Monday, October 31, 2011

The History Of Automotive | schwartzcooper.com

The invention of the car was one of the most important events in recent history. The convenience and freedom of transport, to allow the cars changed the way the world changes, interaction, travel and live from day to day. The car has even changed, where we build our homes. Before the car, it was easy to get to where we were at any time, towns and villages were built so that people could go where they needed to go on foot or by car. Houses were built near the town. The cars have changed other aspects of daily life that we usually think.

In 1806 a Swiss inventor named Francois Isaac de Rivaz invented the first internal combustion engine. This engine was fed at the beginning a mixture of hydrogen and oxygen. He used to power one of the first cars built all. However, its design was rudimentary and not a commercial success.

It was not until 1885 that Karl Benz, German engineer and inventor, the first four-stroke internal combustion powered by petroleum diesel invented. Although several other German engineers worked on their own version of the engine, Karl Benz is credited as the true inventor of the engine. He used the engine to power one of the first cars in the world. This car was initially a little over a seat on three wheels. Later designs Benz four-wheel are made with upgraded engines.

In the U.S., two men were the steps in the automobile industry, Henry Ford and Ransom Olds. Ransom Olds, the founder of the Oldsmobile car manufacturer, was the first to come with a car that was cheap and mass produced, so the public could afford. However, Henry Ford greatly improved the design of Olds. ?The assembly line method of automobile production mass producing a vehicle every fifteen minutes. Her belt was a model of efficiency and safety for the many important industries. With the success of the model of Ford and other car companies started jumping, competition for sales. For this reason, the automotive industry is growing rapidly. In the early 20th century the invention of the electric self-starter and ignition, four-wheel brakes, suspension independent and the car is much improved.

As the year progressed and cars became more and more popular, other inventions were developed and safety features like seat belts and airbags. Automobiles have become increasingly a necessity rather than a luxury that more and more recognized that they needed to get where they need to go. Today, a car is the main mode of transport for most people. It is an invention that changed the way we live. To find out about this day in history in automotive please click the link.

Source: http://www.schwartzcooper.com/the-history-of-automotive.html

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3 killed in Kansas grain elevator blast

A huge explosion rocked a Kansas grain elevator and shot a fireball so high it could be seen in neighboring Missouri, leaving three workers dead and three other people missing, authorities said Sunday.

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Trey Cocking, city manager in the northeast Kansas town of Atchison, confirmed the deaths and said three others remain unaccounted for after Saturday night's blast at the Bartlett Grain Co. elevator. Authorities also reported injuries, but were still trying to get accurate information and notify families.

Cocking said authorities planned to bring in heavy equipment to dig through the rubble Sunday.

"Once we get light, we'll go from there," Cocking told The Associated Press as he left the site before dawn Sunday for a break after hours there. "From this point, they're going to have to do some excavation and bring in some crews."

Blast felt miles away
The shuddering explosion could be seen and felt across Atchison, shaking homes and businesses up to four miles away. The cause was not immediately known, though grain elevator accidents can occur after grain dust becomes suspended in the air and turns explosive.

Bartlett Grain President Bill Fellows said in a statement that 11 workers were loading a train with corn when the explosion occurred about 7 p.m. Saturday. He said several workers escaped injury, but that there were fatalities and some injuries.

Across the nearby Missouri River, a dispatcher at the sheriff's department in Buchanan County, Missouri, said the office received numerous calls from residents saying they could hear the explosion deep into the county. Residents across the area said a fireball from the explosion could be seen well away from the site.

Atchison has about 11,000 residents and is known as the birthplace of aviation pioneer Amelia Earhart.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45092838/ns/us_news-life/

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Sunday, October 30, 2011

The Candidates on Climate Change (ContributorNetwork)

The climate change debate is heating up, and with an election on the way, it's important to know what the candidates believe in regard to the issue. Here is what the front-runners and President Barack Obama have to say on climate change:

Mitt Romney: "My view is that we don't know what's causing climate change on this planet," he said at the Consol Energy Center in Pittsburgh. "And the idea of spending trillions and trillions of dollars to try to reduce CO2 emissions is not the right course for us. My view with regards to energy policy is pretty straightforward: I want us to become energy secure and independent of the oil cartels."

Herman Cain: "I don't believe global warming is real. Do we have climate change? Yes. Is it a crisis? No," he said. "The real science doesn't say that we have any major crisis or threat when it comes to climate change." He strongly opposes legislation to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, because he believes it is "another source of taxation for the bureaucrats."

Rick Perry: "I do believe that the issue of global warming has been politicized. I think there are a substantial number of scientists who have manipulated data so that they will have dollars rolling into their projects. I think we're seeing it almost weekly or even daily, scientists who are coming forward and questioning the original idea that man-made global warming is what is causing the climate to change. Yes, our climates change. They've been changing ever since the Earth was formed. But I do not buy into, that a group of scientists, who in some cases were found to be manipulating this data."

Ron Paul: "(The Copenhagen treaty on climate change) can't help the economy. It has to hurt the economy and it can't possibly help the environment because they're totally off track on that. It might turn out to be one of the biggest hoaxes of all history, this whole global warming terrorism that they've been using, but we'll have to just wait and see, but it cannot be helpful. It's going to hurt everybody."

Barack Obama: "Few issues facing America or the world are more important than combating Climate change. The science is beyond dispute and the facts are clear. Sea levels are rising. Coastlines are shrinking. We've seen record drought spreading famine and storms that are growing stronger with each passing hurricane season. Climate change and our dependence on foreign oil, if left unaddressed, will continue to weaken our economy, and threaten our national security."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111029/us_ac/10313127_the_candidates_on_climate_change

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Python study may have implications for human heart health

Thursday, October 27, 2011

A surprising new University of Colorado Boulder study shows that huge amounts of fatty acids circulating in the bloodstreams of feeding pythons promote healthy heart growth, results that may have implications for treating human heart disease.

CU-Boulder Professor Leslie Leinwand and her research team found the amount of triglycerides -- the main constituent of natural fats and oils -- in the blood of Burmese pythons one day after eating increased by more than fifty-fold. Despite the massive amount of fatty acids in the python bloodstream there was no evidence of fat deposition in the heart, and the researchers also saw an increase in the activity of a key enzyme known to protect the heart from damage.

After identifying the chemical make-up of blood plasma in fed pythons, the CU-Boulder researchers injected fasting pythons with either "fed python" blood plasma or a reconstituted fatty acid mixture they developed to mimic such plasma. In both cases, the pythons showed increased heart growth and indicators of cardiac health. The team took the experiments a step further by injecting mice with either fed python plasma or the fatty acid mixture, with the same results.

"We found that a combination of fatty acids can induce beneficial heart growth in living organisms," said CU-Boulder postdoctoral researcher Cecilia Riquelme, first author on the Science paper. "Now we are trying to understand the molecular mechanisms behind the process in hopes that the results might lead to new therapies to improve heart disease conditions in humans."

The paper is being published in the Oct. 28 issue of the journal Science. In addition to Leinwand and Riquelme, the authors include CU postdoctoral researcher Brooke Harrison, CU graduate student Jason Magida, CU undergraduate Christopher Wall, Hiberna Corp. researcher Thomas Marr and University of Alabama Tuscaloosa Professor Stephen Secor.

Previous studies have shown that the hearts of Burmese pythons can grow in mass by 40 percent within 24 to 72 hours after a large meal, and that metabolism immediately after swallowing prey can shoot up by forty-fold. As big around as telephone poles, adult Burmese pythons can swallow prey as large as deer, have been known to reach a length of 27 feet and are able to fast for up to a year with few ill effects.

There are good and bad types of heart growth, said Leinwand, who is an expert in genetic heart diseases including hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, the leading cause of sudden death in young athletes. While cardiac diseases can cause human heart muscle to thicken and decrease the size of heart chambers and heart function because the organ is working harder to pump blood, heart enlargement from exercise is beneficial.

"Well-conditioned athletes like Olympic swimmer Michael Phelps and cyclist Lance Armstrong have huge hearts," said Leinwand, a professor in the molecular, cellular and developmental biology department and chief scientific officer of CU's Biofrontiers Institute. "But there are many people who are unable to exercise because of existing heart disease, so it would be nice to develop some kind of a treatment to promote the beneficial growth of heart cells."

Riquelme said once the CU team confirmed that something in the blood plasma of pythons was inducing positive cardiac growth, they began looking for the right "signal" by analyzing proteins, lipids, nucleic acids and peptides present in the fed plasma. The team used a technique known as gas chromatography to analyze both fasted and fed python plasma blood, eventually identifying a highly complex composition of circulating fatty acids with distinct patterns of abundance over the course of the digestive process.

In the mouse experiments led by Harrison, the animals were hooked up to "mini-pumps" that delivered low doses of the fatty acid mixture over a period of a week. Not only did the mouse hearts show significant growth in the major part of the heart that pumps blood, the heart muscle cell size increased, there was no increase in heart fibrosis -- which makes the heart muscle more stiff and can be a sign of disease -- and there were no alterations in the liver or in the skeletal muscles, he said.

"It was remarkable that the fatty acids identified in the plasma-fed pythons could actually stimulate healthy heart growth in mice," said Harrison. The team also tested the fed python plasma and the fatty acid mixture on cultured rat heart cells, with the same positive results, Harrison said.

The CU-led team also identified the activation of signaling pathways in the cells of fed python plasma, which serve as traffic lights of sorts, said Leinwand. "We are trying to understand how to make those signals tell individual heart cells whether they are going down a road that has pathological consequences, like disease, or beneficial consequences, like exercise," she said.

The prey of Burmese pythons can be up to 100 percent of the constricting snake's body mass, said Leinwand, who holds a Marsico Endowed Chair of Excellence at CU-Boulder. "When a python eats, something extraordinary happens. Its metabolism increases by more than forty-fold and the size of its organs increase significantly in mass by building new tissue, which is broken back down during the digestion process."

The three key fatty acids in the fed python plasma turned out to be myristic acid, palmitic acid and palmitoleic acid. The enzyme that showed increased activity in the python hearts during feeding episodes, known as superoxide dismutase, is a well-known "cardio-protective" enzyme in many organisms, including humans, said Leinwand.

The new Science study grew out of a project Leinwand began in 2006 when she was named a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Professor and awarded a four-year, $1 million undergraduate education grant from the Chevy Chase, Md.-based institute. As part of the award Leinwand initiated the Python Project, an undergraduate laboratory research program designed to focus on the heart biology of constricting snakes like pythons thought to have relevance to human disease.

Undergraduates contributed substantially to the underpinnings of the new python study both by their genetic studies and by caring for the lab pythons, said Leinwand. While scientists know a great deal about the genomes of standard lab animal models like fruit flies, worms and mice, relatively little was known about pythons. "We have had to do a lot of difficult groundwork using molecular genetics tools in order to undertake this research," said Leinwand.

CU-Boulder already had a laboratory snake facility in place, which contributed to the success of the project, she said.

"The fact that the python study involved faculty, postdoctoral researchers, a graduate student and an undergraduate, Christopher Wall, shows the project was a team effort," said Leinwand. "Chris is a good example of how the University of Colorado provides an incredible educational research environment for undergraduates." Wall is now a graduate student at the University of California, San Diego.

###

University of Colorado at Boulder: http://www.colorado.edu/news

Thanks to University of Colorado at Boulder for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/114699/Python_study_may_have_implications_for_human_heart_health

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Click.to


One of the more interesting consequences of the touchcreen revolution is the way that developments in smartphones and tablets are bleeding over into more traditional hardware and software. Click.to is a program designed to mimic in standard PCs (and Macs) the ease with which people can share content from a touch screen. In practically any app for smartphones and tablets, you can press a single button to share something on Facebook, or email a photo, or otherwise copy and paste content from one application to another. Why shouldn't we have this functionality on our plain old laptops and desktops?

Time-Saving Shortcut
Click.to is a small downloadable program that works on both Windows (XP, Vistas, 7) and Mac computers. After you install and launch it, Click.to will work in any application the moment you try to use the "copy function," whether you press Ctrl+C, Apple-command+C, or right-click and select "copy." A string of icons appears near the text. Select whichever one you want, and Click.to launches the program and pastes the content in the applicable spot. For example, if you select the button for Outlook, Click.to creates a new message and pastes the copied content into the body of the email.

You can customize which icons appear from an Options menu, and, if Click.to doesn't support an application you want to use, you can add it, although the process might seem slightly complicated for less technical people. To add a new program, you have to be able to identify the executable file for the program on your hard drive.

Numerous applications are already supported from the get-go: Google, Facebook, Twitter, Outlook, Word, Excel, Wikipedia, Gmail, Evernote, Flickr, PDF, Blogger, WolframAlpha, Bing Translate, Amazon, YouTube, and many more. Depending on what application you paste into, Click.to will automatically fill in other appropriate information, such as the subject line of an email (it will use the file name from which the text or image is pulled). Paste into a Word doc, and the source of the pasted info will be listed at the top of the file.

One of my favorite features is how the Wikipedia icon works. Rather than pasting your copied text directly into Wikipedia's search bar, Click.to pulls the most concise definition Wikipedia has for the selected text and displays it in a bubble right on screen, so you never have to leave the first application.

When Click.to Isn't So Time-Savey
The number of clicks that Click.to saves you depends on what kind of copying and pasting you normally do. For sharing to social networks and drafting emails, it's pretty handy, and the Wikipedia tie-in is brilliant. But when it came time for me to get some actual work done, I occasionally found Click.to distracting because it was offering its services at times when it they wouldn't work for me. One example: I was copying and pasting information from multiple sources into one existing Notepad document. I didn't want to start a new file every time I copied more text. I just wanted to continue pasting into the file that was already open, and I couldn't find a way to do that with Click.to. However,?I later learned that there is an action that could have helped me, but it wasn't apparent enough for me to find on my own. It's called back-action, and to use it, you have to add the "browse to" button (a red icon with two white arrows) to your Click.to commands list.

To use the back action, you first have to create a new document using Click.to with the first "paste." Then, the next time you use Click.to, you can select the "browse to" icon, and the program will bring you to the file you pasted into last. You then have to use a command for paste (Ctrl+V or Apple command+V, or right-click and select "paste"), as the Click.to function in this case only returns you to the right file and doesn't do the pasting part.

If Click.to is still distracting for certain applications or tasks, you can always it off. And you can turn it off only for certain applications, which is a nice touch.

Fewer Clicks With Click.to
Productivity and efficiency experts have long studied the number of clicks and keystrokes the average office worker completes in a day. Click.to tries to decrease that total by removing several steps in the copy-and-paste process, which is usually more like: select text or item, copy, find and launch other application, open new document or navigate to appropriate spot, paste. The free product is worth downloading if you tend to use copy-paste workflows often.

More Productivity Reviews:?

??? Click.to
??? Dragon Go! (for iPhone)
??? VisualBee (Premium)
??? Smartr Contacts for Android
??? Vlingo (for iPhone)
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/1H4_pfLKXjQ/0,2817,2395207,00.asp

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Friday, October 28, 2011

MMA Marketplace: RVCA Skele-Penn shirt

Since B.J. Penn is fighting on Halloween weekend, RVCA, his longtime sponsor, came up with a shirt that's perfect for the holiday.

MMA Marketplace: RVCA Skele-Penn shirt

It's perfect if you're going as an MMA-loving skeleton, or as a skinny Penn fan, or as someone who loves Hawaii so much that you want to wear it on your shoulder and you don't mind being dressed as a skeleton. Buy it for $29.99.

Don't forget about the Cagewriter Halloween contest. Share your MMA-themed pumpkin with us, and win free stuff.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/mma/blog/cagewriter/post/MMA-Marketplace-RVCA-Skele-Penn-shirt?urn=mma-wp8551

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Teeth study shows big dinosaurs trekked for food

An undated photo released by Henry Fricke shows a sampling of dinosaur teeth from the Dinosaur National Monument in Utah. Scientists analyzing 32 teeth of plant-eating dinosaurs found that they migrated from the lowlands to highlands in search of food and water during the late Jurassic period. A new study suggests long-necked, plant-eating dinosaurs migrated hundreds of miles to find enough food for their gargantuan appetites. (AP Photo/ Henry Fricke,/Colorado College)

An undated photo released by Henry Fricke shows a sampling of dinosaur teeth from the Dinosaur National Monument in Utah. Scientists analyzing 32 teeth of plant-eating dinosaurs found that they migrated from the lowlands to highlands in search of food and water during the late Jurassic period. A new study suggests long-necked, plant-eating dinosaurs migrated hundreds of miles to find enough food for their gargantuan appetites. (AP Photo/ Henry Fricke,/Colorado College)

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? What did giant plant-munching dinosaurs do when they couldn't find enough to eat in the parched American West? They hit the road.

An analysis of fossilized teeth adds further evidence that the long-necked dinosaurs called sauropods ? the largest land creatures ? went on road trips to fill their gargantuan appetites.

Scientists have long theorized that sauropods foraged for precious resources during droughts because of their preserved tracks and long limbs that were "ideal moving machines" and allowed them to cover long distances, said paleobiologist Matthew Bonnan of Western Illinois University.

The latest study is the best evidence yet that at least one kind of sauropod "took to the hills in search of food when times got tough in the lowlands," said paleontologist Kristi Curry Rogers at Macalester College in Minnesota.

The new work, published online Wednesday by the journal Nature, was led by geologist Henry Fricke of Colorado College.

The researchers analyzed 32 sauropod teeth collected in Wyoming and Utah. The teeth came from massive plant-eaters that roamed a semi-arid basin in the American West during the late Jurassic period about 150 million years ago.

The largest sauropods weighed 100 tons and were 120 feet long. The type in the study was smaller ? about 60 feet in length and weighing 25 tons.

Scientists can get a glimpse into the source of the dinosaurs' drinking water by comparing the oxygen preserved in the tooth enamel to that found in ancient sediment.

A chemical analysis showed differences in the teeth and the basin where the dinosaurs were buried, meaning they must have wandered hundreds of miles from the flood plains to the highlands for food and water.

Fricke said the movement appeared to be tied to changing seasons. Sauropods left the basin in the summer for higher elevations ? a trek that took about five months ? and returned in the winter.

In lush times, sauropods would have feasted on a diversity of plants including ferns, horsetails, conifers and moss, said John Foster, a curator at the Museum of Western Colorado, who had no part in the research.

___

Online:

Journal: http://www.nature.com/nature

___

Follow Alicia Chang's coverage at http://twitter.com/SciWriAlicia

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2011-10-26-Dinosaur%20Dining/id-2d920e0d7a5a4059a8d5382fdc820795

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Drunk ref ejects 3 players for no reason

Look, apparently there?s no rule that says a soccer ref in the Czech Republic can?t be completely stinking hammered on the job, so play on! (Hic!).

Czech referee Tomas Fidra (seen here) stumbled around the field (falling over several times) during the match against local rivals Jestrabi Lahota and Tynec-Nad-Labem, pausing only to discuss the birthday celebration he had just attended. When some of the players asked if he was alright, Fidra red carded three of them.

?His breath smelt like a brewery and he didn?t hide the fact that he had been celebrating a birthday,? Karel Dusek, an official from the Jestrabi Lhota club, told the Lidove Noviny newspaper.?

With his shirt muddied by his numerous falls, the referee then sent off three Jestrabi players in the game against Tynec-nad-Labem.

?There?s no rule which bans a drunk referee from taking charge of a match. If we had refused to continue to play, we could have been sanctioned.?

With their opponents down to eight men, Jestrabi agreed not to attack in protest of the unfair ejections. It ended in a 1-1 draw, and was later annulled entirely.

But the fun was only beginning when the game ended. Police were summoned, and Fidra?s blood alcohol level registered (wait for it ?) a 0.194 ? more than nine teams the legal limit in the Czech Republic. He?s facing a one-year ban.

***
Drunk ref sends off players at random [Yahoo]

Source: http://offthebench.nbcsports.com/2011/10/25/drunk-pro-soccer-ref-ejects-three-players-for-no-reason/related

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Now Selling At 9,000 Retail Locations, Square Launches A Store Locator

SquareDisruptive mobile payments company Square has received a big retail boost over the past few months, with its card readers being sold at Apple, Best Buy, RadioShack, Target and most recently, Wal-Mart retail stores. And to help new users find a brick and mortar retailer where they can purchase a Square card reader, the company is launching a new store locator feature. It's basically a map of all retail locations nationwide that carry Square card readers, and you can simply type in your zipcode, and you'll see all the stores that carry the mobile device near your location. Square tells us that card readers are now available in over 9,000 retail locations nationwide, up from only approximately 200 locations this summer. The readers sell for $9.99 in stores but each purchaser can redeem a $10 credit to their bank account.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/p_G4WKU73UY/

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Summary Box: Peabody 3Q net income rises (AP)

THE NUMBERS: Coal-mining operator Peabody Energy Corp. said Tuesday that third-quarter profit rose 22 percent, helped by growing demand for coal used for power generation in Asia and Europe. Net income was $274.1 million, or $1 per share, up from $224.1 million, or 83 cents per share, a year ago.

PARTNER SPLITS: Luxembourg-based steel maker ArcelorMittal announced it will pull out of a joint bid with Peabody for Australia's Macarthur Coal. That left Peabody as the only buyer in the $5 billion deal.

REACTION: Peabody's CEO said that was OK ? his company "always preferred a larger ownership" of Macarthur. Gregory H. Boyce said going it alone just speeds up Peabody's ability to benefit from the deal.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/earnings/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111025/ap_on_bi_ge/us_earns_peabody_summary_box

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Calif. rep may face ethics inquiry (Politico)

The House Ethics Committee is moving toward a full-scale investigation of Rep. Laura Richardson (D-Calif.), who has been under scrutiny for months over allegations that her staff engaged in banned political activities while on government time, according to several sources close to the matter.

Ethics Committee staffers have been digging into the claims against Richardson since last year as part of a ?preliminary inquiry? by the panel, and they have been interviewing current and former Richardson aides. The investigators are looking into allegations that Richardson and some of her most senior staffers pressured other aides to work on her reelection campaign or be fired, according to these sources and news reports. Staffers on the congressional payroll are banned from working on political campaigns during official time, and no House resources can be used for campaign-related activities, according to House rules and federal statute.

Continue Reading

If the Ethics Committee were to create an special investigative subcommittee to oversee the Richardson case, it would dramatically raise the legal and political stakes for the three-term California Democrat.

Richardson?s campaign committee is already hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt, including more than $125,000 owed to three law firms, and she faces a potential three-way Democratic primary fight against Rep. Janice Hahn and California Assemblyman Isadore Hall in a newly redrawn congressional district.

Such a move would also mean that another African-American Democrat is under investigation by the secretive Ethics Committee, a sore spot for many black lawmakers. Reps. Maxine Waters of California; Jesse Jackson Jr. of Illinois; and Gregory Meeks of New York are all currently under investigation, according to the panel?s press statements.

Richardson?s office did not return calls seeking comment. The Ethics Committee also declined to comment.

The 49-year-old Richardson has been under ethics scrutiny almost continually since winning an August 2007 special election to replace her onetime boss, the late Rep. Juanita Millender-McDonald.

A Sacramento home that Richardson bought that year went into foreclosure in 2008, the third home on which Richardson has missed mortgage payments. The bank that held the Sacramento mortgage, Washington Mutual, then sold the home to a real estate investor.

But Washington Mutual later took the home back and returned it to Richardson and modified her mortgage. Following a lawsuit, Washington Mutual reached a settlement with the investor who had purchased the home.

The Office of Congressional Ethics and the House Ethics Committee both investigated the incident. The Ethics Committee ruled in July 2010 that Richardson ?did not knowingly violate? any ethics rules in the case.

In November 2010, just four months after the mortgage controversy was resolved, the Los Angeles Wave, a community newspaper, reported that Ethics Committee staffers were looking into allegations that Richardson had forced her official staff to work for her reelection campaign while on official time or lose their jobs, a potential ethical and statutory violation.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/politico_rss/rss_politico_mostpop/http___www_politico_com_news_stories1011_66755_html/43376947/SIG=11mkrve3s/*http%3A//www.politico.com/news/stories/1011/66755.html

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Monday, October 24, 2011

Country Star Loretta Lynn Hospitalized With Pneumonia

Country Star Loretta Lynn Hospitalized With Pneumonia

Legendary singer Loretta Lynn was forced to cancel two performances after being hospitalized with pneumonia. The 76-year-old singer was scheduled to perform in Ashland, Kentucky [...]

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/stupidcelebrities/~3/p0g1B3QKnlA/

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Tunisian Islamists to do well in first "Arab Spring" vote (Reuters)

TUNIS (Reuters) ? Islamists are expected to do well in Tunisia's first democratic election Sunday, 10 months after the ouster of autocratic leader Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali in a popular uprising that set off protest movements around the Arab world.

The Ennahda party will almost certainly win a share of power after the vote, which will set a democratic standard for other Arab countries where uprisings have triggered political change or governments have tried to rush reforms to stave off unrest.

Sunday's vote is for an assembly which will draft a new constitution to replace the one Ben Ali manipulated to entrench his power. It will also appoint an interim government and set elections for a new president and parliament.

Polls open at 2 a.m. EDT and close at 2 p.m.

The mother of Mohamed Bouazizi, the young man whose self-immolation last December set off the Tunisian revolt, said the elections were a victory for dignity and freedom.

"Now I am happy that my son's death has given the chance to get beyond fear and injustice," Manoubia Bouazizi told Reuters. "I'm an optimist, I wish success for my country."

Ennahda, banned under Ben Ali who is now in exile in Saudi Arabia, is expected to gain the biggest share of votes. But the Islamist party will probably not win enough to give it a majority in the assembly and will seek to lead a coalition.

The North African country's elite fear the rise of Ennahda puts their secular values under threat. The Progressive Democratic Party (PDP) has centered its campaign on stopping the Islamists, vowing to seek alliances to keep it out of power.

Ennahda has been at pains to assuage the concerns of secularists and Western powers, fielding several women candidates including one who does not wear the hijab, or Muslim head scarf, and promising not to undermine women's freedoms.

Tunisia was a pioneer of secular modernization among Arab and Muslim countries in the post-colonial period, banning polygamy, equalizing inheritance rights, giving women the right to vote and discouraging the veil.

Fundamentalist Islamists known as Salafists have attacked a cinema and a TV station in recent months over artistic material deemed blasphemous. Ennahda says they have nothing to do with them, but liberals do not believe them.

Observers says Ennahda's intentions are not clear. Its election campaign has scrupulously avoided offering policy details that mark it out as much different from its rivals.

At a final election rally Friday, Suad Abdel-Rahim, the female candidate who does not wear a veil, said Ennahda would protect women's gains.

But illustrating the party's contradictions, many of the books on sale on the fringes of the rally were by Salafist writers who believe women should be segregated from men in public and that elections are un-Islamic.

"In the country's interior, where it's more conservative, they use different rhetoric," said commentator Rachid Khechana. "It's about stopping culture from outside, moral corruption of youth, defending Islam, which they say has Shura (consultation), not democracy."

"ARAB SPRING" REPERCUSSIONS

An Ennahda victory would be the first such success in the Arab world since Hamas won a 2006 Palestinian vote. Islamists won a 1991 Algerian election the army annulled, provoking years of bloody conflict.

Ennahda's fortunes could bear on Egyptian elections set for next month in which the Muslim Brotherhood, an ideological ally, also hopes to emerge strongest.

Libya hopes to hold elections next year after a protest movement that transformed into an armed rebellion with NATO backing managed to oust Muammar Gaddafi. Unresolved violent conflict continues in Syria and Yemen, and many other governments have begun reforms to avoid civil unrest.

With so much at stake, there are concerns that even the smallest doubt over the legitimacy of the Tunisian vote could bring supporters of rival parties onto the streets.

Ennahda's leader, Muslim scholar Rachid Ghannouchi, riled opponents this week when he described the party as Tunisia's biggest and warned that the Tunisian people would start a new uprising if they suspected any poll rigging.

Prime Minister Beji Caid Sebsi said in a televised address Thursday that Tunisians should vote without fear of violence or cheating, a feature of Ben Ali's police state.

"No one can doubt the elections, they will be transparent and clean. Rigging will not be possible. The ballot boxes will be open to everyone," Sebsi said.

The government says 40,000 police and soldiers are being deployed to prevent any protests escalating into violence. Shopkeepers say people have been stockpiling milk and bottled water in case unrest disrupts supplies.

(Writing by Andrew Hammond; Editing by Rosalind Russell and Jon Boyle)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111022/wl_nm/us_tunisia_election

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Sunday, October 23, 2011

Life Insurance Diabetes

Life Insurance DiabetesAt Huntley Wealth Insurance, we offer the lowest ?life insurance diabetes? quotes.? Where some companies decline diabetics for life insurance or give them substandard ratings, we routinely help our diabetic clients obtain approvals at standard or better ratings.

In many cases, if your only health issue is diabetes (Type II), you can obtain a Standard approval from at least a half dozen life insurance companies we work with.? To see ?standard? quotes, use our instant quote form on the right and select the health category ?regular?.

Many factors will affect the cost of life insurance with diabetes, one of which is complications resulting from diabetes.? Some complications you may experience after having diabetes for a many years are neuropathy (damage to the nerves, most commonly affecting the legs and feet), eye complications, and heart disease.

If you have experienced any of these complications, this will hinder you from obtaining excellent life insurance ratings.? However, you still may be able to qualify for a substandard rating, a no exam diabetes policy, or at the worst, a guaranteed issue policy.

A few other key factors which will determine your health classification, and therefore how much a diabetic will pay for life insurance premiums, will be time since diagnosis, average glucose reading/control, and current age.

Generally speaking, the longer someone has been diabetic, the greater the risk of developing complications.? So it?s much safer for a life insurance company to offer great rates to a diabetic who has been recently diagnosed (say in the past 5 years) than one who has had diabetes for 10 or 20 years.

Age of diagnosis is closely related to time since diagnosis.? The 65 year old who has had diabetes for 10 years will probably obtain a much better health classification than a 45 year old who has had diabetes for 10 years.? Most insurance companies penalize you for being diagnosed prior to age 50.

Importance of Controlled Diabetes ? Blood Glucose Levels and A1C

Equally important to a life insurance underwriter is how well controlled your diabetes is.? This is measured by taking an average of your glucose readings, or if available, checking your hemoglobin a1c level.? While your glucose reading provides insight to current blood sugar levels, the a1c measures your average blood glucose control for the past 2 to 3 months.

The average a1c for a non diabetic is 5.0.? For many diabetics who have their diabetes under control, this number may range from 6.0 to 8.0.? And for uncontrolled diabetes this level may approach the teens or even twenties, which would be classified as extremely dangerous blood sugar levels.? As far as life insurance companies are concerned, the lower your a1c, the better.

The other factor affecting your life insurance diabetes pricing is your current age.? Better rates are typically available the older you are.? If well controlled, diabetes is a slowly progressing disease, so how risky is it really for an insurance company to insure a 70 year old who was recently diagnosed as a diabetic?? Not too risky.? Chances are something else will lead to his demise other than diabetes.? But if you?re 47 years old and diabetic, you?re young enough for the disease to possibly progress and affect your life, (and life expectancy).

Other medical issues combined with diabetes will affect life insurance diabetes cases.? For example, combining health impairments such as obesity, heart disease, or tobacco use will greatly increase your premiums, since the health risks are exponentially compounded when adding to the diabetes.

To sum it up for cost of life insurance diabetes policies, your absolute best deals and lowest prices will be offered to diabetics over age 60, diagnosed recently (within 5 or 10 years), who control their blood sugar well.

Life Insurance Cost ? Diabetic Taking Insulin

We find for many of the large life insurance companies, whether you take insulin or any other medication for that matter, is not their main concern.? Their concern is that your blood sugar levels are well maintained.

Does Type of Term or Whole Life Affect Rating?

Some of our diabetic clients ask if they buy a short term policy such as 10 or 15 year term life insurance, will the insurance carrier give them a better rating.? After all, they argue, I?m only going to keep the policy for a10 year duration.

The truth is life insurance companies do not distinguish between ratings based on length of term, because most term policies, even 20 year term and 30 year term, have conversion options.? So a diabetic client can?t argue he will only keep the policy for 10 years, since if he?s unhealthy or dying at the end of year 10, he could convert the policy or pay on an annual renewable term.

You may obtain life insurance approval at a better rating for term life insurance if you apply for over $250,000 of coverage with United of Omaha.? At this level, you would be eligible for their FIT credits, allowing someone with a substandard rating possibly get back to standard with credits for things like being a lifetime non smoker or having a college degree.

Diabetics may also find better ratings applying for a permanent type policy, such as whole life insurance or universal life insurance rather than term.

?Term Life Insurance for Diabetics? Quote

For the fairest estimate, you can start by using our quote form on the right to get a life insurance diabetes quote.? Rate yourself as regular, or standard.? But please understand you may not qualify for standard, depending on the factors described in this article.? You can also call us for a personalized term life insurance diabetes quote at 877-966-9383.

Source: http://termlifeinsurancemales.com/life-insurance-with-health-risks/life-insurance-diabetes/

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Saturday, October 22, 2011

Friday, October 21, 2011

S&P turns up on French, German comments (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) ? The S&P rose on Thursday, erasing earlier losses, as comments by French and German leaders eased market concerns before a key summit this weekend.

The leaders said the euro zone needed a new operating method for the rescue fund, called the European Financial Stability Facility. An agreement will be discussed on Sunday.

The Dow Jones industrial average (.DJI) was up 14.91 points, or 0.13 percent, at 11,519.53. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index (.SPX) was up 2.76 points, or 0.23 percent, at 1,212.64. The Nasdaq Composite Index (.IXIC) was down 7.99 points, or 0.31 percent, at 2,596.05.

(Reporting by Angela Moon, Editing by Kenneth Barry)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111020/bs_nm/us_markets_stocks

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Should the Obama kids be allowed to watch the Kardashians? (The Week)

New York ? The First Couple disagree over whether their daughters should "keep up with" the vapid reality TV beauties ? prompting a parenting debate

Are Malia and Sasha Obama keeping up with the Kardashians? It depends, apparently, on which parent they ask for permission to watch. In an interview with iVillage, Michelle Obama reveals that the President would prefer that the kids steer clear of Keeping Up With the Kardashians, which follows the famous-for-being-famous family as they traipse, bicker, and party through L.A. The First Lady's own position is more lenient: "I sort of feel like if we're talking about [the show]," then it's suitable viewing. "If they're learning the right lessons" ? concluding, for instance, that the Kardashian antics are "crazy" ? "then I'm like, okay." Which parent's take on the Kardashian conundrum is right?

The First Lady wins: Mrs. Obama is taking the right approach here, says Allison Berry at TIME. Most moms would agree that it is impossible to keep children "in a protective bubble, unaware of pop culture," and it is wise of the First Lady to not even try. Instead, her method is the one that all parents should follow for any TV series: Sitting down to discuss what they just watched together.
"President Obama doesn't want to keep up with the Kardashians"

But what exactly are the lessons being learned here? Good on the Obamas for being cautious about what they allow their children to watch, says David Raphael at Gather. "There is just a bunch of raunchy garbage on TV nowadays." But what exactly are the life lessons that Mrs. Obama and her daughters are gleaning from these vapid E! channel beauties. Where to get Botox and how "to be shallow and high maintenance?"
"Why are Kim Kardashian and sisters not liked by the Obamas?"

Mr. President takes this one: It's not surprising that President Obama would prefer his kids not watch the Kardashians, says Jeremy Feist at Popbytes. "They are terrible role models for children." Perhaps "the Kardashians should be used as some sort of litmus test for child bearing." If you think your kid shouldn't tune-in, you pass.
"Barack Obama hates the Kardashians!"

This position could, strangely, help Obama's reelection campaign: In a race that's looking like it's getting closer every day, says Aly Semigran at Entertainment Weekly, there couldn't be a better endorsement than this statement about the President's impeccable pop culture taste: "President Barack Obama likes The Wire, but doesn't like Keeping Up With the Kardashians."
"Would you endorse a President that allows the Kardashians in his household?"

Wait? the President knows who the Kardashians are? As hard as it is "to intellectualize the fact the leader of the free world actually knows who they are," says Nicole Fabian-Weber at The Stir, it is "pretty cool" to have a president this in touch with pop culture. The down side? "Obama could make the Kardashians even more famous (if that's possible)." Remember all of the publicity Snooki got when he referenced her at the White House Correspondents Dinner?
"Michelle Obama welcomes the Kardashians in her home"

View this article on TheWeek.com
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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politicsopinion/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/theweek/20111020/cm_theweek/220513

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Pets with disabilities photographed by Carli Davidson | Feature Shoot

disabled-pets-Carli-Davidson

Portland-based Carli Davidson is an award-winning photographer and an experienced animal trainer and care worker. She captures the innate personalities of her subjects using her professional understanding of animal behavior. She is a freelance photographer for the Oregon Zoo and works with domestic animals for commercial and fine art?projects. She spends much of her photo shoots rolling on the ground with whatever animal she is working with, and encouraging them to open up to the camera. Working at The Oregon Zoo, nature preserves and animal rescues have provided her with the opportunity to care for a wide range of animals, from chimpanzees to rats.

Her photography has been featured in national and international publications, photography magazines, and websites, including The New York Times, Vanity Fair, Esquire, BBC, Huffington Post, The Daily Beast, Photo District News and ABC World News.

disabled-pets-Carli-Davidson

disabled-pets-Carli-Davidson

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Source: http://www.featureshoot.com/2011/10/pets-with-disabilities-photographed-by-carli-davidson/

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Thursday, October 20, 2011

Social Security benefits to rise 3.6 percent (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? Social Security retirement benefits for about 55 million people will go up by 3.6 percent next year, the first cost-of-living increase since 2009, the U.S. Social Security Administration said on Wednesday.

The increase means the average Social Security benefit will rise by $516 a year to $14,748, according to a congressional analysis.

"This is welcome news for seniors facing high prices for everyday items like gas, food and medicine," said Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, a Democrat.

Some or all of the Social Security retirement benefit increase could be eaten up by a rise in premiums for the Medicare federal health insurance program for the elderly. Medicare premium adjustments are expected to be announced later this month.

The Social Security benefit increase is due to start in January 2012. An additional 8 million poor and disabled people receiving supplemental benefits will see a 3.6 percent increase starting this December 30, the Social Security Administration said.

Benefits are recalculated annually based on the rate of consumer inflation. Next year's increase will be the first since 2009 because consumer prices have remained relatively stable since then.

The cost-of-living adjustment increase also means that the maximum amount of annual wages subject to Social Security taxes will rise to $110,100 in 2012 from $106,800. That means the annual tax bill will go up for about 10 million wage earners, the Social Security Administration said.

The annual benefit adjustment is based on the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers. Some deficit hawks are pushing to switch the benefit adjustment calculation to an index, called "chained CPI," that reflects a lower rate of inflation based on the assumption that consumers shift to lower-priced items when faced with price increases.

It is unclear if a U.S. congressional "super committee" charged with finding at least $1.2 trillion in budget savings over 10 years will agree to changing the Social Security benefit calculation in the face of stiff opposition from the AARP and other advocacy groups for elderly Americans.

"This so-called 'chained CPI,' through compounding, would cut seniors' benefits by thousands of dollars over their lifetimes -- and the older one gets, the larger the cut," said AARP Executive Vice President Nancy LeaMond.

(Reporting by Donna Smith; Editing Deborah Charles and Will Dunham)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111019/us_nm/us_usa_economy_socialsecurity

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Growth will be weaker than expected - Mukherjee (Reuters)

NEW DELHI (Reuters) ? India's economic growth will be slower than government projections, highlighting how high inflation, rising interest rates and global financial turbulence threaten the country's momentum, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee said on Wednesday.

But Mukherjee hinted India may continue to tighten monetary policy, in contrast to most other major emerging economies, to keep stubbornly high inflation in check despite fears of a broader economic slowdown.

"Most of us are expecting India's growth to go down below 8 percent. This is disappointing," Mukherjee told a news conference. "But if we can, we must not lose perspective of the global situation. There is a slowdown all over the world."

"Let me not hide the fact that I have been disappointed by our growth components over the last few months. It is evident that India's growth rate in 2011-12 will be less than what we presented in February when I presented the budget."

The budget had projected economic growth of around 9 percent this fiscal year.

Businesses have winced at a series of rate hikes by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) -- there have been a dozen since March 2010 -- and are bracing themselves for the prospect of another increase at the bank's next policy review on Oct 25.

The RBI's stance has been hawkish compared to other major emerging economies such as Brazil and Indonesia, which have eased policy because of concerns about the sluggish global economy.

"There is no one size fits all, the central banks across the world may have been moving in a particular direction but the Indian central bank has its own concerns to take care of," Mukherjee said.

STUBBORN INFLATION

The Wholesale Price Index (WPI), India's most closely watched inflation gauge, stayed well above the RBI's comfort zone at more than 9 percent in September.

Headline inflation readings have been above 9 percent for 10 straight months, driven up by bottlenecks affecting food distribution, weakness in the rupee and high oil prices.

Foreign institutional investors (FIIs) sold more than $2.2 billion worth of Indian shares between August and September as fears of a recession in the developed world prompted global investors to sell riskier assets.

The main 30-share benchmark BSE index is down nearly 17 percent so far this year.

"We are concerned about the volatility of FII flows," Mukherjee said.

Industrial output growth for Asia's third-largest economy has dwindled into low single digits, while car sales are expected to rise just 2-4 percent this fiscal year to March 2012, an industry body has forecast.

India's industrial production grew a slower-than-expected 4.1 pct in August over the previous year.

Exports are also forecast to slow down.

Slowing growth and steadily high global oil prices have also put pressure on the fiscal deficit.

"With the crude prices remaining where they are it will be a great challenge to maintain the fiscal deficit numbers to 4.6 percent this year," Mukherjee said.

Private economists see the fiscal deficit widening to up to 5.6 percent of gross domestic product in the current fiscal year 2011/12 ended-March, against government's target of 4.6 percent as the gap between tax receipts and spending widens.

(Reporting by Abhijit Neogy and Manoj Kumar; Writing by Alistair Scrutton)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/india/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111019/india_nm/india599818

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Analysis: ViaSat's growth hinges on satellite launch

Tue Oct 18, 2011 3:42pm EDT

(Reuters) - After being plagued by delays, U.S. satellite and wireless communications systems maker ViaSat Inc plans to send its most advanced satellite into orbit.

The satellite, which will launch on Wednesday from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on an ILS Proton rocket, is expected to boost ViaSat's bandwidth capabilities, allowing it to tap into the booming demand for Internet communications -- provided that the launch is a success.

The ViaSat-1 satellite, expected to be the most efficient and highest-capacity Ka band satellite in the world, was supposed to launch earlier this year, but was delayed for nine months because of problems at satellite manufacturer Space Systems Loral and a Proton rocket failure to put another satellite in the correct orbit.

"At no fault of ViaSat, the ViaSat-1 satellite has not had the easiest development and launch process," said Wedbush analyst Kenneth Herbert.

The demand for broadband Internet by satellite has been growing so fast that ViaSat's WildBlue unit -- which provides high-speed Internet access service for homes and small businesses in the United States -- has stopped taking orders in some parts of the country.

ViaSat estimates that it will add a million subscribers to its customer base of around 400,000 by the fourth year after the satellite's launch.

Whenever a new broadband satellite launches, a big increase in satellite Internet subscribers often follows. Within a few months, however, capacity in key geographic areas gets sold out, capping subscriber growth, according to industry experts.

"ViaSat may get more aggressive on its initial pricing plans to accelerate the subscriber ramp and partially compensate for the delays in the satellite launch," Herbert said.

END OF DELAYS?

So far, the delays to ViaSat-1 have added more costs to the $400 million price ViaSat is paying for making and launching the satellite. A ViaSat spokesman said the total investment is close to $1 billion, including the satellite, launch, infrastructure, network operations upgrades and rollout.

"Costs are extensive because of the delays. They have to amortize the interest and lot of other expenses... But it is difficult to quantify them," said Herbert.

The delays increased costs and reduced ViaSat's time-to-market advantage over rival Hughes Communications, which will launch its satellite in 2012, said Raymond James analyst Chris Quilty. Hughes is owned by Echostar.

More delays or a launch failure would increase pressure on ViaSat, which is experiencing a squeeze in its defense business. But a successful launch would give ViaSat more capacity than its current North American fleet of two-way Ka, C and Ku band satellites combined.

Wunderlich Securities analyst Matthew Robinson thinks that ViaSat could start using the satellite in the fourth quarter.

"The cycle time the company targets for bringing up ViaSat-1 is less than what other networks have required for new satellites (two to six months), but we believe ViaSat has used the launch delay of about six months to stage a lot of the effort required," he said.

ViaSat said the service on the new satellite will begin rolling out early next year.

The ViaSat-1 satellite likely will help raise revenue and improve margins beginning in fiscal 2013, said Oppenheimer analyst Yair Reiner.

DUOPOLY

Present satellite systems are not designed for the high-bandwidth applications such as high-definition television, graphics, Internet telephone calls and peer-to-peer networking. ViaSat and Hughes are betting that Ka band -- a high-capacity, but cheap spectrum -- will be the next area of U.S. expansion.

"What Ka band does is lets you drive down your bandwidth costs," said ViaSat CEO Mark Dankberg. "In ViaSat 1, it is about 100 times more efficient or cost-effective producing satellite bandwidth than conventional Ku band satellites."

Market research firm NSR anticipates that global satellite broadband Internet access revenue will reach $3.9 billion by 2017, up from $823 million in 2007.

"I think the Ka band market will be a competitive one much similar to the satellite TV market, which is a duopoly," Quilty said, adding that ViaSat and Hughes have a time-to-market advantage that would make it hard for new competitors.

The Ka band technology also holds potential for the airplane passengers. ViaSat has already partnered with JetBlue Airways to offer cheap broadband Internet service when the new satellite is launched.

(Reporting by Supantha Mukherjee in New York and Soham Chatterjee in Bangalore. Editing by Peter Lauria and Robert MacMillan)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/scienceNews/~3/y7bj1TNK5tA/us-viasat-idUSTRE79H6OA20111018

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Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Libyans fight against last Gadhafi holdouts

A revolutionary fighter fires at Gadhafi loyalists in downtown Sirte, Libya, Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2011. About 1,000 Libyan revolutionary troops have launched a major assault on Moammar Gadhafi's hometown, surging from the east to try to capture the last area under loyalist control. (AP Photo/Manu Brabo)

A revolutionary fighter fires at Gadhafi loyalists in downtown Sirte, Libya, Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2011. About 1,000 Libyan revolutionary troops have launched a major assault on Moammar Gadhafi's hometown, surging from the east to try to capture the last area under loyalist control. (AP Photo/Manu Brabo)

A revolutionary fighter fires a rocket-propelled grenade at Gadhafi loyalists in downtown Sirte, Libya, Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2011. About 1,000 Libyan revolutionary troops have launched a major assault on Moammar Gadhafi's hometown, surging from the east to try to capture the last area under loyalist control. (AP Photo/Manu Brabo)

In this Monday, Oct. 17, 2011 photo, revolutionary fighters run across the street under heavy sniper fire carrying Bangladeshi children who were trapped in Sirte, Libya, during the entire siege of the city. Revolutionary fighters pushed hard on Monday to clear the remaining pockets resistance in Sirte but their efforts to advance were hampered severely by the well trained snipers still loyal to the Gadhafi regime. (AP Photo/David Sperry)

A revolutionary fighter looks on during fighting with Gadhafi loyalists in downtown Sirte, Libya, Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2011. About 1,000 Libyan revolutionary troops have launched a major assault on Moammar Gadhafi's hometown, surging from the east to try to capture the last area under loyalist control. (AP Photo/Manu Brabo)

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton meets Libyan soldiers at the steps of her C-17 military transport upon her arrival in Tripoli in Libya, Tuesday Oct. 18, 2011. The Obama administration on Tuesday increased U.S. support for Libya's new leaders as Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton made an unannounced visit to Tripoli and pledged millions of dollars in new aid, including medical care for wounded fighters and additional assistance to secure weaponry that many fear could fall into the hands of terrorists. (AP Photo/Kevin Lamarque, Pool)

(AP) ? Libyan revolutionary forces fought building by building Wednesday against the final pocket of resistance in Moammar Gadhafi's hometown ? the last major city in Libya to have been under the control of forces loyal to the fugitive leader.

But while Libya's transitional leadership worked to consolidate control over the entire country, the country's acting prime minister warned in a newspaper interview that Gadhafi can still cause trouble from his hiding place.

Mahmoud Jibril was quoted by the pan-Arab Asharq al-Awsat Tuesday as saying that the ousted leader is moving between Niger, Algeria and the vast southern Libyan desert and has been trying to recruit fighters from Sudan to help him establish a separate state in the south, or to march to the north and destabilize the new regime.

The report could not be confirmed, but it underscored fears that the inability to catch Gadhafi, who escaped with two of his sons after revolutionary forces swept into Tripoli in late August, would allow him and his supporters to wage an insurgency.

"Gadhafi has two options: either to destabilize any new regime in Libya or to declare a separate state in the south," Jibril was quoted as saying, adding there was evidence about this but he didn't elaborate.

Suggesting that the U.S. also was concerned about the possibility, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said during a visit to Tripoli Tuesday that she hoped Gadhafi would be captured or killed.

In Tripoli, meanwhile, Libya's transitional government said it has formally recognized the Syrian opposition's umbrella group as the country's legitimate representative, making it the first country to do so.

Hassan al-Sughayer, a member of Libya's National Transitional Council, announced the decision in Tripoli after meeting with members of the Syrian National Council, a broad-based opposition group that was formed in September. The Syrians were in the Libyan capital to drum up support for their 7-month-old uprising against President Bashar Assad.

The recognition is largely symbolic and unlikely to have any practical impact. Syria's government has threatened tough measures against any country that recognizes the opposition council.

Although two months have passed since Gadhafi fled Tripoli, Libya's new leaders have refrained from declaring national "liberation" until the fall of Sirte, which Gadhafi transformed from a fishing village into a modern city after he seized power in 1969.

Revolutionary forces on Tuesday pushed from the east into the small pocket of the city under the control of Gadhafi loyalists and captured a vegetable market, though they came under heavy fire from snipers and rocket-propelled grenades on the rooftops of residential buildings and homes along major streets.

On Wednesday, Wissam bin Hmade, the commander of one of the revolutionary brigades from the eastern city of Benghazi, said they had the Gadhafi supporters corralled in a 700 square meter residential area but were still facing heavy rocket and gunfire from snipers holed up in surrounding buildings.

It took the anti-Gadhafi fighters, who also faced disorganization in their own ranks, two days to capture a single residential building.

It is unclear whether loyalists who slipped out of the besieged cities of Bani Walid, which was captured this week, and Sirte might continue the fight and attempt to organize an insurgency using the vast amount of weapons Gadhafi was believed to have stored in hideouts in the remote southern desert.

Unlike Iraq's Saddam Hussein, Gadhafi had no well-organized political party that could form the basis of an insurgent leadership. However, regional and ethnic differences have already appeared among the ranks of the revolutionaries, possibly laying the foundation for civil strife.

Gadhafi has issued several audio recordings trying to rally supporters. Libyan officials have said they believe he's hiding somewhere in the vast southwestern desert near the borders with Niger and Algeria.

The whereabouts of two of his sons also remain unknown, although commanders have said they believe Muatassim and Seif al-Islam are hiding in Sirte and Bani Walid, respectively. Seif al-Islam had been Gadhafi's likely choice to succeed him as Libya's leader.

Anti-Gadhafi fighters combed Bani Walid on Tuesday for signs of Seif al-Islam and other high-level regime figures in the desert enclave, 90 miles (140 kilometers) southeast of Tripoli.

"Seif was seen on Thursday. He was eating in a desert village close to the city," one field commander, Said Younis, said.

The Netherlands-based International Criminal Court has charged Seif al-Islam, his father and Gadhafi's former intelligence chief Abdullah al-Senoussi with crimes against humanity for a brutal crackdown on the uprising.

___

Al-Shaheibi reported from Tripoli, Libya. Associated Press writer Maggie Michael contributed to this report from Cairo.

TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) ? A senior Libyan official says the country's transitional government has formally recognized the Syrian opposition's council as the country's legitimate representative, making it the first country to do so.

Members of the Syrian National Council are visiting the Libyan capital to drum up support for their 7-month-old uprising against President Bashar Assad. The Syrian council is a broad-based opposition umbrella group that was formed in September.

Hassan al-Sughayer, a member of Libya's National Transitional Council, told reporters Wednesday in Tripoli that the NTC has formally recognized the Syrian council's legitimacy as the representative of the Syrian people.

Syria's government has threatened tough measures against any country that recognizes the opposition council.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-10-19-Libya/id-78068b063f6042e2b5e901ff6137b41e

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