is ready to hold talks with the armed opposition trying to topple President Bashar Assad, the country's foreign minister said Monday, in the government's most advanced offer yet to try to resolve the 2-year-old civil war through negotiations. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

Displaced Syrian children play with cleaning tools in the Azaz camp for displaced people, north of Aleppo province, Syria, Thursday, Feb. 21, 2013. According to Syrian activists the number of people in the Azaz camp has grown by 3,000 in the last weeks due to heavier shelling by government forces. (AP Photo/Manu Brabo)

This citizen journalism image provided by Aleppo Media Center AMC which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, shows an unexploded rocket from a Syrian warplane, in the neighborhood of Karam Alqasir, near Aleppo International Airport, in Aleppo, Syria, Thursday, Feb. 21, 2013. A car bomb near the Damascus headquarters of Syria's ruling party killed scores on Thursday, while a government airstrike on a rebel field hospital in southern Daraa left several dead, opposition activists and state media reported. (AP Photo/Aleppo Media Center AMC)

A citizen journalism image provided by Aleppo Media Center AMC which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, shows people searching the rubble for dead bodies and injured victims at a site were houses were hit by a missile attack by Syrian government forces, in the neighborhood of Ard Al-Hamra, Aleppo, Syria, Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2013. (AP Photo/Aleppo Media Center AMC)

(AP) ? Syrian rebels battled government troops near a landmark 12th century mosque in the northern city of Aleppo on Tuesday, while fierce clashes raged around a police academy west of the city, activists said.

The fighting near the Umayyad Mosque in the walled Old City threatened to further damage the historic structure, part of which was burned during clashes last year.

Since July 2012, government forces and rebels seeking to topple President Bashar Assad have been battling over Aleppo, the country's largest city and a major prize in the civil war. While rebels have gradually expanded the amount of turf under their control, seven months of street fighting, airstrikes and shelling have left much of the city, considered one of Syria's most beautiful, in ruins.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported intense clashes with heavy gunfire and explosions near the mosque. Syria's state news agency said "terrorists" had detonated explosives near the building's south wall, causing "material damages."

Assad's regime refers to the opposition as "terrorists."

The mosque, also known as the Great Mosque of Aleppo, sits near a medieval covered market in the Old City, which is a UNESCO World Heritage site. The mosque was heavily damaged in October, 2012, just weeks after a fire gutted the market.

Syria's nearly 2-year-old civil war has left its mark on other gems of the country's rich archaeological and cultural heritage.

At least five of Syria's six World Heritage sites have been damaged in the fighting, according to UNESCO, the U.N.'s cultural agency. Looters have broken into one of the world's best-preserved Crusader castles, Crac des Chevaliers, and ruins in the ancient city of Palmyra have been damaged.

Both rebels and regime forces have turned some of Syria's significant historic sites into bases, including citadels and Turkish bath houses, while thieves have stolen artifacts from archaeological excavations and, to a lesser extent, museums.

To the west of Aleppo, activists reported fresh fighting Tuesday near the police academy that has become a key government military installation.

The Observatory said the two sides were shelling each other's positions while the government launched airstrikes in the area.

Video posted online in recent days shows rebel groups firing homemade rockets and mortars at the academy and blasting it with captured tanks. The videos appeared genuine and corresponded with other Associated Press reporting.

The Observatory said the dead in the last two days of fighting in the area included 26 rebel fighters, 40 soldiers and five pro-government militiamen.

The police academy, which activists say the government has turned into a military base, has recently emerged as a new front in the battle for Aleppo. Losing the facility would hinder the regime's ability to shell opposition areas and support its troops inside the city.

An Aleppo activist who goes by the name Abu al-Hassan said via Skype that rebels coming from Idlib province to the west are now trying to clear the army from residential areas near the academy before they attack it.

"Yesterday and today they have been trying to go forward but there are lots of shelling and airstrikes," he said.

The fighting has largely destroyed Aleppo and caused humanitarian conditions for the city's remaining civilians to plummet.

On Tuesday, Human Rights Watch said more than 141 people, including 71 children, had been killed in at least four missile strikes by the Syrian government in and near the city of Aleppo last week. The New York-based group said the strikes hit residential areas and called them an "escalation of unlawful attacks against Syria's civilian population."

A Human Rights Watch researcher who visited the sites said up to 20 buildings were destroyed in each area hit by a missile. There were no signs of any military targets in the residential districts, located in rebel-held parts of Aleppo and its northern countryside, said Ole Solvang, the researcher.

"The extent of the damage from a single strike, the lack of (military) aircraft in the area at the time, and reports of ballistic missiles being launched from a military base near Damascus overwhelmingly suggest that government forces struck these areas with ballistic missiles," HRW said in its report.

It added that the Aleppo neighborhoods hit were Jabal Badro, Tariq al-Bab and Ard al-Hamra. The fourth strike documented by the group was in Tel Rifat, north of the city.

UNICEF said in a statement that it is "appalled" by the deaths of children, and called on all parties in the conflict to "ensure that civilians ? and children especially ? are protected, at all times."

Syria has never acknowledged the strikes, and portrays the conflict as a foreign conspiracy carried out by "terrorists" to weaken the country.

The missile attacks have outraged the leaders of Syria's exiled opposition who have accused their Western backers of indifference to the suffering of civilians caught up in the conflict.

Also Tuesday, the Observatory said the death toll in a car bomb attack in Damascus had risen to eight. All were regime security officers, it said.

The blast late Monday struck a security checkpoint in the neighborhood of Qaboun, less than a kilometer (mile) from Abbasid Square, northeast of downtown. It was followed by several other smaller blasts thought to be mortar shells landing in various districts of the capital.

The explosions and subsequent gunfire caused panic among residents who hid in their apartments.

Syria's state news agency said the blast was caused by a suicide car bomber and caused an unspecified number of casualties.

The U.N. says some 70,000 have been killed since Syria's conflict began in March 2011.

___

Associated Press writer Ryan Lucas contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-02-26-Syria/id-d4791768e4bd4741846d1cc6da255056

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Was the Flurry of Space Rocks a Coincidence—or a Swarm?

Are we in a "meteor swarm?" The short answer is yes. But it's a bit misleading to put it that way, because "yes" is the normal state of affairs.

The pass of the one-half-football-field-size asteroid 2012 DA14 and the explosion of a meteor 20 to 30 miles above Chelyabinsk, Russia?both on Feb. 15?seems to have been a mere coincidence. What made them unusual is that we happened to notice both of them?the asteroid because amateur astronomers looked at just the right place at the right time, the meteorite because it was large enough to do some damage over a populated area.

Harry "Hap" McSween is a professor of planetary sciences at the University of Tennessee, a co-investigator for NASA's DAWN asteroid-encountering spacecraft, and a leading authority on meteorites. He estimates that thousands of meteorites strike Earth every year. "Most of them are small and they land in the ocean," he tells PM. That stands to reason, since 70 percent of Earth's surface is ocean. There the meteors go unnoticed. "Even the ones that go over continents... many of them burn up in the atmosphere, and then the ones that fall on land, most of them we never find," McSween says. "They're typically small rocks, things like a baseball. They just don't do damage unless they happen to hit a structure."

Sky surveys like the one that found 2012 DA14 en route to Earth last year are continuing to demonstrate just how crowded space around Earth really is, particularly with smaller space rocks. "Most of the bodies that are discovered are more like a kilometer or half a kilometer," McSween says. The smaller ones typically don't get spotted until they are relatively close?if they're seen at all.

Scientists aren't actually sure how large the Russian meteor was before it broke up. "I have heard a number of different estimates," McSween says. "I haven't heard any credible estimates yet." According to John Lewis, professor emeritus of planetary sciences at the University of Arizona and asteroid specialist, how a space rock behaves when it hits our atmosphere?whether it breaks up or lands partially or fully intact, and how much damage it does when it gets to Earth?is a function of its composition as well as its size.

Asteroids composed mainly of metal do the most damage, while the more common rocky ones typically don't get close to the ground intact. McSween figures the Chelyabinsk object was probably of the latter type. "I presume it's a chondrite," he says, "but that's just a guess based on the fact that those are the overwhelming majority of objects to fall." McSween calls chondritic asteroids and meteorites "kind of a cosmic sediment" composed of dust and larger particles clumped together. These are presumed to be the leftovers from the formation of the solar system. "It is common for these bodies to break up during atmospheric passage," he says.

Enterprising locals are apparently picking pieces of the rock that exploded over Chelyabinsk and offering them for sale; McSween is not sure what scientific survey and analysis of the fragments might be under way in Russia. Nor can scientists be sure why Chelyabinsk exploded and created a damaging shockwave over Russia that shattered glass. "It kind of surprised me that it was such a big shock effect," McSween says. "I can understand the noise"?the expected result of a meteor rapidly decelerating in the atmosphere?"but knocking out all those windows was pretty impressive."

As for the near-Earth asteroids that are even bigger than Chelyabinsk, McSween says, "I suspect we've not found more than half." He says a lot more needs to be done to find them, given the risk they pose to planet Earth. "I can't think of anything that might make the world's nations work together than finding a way to avoid annihilation."

Source: http://www.popularmechanics.com/science/space/was-the-flurry-of-space-rocks-a-coincidence-or-a-swarm-15142514?src=rss

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Monday, February 25, 2013

Why can't Washington compromise? They're too human

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Turns out politicians are people, too, only worse.

Just ask pros who make their living in the trenches of everyday human drama such as divorce, family feuds or schoolyard scraps. They recognize in Washington's bitter budget standoff a hint of human nature as they know it, but with the crazy pumped up to absurd levels.

"We're seeing middle school behavior here," says Barbara Coloroso, who crusades against childhood bullying. Psychologist Piers Steel, an expert on procrastination, says Congress has the worst case of it he's seen. Divorce attorney Sanford Ain's assessment is blunter: "It's nuts!"

A sampling of conflict-savvy professionals and scholars interviewed by The Associated Press finds dismay that the nation is in political stalemate after two years of showdowns and near-misses for the economy. Not that these they have any easy solutions, either.

Some dream of locking up President Barack Obama and House Speaker John Boehner. R-Ohio, together until the nation's tax and spending issues are settled.

"That's my fantasy: To go into a room and tell them what to do, right or wrong, and make them do it," said Marvin McIntyre, a prominent financial adviser in the District of Columbia who writes political novels on the side.

With lawmakers and the president on the brink of yet another compromise-or-else deadline Friday, the nonpoliticians shared their take on the all-too-human behavior in Washington.

Historian Altina Waller is reminded of the Hatfields and McCoys. Of course, she would be: Waller's an authority on the deadly 19th century feud.

Despite the myth, the Hatfield-McCoy conflict wasn't primarily about clan hatred, Waller said, and she doesn't think today's acrimony between Republicans and Democrats is fully explained by partisanship or ideology.

The Appalachian feud grew out of economic anxiety as farming declined and logging and coal moved in, she said. These days, Democrats and Republicans worry about the economy and the loss of American jobs and influence to foreign competition, and blame each other.

"Like the Hatfields and McCoys," Waller said, "they are personalizing a problem brought about by larger economic forces."

Coloroso, author of "The Bully, the Bullied and the Bystander," sees too many politicians acting like the mean girl who taunts unpopular classmates in the cafeteria.

"Bullying is about contempt for the other person," Coloroso said. "Do you see how that fits with some of the people in Congress? Utter contempt, bullying, wanting to bring somebody down. You cannot resolve a major issue like a budget with name-calling, with disdain for the person you're supposed to be working with."

Ain says the political fight illustrates something he's learned in 40 years of striving to keep family law cases amicable: "If you have extreme views and won't compromise, you can't get anything done. It's going to go to war."

Yet a sudden switch to civility will not guarantee that tough decisions get made.

Human brains are wired to put off the unpleasant, says "The Procrastination Equation" author Steel.

We postpone starting a diet, put off going to the gym, keep meaning to write those thank-you notes. Congress members are masters of this.

"They're pretty much the worst, hands down, of any group we ever investigated," said Steel, who has researched procrastination for more than a decade. "They're worse than college students."

What finally gets people moving? A deadline. The paper must be written to pass the class. The house is tidied because company's coming. The expense report is finished because the boss demands it by 5 p.m.

So it makes sense to set deadlines for solving the nation's pressing fiscal problems. Only it isn't working.

Congress and the White House have lurched from the brink of default or government shutdown or "fiscal cliff" to the next potentially disastrous deadline, this time automatic budget cuts known as the "sequester." They've only achieved temporary fixes without resolving the big disagreements over the deficit, taxes and Medicare and Social Security spending. Obama calls it "drifting from one manufactured crisis to the next."

Why aren't the deadlines working?

Pushing the limits isn't always procrastination; sometimes it's strategy.

Negotiation expert Robert Mnookin points to labor disputes resolved just before the strike deadline and lawsuits settled on the courthouse steps on the eve of trial. Bargainers tend to play "chicken" like two drivers speeding toward each other in hopes the other will swerve first.

"It's often believed that you won't be able to extract the very best concession from the other side unless you are on the brink of something that's very bad," said Mnookin, chairman of Harvard's Program on Negotiation and author of "Bargaining with the Devil."

Both the Republicans and Democrats have die-hards pushing to keep charging ahead.

"It's a hugely dangerous game to play," Mnookin warns, "because people aren't always rational in their behavior."

What happens if Democrats and Republicans collide head-on this time? Some $85 billion in automatic federal budget cuts over the next seven months, with more in following years.

Obama says that would weaken the military, disrupt programs Americans rely on, eliminate jobs and weaken the economy. Boehner calls it "an ugly and dangerous way" to reduce spending. These cuts were designed to be so distasteful that politicians would agree on more rational budget-cutting to stop them.

But there's another way out. Lawmakers and Obama could agree to block the cuts, before or after they kick in, and once again postpone making big fiscal decisions that might cost some of them re-election.

That's a problem with artificial deadlines: They're hard to enforce.

Economist Christopher Kingston, whose research ranges from 19th century dueling to modern game theory, says what lawmakers need is a strong "commitment device." He cites the story of William the Conqueror burning his ships after his invading army landed in England, ensuring his soldiers couldn't retreat.

A less reliable commitment device: A shopaholic cutting up his credit cards. That works unless he gets new ones and start running up debt again.

"It's really hard to create a commitment device artificially, particularly if you don't have an external power that's going to enforce it," said Kingston, an associate professor at Amherst College.

Congress and the president have no judge, no referee, no board of directors. Washington won't hear from the voters again for two years, and even then the message may be unclear.

With human nature against them, how can politicians escape gridlock?

A few tips from the pros:

?Shock them with kindness. "Try to do something unexpectedly nice for the other side," advises Ain, and your surprised opponent may reciprocate.

?Avoid the "zero-sum" trap. Just because something is good for one side doesn't mean it's bad for the other. "There are all kinds of deals that the president and the Congress could make that would be better for the economy and the nation as a whole and in that sense would benefit them all," Mnookin says.

?Get a mediator. Maybe the special 2011 deficit committee could have reached agreement with the help of a trusted outsider. It's worth a try, Ain says, because "that works in major litigation and all sorts of situations."

?Shame the bullies. If politicians denounced their fellow party members who display contempt for the other side, Coloroso says, it would squelch the mocking tone.

America's citizens also are mostly silent bystanders right now, the author said.

"What are we going to do about it?" she asked. "Do we just stand by and shrug our shoulders?"

___

Follow Connie Cass on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/ConnieCass

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/why-cant-washington-compromise-theyre-too-human-131324676.html

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OPTiM outs wireless smartphone-to-smartphone screen sharing and remote control app for Android

OPTiM outs wireless smartphonetosmartphone screen sharing and remote control app for Android

One of the more notable features of BlackBerry 10 is built-in screensharing, but here in Barcelona at MWC 2013, OPTiM has just one-upped Waterloo with a new app for Android. It not only lets users share screens, but it also allows them to remotely control devices over WiFi. Called Optia for Android, it works with handsets running Android 2.3 and up, and has a built-in chat function for facilitating communication while screensharing. Naturally, the app's a boon to IT pros who manage devices from afar, but it should also prove useful for helping you teach mom and dad how to use the fancy new smartphones you got them for Christmas. The app's currently free from Google Play, though only for a limited time. Head on past the break for a video of Optia in action, and you can grab the app at the source link below.

Filed under: ,

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Source: Google Play Store

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/25/optim-android-smartphone-to-smartphone-screen-sharing-app/

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Armani racks up early fashion wins at Oscars

Jessica Chastain arrives at the 85th Academy Awards at the Dolby Theatre on Sunday Feb. 24, 2013, in Los Angeles. (Photo by John Shearer/Invision/AP)

Jessica Chastain arrives at the 85th Academy Awards at the Dolby Theatre on Sunday Feb. 24, 2013, in Los Angeles. (Photo by John Shearer/Invision/AP)

Jessica Chastain arrives at the 85th Academy Awards at the Dolby Theatre on Sunday Feb. 24, 2013, in Los Angeles. (Photo by John Shearer/Invision/AP)

Actress Quvenzhane Wallis arrives at the 85th Academy Awards at the Dolby Theatre on Sunday Feb. 24, 2013, in Los Angeles. (Photo by John Shearer/Invision/AP)

Actress Jennifer Lawrence arrives at the 85th Academy Awards at the Dolby Theatre on Sunday Feb. 24, 2013, in Los Angeles. (Photo by John Shearer/Invision/AP)

Actress Jennifer Lawrence arrives at the Oscars at the Dolby Theatre on Sunday Feb. 24, 2013, in Los Angeles. (Photo by John Shearer/Invision/AP)

Giorgio Armani could claim some big wins at the Oscars on Sunday night: The designer dressed Jessica Chastain and Quvenzhane Wallis.

Chastain, in a glistening copper-tone strapless gown with mermaid hem, looked like an old-world glamorous movie star, especially with her oversized vintage Harry Winston diamond earrings and bright red lipstick. "I chose it because to me it was a throwback to old Hollywood," she said.

Meanwhile, she told E!: "It's a very 'Happy birthday, Mr. President' dress."

Naomi Watts was expected to wear a gunmetal beaded gown with a geometric cutout on the bodice, also by Armani. She and Chastain were both considered fashion "gets" for the Academy Awards in Los Angeles.

Quvenzhane, with a silver headband in her hair and carrying her puppy purse, wore an Armani Junior navy-blue dress with black, navy and silver jewels scattered on the skirt and a big bow on the back. She apparently has another Armani dress, a pink one, ready for the afterparty. "I liked it because it was sparkly and puffy."

Jennifer Lawrence was in a white strapless gown by Dior Haute Couture with sophisticated pulled-back hair, diamond-ball earrings and a delicate long necklace that hung down in the back.

Amy Adams wore a dove-gray Oscar de la Renta gown with a sweetheart neckline and tiers of frayed chiffon and tulle on the ballskirt, and Zoe Saldana wore a strapless gray gown with floral appliques. Reese Witherspoon's modern gown by Louis Vuitton was mostly electric blue with a strip of black at the bustline.

Kerry Washington wore a Miu Miu gown with a chunky beaded bodice and orange-red skirt with a delicate bow at the waist.

Other expected designer moments to unfold at the Dolby Theatre include Barbra Streisand in a black, bias-cut, asymmetrical Donna Karan gown that the designer dubbed "City Lights." Renee Zellweger was expected to wear a Carolina Herrera gown.

Headed to the Oscars herself, Nadja Swarovski, the head of corporate communications for the crystal company Swarovski that makes the beadwork for the majority of the red-carpet gowns, expected the collective fashion picture to be fairly minimalist looks in monochromatic colors.

Still, she said, there'll be sparkle. "It's more of a dot on the 'I' or cross on the 'T,' more than a whole of sparkle, but it makes a great palette for jewelry."

___

Associated Press Writer Beth Harris contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-02-24-Oscars-Fashion/id-b50d403c2e8b4c588cd46c6564a1f3f4

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City Watching State-Level Income Tax Proposals - Stow, OH Patch

Stow officials are watching a conversation in Columbus closely about proposals to change the way communities in Ohio collect income tax.

Stow Mayor Sara Drew and Stow Finance Director John Baranek also are providing input about Ohio House Bill 5. The proposed legislation would change the way communities collect income tax and also effects business owners.

"What we?re trying to do is we?re trying to enlighten some of the legislators through the Ohio Municipal League and meetings with our local representatives, Rep. Roegner and State Sen. LaRose," Baranek said. "They propose this as being a revenue neutral legislation for the municipalities. And it really isn?t, depending on how your local income tax ordinances are set up."

Ohio legislators are in the midst of hearings on the proposed legislation.

Some changes the legislation, if adopted, would make include changing the occasional entry rule ? the time period when municipalities start collecting income tax for temporary workers ? from 12 days to 20 days.

That change alone could cost Stow thousands each year, Baranek said.

"Right now there?s a 12-day period that if they come in and they?re in Stow working for eight days (the state) considers that a casual time period, so (workers) don?t have to pay Stow local tax for those eight days," Baranek said. "But if we have a construction company that comes in ? and they work 12 days, maybe 15 days, then we?re allowed to tax those 12 or 15 days of wages for city tax purposes and they have to pay us for those days that they?re in here."

The proposed legislation also would mandate that Stow sends notices to taxpayers regarding liability via certified mail.

"Where before we could send things out ? by regular mail," Baranek said. "So we?d have a lot of postage costs involved in sending a lot of letters out."

Another proposed change would be to create a uniform net operating loss carry-forward period of five years.

"Many communities in the state of Ohio don?t recognize the state has a five-year carry forward," Baranek said. "So if I have a loss this year I can carry it forward and use it up over the next five years against that income I have. Many municipalities have a shorter term.

"That one alone will effect a lot of communities," he said. "If they have to extend that out, they?ll lose tax revenue over that."

That proposal is one change that wouldn't hinder Stow, as it already adheres to the state's five-year period.

The first hearing in Columbus on the proposed legislation was held Feb. 13. Stow officials may travel to the state capital to testify on the proposed legislation.

Drew said their hope is that whatever final version of the legislation is adopted includes no mandates that increase income tax collection costs for cities.

"We're really working hard to make sure it's a revenue-neutral program," she said.

Source: http://stow.patch.com/articles/city-watching-state-level-income-tax-proposals

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

Official: Algeria kills 12 extremist fighters

(AP) ? An Algerian government official says security forces have killed a dozen extremist fighters in northern areas outside the capital and uncovered an arms cache in an area known for attacks against security forces.

The official, who wasn't authorized to give the information publicly, said Saturday an army patrol killed eight extremists in Boumerdes, about 50 kilometers (30 miles) outside the capital, Algiers. The official said four fighters were killed in the northern Boukadir forest about 280 kilometers (175 miles) away.

Terrorist attacks have dropped dramatically in Algeria's populated north in recent years and are largely restricted to a small operations against local forces.

But President Abdelaziz Bouteflika said Saturday that fighting in neighboring Mali has raised the threat of "the terrorism that we never stop fighting."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-02-23-Algeria/id-11d52d2dd21f4276b623444123e70dc2

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Friday, February 22, 2013

Defining Success On Your Terms | Care2 Healthy Living

When I was a child, my parents led me to believe that success looked like learning my times tables, following the rules, and being polite to strangers.

When I was a teenager, success looked like making straight A?s, steering clear of cigarettes, alcohol, and drugs, and guarding my virginity until I got married.

When I was a medical student and resident, my professors led me to believe that success looked like showing up early, staying late, sacrificing my personal needs for the needs of my patients, coming to work when I was sick, prioritizing my work over my family or friends, overdelivering, curing patients without ever screwing up, and helping out my fellow residents, even if it was long past when I wanted to go home.

When I was a practicing physician, my colleagues led me to believe that success looked like a schedule full of patients, 72 hour call shifts during which I worked my ass off without ever making mistakes, efficiency in the exam room so I could blow through 40 patients a day, billing enough to bring in my fair share of revenue, perfection in the operating room, the adoration of my patients, a six-figure income and a house with an ocean view, and being voted among San Diego?s Top Doctors.

When I was forging ahead in my art career, people led me to believe that success looked like being represented by many galleries, getting my art shown in museums, big ticket art sales, and name recognition for my work.

Now I work in an industry where there?s no limit to the amount of external success you can achieve ? books, blogs, online programs, public speaking, conferences, magazine articles, television talk shows ? the big leagues.

In the past, I let other people define success for me. But this time around, I?m committed to doing it differently.

Success On My Terms

My new motto is ?Just because you can doesn?t mean you should.?

Just because I can publish 20 books doesn?t necessarily mean I should.

Just because I?m invited to speak at a big conference doesn?t mean I should say yes.

Even if the opportunity to host my own TV show arises, it doesn?t mean doing so is necessarily aligned with my priorities.

But? I can?t create the life I dream of living unless I know what success on my terms looks like. So let me take a stab at it?

Success looks like feeling how I want to feel.

My core desired feelings (hat tip to Danielle?s LaPorte?s?Firestarter Sessions) are to feel connected, influential, generous, and easeful. Every opportunity that comes my way ? even ones others might deem ?successful?? ? gets screened through that filter. Will it make me feel connected to loved ones and Source? Will it lend me influence so others will hear my message, and if I shine a spotlight on other people doing great work in the world, will people listen? Will it allow me to take all my friends out to dinner and when the bill comes, say ?It?s on me?? And most importantly, will it feel graceful, effortless,?eggy and playful?

Success looks like making the world a better place.

I dream of?healing health care,?opening hearts,?training doctors to reclaim their true nature as healers, helping people tap into the truth of their?Inner Pilot Lights, inspiring them to cleanse their bodies, minds, and souls,?helping people find their callings,?aiding visionaries who long to change the world,?mentoring those who will help me make the world a better place in their own unique way, writing and?speakingabout what matters to me, and raising funds for?charities I support.

Success looks like following a calling and fulfilling a mission.

After years of floundering around, I now know what I?m here on this earth to do, and I will devote myself to serving that calling ? but only on my terms. Success does not look like writing New York Times bestselling books, reaching millions of people with my message, influencing how people think and act, and fulfilling a dream, only to realize I?ve missed the whole point.

Success looks like prioritizing those I love above achievement.

Last year, I turned down the opportunity to appear on Good Morning America because I had been away from my daughter all week, promising I?d be all hers during her Spring Break. Then Good Morning America called the day before our ski trip and asked me to fly to New York. I said no. My daughter is more important.

Success looks like living from a place of trust, not fear.

I don?t want to say ?Yes? just because I?m afraid it?s my one and only shot.? I want to trust that if saying yes requires me to sacrifice my priorities, the opportunity will arise at some future point, God willing.? Good Morning America hasn?t called me back (yet), but I don?t have a single regret.

Success looks like making room for self care in my life.

Almost every day, I hike or do yoga. I meditate for 20-30 minutes. I drink 4-5 green juices per day.? I treat myself to spa days and retreats at hot springs resorts. I devote whole days to being with friends in my inner circle. I prioritize quality time and physical intimacy with my husband.? I read with my daughter. I take long baths. I get pedicures. I won?t sacrifice these things for any amount of money, fame, or kudos. Period.

Success looks like allowing myself to be a vessel for Divine work in the world.

Success is not unbridled ambition. It?s allowing myself to be used, to be of service, to fully self-actualize, to lift up my gifts and talents so they may be utilized for Divine work in the world. When I first met Martha Beck, she said, with delight in her voice, ?You?re one of us ??a stealth agent for God!? If I am, that looks like success to me.

Success looks like spending a lot of time in nature.

I already live in a small coastal town in the San Francisco Bay area in West Marin County, where the mountains and the redwoods meet the ocean. Success does not look like being on airplanes too much or stuck in big cities or inside closed walls all the time, tied to a computer. Success looks like dancing under a full moon, skiing down a mountain slope, wading in the crystalline waters of a Bali beach, soaking in hot springs under the stars, and frolicking in fields of wildflowers.

Success looks like deep intimacy.

I?m not satisfied with lots of superficial relationships. I?d rather have a smaller number of super intimate ones. I value being brave enough to be vulnerable with the precious beings in my inner circle. I treasure the talks I have with my seven year old about how she used to be a fairy and why she decided to choose me as her Mama. I cherish the deep inner work I do with my mentoring clients and the doctors in the?Whole Health Medicine Institute. When I get to witness the Inner Pilot Lights of others and have my Inner Pilot Light witnessed in return, I feel whole.

Success looks like staying in integrity with myself.

I recognize that integrity is very personal, and it?s never black and white.? I view it as a spectrum from 0% integrity to 100% integrity, with 0 being ?total sell out? and 100 being ?impeccable integrity.? Success looks like staying mostly over 80% aligned with my own unique definition of integrity and never, ever going below 50%.

Success looks like easeful, graceful, eggy financial abundance.

I spent too many years?giving until I was depleted, failing to value myself enough or set clear enough boundaries to charge what my time was worth. Then I declared to fill myself first and everything shifted. Now, the comfortable income I generate allows me to be generous with others (back to one of my core desired feelings.) And it allows my husband and I freedom from anxiety about how the bills will get paid and how I?ll continue to fund the work I do at no cost in the world through the?Daily Flame,?my blog, and?OwningPink.com.

But I?m no longer willing to ?sperm? my way to financial abundance. If it doesn?t flow in easily, it?s not meant to be mine. And I?m unwilling to push, strive or strong arm my way to ?make it happen? anymore. Nope. That?s not success on my terms. On my terms, money flows in generously and effortlessly, and the more I believe this, the more the Universe conspires to prove to me that it?s true.

Success looks like being sovereign.

Nobody owns me. I am never a victim of my circumstances. I have no right to bitch and moan about anything in my life ? ever ? because I always get to choose how I respond to my circumstances, even if my circumstances are beyond my control. I am responsible for and in charge of my life, even as I cede control to the Universe (my choice to let go of the reins and trust.) Success looks like owning my choices and claiming my life as my own. Success does not look like being a prima donna, but it does look like being brave enough to stand before those who might think they know what success looks like more than I do ? and to stay true to who I am and what I care about.

Success looks like beauty.

I love creating beautiful art, surrounding myself with beautiful design, wearing beautiful clothes, immersing myself in the beauty of nature, relishing the beauty of gourmet food arranged beautifully on a plate, and living in a beautiful home. Life is to be relished, savored, appreciated.

Success looks like being a student for life.

If I ever think I?ve learned all there is to learn, I?ve stopped being successful. I will be taking workshops, reading books, studying, and satisfying the kind of intense curiosity that led me to research and write?Mind Over Medicine for the rest of my successful life. As I write this, I?m on an airplane, heading to New York City to speak at the Hay House ?I Can Do It Ignite? conference with inspirational colleagues like Wayne Dyer, Louise Hay, Cheryl Richardson, Doreen Virtue, Kris Carr, Gabrielle Bernstein, and Anita Moorjani. These people are my teachers in this course called life. Success looks like surrounding myself with inspiring people.

Success looks like fully self-actualizing.

No longer will I wear masks, pretending to be something I?m not so I?ll appear perfect to others. Success looks like being unapologetically ME, even as I strive for continual self-improvement. Success look like fully expressing my gifts in the world, being authentic, and being brave enough to be completely vulnerable and imperfect with those I trust.

Success looks sexy.

Success doesn?t require that I sell out?the sexy and feminine within me in order to appear ?professional.? In fact, success embraces all the fluid, curvy, hip-swaying, pole-dancing, bump-and-grinding, skinny-dipping, thigh-high boot-wearing parts of me.

Success looks like FUN.

My old story ? success looks like sacrifice. My new story ? success is FUN and playful. Success involves a great deal of pleasure, laughter, touch, good food, adventures, and checking things off my bucket list. Hot air ballooning, here I come!

Success looks like inner peace.

No matter how many generous acts I perform, no matter how much I make the world a better place, no matter how much money I earn or how much fame I achieve, no matter how many people I love, who love me in return, it doesn?t really matter if I?m plagued with turmoil.? Success looks like freedom, wisdom, and deep abiding joy.

I?m Not There Yet, But I?m There

When I look at this list, I realize I still haven?t fully achieved the success I dream of achieving, mostly because I?m still learning and growing and figuring out my life. But that doesn?t mean I?m not ?there? yet.?As I wrote about here, I finally realized that there is no ?there,? that there is only here, and that right here, right now, I love my life and I celebrate the present moment, while simultaneously setting intentions that everything on this list will come to pass in its own perfect time.

Clarity is key. We can?t create success on our own terms if we let someone else define success for us. And we can?t create success on our own terms if we don?t know what it is.

What Does Success Look Like To You?

Tell us how YOU define success so you can create it for yourself.

Standing fiercely for success on our own terms,

Lissa Rankin

?

Source: http://www.care2.com/greenliving/defining-success-on-your-terms.html

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Whose idea was the sequester? And does it matter?

The Republicans point to Bob Woodward's book as evidence it's the 'Obamaquester.' Democrats counter with a Boehner slideshow that just resurfaced. The public is left scratching its head.?

By Linda Feldmann,?Staff writer / February 20, 2013

President Barack Obama speaks about the 'sequester' Tuesday at the White House in Washington, as he stands with emergency responders, a group of workers the White House says could be affected if state and local governments lose federal money as a result of budget cuts.

Charles Dharapak/AP

Enlarge

Debate is raging in Washington over the origins of the ?sequester? ? the deep, almost-across-the-board federal spending cuts that go into effect March 1 if Congress doesn?t act.

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Exhibit A is Bob Woodward?s book, ?The Price of Politics,? which describes how top aides to President Obama brought the idea to Senate majority leader Harry Reid (D) of Nevada in the summer of 2011, when Congress was grappling with the debt ceiling.

The sequester proposal became part of the agreement that allowed the government to keep borrowing to pay its bills ? and, as has been repeated ad infinitum, it was never meant to go into effect. It was supposed to be so beyond the pale that it would force the White House and Congress to come up with a deficit-reduction deal that was more finely honed.

But Republicans have latched onto Mr. Woodward?s book as the smoking gun.

Aha, they say, the sequester is Mr. Obama?s baby. They?ve tried to get people to call it the ?Obama sequester? or even the ?Obamaquester.? It doesn?t exactly trip off the tongue, but it?s more than the Democrats have devised.

Exhibit B is a July 31, 2011, PowerPoint presentation found by John Avlon of The Daily Beast in an old e-mail, reported on Wednesday. The slideshow was put together by House Speaker John Boehner?s office and the GOP?s House-based think tank, the Republican Policy Committee, and describes a ?new sequestration process? that would cut spending across the board if the cuts weren?t made by other means.

So there, say Democrats, the sequester is really a Republican idea.

The bottom line, concludes FactCheck.org, is that it doesn?t matter. Both parties are responsible for this puppy, the fact-checking site?s report says, because they both voted for it.

?The reality is that the pending cuts would not be possible had both Democrats and Republicans not supported the legislation that included them,? FactCheck says.

The sequester was part of the Budget Control Act (BCA) of 2011, which passed the House with 269 ?yea? votes ? 174 Republicans and 95 Democrats. In the 100-seat Senate, Democrats made up most of the 74 "yea" votes, but there were 28 Republicans in that majority, as well.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/uCfRB0xsmUw/Whose-idea-was-the-sequester-And-does-it-matter

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DFL colleagues push Oberstar for U.S. transportation chief (Star Tribune)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/286176999?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Thursday, February 21, 2013

Professor strips, shows 9/11 footage during class

By Deepti Hajela, The Associated Press

Columbia University says it's reviewing a science class in which a professor stripped to his underwear and showed 9/11 video footage during a lecture on quantum mechanics.

The Frontiers of Science class on Monday morning with Professor Emlyn Hughes also included two other participants dressed in black, one of whom used a sword to destroy a stuffed animal.

Video of the event was posted to Bwog, the online home of Columbia's monthly undergraduate magazine.

It starts with the professor stripping with his back to the students as music plays and an image of a skull is projected on a screen. Later, two stuffed animals are placed on stools, one of which is stabbed by a person with a sword. In the background, a video shows the fall of the World Trade Center and an image of Osama bin Laden.

A female student watching Hughes could be heard repeating, "What is happening?" as the performance went on.

It ended with the professor returning to the stage.

"In order to learn quantum mechanics, you have to strip to your raw, erase all the garbage from your brain and start over again," Hughes said.

The professor didn't respond to an email from The Associated Press seeking comment.

In a statement, the university said, "Universities are committed to maintaining a climate of academic freedom, in which the faculty members are given the widest possible latitude in their teaching and scholarship. However, the freedoms traditionally accorded the faculty carry corresponding responsibilities."

It added, "While one must exercise caution in judging excerpts from a lecture or short presentations from an entire course outside of their full context, the appropriate academic administrators are currently reviewing the facts of this particular presentation in quantum mechanics."

? 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/20/17029224-nyc-professor-strips-to-underwear-shows-911-footage-during-class?lite

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Google Drive rolls out quick previews for documents, videos, and photos

Finding that file in your Google Drive just got a little easier with the addition of a new preview feature. Right-clicking on any file will bring up an option to preview it without needing to open, and you can scroll through other files with arrows imposed on the left and right of your screen. It works with several types of file including videos, text, and images, and the previews let you copy text, print, or download the document right away. Google says the feature will roll out over the next few days, and we're seeing it on our own Drives already.

Screen3

Source: http://www.theverge.com/2013/2/20/4011840/google-adds-drive-file-preview-feature

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Discussing Mercedes-Benz, AMG, And The Future: Google+ Hangout Video

Last week part of the High Gear Media editorial team including editorial director Marty Padgett, social media manager Joel Feder, and senior editor Nelson Ireson, all sat down together for a Google+ Hangout On Air. The topic was all about the future of Mercedes-Benz and AMG.

The discussion included everything from our first driving impressions of the 2013 Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG GT and 2014 Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG, to our first impressions to the stylish new 2014 Mercedes-Benz CLA. We also covered future Mercedes-Benz models, such as the next-generation S Class and C Class.

Last but not least, we discussed future technology, and how Mercedes-Benz is implementing it. From LED lighting technology to electronic power steering systems and downsizing engines with forced induction, there's a lot to take in.

If you missed the live broadcast last week, don't fret. Thanks to YouTube our discussion has been preserved for many moons for your viewing pleasure.

Did we miss anything, or do you have something to add to the discussion? Feel free to leave a comment below and we'll get back to you.

Source: http://www.thecarconnection.com/news/1082400_discussing-mercedes-benz-amg-and-the-future-google-hangout-video

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Ofgem's warning of future energy bill rises ? Consumer Focus

Published: 19 February 2013

Responding to Ofgem?s warning of future energy bill rises, Mike O?Connor, Chief Executive, Consumer Focus, said:?

?Keeping the lights on is a real challenge which the nation has to meet.? We need to invest but we also need to think about how we protect the most vulnerable consumers who can least afford higher prices.? In the long term the best hope is more energy efficient homes.? We need to do more to ensure our homes do not leak energy and we are calling on Government to use the funds they raise in carbon taxes to insulate our houses to modern standards, saving the poorest in society money on their bills, as well cutting carbon emissions and creating jobs.?

?With 6 million households in fuel poverty, rising to over 9 million by 2016, ?and an increasing proportion of our incomes being spent on essential items like energy, this latest news, while not surprising, is chilling.?

?Three things are vital:

  1. We must focus not just on bringing new plant to market but on how we pay for the new investment. The trend is for bill payers, rather than tax payers or shareholders, to take the burden and risk. We must question whether that is right, and urge that the government to commit to the least regressive way to fund energy investment.
    ??
  2. Policy makers must put energy efficiency at the top of the list. Reducing demand by making homes and businesses more energy efficient is such an obvious first step that the lack of a really ambitious programme is?bewildering. Reducing demand is quicker, cheaper, more sustainable and solves the problem at source. A major energy efficiency programme should be financed by the billions we will pay on our bills in carbon taxation and would drive economic growth.
    ??
  3. As always, those who can least afford to pay will suffer the most. Millions of homes face their own security of supply crisis every day and many have to respond by staying cold. Facing the security of supply crisis means tackling fuel poverty as well.??

ENDS?

Notes to Editors?

See also blog post by Chief Executive Mike O?Connor on how we pay for essential infrastructure.

Press Contact Details

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Source: http://www.consumerfocus.org.uk/news/ofgems-warning-of-future-energy-bill-rises

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Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Jazz notes: Jefferson helps out after tornado

Jazz notes ? Damaged Hattiesburg, Miss., near Big Al?s hometown.

Houston ? Al Jefferson didn?t have big plans for All-Star Weekend. He was going home to southern Mississippi and would see people he wanted to see.

Then a tornado struck nearby Hattiesburg. On Saturday, the Jazz center spent his time with people he hadn?t even known.

In a video report published online by WDAM-TV in Hattiesburg, Jefferson could be seen visiting families in areas hit hardest by the tornado, which reportedly destroyed or damaged 800 homes.

Jefferson grew up in Prentiss, a small town 55 miles from Hattiesburg, a college city of 50,000 people. While no one was killed by the storm, it gutted sections of Hattiesburg.

"It took my breath away," Jefferson told the news station. "I?m still kind of amazed just to see all of the damage that was done."

So, like Jefferson does when his team?s offense has begun to lag, he decided to do something about it. WDAM reported Jefferson pledged to buy a new car for a teenage girl whose vehicle was destroyed by the tornado.

"It feels good, man," Jefferson said. "It feels real good, especially when you?re able to do it. This time, everybody needs to come together and stick together and help each other out."

Jefferson who makes $15 million this season in the final year of his contract with the Jazz, also hosts an offseason basketball camp for children and funded a scholarship endowment in honor of his late father.

"If I can just help someone get through this," he said, "it makes me feel better and like I did my part."

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Rumors

The Jazz were rumored Saturday to be in talks with the Los Angeles Clippers about a deal that would bring Eric Bledsoe to Utah while shipping free agent-to-be Paul Millsap to Southern California.

The potential trade was reported by ESPN.com.

Bledsoe would provide the point guard of the future the Jazz are seeking, and Millsap would give the Clippers front court depth for their playoff run. However, Millsap makes more than $5 million more than Bledsoe, meaning the Clippers would have to include other pieces to make the salaries match. Things would get tricky at that point for the Jazz, who would need to find a way to open roster spots. They currently carry 15 players under contract, which is the league maximum.

The voters back home

Jeremy Evans didn?t win the Slam Dunk Contest on Saturday at the Toyota Center, falling to Toronto?s Terrence Ross in a popular vote.

Evans jumped over a portrait of himself dunking that he painted in the week and a half before the contest, and then over a seated Dahntay Jones for his final performance. However, Evans garnered only 42 percent of the vote.

While not all of the viewers favored Evans, his teammates certainly did. Enes Kanter, Millsap, Gordon Hayward, DeMarre Carroll, Kevin Murphy, Jamaal Tinsley and Derrick Favors all tweeted their support for Evans. After the result was announced, Carroll was the most vocal dissenter.

"Are you serious???" he wrote on the social networking site. "I thought the dunk contest was about bein CREATIVE."

Copyright 2013 The Salt Lake Tribune. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/jazz/55849227-87/jefferson-jazz-evans-hattiesburg.html.csp

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