বুধবার, ৩১ অক্টোবর, ২০১২

Party like it's Q2 2013 with this BB10 lockscreen mod

If you've at all paid attention to the recent news from RIM, the latest version of its OS -- BlackBerry 10 -- is definitely coming (no really guys, we're serious this time). We don't know when that'll be for certain, and we're not so sure it's going to pull anyone away from the Android world. If you're curious to try out the lockscreen from BB10, however, here's your chance.

The always hacker-minded folks over at XDA have conjured up a mod to add the lockscreen to some specific devices on specific versions of Android, mainly 4.1 Jelly Bean at the moment, but hopefully expanded support is coming soon.

Source: CrackBerry; XDA



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/2IRi5oRP5RU/story01.htm

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Italy still reviewing Novartis vaccines: drug authority

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Hurricane Sandy Is a Reminder of Why 'Obama Phones' Exist (Atlantic Politics Channel)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/259402201?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Aerobics Cardio: Cardio Training - A Crucial Aspect of Fitness

The American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) recommends 30 minutes of moderate intensity aerobic training 5 times a week, or high intensity cardio 3 times a week for optimal health. Cardio training benefits us by reducing the risk of heart disease and some types of cancer and strengthening the heart and lungs. It also reduces stress, gives us more energy and helps us sleep better. Lastly, it can help us with our weight loss goals. It's obvious that it is something with which everyone should be engaged.

The forms of cardio exercise available to us are as numerous as the benefits we derive from performing the exercise. The primary equipment necessary is generally a good pair of walking or running shoes and some comfortable workout clothing. Once you have these the next step is to choose which form of exercise you would most enjoy.

Walking is the most convenient and generally widely recommended exercise. It involves no costs, except those sustained for shoes and clothing (you were going to spend the money on that anyway), it can be done anywhere, at anytime of the day. About 15 minutes of walking burns 100 calories, so it's definitely a viable means to aid in weight loss efforts. The key here, as with all forms of cardio, is to get your heart rate up. You should be walking at a pace that causes you to expend effort, to sweat a little, but you don't need to walk so fast that you feel you will keel over.

If you are more ambitious, you can try running for your workout. It's vitally important to have a good pair of shoes when running. You shouldn't wear a pair of shoes designed for basketball players or baseball players because this can cause havoc on the feet and knees over a period of time. Even the wrong pair of running shoes can these problems. With this in mind, when you go to buy a pair of shoes, ask the salesperson for assistance and walk around the store with the shoes on. Make sure your toes aren't squeezed and that there is adequate arch support. After you have taken care of these factors, you can begin with your workouts. If you are just starting out and find that running continuously is too strenuous, alternate walking and running. If you are working out 3 times a week, the first week try running for a minute and walking for a minute. As time goes on you can increase the time you are running, until you are running for 30 minutes at a time.

Swimming is a fantastic workout. It's a total body workout and it's low impact. This is the recommended exercise for people who suffer from arthritis. Arthritis is a condition that affects the joints of the body, causing sufferers great pain. High impact aerobics can aggravate that pain. Swimming burns an average of 400 calories per hours (more or less depending on weight and stroke used), so in addition to cardiovascular conditioning, it's also a great tool to use in any weight loss program.

Elliptical trainers are also very popular. They give a combination of upper and lower body workout. It is said that the trainer is a combination of running and riding a bicycle. There are different types of workouts that can be done as well. Cardio, Manual, Interval Training. This variety helps so you won't get bored with the same old routine. This low impact exercise can easily be done 5 times a week, with great results.

Like to dance? Have no fear. Zumba is another aerobic workout, where you can dance your way to fitness. You can join a gym and enroll in the classes, or buy a home DVD. DVDs are great in that they have progressive workouts, you can do it in the comfort of your home and you just pay one time for the DVD.

Every workout should begin and end with a good stretch. At the beginning of a workout it's important to prepare the for the work that is about to be done. It's equally important to end the exercise in the same way. Stretching helps keep muscles, tendons and ligaments pliable so injury can be avoided.

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Source: http://expert-aerobics.blogspot.com/2012/10/cardio-training-crucial-aspect-of.html

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Ozone's impact on soybean yield: Reducing future losses

ScienceDaily (Oct. 30, 2012) ? People tend to think of ozone as something in the upper atmosphere that protects Earth's surface from UV radiation. At the ground level, however, ozone is a pollutant that damages crops, particularly soybean.

Lisa Ainsworth, a University of Illinois associate professor of crop sciences and USDA Agricultural Research Service plant molecular biologist, said that establishing the exposure threshold for damage is critical to understanding the current and future impact of this pollutant.

"Most of my research is on measuring the effects of ozone on soybean, determining the mechanisms of response, and then trying to improve soybean tolerance to ozone so that we can improve soybean yields," she explained.

Ozone is highly reactive with membranes and proteins and is known to damage the human lung. It also harms plants, slowing photosynthesis and accelerating senescence. As a result, they take in and fix less carbon, reducing yield. Ainsworth said that ground level concentrations of ozone are already high enough to damage crop production.

"Ozone reacts very quickly once it enters the leaf through the stomata," she explained. "It can form other oxygen radicals and also hydrogen peroxide. Then a series of cascading reactions causes a decrease in photosynthesis, reducing stomata conductance."

The plant's response to ozone mimics a hypersensitive response to a pathogen attack. "At quite high concentrations of ozone, you can get leaf bronzing, stippling of the leaves, and necrotic spots," Ainsworth said. "At really high concentrations, you get cell death." The metabolic changes then feed forward to affect plant productivity.

Ainsworth's group conducted a two year study in 2009 and 2010 at the Soybean Free Air Concentration Enrichment (SoyFACE) facility at the U of I South Farms. It was the first dose-response experiment to look at ozone and soybean under completely open-air conditions.

They investigated the responses of seven different soybean genotypes to eight ozone concentrations. The plants were exposed to ozone concentrations ranging from ambient levels of 38 parts per billion up to 200 parts per billion. "This is quite high, but unfortunately, those kinds of concentrations are what very polluted areas of China and India are looking at today," Ainsworth said.

The researchers found that any increase above the ambient concentration was enough to reduce seed yield: roughly half a bushel per acre for each additional part per billion.

"This is significant," Ainsworth said. "Especially considering that background concentrations of ozone today vary year to year, anywhere from about 38 to 39 parts per billion to about 62. That can be 15 bushels per acre from one year to the next that farmers are losing to ozone." The researchers compared the results of this study, which used modern genotypes, with results from experiments conducted in controlled environments in the 1980s. They found that the responses of the modern genotypes were similar to those of the older genotypes.

"Breeders haven't inadvertently bred for ozone tolerance in more modern lines," Ainsworth said. "They're still sensitive to ozone, which means that farmers are still subject to these yearly variations in ozone and are losing yield accordingly."

Potential increases in background ozone are predicted to increase soybean yield losses by 9 to 19 percent by 2030. Levels were particularly high during this year's growing season because most days were sunny and warm, and thus they were favorable for ozone formation. Peaks on many days exceeded 80 parts per billion, twice the known sensitivity threshold.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Illinois College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences, 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. Amy M. Betzelberger et al. Ozone Exposure-Response for U.S. Soybean Cultivars: Linear Reductions in Photosynthetic Potential, Biomass and Yield. Plant Physiology, October 2012 DOI: %u200B10.%u200B1104/%u200Bpp.%u200B112.%u200B205591

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Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/Y_TB1JXmat8/121030161523.htm

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Gmail composer goes to a simple pop-up, gives multitaskers freedom to fly

Gmail composer goes to a simple popup, gives multitaskers freedom to fly

As much as Gmail shines when it's on the web, some of its most avid users stay in native apps for the multitasking; having to check a past message in the web client has usually meant putting the current draft on hold, or at least maintaining a near-photographic memory. Google wants to translate some of that desktop experience to the web through a new composition interface it's testing as of today. New messages start off in a shrinkable pop-up that lets us find old threads without having to put the new conversation on ice, even we're indecisive enough to leave multiple unfinished e-mail messages open. Other upgrades lurk in the background for the more focused among us, such as a pared-back composition interface, in-line photos and a reply box that dynamically adapts to the space it needs. Only those in the preview will see the Gmail update for now; Google is promising a wider launch in the months ahead that could save us all a few precious minutes each day.

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Texas pastor fatally beaten was 'man of integrity'

People comfort one another outside of the Greater Sweethome Missionary Baptist Church, Monday, Oct. 29, 2012, in Forest Hill, Texas, after the church's founding pastor was killed Monday by an attacker who rammed a car into a church wall, chased the pastor and beat him with an electric guitar, according to police. (AP Photo/Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Pauly Moseley) MAGS OUT (FORT WORTH WEEKLY, 360 WEST); INTERNET OUT

People comfort one another outside of the Greater Sweethome Missionary Baptist Church, Monday, Oct. 29, 2012, in Forest Hill, Texas, after the church's founding pastor was killed Monday by an attacker who rammed a car into a church wall, chased the pastor and beat him with an electric guitar, according to police. (AP Photo/Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Pauly Moseley) MAGS OUT (FORT WORTH WEEKLY, 360 WEST); INTERNET OUT

Hundreds of distraught church members gather at the Greater Sweethome Missionary Baptist Church, Monday, Oct. 29, 2012, in Forest Hill, Texas, after the church's founding pastor was killed Monday by an attacker who rammed a car into a church wall, chased the pastor and beat him with an electric guitar, according to police. (AP Photo/Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Pauly Moseley) MAGS OUT (FORT WORTH WEEKLY, 360 WEST); INTERNET OUT

An investigator looks over a car that was crashed into the Greater Sweethome Missionary Baptist Church in Forest Hill, Texas, Monday, Oct. 29, 2012. Forest Hill Police Chief Dan Dennis says the pastor of the church is dead after the driver of the car crashed into the building and began to assault him. Dennis said officers arrived Monday afternoon at the Greater Sweethome Missionary Baptist Church to find an assault in progress. Dennis says the suspected attacker also later died shortly after being detained. (AP Photo/LM Otero)

Crime scene tape surrounds Greater Sweethome Missionary Baptist Church in Forest Hill, Texas Monday, Oct. 29, 2012, as Forest Hill Police investigate the beating death of pastor Danny Kirk, Sr. Authorities say Kirk died after a man drove his car into the church and attacked the pastor with an electric guitar. (AP Photo/The Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Paul Moseley) MAGS OUT; (FORT WORTH WEEKLY, 360 WEST); INTERNET OUT

One woman comforts another at the Greater Sweethome Missionary Baptist Church, Monday, Oct. 29, 2012, in Forest Hill, Texas, after the church's founding pastor was killed Monday by an attacker who rammed a car into a church wall, chased the pastor and beat him with an electric guitar, according to police. (AP Photo/Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Pauly Moseley) MAGS OUT (FORT WORTH WEEKLY, 360 WEST); INTERNET OUT

(AP) ? Rev. Danny Kirk Sr. greeted everyone walking into his Texas church on Sundays with a big hug and an "I love you." His weekdays were spent visiting folks in the hospital or mowing lawns and doing household repairs for members in need.

Parishioners, who described Kirk as a dedicated minister with a bubbly personality and a knack for remembering the names of his church's 800 members, are now looking for answers following his violent death.

Police in the Fort Worth suburb of Forest Hill said Kirk was killed Monday by a man who rammed a car into a wall at his Greater Sweethome Missionary Baptist Church, then chased Kirk and fatally beat him with an electric guitar.

Investigators said they don't know the motive or if Kirk knew his attacker, who police subdued by using a Taser but died after being taken into custody. His name hasn't been released.

Hundreds of people gathered outside the church, where crime-scene tape was wrapped around a small statue of Jesus near the wrecked car. Some hugged each other and cried, while others shared memories of Kirk.

"He really was concerned about our souls," Montoya McNeil, a church member for eight years, said as she wiped away tears. "You looked forward to being here. ... I'm not asking God why, because I know where he (Kirk) is, but we won't get those big bear hugs and those great sermons anymore."

Claudie Loftin, an associate minister, called Kirk a hands-on pastor who "didn't run around wearing a suit.

"He would wear jeans or a sweatsuit because he said he never knew how he would be needed to help, and that's what a pastor does. He was a man of integrity."

Forest Hill Police Chief Dan Dennis said the suspect drove his car into a church wall before noon Monday, apparently on purpose. The suspect got out of the car and began to attack the pastor in the parking lot before chasing him into the church, while the secretary hid and called 911, Dennis said.

Police arrived to find the suspect assaulting Kirk with an electric guitar from inside the church, Dennis said. An officer used a Taser on the suspect, handcuffed him and put him in the back of a patrol car.

By then, Kirk had died, Dennis said. A maintenance worker who tried to help Kirk was injured and taken to an area hospital. His condition was unknown.

Dennis said the suspect was found unresponsive shortly after being detained and was pronounced dead at a local hospital. Kirk fought back during the attack, Dennis said, but it's unclear if that played any role in the suspect's death. An autopsy was being performed on the suspect to determine the cause of death.

Dennis said he didn't know if the suspect knew Kirk, attended the church or why he might have attacked the pastor.

Former Forest Hill Mayor James Gosey said Kirk started the church in 1995 in a strip mall before building the red-brick church.

Kirk was also an unofficial volunteer chaplain who occasionally counseled members of a local high school football team, Fort Worth school district spokesman Clint Bond said.

Loftin, the associate minister, said that church members were grieving but would recover from the loss "with the help of God."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-10-30-Car%20Into%20Church-Deaths/id-6a3348013ba347559fbaaf6b8c5ad2fe

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New E-Reader Display Aims at Video and Color

A new prototype e-reader display offers a small window into the future of these evolving devices. It's able to show new pages quickly enough to play videos, and its white background is brighter than a magazine's white pages ? an important component for making color e-readers, says the prototype's lead creator, engineer Jason Heikenfeld.

The prototype paves the way for e-readers that combine the best of readers and tablet computers, along with some abilities neither technology has. E-readers in the future could be very thin and light, show colors and videos, use little battery and be easy to read in sunlight, said Heikenfeld, who leads the Novel Devices Laboratory at the University of Cincinnati and conducts research for an e-reader display company, Gamma Dynamics. [SEE ALSO: Will Tablets Kill E-Readers?]

"If you want to make something like an iPad you can roll up and put in your pocket, this is the type of technology that can enable that type of breakthrough," Heikenfeld told TechNewsDaily.

The prototype Heikenfeld and his Cincinnati colleagues made would still need years of work before it shows up in a roll-able tablet. It usually takes years of continued research and funding from investors to turn a research advance into a consumer product, Heikenfeld said.

In a paper they published today (Oct. 30), Heikenfeld and his colleagues reported on their new display, which shows black-and-white images, is about 6 inches wide and has a resolution of 150 pixels per inch. The most basic Amazon Kindle and Barnes & Noble Nook display just fewer than 170 pixels per inch.

Whiter and faster

The new e-paper is made with a white, plastic sheet that's 10 times thinner than a sheet of paper. The plastic is coated with aluminum, to help it reflect light better, and it's pricked with pores that are invisible to the naked eye.

To show text or images, the display pushes ink from behind the white sheet, through the pores and onto the front of the sheet. This type of movement is usually much faster than the technology that switches pixels between black and white in Kindles, Nooks and other e-readers on the market, Heikenfeld said. "You typically switch over a 100 times faster over similar distances," he said.

Heikenfeld's display is able to change what it shows about 67 times a second, which is fast enough for videos.

The aluminum-coated plastic sheet also better hides black ink behind it than current e-reader displays. That's the key to its brighter white background. Heikenfeld compared basic e-reader displays to thinly painted white walls that still show some of a darker paint job underneath. "If you have a black wall in your house and you want to paint it white, you know one coat won't do it," he said.

That bright white not only makes for a display that looks more like glossy magazine pages, it could help researchers create e-readers that show color. Of course, the liquid crystal displays on tablets already show color, but they do so by shining colored lights out of the screen. E-readers, on the other hand, create colors by reflecting incoming light. They use much less power, are easier to read in sunlight and are thinner than LCDs.

Adding color inks to e-readers darkens their displays, Heikenfeld explained. By making a whiter display to start with, the Novel Devices Lab's technology builds in a cushion for the darkening effects of color inks, he said.

"Now you're starting to capture a lot of the advantages you have in an iPad screen, but you can see in it in sunlight," Heikenfeld said.

Grayscale and color next

The Novel Devices Lab is now trying to show grayscale images using their new display tech, Heikenfeld said. Gamma Dynamics is working on displaying color.

Another important next step will be to make larger versions of the display. "Our goal is to make this on a roll. We're talking about a roll 8 to 12 inches wide," Heikenfeld said.

He and his colleagues published their work in the journal Nature Communications.

This story was provided by TechNewsDaily, sister site to LiveScience. You can follow TechNewsDaily staff writer Francie Diep on Twitter @franciediep. Follow TechNewsDaily on Twitter, or on Facebook.

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

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/e-reader-display-aims-video-color-164838717.html

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Lawyer: Man charged with taping toddler's mouth just being 'playful ...

Andre Curry was in the living room playing with his 22-month-old daughter last December when he grabbed a roll of blue painters tape, bound the little girl?s hands and feet together and put two strips of tape over her mouth.

Then the South Side father snapped a photo of the little girl bound in tape and posted it to his Facebook page, according to testimony today at his trial on aggravated domestic battery charges.

Across the top of the image were the words: "This is wut happens wen my baby hits me back," according to testimony. The message was followed by a winking emoticon. Within hours, it had gone viral on the Internet.

Curry, 22, does not deny posting the photo. At the close of the bench trial, which featured only three witnesses and lasted a little over an hour, his attorney, Sam Adam Jr. argued he was a good father who was just being playful, and that the child was never in any danger.

?Was this something stupid to do? No question about it,? Adam told Judge Lawrence Flood. ?But they?re asking you to find him guilty of some very serious charges.?

Cook County prosecutors argued that by placing the tape over the girl?s mouth, Curry obstructed her breathing and committed a battery. There was no evidence presented of any injuries to the child.

Curry?s family, including the baby?s mother, Yasmin Doss, has stood by him since the incident.

His sister, Annastasia Curry, testified today that she was cooking dinner that night at the family?s home in the 6100 block of South Racine Avenue and could hear Curry and her niece laughing in the living room. She testified she went out to check on them at one point and saw the little girl with the tape on her.

?She was laughing, he was laughing,? the sister said in a matter-of-fact tone. ?I saw him take the tape off, and I went back in the kitchen.?

Chicago police Detective Charles Hollendoner testified he interviewed Curry twice in the days after the incident and the father insisted the whole thing was meant to be a joke.

??He said he was just playing with the child and didn?t mean any harm,? Hollendoner said. ?He said the child was only taped up for a maximum of 30 seconds.?

Curry told police he was soon flooded with ?hate mail? and removed the photo from his page the next day, Hollendoner testified. As the image was circulated it also prompted numerous calls to police and the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services.

Curry, who is free on bond and has since taken a job in Minnesota, sat at the defense table today dressed in a cream-colored sweater and black jeans. His attorneys presented no witnesses, and he told the judge he did not wish to testify in his own defense.

After prosecutors concluded their case, Flood acquitted Curry of unlawful restraint, but he said he wanted more time to look over domestic battery laws before issuing a ruling on Nov. 8.

If convicted, Curry could face up to 7 years in prison. He has been ordered to have no contact with his daughter except through DCFS until the case is resolved.

jmeisner@tribune.com

Source: http://www.wgntv.com/news/local/breaking/chi-lawyer-man-charged-with-taping-toddlers-mouth-just-being-playful-20121030,0,2961381.story?track=rss

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Understanding Grief and Loss | aayahanolosha.net

Number of View: 14

Throughout the years, the 5 stages of Reduction and Grief have been well written about and also discussed. In this dissertation, I will elaborate the views that extend on the Bargaining point of grief. Bargaining is the normal reaction to thoughts of helplessness as well as vulnerability after a death of a loved one that is certainly often associated with the have to regain control. Some widespread thoughts associated with dealing can be ?if only we?d sought medical attention sooner,? ?If only we had gotten a second opinion from another doctor,? ?If only I needed tried to be a right now there more?.

Grief

I believe that the amount someone grieves is immediately proportional to the type of relationship the person had for the deceased. Seems like a simple concept, yet, it really is filled with a load of emotional baggage which may be at times hard to evaluate and even harder to be aware of. Often, the person feelings of loss is drowned by a sea of shame and hopelessness. This is one way the mind deals with problem management through loss. This happens because our brain wants to get back to scenario of ?normalcy? as quickly and efficiently as possible and uses control as its vehicle. When something undesirable happens, such as dealing with the loss of a loved one, the very first thing the mind seeks to get is some form of manage. This is usually done through seeking some form of participation as a way to fix the situation. But wait, how can someone ?fix the actual situation? when the person is deceased? It?s not like we now have the powers to get them back to life. This defeat can fall us, make us more hopeless, angry, and depressed. Your head goes into panic function and is desperately in search of a way to gain back a few some control. Therefore, the brain develops feelings associated with guilt as a function of participation. It can be almost the only thing it could do, as a default, because it has nothing in addition. Looking at it nearer, it makes a lot of sense; guilt gives the particular person a senses regarding participation, a sense of carrying out something (though their counterintuitive since the shame is a form of self punishment, it?s still carrying out something and that is an improvement on nothing at all), it?s the best way the psyche understands how to gain back a sense of handle. This guilt, is the psyche?s way of self-medicating itself over the pain of sacrificing someone. Making excessive grieving a accounts of how the person seen the lost 1 and what that individual meant to them. It could be quite humbling to know that this amount of grieving is reflective towards the amount of love and admiration the person had while using deceased. Making the greater the love, the greater and much more difficult the grieving process. Understandably, the space and type of mourning and the degree in how it affects us varies in all people. Often, I find what exactly is most helpful isn?t type of advice one particular gives, or the type of coping mechanism one particular uses. Rather than carrying out something, just resting with the person in their particular pain. Just getting there and allowing the person to go through the required motions they need to in order to make peace and move on. This task is often tougher to grasp and at instances frustrating, and sometimes producing therapy becomes beneficial. Seeking a counselor that will allow the mourner to be able to process their despair properly, work through his or her guilt, and gain a healthy sense of engagement is essential in finding interior peace towards a proper recovery.

For more information about grief please visit the website.

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Small Businesses Source Top Talent with Social Recruiting : topic ...

Small-business owners are embracing social networking, not just for marketing their products and services, but to recruit top talent. Likewise, job seekers are increasingly turning to LinkedIn, Twitter and even Facebook to land new roles.

From the employer?s perspective, social networks are taking on a new form as valuable resources for finding skilled professionals who may not be actively seeking new employment. According to Jobvite?s 2012 Social Recruiting Survey, 92 percent of recruiters are using, or plan to use, social recruiting in the near future. Among those who do, 43 percent report an increase in candidate quality.

Earning an Internship?

Planit, a full-service marketing communications agency based in Baltimore, decided to capitalize on social media to recruit its next round of interns. Candidates competed for four coveted internships by submitting videos and other materials, showcasing their talents to the company?s Facebook page. The public was allowed to vote, and the top vote-getter earned a final interview along with four other candidates. In total, four interns were hired.

Caitlin Mills, Director of PR and Social, said the project was a perfect fit for Planit given the nature of the business and the company?s culture: Fun, creative and innovative.

?We knew that our target demographic consists of avid social users, so it made sense for us to evaluate them in their own environment,? Mills explains. ?Planit is big on culture, it's what makes our company so unique. It's important for us to enhance our team with members who share our values, and this project helped us identify candidates we knew would be a great fit with our current team: Dedicated, driven and fun.?

Demonstrating Social Skills

Planit also took advantage of the opportunity to evaluate candidates? social networking prowess. Because social campaigns are a big part of the company?s service offerings, they wanted interns who could demonstrate social media expertise. The nature of the application process helped Planit identify those candidates who were truly comfortable with the medium.

The project also resulted in follower growth on Planit?s social platforms. The company?s Facebook fan count jumped from 1,400 to 3,500 from the project?s inception to its end, an increase of 147 percent. Candidates received a total of 5,700 votes in just three weeks; the company?s total reach jumped by 1,000 percent, reaching 34,000 people each week.

Planit's intern contest was administered using a Facebook application.

Planit makes a point to mention all open positions on its social channels before a formal job post ever goes up, a tactic they?ve had great success with. In fact, both Mills and Kelsey Reck, Planit?s social media strategist in charge of executing the intern project, found out about their positions on social sites. Overall, about 25 percent of the company?s current employees first heard about their positions on a social platform.

Scrapping the Want Ad

Small-business owners don?t always have the time to post job openings and sort through dozens of resumes. For that reason, many turn to recruiters to find the best candidates, even before actively advertising a position. Savvy recruiters have developed methods for using social platforms to identify and reach out to highly qualified candidates.

Mark Moyer, Principal of Compass Points Advisors, LLC, has spent the past 23 years working as an executive recruiter serving the financial services industry, and he?s adapted his methods over time for a competitive edge as hiring practices change. Moyer uses LinkedIn almost exclusively to source candidates using a defined process that he?s developed over many years.

Moyer?s social media strategy is different than many; he doesn?t set out to rack up as many contacts as he can. Instead, he?s very careful about choosing his connections, primarily focusing on attorneys, risk managers and other high-level executives working in the financial services industry. Moyer says this makes his communication more impactful, ?I don?t actively make open posts of positions I?m looking to fill. When I reach out to an individual because I feel they?re a good fit or might know someone who is, it makes a bigger impact because I?m taking a targeted approach.?

Many companies will simply post a job opening, wait for the resumes to roll in and select a candidate from that pool. But this reactive approach means you could be missing out on the best candidate who may not be actively looking, but would be willing to jump ship for the right opportunity. Moyer prefers not to post openings at all.?Even if he doesn?t find the perfect candidate within his own network, LinkedIn?s search feature helps him find other qualified candidates. He then sends a connection request to that person along with a personalized note. Moyer says these candidates almost always accept his request.

Unlike Planit, whose target candidates skewed to the younger generation, Moyer is generally searching for white-collar professionals with years of industry experience. Therefore, he sticks to LinkedIn as his primary social recruiting tool, although he does make a point to check candidates? other social networks for a broad overview of the candidate?s personality and extracurricular activities.

Time-Saving Tools

The prospect of recruiting via social media may still seem daunting to the small-business owner already wearing five other hats, but new tools are emerging to simplify the process for the time-pressed small business.

Ovation is a social recruiting platform that automates the job posting process and provides a single interface for viewing and sorting applications. Karen Droz, President of Ovation, says the platform was designed to help small businesses identify the best matches for a position using a unique star-rating system that scores each application based on the parameters set by the hiring company.

Ovation allows users to post ads simultaneously across numerous websites, including Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Craigslist and Indeed.com. Droz says, ?From a hiring employer?s point of view, employee referrals, contacts and networking have always been the most effective way to hire good people. Social media is replacing standard networking and making it exponentially larger as each contact spreads the word to their connections, and so forth.?

Ovation rates each application on a five-star rating scale, allowing hiring companies to target those with the best match without manually reading dozens of applications. Because the company offers mobile applications as well, hiring managers can instantly see what candidates have applied and respond immediately. It?s also possible to set up automated responses, such as a brief message thanking a candidate for an application, to eliminate the need for manual responses.

Droz says customers have received more than 75 applications within 15 minutes of posting an ad to Craigslist.? ?Hiring is daunting and distracts owners from their core business. Many don?t have the time or expertise to sort through the hiring process. Ovation makes it simpler, allowing companies to reach a really broad labor market in a fraction of the time, and helping to rank the best qualified candidates.?

Social recruiting can boost follower counts and brand awareness.

As social recruiting continues to replace traditional methods of networking, small-business owners will be developing methods to capitalize on the ability to reach hundreds or thousands of potential candidates within minutes. Whether you take a proactive or reactive approach to the hiring process, social media provides ample opportunities to find the best talent with the added benefit of boosting social exposure for your business.

Source: http://www.openforum.com/articles/small-businesses-source-top-talent-with-social-recruiting

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Open Source CMS Development


Joomla is considered as the No 1 rich media publishing tool. Joomla development is so good that there are no commercial challengers which come close. As an example, there are about 100 plugins just for streaming media. People now days are opting towards taking joomla services rather than using other content management systems.

Source: http://www.webcosmoforums.com/web-development-programming-coding/58375-open-source-cms-development.html

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Disney to make new 'Star Wars' films, buy Lucas co

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? A decade after George Lucas said "Star Wars" was finished on the big screen, a new trilogy is destined for theaters as The Walt Disney Co. announced Tuesday that it was buying Lucasfilm Ltd. for $4.05 billion.

The seventh movie, with a working title of "Episode 7," is set for release in 2015. Episodes 8 and 9 will follow. The new trilogy will carry the story of Luke Skywalker, Han Solo and Princess Leia beyond "Return of the Jedi," the third film released and the sixth in the saga. After that, Disney plans a new "Star Wars" movie every two or three years. Lucas will serve as creative consultant in the new movies.

"For the past 35 years, one of my greatest pleasures has been to see Star Wars passed from one generation to the next," said Lucas, chairman and CEO of Lucasfilm Ltd. "It's now time for me to pass Star Wars on to a new generation of filmmakers. I've always believed that Star Wars could live beyond me, and I thought it was important to set up the transition during my lifetime."

Disney CEO Bob Iger said Lucusfilm had already developed an extensive story line on the next trilogy, and Episode 7 was now in early-stage development.

The Walt Disney Co. announced the blockbuster agreement to buy Lucasfilm in cash and stock Tuesday. The deal includes Lucasfilm's prized high-tech production companies, Industrial Light & Magic and Skywalker Sound, as well as rights to the "Indiana Jones" franchise.

Lucas was hailed as a cinematic visionary when the original "Star Wars" came out in 1977. But he had become an object of often-vicious ridicule by the time he released 3-D versions of all six films in the Star Wars franchise earlier this year.

Die-hard Star War fans had been vilifying Lucas for years, convinced that he had become a commercial sell-out and had compounded his sins by desecrating the heroic tale that he originally sought to tell. They railed against him for adding grating characters such as Jar Jar Binks in the second trilogy and attacked him for tinkering with the original trilogy, too. Any revision ? from little things like making the Ewoks blink or bigger alterations like making a green-skinned alien named Greedo take the first shot at Han Solo in a famous bar scene ? were treated as blasphemy.

The criticism grated on Lucas, who vowed never to make another Star Wars movie during an interview with The New York Times earlier this year.

"Why would I make any more when everybody yells at you all the time and says what a terrible person you are?" Lucas told the Times.

"Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull," the fourth film in another lucrative franchise, subjected Lucas to even more barbs when it came to the big screen in 2008. Fans of those films were especially outraged about an opening scene that featured Indiana Jones crawling into a lead-lined refrigerator to survive a nuclear bomb blasting.

Lucas, 68, was fed up by the time he released "Red Tails," a movie depicting the valor of African-American pilots during World War II, earlier this year. He told the Times he was ready to retire from the business of making blockbusters and return to his roots as a student at USC's film school, where he once made a movie about clouds moving in a desert.

Kathleen Kennedy, the current co-chairman of Lucasfilm, will become the division's president and report to Walt Disney Studios Chairman Alan Horn. She will serve as executive producer for the new movies.

In a video posted on YouTube, Lucas said the decision to continue with the saga wasn't inconsistent with past statements.

"I always said I wasn't going to do any more and that's true, because I'm not going to do any more, but that doesn't mean I'm unwilling to turn it over to Kathy to do more," Lucas said.

He said he has given Kennedy his story lines and other ideas, "and I have complete confidence that she's going to take them and make great movies."

Kennedy added that she and Lucas had discussed ideas with a couple of writers about the future movies and said Lucas would continue to have a key advisory role. "My Yoda has to be there," she said.

In a statement, Iger said the acquisition is a great fit and will help preserve and grow the "Star Wars" franchise.

"The last 'Star Wars' movie release was 2005's 'Revenge of the Sith' ? and we believe there's substantial pent-up demand," Iger said.

The deal brings Lucasfilm under the Disney banner with other brands including Pixar, Marvel, ESPN and ABC, all companies that Disney has acquired over the years. A former weatherman who rose through the ranks of ABC, Iger has orchestrated some of the company's biggest acquisitions, including the $7.4 billion purchase of animated movie studio Pixar in 2006 and the $4.2 billion acquisition of comic book giant Marvel in 2009.

Disney shares were not trading with stock markets closed due to the impact of Superstorm Sandy in New York.

___

AP Technology Writer Michael Liedtke in San Francisco contributed to this story.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/disney-star-wars-films-buy-lucas-co-210816699--finance.html

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Unique protein bond enables learning and memory

ScienceDaily (Oct. 30, 2012) ? Two proteins have a unique bond that enables brain receptors essential to learning and memory to not only get and stay where they're needed, but to be hauled off when they aren't, researchers say.

NMDA receptors increase the activity and communication of brain cells and are strategically placed, much like a welcome center, at the receiving end of the communication highway connecting two cells. They also are targets in brain-degenerating conditions such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's.

In a true cradle-to-grave relationship, researchers have found the scaffolding protein, SAP102, which helps stabilize the receptor on the cell surface, binds with a subunit of the NMDA receptor called GluN2B at two sites, said Dr. Bo-Shiun Chen, neuroscientist at the Medical College of Georgia at Georgia Health Sciences University.

While one binding site is the norm, these proteins have one that's stronger than the other. When it's time for the normal receptor turnover, the stronger bond releases and the lesser one shuttles the receptor inside the cell for degradation or recycling.

"One binding site is involved in stabilizing the receptor on the cell surface and the other is important in removing the receptor. We think it's a paradigm shift; we've never thought about the same scaffolding protein having two roles," said Chen, corresponding author of the study in the journal Cell Reports.

"We believe by understanding the normal turnover of these receptors, we can learn more about how to prevent the abnormal receptor loss that occurs in debilitating diseases such as Alzheimer's." In Parkinson's, the receptors inexplicably move away from where the synapse, or information highway, connects to the neuron, making them less effective. NMDA receptors are supposed to cluster where the synapse hooks into the receiving neuron; in fact, it's part of what anchors the synapse, Chen said.

Interestingly, this pivotal protein, SAP102, a member of the MAGUK family of scaffolding proteins, is the only family member known to directly contribute to maladies: its mutation causes intellectual disability.

While all cells have a system for managing the number of receptors on their surface, in Alzheimer's, this removal process appears accelerated, with increased engulfing of receptors and less neuron-to-neuron communication. The neurotransmitter glutamate helps establish and maintain the synapse and also binds with GluN2B.

GluN2B-containing NMDA receptors stay open to receive information for a long time, enabling the type of vigorous and sustained communication that enables learning and memory. In fact the number of these receptors naturally decreases with age, which may be one reason young people learn easier. When it's time to remove a receptor, phosphorus gets added to GluN2B, changing its function so it no longer binds to the scaffolding protein.

Chen's research was funded by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and conducted in mice and rat neurons in culture. Collaborators include Dr. Roger A. Nicoll, Professor, Departments of Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology and Physiology, the University of California, San Francisco, and Dr. Katherine W. Roche, Senior Investigator, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Georgia Health Sciences University. The original article was written by Toni Baker.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Bo-Shiun Chen, John?A. Gray, Antonio Sanz-Clemente, Zhe Wei, Eleanor?V. Thomas, Roger?A. Nicoll, Katherine?W. Roche. SAP102 Mediates Synaptic Clearance of NMDA Receptors. Cell Reports, 2012; DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2012.09.024

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/c9lG-2EXjb0/121030161418.htm

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GSK starts final-stage tests on severe asthma drug

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BUSINESS TIPS & NEWS FOR BRACEBRIDGE: Breaking ground ...

On Saturday, October 27th, The Honourable Tony Clement, Minister for FedNor, announced?FedNor funding of $163,336 to assist in completing infrastructure upgrades to District Road #118 to enable the development of a business and light industrial park development at the Canyon Court Business Park. ?Specifically, the funding will be used to improve the existing roadway and create turning lanes to provide safe access to this 70-acre industrial park development site.





The majority of the work funded by FedNor will be completed by year end (i.e. December 31st).? We would expect work to begin in a few weeks.

This property was formerly known as South Bracebridge Business Park and was recently named Canyon Court Business Park because of its proximity to the Muskoka River Canyon. ?The park includes?22 lots that?range in size from .84 acres to 9 acres and it will be fully wired with Fibre Optics.

The unique Business Park Zoning allows for a large range of uses including: ??Contractor?s Yard,?Emergency Service Depot,?Equipment Sales & Rental,?Farm Implement Dealer,?Fuel Storage Tank,?Home Improvement Centre ,?Indoor Storage Facilities,?Light Manufacturing,?Manufacturing and Processing Plant,?Motor Vehicle Body Shop,?Motor Vehicle Dealership,?Motor Vehicle Parts Establishment,?Motor Vehicle Rental Agency,?Motor Vehicle Repair Garage,?Office,?Outside Display and Sale - Permitted only as an accessory use,?Outside Storage (permitted with buffering),?Passenger Transportation Depot,?Printing and Publishing Establishment,?Rental Agency,?Retail Store Permitted only as an accessory use (not exceeding 25%),?Service and Repair Shop,?Truck or Transportation Depot,?Veterinary Clinic

Source: http://bracebridgebusiness.blogspot.com/2012/10/breaking-ground-for-new-business.html

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Analysis: U.S. presidential race is all about Ohio - or is it?

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - With one week left in the tight battle for the White House, it's all about the vital swing state of Ohio. Unless it's about Colorado - or Iowa, or tiny New Hampshire.

Democratic President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney both have clear paths to the 270 electoral votes needed for victory - and they don't all go through Ohio, the state that both sides have long viewed as key to capturing the White House.

Obama still has a slight electoral map advantage fueled by his slim lead in Ohio, but Romney has steadily closed the gap or moved slightly ahead in some other battleground states. Eight states remain relative toss-ups.

Both candidates can construct multiple winning scenarios, with or without Ohio. And it's now possible that the tipping point could emerge from another battleground, such as Colorado, where Obama and Romney are deadlocked in the polls.

"At this point, there are probably more electoral map scenarios than there are undecided voters," said Lee Miringoff, a pollster at Marist College, which is conducting surveys in key swing states.

"In a 50-50 race ... everything and everywhere is going to matter," he said.

National polls show the race is a virtual dead heat, but Obama still has a lead of at least 4 percentage points in states that account for 237 electoral votes, according to averages compiled by RealClearPolitics. Romney has a lead of at least that size in states that represent 201 electoral votes.

That gives Obama slightly more leeway in the fight for the remaining 95 electoral votes available in the eight toss-up states, all won by Obama in the 2008 election - Colorado (9 electoral votes), Florida (29), Iowa (6), Nevada (6), New Hampshire (4), Ohio (18), Virginia (13) and Wisconsin (10).

Obama is clinging to slight poll leads - which typically are less than the polls' margins of error - in five of those states with a combined 44 electoral votes: Ohio, Iowa, Nevada, New Hampshire and Wisconsin. That would be enough to put him over the top.

Even if he loses Ohio, Obama could still get to 270 electoral votes - and clinch the election - by winning Colorado instead. Obama won Colorado by 9 percentage points in 2008, aided by support from young and suburban voters and the growing Hispanic vote, but he is virtually tied with Romney there now.

Romney's path is tougher without Ohio, but still possible.

The former Massachusetts governor has a slight lead over Obama in Florida and has pulled even with the president in Virginia. If Romney sweeps those two states and adds Colorado, he would still need to win Iowa, New Hampshire and Wisconsin to capture the White House.

NEVADA SLIPPING AWAY FROM ROMNEY?

Of the eight toss-up states, Nevada appears the least competitive, with analysts and some strategists in both parties saying it is moving toward Obama.

An NBC/Wall Street Journal/Marist poll on Thursday gave Obama a 3-point edge in Nevada, and the last six public polls have shown Obama ahead.

Romney appears to have an advantage in Florida, where six of the last seven public polls have shown him with a small lead. RealClearPolitics puts Romney's average lead at 1.8 percentage points, within most polls' margin of error but symbolic of a trend toward the Republican, analysts say.

"Once an incumbent loses a grip on the race, it's very hard to get it back," said Florida-based pollster Brad Coker of Mason-Dixon. "Florida is gone for Obama, from what I'm seeing on the ground here. The map seems to be expanding for Romney and shrinking for Obama."

The multiple electoral scenarios have sparked speculation about alternative outcomes such as a 269-269 tie in electoral votes, which would leave the presidency to a vote by the Republican-led House of Representatives.

Another possibility: one candidate wins the nationwide popular vote, while the other wins the electoral vote - and walks away with the presidency.

The most heavily contested prize remains Ohio, and both campaigns are concentrating their time and resources there. Obama has an average lead in polls there of 1.9 percentage points, according to RealClearPolitics. Six of the last nine public polls showed Obama with a slight edge.

The other three showed a tie, including a poll released on Sunday by the Cincinnati Enquirer newspaper and the Ohio News Organization.

"The electoral map tilts slightly to Obama, but only because Ohio is so important and that's one state where he has kept a very small lead," said Thomas Riehle, a pollster at the market research firm YouGov, which also is surveying swing states.

"The polling is so much closer than it was in 2000 or any other close election year, so everything is hard to predict," he said.

'AN ILLUSION OF VOLATILITY'

Romney's poll gains since his strong performance in the first debate on October 3 have been powered by growing voter confidence in his ability to handle the economy, an increase in his favorability ratings and gains among women and independents.

But Romney's early and mid-October momentum seems to have slowed or stopped since Obama's strong performances in the final two debates. National tracking polls have ebbed and flowed in a narrow range during the past week, with Romney keeping a slight lead in most.

But in a Reuters/Ipsos national online tracking poll on Sunday, Obama opened a slight lead on Romney, 49 percent to 46 percent, among likely voters.

On the state level, Romney's surge put him slightly ahead in Florida and Virginia, but has not been enough for him to overtake Obama in the Midwestern battlegrounds of Ohio, Iowa and Wisconsin.

Those three states alone, added to the states where Obama already has solid leads, would be enough for the president to win with 271 electoral votes.

"There is an illusion of volatility that is created when you have 90 public polls coming out every day," Obama senior adviser David Axelrod told reporters last week. "The fact of the matter is, this race has been remarkably stable over a long period of time."

Obama's support level falls short of the magic 50 percent mark in most national and swing state polls, a danger sign for an incumbent who is well known to voters and therefore could be unlikely to win the support of a majority of those who make late decisions.

The close race has put a premium on each campaign's ability to identify and turn out their voters, and Obama's camp has trumpeted its edge in early voting in swing states and its effort to get both frequent and sporadic voters to the polls.

It is unclear how Hurricane Sandy will affect early voting along the East Coast - particularly in Virginia. Bob McDonnell, Virginia's Republican governor and a Romney supporter, has vowed to extend early voting hours and restore power quickly to voting facilities in the event of outages.

Obama's Democrats have made early voting a focus of their campaign and represent a majority of those casting ballots before Election Day.

But Romney's campaign says early voting among Republicans in the toss-up states is running ahead of the party's pace in 2008, when Obama defeated Republican John McCain. In Ohio, Republicans are out-performing their share of registered voters in absentee ballot requests and early votes, the campaign said.

"The battleground state polls are all very close, although many are still tipping slightly Obama's way," Miringoff said. "It's still very much a flip of the coin situation."

(Editing by David Lindsey and Christopher Wilson)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/analysis-u-presidential-race-ohio-052051882.html

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Gaston College to hold small business seminars | Denver Weekly ...

LINCOLNTON ? The Small Business Center at Gaston College will hold two seminars in November to help local people start or strengthen their businesses.

? Marketing II ? Targeting for Results: This seminar will help business owners identify marketing tools relative to business needs, including demographic, location and advertising selection. 6:30-9 p.m. Oct. 29. At the Lincoln Campus, Room LC 125.

? Marking III ? Great Expectations: This seminar will help business owners understand creating a realistic marketing plan to match the company?s resources. 6:30-9 p.m. Nov. 5. At the Lincoln Campus, Room LC 125.

? Tax issues: A local accountant will discuss financial statement formulation and terminology, self-employment and payroll taxes, tax theory and forms and aspects of interacting with your finance and accounting professional. 6:30-9 p.m. Nov. 12. At the Lincoln Campus, Room LC 125. q

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Source: http://denverncweekly.com/business/2012/10/gaston-college-to-hold-small-business-seminars/

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Organize Your Desktop, Files, and Folders with These Color-Coded Dropbox Icons

Organize Your Desktop, Files, and Folders with These Color-Coded Dropbox IconsKeeping your desktop, files, and folders organized can be a bit of work, so it helps to have an in-and-out system you can use to always store your work. To make that easier, I created a set of color-coded dropbox icons you can use to sort all your stuff.

You can see all of the icons above. There are eight colors of the inboxes and the outboxes. Nothing's specifically labeled so you can use them for anything, and they work nicely with OS X's color-coded labels (or an app that adds colored labels to Windows Explorer). The icons come as a zip file containing an iContainer, OS X folders, and individual icons in ICO, ICNS, and PNG format so you should have no trouble using them anywhere. Download freely and use them as you please.

Dropbox Icons | Lifehacker

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/j-T0HvtLwY8/organize-your-desktop-files-and-folders-with-these-color+coded-dropbox-icons

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