Saturday, December 31, 2011

Great apes make sophisticated decisions

ScienceDaily (Dec. 29, 2011) ? Max-Planck-researchers have shown that chimpanzees, gorillas and orangutans make decisions carefully.

Chimpanzees, orangutans, gorillas and bonobos make more sophisticated decisions than was previously thought. Great apes weigh their chances of success, based on what they know and the likelihood to succeed when guessing, according to a study of MPI researcher Daniel Haun, published on December 21 in the online journal PLoS ONE. The findings may provide insight into human decision-making as well.

The authors of the study, led by Daniel Haun of the Max Planck Institutes for Psycholinguistics (Nijmegen) and Evolutionary Anthropology (Leipzig), investigated the behaviour of all four non-human great ape species. The apes were presented with two banana pieces: a smaller one, which was always reliably in the same place, and a larger one, which was hidden under one of multiple cups, and therefore the riskier choice.

The researchers found that the apes' choices were regulated by their uncertainty and the probability of success for the risky choice, suggesting sophisticated decision-making. Apes chose the small piece more often when they where uncertain where the large piece was hidden. The lower their chances to guess correctly, the more often they chose the small piece.

The researchers also found that the apes went for the larger piece -- and risked getting nothing at all -- no less than 50% of the time. This risky decision-making increased to nearly 100% when the size difference between the two banana pieces was largest. While all four species demonstrated sophisticated decision making strategies, chimpanzees and orangutans were overall more likely to make risky choices relative to gorillas and bonobos. The precise reason for this discrepancy remains unknown.

Haun concludes: "Our study adds to the growing evidence that the mental life of the other great apes is much more sophisticated than is often assumed."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Max-Planck-Gesellschaft, via AlphaGalileo.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Daniel B. M. Haun, Christian Nawroth, Josep Call. Great Apes' Risk-Taking Strategies in a Decision Making Task. PLoS ONE, 2011; 6 (12): e28801 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0028801

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/rnBVHEih6nY/111229091636.htm

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APNewsBreak: Russell Brand, Katy Perry to divorce

FILE- In this Tuesday, April 19, 2011 file photo, British actor Russell Brand and his wife Katy Perry arrive for the European premiere of Arthur, in London. (AP Photo/Joel Ryan, FILE

FILE- In this Tuesday, April 19, 2011 file photo, British actor Russell Brand and his wife Katy Perry arrive for the European premiere of Arthur, in London. (AP Photo/Joel Ryan, FILE

(AP) ? British actor-comedian Russell Brand is divorcing "California Gurls" songstress Katy Perry after 14 months of what had appeared to be one of Hollywood's happier marriages.

"Sadly, Katy and I are ending our marriage," Brand said in a statement to The Associated Press on Friday. "I'll always adore her and I know we'll remain friends."

Brand, 36, offered no other details, but in papers filed Friday in Los Angeles Superior Court, he cited irreconcilable differences.

He and the 27-year-old pop singer were married in October 2010 at a resort inside a tiger reserve in India, and their mutual affection had become a rather sweet feature of the celebrity circuit.

The couple announced their engagement in January 2010 after meeting at the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards, where Brand hosted and she performed.

The comedian, who once struggled with substance abuse and sex addiction, was effusive about his bride while promoting projects earlier this year, saying marrying Perry has "given me much more strength in what I do."

"For a long while, what I do professionally was all that mattered to me really," he said in March. "Now I think, well, whatever I do, I'll just go back to her, and that's incredibly comforting."

Perry praised her husband backstage at the 2011 VMAs in August, where she won three awards and he offered a tribute to Amy Winehouse.

"I'm proud of him, whatever comes out of his mouth, and sometimes it's very colorful, right?" Perry said of Brand. "That's why I married him, because he's smart and I learn a lot."

Attorneys for Perry, whose name is listed as Katheryn Elizabeth Hudson in the divorce papers, did not respond Friday to calls seeking comment.

The Internet had been abuzz recently with rumors about possible trouble for the couple after they were seen during the holidays without their wedding rings.

Perry's run of No. 1 singles earned her the distinction of becoming MTV's first artist of the year earlier this month. She hosted "Saturday Night Live" on Dec. 10 and gave no indication any marital woes.

Brand's recent film credits include "Arthur," ''Hop" and "Get Him to the Greek." He is among the ensemble starring alongside Tom Cruise in "Rock of Ages," set for release next year.

Both Brand and Perry were absent Friday from Twitter, where they often shared kind words for each other.

___

AP Entertainment Writer Sandy Cohen can be reached at www.twitter.com/APSandy .

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-12-30-People-Brand-Perry/id-d4a71ab560094da49409ff3328e19050

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Why Are Korean Copyright Owners Suing an Australian Infringer in San Jose, California?

Technology & Marketing Law Blog

? Another Set of Parties Duel Over Social Media Contacts -- Eagle v. Sawabeh | Main

December 28, 2011

Why Are Korean Copyright Owners Suing an Australian Infringer in San Jose, California?

By Eric Goldman

DFSB Kollective Co., Ltd. v. Tran, 2011 WL 6730678 (N.D. Cal. Dec. 21, 2011)

In light of SOPA, I am paying closer attention to transborder copyright and trademark enforcement actions. After all, SOPA is designed to redress foreign rogue websites, so the results being obtained in court today are highly relevant to the policy debates. As we've previously shown, a lot of SOPA remedies are already being awarded by judges--for better or worse (mostly the latter)--and some of those rulings are raising some of the same due process concerns we have about SOPA.

Today's ruling baffles me, and I'm hoping you'll help me understand the case and the issues. The plaintiffs own copyrights in Korean pop music and are based in Seoul. The defendant is Kenny Tran, who runs ihoneyjoo.com and ihoneydew.com (both offline--more on that later) and is peripatetic on social media. Tran allegedly posted infringing music files and album covers to cyberlockers and other sites and then linked to the uploads from his social media accounts. The plaintiffs claim Tran is "one of the biggest illegal uploaders (and free download link providers) of Korean music in the world" and his site generated more traffic than the top 3 legitimate Korean music sites combined. (If true, this crucial information about consumer behavior made me think of this meme). Tran allegedly profited from his actions by showing ads and soliciting PayPal donations.

The plaintiffs claim they repeatedly sent takedown notices to Tran's service providers, but Tran allegedly evaded enforcement by opening new accounts or switching vendors. So they sued Tran in San Jose, California, where they happened to draw Judge Koh, the only federal district court judge of Korean descent. They claim to have served him in Australia, but Tran hasn't responded to the lawsuit at all.

As usual in default judgments, the judge basically rubber-stamps the plaintiffs' arguments. She finds personal jurisdiction over Tran, a result that's become almost pro forma in copyright infringement cases (see the multiple Righthaven jurisdictional wins). As for Tran's ties to California, Judge Koh says:

it appears as though Defendant has specifically used several California companies to further his scheme of perpetrating illegal downloads. Tran uses California companies Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube to promote the websites he operates, and to allow users access to the pirated copies of the copyrighted music and artwork. Additionally, it appears as though Defendant uses a privacy service located in California to shield his identity....In light of the nature of the websites run by Defendant, it appears that Defendant's activities are expressly aimed at California.

Similarly, with respect to how Tran caused harm in California, the opinion says:

Tran relied on several California companies to further his scheme of providing copyrighted music to a world-wide audience of users. Additionally, given the evidence provided by Plaintiffs of the reach of Defendant's activities, Tran likely knew that harm?in the form of distribution and download of copyright protected material?would be suffered in the forum state.

Completely missing from this discussion is how the plaintiffs suffered any harm in California or, for that matter, had any ties themselves to California. The opinion offers nothing on that point, leaving open the possibility that the plaintiffs are engaged in strategic forum-shopping. The opinion also does some serious arm-waving about the other factors in the personal jurisdiction tests that evaluate the forum's appropriateness--because the plaintiffs apparently didn't provide anything to show their interest in California, the opinion just says a lot of factors are "neutral" when in fact she's working with no information at all. This is typical of default judgments; we usually wouldn't see such corner-cutting in an adversarial proceeding. Similarly, the conclusion that using Twitter or Facebook makes defendants subject to California jurisdiction would not survive properly adversarial proceedings.

The opinion finds direct copyright infringement of 11 albums/129 songs. It also finds contributory copyright infringement, although it never says who the direct infringer is given that Tran allegedly uploaded the files himself (the failure to identify a direct infringer in a contributory copyright infringement analysis is a common error on my Internet Law exam, a mistake that my students usually regret when they get their grade). The opinion punts on the inducement question, saying "there is some doubt as to whether [inducement] is a separate cause of action or more properly considered a species of contributory infringement."

Based on the copyright infringement, Judge Koh approves $5k statutory damages per infringement, for a total of $645k. She also grants the following injunction:

Defendant Kenny Tran, and his officers, agents, servants, employees, and attorneys, are permanently enjoined from copying, displaying, or distributing Plaintiffs' works without permission, and from providing internet links or instructions enabling others to access infringing copies of Plaintiffs' works.

In light of recent injunctions involving foreign rogue websites, this injunction is quite restrained.

This ruling leaves open the big unanswered question: why the plaintiffs didn't sue Tran in Australia? If they really wanted to shut him down, they are more likely to get the desired enforceability from an Australian court.

One possibility is that the plaintiffs knew Tran would default in a US action but feared he would fight in Australia, so suing in San Jose was a quick way to get a default judgment. But is the default judgment actually worth more than the paper it's printed on? I assume they will have some difficulty enforcing their damages award and even more difficulty enforcing the injunction given Tran is in Australia. If Tran breaches the injunction and is held in contempt by a US court, then what? Getting a quick but unenforceable win seems like an odd move.

Another possibility is that the plaintiffs will use the ruling to cut off Tran from US service providers, like kicking Tran off Facebook, Twitter, etc. Interestingly, the injunction doesn't specifically reference any remedies against these third-party service providers, unlike some of the other troubling rogue website enforcements we've blogged about recently. Furthermore, many of those service providers already are willing to kick Tran off as a repeat infringer, but they won't set up the screens required to proactively prevent Tran from setting up new accounts, so I don't see how this injunction helps.

Nevertheless, Tran's two domain names are already down. Did the domain hosts cut off the domain names only because of this ruling? Or would they have done the same with an Australian ruling of infringement? Or, especially in the case of GoDaddy, merely at the copyright owner's request without any judicial adjudication at all?

A third possibility is that the plaintiffs had copyright registrations in the United States but didn't have the requisite copyright standing in Australia. I haven't researched this, but it seems doubtful.

As you can see, I have a lot of questions about this case and not a lot of answers. I'd welcome your thoughts about what's going on here and what it might mean. (As usual, let me know if it's OK to post your email to the blog).

One thing I do know: our judicial system depends on adversarial proceedings, and it frequently breaks down quickly when judges are asked to make rulings based on hearing only one side of the story. In this case, Judge Koh--a shining light in our federal judiciary who normally issues rock-solid opinions--totally sidestepped a deeper inquiry into the plaintiffs' interests in California. I can't imagine she missed this glaring hole in the plaintiffs' case (the opinion unmistakably arm-waves on the factors that would prompt that inquiry), so perhaps she just wanted to quickly move this uncontentious case off her docket. However we get there, it's clear that judges won't aggressively protect defendants in default judgments on their own accord without any help from defendants. Any legislative solution that relies on ex parte or non-adversarial proceedings before a judge superficially appears to bake in due process but instead will suffer the same defect, even when we have great federal judges who try to do the right thing. This has a lot of implications for SOPA, but it's also relevant to OPEN.

For more on the case, see Mike Masnick's post.

Posted by Eric at December 28, 2011 12:34 PM | Copyright

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Putin urges acceleration of South Stream

(AP) ? Prime Minister Vladimir Putin on Friday instructed gas giant Gazprom to speed up the construction of a gas pipeline under the Black Sea in an apparent attempt to put pressure on Ukraine, the current chief export route for Russia.

The South Stream project, co-owned by Gazprom, France's EdF, Italy's Eni and Germany's Wintershall, is meant to ship Russian natural gas to southern and eastern Europe.

The pipeline, which is expected to start operating in 2015, would ship up to 63 billion cubic meters (2 trillion cubic feet) of gas annually to Bulgaria, Serbia, Hungary, Slovenia, Austria and Italy in one leg and Croatia, Macedonia, Greece and Turkey in a second. This week, Moscow secured a key approval from Turkey to go ahead with the construction.

The 15 billion-euro South Stream is rivaling the European Union-backed Nabucco pipeline that's slated to ship gas from the Caspian region to Austria.

Putin told Gazprom CEO Alexei Miller in televised comments that "it would be advisable" to start building the pipeline at the end of next year, not in 2013.

The move is likely to put pressure on Ukraine, currently Russia's chief gas export route.

Miller also said that the $20 billion Ukraine is seeking for the pipeline is too high because it will require 2 to 8 billion euros ($2.5-10 billion).

Continuous disagreement between Moscow and Kiev, which has led to two gas wars, largely stems from Moscow striving to control, or at least manage, the export pipeline crossing Ukraine. Kiev in return is seeking lower gas prices.

Ukraine is currently paying about $400 per 1,000 cubic meters of gas, but wants to pay $250. The talks have so far failed to produce a deal and a new round is set for mid-January.

A price discount for Ukraine could amount to $9 billion for an annual shipment, Miller said Friday.

Although his order regarding South Stream seems to be aimed to push pressure on Ukraine at the upcoming gas talks, Putin still added that it expects Ukraine to remain an important gas route for Russia.

Ukraine's prime minister Mykola Azarov on Thursday threatened that his government may take Gazprom to court if Moscow doesn't agree to a lower price at the talks. It was not immediately clear, however, what could make the legal grounds of that lawsuit.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-12-30-EU-Russia-Ukraine-Gas/id-f01b33c938774b13af67d2015fedf9e5

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Russia building 10-petaflop supercomputer, joins China in search of less US tech dependence

Our brothers from another Marxist mother are joining the race to 1,000-petaflop ?exascale? computing: By 2013, Lomonosov Moscow State University ? the oldest university in Russia ? will house a 10-petaflop supercomputer created by T-Platforms, an up-and-coming high-performance computing (HPC) company that?s basically the Russian equivalent of Cray or IBM.

The exact hardware spec isn?t known yet, but T-Platforms has apparently pitched a few different node varieties to the university; some sporting Intel Sandy Bridge Xeons, some Ivy Bridge, and some a combination of Sandy Bridge and Nvidia Kepler-based GCGPU coprocessors. To reach 10 petaflops, which is just marginally slower than the world?s fastest HPC installation, Japan?s K computer, there?ll probably be in the region of 500 to 1000 server racks, and tens of thousands of CPUs and GPUs. Like all other top-end supercomputers, it will be water-cooled.

Beyond the computer itself, though, a much more interesting story is unfolding. If you go back 10 years (he history of HPC only really dates back to the ?90s) almost every supercomputer in the world was in the USA or Japan. The title of World?s Fastest Supercomputer is now firmly back in the hands of the Japanese, but in 2008 it belonged to China?s Tianhe-1A. The US is now upgrading its fastest supercomputer, Jaguar, to become Titan, and by the time 2013 rolls around there?ll probably be a handful of 10-petaflop computers sucking down tens of megawatts each.

The T-Platforms supercomputer, from another angleThe thing is, Titan, Tianhe, K, and Russia?s unnamed computer, are all built on Intel, AMD, and Nvidia technology; American technology? and that?s all about to change. China is now working on a supercomputer made entirely from Chinese tech, Russia has made it clear that it would like to seed a homegrown tech industry that can power these supercomputers, and even Europe ? which already has high-tech companies like the UK-based ARM Holdings ? wants to reduce its dependence on US technology.

It seems that the Russian, Chinese, and European governments all believe that the ?race to exascale? provides the ideal seed for home-growing the new processing, memory, and interconnect technologies that will be required at 1000 petaflops (which we shoudl reach by 2020). Intel and Nvidia already have a massive head start (the next-generation HPC-oriented 50-core Knights Ferry is almost on the market), but who knows. Russia and China are both famous for their crony capitalism, and shoehorning trillions of governmental dollars into technology start-ups is probably one of the few ways to beat Intel.

If you?ve ever wanted to see what a Russian supercomputer installation looks like, watch the video (but the narration is Russian; so you might just want to look at the pretty pictures).

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/extremetech/~3/cvxWxnt9sHA/110583-russia-building-10-petaflop-supercomputer-joins-china-in-search-of-less-us-tech-dependence

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pritigorkha started the forum topic Darjeeling Terai Dooars Plantation Labour Union - reopen Panighata Tea Estate in the group Dooars Terai Gorkha Community

Siliguri: The Darjeeling Terai Dooars Plantation Labour Union submitted a memorandum to the joint labour commissioner in Siliguri on Wednesday asking him to take steps to reopen Panighata Tea Estate. The management had suspended the work in the garden on Tuesday. Harihar Acharya, the convener of the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha-backed trade union, said he was hopeful that a meeting would be held with the owners next month to discuss the matter.

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Source: http://www.gorkhacreed.com/groups/dooars-terai-community/forum/topic/darjeeling-terai-dooars-plantation-labour-union-reopen-panighata-tea-estate/

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

David Lee Roth to Reunite with Van Halen & Hit the Road

Some thought it would never happen (again), but it looks like David Lee Roth is honestly and truly back with Van Halen for a special 2012 reunion tour.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/david-lee-roth-reunite-van-halen-and-tour/1-a-414045?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Adavid-lee-roth-reunite-van-halen-and-tour-414045

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Royal grandkids visit Prince Philip in hospital (AP)

LONDON ? Queen Elizabeth II emphasized the importance of family in her Christmas message this year and her grandchildren brought some Christmas cheer to her husband, Prince Philip, as he recovered in a hospital after a heart procedure.

The 90-year-old prince was forced to miss the royal family's traditional Christmas festivities ? opening presents together, going to a morning church service and viewing the Queen's Christmas broadcast ? after doctors put a coronary stent in. Philip had gone to the hospital on Friday complaining of chest pains, which doctors determined were caused by a blocked coronary artery.

Buckingham Palace said it does not know yet when Philip will be released.

"The Duke is in good spirits and will remain in hospital under observation for a short period," the palace said.

Prince William and his brother Prince Harry drove in separate cars to Papworth Hospital from Sandringham, Elizabeth's sprawling estate where the royal family gathered to celebrate Christmas.

Prince Andrew's daughters, Beatrice and Eugenie, also came to the hospital, along with Princess Anne's children, Zara and Peter.

The 45-minute visit from the royal grandchildren came after Elizabeth's annual, pre-recorded Christmas message to the nation aired. The royal family reportedly watches the broadcast together every year.

The theme of her broadcast ? family ? was especially poignant with Philip in the hospital recovering. The message was recorded Dec. 9, before Philip, also known as the Duke of Edinburgh, went into the hospital.

Wearing a festive red dress, the Queen said the importance of family was driven home by the marriages of two of her grandchildren this year ? William and Zara. William's royal wedding at Westminster Abbey captivated the world in April, and Zara had a quiet but elegant celebration in July.

The 85-year-old queen has made a prerecorded Christmas broadcast on radio since 1952 and on television since 1957. She writes the speeches herself, and the broadcasts mark the rare occasion on which the queen voices her own opinion without government consultation.

Elizabeth spoke of the strength family can provide during times of hardship and how friendships are often formed in difficult times.

She pointed to the Commonwealth nations as an example that family "does not necessarily mean blood relatives but often a description of a community."

With one notable absence ? Philip's ? the royal family kicked off their Christmas earlier Sunday with a traditional morning service at St. Mary Magdelene Church, on the Sandringham Estate.

The huge crowds that gathered outside the church to catch a glimpse of the Queen got an early peek when the royals made a quick private visit to the church ahead of the services. Less than two hours later, they were back ? in different clothes ? for the Christmas service.

The Queen arrived first ? dressed in a lavender-colored coat and hat ? in a royal limousine, leading the way into the church. Her oldest son, Prince Charles, and his wife, Camilla, trailed behind.

Harry walked in with his brother William and new sister-in-law Kate ? now known as the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge. Kate, whose style is closely watched around the world and who sends any dress she wears flying off the shelves in Britain, wore an eggplant-colored coat and matching hat.

Among the other royals, Zara was joined by her new husband Mike Tindall, an English rugby player.

After the service, local children lined up to give bouquets of flowers to the queen. Thanking each well-wisher, the queen then handed the bouquets to granddaughters Beatrice and Eugenie.

Well-wisher Camilla Fitt, 71, said Charles told her that his father was "very determined" to get well.

"Charles said he is coming on," said Fitt.

The royal family then traveled back to the house for lunch, an integral part of their celebration.

___

Cassandra Vinograd can be reached at http://twitter.com/CassVinograd

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111225/ap_en_ce/eu_britain_royal_christmas

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

People says gay Taylor Lautner cover "100 percent fake" (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) ? People magazine said on Tuesday that a cover apparently featuring "Twilight" actor Taylor Lautner coming out as a gay man was "100 percent fake."

"The cover in question is 100 percent fake. This began as a ridiculous Twitter joke that went viral," said People Magazine spokeswoman Julie Farin.

The fake People cover, dated Jan 7 2012, was circulated on the Internet over the holidays. It featured a picture of Lautner, 19, with text saying "Tired of rumors, the Twilight star opens up about his decision to finally come out."

Social media sites circulated the fake cover, with celebrities like Def Jam's co-founder Russell Simmons tweeting their congratulations to the "Twilight" actor before realizing the hoax.

"Disappointed that people would joke about someone coming out about their sexuality. Let Taylor Lautner be whoever he wants to be," Simmons said in a later tweet Monday.

A representative for Lautner, who previously dated country singer Taylor Swift, did not respond to requests for comment.

The authors of the hoax were not immediately known.

(Reporting by Piya Sinha-Roy; Editing by Jill Serjeant)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/celebrity/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111227/people_nm/us_taylorlautner_people

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NTMA_CSTCA: #Kabul hosts #football #competition with #US, #UK, #Bulgaria, #Mongolia, #Croatia, #Turkey, #Malaysia & #Afghanistan - http://t.co/abNcQ290

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Joba's right arm 'feels great'

Palmeiro Orioles

USA Today?s Bob Nightengale tweeted his Hall of Fame ballot earlier today. It?s somewhat unusual as far as these things go: Barry?Larkin, Rafael Palmeiro, Fred McGriff, Jack Morris and Alan Trammell. Nightengale?then said that he votes for PED guys because we?ll never know who did and who didn?t use. ?That explains his vote for Rafael?

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/12/25/joba-chamberlains-rehabbing-right-arm-feels-great/related/

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Pope urges end to Syria bloodshed, peace worldwide (AP)

VATICAN CITY ? Pope Benedict XVI called for an end to the bloodshed in Syria and the resumption of Israeli-Palestinian peace talks in his Christmas message Sunday, an appeal for peace that was challenged by deadly attacks on Nigerian churches.

Benedict delivered his "Urbi et Orbi" speech (Latin for "to the city and to the world") from the central loggia of St. Peter's Basilica overlooking a sun-drenched piazza below, before thousands of jubilant tourists and pilgrims, and hundreds of colorful Swiss Guards and Italian military bands.

The 84-year-old pope, fresh off a late-night Christmas Eve Mass, said he prayed that the birth of Jesus, which Christmas celebrates, would send a message to all who need to be saved from hardships.

He cited refugees from the Horn of Africa and flood victims in Thailand, among others, and called for greater political dialogue in Myanmar, and stability in Iraq, Afghanistan and Africa's Great Lakes region.

He said he prayed that God would help the Israelis and the Palestinians resume talks.

"May he bring an end to the violence in Syria, where so much blood has already been shed," he said.

The pope didn't mention the deadly blasts on churches in Nigeria, but the Vatican issued a statement denouncing the attacks as a sign of "cruelty and absurd, blind hatred" that shows no respect for human life.

Early Sunday, an explosion ripped through a Catholic church during Christmas Mass near Nigeria's capital of Abuja, and an emergency worker reported that 25 people were killed. A second explosion struck near a church in Nigeria's restive central city of Jos, while two other explosions hit the northeast state of Yobe.

There was no immediately claim of responsibility for either explosion, but Nigeria has suffered a wave of sectarian attacks blamed on the radical Muslim sect Boko Haram.

Vatican spokesman Rev. Federico Lombardi said the Catholic church was praying for all Nigerians confronting "this terrorist violence in these days that should be filled with peace and joy."

The Vatican press office noted that Benedict's speech was prepared well in advance of the attacks.

After his speech, Benedict delivered Christmas greetings in 65 different languages, from Mongolian to Maori, Aramaic to Albanian, Tamil to Thai. He finished the list with Guarani and Latin, as the bells tolled from St. Peter's enormous bell towers.

In the West Bank, hundreds of Christian faithful, defying lashing rains and wind, celebrated Christmas Mass at Jesus' traditional birthplace of Bethleham on Sunday, spirits high despite the gloomy weather.

Worshippers dressed in their holiday best rushed under cover of umbrellas into St. Catherine's Church on Manger Square, leaving the plaza, with its 50-foot-tall (15-meter-tall) Christmas tree, deserted. The church was packed, and the overflow crowd waited eagerly in an arched corridor for a chance to enter.

Inside, supplicants, some dressed in the traditional attire of foreign lands, raised their voices in prayer, kissed a plaster statue of a baby Jesus and took communion. St. Catherine's is attached to the smaller Church of the Nativity, which is built over a grotto where devout Christians believe Jesus was born.

"Lots of pilgrims from around the world are coming to be here on Christmas," said Don Moore, 41, a psychology professor from Berkeley, Calif., who came to Bethlehem with his family. "We wanted to be part of the action. This is the place, this is where it all started."

With turnout at its highest in more than a decade, proud Palestinian officials said they were praying the celebrations would bring them closer to their dream of independence.

In Britain, the leader of the world's Anglicans, the Archbishop of Canterbury, said the summer riots in Britain and the financial crisis have broken bonds and abused trust in British society.

In his Christmas Day sermon, Rowan Williams appealed to those congregated at Canterbury Cathedral to learn lessons about "mutual obligation" from the events of the past year. He said Sunday "the most pressing question" now facing Britain is "who and where we are as a society."

"Bonds have been broken, trust abused and lost," he said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mideast/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111225/ap_on_re_eu/eu_vatican_christmas

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Rich Indian can't buy out of lowest caste

As far back as he can remember, people told Hari Kishan Pippal that he was unclean, with a filthiness that had tainted his family for centuries. Teachers forced him to sit apart from other students. Employers sometimes didn't bother to pay him.

Pippal is a dalit, a member of the outcast community once known as untouchables. Born at the bottom of Hinduism's complex social ladder, that meant he could not eat with people from higher castes or drink from their wells. He was not supposed to aspire to a life beyond that of his father, an illiterate cobbler. Years later, he still won't repeat the slurs that people called him.

Now, though, people call him something else.

They call him rich.

Pippal owns a hospital, a shoe factory, a car dealership and a publishing company. He owns six cars. He lives in a maze of linked apartments in a quiet if dusty neighborhood of high walls and wrought-iron gates.

"In my heart I am dalit. But with good clothes, good food, good business, it is like I am high-caste," he said, a 60-year-old with a shock of white hair, a well-tailored vest and the girth of a Victorian gentleman. Now, he points out, he is richer than most Brahmins, who sit at the top of the caste hierarchy: "I am more than Brahmin!"

But in an increasingly globalized nation wrestling with centuries of deeply held caste beliefs, there is little agreement about what that means. Do Pippal and the handful of other dalit millionaires reflect a country shrugging off centuries of caste bias? Does caste hold still hold sway the way it used to?

Even Hari Kishan Pippal isn't sure.

"Life is good for me," says Pippal, sitting in his office in Heritage Hospital, one of the largest private medical facilities in this north Indian city. "But life is very bad for many, many people."

Improvements slowly emerge
The vast majority of India's 170 million dalits live amid a thicket of grim statistics: less than a third are literate, well over 40 percent survive on less than $2 a day, infant mortality rates are dramatically higher than among higher castes. Dalits are far more likely than the overall population to be underweight, and far less likely to get postnatal care.

While caste discrimination has been outlawed for more than 60 years, and the term "untouchable" is now taboo in public, thousands of anti-dalit attacks occur every year. Hundreds of people are killed.

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The stories spill from India's newspapers: the 14-year-old dalit strangled because he shared his first name with a higher-caste boy; the 70-year-old man and his disabled daughter burned alive after a dalit-owned dog barked at higher-caste neighbors; the man run over at a gas station because he refused to give up his place in line to a high-caste customer.

But amid centuries of caste tradition that can seem immutable, there has been slow change.

In an extensive survey by the Center for the Advanced Study of India at the University of Pennsylvania, researchers found that dalits living in concrete homes, not huts made from mud and straw, had jumped from 18 percent to 64 percent between 1990 and 2007 in one north Indian district. Ownership of various household goods ? fans, chairs, pressure cookers and bicycles ? had skyrocketed over the same period.

It also found a weakening of some caste traditions, with, for example, far fewer dalits being seated separately at non-dalit weddings.

'Caste is losing its grip'
While most dalits still support themselves as rural laborers, there is also a growing dalit middle class, many of them civil servants who have benefited from affirmative action laws.

"Caste is losing its grip," said Chandra Bhan Prasad, a dalit writer, social scientist and one-time Marxist militant who has become a leading voice urging the dalit poor to see the virtues of capitalism.

In a consumer society, Prasad argues, wealth can trump caste ? at least some of the time. Growing economies also foster urbanization, he says, allowing low-caste Indians to escape traditional village strictures. Finally, economic growth also means that the traditional merchant castes are not large enough to fill every job.

"This means other castes also have a chance" in the business world, Prasad said.

To Prasad, the new millionaires are a way to prove that dalits can make it in a globalized world.

"Don't say (success) is not possible because of the caste system," he said. "Here is a list of dalits who are doing so well."

The list is impressive, even if its members are far from India's traditional centers of wealth, power and celebrity. They are, for the most part, blue-collar rich, often finding their niches in less-glamorous industries: building working-class housing developments, manufacturing immense concrete pipes, churning out cheap polyester shirts.

No one knows how many wealthy dalit entrepreneurs have emerged since India opened its economy in the early 1990s, sparking some of the world's fastest economic growth. Hundreds certainly, maybe thousands.

Visibility grows
They are also increasingly visible. A decade ago, dalit businessmen regularly changed their last names, since these almost always identify someone's caste. Even Pippal did it at first, playing off the pronunciation of his name and calling his first company "People's Exports" to mask his caste background.

Now, the dalit rich are chatting over cocktails at meetings of their own chamber of commerce, and setting up booths at dalit trade fairs. Top government officials are talking about a venture capital fund to make financing more easily available to entrepreneurs from India's outcast communities.

The wealthiest, meanwhile, have become darlings of the Indian media, held up as proof that modern India is an increasingly caste-blind society.

Nonsense, says Anand Teltumbde, a prominent dalit activist.

"These stories (about successful dalits) sit well with the middle class," said Teltumbde, who is a grandson of B.R. Ambedkar, an independence-era dalit lawyer revered as a hero by dalits across India. "The entire world has changed ... but the number of well-off dalits is no more than 10 percent. Ninety percent of dalits live a dilapidated kind of life."

As for Pippal, he finds himself uncomfortably in the middle of this debate. He is a rich dalit who thinks very little has changed for India's outcasts, a man who credits his own success to hard work and one enormous advantage: ego.

"From my childhood, I was thinking one day I will be a big man," he said.

Raised in poverty, he only made it through high school before his father became ill, and he had to go to work pulling a rickshaw to support the family. His first break came when he married a dalit woman from a slightly better-off family that owned a small shoe workshop.

Dalits have long dominated the shoe business. Caste is largely a reflection of traditional trades, and since making shoes involved working with the skins of dead animals, it was left to dalits.

Building on a skill
But Pippal shifted the focus of his father-in-law's workshop, concentrating on high-quality shoes and teaching himself a slew of languages ? English, Tamil, Punjabi, Russian, German ? to sell his footwear more widely. Today, he owns a 300-worker factory where 500 handmade shoes are turned out every day, then packed into boxes already marked with prices in euros and British pounds. The expensive ones retail for as much as $500 a pair.

He used his footwear profits to start the small Honda dealership, and then the hospital. Immense profits are being made in India's private health care industry, as the new middle class seeks alternatives to the often-questionable care at most public hospitals.

"I didn't know ABC about hospitals," Pippal said, laughing his barking laugh. He gleefully talks about the Brahmin doctors who at first worked for him very reluctantly.

"Now they are earning a lot of money from this hospital," he said.

Of course, so is Pippal. He's still a long way from being a billionaire, but says his businesses have a total turnover of about $12 million a year.

At first glance, Heritage Hospital doesn't look state-of-the-art. Pippal's office has stained green carpeting and paint coming away in bubbly clumps. On a recent day, masons were working near the main entrance, forcing patients to enter through a dark hallway beneath his Honda dealership, which is next door. Janitors do little but move around the dirt with wet rags.

But it is cleaner and has more resources than the public hospitals most Indians must rely upon. Pippal proudly ticks off its assets: 150 beds, 187 doctors, a range of care from oncology to plastic surgery.

In so many ways, Pippal has proven himself a success. He is rich. He is greeted with respect on the streets. His children went to good schools, and grew up with friends from across the caste spectrum.

Yet he also believes that he remains, very often, a figure of quiet contempt.

"These people are very bloody clever," Pippal said of the high-caste businessmen with whom he deals. "When there are profits to be made, then everything (about his caste) is OK."

"But in their mind, they're thinking: 'He is a dalit.'"

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/45770579/ns/world_news-south_and_central_asia/

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Lawyers for Sheen's ex-wife fear media frenzy (AP)

ASPEN, Colo. ? Attorneys for Charlie Sheen's ex-wife want to stop what they expect to be a media frenzy when she appears in court on drug and assault charges.

Attorneys asked a judge to deny a live Internet feed from the courtroom requested by TMZ Productions when Brooke Mueller appears on Jan. 23.

The 34-year-old Mueller faces a felony charge of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute and a misdemeanor assault charge.

She was arrested Dec. 3 after a woman reported being assaulted at a nightclub.

The Aspen Times reported ( http://bit.ly/rWhvw7) that police found between four and five grams of cocaine when they contacted Mueller.

Sheen and Mueller divorced earlier this year after Sheen was arrested on suspicion of assaulting her in 2009. He completed his probation in November 2010.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111222/ap_en_ot/us_mueller_sheen_arrest

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The Elephant in the Room: How Contraception Could Save Future Elephants from Culling

News | Evolution

South African reserves facing unprecedented elephant populations could turn to immunocontraception to slow growth


elephants by waterToo Many Elephants Elephants in Addo Elephant National Park, in South Africa, gather around the watering hole. Image: Clive Reid, Flickr

In South Africa they have a problem, a big one: too many elephants.

For most of the 1900s extensive poaching threatened to wipe out the country?s elephants. In response, conservationists established reserves throughout the region and relocated as many herds as they could. Now those herds are doing quite well. So well, in fact, that they?re causing problems. Wildlife managers are currently facing a dilemma: how to deal with too many elephants. While some advocate for culling the giants, a group of scientists has outlined a different plan to control their populations: contraception.

Rather than simply setting a quota and culling the extras, immunocontraception could be a tool to allow land managers to control elephant populations in response to conditions on the ground such as food availability. "The approach now has to be much more dynamic and look at the influence the animals are having on the land," says Robert Slotow, a biologist at the Amarula Elephant Research Program in Durban, South Africa. His team recently published a paper in PLoS ONE describing how scientists might be able to use immunocontraception?a vaccine that gets the body to make antibodies that target sperm receptors on the surface of the egg cell. Slotow and his team outlined an immunocontraception schedule that would halt the growth of herds in a South African park and even out their population structure.

The problem

In the wild, two things control elephant populations: natural mortality and environmental conditions. Calves and full-grown animals get sick and die from all kinds of things, from predation to viruses. And when the environment is unfavorable?during years of drought or food shortages, for instance?females will put off having babies. In closed systems like conservation parks, however, neither of those controls is in place. The fences around the park keep out new animals and pathogens, and controlled park conditions make sure that there is ample food. Mothers keep having babies, and the death rate seems to slow to a crawl.

But simply letting the population boom isn?t an option either. Herds can reduce forests to grasslands by trampling plants and uprooting trees as they feed. There is concern that the elephants are pushing out other species. Kruger National Park, the oldest elephant reserve in South Africa, has about 15,000 elephants. The sustainable number estimated for the park is probably more like 7,500. One way that Kruger dealt with its growing population was to relocate juveniles to other parks in South Africa, which temporarily solved the problem in Kruger but created issues elsewhere. These smaller parks suddenly had a bunch of elephants that were all the same age, which leads to a young, fast-growing population. Now those smaller parks are having the same challenge?too many elephants.

In 2008 South Africa announced it would lift the 1994 ban on elephant culling to deal with increasing populations, although to date the cull has not happened. Culling itself is controversial: some argue it?s a way to utilize a resource and profit from the skin, meat and ivory provided by elephants, whereas others contend that the killing is barbaric and unnecessary.

?All these things that people want to talk about?deer gnawing on your shrubbery, culling elephants?they?re symptoms of the larger problem, which is reproduction,? says Jay Kirkpatrick, director of the Science and Conservation Center at ZooMontana and longtime advocate for immunocontracpetion. And if you want to curb reproduction, he says, contraception is one option.

A potential solution

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=37598193f90bc4be1f36fb6fbdc1373b

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Boehner's Words for the Ages (talking-points-memo)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/178119179?client_source=feed&format=rss

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American troops will not solve Iraq's problems


For nearly a year now, most of the articles written about Iraq by western observers and journalists have focused on the ongoing departure of American troops, drawing a gloomy picture of post-withdrawal Iraq at the end of this month. Their arguments are usually based on the insufficient readiness of Iraqi security forces, concerns about the return of sectarian violence, ethnic conflict between Arabs and Kurds, the instability that can be caused by unresolved political disagreements, and Iran's increasing influence in Iraq filling the gap left by the withdrawal of American troops.

These observers often conclude that the national security interests of both the United States and Iraq require extending the Status of Forces Agreement and retaining a smaller but still substantial US military footprint in Iraq. What is puzzling is the pessimism of these analyses, the mixing and overlapping of Iraqi and US interests, and the level of ignorance of realities in Iraq.

It is a fact that the Iraqi armed forces do not have the readiness to defend Iraq against an external threat. It will take years to have an effective air force, air defense, navy, and ground combat forces with sufficient fire support. But what analysts miss is that no classic external military threat against Iraq is anticipated within the next few years. Yes, some neighbors may try to intervene in Iraq by supporting militant groups, proxies, terrorists, etc. But such a threat in any case cannot be dealt with by American troops. Iraqi security forces perform better in this area, as they do in maintaining internal security.

A return to sectarian violence is possible but not highly probable. Iraqis learned their lesson during the 2003-2008 period of sectarian violence and don't want to repeat that experience. The campaigns and outcomes in the 2009 provincial elections and the 2010 national elections showed clearly that the majority of Iraqis, Sunni and Shiite, may vote for candidates from their own sect but would not vote for someone they perceive to be promoting a sectarian agenda or sectarian violence. Anyway, even if the least probable scenario emerges and sectarian violence starts again, American troops can do very little about it. At the height of sectarian violence, when the American troop contingent exceeded 140,000 combatants, they could not do much.

Kurdish parties played an important role alongside Iraqi opposition parties-in-exile during the Saddam Hussein era. After the toppling of Saddam's regime in 2003, Kurds played a key role in drafting the 2005 Iraqi constitution. The federalism embodied in that constitution was perceived as the solution for the Kurdish problem in Iraq. But there remain unresolved issues that present national security challenges such as the future of Kirkuk, the future of the areas of common interest, the distribution of wealth, and the deployment of Kurdish Peshmerga troops outside the Kurdistan region.

American troops did play the role of arbitrator in 2009 in preventing security friction between Peshmerga and Iraqi security forces from developing into a political crisis. Their presence also had a psychological effect in easing the fears of some Iraqi factions. But in the bigger picture, they were not able to bring Kurds and Arabs to resolve their key differences. Nor could they facilitate Iraqi national reconciliation. There is no reason to believe that a smaller presence of American forces with fewer assets could do what a bigger and more resourceful troop presence could not do.

Much has been said about Iranian influence in Iraq and the danger that Iran will take over Iraq once the American troop presence is ended. This is an oversimplification of a complicated issue. Iraq suffers from intervention and intelligence penetration by neighbors and more distant countries. Americans troops are not counter-espionage forces. They could not solve this problem in the past, and they cannot solve it in the future. In fact, they are part of the problem. American troops on Iraqi territory render Iraq a "battlefield" with Iran ? something Iraqis do not want. The only way Americans can help in this regard is by developing the capabilities of specialized Iraqi agencies. And this can be done far more effectively through training, equipping and intelligence-sharing under the Strategic Framework Agreement of 2008.

The departure of the last American combat units is a significant milestone that will end Iraqis' concerns about sovereignty, enhance the legitimacy of the Iraqi government and create the right climate for Iraq to engage its neighbors. The withdrawal allows normalization of a solid strategic relationship between Iraq and the US based on the Strategic Framework Agreement. Lastly, while withdrawal could encourage insurgents to increase their attacks in the short term, it prevents them from using the occupation to justify their crimes, thereby positively impacting stability in the longer term.

Safa A. Hussein is a former deputy member of the dissolved Iraqi Governing Council. He served as a brigadier general in the Iraqi Air Force. Currently he serves in the Iraqi National Security Council. This commentary is published by DAILY NEWS EGYPT in collaboration with bitterlemons-international.org


Source: http://thedailynewsegypt.com/rssRedirect.php?id=134876

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Friday, December 23, 2011

APNewsBreak: Texas rejects Valero tax break bid

HOUSTON (AP) - The Texas environmental agency has rejected a request by oil giant Valero to get a large tax break at six refineries, exemptions that could have triggered refunds of up to $92 million that would have come out of the budgets of cash-strapped school districts and municipalities.

The Associated Press on Wednesday obtained letters dated Dec. 14 that were sent by Mark Vickery, executive director of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, to Valero's six refineries. The letters state that the agency has rejected the request for a partial tax exemption.

The agency's move indicates that it will also reject 10 other similar requests. An AP analysis of the applications and tax information indicated that if granted, Texas school districts and municipalities would have had to refund up to $135 million.

Valero did not immediately respond to phone messages and emails seeking comment.

The request has been pending since 2007, when Valero first asked for a full exemption on hydrotreater units it installed at six refineries in Texas. It argued that the units reduced pollution and so should be exempt from taxes under a Texas rule that grants breaks to companies with equipment that cleans the environment.

But the hydrotreaters were installed after the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in 2006 began requiring refineries to remove sulfur dioxide from crude oil.

The TCEQ rejected Valero's request, stating the pollution reductions were being enjoyed in other regions, not where the refineries are located. Valero appealed and the commissioners asked the agency's staff to consider a partial rejection.

Now, the agency has denied the partial request as well. Valero can appeal that decision to the commissioners.

Source: http://www.kboi2.com/news/business/APNewsBreak-Texas-rejects-Valero-tax-break-bid-136000723.html

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IRISphoto 4


The IRISphoto 4 ($99 direct), from I.R.I.S. Inc. is all about simplicity. You don't need to know anything about scanning to use it; you don't have to change any settings (in fact, there are no settings you can change); and you don't even have to connect the scanner to a computer to scan. Just turn the IRISphoto 4 on, put the photo you want to scan in the input slot, and the scanner will handle everything else automatically. If that sounds like your kind of scanner, read on.

In many ways, the IRISphoto 4 is similar to the Pandigital Personal Photo & Negative Scanner/Converter PanScn05 ($99.99 direct, 3.5 stars) and Kodak P460 Personal Photo Scanner ($109.99 direct, 3.5 stars) that I reviewed earlier this year. All three are limited to a maximum 4- by 6-inch size for photographic prints, all three let you scan without connecting to a computer, and all three are aimed at casual?which is to say consumer-level?photographers. However, there are some important differences as well.

Arguably the most important is that unlike the P460 and PanScn05, the IRISphoto 4 can't scan slides or strips of film. Beyond that, both other scanners let you choose between scanning photos at either 300 or 600 pixels per inch (ppi). That is the only settings choice they give you, but it's one more than you get with the IRISphoto 4, which uses 600 ppi in all cases when you're using the supplied protective sleeve or 300 ppi in all cases when you're not using it.

Still another difference is that, unlike the other two scanners, the IRISphoto 4 doesn't give you the option to connect by USB cable and scan directly to your hard disk instead of scanning to memory as a standalone scanner. On the other hand, it offers application software, which is something the other two scanners lack. ACDSee is both a photo album program and a reasonably capable photo editor. When you compare prices, keep in mind that you'd have to buy a photo editor separately for the Kodak or Pandigital scanner.

Setup and Scanning
The IRISphoto 4 measures 1.7 by 6.2 by 2.1 inches (HWD), which is small enough to take with you if you like, as well as store in a desk drawer when you're not using it. It has a 4-inch-wide manual feed slot in the front, along with the power switch and status light. The straight-through path exits in the back. Also in back are a memory-card slot and a mini-USB connector that lets you connect to a computer with the supplied cable, both to move files to the computer and charge the scanner's battery.

Setup consists of charging the battery, which, according to I.R.I.S. takes 4 hours for a full charge. That's it. Scanning is just as easy. The scanner comes with two protective sleeves. Whether you use the sleeve or not will determine the scan resolution. Given that the rollers in a sheet feeder tend to leave marks on originals, however, I'd use a sleeve in all cases.

Scanning with a sleeve consists of putting the photo in the sleeve, putting the sleeve far enough into the slot for the sheet feeder to grab it, and then waiting for the scan to finish. I timed the scans at a reasonably consistent 33 to 36 seconds each. Having two sleeves is a nice touch, since it lets you scan a stack of photos at essentially full speed. The time it takes to scan one photo is easily enough to remove an already scanned photo from the other sleeve, put a new one in, and have it ready to feed as soon as the current scan finishes.

Scan Quality and Other Issues
Scan quality for the IRISphoto 4 is comparable to the quality for other inexpensive sheet fed photo scanners. That translates to being good enough for casual photographers who don't have a critical eye and don't have any interest in printing the photos at a larger size than the original.

One advantage that the IRISphoto 4 has over the competition is the included software, which can do a reasonably good job of removing dust specks, adjusting brightness and contrast, and more, including adjusting shadow, midtones, and highlights separately.

If you need to scan film as well as prints, the P460 or PanScn05 is clearly a better choice than the IRISphoto 4. You might also want to take a look at the somewhat more expensive Kodak P461 Personal Photo Scanner ($139.99 direct, 4 stars) or, if you need to scan prints at up to 8 by 10 inch size, the Kodak P811BK Personal Photo & Negative Scanner ($129.99 direct, 3.5 stars). But if the only thing you need to scan is photos at up to 4 by 6 inches and with snapshot quality, the IRISphoto 4 can do the job, and the included software helps make it a more than reasonable value.

More Scanner Reviews:

??? IRISphoto 4
??? Kodak i2600
??? Kodak i2400
??? IRISnotes Executive
??? IRISnotes 1 for Smartphones
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/2Tn8Bqz503A/0,2817,2397737,00.asp

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Former Miss Venezuela dies of breast cancer at 28 (AP)

CARACAS, Venezuela ? Former Miss Venezuela Eva Ekvall, whose struggle with breast cancer was closely followed by Venezuelans, has died at age 28.

Her family said Ekvall died Saturday at a hospital in Houston.

Ekvall was crowned Miss Venezuela at age 17 in 2000, and the following year she was third runner-up in the Miss Universe pageant in Puerto Rico. She went on to work as a model, actress and television news anchor.

She also authored a book, "Fuera de Foco" ("Out of Focus"), about her struggle with cancer, which included images by Venezuelan photographer Roberto Mata.

She told the newspaper El Nacional in an interview last year after the book was published that "I needed to send the message of the need for cancer prevention."

On the cover was a portrait in which she appeared with makeup and her head shaved. The book also included images of her while going through chemotherapy.

"I hate to see photos in which I come out ugly," Ekvall told El Nacional. "But you know what? Nobody ever said cancer is pretty or that I should look like Miss Venezuela when I have cancer."

At the time, she was hopeful of overcoming cancer and wanted to write more.

Ekvall's family said in a statement Sunday that her remains were being cremated in Houston on Monday and that a service is to be held in Venezuela once her remains are returned to the country.

Ekvall said in a 2007 interview published in Venezuelan news media that although her mother is Jamaican and her father is American of Swedish and Hungarian descent, "I feel more Venezuelan than anybody."

She was married to radio producer John Fabio Bermudez and had a 2-year-old daughter.

In her book, Ekvall had described her joy at the birth of her daughter saying "that happiness, although (the daughter) may not know it or understand it, keeps me alive today."

The book included emails that she wrote to friends providing updates on her treatment and thanking them for their support, as well as short essays by relatives and friends reflecting on her ordeal.

Her father, Eric Ekvall, recalled in the book that his mother, also named Eva, had died of the same type of cancer at age 39.

"Those who know Eva know she doesn't give up," he said of his daughter. "She fights for what she wants."

Her death brought an outpouring of condolences from Venezuelans, including from some prominent artists and politicians who praised her in messages on Twitter.

One drawing posted online depicted her as an angel with white wings and a pink ribbon on her chest.

Ekvall's husband posted a photo on Twitter Sunday showing a close-up of his hand holding hers, resting on a bed, with the words "Always together ... I love you wife."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111220/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_venezuela_obit_ekvall

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