রবিবার, ৩০ সেপ্টেম্বর, ২০১২

?Unreasonable? Green Goals in Reach for India?s Infosys

What's Happening from Environmental Building News


Infosys's newest office building, SDB1 in Hyderabad, is 80% daylit despite the forbiddingly hot climate. Infosys also installed radiant cooling in half the building and high-efficiency variable-air-volume (VAV) air conditioning in the other half in order to see which performed better?and whether radiant cooling could be used in India without the severe condensation issues feared by engineers. The radiant cooling is 33% more efficient than the VAV cooling.

By Paula Melton Disruption: it can be a way of life in developing economies, as massive blackouts across India recently demonstrated. But when Rohan Parikh, head of green initiatives at Bangalore-based Infosys, uses the word ?disruption,? he means something completely different. ?It had to be unreasonable; it had to be a paradigm shift,? says Parikh of the company?s green building goals. He calls the method ?disruptive design? and describes the results as ?an extreme conversion process? involving ?design first, education second.? The goals include LEED Platinum certification as a minimum standard for all buildings, 50% reduced energy consumption, carbon neutrality, 100% renewable energy, and net-negative water consumption by 2018. The company?s most recent sustainability report shows a promising start, though there is still a long way to go?and overall impact is increasing as the company grows (Infosys already has 12 campuses in India alone and is building two to three million square feet per year). Although consumption and emissions have gone up since 2007, the increases are far below expectations: the company is emitting 111,859 megatons less carbon and using 124 million kWh less electricity and 1,021 million liters less water than it would have if it hadn?t changed its building and business practices. If the targets sound extreme, the means of reaching them can be truly radical. For example, explains Parikh, the company has moved to performance-based contracts, effectively forcing project teams to practice integrated design by withholding fees if performance goals are not met. ?We understand you?re the creative guys,? Parikh says he told prospective architects of its most recently completed building, SDB1, ?but the only way you?re going to work with us is if 80% of the floor space is daylit and the solar heat gain is limited to 1 W/ft2.? The real kicker? You lose 25% of your fee if any building occupant requests a window blind. Because architects, engineers, and owners worked so closely together, the performance goals were met, he says, and SDB1 has become the company?s model for its next generation of campuses (Infosys has also completed deep energy retrofits of existing buildings).

Infosys's emissions and resource use are low relative to expectations, though overall impacts continue to increase with growth.

It?s not just about energy. Building a new campus affects nearby villages, many of which are already resource-poor. ?We come there and we highjack everything in that area; we take away all the resources,? Parikh laments. ?If we start digging groundwater, then we are going to be taking somebody else?s groundwater.? This realization has led to the company?s goal to ?sequester more fresh water into the ground than we consume? on all its campuses. Parikh also highlights waste as a serious problem, and Infosys is now piloting biogas plants using compost on two sites. Why such a hands-on approach? ?We can go buy green energy and become carbon neutral tomorrow,? he said, but the company opted for more direct involvement because ?it should be a model that can be replicated by others.? Even though a quarter of its growing population has no electricity, India is already the world?s third-largest energy consumer, and the need for longer-term thinking about energy and water was on international display at the end of July 2012 when hundreds of millions of Indians lost power due to a combination of factors, including drought. Unlike many corporate leaders in the U.S., Parikh does not dance around the probable consequences if we don?t slow climate change and address global water shortages; after all, shaking people up is what ?disruptive design? is all about. ?We cannot wait for governments to act,? says Parikh. ?Unless we change, the world is headed toward doom.?

For more information:

Infosys
www.infosys.com/sustainability

September 1, 2012





GREEN TOPICS



IMAGE CREDITS:
1. Photo: Infosys
2. Source: Infosys

Source: http://www.buildinggreen.com/auth/article.cfm?fileName=210903a.xml

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Officials mull seismic tests near Calif nuke plant

In this Dec. 12, 2011 photo, workers lower equipment off the marine research vessel Bluefin to carry out a seismic ocean survey near Avila Beach, Calif. State and federal officials are juggling concerns over endangered whales and other marine life with public safety as they mull over plans to use massive air canons to create new earthquake fault maps in two state marine reserves off the Central Coast. Pacific Gas & Electric Co. wants to use the canons to make maps of shoreline fault zones recently discovered near its Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant. The massive reverberations caused by the air canons is picked up by sensors placed in the water, allowing scientists to gain detailed data about the makeup of the seafloor and faults. (AP Photo/The Tribune (of San Luis Obispo), David Sneed) MAGS OUT

In this Dec. 12, 2011 photo, workers lower equipment off the marine research vessel Bluefin to carry out a seismic ocean survey near Avila Beach, Calif. State and federal officials are juggling concerns over endangered whales and other marine life with public safety as they mull over plans to use massive air canons to create new earthquake fault maps in two state marine reserves off the Central Coast. Pacific Gas & Electric Co. wants to use the canons to make maps of shoreline fault zones recently discovered near its Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant. The massive reverberations caused by the air canons is picked up by sensors placed in the water, allowing scientists to gain detailed data about the makeup of the seafloor and faults. (AP Photo/The Tribune (of San Luis Obispo), David Sneed) MAGS OUT

FILE - In this Sept. 20, 2005 file photo is the Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant in Avila Beach, Calif. State and federal officials are juggling concerns over endangered whales and other marine life with public safety as they mull over plans to use massive air canons to create new earthquake fault maps in two state marine reserves off the Central Coast. Pacific Gas & Electric Co. wants to use the canons to make maps of shoreline fault zones recently discovered near its Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant. (AP Photo/Michael A. Mariant, File)

FILE - In this Nov. 3, 2008 file photo, Pacific Gas and Electric's Diablo Canyon Power Plant's nuclear reactors are seen in Avila Beach, Calif. State and federal officials are juggling concerns over endangered whales and other marine life with public safety as they mull over plans to use massive air canons to create new earthquake fault maps in two state marine reserves off the Central Coast. Pacific Gas & Electric Co. wants to use the canons to make maps of shoreline fault zones recently discovered near its Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant. (AP Photo/Michael A. Mariant, File)

(AP) ? Plans to use an array of powerful air cannons in an undersea seismic study near a Central California nuclear power plant have federal and state officials juggling concerns over marine life with public safety.

Pacific Gas & Electric Co. wants to use big air guns to emit strong sound waves into a large, near-shore area that includes parts of marine reserves to make three-dimensional maps of fault zones, some of which were discovered in 2008, near its Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant.

But a state study, mandated by AB1632, signed into law in 2006, found the project is likely to have "unavoidable adverse effects" on marine life and the environment. Biologists, environmental groups and fishermen have opposed using the high-energy air guns, saying the blasts have potential to harm endangered whales, California sea otters and other creatures frequenting these waters.

"I am very concerned about impacts to marine mammals, especially some of the large whales including blue, fin, and humpback whales," said John Calambokidis, an Olympia, Wash.-based marine biologist who has studied Pacific Ocean whales for decades. "There are many uncertainties on the impact of this type of operation on whales, especially since we have not seen this type of large air gun survey off California for a long time."

The $64 million, ratepayer-funded effort to understand seismic threats to the plant has intensified since the disastrous 2011 Tohoku quake and tsunami, which disabled reactors at Japan's Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant. Quake experts were surprised by the 9.0-magnitude quake on a fault that scientists did not believe would produce a quake stronger than 8.0.

Although the Japan disaster demonstrated that predicting the strength of a quake on a given fault is an inexact science, PG&E wants to know if the newly discovered faults near San Luis Obispo are connected to existing ones that have already been studied. Seismologists typically use a fault's length to estimate the maximum possible earthquake it can produce.

"People need to understand, we're living in the world post-Fukushima, so we need to go back and review everything we think we know about the seismic threat situation around important structures like this power plant," said Bruce Gibson, a former seismologist who now serves as a San Luis Obispo County supervisor.

"Unfortunately, from an environmental impact standpoint, the only real way to get the images is to put high energy sound into the earth."

If the project gains approval from myriad agencies, scientists would tow up to 18 air guns behind a boat and blast loud sound into the water over a 530-square-nautical-mile area. Hundreds of sensors would be placed strategically on the seafloor, picking up the reverberations and allowing computers to create three-dimensional maps in technology similar to an ultrasound.

The air guns and sensors would be dragged through an area that includes two state marine protected areas ? Cambria and White Rock ? and is adjacent to the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Dozens of endangered and threatened species use these waters.

A similar seismic survey is being planned near the state's other nuclear plant at San Onofre, in San Diego County to the south.

A State Lands Commission environmental impact study found on Aug. 20 there would be "unavoidable impacts" to marine life in the area during the San Luis Obispo testing.

But the commission also concluded the "benefit of the project outweighs the unavoidable adverse impacts," said Jennifer DeLeon, a senior environmental scientist at the commission.

While similar high energy seismic surveys have been done on the Pacific Coast ? most recently off Washington ? PG&E said monitors there did not observe harm to whales or other marine mammals.

The powerful cannons used in these projects can be fatal to animals that stray too close to them. Also, biologists said the loud noises could drive migrating whales and their calves apart, and that mortally wounded whales often sink in the ocean, so it is difficult to see how the tests affect the creatures.

Efforts to mitigate such impacts will reduce, but not eliminate, harm to animals, according to the company and earth scientists.

"The sound source for the PG&E imaging project is a type that has been used for several decades by scientists and industry," Donna Blackman, a geophysicist at Scripps Institution of Oceanography in San Diego, said in an email. "Known cases of possible impacts on marine mammals are very few. An integral part of using this type of system is to have continuous monitoring for whales within close range of the ship."

PG&E said it is spending $8 million on monitoring for the project, said Mark Krausse, a PG&E director.

"If the ship is coming within 1.1 mile of any mammal, not just a marine or listed, but any mammal, we have to shut down," Krausse told the California Fish and Game Commission on Monday.

PG&E wanted to start work Nov. 1 and continue through Dec. 31 ? a time window believed to have lower whale traffic off the Central Coast. But the company has asked for an extension of its hearing before the California Coastal Commission, and other agencies are not expected to approve testing permits by then.

Major environmental groups such as the Sierra Club and Natural Resources Defense Council oppose the plan, saying adequate seismic research already has been done, and that too little is understood about potential long-term impacts of the air guns on the marine environment.

"The marine protected areas were created (so) marine wildlife could thrive without human interference," said Amanda Wallner of Sierra Club California. "We share concern over earthquake risk at Diablo Canyon. However, we don't believe this is the best way or the only way to determine seismic risks."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-09-30-Quake%20Faults-Marine%20Life/id-84a9988b22364da3a95f7c0299bb5fb5

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Coach TV: Northwestern postgame

September 29, 2012

Coach TV: Northwestern postgame

Watch what Indiana head coach Kevin Wilson said to the media earlier today following his team's 44-29 loss to Northwestern at Ryan Field in Evanston.

...More... To continue reading this article you must be a member. Sign Up Now for a FREE Trial

Source: http://indiana.rivals.com/content.asp?CID=1415622

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শনিবার, ২৯ সেপ্টেম্বর, ২০১২

Woman Protects Cat From Husband By, er, Shooting Him | Babble ...

audreymiller 300x265 Woman Protects Cat From Husband By, er, Shooting HimApparently, Audrey Miller (pictured) was arguing with her husband when he threatened to shoot one of her beloved cats with a pellet gun.

Her response? She shot him in the stomach instead.

This all happened in Harris County, Texas. Luckily, the husband is currently in stable condition after surviving the surgery to repair the damage the .40 caliber handgun did to him.

Now, I don?t condone shooting most of the time. But I also don?t condone threatening pets with violence. After all, they are smaller than we are and trust us to take care of them.

Still, I don?t condone the shooting. Really.

 Woman Protects Cat From Husband By, er, Shooting Him

Source: http://blogs.babble.com/pets/2012/09/27/woman-protects-cat-from-husband-by-er-shooting-him/

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U.N. criticizes "shrill war talk" in Iran nuclear dispute

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - The U.N. on Friday urged all sides in the dispute over Iran's nuclear program to tone down "shrill war talk," reacting to this week's clashes at the world body between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

"It's obvious that harsh tones and rhetoric are not going to be helpful, that is quite clear," said U.N. spokesman Martin Nesirky when asked about Netanyahu's speech on Thursday to the General Assembly.

"What is also clear is that Iran needs to prove to the international community that its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes," Nesirky said.

Using a cartoonish diagram of a bomb, Netanyahu suggested in his speech that Israel might take military action to prevent Iran from reaching the point where it has enough enriched uranium for a bomb. He indicated that point could come by the spring or summer of 2013.

"Even without a chart, the secretary-general in his quite forceful remarks to the General Assembly on Tuesday made very clear that there does indeed need to be a toning down of the rhetoric from all sides," Nesirky said.

"He referred to the shrill war talk of recent weeks," Nesirky said, referring to U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon.

Ban met with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Sunday and warned him of the dangers of incendiary rhetoric. Ahmadinejad disregarded Ban's caution, predicting on Monday that Israel would be "eliminated."

U.S. President Barack Obama followed on Tuesday with a warning to Tehran that it would do what it has to do to prevent Iran from getting an atomic weapon.

Iran's U.N. mission responded to Netanyahu's speech, saying Tehran was strong enough to defend itself and that it reserved the right to retaliate with full force against any attack.

Iran rejects allegations by Western nations and Israel that it is seeking the capability to produce an atomic weapon. Tehran insists its nuclear ambitions are limited to the peaceful production of medical isotopes and electricity.

(This version of the story removes the paragraph that mistakenly attributed market comments to Nesirky.)

(Additional reporting by Michelle Nichols; Editing by David Brunnstrom and Christopher Wilson)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-n-criticizes-shrill-war-talk-iran-nuclear-001203414.html

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শুক্রবার, ২৮ সেপ্টেম্বর, ২০১২

Yes. I am reading 50 Shades of Grey. Part 1. | AMNAR

Yesterday, I finally caved in. I decided to read 50 Shades of Grey.

?WHY?? I hear all the sane readers with taste demanding.

Well? because I?m really curious about it. This isn?t just an ?everybody?s reading it? thing, either. It?s become The Feminist Issue In Literature, and I?ve seen a lot of opinions on it. I?ve seen a lot of toing and froing about the book, and I?ve even heard about it being burned because it?s apparently responsible for brainwashing women somehow.

I?d like to have an opinion on the book. This is partly because I?m a woman, partly because I?m a feminist, and partly because I?m a human being. I have to admit, I am massively curious about what could outsell Harry Potter on such an epic scale. If you?d asked me what could do that so easily, I?d have answered ?porn?. But nobody asked.

Now, I don?t usually read porn. Or watch porn. Or take much of interest in porn. I?m sure I?d have more readers if I did. I have put sex scenes in my own books, but for the last while I?ve had anhedonia, which is gives you the sex drive of the average rock. Stonehenge has more interest in it right now.

I don?t know if that gives me more or less insight, but I suppose I could consider it a challenge. Mostly, I think if something is being discussed that much, especially explicitly saying it has an impact on women and their lives (which is often what you read in reference to 50 Shades), then I should probably pay attention.

I?ve also decided I?ll give it a bit of a review when I?m done. It means that when somebody launches into an opinion starting with the line ?I haven?t read it, but?? I?ll be able to reply with slightly more insight than a rock. Because really, you can?t start out with a detailed opinion on something if your opening line is ?I haven?t read it, but??

You?d think that was in the Basic Book of Rules, but uninformed opinion is often the bedrock of humanity?s discussion of everything these days. I think I?d rather sit on the side of the fence with the people who investigated and thought about something a bit before leaping to a conclusion.

Now, before I talk about the book at all, I have to say this. One of the major criticisms from feminists, and women generally, is that 50 Shades paints a portrait of a dysfunctional, abusive relationship without clearly qualifying that such relationships are A Bad Thing for women. Unfortunately, they also add that this is a woman?s fantasy. Now, I?ve read Robin Ince?s Bad Book Club and as a result I know there is a book of women talking about their fantasies that included a woman who fantasised about being raped by a donkey. No, I?m not kidding you. Yes, I will wait while you go and find out more about that.

So let?s start by saying at least this massively popular book is not about a woman who wants to be raped by a donkey. Not that this is necessarily wrong. Fantasies, sexual or otherwise, are exactly that: they?re fantasies. I get the impression that both 50 Shades and Twilight, the book that inspired the series, are essentially fantasies created by the authors who wrote them. Would that I had such popular fantasies. Mine are all sadly non-sexual and largely dragon-based.

This is where I wade into difficult territory because a lot of angry women will shout at me saying I?m approving of rape, abusive relationships and domestic violence. I?ve not got that far along in the book, but apparently the relationship described is a violent one and goes beyond the bounds of what real life BDSM relationships are like. I?ve seen it claimed that this will somehow make domestic violence more acceptable, or that all women who?ve read 50 Shades will conclude that in real life, they want a Christian Grey who treats them the way he treats Anastasia.

I?m afraid I?d need evidence to prove that. I grew up on an odd combination of epic fantasy (Lord of the Rings etc) and horsey books. Based on my reading of fantasy, you?d think I?d have grown up thinking that there are only four women in the whole entire world, that one of them is a hobbit, and two of them are elves. I have no idea what I might have concluded from the horsey books, but it probably might end up worryingly close to the whole donkey thing.

I dislike this idea that women are such a blank canvas that we can?t make conclusions of our own about what we read. Amazingly enough, I can read books that don?t clearly state in capitals that what?s contained within might be Bad For Me, and not think that I must live my life in that way. I have a brain. As I understand it, we base most of our conclusions on what relationships are about from our parents and the people around us when we?re children.

In search of something that might give me an idea of what readers think, I had a look at the Amazon page for 50 Shades. At the moment of writing, there 4588 reviews on the site. 1477 are 1-star reviews, and 1954 are 5-star reviews. A glance at the 5-star reviews produced a lot of joke reviews, including a drinking game based on the repetitive nature of the language. I wouldn?t recommend it, because even at my current place in the book you?d need a new liver.

There are people who genuinely liked it. They were totally hooked, apparently. I?m not sure I can conclude from that they intend to go out and allow themselves to be abused by men. Many of the genuine reviews appear to be quite clear that they understand that this is a fantasy, and not an instruction manual. The word ?escapism? appears a lot.

I?m going to get a fuck-ton of stick (if anybody reads this) for not clearly being angry about domestic violence in all its forms. I am against domestic violence. I honestly think what we?re facing here is not a tide of idiot women fooled by a book into thinking rape is great but society maybe having to face the fact that we 1. have sexual fantasies; 2. those fantasies are weird and seem unhealthy in the cold light of day and 3. are able to distinguish between those fantasies and reality. I suspect a lot of the hoopla is down to the fact that women and what women think about often don?t chime with what critics and opinion-makers wish they were and thought about.

So now I?ve written over 1000 words trying to come up with a position on the book when I?ve only reached chapter four. I?ll have to start reviewing in the next post. Damn.

Source: http://joelyblack.com/2012/09/27/yes-i-am-reading-50-shades-of-grey-part-1/

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65 Million For Husband: Tycoon Offers Reward to Marry Lesbian Daughter

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/09/65-million-for-husband-tycoon-offers-reward-to-marry-lesbian-dau/

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Sara Douglass- In Memoriam ? Voyager Online

It?s hard to believe that a year has passed since Sara died. It?s not that the reality of her death isn?t apparent; the ache of her absence is constant and painful. Rather, I think it?s because through her books, short stories and lingering cyber-presence she continues to touch, challenge and move us.

In some ways, it?s as if she?s still here.

Like many of her friends and fans, I?ve been reading her books again ? it?s a way of bringing her closer, providing comfort in bleak and sad times. What re-reading her novels has also served, is to remind me of what an astonishing talent she possessed.

From her very first novel, Battleaxe (which changed the landscape of fantasy publishing in Australia) right through to her final books, The Devil?s Diadem and the posthumously published collection of short stories, The Hall of Lost Footsteps, the breadth and depth of her work, the way she used and transformed history, invented complex and rich societies; the liveliness and courage of her characters, their weaknesses and strengths, passions and foibles, are all there to enjoy whenever we want.

The problem with this, of course, is that the experience is bitter-sweet. On the one hand, you plunge into a novel (actually, you?re grabbed by the throat and dragged into the world between the pages whether you?re ready or not) and lose yourself in an astounding tale. On the other, once the final line is finished, there?s the cruel reminder that never again will there be the opportunity to dive into a new Sara Douglass invention.

Every day around the world, someone who has had the Douglass experience wakes to the knowledge that they won?t again ? at least, not in the same, thrilling way that first encounters engender ? and they too mourn what we?ve all lost.

For those who are Sara Douglass worlds? virgins, understand how much you?re envied.

But how lucky are we that she?s left behind such a legacy for us to discover or revisit over and over and extract whatever pleasures, memories and wonder we can? That was Sara?s gift to all of us; one she willingly and lovingly gave.

Then, there?s also the powerful truths contained in her blogs, like the one reproduced below, ?The Silence of the Dying.? Here, Sara discusses death, giving voice to those who cannot speak for themselves as well as bearing her heart and fears in such a raw and frank way. Reading it again isn?t easy, but it is a privilege; a difficult, demanding one, but a privilege nonetheless and I?m grateful to Harper Collins and Voyager for this.

Sara?s words, the lyrical, sensual, sorrowful and authoritative, however, are only one aspect of Sara?s life and thus death. For those who truly knew and loved her ? those few whom she admitted into her extremely private world ? her loss is both a yawning chasm and a constant whisper, a murmur in the heart and soul that reminds you of the joy her love bestowed and the anguish it?s no more. The song of her surcease should be sung ? not as a dirge, but as a sweet refrain.

In commemorating Sara?s death, I think it?s more appropriate we remember her life. We should, on this day especially, celebrate her accomplishments. But let?s not forget the amazing, beautiful woman behind the words ? her knowledge, compassion, honesty, empathy and her delight in a life cut brutally short.

We?re so fortunate Sara?s spirit lives on her words. Every time we read or recall these, it?s comforting to know that, like her characters, she is also brought to life again and again and again?.

Karen Brooks
September 2012

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Originally from blog ?Notes from Nonsuch?

The Silence of the Dying

By Sara Douglass

Many years ago I did an hour long interview on Adelaide radio (with Jeremy Cordeaux, I think, but my memory may be wrong). The interview was supposed to promote one of my recent publications, but for some reason we quickly strayed onto the subject of death and dying, and there we stayed for the entire hour. I proposed that as a society we have lost all ability to die well. Unlike pre-industrial western society, modern western society is ill at ease with death, we are not taught how to die, and very few people are comfortable around death or the dying. There is a great silence about the subject, and a great silence imposed on the dying. During the programme a Catholic priest called in to agree with the premise (the first and last time a Catholic priest and I have ever agreed on anything) that modern society cannot deal with death. We just have no idea. We are terrified of it. We ignore it and we ignore the dying.

Today I?d like to take that conversation a little further, discuss modern discomfort with death, and discuss the silence that modern western society imposes on the dying. Recently I?ve had it hammered home on a couple of occasions how much the dying are supposed to keep silent, that ?dying well? in today?s society means keeping your mouth firmly closed and, preferably, behind closed doors.

Never shall a complaint pass your lips. How many times have we all heard that praise sung of the dying and recently departed, ?They never complained??

Death in pre-industrial society was a raucous and social event. There was much hair-tearing, shrieking and breast beating, and that was just among the onlookers. Who can forget the peripatetic late-medieval Margery Kempe who shrieked and wailed so exuberantly she was in demand at all the death beds she happened across? Suffering, if not quite celebrated, was at least something to which everyone could relate, and with which everyone was at ease. People were comfortable with death and with the dying. Death was not shunted away out of sight. Grief was not subdued. Emotions were not repressed. If someone was in pain or feeling a bit grim or was frightened, they were allowed to express those feelings. Unless they died suddenly, most people died amid familiar company and in their own homes amid familiar surroundings. Children were trained in the art and craft of dying well from an early age (by being present at community death beds). Death and dying was familiar, and its journey?s milestones well marked and recognizable. People prepared from an early age to die, they were always prepared, for none knew when death would strike.

Not any more. Now we ignore death. We shunt it away. Children are protected from it (and adults wish they could be protected from it). The dying are often not allowed to express what they are really feeling, but are expected (by many pressures) to be positive, bright and cheerful as ?this will make them feel better? (actually, it doesn?t make the dying feel better at all, it just makes them feel worse, but it does make their dying more bearable for those who have to be with them).

When it comes to death and dying, we impose a dreadful silence on the dying lest they discomfort the living too greatly.

I have done no study as to when the change took place, but it must have been about or just before the Industrial Revolution ? perhaps with the mass movement into the cities and the subsequent destruction of traditional communities and community ties, perhaps with the rise of the modern medical profession who demanded to control every aspect of illness, perhaps with the loosening grip of religion on people?s lives during the Enlightenment.

Certainly by the nineteenth century silence and restraint had overtaken the dying. The Victorian ideal was of the dying suffering sweetly and stoically and silently (we?ve all read the novels, we?ve all seen the paintings). Those who didn?t die sweetly and stoically and silently but who bayed their distress to the moon generally ended badly by dropping their candle on their flammable nightgown, and then expiring nastily in the subsequent conflagration which took out the east tower of whatever gothic mansion they inhabited. The lingering commotion and the smouldering ruins always disturbed everyone?s breakfast the next morning. There was much tsk tsk tsk-ing over the marmalade.

By the mid-nineteenth century, if not earlier, the lesson was clearly implanted in our society?s collective subconscious.

Death should be silent. Confined. Stoic.

Sweet, stoic and silent was the way to go. (Again I remind you that a sweet, stoic and silent death is still praised innumerable times in today?s society; by the time we have reached early adulthood we have all heard it many, many times over.) The one exception is the terminally ill child. Terminally ill children are uncritizable saints. The terminally ill adult is simply tedious (particularly if they try to express their fears).

All this silence and stoicism scares the hell out of me.

In that radio interview many years ago I spoke as a historian. Today I speak as one among the dying. Two years ago I was diagnosed with cancer. Six months ago it came back. It is going to kill me at some stage. Now everyone wants a date, an expected life span, an answer to the ?how long have you got?? question. I don?t know. I?m sorry to be inconvenient. I am not in danger of imminent demise, but I will not live very long. So now I discuss this entire ?how we treat the dying?with uncomfortable personal experience.

Now, with death lurking somewhere in the house, I have begun to notice death all about me. I resent every celebrity who ?has lost their long battle with cancer?. Oh God, what a clich?. Can no one think of anything better? It isn?t anything so noble as a ?battle? gallantly lost, I am afraid. It is just a brutal, frustrating, grinding, painful, demoralizing, terrifying deterioration that is generally accomplished amid great isolation.

Let me discuss chronic illness for a moment. As a society we don?t tolerate it very well. Our collective attention span for someone who is ill lasts about two weeks. After that they?re on their own. From my own experience and talking to others with bad cancer or chronic illness, I?ve noticed a terrible trend. After a while, and only a relatively short while, people grow bored with you not getting any better and just drift off. Phone calls stop. Visits stop. Emails stop. People drop you off their Facebook news feed. Eyes glaze when you say you are still not feeling well. Who needs perpetual bad news?

This is an all too often common experience. I described once it to a psychologist, thinking myself very witty, as having all the lights in the house turned off one by one until you were in one dark room all alone; she said everyone described it like that. People withdraw, emotionally and physically. You suddenly find a great and cold space about you where once there was support. For me there has been a single person who has made the effort to keep in daily contact with me, to see how I am, how I am feeling, and listen uncomplainingly to my whining. She has been my lifeline. She also suffers from terrible cancer and its aftermath, and has endured the same distancing of her friends.

The end result is, of course, that the sick simply stop telling people how bad they feel. They repress all their physical and emotional pain, because they?ve got the message loud and clear.

People also don?t know how to help the sick and dying. I remember a year or so ago, on a popular Australian forum, there was a huge thread generated on how to help a member who was undergoing massive and life-changing surgery that would incapacitate her for months. People asked what they could do. I suggested that if one among them, or many taking it in turns, could promise this woman two hours of their time every week or fortnight for the next few months then that would help tremendously. In this two hours they could clean, run errands, hang out the washing, whatever. And they had to do all this while not once complaining about how busy their own lives were, or how bad their back was, or how many problems they had to cope with in life. Just two hours a fortnight, with no emotional-guilt strings attached. Whatever she wanted or needed. Freely given.

Bliss for the incapacitated or chronically ill.

But that was too difficult. Instead the poor woman was buried under a mountain of soft toys, dressing gowns, bath salts and bombs, daintily embroidered hankies, a forest?s worth of Hallmark cards, chocolates and flowers and exhortations that everyone was ?thinking of her?.

None of which helped her in any way, of course, but all of which assuaged the guilt of the gift-givers who mostly promptly forgot her and her daily horrific struggle through life.

Modern attention spans for the chronically ill are horribly short, probably because chronic or terminal illness in today?s society is horribly tedious. Tedious, because we are all so uncomfortable with it.

Instead, too often, it is up to the sick and the dying to comfort the well and the un-dying.

Just take a moment to think about this, take a moment to see if you have ever experienced it yourself. The dying ? sweet, stoic, silent ? comforting those who are to be left behind. I know I experienced it when first I was diagnosed with cancer. I found myself in the completely unreal situation of having, over and over, to comfort people when I told them I had cancer. In the end I just stopped telling people, because almost invariably I was placed into the bizarre situation of comforting the well by saying everything would be all right (which, of course, it won?t, but that?s what people needed to hear to make them comfortable about me again).

The dying have been indoctrinated from a very young age into this sweet, stoic and silent state. They earn praise for always being ?positive? and ?bright? and ?never complaining?. Perhaps they are bright and positive and uncomplaining, but I am certain they lay in their beds with their fear and anger and grief and pain and frustration completely repressed while modern expectation forces them, the dying, to comfort the living.

I am sick of this tawdry game. I am sick to death of comforting people when all I want is to be comforted. I am sick of being abandoned by people for months on end only to be told eventually that ?I knew they were thinking of me, right?? I am sick of being exhorted to be silent and sweet and stoic. I know I face a long and lonely death and no, I don?t think I should just accept that.

I don?t think I should keep silent about it.

I have witnessed many people die. As a child I watched my mother die a terrible death from the same cancer that is going to kill me. As a registered nurse for seventeen years I have seen scores of people die. I have watched the dying keep cheerful and reassuring while their family were there (forced by modern expectation of how people should die), only to break down and scream their terror when the family have gone. The one thing they all said, desperately, was ?Don?t let me die alone.? But mostly they did die alone, doors closed on them by staff who were too frantically busy to sit with them, and relatives who have gone home and not thought to sit with their parent or sibling. People do die alone, and often not even with the slight comfort of a stranger nurse holding their hand. If you put your relative into a hospital or a hospice or a nursing home, then their chances of dying alone and uncomforted increase tremendously. I want to die at home, but I am realistic enough to know that my chances of that are almost nil as impersonal ?carers? force me into a system that will remove me from any comfort I might have gained by dying in familiar, loved and comforting surroundings.

My mother, who died of the same cancer which will kill me, kept mostly stoic through three years of tremendous suffering. But I do remember one time, close to her death, when my father and I went to visit her in hospital. She was close to breaking point that evening. She wept, she complained, she expressed her fears in vivid, terrifying words. I recall how uncomfortable I was, and how relieved I was when she dried her tears and once more became cheerful and comforting herself. I was twelve at the time, and maybe I should feel no guilt about it, but I do now, for I know all too well how she felt, and how much she needed comforting far more than me.

She died in her cold impersonal hospital room in the early hours of the morning, likely not even with the comfort of a stranger nurse with her, certainly with none of her family there.

The great irony is that now I face the same death, from the same cancer.

That is the death that awaits many of us, me likely a little sooner than you, but in the great scheme of things that?s neither here nor there. Not everyone dies alone, but many do.

Not everyone suffers alone, but most do it to some extent.

It is the way we have set up the modern art of death.

I am tired of the discomfort that surrounds the chronically and terminally ill. I am tired of the abandonment. I am tired of having to lie to people about how I am feeling just so I keep them around. I am tired of having to feel a failure when I need to confess to the doctor or nurse that the pain is too great and I need something stronger.

I am tired of being made to feel guilty when I want to express my fear and anguish and grief.

I am tired of keeping silent.

******************

Thank you for reading this far, and being my companion this far. I promise to be more stoic in future. But just for one day I needed to break that silence.

May 22nd, 2010

??????-

Many, MANY thanks must also go to our Voyager friend Lindsay who helped find this post by Sara in the Internet archives.

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Source: http://voyagerblog.com.au/2012/09/27/sara-douglass-in-memorium/

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৭ সেপ্টেম্বর, ২০১২

Battered RIM sees uptick in BlackBerry subscribers

RIM may be down, but the BlackBerry maker isn't out yet.?

By Matthew Shaer / September 25, 2012

The RIM subscriber count has actually climbed in recent months, RIM says. Here, a pile of BlackBerry phones.

Reuters

Enlarge

The past couple of years have not been particularly kind to RIM, the Canada-based maker of the BlackBerry smartphone line. The PlayBook tablet flopped;?global sales shrank;?workers were laid off;?and?Jim Balsillie and Mike?Lazaridis, formerly the RIM co-CEOs, were pushed out in favor of COO?Thorsten Heins. Cue the takeover rumors and the snarky obituaries for a company that once sat at the top of the smartphone game.?

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But according to Reuters, those obits may have been a little premature. RIM tells Reuters today that its subscriber base has actually climbed as of late?? from 78 million at the beginning of 2012 to 80 million now. Reuters reports that many of the new RIM subscribers are in emerging markets, such as India, "where consumers are much more price conscious and where RIM's much-admired BlackBerry messaging platform gives it a big edge."

The subscriber numbers helped nudge RIM stock up three percent in trading today. So is RIM in the midst of a resurgence??

Well, the company would certainly like you to think so. Speaking at an event in?San Jose, Calif., Heins pointed to the forthcoming BlackBerry 10 operating system, which is expected to launch on a range of RIM devices early next year.?"We recognize the need for change," Heins said at the event. "There is a new energy and a lot of fighting spirit at RIM."

We're somewhat less than fully convinced. Although RIM may still find a market among business users, the company has fallen well behind Apple and Google in both the inventiveness of its devices and the quality of its operating systems. Even if RIM knocks it out of the park with BlackBerry 10 ? which won't even launch until long after the holiday shopping season has concluded ? it will have a tough time catching up.?

RIM user? Drop us a line in the comments section. And to receive regular updates on how technology intersects daily life, follow us on?Twitter @venturenaut.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/m8qC7BS3UdE/Battered-RIM-sees-uptick-in-BlackBerry-subscribers

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Sport Information Resource Centre (SIRC): Does exercise help ...

Osteoarthritis or "common arthritis" is the gradual wearing down of the joint's hyaline cartilage.? Our joint's have a shiny, smooth surface at the end of each bone which allows friction and free motion.? When this area becomes damaged, thinned or worn away it is known as osteoarthritis.? The rubbing of the damaged area is painful and the repetition leads to inflammation, swelling and more pain.

Three kinds of exercises you can do if you have osteoarthritis:

Exercise is considered the most effective non-drug treatment for reducing pain and improving movement for people with osteoarthritis.? Keep in mind that exercise should be balanced with rest and joint care. If your joints hurt or you have redness or swelling, rest your joints and then try again.? Other treatments include physiotherapy, podiatry, anti-inflammatories and supplements such as Glucosamine and Chondroitin.? These supplements are not heavily researched, however they are still widely prescribed to help people with osteoarthritis.

You may not be able to perform like you did when your were in your twenties, but the smart person who continues to exercise is one who adapts their training and works with their body, not against it.? As always, before starting any training regimen, speak to your doctor first and then decide which exercises may be best for you.? Many people have made changes to their lifestyle after being diagnosed with osteoarthritis and continue to enjoy daily exercise.

References from the SIRC Collection:?

1. Better adherence to exercise means better relief from osteoarthritis pain. Research Review (International Council On Active Aging). July 28, 2010;10(27):2-3.
2. Christensen K. Ease the Pain of Arthritis With Exercise. American Fitness. July 2009;27(4):12-13.?
Exercises in Warm Water Can Help Relieve Osteoarthritis Pain. PT: Magazine Of Physical Therapy. January 2008;16(1):66-68.
3. Focht B. How Knee Osteoarthritis Patients Can Use Exercise to Enhance Quality of Life. ACSM's Health & Fitness Journal. September 2012;16(5):24-28.
4. Page P. Knee osteoarthritis: strength training for pain relief and functional improvement. Functional U. September 2003;1(6):1-6.
5. People with osteoarthritis feel better with exercise and the right shoes. Research Review (International Council On Active Aging). March 24, 2010;10(12):2-3.

Source: http://sircsportresearch.blogspot.com/2012/09/does-exercise-help-osteoarthritis.html

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Ricketts' PAC launching anti-Obama ads

WASHINGTON (AP) ? A conservative political action committee is launching a $10 million campaign to sway voters who backed President Barack Obama four years ago to now support his Republican challenger, Mitt Romney.

The Ending Spending Action Fund, bankrolled by billionaire Joe Ricketts, is airing 30-second ads on national cable and television in Virginia, Ohio, Iowa and Wisconsin. The ads with former Obama supporters are coupled with radio and online advertising, direct mail and door-to-door voter contact programs led by former Bush White House political director Sara Taylor Fagen.

Ending Spending Action Fund president Brian Baker said Wednesday the television ads would begin on Thursday. Those ads were produced by Stephen K. Bannon, the filmmaker behind Citizen United's recent documentary featuring disaffected Obama supporters.

Ricketts is the founder of Nebraska-based TD Ameritrade Securities.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ricketts-pac-launching-anti-obama-ads-181526545--election.html

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Seeking Roleplay Partners!

Hello there!
You people need to smile! That's why we're all here, isn't it? Let's have some fun! Let's make some plots, be creative, develop some characters up around here!

I don't know what to say here, really. So I'll just keep to the basics, I don't want you guys reading a novel about what we're about to start roleplaying. Pah! I won't give you a list of my do's and dont's. I'll roleplay just about anything! I have my preferences, obviously, but I'm always open for something new! I do prefer male characters, and I do have rather moderate comfort zones on explicit material... BUT, I think that you guys are smart, and experienced enough to understand the simplistic things. :)

Anyway. Like I said, I'm open to just about any ideas you can throw at me. Send me a private message and let's brainstorm some ideas up! And I'll apologize ahead of time for all of the anime-fans. Like I said, open to anything, but that doesn't mean I know much about the subject either. It's not that I have anything against anime... just picture me as a cat falling in a tub of water. I kick, thrash, claw, and bite my way out because I have no idea what I'm doing! :P

Just as long as you can send me at least a solid three to four paragraph response at least once a week I'll be as happy as a catfish. Assuming said catfish is happy, a happy catfish lives in a happy river -- not a happy catfish farm, those don't end too happy for catfish. Trains.

Sorry, that was way random. But hey, send me something funny and random if you PM me would ya? It might just brighten up my day. ^^

Back on subject. My main interests are sci-fi, historical, and sometimes even alternate historical. Just because it doesn't fit in those catagories though, doesn't mean I'm not interested. Just as a extra side note, my personal preference is for my partner to roleplay a female character -- but I don't mind either. Normally I end up doubling up on characters anyway.

So, that's about all I think you need to know. Shoot me a response when you get the chance. Let me know your ideas, and I'll share mine.

Keep it kewl, and do something that makes you smile today!
Best regards,

M-

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/q7fw4hmPrjg/viewtopic.php

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Romney: Teacher Contributions to Politicians Should Be Limited

Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney said on Tuesday that Democratic politicians have a conflict of interest in dealing with teachers' unions because the unions contribute so heavily to their campaigns. He suggested that money should somehow be diverted or cut off, although he did not offer details.

Speaking in New York City at Education Nation, a forum sponsored by NBC, Romney told interviewer Brian Williams that he is not necessarily against a right to strike. ?I don?t know that I would prevent teachers from being able to strike,? he said, adding later that ?allowing teachers to strike on matters such as compensation I think is a right that exists in this country.?

The bigger problem, Romney said, is that ?the person sitting across the table from them should not have received the largest campaign contribution from the teachers' union themselves.... [It?s] an extraordinary conflict of interest and something that should be addressed.?

He later added that ?we simply can?t have? elected officials who have received large contributions from teachers sitting across from them at the bargaining table ?supposedly? to represent the interests of children. ?I think it?s a mistake,? Romney said. ?I think we have to get the money out of the teachers' unions going into campaigns. It?s the wrong way for us to go. We?ve got to separate that.?

The problem is broader than teachers' unions, Romney said, but they are the issue when it comes to Democrats. ?I don?t mean to be terribly partisan, but I kind of am,? he said to laughter.

Romney was dismissive when a New York City school board member at the forum, also a parent, said city parents support the union to protect their kids 3-to-1 over the mayor and chancellor. ?They believe actually that the unions are fighting for our kids,? the man said. ?This is not?coming from me, this is coming from a poll of parents.?

?I don?t believe it for a minute,? Romney said. ?I know something about polls and I know you can ask questions to get any answer you want.?

Romney attended an expensive private school, Cranbrook, when he was growing up in Michigan, and Williams asked him whether all kids deserve that kind of education. ?That?s not going to be available for the entire nation,? Romney said. But he said that ?a dollar number? doesn?t always equate to an effective teacher and ?I know that there are teachers in the public system who are every bit as good as those in the private system.?

It?s most important to focus on attracting and promoting good teachers, measuring student performance, and giving students incentives to do well, Romney said. ?We have proven that sending a lot of money to failed schools to pay the same teachers to do the same things will not make any difference,? he said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/romney-teacher-contributions-politicians-limited-134343275--politics.html

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Curiosity rover touches 1st Martian rock

NASA's Mars rover Curiosity reached out and touched a Martian rock with its huge robotic arm for the first time, then took off on its longest Red Planet drive to date.

Curiosity spent the past several days investigating a strange pyramid-shaped stone named "Jake Matijevic," testing out some of the gear at the end of its 7-foot-long (2.1 meters) arm. These tools include the Alpha Particle X-Ray Spectrometer (APXS), which measures elemental composition, and the Mars Hand Lens Imager close-up camera, or MAHLI.

The rover performed these initial "contact science" operations on Saturday and Sunday (Sept. 22 and 23), researchers said. Photos snapped on those days show Curiosity's arm sidled up against "Jake Matijevic," with the arm's turret obscuring most of the 16-inch-tall (25 centimeters) rock.

"I did a science! 1st contact science on rock target Jake," the Curiosity team announced Saturday (Sept. 22) via the rover's Twitter feed @MarsCuriosity, which has more than 1.1 million followers. "Here's an action shot." [Curiosity Mars Rover: 11 Amazing Facts]

Curiosity also zapped "Jake Matijevic" with the laser on its ChemCam instrument, which reads rock composition from the vaporized bits. Comparing the results should help cross-calibrate the two instruments, researchers said.

The ChemCam work wrapped up Monday (Sept. 24), at which point Curiosity embarked on a 138-foot (42 m) drive ? the longest one-day jaunt for the rover since it landed inside Mars' Gale Crater on the night of Aug. 5.

Curiosity is making its way toward a site called Glenelg, which lies 1,300 feet (400 m) from the rover's touchdown site. Before Monday's drive, the mission team had said Curiosity was about halfway to Glenelg.

Scientists will likely soon begin looking for sandy areas to try out Curiosity's scooping system for the first time. The arm will deposit bits of Martian soil into the analytical instruments on the rover's body, which are known as SAM (Sample Analysis at Mars) and CheMin (short for Chemistry & Mineralogy).? ?

The first use of Curiosity's rock-boring drill, which also sits at the end of the rover's arm, will come sometime after that, researchers have said.

While team members are keen to see what Curiosity discovers at Glenelg, the $2.5 billion rover's main destination is the base of Mount Sharp. This odd mountain rises 3.4 miles (5.5 km) into the Red Planet sky from Gale Crater's center, and its foothills show signs of long-ago exposure to liquid water.

Those foothills lie about 6 miles (10 km) away from Curiosity's landing site. The rover ? whose main task is to determine if the Gale area could ever have supported microbial life ? may be ready to turn its wheels toward the interesting deposits near the end of the year, scientists have said.

The rock "Jake Matijevic" takes its name from Curiosity's surface operations systems chief engineer, who died Aug. 20 at the age of 64. Matijevic, who was based at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., also worked on all three previous Mars rovers ? Sojourner, Spirit and Opportunity ? NASA officials said.

Follow SPACE.com senior writer Mike Wall on Twitter @michaeldwall or SPACE.com @Spacedotcom. We're also on Facebook and?Google+.

?

Copyright 2012 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/curiosity-rover-touches-1st-martian-rock-makes-longest-024439778.html

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Army general: Pacific refocus means more exercises

FORT SHAFTER, Hawaii (AP) ? The leader of U.S. Army forces in Asia and the Pacific says his soldiers will be able to conduct more exercises with other nations in the region, as the U.S. withdraw from Afghanistan and the military refocuses its attention.

Lt. Gen. Francis J. Wiercinski, the commander of U.S. Army Pacific, said he'd like U.S. soldiers to undertake more exercises with counterparts from nations such as Indonesia, Malaysia and India.

The Army will also be able to have more active duty soldiers, instead of reserves, participate in exercises with allies such as Japan.

"We've been engaged, obviously, in the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, and that's where we've had to focus ? for all the right reasons," Wiercinski told The Associated Press in an interview at his headquarters in Hawaii. "But now that we're having this opportunity, we can get back into the Pacific with our partners here."

The Army has 70,000 soldiers and 12,000 civilians at installations in the Asia-Pacific region.

U.S. military leaders and diplomats have increasingly emphasized the importance of Asia and the Pacific as the region's economies grow and gain clout.

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta stressed last week that the U.S. pivot to the Pacific isn't aimed at containing or threatening China, which now has the world's second-largest economy after the U.S. But Washington has criticized China for lacking transparency while it has rapidly modernized its military and boosted military spending.

The Pentagon in January issued a new national defense strategy declaring that the U.S. would "rebalance" toward the region, noting U.S. economic and security interests are inextricably linked to developments in the area.

Examples of the strategy are slowly emerging.

Last year, the U.S. and Australia announced an agreement for up to 2,500 U.S. Marines to rotate through a joint military training hub in the northern Australia city of Darwin. The Navy next year plans to begin deploying a littoral combat ship ? a new type of vessel that can operate closer to shore than other ships ? to Singapore.

The Air Force, meanwhile, plans to make greater use of airfields and bombing ranges in the Australian Outback.

Wiercinski said the Army doesn't want to set up new bases. Instead, he spoke of soldiers training with other nations to get a feel for cultures, terrain and interaction with U.S. allies.

"We're not talking about putting bases in other countries or a permanent presence anywhere," he said. "We're talking about rotating ? 30, 40 days at a pop."

Wiercinski pointed to the current deployment of a few dozen soldiers to Tonga for a disaster relief exercise as the type of drill likely to become more prevalent.

In the drill, which also involves Australia, France and New Zealand, Tonga calls the U.S. for help after being hit by a major earthquake and tsunami. The Army sends soldiers to the Pacific island nation within 24 hours to assess the situation and report what help Tonga needs.

"Just that, the ability to do that, demonstrates our capability, shows the Tongan government and all the neighbors in the area that we're backing up what we say we can do," Wiercinski said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/army-general-pacific-refocus-means-more-exercises-172614887.html

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Video: Paranoia setting in for replacement refs

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

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/21134540/vp/49152474#49152474

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Apple sells over 5 million of its iPhone 5 on first weekend

Featured

10 hrs.

The iPhone 5 started shipping (and hitting store shelves) on Friday, Sept. 21. According to Apple, the company has sold more than?five million of the new iPhone model in the three days since its debut.

?We are working hard to get an iPhone 5 into the hands of every customer who wants one as quickly as possible," Apple CEO?Tim Cook said?in a press release from the Cupertino-based company. "While we have sold out of our initial supply, stores continue to receive iPhone 5 shipments regularly and customers can continue to order online and receive an estimated delivery date. We appreciate everyone?s patience and are working hard to build enough iPhone 5s for everyone."

Folks who try to order an iPhone 5 at this point will find that the device won't ship for three to four weeks, but based on calls to a random selection of Apple's own stores as well as several carriers' retail locations, there still appears to be a small amount of stock in the brick-and-mortar shops. (And as Cook said, stores are regularly receiving additional?shipments of devices.)

If you are in a rush to get an iPhone 5, we suggest that you lace up your boots and pound the pavement. As?Verizon Wireless spokeswoman Brenda Raney points out, you should not only?get to a store early (in hopes of snagging a device from a recent product replenishment), but also strategize as to which store you will visit.

"Select a store away from the center of the city or places where commuters and shoppers congregate," she told NBC News. "A?stand-alone store on the outskirts of town may be a better bet than the one in a mall.

In case you somehow missed all the excitement about the device, let's review the basics about the iPhone 5,?the latest generation of Apple's popular smartphone. In appearance, it is similar to the iPhone 4S, its predecessor, though it has?a 4-inch display (rather than a 3.5-inch display) and is a bit thinner.?The iPhone 5 offers 4G LTE connectivity (meaning users will see faster data speeds), improved battery life, a faster processor, and a lighter body.?

Out of the box,?the new smartphone will run iOS 6, the latest version of Apple's mobile operating system, which means that it will have?an improved version of Siri, a new app called Passbook (which will store boarding passes, discount cards, and similar items), and about 200 other?new features.?

Much to the dismay of many, the new operating system does not offer a Google-powered Maps app, but instead uses Apple's own creation (which is not earning much praise so far).

In better news, the iPhone 5 is considered to be "easier than ever" to repair, much to the relief of those who?live in constant?fear of dropping their iPhones and damaging the devices.

Want more tech news?or interesting?links? You'll get plenty of both if you keep up with Rosa Golijan, the writer of this post, by following her on?Twitter, subscribing to her?Facebook?posts,?or circling her?on?Google+.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/gadgetbox/apple-sells-over-5-million-its-iphone-5-first-weekend-1B6042213

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IACC 2013 : 3rd IEEE International Advance Computing Conference

IACC-2013 is soliciting original, previously unpublished and high quality research papers addressing research challenges and advances in the tracks mentioned below. The topics of the conference include, but are not limited to:

Track 1: High Performance Computing

Autonomic Computing
Biotechnology
Cluster, Cloud and Grid Computing
Compiler Technologies for High-Performance Computing
Distributed Computing
Interconnection Network and Architecture
Load Balancing, Scheduling and Resource Management
Nanotechnology
Operating System for High Performance Computing
Parallel and Distributed Algorithms/Systems
Quantum Computing
Scalable Servers and Systems
Scientific/Engineering/Commercial Application and Workloads
Surface Computing
Track 2: Advances in Communication and Networks

Ad-hoc Networks
Computer Networks
Cryptography
Cyber Crime
Cyber Crime
Cyber Law & Security
Ethical Hacking
Fraud Control
High Performance Networks
High Speed Networks
Information and System Security
Intellectual Property Right
Mobile Computing
Multimedia Signal Processing
Network Security and Privacy
Reliable Computing
RFID Applications
Software Engineering for Emerging Networks and Systems
Software Engineering for Mobile Systems
Trusted Computing
Wireless Communication
Wireless Sensor Networks
Track 3: Advanced Algorithms

Approximation Algorithms
Bioinformatics Algorithms
Computational Biology
Computational Geometry
Data Compression Algorithm
Parallel and Distributed Algorithms
Exponential Algorithm
External-Memory Algorithms
Game Theory
Graph Algorithms
Network Algorithms
On-line Algorithms
Optimization Algorithms
Parallel Algorithms
Parameterized Algorithms
Pattern Matching Algorithm
Randomized Algorithms
Streaming Algorithms
String Algorithms
Track 4: Image & Multimedia Processing

Audio Video System
Biometrics and Human Computer Interaction
Data / Image Compression
Digital Image Processing
Document Analysis
Image / Video Coding and Transmission
Image Enhancement
Image Formation
Image Restoration
Internet and Web Applications
Machine Learning and Data Mining
Medical Imagine
Multimedia Applications
Pattern Recognition and Analysis
Statistical and Structural Pattern Recognition
Video on Demand
Wavelet Transforms
Track 5: Databases and Data Management

Clustering
Databases and Data Mining Applications
Database Tuning
Distributed Databases
Feature Selection and Feature Extraction
High Performance Data Mining Algorithms
Information Retrieval
Knowledge Discovery in Database
Knowledge Management
Query Optimization
Search Engine Optimization
Sequential Data Mining
Social Network Mining
Stream Data Mining
Temporal and Spatial Data Mining
Text, Graph, Video, Multimedia Data Mining
Web Mining
Track 6: Teaching & Learning Systems

Academic Staff/Faculty Development
Accreditation and Quality Assurance
Active Learning
Assessment and Evaluation
Computer-Based Learning and Courseware Technologies
E-assessment
E-learning in the Workplace
Ethical and Social Justice Issues
Generic Skills (e.g., Communications, Teamwork)
Industry Linkages and Partnerships
Infrastructure and Technology for Engineering Education
Interdisciplinary Teaching Approaches
Introductory Engineering and Computing Courses
Learning Management Systems
Learning Models
Mobile Learning
Mobile Learning
Service Learning
Technology Enhanced Learning for students with special needs

Source: http://www.wikicfp.com/cfp/servlet/event.showcfp?eventid=25884©ownerid=19567

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BigDavidMullins: Why does gronkowski always look like hes gotta turtle head pokin out? #NFL #patriots

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Source: http://twitter.com/BigDavidMullins/statuses/250030153881776128

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IMF chief says hopes Argentina can avoid "red card" over data

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Free downloads! - Others Forum - Chartered Accountants India ...

Here are the free downloads:

1. Negotiation ? The Art of Getting What you Want

Download link: Negotiation ? Art of Getting What U want
In this 160 page book, author has demonstrated use of practical tips andl techniques in every day lives for effective negotiations.

2. Go ? getter:

Download link:?gogetterastoryt00kynegoog[1]

This is a small book by Peter B. Kyne. As the name indicates, this is the story of a person who is a ?go-getter? and his motto is: ?It shall be done!?

3. How to start an internet business?

If you are looking for staring an internet business and to earn money online, I would recommend this small 51 page E-Book by Yaro Starak to you. Download link: How to start an internet business?

4. Qualities of a successful blog and how to make money from blogging

The website developed by Yaro Starak makes $ 20,000 per month and attracts around?25,000 daily readers. He claims that he works only two hours a day? Here is his book: Blog profits blue print which informs us about the reason behind his success:

Download link: Blog profit blue print

Source: http://www.caclubindia.com/forum/free-downloads--221604.asp

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