Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Huawei security chief says embracing its hacker critics

NEW DELHI/HONG KONG (Reuters) - Under-fire Chinese telecoms equipment vendor Huawei Technologies Co Ltd is reaching out to one of its sternest critics: a hacker who accused it of making shoddy products.

John Suffolk, the company's global cybersecurity chief, told Reuters at a cybersecurity conference in New Delhi that he was sending a team of engineers to talk to German security researcher Felix Lindner, who has exposed vulnerabilities in the company's routers, from its $100 home Internet devices to multi-million dollar equipment run by telecommunications companies.

"We've very much taken on board Felix's views and you'll see over the coming period we've got a whole host of significant operations to deal with these issues," he said.

The move is a departure of sorts for Huawei, which has been battling critics on several fronts. It was last year blocked from bidding for a multi-billion dollar national broadband network contract in Australia over cyber-security fears.

A U.S. congressional committee recommended Washington to similarly bar Huawei and its Chinese rival ZTE Corp from being allowed to sell equipment to U.S. carriers.

INSPECTING HUAWEI'S CODE

Huawei has denied inserting deliberate backdoors in its products to allow for spying, and has invited governments to inspect its code.

In Britain, it set up a center to test out whether its products can withstand security threats, and has offered to set up something similar in both the United States and Australia.

But it has so far been reluctant to engage security researchers and hackers who challenge the company, something that Suffolk said was now changing, in part because of Lindner's allegations.

Suffolk, who was the British government's chief information officer before joining the Chinese company, said the team's trip to Germany had been slowed by visa issues, but would go ahead soon.

Lindner told Reuters after a presentation at a hacker conference in Kuala Lumpur earlier this month that, while he could not be sure there were no deliberate backdoors in the software, there was no evidence in the devices that he tested.

The problem, he said, was that the software was poorly written and left the equipment vulnerable to hackers.

Lindner's views fitted with a White House investigation that found no clear proof that Huawei was spying for the Chinese government, sources told Reuters earlier this month.

SYSTEMIC CHANGE

Suffolk said that Huawei had not sent anyone to attend an earlier presentation by Lindner in July but had done so for the Kuala Lumpur conference.

Their presence, he said, was not to dissuade Lindner from speaking but to see if he was revealing new information.

"We like these comments, although sometimes you think to yourself that's a bit of a slap in the face," Suffolk said.

"But sometimes you need a bit of a slap in the face to step back, not be emotive in your response, and say what do I systematically need to change so over time any these issues begin to reduce?"

The move to engage Lindner, Suffolk said, was part of a broader shift in Huawei's approach that he had led since joining the company in 2011.

He numbered among the changes making it easier for other security researchers to contact Huawei with vulnerabilities they have found. But his long-term goal, he said, was to change procedures to make all products more robust.

"I can fix the Felix issue in a few lines of code," he said. "But I'm interested in systemic change within Huawei."

Huawei's efforts to crack the lucrative U.S. market have been hurt by years of suspicion from U.S. lawmakers, who say the Shenzhen-based company, started by CEO Ren Zhengfei, a former Chinese military officer, has links with the Chinese government.

After an 11-month investigation, the U.S. House of Representatives' Intelligence Committee released a 52-page report urging U.S. firm to stop doing business with Huawei and its smaller rival ZTE due to potential influences from the Chinese government, which could pose security threats.

(Editing by Alex Richardson)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/huawei-security-chief-says-embracing-hacker-critics-081811367--sector.html

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Monday, October 29, 2012

Sunday musings and affirmations 10-28-12 | Martina McGowan

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?A? man?s worth is no greater than his ambitions.? Marcus? Aurelius???

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Affirmation:?I combat de-motivation or lack of motivation with belief in my worth.

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?I believe in myself. I am confident that I can rise above challenging circumstances because I have what it takes to do this.

My spiritual connection is strong and it fortifies?my strength whenever I feel a greater need for it.

When things happen that threaten to destroy my motivation or?make me question my attributes, I remind myself that negative forces exist to try and keep me down.

However, I know that I am worthy, and no external force can change that belief.

When someone indicates some displeasure with my work, I can admit to myself that it is easy to lose hope.

But then I remind myself of my value.

I know that I have it within me to overcome the challenges trying to hold me back.

So I push a little harder and complete the task at hand with excellence.

Today, I accept the challenge of believing in myself in every situation.

I look within to find the strength to motivate myself to keep going, especially after disappointment.

I know that failure has absolutely nothing to do with defining my worth.

In fact, such obstacles help me to recognize just how strong, capable and worthy I really am.?

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Homework -?Self-Reflective Questions:?

1. What steps can I take to build my self-confidence?

2. Do I look to the support of family and friends to encourage me to persevere?

3. How do I feel when I am successful after convincing myself to keep going?

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Note- This is a short term experiment that started 10-21-12.

My current plan is to do this every Sunday in preparation for our week ahead. But I need for you to do four things for me.

1. Read the affirmation and statement aloud to yourself.

2. Write out your answers to the self-reflective questions. You don?t have to share them if you don?t want to, but write them down for your own benefit and boost.

3. Subscribe. If we continue this series, the only way you will get it on a regular basis is to subscribe.

4. Comment. I don?t usually press for comments. However,?as I continue to consider adding this as a regular feature to the blog, I am asking for feedback. If you liked it, or didn?t. If you see ways that I can tweak it to make it better. If you found the exercise helpful or not. If you had some kind of breakthrough, epiphany or wake up call. If you?d rather get this as a newsletter on a monthly basis. Anything?

Here?s the bottom line for this experimental feature. Because it will take a little extra time to get these ready, no comments or feedback, no musings. Ok?

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photo credit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/-lif-/3213233094/sizes/z/in/photostream/

About Martina McGowan

Servant, physician (gynecologist), blogger, businesswoman, seminary student, mother, grandmother, sexual assault survivor's advocate, listener, minister, speaker, teacher, leader, writer, occasional haikuist

About Martina

Servant, physician (gynecologist), blogger, businesswoman, seminary student, mother, grandmother, sexual assault survivor's advocate, listener, minister, speaker, teacher, leader, writer, occasional haikuist

Source: http://martinamcgowan.com/2012/10/sunday-musings-and-affirmations-10-28-12/

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Thursday, October 11, 2012

Agifalling


The project is consequently split into different practices depending on your role. The developers get the most Agile work. This usually involves two weeks of sprints and daily stand-ups but there?s no product owner and zero contact with the customer. The project manager?s job doesn?t change ? they move around the tasks on their Gantt chart until they have everything in sequential order in much the same way as they did with waterfall, only it?s relabelled ?Agile? (or ?iterative?).

And what becomes of the BA? The BA is caught in the middle between delivering requirements on a waterfall-type schedule while trying to keep up with an Agile development team. In an effort to cover the bases, a BA is usually faced with producing more documentation than they would have delivered on a waterfall project.

A bad hybrid project can result in a BA writing use cases and then extrapolating user stories from the use cases for the developers. Or, distrustful of user stories (not to mention Kanban boards) and thinking use cases are too hard, the project decides that all of their requirement elicitation woes will be cured by producing extremely detailed screen prototypes that take weeks to produce (not to mention 10 to 30 pages of documentation per screen) but contain zero business context.

Although most BAs understand that the job is all about communicating the requirements in a way that allows the requirements to be understood, BAs on hybrid projects can find that they can?t keep up with delivering requirements in a way that will keep pace with a sprint. Usually a BA on these types of projects is pushed to ?just make a start? without any idea of the overall features required. This is based on the assumption that Agile will help the overall goals and features naturally make themselves known as an outcome of the process. If the team has been tasked with delivering hi-fi screen prototypes as their sole source of requirements then the opposite is true. As super-detailed prototypes are developed and people are sidetracked by fonts and radio buttons, the overall design and purpose of the application seems to become more obscure.

The ensuing pressure and panic to define requirements using nothing but screen prototypes coupled with trying to keep pace with the development team usually results in a project that is in a constant state of anxiety. Keeping to schedule somehow turns into doing whatever the customer wants without question, even if what the customer wants is a very bad idea, because it?s far easier just to say yes to everything and shove the wants down the line. Any problems are pushed to the development team, which ends up with an ever-increasing product backlog and sprints that never get out of testing.

Without the additional Agile practices of regularly reflecting on the work done to date and adjusting the approach as needed, all that happens is everyone wearily traipses off to the daily stand-up so they can be harangued by the project manager about why the schedule is slipping.

What can you do if you?re a BA on a bad hybrid project?

Firstly, it?s going to depend on where you are on the project. If it?s already agifalling and the developers are drowning in sprints that never seem to deliver then it may already be too late. You can try suggesting to the project manager that it?s time to limit the requests from the customer and prioritise the product backlog. It?s also probably time to get an idea of the overall feature set to help sort out the backlog. This won?t make you popular since people cling to the notion that Agile is about accepting any and all changes at any stage, but there?s no way you?re ever going to end at the rate you?re going.

You could try talking to the project manager about Agile being a collaboration between the customer and the development team, which means that it would be desirable if the customer could be on site with the developers and the business analyst(s) for a number of hours per week to allow direct and unhindered communication. And if that?s not possible, at least arrange regular conference calls and/or Skype sessions. You can also look at going back to the prototypes giving the development team the most trouble and ensure that you do a quick user story or state a business goal for each screen, showing how the various screens relate to each other. This will at least give the developers some context.

If the idea of running a hybrid project is being discussed but has yet to start then you may have an opportunity to help the project manager avoid the problems that will rapidly appear. This will depend on how comfortable the project manager is with trying new techniques. However, if a hybrid project is pitched from the perspective of making their lives easier, a BA may be able to offer tips and tricks on how to keep the requirements process running in a way that actually focuses on delivering value for the customer (identifying business goals/needs, etc.) while tracking with the developers fortnightly sprint cycle. The project manager may be deeply uncomfortable with most Agile techniques (except for the ones that purportedly make developers code faster) but it may be an opportunity for a BA to design a sneaky template and wedge in a user story or two anyway. No one ever said that a user story had to be on a sticky note.

For example, you could add a small paragraph at the top of the screen prototype (if you?ve been forced down that path) that outlines the goal and how the customer envisions using the screen from a business perspective.

If you?re going down the path of writing use cases first and then extrapolating user stories from the use cases, you can definitely save time by factoring in the user stories at the start. Make them part of the use case as an additional section. This is a little sacrilegious but you?re on a bad hybrid project so any thoughts of using best practice or standard techniques have already gone out the window. Do whatever you can to save everyone time further down the track.

My final thoughts on the hybrid project is that they?ve emerged as yet another ICT attempt to find the silver bullet that will make the extremely hard software development stuff happen as if by a miracle. All of the techniques, whether plan driven or change driven, tend to be successful with the right team of people, the right attitude and a huge dose of pragmatism.

A bad project is a bad project no matter what technique, practice or methodology is used. But that?s a different article.

Don?t forget to leave your comments below.

Article source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/BusinessAnalystTimes-BusinessAnalysisHome/~3/3b5y0od5Pnk/agifalling.html

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Tags: agile, Business Analysis, Business Analysis - Net, Business Analyst Times, development, hybrid project, Management, methodology, Project Management

Source: http://projectcommunityonline.com/agifalling.html?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=agifalling

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Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Your right to resell your own stuff is in peril It could become illegal to ...

Regular Monday Nite Tea Time Meets at 6 pm at: See Exceptions below.

Lone Star Steakhouse
341 Rockwood Road
Arden, NC 28704
Phone: 828-260-2222
Click here to visit website.
Click here for Map.
Click here for menu.


Monday, Oct 15th: Regular Tea Time Cancelled. .

Monday Oct 15th: Instead, we are carpooling to Sylva.

See details below.

When: Monday, October 15th, 7:30 pm: We are going to try to carpool to Sylva Library to support our iCaucus ATPAC endorsed candidates. Contact fremont@ashevilleteaparty.com so we can coordinate the carpooling. Asheville Die Cast, 1434 Brevard Rd., Asheville. See below for details.

What: Candidate Forum sponsored by Occupy WNC Movement, The Canary Coalition, The League of Women Voters and Smoky Mountain News

Who: Our Endorsed candidates, Marty Jones, Jackson County Commissioner, and Senator Jim Davis, NC Senate 50 and on
the Democrat side: Hayden Rogers NC 11, John Snow, Senate 50, Joe Sam Queen, NC 119 will be attending.

Where: Sylva Library. We will be carpooling from Asheville Die Cast, 1434 Brevard Rd., Asheville. Be there no later than 6:00 See www.ashevilleteaparty.org for details. Please RSVP to fremont@ashevilleteaparty.org or jane@ashevilleteaparty.org so we know who is going. Thanks.

From Jackson County Tea Party Patriots: Ginny Jahrmarkt:
Thanks all for backing Jim and Marty. I am forwarding this e-mail to Haywood Patriots so that they too can rally their troops to attend this debate scheduled for October 15th in Sylva. The Jax GOP is putting together a carpool from the Gelnville/Cashiers area and I have already been promoting attendance in our newsletter.

Ginny Jahrmarkt Tea Party Patriots of Jackson County


Monday, October 15th: Mike Causey Reception
Our iCaucus Candidate for N.C. Insurance Commissioner

Monday, October 15, 2012
5:00 PM ? 7:00 PM
Where"The Ramble Wellness Center
Valley Springs Rd., Asheville

Platinum sponsor $2,000 Gold sponsor $1,000 Silver sponsor $500
Host $300 Co-Host $150 Couple $80 Attendee $50

RSVP: escgop@aol.com or 919-264-4676 or 828-337-4718

Learn how the N.C. Insurance Commissioner affects you at gocausey.com

Donate at gocausey.com or by check to Causey for Insurance Commissioner

Directions to The Ramble: Turn off Hendersonville Road, just south of the Parkway, onto Valley Springs Road.
Continue through the gate and follow signage to The Ramble Wellness Center.


Tuesday, October 16th, 7 pm. Skyland Fire Department, 2nd floor. 9 Miller Rd.Skyland, corners of Long Shoals and Hendersonville Hwy, Skyland. Exit, 37 off Hwy 26.

Dr. Robert Levy from the Cato Institute: Understanding the Constitutional Ramifications of the Supreme Court's Healthcare Decision http://www.cato.org/people/robert-levy

Dr. Dan Eichenbaum will then follow you with a 25 minute Power Point Presentation of Obamacare from a physicians point of view http://www.drdansfreedomforum.com/

Fred Hoffstadt, Founding Member of the Western North Carolina Objectivists, will follow with a ten minutes presentation of a free market, Constitutionally sound alternative to Obamacare.
Follow up with Q and A from audience.


Pat Cothran, Candidate for Register of Deeds
at Tea Time on Oct 22nd


Monday, Oct 29: Tea Time Cancelled for General Membership Meeting at Skyland FD


Tuesday, Oct 30th: General Membership Meeting, Skyland Fire Department, 9 Miller Rd., corner of Long Shoals and Hendersonville Hwy, Skyland. re: Last preparations for election.


Monday, November 5th: Tea Time Cancelled. Put up signs at polling places


Tuesday, November 6th: D-Day!

Source: http://ashevilleteaparty.org/?p=4533

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Daredevil's New Mexico skydive off for now

(Reuters) - An Austrian daredevil called off his death-defying skydive from a balloon 23 miles over the New Mexico desert on Tuesday because of winds at the launch site.

Felix Baumgartner, a 43-year-old helicopter pilot, hot-air balloonist and professional skydiver, had been preparing to break a longstanding altitude record.

But his team announced the launch had been aborted moments after Baumgartner's balloon was set to carry him aloft over Roswell, New Mexico.

"Mission aborted due to gusty winds," a statement on the website of sponsor Red Bull said.

Team spokeswoman Sarah Anderson later said no new launch attempt would be made before Thursday. She said Wednesday had been ruled out due to weather concerns and to give Baumgartner's support crew a day off.

Winds were about 17 mph when the balloon launch was called off at 1:43 p.m. EDT (1743 GMT).

The 30-million-cubic-foot (850,000-cubic-meter) plastic balloon, which is about one-tenth the thickness of a Ziploc bag, cannot handle winds greater than 6 miles per hour (9.7 km per hour).

If successful, Baumgartner would be the first parachutist to break the sound barrier but not the first person to fall faster than the speed of sound. On January 25, 1966, Bill Weaver, a test pilot aboard an SR-71 Blackbird aircraft, was ejected over the United States from his damaged plane at Mach 3.18 - more than three times faster than the speed of sound - and survived.

Before Tuesday's launch was scrapped it had already been delayed by nearly five hours because of winds above the launch site.

After the winds subsided Baumgartner, wearing a pressurized spacesuit, climbed into the specially made capsule designed to carry him into the stratosphere. But the gusts then picked up again.

If the launch had proceeded, it would have taken about 2.5 to 3 hours for the 55-story tall balloon to reach 120,000 feet.

Baumgartner's goal is to break the record of 102,800 feet for the highest-altitude freefall, a milestone set in 1960 by U.S. Air Force Colonel Joe Kittinger.

As he falls from 120,000 feet Baumgartner would also break the sound barrier. With virtually no air to resist his fall, he was expected to reach the speed of sound, which is 690 mph at that altitude, after about 35 seconds of freefall.

He would stay supersonic for nearly a minute and should freefall for a total of 5 minutes and 35 seconds.

When Baumgartner jumps from the capsule, the position of his body will be crucial, since there is no air for him to move around in. If he falls in a way that puts him into a rapid spin, Baumgartner could pass out and risk damaging his eyes, brain and cardiovascular system.

Baumgartner's safety gear includes his custom spacesuit that will protect him from low pressure and the extreme cold. Temperatures are expected to be as low as about minus 70 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 57 degrees Celsius.)

The near-vacuum puts him at risk of ebullism, a potentially lethal condition in which fluids in the body turn to gas and the blood literally boils. Severe lung damage could occur within minutes.

Helicopters equipped with newly developed instruments to treat lung damage would be standing by during Baumgartner's skydive.

(Additional reporting by Jane Sutton in Miami; Editing by Tom Brown and Doina Chiacu)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/daredevils-mexico-skydive-called-off-now-180331114.html

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Presidential campaigns target new citizen voters

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ? From Florida to Virginia, Massachusetts to California, candidates and political parties seeking to squeeze every vote from a divided electorate are targeting America's newest citizens. It's a relatively small bloc but one that can be substantial enough to make a difference in razor-close presidential swing states and competitive congressional races.

In Florida, which President Barack Obama won by less than 5 percentage points four years ago, a new analysis of U.S. Census data shows people who naturalized as Americans since 2000 make up 6 percent of the population of voting-age citizens. For months, the Obama campaign has been sending volunteers to citizenship ceremonies to register people and canvassing Miami-area neighborhoods where immigrant families live.

In California, where new citizens comprise nearly 9 percent of potential voters, Republicans hope House candidates Ricky Gill and Abel Maldonado can reach that group by highlighting their families' journeys from India and Mexico, respectively, in search of the American Dream.

Georgina Castaneda, a home-care worker who grew up in Veracruz, Mexico, and now lives in Los Angeles, is the type of person the campaigns are targeting. After years of waiting for her citizenship application to go through the bureaucracy, she passed the U.S. civics test and swore her allegiance to the flag along with thousands of others at a ceremony in March at Los Angeles' Staples Center.

Castaneda said Democratic Party workers walked down the aisles handing out brochures to the crowd. She filled one out while still seated.

"My idea was that one more vote could do something, so I registered at the ceremony," she said.

Political parties have tried to engage new arrivals since at least the 1790s, when New York City's fabled Tammany Hall political machine organized immigrants, especially the Irish. In this final stretch of contemporary campaigns, the influence of new voters is magnified in several battleground states, where small shifts can produce large impacts on the electoral vote count.

"The trick with politics is to get to people early, so what you want to do is make sure that your party gets in on the ground floor of any new citizen's thinking," said Stephen Farnsworth, a professor of political science at the University of Mary Washington in Fredericksburg, Va. "So instead of meeting people at the docks like the political machines of a century ago, political parties and campaigns are meeting potential voters right after they take the oath."

Overall, first-generation citizens historically have leaned Democratic and registered at lower rates than U.S.-born voters. But during the past decade that gap in registration has narrowed, partly because the newest Americans have been motivated by the immigration debate, said Manuel Pastor, director of the Center for the Study of Immigrant Integration at the University of Southern California. The center released the data last week, after performing a first-of-its kind analysis made possible because the Census Bureau in 2008 started asking people more detailed questions about when they became citizens.

Nationwide, there are an estimated 7.8 million people of voting age who naturalized since 2000, or 3.6 percent of all potential voters, according to the study. Two swing states ? Florida, at 6 percent, and Nevada, at 5.1 percent ? have higher concentrations than the national average. Virginia is at 3.5 percent, and Colorado at 2.1 percent.

States like California, Massachusetts and Illinois that are considered likely to go for Obama also have significant populations of new citizens who could make the difference in congressional races.

In Massachusetts, where the newest Americans make up 5 percent of all potential voters, GOP Sen. Scott Brown often emphasizes his support for legal immigrants who have "played by the rules" as he competes with Democratic challenger Elizabeth Warren for the swath of undecided voters.

In downtown Oakland, Calif., the Alameda County Republican Party has been erecting folding tables bedecked with American flags and voter registration forms in Spanish, Chinese, Tagalog and English outside naturalization ceremonies at the Paramount Theater.

"We want to be in places where we are reaching the minorities or ethnic blocs," said Sue Caro, the local GOP chairwoman.

The success rate for Republicans in this traditionally Democratic stronghold is unclear ? Caro noted sometimes new citizens pose with the party's cardboard cutouts of Mitt Romney and Ronald Reagan, then walk down the sidewalk to the Democratic Party's table and take family photos with likenesses of Michelle and Barack Obama.

In Florida, the Obama campaign for months has sent volunteers to the conference halls where the federal government holds its citizenship ceremonies, and has been seeking out new citizens willing to host house parties.

"Our campaign is about inclusiveness and to that end we encourage all citizens, including our newest citizens, to get involved in the democratic process," Obama campaign spokesman Adam Fetcher said.

To be sure, campaigns and parties say courting undecided new citizens is just one element of the numbers game, which ultimately will turn on how many people show up to vote. Republican National Committee spokeswoman Kirsten Kukowski said new Americans represent a piece of the GOP's registration program, but their turnout efforts are focused on registered voters because they more reliably go to the polls.

California is considered a sure bet for Obama, but there are an unusually large number of competitive U.S. House seats. Republican and Democratic Party officials say new citizens could boost their turnout, and both sides are targeting them.

Maldonado, a former lieutenant governor whose father came to the U.S. from Mexico, is locked in a fierce campaign against longtime Democratic Rep. Lois Capps in a new Santa Barbara-San Luis Obispo district that has a voter registration edge for Democrats of just 3 percentage points.

Maldonado, a wealthy farmer, said he has been talking to new citizens at house meetings in the agricultural region of his district.

"I think they're very proud to see that someone can come here to this country of ours poor, and work hard, save, plan, pay taxes and see their son eventually become lieutenant governor," he said.

Eight-term incumbent Capps said her voting record reflected her strong alliance with Hispanics and said as a former school nurse she understands immigrant families' challenges.

In Virginia, immigrants from India make up a substantial portion of the newest citizens.

South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, who is Indian-American, has campaigned for Romney multiple times in northern Virginia, where a sizable Indian population has settled. Obama made a campaign stop at a high school in Leesburg in August, and on Friday went to Sterling, the same town Haley addressed.

"That part of Virginia that is home to a lot of striving recent arrivals," said Farnsworth. "And for the parties it represents time and money very well spent to approach new voters, because as close as the polls tell us this race will be, that last 3 percent may be the percent that makes the difference."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/presidential-campaigns-target-citizen-voters-063140225--election.html

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Social media: From monitoring staff to fake pages - five tips to protect ...

Takeaway: Many businesses now get social media and can see the benefits. But they also need to have a handle on the risks and have ways of dealing with them.

The use or misuse of social media by staff creates a series of challenges for employers in monitoring their activities. Photo: Shutterstock

The use or misuse of social media by staff creates a series of challenges for employers in monitoring their activities. Photo: Shutterstock

Social media is now ubiquitous and has fundamentally changed how businesses engage with customers.

A recent study by global law firm DLA Piper, for which I work, revealed that 76 per cent of large employers have some form of social-media presence with 86 per cent on Facebook, 78 per cent on Linkedln and 62 per cent on Twitter.

The potential benefits of social media for businesses are clear: an ability to market and advertise in a direct, interactive and usually free way to a potentially massive global audience. But as social-media use increases, businesses are becoming aware of the risks.

The ability of users to post comments and opinions on social media networks provides a platform for criticism, whether or not justified, and the misuse of a business?s brand and content.

Further, the use or misuse of social media by employees brings a series of challenges for employers in monitoring staff activities. Key risks include loss of confidential information, harassment and reputational damage.

Companies need to consider how to minimise these risks before they arise and plan how to deal with them if they do. Here are five steps for businesses to take in connection with their use of social media.

1. Develop a social-media policy and train staff

Most employers should be considering implementing a policy to set guidelines on acceptable use of social media. The policy should cover employee use of social media - for example, employees? own Facebook or Twitter accounts - and use by the business.

Clearly, risks and priorities will vary from business to business, so it is important to tailor policies. Also, policies need to be able to adapt to the broad and fast-changing nature of social media, which is not just Facebook and Twitter, and can include blogs and sites such as YouTube.

Once finalised, the social-media policy should be communicated to staff. There is certainly a case for training all staff in the use of social media, but brand managers and social-media page administrators in particular need skills in dealing with users on social networks.

2. Monitor user-generated content

A recent landmark ruling by Australia?s advertising watchdog has confirmed that companies could be liable for comments made on their Facebook pages by users.

While the ruling is applicable to Australia only, it has alerted regulators and brandowners around the world to the importance of monitoring user-generated content on social-media sites, and whether they need to be doing more on this front.

Under the ruling, no differentiation was made between comments posted by the company and those made by users, leaving the company liable under advertising laws for all comments made on its page.

In the UK, the current indication is that the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA), which has had an online advertising remit since March 2011, will not be making changes to its current position. Essentially, it will only intervene on user-generated content if an advertiser takes a user post and highlights it as a testimonial.

However, the Committee of Advertising Practice (CAP) is presently conducting a two-year review of the ASA?s online remit, so it remains to be seen whether this position will ultimately change.

In the meantime, brandowners are taking a risk in having completely unmonitored social-media pages - for brand-reputation reasons, if not because of advertising law.

3. Deal with customer complaints carefully

Administrators of company?s social-media pages should be vigilant about content posted by users, but they should also be careful when interacting with them.

A number of brands use social media to interact direct with fans and users - for example, dealing with commonly-asked questions and customer complaints.

However, some companies have made situations worse by simply deleting negative posts or tweets. This practice raises potential advertising-law concerns. Others have engaged in online arguments with users on social networks, unwittingly creating bad publicity.

An aggressive reaction, however justified, to a complaint is usually best avoided. Instead, it?s better to have a measured response, informing the user what is being done to address his or her concerns.

If the issue is complex, your social-media presence may not be the best place to conduct a conversation with a disgruntled customer.

4. Review social-media sites? terms of use

Before using Facebook, Twitter and other social networks, you should carefully check their terms and conditions. This measure is particularly important in the context of running promotions and competitions. Not complying with their rules risks your page being removed.

For example, you cannot use Facebook?s Like button functionality as a voting mechanism for a promotion, nor can you notify winners through Facebook, such as through messages, chat or posts on profiles.

You must acknowledge that the promotion is in no way associated with Facebook. With Twitter promotions, a key rule is that you must discourage users from creating multiple accounts - to dissuade them from entering a contest more than once.

5. Monitor use of your brand and fake user names and pages

Brandowners should also be vigilant about the generic use of their brands by social-media users and should look to prevent their trademarks losing distinctiveness and therefore legal protection.

Brandowners should also keep a careful eye on infringers on social networks, in particular the use of fake pages and usernames. On the one hand, fan pages may not necessarily cause harm to a brand: Coca-Cola?s Facebook page was originally started by two fans.

But the potential for, in particular, infringement of intellectual- property rights and defamation is clear. Facebook and Twitter will take down infringing content, but at the moment, there is no equivalent process for social-media usernames to the uniform dispute- resolution policy used for domain-name disputes.

So a brandowner may need to consider court action if a social network refused to take down a fake page or username.

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Source: http://www.techrepublic.com/blog/cio-insights/social-media-from-monitoring-staff-to-fake-pages-five-tips-to-protect-brands/39749492

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Monday, October 8, 2012

Google Finally Pushing for Tablet-Specific Android Apps

Android has always lagged behind Apple's iOS when it comes to tablet-tailored apps. Now, finally, Google is making public moves to change that by offering a design guide and a list of best practices for developers looking to make apps that don't suck on Android slates. They're also giving some shine to such apps in Google Play, too.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GearFactor/~3/RfxSvPah5Gw/

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Maui Artist Profile: Tattoo Artist Rachel Helmich | Maui Now

By Vanessa Wolf

Tattoo artist Rachel Helmich. Photo by Vanessa Wolf

Rachel Helmich of the Maui Tattoo Company started tattooing in 1999, when her then-boyfriend ? now husband ? approached her and asked if she wanted to learn.

?I?d graduated from the Art Institute of Pittsburgh, and had enrolled in an engineering program.? Helmich explained. ?We?d gotten to the part where we were making models, and I was bored stiff. I thought about Craig?s offer for a couple days, and ultimately told him ?yes?. Then I went and withdrew from the engineering program.?

With her art background, Helmich is a natural, and the fit suits her.

?I?m in love with my career,? she says. ?It?s my life. ?I can?t imagine doing anything else. I don?t get to paint and everything like I used to, so tattooing is my creative outlet.?

Formerly based in Pittsburgh, the Helmiches moved to Maui in 2002 and the rest is history?sort of.

Originally hired by Samantha Fairchild at The Maui Tattoo Company, the couple now owns the business, located in Kihei Kalama Village on South Kihei Road. Fairchild still tattoos there, and all three have their own unique approach. Helmich mused that a little bit of both her husband and Fairchild?s style comes out in her own work.

Helmich?s favorite tattoo: a portrait of her son, Max, as done by tattoo artist Bob Tyrrell. Photo by Vanessa Wolf

When asked how Maui has influenced her as an artist, the answer is at first practical. ?Turtles and plumerias: they are the most-requested tattoos.? After a little more thought she adds, ?People respond to their elements; what?s around them. When we were in Pennsylvania, most of the tattoos had to do with hunting, American flags, and the Pittsburgh Steelers.?

Now it?s more about whales, spirituality, and nature. ?There are more colors and the whole experience is more relaxed. I don?t stress out like I used to.?

Still, Helmich aspires to satisfy despite the fact that tattoos are one of? the ? if not the ? most personal and emotional art forms available.

?One thing people don?t realize is artwork is work. We put in a lot of effort that people don?t see. I have to delve into something to prepare a piece. If someone says they want a tiger, that doesn?t mean I necessarily know what?s in their head. I have to research on the subject.?

But aren?t there clients who come in with clear ideas?

Helmich laughs, ?Sometimes people come in with a horrible sketch that looks like my three year old did it. Other times, they have a whole thick file folder of ideas. That?s almost worse.?

The reality is that the tattoo artist/client relationship is one of trust. ?If you?re too restrictive, it?s not going to turn out well,? Helmich explains. ?There?s a certain way things should flow on the body. The person who chose me ? flawed human and all ? needs to trust me.?

Inside the Maui Tattoo Company. Photo by Vanessa Wolf

Helmich is not just an artist in her preparation, but with respect to how the tattoo itself compliments a person. ?Often times, I convince people to change where the tattoo is going. I won?t put a rectangle on a hip or do something that is going to cut someone off. Tattoos are decoration; they should flow with the line of the bone or muscle.?

She must be doing something right: almost everyone in her family and many of her friends have been tattooed by her. ?I?ve done my sister?s entire back. Sometimes I come up with an idea and call my family or friends and tell them it needs to go on them.? She laughs, ?I?m sleeving my mom right now: she?s almost 60!?

What can someone expect when going to Helmich for a tattoo?

?You have to have patience. I don?t just want to make the tattoo look good, but I want it to look good on your body. It doesn?t matter if I personally like what you want to get, I?ll do my best at it no matter what.?

When asked what she might be doing today? if she hadn?t become a tattoo artist, Helmich reflects back on her days in Pittsburgh. ?Probably some kind of engineer. I thought it would be stable and have good insurance.?

Lucky for Maui and the tourists who discover her, Helmich decided to live a little more dangerously.

Are you a local artist ? singer, storyteller, hula dancer, fashion designer, lei maker, taiko drummer, chef, tiki carver or cartoonist ? with an interesting story to tell??Know of a great band, artist, author, filmmaker, or event coming to town? Have an idea for a fun or thought-provoking story??Get in touch: we want to hear from you! Vanessa(@mauinow.com)

Related Stories:

Source: http://mauinow.com/2012/10/07/maui-artist-profile-tattoo-artist-rachel-helmich/

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Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Church & Dwight closes $650M deal for Avid Health

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Locked out Minnesota Orchestra cancels concerts

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) ? The Minnesota Orchestra has canceled its concerts through Nov. 25 as a lockout of musicians takes effect.

The cancellations announced Monday affect 17 performances starting Oct. 18. Ticketholders will be notified by phone and in writing about obtaining refunds or exchanging tickets for future performances.

Management and musicians failed to reach a new agreement Sunday before the old contract expired at midnight.

Management rejected musician proposals for arbitration and for allowing the musicians to play during negotiations. The musicians rejected a management offer that would've cut salaries an average of 34 percent, lowering the current annual average from $135,000 down to $89,000.

The musicians plan to rally outside Orchestra Hall at 1 p.m. Monday. They issued a statement renewing their call for an independent analysis of the orchestra's finances.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/locked-minnesota-orchestra-cancels-concerts-161842356.html

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Monday, October 1, 2012

Givenchy's Dark Romance

Givenchy's catwalk shows are public debates that its designer Riccardo Tisci has with himself each season, where his inner demons and personal obsessions do battle for his soul.

The spring 2013 collection presented Sunday night, Sept. 30, was no different. The threads of religion, romance, gothic imagery and female power run through all his collections.

His staging showed the different directions in which he is swayed: a church organist in an elegant wooden scaffold at one end of the Paris high school interior courtyard where the show was staged, a rocking DJ duo at the other.

Just like the soundtrack, the clothes competed for attention. Tisci went back to the house's archive, and discovered some striking new moon shape tailoring - seen to great effect in stiff silk tops and theatrical cocoon jackets.

His women varied from the rapacious to the devout: a Catherine de Medici calico blouse one second, then a simmering femme fatale in a tunic of white jacquard, the sort of fabric a cardinal would wear. And as the church organist hit some super moody chords, a posse of sexy nun models paraded around the musician.

Most looks were finished with tough chic metal chokers, mini shoulder straps, bracelets and heels - adding punch to the ensembles.

"They came from Carlo Molino, but from his furniture not his work," said Tisci backstage, as a mob of fans showered him with compliments.

It's been quite a season for Molino, the fantastical Italian architect and photographer of the faintly perverse, seeing as Consuelo Castiglioni at Marni in Milan cited him last week as an influence on her new geometric fashion.

There was little geometric about this Givenchy show, whose finale featured floor-length white chiffon blouses, with one side cut out to reveal tuxedo pants underneath. Every second look was trimmed and completed with a fluttering ruffle, a romantic touch to the dynamic yet fervent style.

However, though thoroughly accomplished, the show did not quite reach the heights of recent Givenchy outings. There were no special bookings or visiting super models like Gisele Bundchen or Natalia Vodianova, one of the highlights of Givenchy shows. Moreover, the trip to the archive, while intriguing, meant the collection broke less ground than one is used to with Tisci.

That said, even a couple of points off his A-game, a Givenchy show by Tisci is always a truly compelling affair.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/givenchys-dark-romance-232416570.html

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Rodgers throws late TD, Packers beat Saints 28-27

Referee Jeff Triplette signals New Orleans Saints' possession, after a video review, during the second half of the Saints' NFL football game against the Green Bay Packers on Sunday, Sept. 30, 2012, in Green Bay, Wis. Saints' Darren Sproles appeared to fumble a kickoff but officials ruled that he was down by contact. Replays showed that the ball clearly came out but the Packers were out of replay challenges, leaving Packers fans screaming at the officials for the second week in a row. (AP Photo/Tom Lynn)

Referee Jeff Triplette signals New Orleans Saints' possession, after a video review, during the second half of the Saints' NFL football game against the Green Bay Packers on Sunday, Sept. 30, 2012, in Green Bay, Wis. Saints' Darren Sproles appeared to fumble a kickoff but officials ruled that he was down by contact. Replays showed that the ball clearly came out but the Packers were out of replay challenges, leaving Packers fans screaming at the officials for the second week in a row. (AP Photo/Tom Lynn)

Green Bay Packers' C.J. Wilson, front, celebrates a sack of New Orleans Saints' Drew Brees during the second half of an NFL football game Sunday, Sept. 30, 2012, in Green Bay, Wis. Green Bay won 28-27. (AP Photo/Jeffrey Phelps)

Green Bay Packers' Aaron Rogers stiff-arms New Orleans Saints' Jabari Greer during the second half of an NFL football game Sunday, Sept. 30, 2012 in Green Bay, Wis. The Packers won 28-27. (AP Photo/Tom Lynn)

New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees looks for a receiver during the second half of an NFL football game against the Green Bay Packers on Sunday, Sept. 30, 2012, in Green Bay, Wis. The Packers won 28-27. (AP Photo/Mike Roemer)

Green Bay Packers' Randall Cobb reacts after New Orleans Saints' Garrett Hartley missed a field goal during the fourth quarter of an NFL football game Sunday, Sept. 30, 2012, in Green Bay, Wis. The Packers won 28-27. (AP Photo/Tom Lynn)

GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) ? As if bearing the brunt of the call that ultimately led to the end of the NFL's replacement officials wasn't enough, Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers nearly had a big comeback win undone by a blunder from the regular refs.

Rodgers threw a go-ahead touchdown to Jordy Nelson in the fourth quarter, and the Packers shook off a week's worth of controversy with a rally to beat the New Orleans Saints 28-27 on Sunday.

With Lambeau Field fans howling about what appeared to be yet another bad call ? this time by the regular officials, not the replacements ? Garrett Hartley missed a 48-yard field goal attempt with just under three minutes remaining that cost the Saints a shot at the lead.

"We've probably had to deal with more adversity than most of the teams I've played with, especially early on we've had some interesting games already," Rodgers said. "We're four games in. So, I think the character of this team is very strong. Winning games like this says a lot about the kind of men that we have."

Rodgers threw for 319 yards with four touchdowns and an interception for the Packers (2-2).

"I'm very proud of our football team, especially the week we've endured," Packers coach Mike McCarthy said. "We talk a lot about integrity and character, and I thought today's game had plenty of those types of situations where it showed up big."

Drew Brees threw for 446 yards with three touchdowns for the winless Saints (0-4).

"It's going to hurt when you lose a game like this," Saints interim coach Aaron Kromer said. "But I will not let them get down. We are too close."

Brees now has thrown at least one touchdown in 47 straight regular-season games, tying the NFL's all-time mark set by Johnny Unitas.

"Yeah, it's disappointing," Brees said of the loss. "It stinks. But despite where we're at, right now I think this team's going to do something."

With the win, the Packers were able to put Monday night's controversial replacement official-driven loss at Seattle behind them. But even with the regular refs back this week, the Packers and their fans still nearly were dealt a crushing blow on a blown call.

After Rodgers' touchdown to Nelson, Darren Sproles appeared to fumble the ensuing kickoff but officials ruled that he was down by contact. Replays showed that the ball clearly came out but the Packers were out of replay challenges, leaving Packers fans screaming at the officials for the second week in a row.

"You guys were all happy that the officials were back, and we tried to tell you that they'd still get booed," Nelson said with a laugh.

Brees then led the Saints into field goal range, and Hartley hit a 43-yard attempt ? but the Saints were called for holding, forcing Hartley to line up a 53-yarder. The Packers then were called for encroachment, leaving Hartley to try a 48-yarder and he missed it wide left.

It was a sigh of relief for the Packers, who spent most of the week in the middle of a nationwide firestorm after a last-second decision by replacement officials cost them a game at Seattle on Monday night. It was a burden for the Packers to bear, but likely played a significant role in the NFL agreeing to a deal with its regular officials during the week.

Referee Jeff Triplette struck a triumphant tone during the pregame coin toss Sunday, announcing that "it's great to be back, gentlemen!" A handful of Packers fans came to the game dressed as officials, and some brought signs showing support for the regular refs.

The honeymoon didn't last long. Fans howled for an offensive pass interference call after Brees threw a 20-yard touchdown pass to Marques Colston late in the first quarter, but no flag was forthcoming. With the Packers leading 21-14 in the third quarter, fans ? and McCarthy ? were on the officials again when McCarthy challenged a catch by Jimmy Graham but it wasn't overturned.

A 20-yard field goal by Hartley cut the lead to 21-17 with 9:41 left in the third quarter. Rodgers responded with a drive but needed attention from the team's training staff after getting poked in the eye on a face mask by New Orleans' Malcolm Jenkins.

"I wanted to stay in the game ? obviously, I don't like coming out for anything," Rodgers said. "Just didn't have any depth perception immediately thereafter and so I figured we were a yard away and we could punch that thing in there. Unfortunately, didn't happen."

Rodgers came out of the game for one play and backup quarterback Graham Harrell came in ? then tripped and fumbled as he tried to hand it off, allowing the Saints to get the ball. Brees then found Joseph Morgan wide open behind the defense for an 80-yard touchdown and a 24-21 lead.

Rodgers then threw an interception to Patrick Robinson and the Saints drove for a 27-yard field goal by Hartley to take a 27-21 lead with 13:04 remaining.

With the Packers trailing by 6, Rodgers threw an 11-yard strike to Nelson as the Saints' Corey White tried to wrap his arms around the ball ? briefly re-creating a scene eerily similar to the controversial game-ender in Seattle on Monday.

This time, though, Nelson clearly came away with the ball and spiked it emphatically.

NOTES: Packers S M.D. Jennings, who played a key role in the controversial play at Seattle, left the game with a shoulder injury. ... Packers WR Greg Jennings caught a touchdown in the second quarter but later came out of the game. Jennings has been struggling to stay healthy with a groin injury.

___

Online: http://pro32.ap.org/poll and http://twitter.com/AP_NFL

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-09-30-Saints-Packers/id-20913a03f40f4519bc0fca1b39afc0dd

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House GOP freshmen look for promotions in 113th Congress

With just two years in Congress under their belts, members of the House GOP's vaunted freshman class are looking for promotions into the party leadership come January.

At least three Republicans elected in 2010 are vying for leadership posts, lawmakers and aides say: Reps. Martha Roby (Ala.), James Lankford (Okla.) and Jeff Denham (Calif.). House Republicans vote by secret ballot after the national elections in November.

Roby, who at 36 is one of the youngest members of Congress, is running against Rep. Lynn Jenkins (Kan.) for the vice chairmanship of the conference, the fifth-ranking leadership position. Having solidified a once-Democratic district in Alabama, Roby has emerged as a favorite of the current leadership team and frequently appears at its weekly press conferences.

She is also stumping for Mitt Romney?s campaign as a surrogate in battleground states, targeting young voters and women. Like other freshmen, Roby has started a leadership PAC to raise and distribute money to fellow Republicans.

?It?s an honor to be encouraged by my colleagues to pursue a leadership role, and the response has been heartening,? Roby said. ?But right now we?re all focused on November, doing our part to elect more Republicans to Congress and send Mitt Romney to the White House. I was proud to be asked to represent the Romney-Ryan campaign in swing states this fall, and I told them I would go wherever they needed me.?

Jenkins spokeswoman Annie Dwyer said the second-term Kansan is citing her experience as a former CPA and state treasurer in seeking support from colleagues. ?She is getting very enthusiastic support from a wide array of members,? Dwyer said, ?but at this point she?s focusing on November, making sure she returns and assisting members and candidates across the nation to ensure a strong Republican majority.?

Dwyer said current House GOP conference chairman Jeb Hensarling (Texas) and the chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, Rep. Dave Camp (Mich.), are among top Republicans backing Jenkins.

Roby and Jenkins are bidding to succeed Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (Wash.), who is running for conference chairman against Rep. Tom Price (Ga.), head of the Republican Policy Committee.

Lankford, whose office declined comment, has no declared challenger in his race to take over the policy committee from Price. Lankford has managed to become one of the most media-friendly members of the freshman class, but unlike Reps. Joe Walsh (R-Ill.) or Allen West (R-Fla.), he has avoided the kinds of harsh denunciations and controversial statements that have drawn negative attention and eye rolls from party leaders.

For freshmen, making a leadership bid can be a double-edged sword. While they can boast to constituents back home of having more clout in the Capitol, it can undermine the outsider image that many of them cultivated in their initial bids for Congress.

That challenge is most clearly evident in the experience of Rep. Tim Scott (R-S.C.), one of two freshmen who serve in leadership as liaisons to the 87-member class of 2010.

A staunch conservative, Scott has occasionally sided with his colleagues in the South Carolina delegation and opposed legislation backed by the GOP leadership ? most notably during the debt ceiling debate in 2011, when he voted no on the Budget Control Act.

?He feels like he?s sticking to his principles,? a source close to Scott said about his voting record. ?You can be in a role and still vote how you vote and do what you do without sacrificing your principles.?

?It makes things uncomfortable every once in a while,? the source acknowledged.

As for 2013, Scott?s place in leadership is up in the air. ?I think he?d love to stay in leadership in one way, shape or form,? said the source close to him. ?It?s about finding the right spot.?

The other freshman leadership liaison, Rep. Kristi Noem (S.D.), has not declared whether she is seeking a post in the next Congress. Her spokeswoman did not return a request for comment.

Denham is battling Reps. Virginia Foxx (N.C.) and Gregg Harper (Miss.) for GOP conference secretary, the sixth-ranking leadership post. The secretary helps with messaging and legislation but has not played a highly-visible role in recent years. The current conference secretary, Rep. John Carter (Texas), rarely appears at the weekly press briefings that Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) and other party leaders hold on Capitol Hill.

Denham is in a more competitive re-election race than other Republicans vying for leadership posts, and his bid was likely not helped by a Buzzfeed article on Friday reporting that he had billed taxpayers more than $1,000 in hotel room expenses to appear on morning television shows. His spokeswoman did not return a request for comment on his leadership bid.


Source: http://thehill.com/homenews/house/259273-gop-freshmen-look-for-promotions-in-113th-congress

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In Debt: Changes to Energy Debt

New measures released by industry regulator, Ofgem, means that customers on a pre-paid meter who owe their energy supplier as much as ?500 can switch energy supplier.

At the moment, if you owe your energy supplier ?200 or less then you can move to a new company, however with the amount of arrears typically exceeding this level, Ofgem has amended the rules.

Gas and Electricity Debt

A high percentage of people supported at Debt Support Trust owe money to their gas and electricity supplier and it means often people are living in fuel poverty.

At Debt Support Trust, we believe that the most impoverished people in society were tied to an energy supplier and being charged higher rates for fuel because of their arrears. The person in debt had no choice but to accept this because of the arrears. This made cutting the ties between energy supplier and client very difficult.

The news means people with debt over ?200 to the energy supplier but under ?500 can now switch energy supplier to a cheaper deal. The indebted individual isn't getting away without paying the money, but they will be in a better position to repay the debt because of the money they are able to save on their fuel bills.

Number of people on Pre-Paid Meters

Ofgem has said there are 320,000 gas and 315,000 electricity customers who are on pre-paid meters because their owe money to their energy supplier.

A pre-paid meter is installed when the energy supplied is owed money. This was used for the energy provider to reclaim the money they were owed. The price of the fuel is higher than normal so the energy company can recoup the money they are due.

However, this solutions doesn't encourage people to get back out of debt and instead often people are left in fuel poverty because they are part of the 'can't pay society'.

Source: http://www.debtsupporttrust.org.uk/blog/2012/9/24/in-debt-changes-to-energy-debt

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What to Make of Declining Democratic Registration? (Powerlineblog)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

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Thursday, September 27, 2012

Dusty Road $65 -neutered lap cat! - Minneapolis-St. Paul Classifieds

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Barnes & Noble takes aim at Amazon, Apple with HD Nook tablets

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Barnes & Noble Inc took a shot at archrival Amazon.com on Wednesday, unveiling its own lighter and thinner hi-definition tablets that can accommodate multiple users in a bid to win a bigger share of the exploding tablet market.

The largest U.S. bookstore chain introduced the new devices with price tags ranging from $199 for a 7-inch Nook HD tablet with 8 gigabytes of memory, to $299 for a 9-inch Nook HD+ tablet, similar in size to Apple Inc's market-leading iPad, with 32 GB of memory. IPad prices are roughly twice as high for similar devices.

The new Nooks are the latest entrants in the fight for sales of tablets and e-readers - and the digital content like books, movies and magazines that goes with them. Barnes & Noble has staked its future on its digital business as the company faces an overall industrywide drop in the sales of physical books.

"A key growth area is to get their existing customer base onto the digital platform," Forrester Research analyst Sarah Rotman Epps told Reuters, saying the new devices were competitive with similar products by Amazon in terms of features and pricing.

Barnes & Noble faces formidable competition from Amazon, which can use its Prime shipping service and amazon.com site to draw users, and the iPad, which has sold in the tens of millions of units.

To keep pace, Barnes & Noble added innovative features that would allow each a family to share a Nook tablet, with each user able to create a home page and customize preferences, the first table to do so. There are also parental controls that can prevent kids from reading "Fifty Shades of Grey" or go shopping on the digital store.

The company is also launching a new video-streaming and download service for Nook, narrowing the gap with Amazon and Apple, which offer more content on their devices.

At a media event in Manhattan on Tuesday, officials said the company had emphasized features such as image resolution and page-turning technology given the needs of its basic customers, book and magazine readers.

"We are playing in the tablet space, but reading is at our core," Barnes & Noble Chief Executive William Lynch told Reuters in an interview on Tuesday.

The 7-inch tablet weighs 11.1 ounces. Its larger sibling is 18.2 ounces, making it lighter than the iPad and making them both more appropriate for reading, he added. The iPad weighs about 23 ounces.

The top U.S. bookstore chain launched its first Nook device, a basic e-reader, in 2009 and has held its own with deep-pocketed rivals Amazon, Apple and Google Inc. That success has allowed it to garner as much as 30 percent of the U.S. electronic-books market.

Barnes & Noble's new devices, available for pre-order on Wednesday, will ship in October and be in U.S. stores in November. They will be on sale in Britain beginning in late November at chains including Sainsbury's and Waitrose.

For a factbox comparing Nook, iPad and Kindle:

BRUISING PRICE WARS

The tablet market is among the fastest-growing sectors of the technology industry. Research firm Gartner forecasts that sales will almost double this year, to 118.9 million units.

Barnes & Noble's latest Nooks will appear in its nearly 700 stores as well as chains Best Buy Co Inc, Target Corp and Wal-Mart Stores Inc. Target and Wal-Mart have decided to no longer carry Amazon's Kindles, giving the Nook an edge at thousands of retail locations.

Amazon.com Inc earlier this month unveiled its own HD tablets. It launched its first last year and says it has a 22 percent share of the U.S. market.

With the new Nooks, Barnes & Noble is also taking aim at Apple, whose iPad is far more expensive, because there is room in the market for a strong tablet at a lower price, Lynch said.

Questions about the Nook's long-term viability arose last month after Barnes & Noble reported that Nook revenue including ebooks last quarter was up only 0.3 percent, hurt by price decreases early in the summer. That has added urgency to developing new products.

Price wars with Amazon have been bruising, but Lynch was undismayed: "We're growing the digital content portion of the business, and that's where we envision making our economics," Lynch said.

Last quarter, Barnes & Noble lost business when it didn't have enough Nook devices that allow for reading in the dark. Lynch said the company is now producing HD tablets in numbers sufficient to meet what it expects will be strong demand during the holiday period.

"We believe we'll gain significant share in the tablet category, and we've planned for that from a production standpoint. I believe these are going to be hot holiday gifts."

(Editing by Prudence Crowther)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/barnes-noble-takes-aims-amazon-apple-hd-nook-050306151.html

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Single-site laparoscopic surgery reduces pain of tumor removal

Single-site laparoscopic surgery reduces pain of tumor removal [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 27-Sep-2012
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Contact: Jackie Carr
jcarr@ucsd.edu
619-543-6163
University of California - San Diego

Researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine have found that recovery from an emerging, minimally invasive surgical technique called Laparo-Endoscopic Single-Site Surgery (LESS) was less painful for kidney cancer patients than traditional laparoscopic surgery. Study results were published in the September online edition of Urology.

"In the largest prospective study of kidney cancer patients to date, the UC San Diego study showed less use of narcotic pain medication and lower pain scores upon hospital discharge," said Ithaar Derweesh, MD, senior author and urologic oncologist at UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center. "For patients and surgeons, this research shows that reducing the number of incisions to one confers benefits beyond fewer scars."

Led by Derweesh, the study compared single-site laparoscopy, also known as LESS, and traditional multiport laparoscopy in a total of 74 patients needing either complete or partial removal of the kidney for malignancy. LESS was performed with one small incision in the umbilicus through which all tools were inserted to reach the tumor. The patients undergoing traditional laparoscopy underwent four to six incisions.

After surgery, surgeons used the visual analog pain (VAP) test to establish a patient's comfort level. The test is composed of simple line drawings of the human face. One end of the scale shows a smile and "no hurt," the opposite end expresses tears and "hurts worst."

"We found that patients rated the LESS surgery as 40 percent less painful than traditional laparoscopic surgery, while requiring approximately 50 percent less narcotic pain medication," said Derweesh. "This is an excellent sign that the LESS technique may further improve the quality of life of appropriate patients undergoing major cancer surgery."

The incidence of renal cell carcinoma is increasing worldwide. In the United States, kidney cancer is the most lethal of the commonly diagnosed urologic malignancies, diagnosed in more than 64,000 Americans every year. According to the American Cancer Society, kidney cancer is increasing at a rate of two to three percent each year in the U.S.

###

Additional contributors to this paper include Wassim M. Bazzi, Sean P. Stroup, Ryan P. Kopp, Seth A. Cohen, and Kyoko Sakamoto from the UC San Diego School of Medicine.



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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Single-site laparoscopic surgery reduces pain of tumor removal [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 27-Sep-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Jackie Carr
jcarr@ucsd.edu
619-543-6163
University of California - San Diego

Researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine have found that recovery from an emerging, minimally invasive surgical technique called Laparo-Endoscopic Single-Site Surgery (LESS) was less painful for kidney cancer patients than traditional laparoscopic surgery. Study results were published in the September online edition of Urology.

"In the largest prospective study of kidney cancer patients to date, the UC San Diego study showed less use of narcotic pain medication and lower pain scores upon hospital discharge," said Ithaar Derweesh, MD, senior author and urologic oncologist at UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center. "For patients and surgeons, this research shows that reducing the number of incisions to one confers benefits beyond fewer scars."

Led by Derweesh, the study compared single-site laparoscopy, also known as LESS, and traditional multiport laparoscopy in a total of 74 patients needing either complete or partial removal of the kidney for malignancy. LESS was performed with one small incision in the umbilicus through which all tools were inserted to reach the tumor. The patients undergoing traditional laparoscopy underwent four to six incisions.

After surgery, surgeons used the visual analog pain (VAP) test to establish a patient's comfort level. The test is composed of simple line drawings of the human face. One end of the scale shows a smile and "no hurt," the opposite end expresses tears and "hurts worst."

"We found that patients rated the LESS surgery as 40 percent less painful than traditional laparoscopic surgery, while requiring approximately 50 percent less narcotic pain medication," said Derweesh. "This is an excellent sign that the LESS technique may further improve the quality of life of appropriate patients undergoing major cancer surgery."

The incidence of renal cell carcinoma is increasing worldwide. In the United States, kidney cancer is the most lethal of the commonly diagnosed urologic malignancies, diagnosed in more than 64,000 Americans every year. According to the American Cancer Society, kidney cancer is increasing at a rate of two to three percent each year in the U.S.

###

Additional contributors to this paper include Wassim M. Bazzi, Sean P. Stroup, Ryan P. Kopp, Seth A. Cohen, and Kyoko Sakamoto from the UC San Diego School of Medicine.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-09/uoc--sls092712.php

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