Saturday, June 22, 2013

Randy Orton and Daniel Bryan set for Raw rematch

After their brutal SmackDown battle ended in a?controversial count-out victory for Daniel Bryan, WWE.com has learned that the submission specialist and Randy Orton will once again lock up Monday on Raw.

With the score now even at one victory apiece, Monday's battle will be the rubber match in what has been an epic series of bouts that culminated on the June 17 episode of Raw, when WWE COO Triple H deemed Bryan too injured to continue and awarded the match to The Viper. For his part, Bryan was hot about not being able to finish the match, and he let Triple H know it. The submission specialist carried those emotions over into an explosive SmackDown main event on June 21, where he defeated Orton via count-out in another classic showdown.

Bryan confronts Triple H backstage!?| Photos of Friday's blockbuster bout

Now, with the two Superstars set to go head-to-head again, will The Viper prove that Daniel Bryan really is the "weak link," or will the bearded wonder once again wow the WWE Universe and drop Orton? Find out Monday on Raw!

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Source: http://www.wwe.com/shows/raw/randy-orton-and-daniel-bryan-set-for-raw-rematch

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Family seeks answers in death near Hernandez home

BOSTON (AP) ? At least one company yanked an endorsement deal from New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez on Friday as puzzled family members of a friend found slain a mile from Hernandez's home sought answers about how he died.

Police have searched in and around Hernandez's sprawling home in North Attleborough, not far from where the Patriots practice, but a court clerk said that as of Friday afternoon no arrest warrants had been issued in the case. The Bristol County district attorney has not released any information, other than saying the death of semi-pro football player Odin Lloyd was being treated as a homicide.

A jogger found Lloyd's body in an industrial park Monday. Family members said Friday that Lloyd had been dating Hernandez's fiancee's sister for about two years. They said the two men were friends who were together the night Lloyd died.

Police in nearby Providence, R.I., said they had assisted Massachusetts state police and North Attleborough police with activity related to the Hernandez investigation at a strip club named Club Desire. It was unclear if they believed Lloyd and Hernandez might have been at the club in the days before Lloyd died. A reporter was escorted out of the club Friday afternoon before she could speak with employees or patrons.

Family members have said Lloyd, 27, was never in trouble.

"I want the person that killed my son to be brought to justice," said Lloyd's mother, Ursula Ward. "That's my first-born child, my only boy child, and they took him away from me. ... I wouldn't trade him for all the money in the world. And if money could bring him back I would give this house up to bring my son back. Nothing can bring my son back."

Family members said they had heard from Lloyd's girlfriend but not from Hernandez after Lloyd's death. They are anxiously awaiting an arrest in the case.

"We're just hoping for justice," cousin Marsha Martin said. "We don't want Odin to have died in vain."

Hernandez's attorney Michael Fee has acknowledged media reports about the state police search of his Hernandez's home but said he wouldn't have any comment on it.

Attleboro District Court clerk magistrate Mark E. Sturdy said three search warrants were issued in the investigation earlier in the week but have not been returned, meaning they're not public. He said no arrest warrants had been filed in state courts by the time court closed at 4:30 p.m. Friday.

Hernandez was gone from his home for most of the day Friday, including when two state police officers knocked on his door. He returned home with his attorney around 5 p.m.

Patriots spokesman Stacey James has said the team does not anticipate commenting publicly during the police investigation. NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell was waiting for the legal process to take its course.

CytoSport, a Benicia, Calif.-based company that makes Muscle Milk and other supplements for athletes, said Friday it was ending Hernandez's endorsement contract, effective immediately, because of the investigation.

The Patriots drafted Hernandez out of Florida in 2010. Since then, he has combined with Rob Gronkowski to form one of the top tight end duos in the NFL. He missed 10 games last season with an ankle injury and had shoulder surgery in April but is expected to be ready for training camp. Last summer, the Patriots gave him a five-year contract worth $40 million.

Hernandez said after he was drafted that he had failed a drug test while with the Gators and had been upfront with NFL teams about the issue.

Earlier this week, a man filed a lawsuit in South Florida claiming Hernandez shot him in the face after they argued at a strip club there.

Alexander Bradley's lawsuit accuses Hernandez of negligence, among other things, suggesting that the shooting may have been accidental. Bradley said he lost his right eye and suffers many other lingering effects from the shooting.

A spokeswoman for the Palm Beach County sheriff's office said Friday that investigators would need to speak with Bradley to move forward with a criminal investigation and cannot rely on the claims he made in his lawsuit. The spokeswoman, Teri Barbera, said Bradley repeatedly refused to cooperate in the criminal probe after he was shot in February, telling detectives he didn't know who shot him.

Hernandez's attorney did not respond to a request for comment on the lawsuit.

___

Associated Press writers Curt Anderson in Miami, Michelle R. Smith in Attleboro, Rodrique Ngowi in Boston and Erika Niedowski in Providence, R.I., contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/family-seeks-answers-death-near-hernandez-home-160343672.html

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Weinstein Co. Shifts Meryl Streep-Julia Roberts 'August: Osage County' to Christmas

By Todd Cunningham

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - The Weinstein Company on Thursday shifted the release date of one of its main awards hopefuls, "August: Osage County," to Christmas Day. It had been scheduled to debut on November 8.

Christmas is getting crowded. Also set to debut on that day are Universal's Keanu Reeves action drama "47 Ronin," Paramount's Chris Pine-Keira Knightley action thriller "Jack Ryan" and the Fox comedy "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty."

The studio also shifted "Grace of Monaco," a biopic starring Nicole Kidman as Hollywood star-turned-princess Grace Kelly, from December 27 to November 27, the day before Thanksgiving.

"August: Osage County" is directed by John Wells and produced by George Clooney and Grant Heslov. The cast includes Meryl Streep playing a pill-popping mother and Julia Roberts as her bitter daughter. Also featured are Chris Cooper, Benedict Cumberbatch, Ewan McGregor, Sam Shepard, Abigail Breslin and Juliette Lewis.

The Tracy Letts play that inspired the film snagged just about every major theatrical prize including the Pulitzer when it debuted on Broadway in 2007.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/weinstein-co-shifts-meryl-streep-julia-roberts-august-211620704.html

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Grenier: Drug war demonizes (CNN)

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Policy of sensible politics and commonsense economics: A revisit ...

By Adisa Adeleye

A critical reader once asked me to define the concept of sensible politics and commonsense economics that I always refer to in this column, and also, to differentiate between that concept and President Jonathan?s Transformation Agenda. My logical answer is that the President?s Transformation Agenda is now in vogue and Nigerians are familiar with the consequences of some of the actions of the Federal Government.

Simply put, the Agenda on the Economy is macro-economic stability with full employment and less inflation. The idea is to grow the economy to the extent that poverty would be eradicated and prosperity restored and maintained. The political agenda points to politics without strife and bitterness and security of life and property.

My concept of sensible politics and commonsense economics would depend on application of policies to the attainment of peace and prosperity. In a democratic environment, there would be a government and the opposition {alternative government). It is the duty of the government, through its pre-election promises, to rule and provide good and tolerable administration for the people. sanusi1

It is the right of a progressive opposition to examine critically the policies of the government, point out adverse consequences and assure the electorate of its readiness to provide a better solution. In the absence of organized strong and effective opposition, many Nigerians, through the media, have been critical of the government to the displeasure of the celebrated spokesmen of the authorities.

The idea of sensible politics rests on the pillars of consensus ? a stand which will appeal to majority of Nigerians and which the opposition parties will find it difficult to oppose with good reason. In the recent emergency declaration in three states of the March, the stand of the federal government, though belated, was widely supported by majority of Nigerians. It is however recognized that such an important step should have been discussed before action, with a responsible opposition.

In all civilized democratic institutions of the world, security matters, war and peace, are thoroughly discussed with responsible organs of the state to obtain maximum support of the people and easy passage of laws at the Legislative houses. The organized opposition of the people and the discordant notes from the nation?s parliament on many critical issues is a stronger pointer to the fact that political processes, at times, lack sensible approach.

A case in point is the recent Senate approach to a single term of six years for President and Governors. How do you gather support from the affected political office holders if they know that their fortunes are affected? You should not expect a President to support a piece of legislation that would affect his chance of second term.

It is amazing, if not embarrassing that of all the myriads of problems facing Nigeria, it?s only the term of principal political officers that would excite the minds of our highly paid parliamentarians. The electoral processes need structural reforms before 2015; there are questions about suitability of the presidential system of government for a developing country; other problems concern the imposition of a unitary system of administration on a federal constitution. There are also problems of armed robberies, kidnapping and ritual and political killings that need adequate attention.

Many analysts believe that a plural society like Nigeria needs the development of sensible politics to promote consensus on vital matters through cooperation and understanding. The negative approach to sensible politics is the apparent curious behavior of many PDP governors and some party officials. The strife within the rank and file of party members and the dictatorial and proud attitudes currently being displayed do not suggest an atmosphere for rational thinking for the development and progress of the country.

The words in the mouths of many patriotic Nigerians rest on the believe that a party that does not tolerate opposition and cannot manage its affairs with dignity may not be the party that would bring peace and prosperity to the country. The tragedy of the Nigerian politics is the difficulty or near impossibility of removing a non-performing sitting administration. People doubt the efficacy of the present electoral regulations in resolving rigging issues.

Many economists are not sure of the effectiveness of some policies under the Transformation Agenda to ensure prosperity through less poverty and high employment. At present the reliance on oil for the sustenance of the Nigerian economy has not encouraged the desired economic development. Oil revenue, as an engine of growth, is being used to support the budgets of all tiers of government (whose propensity to consume conspicuous non-essential goods is prodigious).

The failure of the federal government and the states on the use of Excess Crude Oil account for infrastructural development is a case in point. Also, as Nigerian oil would be facing bleak future in foreign market, the home production is affected by pipe-line vandals and daring crude oil thieves.

It is regretful that the present economic policy has produced a regime of high banking lending rate, low value of the naira, high unemployment rate and deepening poverty. A preferable commonsense approach would be cheap money (low bank lending rate) as being practiced in many developed countries; a suitable exchange rate in respect of certain necessary commodities and great incentives to domestic manufacturing.

There is no other way to tackle high rate of employment problem than the injection by the government of massive funds into the economy to stimulate effective demand and thereby, increase employment. Commonsense dictates this approach in the short-term (as the year 2015 approaches), as Lord Keynes once noted, ?in the long term, we are all dead?.

Comments are moderated. Please keep them clean and brief.

Source: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/06/policy-of-sensible-politics-and-commonsense-economics-a-revisit/

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Administrator opens probe of spill claims lawyer

NEW ORLEANS (AP) ? For months, BP has complained that a Louisiana attorney who is administering its settlement with tens of thousands of Gulf Coast businesses and residents has made decisions that expose the company to what could be billions of dollars in fictitious claims arising from the 2010 oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

Now the court-appointed administrator himself is investigating allegations that could provide the London-based oil giant with fodder for its argument that it hasn't gotten a fair shake from the claims-processing team.

Lafayette-based lawyer Patrick Juneau confirmed Friday that he has opened an internal probe of alleged misconduct by one of his staff attorneys, Lionel H. Sutton III.

Sutton resigned Friday morning, Juneau spokesman Nick Gagliano told The Associated Press.

A report outlining the allegations, a copy of which was obtained by the AP, accuses Sutton of "writing polices" that benefited himself and other plaintiffs' lawyers. It does not elaborate.

Prepared by Juneau's office, the report also says a "confidential source" who contacted Juneau's security chief accused Sutton of trying to influence a claim filed by New Orleans-based Andry Law Firm. The same firm allegedly paid Sutton a portion of settlement proceeds for claims he had referred to it before he went to work for Juneau.

Juneau provided the report to U.S. District Judge Carl Barbier during a meeting in his chambers Thursday. The administrator has pledged to thoroughly investigate the claims involving Sutton, who started working for his office in November 2012, according to the report.

Both BP and claimants "rightfully expect fairness and objectivity from this claims process," Juneau wrote.

"Our goal is to operate in an efficient, transparent and fair manner. All allegations are taken seriously and investigated thoroughly."

But in its own statement Friday, BP said only a "comprehensive and independent investigation will ensure the integrity of the claims process."

Sutton acknowledged in an email late Thursday that he had been told he was suspended "pending an investigation of an anonymous allegation against me."

"I have not been made aware of the substance of the allegation or the status of the investigation," Sutton wrote. "Once this is resolved, I would be happy to discuss it all with you."

According to the report, Sutton denied the allegations when Juneau discussed them with him.

"Sutton advised Juneau that he did not retain any interest in the claims or clients and the allegations were 100 percent incorrect," the report says.

But the report also cites passages from a string of email exchanges in which Sutton allegedly asks about his cut of nearly $500,000 in settlement payments to an individual who had filed several seafood-related claims.

In response to a lawyer who emailed him in January 2013 and asked him about his fee, Sutton allegedly responded, "They sent you the check for my fee. The total fee on (the claimant) was 10k (+ or -). They sent you 5 for me and kept the other 5."

Jonathan Andry, a lawyer at the firm that allegedly paid Sutton, didn't immediately respond to messages left at his office and with his answering service.

The report indicates that Juneau's security head, David Welker, notified the FBI's New Orleans division about the lawyer's alleged misconduct. Welker until recently was the special agent in charge of the FBI office in New Orleans.

An FBI spokeswoman in New Orleans declined to comment Thursday.

Before the allegations even surfaced, BP PLC had sued to block what could be billions of dollars in settlement payouts to businesses over the spill. The company has accused Juneau of trying to rewrite the terms of the deal and asserts that he has made decisions that expose the company to fictitious losses that were never contemplated in the settlement.

Judge Barbier, who is overseeing the massive settlement, appointed Juneau last year and has upheld his decisions for calculating payments. BP has appealed, and the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals is scheduled to hear the case in July.

It's unclear how much influence Sutton had over the process of evaluating and paying scores of claims spawned by the deadly Deepwater Horizon disaster, which killed 11 rig workers and led to the nation's offshore oil spill.

The report prepared by Juneau's office Thursday doesn't elaborate on the allegation from the confidential source that Sutton was "writing policies within the (settlement program) that ultimately may benefit his friends who are attorneys and himself."

But the revelation could strengthen BP's position as it forges ahead with a high-stakes challenge to Juneau's interpretation of the settlement terms.

"If I'm Judge Barbier, I've got to worry about this," said Howard Erichson, a Fordham University law professor specializing in complex litigation. "Any claims settlement relies on a reliable claims process. If the integrity of the claims process is challenged, the judge is going to take that very seriously."

The spill began in April 2010 after the BP-leased drilling rig Deepwater Horizon exploded off the Louisiana coast, killing 11 workers. Roughly 200 million gallons of crude oil were released from the Macondo well a mile under the Gulf surface. Marshes, fisheries and beaches from Louisiana to Florida were fouled by the oil until a cap was placed over the blown-out well in July 2010.

BP set up a compensation fund for individuals and businesses affected by the spill and committed $20 billion. The claims fund initially was handled by lawyer Kenneth Feinberg but Juneau took over the processing of claims after the settlement was reached last year.

Juneau's office announced in May that it has determined more than $3 billion in claims are eligible for payment through the settlement agreement. More than 162,000 claims were filed and more than $2 billion had been paid to claimants as of May 6.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/administrator-opens-probe-spill-claims-lawyer-173946788.html

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John Hodgman explains the end of the world to you

John Hodgman explains the end of the world to you

John Hodgman is the world's foremost expert on all things canny and uncanny, and everything in between. And today marks the release of Ragnarok, his one-hour comedy special about the apocalypse, via Netflix. To celebrate, we talked to him about the meaning of apocalyptic stories, and why he doesn't love zombies.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/_e7ftlyvejw/john-hodgman-explains-the-end-of-the-world-to-you-521452635

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New documents reveal parameters of NSA?s secret surveillance programs (Washington Post)

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Friday, June 21, 2013

This Insane Carbon Fiber Hammock Bathtub Is the Epitome Of Relaxation

This Insane Carbon Fiber Hammock Bathtub Is the Epitome Of Relaxation

The eternal debate?of whether to soak in the tub or lounge in a hammock?has just been rendered moot, thanks to this stunning carbon fiber hammock tub that lets you do both at the same time. Made by the UK company SplinterWorks, it's called the Vessel, and it makes for an awesome centerpiece for your bathroom, assuming you've got the room for it (and the cash).

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Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/cmQchnGZqBk/this-insane-carbon-fiber-hammock-bathtub-is-the-epitome-529680956

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WHO: Third of women suffer domestic violence

LONDON (AP) ? About a third of women worldwide have been physically or sexually assaulted by a former or current partner, according to the first major review of violence against women.

In a series of papers released on Thursday by the World Health Organization and others, experts estimated nearly 40 percent of women killed worldwide were slain by an intimate partner and that being assaulted by a partner was the most common kind of violence experienced by women.

"Violence against women is a global health problem of epidemic proportions," WHO Director-General Dr. Margaret Chan said in a statement.

WHO defined physical violence as being slapped, pushed, punched, choked or being attacked with a weapon. Sexual violence was defined as being physically forced to have sex, having sex because you were afraid of what your partner might do and being compelled to do something sexual that was humiliating or degrading.

The report also examined rates of sexual violence against women by someone other than a partner and found about 7 percent of women worldwide had previously been a victim.

In conjunction with the report, WHO issued guidelines for authorities to spot problems earlier and said all health workers should be trained to recognize when women may be at risk and how to respond appropriately.

Globally, the WHO review found 30 percent of women are affected by domestic or sexual violence by a partner. The report was based largely on studies from 1983 to 2010. According to the United Nations, more than 600 million women live in countries where domestic violence is not considered a crime.

The rate of domestic violence against women was highest in Africa, the Middle East and Southeast Asia, where 37 percent of women experienced physical or sexual violence from a partner at some point in their lifetime. The rate was 30 percent in Latin and South America and 23 percent in North America. In Europe and Asia, it was 25 percent.

Some experts said screening for domestic violence should be added to all levels of health care, such as obstetric clinics.

"It's unlikely that someone would walk into an ER and disclose they've been assaulted," said Sheila Sprague of McMaster University in Canada, who has researched domestic violence in women at orthopedic clinics. She was not connected to the WHO report.

"Over time, if women are coming into a fracture clinic or a pre-natal clinic, they may tell you they are suffering abuse if you ask," she said.

For domestic violence figures, scientists analyzed information from 86 countries focusing on women over the age of 15. They also assessed studies from 56 countries on sexual violence by someone other than a partner, though they had no data from the Middle East. WHO experts then used modeling techniques to fill in the gaps and to come up with global estimates for the percentage of women who are victims of violence.

In a related paper published online in the journal Lancet, researchers found more than 38 percent of slain women are killed by a former or current partner, six times higher than the rate of men killed by their partners. Heidi Stoeckl, one of the authors at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said the figures were likely to be an underestimate. She and colleagues found that globally, a woman's highest risk of murder was from a current or ex-partner.

Stoeckl said criminal justice authorities should intervene at an earlier stage.

"When a woman is killed by a partner, she has often already had contact with the police," she said.

Stoeckl said more protective measures should be in place for women from their partners, particularly when he or she has a history of violence and owns a gun.

"There are enough signs that we should be watching out for that," she said. "We certainly should know if someone is potentially lethal and be able to do something about it."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/third-women-suffer-domestic-violence-131011699.html

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IDC: Apple tripled iPhone share in China in Q1, leaps to fifth place

?

China now has more active Android, iOS devices than US, growing rapidly

Market analysis firm IDC has released its latest figures on smartphone share in China, and reports that Apple has achieved a nine percent share of the estimated 78 million smartphones sold in China during the first three months of 2013, a rise of 117 percent year-over year. While all of the top vendors did well, Apple -- led by its entry-level iPhone 4 -- grew at an annual rate of 211 percent. Another survey firm, Canalys, gave Apple an eight percent share but also ranked it in fifth place among manufacturers, about double the prevailing view on the company's marketshare in China.

The tripling of iPhone 4 sales is credited to more aggressive marketing by Apple including financing through instalment plans and generous trade-in offers through resellers, who then recycle the trade-ins to bolster their margins. In both the IDC and Canalys surveys, Samsung is the market leader with a share roughly double that of Apple -- but the core of its business is in sub-$200 phones rather than premium smartphones.

Also of note in a recent analysis by Flurry Analytics was that the Chinese market for smartphones is now larger than the US market, with China having reached parity in January and is now approaching the 250 million mark in the total number of active iOS and Android devices. The US market is also growing, but at a slower pace and is estimated to have reached the 230 million mark in February.

Samsung's hold on the low-end phone market in China grew by 47 percent, which mirrors recent map analysis based on Twitter tweets that show that poorer areas of major US cities tend to be dominated by Android phones, while upscale areas tend to be solidly iPhone-centric. IDC says that Samsung has changed its marketing focus to simply maintaining its high-end base and focusing on the low-end segment for growth. China now has 79 percent of its mobile handset market made up of various levels of smartphone as it makes the transition away from "feature phones."

Because of the lower price of the iPhone 4 coupled with Apple's incentives, it has found that it can compete effectively in the "middle range" between the low-end devices (many of which barely qualify as smartphones) and the premium devices such as the iPhone 5. Apple's sales surge would indicate that consumers are willing to reach a little beyond the cheapest segment when they can get most of the features found in the most expensive premium smartphones, the so-called "value segment" of the market.

The report says that the dominance of the market by foreign-owned companies has hindered China-based local manufacturers (apart from international brand Huawei) from gaining more of a foothold, mostly due to patent limitations or the fact that foreign manufacturers have eaten up most of the capacity with parts suppliers. IDC believes that the larger domestic brands in China will need to expand through mergers and acquisitions of parts suppliers in order to fight the challenge of foreign brands.

China is also starting to see a rise in large-screen mobile phones, with units that feature screens larger than five inches now accounting for 7.5 percent of the market -- a 74 percent year-over-year rise that IDC believes this will grow to 20 percent share by year's end. As such devices tend to be priced as higher "premium" smartphones, however, the prediction may be seen by some as optimistic. The analysis firm also called for 4G to overtake 3G as a majority of smartphone models sometime in 2017, and said that trends going forward will depend heavily on the "stickiness" of the mobile services eco-system vendors build around the products -- a factor that could favor more growth for Apple, which is widely seen as having the best and most resilient after-sale phone accessories and app market.

By Electronista Staff

Source: http://electronista.feedsportal.com/c/34342/f/625515/s/2d87a1ff/l/0L0Smacnn0N0Carticles0C130C0A60C190Cchina0Bnow0Bhas0Bmore0Bactive0Bandroid0Bios0Bdevices0Bthan0Bus0Bgrowing0Brapidly0C/story01.htm

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Thursday, June 20, 2013

Insight: Who wants to bet on a 'Nicaragua Canal'?

By Ivan Castro and Lomi Kriel

MANAGUA/PANAMA CITY (Reuters) - For centuries since the colonization of the New World, entrepreneurs have dreamed of building a canal spanning Nicaragua to make it easier to tap Asia's riches.

Sixteenth century Spanish conquistador Hernan Cortes yearned to cleave the isthmus, and ever since, French, American and Dutch financiers have all made abortive, Quixotic attempts to bisect the Central American country's volcano-studded terrain.

Now it's the turn of the Chinese. And skepticism is as strong as ever.

The Hong Kong-based company that won a concession to design, build and manage a $40 billion canal to rival Panama's says it has been lured by an energy renaissance in the United States and its belief that world trade could double by 2030.

The company, HKND Group, was registered last year in the Cayman Islands. This would be its first infrastructure project, and its 40-year-old boss, Wang Jing, is relatively unknown.

There is still no firm route for the proposed canal, which would cost about four years' worth of Nicaragua's annual gross domestic product, and would likely be three times longer than the 48-mile (77-km) Panama Canal, which took a decade to build. Engineers also note that the geography poses some major challenges - not least a 20 foot tide differential between the two coasts.

For all those reasons, investors and infrastructure experts are highly dubious that a canal will ever be built.

"Are international shipping companies going to trust a one-guy shop with minor telecommunications experience to be the system integrator on a $40 billion project in a country whose transparency is already subject to question?", said Evan Ellis, a professor of national security studies at the U.S. Government's National Defense University.

Greg Miller, a shipping consultant at IHS Fairplay, a global maritime intelligence company, was also highly skeptical.

"The Nicaragua canal will never be built and the only people who'll financially profit from this proposal are the consultants paid to do the feasibility studies," he said.

Rosario Murillo, the wife of President Daniel Ortega and his government spokeswoman, said at a ceremony with Wang after the concession was granted: "This is a day of miracles, of wonders." Government officials declined to comment on skepticism that has emerged since then.

BETTING ON ENERGY BOOM

HKND Group is a unit of holding company the HK Nicaragua Canal Development Investment Co., Ltd. which was incorporated last year, according to the Hong Kong Companies Registry.

It bases its projections for the future success of a Nicaragua canal on the U.S. shale revolution, which has unlocked decades of oil and gas supply. If the United States wants to export more to Asia, the theory goes, it will need to send more and bigger ships from Gulf Coast refineries by canal to the Pacific, and Panama won't be able to handle it all.

"This project can be undertaken now, and only now, thanks to the discovery of prodigious amounts of gas and oil in the United States," said Ronald MacLean-Abaroa, HKND Group's spokesman, who is a former mayor of Bolivia's La Paz and one-time World Bank governance specialist.

"Three years ago that didn't exist," he told Reuters in an interview, saying the company would seek to raise private financing in Asia. On its website, the company also pointed to growth in U.S. exports of iron ore, coal and grains.

The Panama canal is already expanding to accommodate growth in traffic, and experts say the shale oil boom could benefit a Nicaraguan project, if it is ever completed.

Maersk Line, the world's largest container shipping company and the Panama Canal's top customer, has rerouted services from Asia to the East Coast of the United States via the Suez Canal. Its newest ships are too big for the Panama Canal, even after a third lane is built.

A spokesman for Maersk Line Central America and Caribbean said it was too early to speculate on the Nicaragua project, but it would be monitoring developments.

"We applaud bold initiatives that can boost the possibilities for container shipping for the benefit of both lines and our customers," Ariel Frias said.

Panama Canal officials have said it is too early to speculate on the viability of the Nicaraguan waterway or how it could affect trade.

OUT OF THE BLUE

Little is known about the Chinese lawyer and businessman behind the canal project, Wang Jing.

According to his identity card data, Wang was born in Beijing on December 24, 1972, but there is no information on him publicly available until 2010, when he became the head of the Xinwei Telecom Enterprise Group, a wireless communications company. Wang visited Nicaragua in 2012 and signed a wireless telecoms deal.

Xinwei's website says the group's core markets include public telecoms operations, public security, oil fields, power grids, water conservancy and transportation and emergency communication, and lists several subsidiaries in China, Hong Kong, Russia and Cyprus.

The site, which does not mention HKND Group, carries photographs of Xi Jinping, now China's president, and Li Keqiang, now premier, visiting Xinwei.

"Your future is very bright. Full of hope," the site quotes Li as saying of Xinwei, picturing Wang with the leader. It said the visit took place on December 21, 2010.

At Wang Jing's listed office in Hong Kong, a woman declined to say where he was. HKND Group's plush office takes up a large part of the 18th floor of Two International Finance Centre, which it occupied in May.

The office is large and brand new with a view of Victoria Harbor outside its floor-to-ceiling windows. Big LED screens by the front door play the company's promotional videos in a loop. The office was very quiet and few people were working there.

An HKND spokesperson contacted by email said Wang was not available to comment for this story.

The company has given little information on the practicalities of building the proposed canal. The concession simply lists a shipping canal, ports and terminals, an oil pipeline, a railway, free trade zones and an airport.

Unlike the Panama Canal, a canal cutting across Nicaragua could theoretically be built at sea level, without locks, but there is a problem with the tides at either end. The timing and height of the tides are different, meaning that the water level can be as much as 20 feet higher at one end.

"It means a lot of water is going to come from west to east," said J. David Rogers, professor or geological engineering at Missouri University of Science & Technology.

"Everybody would love to have a sea-level canal between the Pacific and the Atlantic," he said, adding that engineers would likely have to consider tidal weirs.

"I'm not saying you can't do it, but it has some major engineering challenges that have to be overcome, and if it's your first project, I wouldn't invest in it."

Environmentalists are concerned the project could contaminate Lake Nicaragua, Central America's largest reserve of fresh water, which would almost certainly be part of any route.

President Ortega said last week the government was going ahead with feasibility studies that should be done by 2015, when work on the canal could begin.

Under the terms of the concession, HKND Group would face no legal or economic sanctions for failing to complete the project.

"Who knows if this is actually going to happen or not, but it seems much more serious at this point. There's some real heavy-weights involved," said Margaret Myers, director of the China and Latin America program at the Washington D.C.-based Inter-American Dialogue.

She noted HKND Group says it is working with several respected international companies, including Environmental Resources Management, a leading sustainability consultancy, and consulting firm McKinsey & Company.

McKinsey declined to comment, citing client confidentiality. Environmental Resources Management confirmed it had been hired to do a study.

SHOW ME THE MONEY

Another open question is the financing.

Christopher Erckert is a partner at the U.S. Mayer Brown law firm, which advised the Panama Canal Authority in its $5.25 billion expansion. A specialist in Latin American project finance, he said the main risk would be if Nicaragua nationalized the canal in the future.

"Nicaragua is not an investment grade country. That's a fact," he said. "That makes this a speculative grade investment... which limits the kind of investors who can play."

Several project financiers Reuters spoke to, who asked not to be named, said they had seen no signs in the industry of interest in the project.

If the project does go ahead, it might depend on China's desire to flex its muscles in America's backyard.

Alfonso Guzman, managing director at Castalia Strategic Advisors, an international economic and financial advisory firm, said it was hard to see how the project would be commercially viable.

"The only way it can be viable is if someone like the Chinese government provides a lot of grants and low-cost money so that the cost of the project is low and the prices charged for using this canal are lower or comparable to what the Panama canal offers," he said.

(With reporting by Lomi Kriel in Panama City, Isabella Cota in San Jose; Krista Hughes, Gabriel Stargardter and Simon Gardner and Elinor Comlay in Mexico City, Jonathan Standing and Koh Guiqing in Beijing, Lavinia Mo, Anne Marie Roantree and James Pomfret in Hong Kong and Kristen Hays in Houston; Writing by Gabriel Stargardter and Simon Gardner; Editing by Claudia Parsons)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/insight-chinese-whispers-wants-bet-nicaragua-canal-085902132.html

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Digital 3-D atlas of brain reveals tiny details

AAA??Jun. 20, 2013?2:30 PM ET
Digital 3-D atlas of brain reveals tiny details
AP

In this photo provided by Katrin Amunts, Karl Zilles, Alan C. Evans, researchers use a microtome to cut sections from a brain preserved in paraffin wax into slivers 20-micrometers thick, resulting in over 7,400 slices. A digital three-dimensional model called "BigBrain" was produced from the thousands of sections. Its resolution is finer than a human hair, so it can reveal clusters of brain cells and even some large individual cells. It is being made available to scientists around the world. The researchers, from Germany and Canada, reported their work Thursday, June 20, 2013 in the journal Science. (AP Photo/Katrin Amunts, Karl Zilles, Alan C. Evans)

In this photo provided by Katrin Amunts, Karl Zilles, Alan C. Evans, researchers use a microtome to cut sections from a brain preserved in paraffin wax into slivers 20-micrometers thick, resulting in over 7,400 slices. A digital three-dimensional model called "BigBrain" was produced from the thousands of sections. Its resolution is finer than a human hair, so it can reveal clusters of brain cells and even some large individual cells. It is being made available to scientists around the world. The researchers, from Germany and Canada, reported their work Thursday, June 20, 2013 in the journal Science. (AP Photo/Katrin Amunts, Karl Zilles, Alan C. Evans)

This image made from video provided by researchers shows a highly-detailed image of the hippocampus region of the human brain. The digital three-dimensional model called "BigBrain" was produced from the thousands of sections made from the brain of a 65-year-old woman. Its resolution is finer than a human hair, so it can reveal clusters of brain cells and even some large individual cells. It is being made available to scientists around the world. The researchers, from Germany and Canada, reported their work Thursday, June 20, 2013 in the journal Science. (AP Photo/Montreal Neurological Institute/McGill University, Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine/Research Centre Juelich, and National Research Council of Canada)

In this photo provided by Katrin Amunts, Karl Zilles, Alan C. Evans, researchers use a microtome to cut sections from a brain preserved in paraffin wax into slivers 20-micrometers thick, resulting in over 7,400 slices. A digital three-dimensional model called "BigBrain" was produced from the thousands of sections. Its resolution is finer than a human hair, so it can reveal clusters of brain cells and even some large individual cells. It is being made available to scientists around the world. The researchers, from Germany and Canada, reported their work Thursday, June 20, 2013 in the journal Science. (AP Photo/Katrin Amunts, Karl Zilles, Alan C. Evans)

In this photo provided by Katrin Amunts, Karl Zilles, Alan C. Evans, researchers arrange sections made from a brain preserved in paraffin wax. A digital three-dimensional model called "BigBrain" was produced from the thousands of sections. Its resolution is finer than a human hair, so it can reveal clusters of brain cells and even some large individual cells. It is being made available to scientists around the world. The researchers, from Germany and Canada, reported their work Thursday, June 20, 2013 in the journal Science. (AP Photo/Katrin Amunts, Karl Zilles, Alan C. Evans)

(AP) ? Scientists have a new brain atlas to help them study their favorite organ. It's a digital, three-dimensional model called "BigBrain."

Its resolution is finer than a human hair, so it can reveal clusters of brain cells and even some large individual cells. It is being made available to scientists around the world.

To make the atlas, researchers sliced a cadaver brain from a 65-year-old woman into 7,400 thin sections, stained them to reveal tiny features, and scanned each one. Then they used computers to combine the scanning data into a 3-D digital model.

The researchers, from Germany and Canada, reported their work Thursday in the journal Science.

___

Science: http://www.sciencemag.org

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-06-20-US-SCI-3-D-Brain/id-94a7556d7f1f4233b49bafaca05d8394

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Carbon nanotube harpoon catches individual brain-cell signals

June 19, 2013 ? Neuroscientists may soon be modern-day harpooners, snaring individual brain-cell signals instead of whales with tiny spears made of carbon nanotubes.

The new brain cell spear is a millimeter long, only a few nanometers wide and harnesses the superior electromechanical properties of carbon nanotubes to capture electrical signals from individual neurons.

"To our knowledge, this is the first time scientists have used carbon nanotubes to record signals from individual neurons, what we call intracellular recordings, in brain slices or intact brains of vertebrates," said Bruce Donald, a professor of computer science and biochemistry at Duke University who helped developed the probe.

He and his collaborators describe the carbon nanotube probes June 19 in PLOS ONE.

"The results are a good proof of principle that carbon nanotubes could be used for studying signals from individual nerve cells," said Duke neurobiologist Richard Mooney, a study co-author. "If the technology continues to develop, it could be quite helpful for studying the brain."

Scientists want to study signals from individual neurons and their interactions with other brain cells to better understand the computational complexity of the brain.

Currently, they use two main types of electrodes, metal and glass, to record signals from brain cells. Metal electrodes record spikes from a population of brain cells and work well in live animals. Glass electrodes also measure spikes, as well as the computations individual cells perform, but are delicate and break easily.

"The new carbon nanotubes combine the best features of both metal and glass electrodes. They record well both inside and outside brain cells, and they are quite flexible. Because they won't shatter, scientists could use them to record signals from individual brain cells of live animals," said Duke neurobiologist Michael Platt, who was not involved in the study.

In the past, other scientists have experimented with carbon nanotube probes. But the electrodes were thick, causing tissue damage, or they were short, limiting how far they could penetrate into brain tissue. They could not probe inside individual neurons.

To change this, Donald began working on a harpoon-like carbon-nanotube probe with Duke neurobiologist Richard Mooney five years ago. The two met during their first year at Yale in the 1976, kept in touch throughout graduate school and began meeting to talk about their research after they both came to Duke.

Mooney told Donald about his work recording brain signals from live zebra finches and mice. The work was challenging, he said, because the probes and machinery to do the studies were large and bulky on the small head of a mouse or bird.

With Donald's expertise in nanotechnology and robotics and Mooney's in neurobiology, the two thought they could work together to shrink the machinery and improve the probes with nano-materials.

To make the probe, graduate student Inho Yoon and Duke physicist Gleb Finkelstein used the tip of an electrochemically sharpened tungsten wire as the base and extended it with self-entangled multi-wall carbon nanotubes to create a millimeter-long rod. The scientists then sharpened the nanotubes into a tiny harpoon using a focused ion beam at North Carolina State University.

Yoon then took the nano-harpoon to Mooney's lab and jabbed it into slices of mouse brain tissue and then into the brains of anesthetized mice. The results show that the probe transmits brain signals as well as, and sometimes better than, conventional glass electrodes and is less likely to break off in the tissue. The new probe also penetrates individual neurons, recording the signals of a single cell rather than the nearest population of them.

Based on the results, the team has applied for a patent on the nano-harpoon. Platt said scientists might use the probes in a range of applications, from basic science to human brain-computer interfaces and brain prostheses.

Donald said the new probe makes advances in those directions, but the insulation layers, electrical recording abilities and geometry of the device still need improvement.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/strange_science/~3/7OztY2ISM84/130619195129.htm

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6 Ways Instagram Could Beat Vine at Video Sharing

6 Ways Instagram Could Beat Vine at Video Sharing

War is a-brewin'. Video sharing has been slow to become part and parcel of our everyday schemata of social media, but with the success of Vine, competitors are scrambling to get in on the action. Among them? Reigning heavyweight social champ Instagram, which is reportedly adding video to its arsenal this month. Here's how it might be able to beat Vine at its own game.

Filters

6 Ways Instagram Could Beat Vine at Video Sharing

Instagram forever altered photo sharing by popularizing filters that alter color, texture, and focus. Whether you love filters or despise them, there's no question that they've contributed to Instagram's appeal by simply making the mundane look pretty. Amateur video is often clumsy and drab, and Instagram could immediately stand out by tastefully spicing things up with filters.

Using Previously Shot Clips

Anything you post to Vine must be recorded in Vine. You cannot pull videos from your library, which is definitely limiting and, for some, fairly frustrating. It means you can't edit things in other apps or use material from other cameras. Instagram could open the doors to your previously recorded footage, as it currently does with photos, giving you more options and flexibility.

Dedicated Website

6 Ways Instagram Could Beat Vine at Video Sharing

It took Instagram some time before it made users' photo libraries viewable in their own self-contained web pages. Currently, a Vine recording can only be viewed in the app, or embedded as a card on Twitter or on another website. People love centralized viewing of their media, and Instagram would fulfill that neatly by incorporating video into the current user web pages. It could also get a pretty healthy head start, given that Vine.com is a well-established preexisting brand.

Export as GIF

6 Ways Instagram Could Beat Vine at Video Sharing

While not a very likely feature, the option to export a video (or portion of a video) as a small, self-contained, animated GIF would be the ultimate in share-ability. It would no doubt titillate the current GIF-obsessed internet audience, and would make for a supremely portable file.

Editing Options

Vine concocted an innovative way to compose a series of 'edits' using only your finger and a 6 second timer. It has been great seeing how imaginative users have stretched the limits of what you can create. But it is also very limited. While Instagram has always held to a very small degree of customizability, it could push things just a bit further than Vine in terms of editing and recording options?perhaps a way to re-order or trim clips.

Instagram will have to be careful not to disturb the streamlined aspect of their user-experience, but often simple options have the potential to open the floodgates for new and interesting types of videos.

Less Fragmentation

This one is kind of a stacked deck for Instagram, which enjoys the luxury of already reaching a gigantic user base. Of course, as part of Twitter, Vine theoretically has access to a similar base. However, the Vine experience was new and distinct from Twitter, an entirely separate download. If Instagram releases a decent product, many people will use it over Vine simply because they already use Instagram and don't like the idea of having to keep track of yet another stream, yet another app.

Source: http://gizmodo.com/6-ways-instagram-could-beat-vine-at-video-sharing-514140443

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54% of pregnant women use insecticides that are harmful to the fetus, Spanish study shows

June 20, 2013 ? Pregnancy and infancy are the periods of greatest vulnerability to the use of household insecticides. This is one of the findings of the first study of its kind to be carried out in Spain, which concludes that more than half of expectant mothers routinely use these chemical compounds.

Spanish researchers have described the use of domestic pesticides during pregnancy and the first year of life in nearly 2,500 women and children in Sabadell, Guip?zcoa and various areas of Asturias and the Valencian Community.

The study, published in Science of the Total Environment, also considers the socio-demographic and lifestyle factors most strongly linked to the use of these pesticides.

In 2003 and 2008, the authors monitored the women who agreed to take part in the project from the beginning of their pregnancy until birth and during their offspring's first few years of life.

"Pesticides are used in domestic environments to control infestations of insects or other living creatures," explains Sabrina Llop from the Higher Public Health Research Centre (CSISP) in Valencia, the leading author of the paper. "Exposure during pregnancy or infancy proves to have a negative impact on fetal growth and neurological effects, as well as increasing the risk of childhood leukemia," she continues.

The results show that 54% of pregnant women used some kind of insecticide inside the home and 15% made use of a combination of two or three methods.

45% of women used some kind of insecticide in their bedrooms: 5% throughout the whole year, 75% seasonally and 20% on an occasional basis. The most frequently used method in the bedroom was the electric device at 62%.

47% of pregnant women used insecticides in the rest of the house, 7% throughout the whole year, 67% seasonally and 26% occasionally. The most widely used method by women in other areas of the house was insecticide spray at 69%.

2% of women used other kinds of measures to control infestations in their bedrooms and 5% in the rest of the house. These other measures included cockroach traps, powder insecticide and chemical methods such as wave devices. Only 1% of women used insect repellents during pregnancy.

10% of pregnant women used outdoor insecticides, such as in gardens or vegetable plots and yards with plants: 9% every month, 14% every 2-3 months, 20% three times a year and 57% occasionally.

"These results are significant because they enable this information to be used to come up with preventive measures, especially at vulnerable stages of life," Llop affirms.

The less educated, the more pesticides

"Multiparous women, born in Spain, with a lower level of education, who have a garden, whose residence is near crops, and/or from Sabadell or Valencia are the most likely to use household pesticides," Llop asserts.

The use of these pesticides continued during their offspring's first year of life, although 20% of the women stopped using them. Sprays were the method that the participants were most likely to stop using in their bedrooms: 53% during pregnancy and 26% during infancy. In contrast, the use of the electric device remained constant.

Exposure routes

The main ways of being exposed to these substances are inhalation, skin contact and unintentional ingestion. In babies and children, ingestion of contaminated dust in the house is the most significant route of exposure to pesticides in the home.

The authors attribute this to babies spending more time at home and in general wearing fewer clothes than adults. In addition, their breathing zones are closer to the ground, where pesticide residue levels can be higher, and they are more likely to have close contact with plants, grass and other surfaces.

"Fetuses and children are especially vulnerable to pesticide exposure because their detoxification mechanisms and immune systems are not fully developed," Llop concludes.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/living_well/~3/Mk6bFrOGjb0/130620100832.htm

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Implications seen for rural firms as farmers reduce debt

Updated at 7:20 am today

Rural services firms such as PGG Wrightson are expected to benefit from moves by farmers to pay down their debts and spend more in coming years.

A report by Forsyth Barr Research said debt in the farming sector is still rising but the rate of growth is slowing.

The slowdown is being helped by the high New Zealand dollar, stagnant land prices and moves by farmers to pay down their loans following the global financial crisis.

The Farm to Fridge report said debt growth across the agricultural sector surged from 15 billion dollars in 2002 to 47 billion in 2009, driven by the move towards dairy farming in the past decade.

In the last three years it has grown at a slower pace to $50 billion.

Forsyth Barr equity analyst James Bascand said the moves by farmers to pay down their debt will have implications for companies that are exposed to the agricultural sector.

Source: http://www.radionz.co.nz/news/business/138014/implications-seen-for-rural-firms-as-farmers-reduce-debt

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