Sunday, September 30, 2012

Iran swipe at Web brings angry reply

FILE- In this Monday, Feb. 13, 2012 file photo, Iranian women use computers at an Internet cafe in central Tehran. Iran?s cyber monitors often tout their efforts to fight the West?s 'soft war' of influence through the web, but trying to ban Google?s popular Gmail may have gone too far with complaints coming even from email-starved parliament members. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi, File)

FILE- In this Monday, Feb. 13, 2012 file photo, Iranian women use computers at an Internet cafe in central Tehran. Iran?s cyber monitors often tout their efforts to fight the West?s 'soft war' of influence through the web, but trying to ban Google?s popular Gmail may have gone too far with complaints coming even from email-starved parliament members. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi, File)

FILE - In this Monday, Feb. 13, 2012 file photo, Iranian women use computers at an Internet cafe in central Tehran. Iran?s cyber monitors often tout their efforts to fight the West?s 'soft war' of influence through the web, but trying to ban Google?s popular Gmail may have gone too far with complaints coming even from email-starved parliament members. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi, File)

(AP) ? Iran's cyber monitors often tout their fight against the West's "soft war" of influence through the Web, but trying to block Google's popular Gmail appeared to be a swipe too far.

Complaints piled up ? even from email-starved parliament members ? and forced authorities Sunday to double down on their promises to create a parallel Web universe with Tehran as its center.

The strong backlash and the unspecific pledges for an Iran-centric Internet alternative to the Silicon Valley powers and others highlight the two sides of the Islamic Republic's ongoing battles with the Web. It's spurred another technological mobilization that fits neatly into Iran's self-crafted image as the Muslim world's showcase for science, including sending satellites into orbit, claiming advances in cloning and stem cell research and facing down the West over its nuclear program.

But there also are the hard realities of trying to reinvent the Web. Iran's highly educated and widely tech-savvy population is unlikely to warm quickly to potential clunky homegrown browsers or email services. And then there's the potential political and economic fallout of trying to close the tap on familiar sites such as Gmail.

"Some problems have emerged through the blocking of Gmail," Hussein Garrousi, a member of a parliamentary committee on industry, was quoted Sunday by the independent Aftab-e Yazd daily. What he apparently meant was that many lawmakers were angry and missing their emails.

He said that parliament would summon the minister of telecommunications for questioning if the ministry did not lift the Gmail ban, which was imposed last week in respond to clips on Google-owned YouTube of a film mocking the Prophet Muhammad that set off deadly protests across the Islamic world.

Even many newspapers close to the government complained over the email disruptions. On Saturday, the Asr-e Ertebat weekly reported that Iranians had paid a total of $4.5 million to purchase proxy services to reach blocked sites, including Facebook and YouTube, over the past month.

Iranian authorities ? perhaps recognizing the risks at hand ? decided against taking a symbolic twin shot at Google and cut access to the Web browser in a country with 32 million Internet users among a population of 75 million, according to official statistics.

That would rank online Iran among the world's top 20 in terms of sheer numbers of users, and equivalent to some European countries in per capita Web use at more than 40 percent, according to the private monitoring group Internet World Stats. The World Bank, however, puts Iran's Internet link rate at just 21 percent last year.

The U.S. is among the world's highest at more than 75 percent.

Iran's deputy telecoms minister, Ali Hakim Javadi, told reporters that Iranian authorities were considering lifting the Gmail ban. But he also used the opportunity to again promise development of Iran's domestic alternatives: the Fakhr ("Pride") search engine and the Fajr ("Dawn") email, Aftab-e Yazd reported.

When reporters noted the quality of Gmail services, Javadi quipped: "If there is Mercedes Benz on the street, that doesn't mean everyone drives a Mercedes."

Iran's clerical establishment has long signaled its intent to get citizens off of the international Internet ? which they say promotes Western values ? and onto a "national" and "clean" domestic network. Earlier this year, Iran's police chief, Esmail Ahmadi Moghadam, called Google an "instrument of espionage" rather than a search engine.

But it is unclear whether Iran has the technical capacity to follow through on its ambitious plans, or is willing to risk the economic damage and the social shock waves.

The Internet has steadily become part of Iran's fabric since the first Farsi-language sites developed a decade ago by Canadian-Iranian blogger Hossein Derakshan, who is considered one of the founders of Iran's social media community. Derakshan, however, was detained in 2008 and sentenced to nearly 20 years in prison two years later as the battles heated up between liberals seeking open access to the Web and authorities trying to erect their own version of China's "Great Firewall," the name given to Beijing's extensive filtering and censorship of the Internet.

Sites such as Twitter and Facebook were pillars of the street revolts after the disputed 2009 re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. The powerful Revolutionary Guard responded by recruiting and training its own cyber force to patrol the Web and, later, try to defend against virus attacks on nuclear and other sites that Iran has blamed on the West and its allies.

Some Web security experts also have raised the possibility of Iranian hackers being behind some recent high-profile computer attacks, such as disruptions at Saudi Arabia's state oil giant Saudi Aramco and Qatari natural gas producer RasGas earlier this month. Iran has denied any links.

In a video message for Iranian new year in March, President Barack Obama denounced what he called the "electronic curtain" that keeps ordinary Iranians from reaching out to Americans and the West.

A few weeks later, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei ordered the creation of an Internet oversight agency that included top military, security and political figures in the country's boldest attempt yet to control the Internet. The panel is headed by Ahmadinejad and includes powerful figures in the security establishment such as the intelligence chief and the commander of the Revolutionary Guard.

It's not Iran's first attempt to hold off what hardliners call a Western "cultural invasion." The so-called Barbie wars have gone on for more than a decade with periodic raids to confiscate the iconic American dolls from toy stores. Iran also introduced its own dolls ? twins Dara and Sara ? designed to promote traditional values with modest clothing and pro-family values, but it hasn't significantly dented the demand for Barbie dolls.

___

Murphy reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-09-30-Iran/id-576494b520a94668b12d7493e7567ffe

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Local church services

Chancellor Assembly of God Church, 20527 N. State Highway 27, Chancellor, will hold a Fifth Sunday Night Sing on Sunday, Sept. 30, at 5 p.m. featuring The Paul Family from Buchanan, Ga.

The Davis-McLeod District Fellowship will hold a Fifth Sunday Service on Sept. 30 at Abbeville Church of God in Christ. Sunday school will be at 9:45 a.m. and worship will be at 11 a.m. All district pastors and members are encouraged to attend, and the public is welcome.

Liberty Free Will Baptist Church, 2620 Eddins Road, Dothan, will host Walter Wilson in concert on Sept. 30 at 6 p.m. Finger foods will be served after the concert. No admission charged but an offering will be taken. The church is located off Cottonwood Highway behind the Wilson Mill house, also known as the Peacock house.

The Geneva Baptist Association?s Christ Helping Hands Ministry has a fall and winter clothes available for purchase at the mission store in Hartford. Donations are welcomed. The store is at 710 E. State Highway 52 in Hartford. Call 334-588-3276 for information.

El Bethel Baptist Church, located on Highway 27 North in Chancellor, will be having revival services each Monday during October beginning at 7 p.m. The Oct. 1 services will be led by Dr. Rick Lance, executive director and treasurer of the Alabama Baptist State Convention. For more information, call the church office at 334-684-9544.

Maple Avenue Baptist Church, 1009 W. Maple Ave., Geneva, will host the monthly luncheon meeting of the non-denominational 39er?s C.L.U.B. on Tuesday, Oct. 9, at 11 a.m. Reservations needed by Oct. 2. Past attendees should contact their table hostess; newcomers can call the church office at 334-684-9617. Cost is $5 per person.

Miracle Evangelistic Church of God Inc., 1429 Ross Clark Circle, Dothan, will host a celebration to honor its pastor, Apostle Frank L. Mobley Sr., Oct. 3 through Oct. 6 with services at 6 p.m. and Oct. 7 with a service at 3:30 p.m. For more information, 334-648-4936.

Faith Deliverance Ministries of Berachah Inc., 1310 W. Carroll St., Dothan, will hold a pre-anniversary celebration honoring Pastor Michelle Lee and revival services on Oct. 4 and Oct. 5 at 7:30 p.m. Guest speaker will be Pastor Eddie Stapleton from Blakely, Ga. Call 334-678-1744.

Klondyke Gospel Music Center, located halfway between Newton and Ozark at 3885 Highway 123 S., will host Steve Conrad of Cyprus, Fla., Oct. 5; Scott and Peggy Fowler of Luverne, Oct. 6; Robert Matelski of Slaughter, La., Oct. 12. Free admission. Concerts begin at 7 p.m.

Victory Tabernacle, 10005 E. State Highway 52, Hartford, will hold a peanut boiling and bluegrass gospel sing on Saturday, Oct. 6, at 5 p.m. Singers will include Straight and Narrow and Cleo and the Cholesterol Cowboys of Cornbread County. Admission free but an offering will be taken for the House of Compassion Children?s Home in Haiti. Lawn chairs recommended.

The Christian Brotherhood of Hosford and Telogia will be host a trap shooting tournament, On Target for Him, on Oct. 6 at the Woodmen of the World Youth Lodge in Hosford, Fla., to benefit the Calhoun-Liberty Ministry Center. Registration will start at 8:30 a.m. Cost is $25 per shooter or a canned food donation for spectators. Shooters must be part of a five-member team. Teams must pre-register. For more details or to register a team, contact Daniel Stanley at 850-570-8802.

Grimes Gospel Lighthouse, 1512 County Road 25, Grimes, will host Steven Conrad from Cypress, Fla., at 7 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 6. An offering will be taken. Sunday services will be at 10:30 a.m. with Herbert Brady preaching.

Trinity Baptist Church on U.S. Highway 431 S. in Headland will be celebrating their 25th anniversary beginning at 9:45 a.m. on Oct. 7. Dr. Bill Ashford, first pastor of Trinity, will bring the message with Brother Hasten Walker leading the music. All former members of the church are invited. A covered dish lunch will be served after the service.

Wesley Chapel Community Church will celebrate Homecoming Day on Sunday, Oct. 7, beginning at 10 a.m. with Lydia Berry as the guest singer. A lunch will follow at noon, and a congregational singing will begin at 1 p.m. Wesley Chapel is located at the crossroads of County Road 65 and County Road 54, north of Echo. For more information, call 334-795-6143.

The Breakfast Club of New Easter Missionary Baptist Church, 309 Hope Ave., Graceville, Fla., will host its regular monthly breakfast on Sunday, Oct. 7, at 7 a.m. in the church?s fellowship hall. The guest speakers are Jackson County Sheriff Lou Roberts and Jackson County Commissioner Willie Spires.

Hodgesville Baptist Church, 11190 S. County Road 33, Dothan, will hold Homecoming on Oct. 7, celebrating 101 years. Services begin at 10:30 a.m. with the Glory Road Quartet. Former pastor Brother Jimmy Harrison will deliver the message at 11:30 a.m. A covered-dish lunch will be served after the message.

Bellwood Baptist Church will hold Homecoming on Oct. 7 beginning at 10:30 a.m. The Rev. Wayne Scarborough, pastor of Auburn Heights Baptist Church in Phenix City, will be preaching. A fellowship meal will be served from 12:30 to 2 p.m. An afternoon session will begin at 2 p.m. and will feature Four Calvary gospel quartet from Bonifay, Fla. For more information, call 334-588-6766 or 334-588-3535.

St. Peter Baptist Church, 120 Girard St., Abbeville, will hold an Ushers? Anniversary service on Oct. 7 at 11 a.m. Special guests will be Willie Lawrence and the Spiritual Five.

Source: http://www2.dothaneagle.com/news/2012/sep/29/local-church-services-ar-4652212/

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Re: AVG PC Tuneup Customer - AVG Forums

reallymadnow..

Yesterday evening, I spent over an hour in an ?online CHAT??.only to receive confirmation of the original license number - that is not being recognised.

This morning, I have spent two hours on the telephone speaking to two different agents (possibly) located in the USA or one of it?s off shore call centres?.and constantly being put on hold to await a technician?s response?.which doesn?t come....so I eventualy hung up - TWICE.

PROBLEM; I tried to update AVG Tune UP 2012.?on doing so, the original programme was removed from the laptop?and the new ?trial? version installed. When entering the existing license number?it simply transfers me to a web page where I can purchase the new version.

As the original version was valid until February 7th 2013.?I do not currently wish to purchase again.

I believe all it requires a new license number to be generated for the trial version that is currently on the laptop - that will take me to February 7th 2013 - when I would need to renew!

I am extremely disappointed with the difficulty experienced in trying to contact AVG UK direct?..and with the unacceptable level of delays - plus, the time kept on hold. My time is extremely valuable..... angry

If this is the standard of AVG customer support?.I regret that I will not renew in future (Our home & business runs two computers?.. each running AVG Internet Security - plus, AVG Tune Up) - and will no longer recommend to colleagues/friends.

Source: http://forums.avg.com/us-en/avg-forums?sec=thread&act=show&id=217341

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Saturday, September 29, 2012

'Dance Moms' star: Get in shape, Honey Boo Boo

Getty Images, AP file

Abby Lee Miller and Alana "Honey Boo Boo" Thompson.

By Ree Hines, TODAY contributor

"Dance Moms" instructor Abby Lee Miller is known for her tough-talking ways when it comes to dealing with young dancers on her Lifetime show, but she also has harsh words for another kid. When asked about TLC's rising reality star Alana "Honey Boo Boo" Thompson, Miller didn't hold back.

"She needs to get in shape," Miller said of the 7-year-old during an interview with TMZ. "She needs to be at a dance studio; she need to be training; she needs to work on her turnout -- the whole nine yards."

Miller hasn't been the only one to remark on the tyke's physique lately. On the season finale of "Here Comes Honey Boo Boo," Alana herself worried that she was too "chunky" to fit into her latest pageant outfit. And "The View's" Joy Behar recently said that she believed the youngster would "grow up to be a big fat woman."

That's an awful lot of commentary about one kid's weight. But in the case of Miller, it seems to come with some degree of empathy. After all, she admits she's not so happy with her own shape either.

"I'm a little frazzled because I was watching the reunion of 'Dance Moms,' and I didn't like my hair and I didn't like my two chins," she told TMZ.

Related content:

More in The Clicker:

Source: http://theclicker.today.com/_news/2012/09/28/14139741-dance-moms-teacher-abby-lee-miller-honey-boo-boo-needs-to-get-in-shape?lite

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China rocket puts Venezuela satellite into orbit

By Agence France-Presse
Saturday, September 29, 2012 17:57 EDT

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A Chinese rocket on Saturday successfully launched a Venezuelan earth-observation satellite into orbit, state media said.

The satellite, dubbed ?Generalissimo Francisco de Miranda? after the major Venezuelan independence figure, was launched from the northwest Jiuquan base in the Gobi desert using a ?Long March? class rocket, said Xinhua.

The launch comes four years after the first-ever Venezuelan satellite, named ?Simon Bolivar? , which was built with Chinese help, was also put into orbit using a Chinese rocket.

Last year, Venezuela announced the new $140 million satellite would be used to monitor troop movements on the country?s borders and illegal mining, as well as study climate change and the environment.

The two countries have forged close economic ties in recent years as leftist Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has sought to reduce dependence on Washington, with top officials overseeing agreements worth billions of dollars in the oil, energy, construction, and technology sectors.

They signed an agreement last week to develop together Las Cristinas in southern Venezuela, one of the world?s biggest gold mines, with plans to exploit both the yellow metal and cooper there.

Beijing has extended some $30 billion in credit to Caracas, and Venezuela in turn sells some 640,000 barrels of oil a day to China.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheRawStory/~3/AAFp4BVDNFU/

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Ex-Goldman programmer rejects plea deal with NY: lawyer

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But what do your friends think?\",\"POLL_HEADER\":\"SOCIAL SENTIMENT\",\"SERVER_ERROR\":\"Oops there seems to be some error, please try again later\",\"LOADING\":\"Loading...\",\"SHARE_AFTER_COMMENT\":\"Your response has been shared on Facebook.\",\"UNDO\":\"Undo\",\"UNIT_PEOPLE\":\"People\",\"NUM_PEOPLE_DISAGREE\":\"disagree with your opinion.\",\"READ_MORE_TEXT\":\"Read what they have to say.\",\"SLIDER_THUMB_WORDING_BEFORE_VOTING\":\"WHAT DO YOU THINK?\",\"SLIDER_THUMB_WORDING_VERB_BEFORE_VOTING\":\"DRAG\",\"SLIDER_THUMB_WORDING_THANKS_VOTING\":\"Thanks for voting\",\"NUM_PEOPLE_ANSWERED\":\" 2,816 people have answered this question\",\"ONE_PERSON_ANSWERED\":\" 1 person has answered this question\",\"TWO_PEOPLE_ANSWERED\":\" 2 people have answered this question\",\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s1\":2121,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s2\":227,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s3\":112,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s4\":100,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s5\":99,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s6\":156,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s7\":0,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s8\":0,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s9\":0,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s10\":0}","fbconfig":"{\"message\":\"undefined\",\"name\":\"undefined\",\"link\":\"\",\"source\":\"\",\"picture\":\"http:\\\/\\\/l.yimg.com\\\/a\\\/i\\\/ww\\\/news\\\/2011\\\/09\\\/27\\\/yahoo-tc.jpg\",\"description\":\"\",\"captionLeft\":\"undefined\",\"captionRight\":\"undefined\",\"app_id\":\"196660913708276\",\"redirect_uri\":\"\\\/_xhr\\\/ugcratefbredirect\\\/\"}","template_id":"LONG_SLIDER_SOUTH","obj_id":"ratings_65023516ae68e8c463e64f979916ad62","opt_count":"6","opt_color1":"","opt_color2":"","template_html":"

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ex-goldman-programmer-rejects-plea-deal-ny-lawyer-175213702--sector.html

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Friday, September 28, 2012

Don?t Let Them Disenfranchise You

early voting Voters cast their ballot in a recall election June 5, 2012 in Lake Mills, Wis. Get-out-the-vote volunteers tried different tactics to improve voter turnout in the state.

Photo by Andy Manis/Getty Images.

Five days before the failed vote to recall Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, Rob ?Biko? Baker sat behind the wheel of his Ford Fusion in a working-class neighborhood of Milwaukee?s West Side and watched two of his college-age volunteers knock on doors. They were doing what canvassers for the League of Young Voters, the group Baker serves as executive director, often do before an election: reminding urban, working-class black voters of an upcoming vote and exhorting them to participate.

?Official records show that you are registered to vote. We?re visiting voters like you who care about our community to remind you about the special recall election on June 5!? the canvassers began, after asking to speak with a specific member of the household.? ?It looks like a lot of people will be voting this year in the special recall election, and we hope our community turns out, too!?

Only this time there was something new in the scripts that Baker?s canvassers had affixed to their clipboards. ?Check this out,? they read. ?Have you heard that they?re trying to take away our right to vote?? The canvasser was then supposed to go on and explain what had happened that year in Wisconsin: A law had been passed to require voters to present ID, but a court had intervened to halt its implementation. ?Our power to change laws is directly tied to voting. Imagine if you didn?t have the right to vote,? the script read, before delivering some stage directions: GIVE PERSONAL STORY.

Baker looked out on the scene. ?After 2010, we?ve been on the defensive so much about voter ID,? said the 34-year old Milwaukee native, a former hip-hop promoter who did social media for Snoop Dogg before starting work on a doctorate in history. Founded in 2003 as part of a Bush-era renaissance in liberal organizing, the League of Young Voters had shifted its emphasis to mobilizing specifically urban minorities in six states, relying on the efforts of mostly young, black volunteers. It was a task Baker thought had taken on an unanticipated urgency with the spate of new state laws requiring that citizens present ID cards to vote. ?When I left school I didn?t think my job would be convincing people to get drivers? licenses,? he said.??That?s not why I left graduate school.?

Baker was nonetheless approaching the voter ID question in a rather scholarly way. When it looked as though the Wisconsin law would be enforced in 2012, he wondered if it might present a new opportunity for his group: Could raising hackles over the law?s perceived injustice help to mobilize infrequent voters who might otherwise feel they don?t have a stake in election outcomes? Baker sought out partners to help him design a field experiment that could be administered in the June recall to yield lessons for November. The League of Young Voters ended up partnering with two leaders of Washington?s lefty empirical-electioneering establishment: the New Organizing Institute and the Analyst Institute, which specializes in randomized-control trials to measure the impact of campaign activity. ?I?m like a backyard mechanic who?s got a little bit of schooling,? says Baker, ?but I?m not a political scientist.?

The New Organizing Institute helped create walk lists that included only targets who had been identified by voter data as likely to be African-American, a group the league believed would be the most outraged by new voting laws. The Analyst Institute oversaw the process of randomly assigning Milwaukee?s 318 wards to three separate groups: 104 would get a standard get-out-the-vote canvass, 104 would get scripts with the additional language about voting rights and ID laws, and 104 would be in a control group that was ignored altogether by the league?s canvassers.

The streets of Wisconsin were a muddle that weekend, with canvassers from established institutions (like unions and Democratic Party organizations) mixing with those from pop-up groups founded solely to battle Walker; all were boosted by the arrival of out-of-state volunteers. The experimental design couldn?t control for the activities of these other groups, so the best Baker could do was to train his two dozen paid staffers and their teams of often teenage volunteers to stick closely to their instructions when they headed out in to knock on doors.

Over the summer, it became clear that presenting IDs wouldn?t be a concern to Wisconsin that fall, but that it would be in other states that mattered a lot to Democratic fortunes, like Pennsylvania. As Baker waited for the results of his field experiment to be tabulated, a growing constellation of liberal operatives, strategists, and donors had already reached the conclusion that the new issue would permit them to go on offense, mobilizing the most disaffected corners of their coalition.

?It?s going to be an amazing get-out-the-vote effort for us because there will be stories about people being denied the vote,? John Anzalone, one of Obama?s pollsters, said of voter ID laws at a panel discussion hosted by National Journal during the Democratic Convention in Charlotte. ?This has the ability to really piss a lot of people off.?

By then, the numbers had come in from Milwaukee, and the Washington institutions that had taken on responsibility for the analysis had begun circulating draft memos and PowerPoint presentations. At first glance, the voter ID script appeared to have had an impact: 29.9 percent of Milwaukeeans assigned to hear it turned out to vote in the recall, compared to the control group?s rate of 28.8 percent. But the residents who received a standard get-out-the-vote message from league canvassers voted at a 30.7 percent rate. In other words, the voter ID script actually did worse than the traditional mobilization method, although not in a way the Analyst Institute assessed as statistically significant. ?We cannot conclude that Voter ID messaging dampened turnout, but we also can?t conclude that it increased turnout,? an institute memo read.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=401ea14df23aeb6508a97499fff12f8b

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Burden of epilepsy in developing world described

ScienceDaily (Sep. 27, 2012) ? The burden of epilepsy in poorer parts of the world could be readily alleviated by reducing the preventable causes and improving access to treatment, according to a review article published September 27 in the Lancet.

The researchers call for greater recognition from international and national health agencies to address the management of epilepsy in the developing world.

Despite being one of the most cost-effective disorders to treat, there are twice as many people living with epilepsy in low- and lower-middle-income countries than higher income nations and more than 60% of those affected in these regions are not accessing any appropriate treatment.

Lead author Professor Charles Newton, who works in the Wellcome Trust programmes in Tanzania and Kenya, said: "Epilepsy needs to be brought into the agenda of non-communicable diseases. It was not mentioned in the UN General Assembly Meeting in New York to address the global burden of non-communicable diseases, and yet it represents a substantial burden of ill health."

Epilepsy is a common disorder, particularly in poor areas of the world, but deriving accurate figures on the epidemiology of epilepsy in low- and lower-middle income countries is very difficult. There have been very few surveys to gather appropriate data and such studies tend to be expensive, especially for countries whose health research funding is likely to be very limited.

Professor Newton and Professor Hector Garcia, both Wellcome Trust Senior Research Fellows, conducted a comprehensive review of academic articles about epilepsy in developing countries in order to piece together a picture of the burden of the disease in poorer parts of the world.

They conclude that the high number of people with epilepsy in these regions is likely caused by the higher incidence of risk factors, such as head trauma, complications during childbirth, and parasite infections such as pork tapeworm (neurocysticercosis), and river blindness (onchocerciasis).

The study also reveals the enormity of the treatment gap in poorer nations, with over 60% of people living with epilepsy in low- and lower-middle-income countries not accessing appropriate care. This is partly due to poor adherence to prescribed treatment but there remain huge barriers to accessing care, particularly in rural areas. The stigma associated with the disorder and cultural beliefs around causation is identified as a major problem, along with distance from a health-care facility and inadequate skilled manpower.

The epilepsy burden could be easily reduced by addressing some of the risk factors, say the authors. They highlight several ways in which epilepsy care could be improved at low cost, including by engaging traditional healers who for many people are the only point of care for epilepsy. Given the lack of expertise in management of epilepsy in poorer areas, they suggest that neurologists and psychiatrists should combine to set up services for the management of epilepsy in these regions.

"Sadly, adequate facilities for diagnosis, treatment and on-going management of epilepsy are virtually non-existent in many of the world's poorest regions. Many people with epilepsy or their families do not even know that they have a disorder that can be controlled with biomedical treatment, so it is vitally important that awareness is raised and medical care improved in these regions," added Professor Newton.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Wellcome Trust, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Charles R Newton and Hector H Garcia. Epilepsy in poor regions of the world. The Lancet, Volume 380, Issue 9848, Pages 1193 - 1201, 29 September 2012 DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(12)61381-6

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/EQa5c1Zcd2g/120927205459.htm

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FIDM Graphic Design/Entertainment Portfolios Offer Unique Concepts

We?re always excited to see how students who have earned their Graphic Design/Entertainment degree at FIDM/Fashion Institute of Design & Merchandising reinterpret movie marketing in their portfolios.

FIDM Graphic Design Students are constantly finding inventive ways to market films, television shows and video games. Whether they are developing ?theatrical key art or interactive online marketing concepts, FIDM Students learn the value of research and conceptual thinking first and foremost.

?The visual field of Graphic Design is being blown wide open, and FIDM has responded,? says FIDM Graphic Design Department Director Steve Reaves. ?We have brought together the best Graphic Designers in entertainment and key art design to teach our classes with the same inside knowledge and expertise that have put FIDM on the map.?

Below, check out five inspiring portfolios by recent Graphic Design/Entertainment grads by Kristen Baquerizo, Adabel Sarhad, Camille Sigler, Rebecca Wheatman and Joseph Macri. Each book offers unique qualities and includes beautiful title designs, photo rendering and visually compelling design details.

Entertainment Graphics: Kristen Baquerizo

Don?t miss Baquerizo?s clever taglines (she wrote all of her own copy lines) throughout her portfolio, and interesting interactive marketing concepts for the creepy post-apocalyptic zombie television series ?Walking Dead.?

"Inglourious Basterds" movie poster design concepts by FIDM Graphic Design Entertainment grad Kristen Baquerizo

?Inglourious Basterds? movie poster design concepts by FIDM Graphic Design Entertainment grad Kristen Baquerizo

Click on the thumbnails below to expand the image:

Entertainment Graphics: Adabel Sarhad

Sarhad incorporated plenty of beautiful hand-drawn illustrations into her portfolio, like those seen in these stunning movie poster concepts for Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.

"Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind" movie poster design concepts by FIDM Graphic Design Entertainment Grad Adabel Sarhad

?Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind? movie poster design concepts by FIDM Graphic Design Entertainment Grad Adabel Sarhad

Click on the thumbnails below to expand the image:

Entertainment Graphics: Camille Sigler

Sigler also drew most of the images found in her Graphic Design/Entertainment portfolio shown below, like the dragon shown in her key art concept for The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo.

?The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo? movie poster and marketing concept by FIDM Graphic Design Grad Camille Sigler.

?The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo? movie poster and marketing concept by FIDM Graphic Design Grad Camille Sigler.

Click on the thumbnails below to expand the image:

Entertainment Graphics: Rebecca Wheatman

We love the conceptual thinking behind Wheatman?s movie poster campaign concepts? check out typography-driven poster for The Illusionist (page 12) and the whimsical title designs incorporated into her Where the Wild Things Are theatrical key art concepts.

"Where the Wild Things Are" movie poster campaign concepts by FIDM Graphic Design Grad, Rebecca Wheatman

?Where the Wild Things Are? movie poster campaign concepts by FIDM Graphic Design Grad, Rebecca Wheatman

Click on the thumbnails below to expand the image:

Entertainment Graphics: Joseph Macri

Macri demonstrates his ability to tackle a range of genres in his portfolio, and offers plenty of subtle design details that invites in viewers, like those found in these horror flick movie poster concepts.

Movie poster design concepts for various horror films by FIDM Graphic Design Entertainment Grad Joseph Macri

Movie poster design concepts for various horror films by FIDM Graphic Design Entertainment Grad Joseph Macri

Click on the thumbnails below to expand the image:

Questions/comments? Email the editor, Mani O?Brien at mo?brien@fidm.edu

Learn More?

Would you like to learn more about earning a Graphic Design degree or Digital Media degree from FIDM/Fashion Institute of Design & Merchandising? Click the link below?

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Source: http://blog.fidmdigitalarts.com/fidm-graphic-designentertainment-portfolios-offer-unique-concepts-clever-copy-and-beautiful-design-details/

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Thursday, September 27, 2012

Non-Profit or Business ? Your Web Host is the Best Business Partner

The mission for all non-profit organizations is to create awareness of an issue or mission. With a need to draw attention to child abuse, The Lincoln County Children?s Advocacy Center (www.childrensadvocacycenter.net) in Newport, Oregon is no different. Unfortunately, this goal presented quite the challenge for the organization as its details were buried deep inside the county?s website. The limited visibility and accessibility caused the group to re-evaluate its? strategy. They knew that in order to effectively provide information about their cause, they would need to create a more impressive online presence.

?The Center wanted to provide education to the public about child abuse, prevention and opportunities to support the small, non-profit agency,? said Pam Salisbury of the Lincoln County Children?s Advocacy Center. The ability to express this message and great cause within their provided resources was extremely difficult. Searching for alternative solutions, the group was cautious to develop a website as they believed that they did not have the resources or skills needed to succeed.

?We thought a website for the organization would be too expensive and overly complicated for the average person to maintain,? Salisbury said. A sense of relief came when Salisbury explored Web hosting options and found 1&1 Internet. ?The 1&1 MyWebsite was cost effective, easy to maintain and provided responsive support.?

With a successful Web presence, the Lincoln County Children?s Advocacy Center can now effectively raise awareness and gain the attention it deserves.

By taking the leap into the online world, other non-profit organizations or businesses can see the same success that the Lincoln County Children?s Advocacy Center experienced. By choosing the right Web host as your business partner, your company will be accessible to the masses in no time.

  • Inclusive Solutions ? Bundling your online needs within one package can save on cost while streamlining your invoices. All businesses should have a specific domain name and set of domain-specific email addresses. Therefore, look at options that include such features within the hosting package as well as marketing tools to help leverage your business online.
  • Technical Features ? Factors like security, data storage, Web space and bandwidth, or Web traffic, can affect how well your website operates and adapts as your business grows. Be sure that you commit to a solution which offers unlimited or high allocation to these features.
  • Budget Friendly ? Not all businesses share the same budget for their online strategy. Most hosts provide a variety of online solutions to fit a wide range of price points. Be sure to pick one that will fit your needs and monetary restrictions.
  • Potential to Upgrade ? You may be just starting your business but you should still explore the more complex options with Web hosts. As your company grows, you may demand more from your provider so be sure that the host you chose can accommodate your upgrading needs ? even if it is a few years down the line.

Author: Kelly Meeneghan????

As a manager for 1&1 Internet, Inc., Kelly Meeneghan is an industry specialist providing expert advice on how SMBs can grow their business online through websites and online marketing methods. 1&1, a global leader among Web hosts, provides companies with the tools necessary to get online and be successful. To? View?full?profile

Source: http://www.business2community.com/startups/non-profit-or-business-your-web-host-is-the-best-business-partner-0293696

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Economic trend lines, for now, favoring Obama

WASHINGTON (AP) ? For the past year, as the presidential election unfolded, President Barack Obama confronted a dizzying swell of economic news ? hiring up, hiring down, a euro crisis abroad, seesawing gasoline prices at the pump, foreclosures dragging down home values.

Six weeks before the election, those highs and lows are merging into a straighter line which, while below optimum performance, is moving in a positive direction for the country and for the president in his contest with Republican rival Mitt Romney.

Consumer confidence is at its highest level since February. Home values are up and, more important in the election season, housing prices in 20 major cities, many of them in battleground states, rose in July. Despite recent declines, the stock market has been on an upswing, adding value to Americans' 401(k) retirement plans.

Improving consumer confidence is certainly a positive sign for Obama, who has faced a slow economic recovery and a stubbornly high unemployment rate that has remained above 8 percent since virtually the start of his presidency. The consumer confidence index, as measured by The Conference Board, jumped from 61.3 for August to 70.3 for September, though it remains well below 90, the level that is thought to signify a healthy economy.

The numbers track with recent public opinion polls showing that while a majority of Americans say the country is heading in the wrong direction, an increasing number say the country is on the right path. The rising optimism also coincides with polls showing Obama opening leads in some crucial swing states, including all-important Ohio.

If Obama's advantage holds through Election Day, September may be remembered as a pivotal month when political and economic attitudes began to gel.

A weak recovery still makes the economy vulnerable, and public opinion can still change during the critical month of October. Three debates next month between Obama and Romney have the potential of shaking up the race. And the stock market showed its fickleness Tuesday with its worst sell-off since June after a Federal Reserve official cast doubt on the effectiveness of the central bank's recent economy-boosting measures.

But with early voting already under way in some states and with a shrinking number of persuadable voters, Obama aides see a favorable political landscape despite Romney's focus on sluggish growth.

Obama advisers have long argued that despite the economy's weak performance, Obama's re-election hopes rested on a positive trend line. Indeed, Obama has been running an ad since the Democratic convention earlier this month that points to private sector job growth even as it acknowledges "we're not there yet."

"The economy is perceived in relative rather than absolute terms," said St. Louis University political scientist and pollster Ken Warren.

Romney aides argue that their bottom-line argument ? that the country cannot afford another four years of Obama ? remains a winning message that can still resonate with undecided voters.

While the confidence accrues to the president's benefit, consumer attitudes are more a reflection of their economic perceptions than they are of presidential approval. What's more, studies of the relationship between politics and consumer confidence show that falling confidence hurts a president's approval rating more than rising confidence helps.

If the president can benefit, pollsters say Democrats and Republicans seeking re-election in tough contests might also profit from improving economic indicators.

"It would help all incumbents because people are less angry," Warren said.

The rise in confidence comes as the Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller index showed that national home prices rose 1.2 percent in July compared with a year ago, increasing home equity and, by extension, the perception of personal wealth.

"People pick up on that very quickly," said Rob Shapiro, an economist and former adviser to President Bill Clinton. "They're no longer getting poor every month. So people think, 'OK, we are on a better path, even if we're proceeding on it a lot more slowly than I expected or hoped.'"

Significantly, prices are rising in many large cities in swing states such as Florida, Colorado, Michigan and North Carolina. Prices have risen 3.6 percent in Tampa, Fla., in the past year, for example. And they're up 5.4 percent in Denver, 6.2 percent in Detroit and 2.2 percent in Charlotte, N.C.

Still, Obama is bucking trends. Unemployment stands at 8.1 percent, and no president has been re-elected with unemployment above 8 percent since the Great Depression. Despite improving public attitudes, an Associated Press-GfK poll this month found 52 percent of likely voters said the country was moving in the wrong direction.

"Going from absolutely horrible to really, really bad is not exactly an endorsement of an incumbent president's record," Republican pollster Whit Ayres said. "We're a long way from measures that show the American people have confidence in the direction of the economy."

Shapiro concedes that the politics are confounding. A Washington Post poll out Tuesday showed Obama leading Romney among likely voters in Ohio, 52 to 44 percent. The president also had a slight edge in Florida, 51 to 47 percent among those most likely to vote.

"We have a president who is leading in a very convincing way despite economic numbers that suggest that he should either be losing or just hanging on, and he's not just hanging on," Shapiro said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/economic-trend-lines-now-favoring-obama-071026600--finance.html

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It?s Official: Digsby, Owned By Social Network Tagged, Is Now Open Source And Living On GitHub

digsby screensA new chapter today for Digsby, the social/instant messaging client bought by social network Tagged in April 2011 and effectively put into an idle state soon after. It has now been taken open source, with its code now living on GitHub. The intention to make Digsby open source was first announced in July of this year, but TechCrunch understands that it's only been in the last day that the source code has been completely migrated. The move gives a new lease of life to Digsby, which integrates different messaging and email clients into a single, unified view. Back when Tagged bought the company -- the first-ever acquisition for the 330-million-member, 225-country social network -- it was intended partly as an aqui-hire and partly as a tech purchase. All seven employees of developer dotSyntax were joining the company and the idea eventually was to incorporate features of Digsby into Tagged, which, unlike, Facebook is primarily about meeting new people (similar to Badoo) than it is about reconnecting with those you already know.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/4YlhyyPWoeY/

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Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Common Senior Conditions that Contribute to Hospitalization and ...

While a number of factors can contribute to a senior?s readmission to a hospital after being transitioned home, there are six common conditions that are the most prevalent causes:

  1. Arthritis
  2. Congestive Heart Failure
  3. Diabetes
  4. Myocardial Infarction (Heart Attack)
  5. Pneumonia
  6. Comorbidity

Arthritis

Arthritis is a chronic disease, which is characterized by more than 100 conditions that primarily affect a body?s joints. Some of the most common forms are osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, fibromyalgia and gout. The chances of getting arthritis, especially osteoarthritis, which is caused by the deterioration of a joint?s cartilage, increases with age, making it likely that a senior may suffer from the disease?s effects.

Some with osteoarthritis have knee or hip replacement surgery to help relieve the pain in their joints. Others use medication and lifestyle changes such as exercise and a proper diet to ease their symptoms.

But seniors with arthritis who have just completed a hospital stay and who live alone may have difficulty caring for themselves, particularly in areas of medication and nutrition management, as well as getting the exercise they need to ease their symptoms. If a senior misses needed doses of medications and becomes weak from poor nutrition, he could end up with setbacks and be readmitted to the hospital.

Congestive Heart Failure

Congestive heart failure occurs when the heart is no longer able to pump blood throughout the body. It can be caused by narrowed arteries, high blood pressure, problems stemming from a heart attack, stroke, infection of the heart, and other factors. The symptoms of congestive heart failure generally include fatigue, weakness, shortness of breath, swollen legs and ankles, reduced appetite, nausea and weight gain. Congestive heart failure is a progressive disorder that affects the heart, lungs and kidneys.

Aging plays a large role in the risk of congestive heart failure, and the prevalence of heart failure approximately doubles with each decade of life. Congestive heart failure is one of the most common reasons for hospital readmissions. If you notice any of the symptoms mentioned above, you should contact your loved one?s doctor right away.

Diabetes

Diabetes is a group of diseases characterized by high blood glucose levels due to a lack of insulin. Diabetes is present in over one quarter of seniors age 65 and older, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention?s National Diabetes Fact Sheet. People who are over age 45, overweight or obese and physically inactive also increase their chances of getting diabetes. Diabetes can cause sight and hearing loss, nerve damage, and high blood pressure.

According to the article ?Diabetic Foot Ulcers: Prevention, Diagnosis and Classification? in American Family Physician, foot complications are the most frequent reason for hospitalization in people with diabetes, accounting for up to 25 percent of all diabetic admissions in the United States and Great Britain.

Making sure that your senior loved one leads a lifestyle that includes a healthy diet, exercise and strength training, and proper medication and insulin routines may help to limit complications from diabetes. Research presented in the Lower Extremity Review article ?Exercise and Neuropathy: Not mutually exclusive? also shows that weight-bearing exercise does not increase the risk for foot ulcers, and that those people who were the most active actually reduced their risk for ulceration.

If you need some help, senior care agencies can provide assistance with making sure you senior gets exercise and proper nutrition. Many also provide transportation to activities and can help with grocery shopping.

Myocardial Infarction (Heart Attack)

If your senior loved one suffered a myocardial infarction ? also called a heart attack ? she has much to consider when returning home from the hospital including: keeping and getting to follow-up doctors? appointments and medical tests; properly taking medications; eating a healthy diet; getting to a rehabilitation program and more. Sadly, according to the US National Library of Medicine, having one heart attack increases one?s likelihood of having another episode.

The US National Library of Medicine suggests to prevent another heart attack, and thus readmission to the hospital, a senior needs to do the following:

  • Keep blood pressure, blood sugar, and cholesterol under control
  • Don?t smoke
  • Eat a heart-healthy diet rich in fruits, vegetables, and whole grains, and low in animal fat
  • Get plenty of exercise, at least 30 minutes a day, at least 5 days a week (talk to the doctor first)
  • Get checked and treated for depression
  • Limit alcohol intake to no more than one drink a day for women, and no more than two drinks a day for men
  • Stay at a healthy weight

All of this might seem like a lot of work, but it is vital to maintaining a senior?s good health and staying out of the hospital. As a caregiver you can help in many ways, but be sure to inquire with the senior?s doctors or discharge coordinators if you have questions about getting some outside assistance.

Pneumonia

Pneumonia is a serious condition that occurs when fluids accumulate in the air sacs causing irritation and inflammation in the lungs. As this occurs, blood and cells do not receive the oxygen required for proper function. Pneumonia can affect one or both lungs and can be caused by exposure to bacteria, viruses, irritants or exposure to chemicals. Since the elderly can often have chronic lung problems, the condition may be harder to detect, especially if a senior is already weakened from a previous hospital stay.

Seniors don?t always exhibit classic pneumonia symptoms such as chills, shortness of breath and chest pain. In fact, many elderly sufferers, particularly those just released from the hospital, often show no symptoms because their immune response may already be in a somewhat weakened state. Seniors may also have a lower than normal temperature versus a high temperature. Other signs of pneumonia in seniors include confusion, disorientation, severe weakness and bleeding or discoloration of the lips and nail beds.

According to the National Institutes of Health, pneumonia is one of the ten leading causes of death for persons over the age of 65. It is vital that you monitor your loved one for pneumonia symptoms and call the doctor if you suspect a senior?s health is off. Doing so can keep a senior healthy and risk free.

Comorbidity

Comorbidity is the simultaneous presence of two or more conditions or diseases in the same person, which may complicate her situation. For example, if a senior has congestive heart failure she is particularly vulnerable to infection, especially pneumonia and influenza. An infection can aggravate the underlying heart disease and could lead to rapid, frequent recurrences of the congestive heart failure, which could then result in readmission back to the hospital.

Discharge from the hospital is a critical transition point in your loved one?s care especially if he has multiple comorbidities. Be sure to ask several questions of the senior?s discharge coordinator so that you can make sure to be watch for warning signs and be ready to help manage them.

It may seem a daunting task to have to watch for all of these conditions and their various warning signs but doing so can mean the difference between a senior?s full recovery, a setback or worse. And always remember to take good care of yourself. Be sure to eat right, rest and engage in activities that you enjoy. Being a healthy caregiver is good for you and an even greater gift to your loved one.

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Source: http://homeinsteadwichita.wordpress.com/2012/09/25/common-senior-conditions-that-contribute-to-hospitalization-and-readmissions/

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Romney: Obama keeping facts about Libya attack from Americans (Los Angeles Times)

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JWoww Admits Snooki Wanted Her To Be Engaged 'More Than Me'

Jenni talks to In Touch about why her bestie was the first to hear the news and her plans for an 'insane' Vegas wedding.
By Christina Garibaldi


JWoww and Roger Mathews in In Touch magazine
Photo: In Touch

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1694443/jwoww-engaged-snooki-in-touch-magazine.jhtml

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Tuesday, September 25, 2012

New SARS-like virus detected in Middle East

LONDON (AP) ? Global health officials are closely monitoring a new respiratory virus related to SARS that is believed to have killed at least one person in Saudi Arabia and left a Qatari citizen in critical condition in London.

The germ is a coronavirus, from a family of viruses that cause the common cold as well as SARS, the severe acute respiratory syndrome that killed some 800 people, mostly in Asia, in a 2003 epidemic.

In the latest case, British officials alerted the World Health Organization on Saturday of the new virus in a man who transferred from Qatar to be treated in London. He had recently traveled to Saudi Arabia and is now being treated in an intensive care unit after suffering kidney failure.

WHO said virus samples from the patient are almost identical to those of a 60-year-old Saudi national who died earlier this year. The agency isn't currently recommending travel restrictions and said the source of infection remains unknown.

Health officials don't know yet whether the virus could spread as rapidly as SARS did or if it might kill as many people. SARS, which first jumped to humans from civet cats in China, hit more than 30 countries worldwide after spreading from Hong Kong.

"It's still (in the) very early days," said Gregory Hartl, a WHO spokesman. "At the moment, we have two sporadic cases and there are still a lot of holes to be filled in."

He added it was unclear how the virus spreads. Coronaviruses are typically spread in the air but Hartl said scientists were considering the possibility that the patients were infected directly by animals. He said there was no evidence yet of any human-to-human transmission.

"All possible avenues of infection are being explored right now," he said.

No other countries have so far reported any similar cases to WHO, he said, and so far there is no connection between the cases except for a history of travel in Saudi Arabia.

Hartl said the first patient may have had an underlying condition but it probably didn't make him more susceptible to catching the virus.

Other experts said it was unclear how dangerous the virus is.

"We don't know if this is going to turn into another SARS or if it will disappear into nothing," said Michael Osterholm, a flu expert at the University of Minnesota. He said it was crucial to determine the ratio of severe to mild cases.

Osterholm said it was worrying that at least one person with the disease had died. "You don't die from the common cold," he said. "This gives us reason to think it might be more like SARS," which killed about 10 percent of the people it infected.

Britain's Health Protection Agency and WHO said in statements that the 49-year-old Qatari national became ill on Sept. 3, having previously traveled to Saudi Arabia. He was transferred from Qatar to Britain on Sept. 11 and is being treated in an intensive care unit at a London hospital for problems including kidney failure. Respiratory viruses aren't usually known to cause serious kidney problems.

David Heymann, chairman of the Health Protection Agency, said the new virus didn't appear that similar to SARS.

"It isn't as lethal as SARS and we don't know too much about its transmissibility yet," he said. "If people are getting infected, they aren't getting serious disease."

Heymann said it was unknown whether the virus might mutate to spread more easily in a dangerous form, since viruses mutate constantly as they reproduce. He said none of the health workers involved in treating the Qatari patient had fallen ill.

Saudi officials said they were concerned that the upcoming Hajj pilgrimage next month, which brings millions of people to Saudi Arabia from all over the world, could provide more opportunities for the virus to spread. They advised pilgrims to keep their hands clean and wear masks in crowded places.

The Hajj has previously sparked outbreaks of diseases including the flu, meningitis and polio.

___

Frank Jordans in Berlin and Abdullah Shihri in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sars-virus-detected-middle-east-070206993.html

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LMFAO's Sky Blu Wants To Put Psy 'In A Speedo' And Go Viral

'He took it to another level,' the party rocker tells MTV News about getting bested by the Korean MC for record YouTube 'likes.'
By Jocelyn Vena


Sky Blu of LMFAO
Photo: Marcel Thomas/ FilmMagic

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1694357/lmfao-sky-blu-psy-collabo.jhtml

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We Are All Politicians Now: Science Communication and the Romney 47% Video

We Are All Politicians Now: Science Communication and the Romney 47% Video | Guest Blog, Scientific American Blog Network '); } else { $('#'+formID+' > .error').fadeOut('slow'); $('#'+formID+' > .error').html(json.MESSAGE); } $('#'+formID+' > .error').fadeIn('slow'); } else { $('#'+formID).hide(); $('#'+formID).after('

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Monday, September 24, 2012

Salesforce launches new social media software

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/salesforce-launches-social-media-software-185811643--sector.html

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