So we all have chores to do, and sometimes sticking a list on the fridge isn’t the most productive way of remembering to do things. So of course there is an App for that called HouseKeeper. HouseKeeper reminds you to do all those annoying, but necessary chores like cleaning out the dryer vent or inspecting your extinguisher and smoke detector – so that you’ll survive in case of an emergency. It will also keep a list of the 10 most common household chores, and send you a text or email notification so you have no excuse for forgetting them. HouseKeeper is available for $1.99 at the App store.
Author: Serkadis
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HouseKeeper iPhone App will Remind You To Do Daily Chores
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Attention commuters: Stop to enjoy the tiles
The city’s latest effort to liven the drudgery of commuting as part of its Arts in Transit program was unveiled at the Belmont C.T.A. station on Thursday.
David Csicsko, a Lakeview artist, designed the tiled mosaic mural of bright, multicolored faces riding the train that stretches across the main staircase of the hub for the Red, Brown and Purple Lines.
Mr. Csicsko said his idea was “to really make it about diversity and celebrating all of the people who come in and out of this station.”
He said he also found room on the mural for depictions of his dog, President Obama at age 8 and “the Goddess of Belmont, who watches over all the club kids as they do crazy things at night.”
Most commuters passed by, oblivious, but Kasey Dieb, 17, a Lane Tech student, said the mosaics made the station “much more welcoming.”
Read the original article from the Chicago News Cooperative.
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Still arguing his case, even after all these years
Time stopped in drab Cook County Eviction Court last week as the lawyer George N. Leighton smoothly argued for the Illinois International Port District in a marathon dispute involving a 1965 lease and whether a slip for big ships on the Calumet River was properly dredged.
Without reading from notes, the elegant Mr. Leighton detailed the silt-filled matter between the district, long known as the Chicago Regional Port District, and Dockside Development Corporation.
Standing ramrod straight before Judge Joan Powell and with a clear-as-a-bell baritone, he spent a flawless 15 minutes citing a tortuous history as he built to a strong, low-key climax, replete with a gentlemanly thank you “to Your Honor for being here this afternoon.”
Listening and viewing just his back from the gallery, you would guess that the intellectually nimble advocate was in his 50s, maybe early 60s. He walks with nary a limp. He looks as if he jumped out of a Hugo Boss show window. His hearing, eyesight, cholesterol — you name it — are all fine.
Mr. Leighton is 97.
“I got some advice from an elder care center and now take a few vitamins to avoid getting tired,” he said.
But Mr. Leighton is not discernibly different from when I first covered him, in 1977. He was a federal judge, a liberal Democrat nominated to the post in 1975 by President Gerald R. Ford after serving on the Cook County Appellate Court. He was tough but fair and didn’t tolerate imprecision.
“Tell me how the evidence indicates your client is innocent,” he would say.
He was a stickler for decorum and imposed longer sentences than many judges, though he was not a “banger,” federal building parlance for harsher colleagues.
And in a world in which we conflate celebrity and achievement, and where the definition of “extraordinary” can encompass quarterbacks in their 20s throwing three touchdowns, this man has led a remarkable life.
The son of Portuguese immigrants, he was born George Neves Leitao (a fourth-grade teacher arbitrarily changed his surname to Leighton) in New Bedford, Mass.
He worked with his parents in the cranberry bogs and picked blueberries and strawberries from March until late November, attending school for only a few months each year.
He finished seventh grade at age 17, went to sea on an oil tanker and returned to work in restaurants and to play percussion in a dance band.
Without having gone to high school, he talked his way into Howard University at age 24, where he graduated magna cum laude, and then became one of the few nonwhites of his era admitted to attend Harvard Law School.
After a year there, Mr. Leighton fought in the Pacific theater in World War II for three years. He then finished Harvard and arrived in Chicago in 1946, only to be barred from the segregated Chicago Bar Association.
He became a successful criminal defense lawyer who, after filing suit in 1951 for a black family blocked by angry whites from moving into an apartment they had rented in all-white Cicero, was indicted by a county grand jury for conspiracy to incite a riot and lower property values.
Thurgood Marshall, the future United States Supreme Court justice, represented Mr. Leighton, and the indictment was dismissed. Mr. Leighton was active in civil rights and represented Sam Giancana, a mobster and the head of Chicago’s organized crime outfit, convincing a judge that the Federal Bureau of Investigation needed to limit its surveillance of Mr. Giancana.
“With grace, integrity, humility, perseverance and extraordinary talent, George Leighton has defined for generations of men and women of all racial and ethnic backgrounds what it really means to be a lawyer,” said Jeffrey Colman, a Chicago lawyer who first appeared before him in 1977.
Other than an occasional Dry Sack sherry, Mr. Leighton doesn’t drink alcohol or coffee; he doesn’t smoke or even exercise. He is an inch and a half shorter, and only three pounds heavier, than when he was released from active duty on Oct. 23, 1945. A widower with four great-grandchildren, he plays high-level computer chess when he can’t sleep.
Mr. Leighton has a second home in Plymouth, Mass., but his ties to New Bedford are so great that the City Council and the local congressman, Representative Barney Frank, had the main post office named in his honor in 2005.
In two interviews, Mr. Leighton’s recall is startling. He is as upbeat as a religious broadcaster. And though he lost that port ruling, he told me the other day that he would definitely appeal.
Why not? Time is obviously on his side.
James Warren is a longtime Chicago journalist and the publisher of The Chicago Reader.
Read the original article from the Chicago News Cooperative.
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Assessor candidate benefits from property tax lawyers
By day, Joseph Berrios is the longest-serving member of the three-man board that holds the power to cut the property tax bill for any parcel in Cook County.
By night, Mr. Berrios is a master fund-raiser, bringing in about $3 million in political contributions over the last decade from the same lawyers who ask him and the board to give tax breaks to their clients.
The amount of contributions from property tax lawyers to Mr. Berrios’s campaign committees was uncovered by the Chicago News Cooperative in a comprehensive review of campaign finance reports and Board of Review decisions.
Donations from property tax appeal lawyers account for 64 percent of the money raised over the past decade by Mr. Berrios, who also is chairman of the county’s Democratic Party.
The lawyer-fueled contributions are providing a big fund-raising edge for Mr. Berrios as he seeks the Democratic nomination for the higher office of county assessor in Tuesday’s primary.
Roughly one-third of Mr. Berrios’s campaign money comes from 15 law firms that have gained the most for their clients from the property tax appeal panel. Together, those top firms have contributed almost $1 million to six political committees controlled by Mr. Berrios and to his daughter, State Representative Maria Antonia Berrios, Democrat of Chicago.
Government watchdog groups say the close ties between the commissioner and the lawyers who argue cases before the board is alarming.
“It’s very hard to have the appearance that there is no conflict of interest when your primary funders are always from a small industry that has the most at stake in your decisions,” said Cindi Canary, director of the Illinois Campaign for Political Reform.
In an interview this week, Mr. Berrios said the board did not show favoritism.
“No one gets a reduction just because they contribute money,” he said. “No one has to contribute a dime.”
One of Mr. Berrios’s two opponents in Tuesday’s primary, Raymond A. Figueroa, a former alderman and retired Cook County circuit judge, said he advocated prohibiting donations from property tax lawyers to the assessor or appeals board commissioners.
Mr. Figueroa accused Mr. Berrios of taking part in a “pay-to-play” system. “No wonder these lawyers like him,” he said. “They love him, in fact. Their clients benefit from Mr. Berrios’s golden touch.”
Thanks largely to property tax lawyers, Mr. Berrios has raised more in this campaign than two of the four Democratic candidates for county board president. In one day alone, on Jan. 8, the tax appeal bar chipped in a total of more than $33,000 for Mr. Berrios.
Mr. Berrios said in the interview this week that he believed that the board’s decisions were fair and that he hoped to “make the assessor’s office work for the taxpayers.”
Mr. Berrios is not the only local elected official who gets large sums of campaign money from people who stand to gain from his official decisions. Still, the analysis of records revealed that he relies on political financing from property tax lawyers to a far greater extent than James M. Houlihan, the sitting assessor, and the other two Board of Review commissioners.
Mr. Houlihan, who is stepping down after 12 years in office, has raised about as much money over all as Mr. Berrios, but donations from lawyers who handle appeals to his office make up only about one-quarter of Mr. Houlihan’s campaign money.
When he first ran for assessor, Mr. Houlihan sought money from former clients and others whom he had met as a lobbyist because he wanted to avoid relying heavily on property tax lawyers for his re-election campaigns, he said this week.
“I didn’t want the office to have the tone that, unless you contribute to me, you don’t have access,” Mr. Houlihan said.
While largesse from tax lawyers increased Mr. Berrios’s campaign accounts, his political profile also expanded three years ago when he became chairman of the local Democratic organization. After growing up in the Cabrini Green housing project, he graduated from Lane Tech High School and received an accounting degree. He entered politics working under his precinct captain, and was once an employee of the property tax appeal board before being elected commissioner in 1988.
The assessor’s office, where Mr. Berrios wants to work next, sets the tax bill for every parcel in the county, and it is the first avenue of appeal for property owners who feel they are not being taxed fairly. Every year, however, more than 200,000 taxpayers seek further relief from the Board of Review, and many of them hire lawyers to argue on their behalf.
Read the original article from the Chicago News Cooperative.
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Travel: Following in the footsteps of Harding-King
The National (Jack Shenker)
One hundred years ago, the British explorer WJ Harding King tried and failed to cross Egypt’s forbidding Western Desert. Jack Shenker follows his footsteps into a once-isolated world on the cusp of transformation.There is a tree in the middle of Dakhla oasis that is said by some locals to possess a soul. They call it the tree of Sheikh Adam, and it has stood for centuries at the heart of one million square miles of vast, almost waterless isolation, a space once considered to be among the most inhospitable places on the planet. It lies hundreds of miles from Egypt’s Nile Valley to the east, and hundreds of miles from the Libyan border to the west. If you climb the small hill on which the tree is perched and peer out in either direction there’s nothing to see but sand dunes, some up to 150 metres high, marching unceasingly across the void. A British explorer who reached this spot in 1910 declared the tree to be a symbol of everything magical about the desert, “a land where afrits, ghuls, genii and all the other creatures of native superstitions are matters of everyday occurrence; where lost oases and enchanted cities lie in the desert sands.”
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Museum: Grand Egyptian Museum, Cairo
Heritage Key (Malcolm Jack)
Finished in 2560 BC, the Great Pyramid of Giza took 20 years to build. 3,000 years on, it doesn’t look like major Egyptian construction projects have hurried up any.It was recently announced that the opening date for the Grand Egyptian Museum – the massive centerpiece attraction of the epic new vision for the Giza plateau, two and a half kilometres from the pyramids – has been pushed back to 2013, after the latest in a long-running series of delays for the building. The project was officially commenced in 1992, which means that even if the GEM does open on schedule now, it will itself have taken at least a full 20 years to finally come to fruition. History never lacks a sense of irony, does it?
To be fair, the GEM is no small undertaking.
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Lecture notes: The Lost tomb of Amenhotep – Dr Laurent Bavay
Luxor News Blog (Jane Akshar)
The Lost tomb of Amenhotep – Dr Laurent BavayThis is his website www.ulb.ac.be/philo/crea which he told me does not have details of the subject of the lecture on it yet but obviously will be updated in future. It does have details of their past seasons and in English as well as French
The discovery of this tomb was announced by Dr Zahi Hawass in March 2009. The team have been working for 12 seasons since 1999 at Gurna in the southern part of the necropolis above the famous tomb of Sennefer TT96. They have been working on the chapel TT96a and the next door tomb TT29. They have been doing conservation in TT96A and archaeology in TT29. TT29 Amenemope was a cousin of Sennefer and a Vizier under Amenhotep II. Percy Newbury noted it contained the duties of a vizier but it has never been excavated. During their excavation they found evidence of a Coptic occupation. There were many hermitages and monasteries on the Theban hillside. This particular hermitage belonged to monk called Frange and they found lots of ostraca detail his life. He showed us one piece O.29401, which was so personal and said he had come to see someone and would be ‘back soon’. Altogether they found 1,200 pieces and have been able to recreate his daily life.
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Never Mind the Valley: Here’s Beijing
It’s Data Privacy Day and when it comes to generating privacy-related buzz in the blogosphere, there are few governments as controversial as China. From Google’s recent security issues, to blocked social media sites to the proposed Green Dan censorship program, Western netizens have always had a tenuous relationship with China. As part of our Never Mind the Valley series, ReadWriteWeb spoke to several investors and entrepreneurs to find out what it’s like to run a startup beyond what many describe as the “Great Firewall”. RWW’s Never Mind the Valley series:While areas like Shanghai’s Zhangjiang Hi-Tech Park and PKU-HKUST Shenzhen-Hong Kong Institution have sprung up as tech hubs, there’s no denying that Beijing’s Zhongguancun National Innovation Model Park is considered the country’s tech epicenter. Nestled in the southwest corner of the city, the region plays host to the University of Beijing, Tsinghua University and the Chinese Academy of Science. Since the early eighties, major players like Baidu, Sina and Sohu have skyrocketed to success while sharing the land with global companies like Nokia, IBM and Microsoft. Today, the region tax breaks and opportunities for large and small companies alike.
Emerging Markets
While Facebook often boasts of its 350 million users, in China alone there are 340 million netizens with the majority opting to use alternative social sites like 51.com QZone and RenRen.
Says Barrett Parkman, International Business Development Manager at Mobile Internet Great Wall Club, “Having user generated content as the core of a company here is risky business. Not to say UGC isn’t alive and well, it’s just that companies have to take strong measures to restrict it to uncontroversial topics. This is another reason that the gaming sector and virtual goods industry are growing so rapidly since they are generally uncontroversial in nature.”
Because of China’s leadership in the gaming sector, CMUNE CEO Ludovic Bodin is taking Chinese revenue models and applying them to his Western-launched products such as Paradise Paintball. Says Bodin, “China is one of the most advanced country in the world for online gaming and has strong knowledge of the sale of virtual goods as a primary business model. CMUNE is taking the best practices in China and adapting for a non-Chinese context and audience. Developing here gives us an advantage to later launch into the Chinese market. “
Plus Eight Star CEO Benjamin Joffe further addresses China’s meteoric growth in gaming and virtual goods. Joffe frequently presents emerging trends in China’s mobile, telecom and Internet markets.
Explains Joffe, “The online gaming market is still booming despite being already very large. There are nine companies listed on NASDAQ and Hong Kong stock exchanges including Tencent.” Joffe argues that while many Chinese companies began similar to their Western counterparts, founders quickly realized the need to generate revenue beyond the ad model. As the leading community portal in China, Tencent earned more than $1.5 billion dollars in revenue last year with a large portion of that generated through virtual goods.
In addition to watching the social gaming space, Joffe suggests that technologists look for interesting plays from the business social networking space and from a unique matchmaking service with a hybrid call center/online component called Zhenai.
Funding
There is no shortage of venture capital firms in China. Groups such as GSR Ventures, Sequoia China and Kleiner Perkins Caufield and Byers are all present for those seeking large-scale funding. As well, Huang Shengli’s China Renaissance and a number of other firms help broker private equity deals.
On the other hand, entrepreneurs with more modest needs can find fundraising challenging. Says Richard Robinson, CEO of casual gaming site Kooky Panda, “Later stage VC funding is advanced and even frothy here in the Middle Kingdom and the early stage is still quite nascent.” Robinson goes to explain how much of the angel funding in China comes from friends, family and industry insiders. Nevertheless, that environment is improving as new groups step up with seed money and mentorship for early-stage investors.
Former president of Google China Dr. Kai-Fu Lee launched Innovation Works as a $115 million dollar venture fund for early-stage entrepreneurs. The fund focuses on web, mobile and cloud computing technologies targeted at the greater Chinese market and investors include YouTube cofounder Steve Chen and makers of Lenovo, Legend Group. Additional sources for angel funding include associations such as the Asia America MultiTechnology Association angel group, the China Business Angel Network and The Chinese Founders Fund.
Says Dr. Jovan Hsu founding partner of the Chinese Founders Fund, “There are few funds looking to invest in companies where the valuation is less than $10 million dollars and private equity firms are even higher. Early stage companies need more angel funds. The Chinese Founders Fund finds itself in a good position in the investment food chain in China. We’re providing smart money.”
Mentorship and Learning

Organizations like the Great Wall Club and China Entrepreneurs offer opportunities to network and gain mentorship, while Mobile Monday and Web Wednesday offer regular events for those looking to discuss the latest trends. Meanwhile, research firms like Analysys, iResearch and China ICT host larger conferences for annual business development opportunities.Operations
With 35 million unique visitors per month to his site, CEO Fritz Demopoulos’ Qunar is China’s leading online travel company. Some of the advantages Demopoulos lists in keeping his business in China is the close proximity to the world’s largest internet market, the thriving startup ecosystem with professional firms and universities, and a large number of capable professionals willing to work in a startup business.
Says Demopoulos, “I’ve lived in China for many years and I’ve been involved in media and internet projects for nearly a decade. Globalization provides talent, resources, and the chance to deploy anywhere and seek returns. I’m no exception.”
Says Victor Tong, an angel investor in WebPlus and former director at Talentsoft, “China has built up a market-oriented economy and the business environment is quite free now. Meanwhile, great development in information technology provides companies a lot of support in their business operation…Doing business in China is a great experience. The 1.3 billion person consumer market is a temptation that’s too hard to resist. “
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Mercedes-Benz GL 63 by Brabus
Attachment 276343
PRESS RELEASE
BRABUS GL 63 Biturbo
Luxury SUV with 650 hp / 478 kW and WIDESTAR VersionStrong as a bull, sporty yet elegant and with exclusive appointments: The new BRABUS GL 63 Biturbo, which celebrates its world debut at the DUBAI INTERNATIONAL MOTOR SHOW, combines these three attributes to perfection. With this luxury SUV BRABUS (Brabus-Allee, D-46240 Bottrop, phone + 49 / (0) 2041 / 777-0, fax + 49 / (0) 2041 / 777 111, Internet BRABUS) further expands its impressive portfolio of exclusive high-performance automobiles. The 4×4 SUV is powered by a BRABUS B63 Biturbo 6.3-liter V8 engine with 650 hp (641 bhp) / 478 kW and reaches a top speed of 300 km/h (186 mph). Visually the SUV sets itself apart with the stunningly styled BRABUS WIDESTAR version and forged 23-inch wheels. Also part of the standard equipment of the BRABUS GL63 Biturbo is an exclusive interior with leather and Alcantara. The GL 63 Biturbo is built in small-series production and starts at 368,000 Euros MSRP.
Attachment 276344
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BRABUS fits the high-speed eight-cylinder four-valve engine from the ML63 AMG with a twin turbo system and implants it into the largest Mercedes SUV. By doing so the luxury manufacturer from Bottrop elevates the GL 63 to a new performance dimension.The twin turbo system is yet another high-tech development so typical for BRABUS. The BRABUS engineers have developed special cast exhaust manifolds with integrated turbine housings and bypass valves for the V8 engine. For faster response the turbochargers were sized relatively small and both manifolds were designed to only use the exhaust gases from three of the four cylinders on each side for driving the turbochargers.
The turbochargers themselves are also a custom BRABUS development. Normally V-type engines are fitted with two right-turning chargers. That results in a slower response on the right side of the engine because the intake on the right side of the turbine housing necessitates a more complicated exhaust routing than on the left side of the engine. To solve this problem the BRABUS engineers designed a left-turning turbocharger for the right cylinder bank of the engine and thus achieved perfect exhaust-gas dynamics.
The twin turbo system also includes a generously dimensioned water-to-air intercooler as well as a dual intake manifold with cast-in BRABUS Biturbo logos and sport air filters. High-performance catalysts behind the turbochargers reduce back pressure and further lower exhaust emissions.
Attachment 276346
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The inner workings of the engine are adapted to turbocharging with BRABUS forged pistons that reduce the compression ratio to 9.0:1. Newly programmed engine electronics with custom mapping for ignition and injection adapted to the turbo technology and an electronic boost pressure management system play a key role. Together they ensure not only maximum power yield but also clean emissions in accordance with the EURO IV emission standards. Like all BRABUS engines the B63 Biturbo is lubricated exclusively with synthetic ARAL high-performance motor oil.This engine establishes the BRABUS GL 63 Biturbo among the world’s most powerful SUVs. The engine has a rated power output of 650 hp (641 bhp) / 478 kW at a low 6,200 rpm. The maximum torque of 850 Nm (626 lb-ft) is available on a plateau between 3,000 and 5,500 rpm.
In combination with a modified SPEEDSHIFT 7G-TRONIC seven-speed automatic transmission and permanent four-wheel drive this engine delivers performance previously unimaginable for a vehicle of this type: The BRABUS GL63 Biturbo accelerates from rest to 100 km/h (62 mph) in just 4.7 seconds and reaches an electronically limited top speed of 300 km/h (186 mph).
Attachment 276348
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Naturally the vehicle’s aerodynamic properties, tires, suspension and brakes are all adapted to this enormous performance potential.The BRABUS WIDESTAR version with its elegantly contoured fender flares adds six centimeters (2.4 inches) to the width of the GL 63 Biturbo. The WIDESTAR front apron was shaped in the wind tunnel to reduce aerodynamic lift on the front axle thus maximizing directional stability at high speed. Generously sized air inlets provide the engine and the front brakes with as much cooling air as possible. For further increased active safety the BRABUS front features LED daytime running lights and four auxiliary headlamps.
BRABUS rocker panels create an aerodynamically smooth transition between the fender flares on front and rear axle. Integrated entrance lights facilitate entering and exiting the vehicle in the dark.
The vehicle’s aerodynamics are further optimized by a roof spoiler and the BRABUS rear apron with integrated diffuser. The apron is custom-tailored to fit the wider fenders and in addition to cutouts for the tailpipes of the BRABUS stainless-steel quad sport exhaust system features integrated underfloor lights.
The large wheel houses offer plenty of room for three-piece BRABUS Monoblock E PLATINUM EDITION 11Jx23 wheels. These nine-spoke wheels have a forged and high-gloss-polished drop center and can be fitted with Pirelli or YOKOHAMA high-performance tires up to size 305/30 R 23.
The BRABUS GL 63 Biturbo can also be equipped with forged 21-inch Monoblock VI or F wheels or with 22-inch Monoblock VI, E, Q or S and new BRABUS Monoblock G PLATINUM EDITION forged wheels.
The ride height of the high performance car is lowered by some 30 millimeters (1.2 inches) with the BRABUS suspension tuning module for the AIRMATIC air suspension. This measure not only benefits the looks of the GL. The lowered center of gravity also results in even sportier and safer on-road handling.
Attachment 276350
Attachment 276351To further optimize active safety the SUV is equipped with a BRABUS high-performance brake system. The version for the GL 63 Biturbo features 12-piston aluminum fixed calipers and vented and cross-drilled 380 x 36 millimeter (15.0 x 1.4 inches) discs on the front axle. The rear axle stops on 355 x 28 mm (14.0 x 1.1 inches) brake discs and six-piston fixed calipers.
The luxury equipment of the BRABUS GL 63 Biturbo also includes a premium interior. The interior is custom-tailored to customer specifications from a combination of especially soft and breathable Mastik leather and Alcantara.
BRABUS precious-wood and carbon-fiber inlays are available in a variety of versions and are color-coordinated with the leather. The sporty character of the vehicle is reflected by the speedometer with 320-km/h (200-mph) scale, aluminum components such as pedals and door-lock pins and an ergonomically shaped sport steering wheel.
Special consoles for the backs of the front seats each have an integrated seven-inch LCD screen, a DVD player and a folding table. They transform the rear passenger compartment into a multimedia studio. The entertainment equipment can be further expanded into a fully functional office on wheels with state-of-the-art communication and computer technology.
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Report: Fourth annual Festival of Archaeologists, Cairo
drhawass.com (Zahi Hawass)
Recently we celebrated the fourth annual Festival of Archaeologists at the Cairo Opera House. I began the idea four years ago of having a day to celebrate the achievements of Egyptian archaeologists, and making a place for them to meet together and with their foreign colleagues.I chose the date of January 14th to hold this celebration because it is the anniversary of the date in 1953 that Mostafa Amer became the first Egyptian to be named the head of Egyptian antiquities. This marks an important moment in Egyptians gaining authority over their own heritage, so I decided it would be the best date, and we hold the celebration at the Opera House in Cairo, which is a very beautiful space.
Now we meet on this day every year, beginning at 7 pm, with a 15-minute film talking about all the projects that Egyptian archaeologists are running. These include museums and site management programs for pharaonic, Coptic, Jewish, and Islamic sites and monuments, as well as training programs that we are implementing.
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Feature: Ozymandias
The Guardian, UK (Carol Rumens)
The Shelleys’ circle enjoyed setting each other themed writing contests: the most famous work to have emerged from such a pastime is Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein.It’s less well-known that Shelley’s most famous short poem, Ozymandias, was the result of a competition between himself and his friend Horace Smith, a financier, verse-parodist and author of historical novels. Smith’s rival sonnet is called, less memorably, In Egypt’s Sandy Silence and disadvantages itself early on by the gauche reference to “a gigantic leg”. Somehow, Shelley’s “two vast and trunkless legs” are more impressive. But both poems, first Shelley’s and then Smith’s, were published by Leigh Hunt early in 1818 in consecutive issues of his monthly journal The Examiner.
Shelley’s interest in Egyptology was already established, as revealed by some of the imagery of an earlier poem, Alastor, but perhaps it had been rekindled in part by the news of the excavation of the colossal head of Rameses II.
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Feature: Lifestyles of the rich and famous
The Independent (Paula Veiga)
The rich and famous people of ancient Egypt lived a decadent lifestyle with fine wine, sex, high fashion, and plenty of partying. How do they compare with their equivalents today – the modern western celebrity set?The main differences might be regarding who were the richest people then, and who are the richest people now. In ancient Egypt the pharaoh was at the top of the ‘pyramid’ and his family, noble people who owned land, and the priests came after. Scribes, architects and doctors were well off, and skilled craftsmen also had many privileges.
Peasants and unskilled workers were low down the scale of Egyptian society, but it was the servants and slaves that skirted the bottom of the class pyramid. Those working in mines and quarries were really asking for trouble, as diseases, physical strain and dangers lurked in every turned stone in the desert. Slaves working in rich domestic environments were the lucky ones as they were assured security, housing and food. Many of these endured hard physical work and usually died young as we can see from the osteological remains found at Amarna site analyzed by Dr. Jerome Rose which proved that people building those megalomaniac buildings for Akhenaton died young with severe bone lesions.
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Feature: Egyptian temples
Egyptian temples existed from the middle of the fourth millennium bce at the latest. According to tradition, the earliest were in the shape of reed huts. The last Egyptian temple built was a complex of buildings on Philae which ceased to be used in the mid-sixth century ce. After this, the existing structures were used as residences, vandalized or destroyed as pagan reminders, or exploited as quarries. However, the razing of temples for the last reason was already common in pharaonic times—to make room for a new building, to remodel a temple facility, or merely to reuse the materials on another site. Thus, out of the thousands of temples that once existed, only a fraction have been preserved for us.Most of these in exist today outline; the rest are almost all ruins, and only a few are intact to some extent. The extant temples are predominantly from the last millennium of Egyptian history, the Greco-Roman period (fourth century bce to sixth century ce).
Egyptian temples are first and foremost objects of study for architectural and art history. They are also useful in efforts to reconstruct Egyptian religion and the history of the Egyptian state.
Egyptian temples were mostly erected by the state, at the head of which stood the pharaoh. Thus, the temples had a political function, which was expressed in both images and texts. In the foreground, because it was directly visible in the decoration, was the function of communication with the gods. Therefore, the temples are places of religious practice, though strongly influenced by political considerations. Just as the temples were state institutions, Egyptian religion was a state religion. The state is closely connected with two nonreligious aspects: first, temples had to be administered, a well-researched topic; and second, they required an economic base, which is apparent in many details, particularly lists of donors for its furnishing. The temple economy and administration as sectors belonging to the state had a life of their own, because they supported the regime in a purely practical sense (except in periods of unrest), and also because of the prominence of temples as a proportion of the overall economy. However, the primary function of the temples was worship directed to deities.
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Antiquities law: Hosni and Hawass oppose new Egyptian law
AlMasryAlYoum (Emad Fouad)
At a parliamentary session Tuesday, Culture Minister Farouk Hosni and Zahi Hawass, secretary-general of the Supreme Council of Antiquities (SCA), urged opposition and independent MPs to vote down a bill permitting the buying and selling of antiquities inside Egypt.Both men warned of the dangers of unlicensed excavations if the bill is passed, recommending that the law be applied to fixed antiquities only–such as ancient buildings or walls–rather than transportable ones.
Hawass went on to refer to Article 8 of the existing antiquities law, which stipulates that all archaeological discoveries be reported to the SCA within a two-year period. He went on to request that this period be reduced to six months only.
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Levitating magnet could make fusion faster and cheaper
Fusion power has been held up by our inability to get the reaction hot and dense enough to self-sustain, or maintain its own temperature without externally-provided heat. By studying the magnetic fields of planets and other bodies in space, scientists have found a new configuration of magnetic fields that could help concentrate the density of the fuel. The setup uses a levitating magnet to help the plasma to move across magnetic field lines, which maintains its high density, eliminates particle loss, and may even allow for the use of cheaper helium-3 as fuel.
Fusion requires the reacting plasma to be well-confined, or densely packed, and the particles involved have to remain in that area to keep energy losses at a minimum. This helps the plasma achieve the Lawson criterion, the set of conditions needed for a plasma to not only reach ignition, but remain sufficiently confined to continue reacting and releasing energy. For many reactor designs, this means confining the plasma using magnetic fields.
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Could P2P blocking be legalized by new net neutrality rules?
The Electronic Frontier Foundation can’t believe it: the FCC’s network neutrality draft rules, if adopted in their current form, might give Comcast permission to flat-out block BitTorrent—precisely the scenario that led to the rules being drafted.
It’s a shocking claim, if true. Could FCC Chair Julius Genachowski’s big push for network neutrality actually authorize the very conduct it was (ostensibly) drafted to prevent, indiscriminate blocking of the bluntest kind?
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Antiquities market: Celtic Armadillos, Nilotic Fish, and a Bright Blue Shabti
Maine Antique Digest (Ian McKay)
The market in antiquities is one that continues to hold up strongly in the face of what remain difficult economic times for some markets, not to mention stricter export laws and regulations on what can and cannot be sold. Sotheby’s no longer holds antiquities sale in London, but Bonhams and Christies are doubtless happy to take full advantage of that, and as was the case last April, their October 2009 auctions saw healthy sales by lot as well as some strong prices. Sound, or at least old Western provenance was again a key selling point. . . .The real surprise in the Bonhams sale, however, was to be found among the Egyptian pieces—a bright blue-glazed composition royal shabti of the 19th Dynasty, circa 1279 B.C. It was one of a number of shabtis, or funerary figures, in a property sent to auction by an American couple who began buying antiquities in the 1970’s from British and U.S. salesrooms and dealers. They clearly had a particular passion for Egyptian pieces and this 5½” high figure, its back inscribed with six bands of hieroglyphs for King Menmaatre, or Seti I, an Egyptian pharaoh whose tomb in the Valley of the Kings was found in 1817 by the great Giovanni Battista Belzoni, a circus strongman and showman turned engineer, explorer, and amateur archaeologist.
Like the canine cameo, this was valued at $10,000 or thereabouts, but that possible Belzoni provenance and its association with one of the better-known pharaohs seems to have worked a potent spell.
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Feature: Sandro Vannini’s photos of entrance to tomb of Tutankhamun
When the entrance to the Tomb of King Tutankhamun (KV62) was discovered by the great explorer Howard Carter and his financier Lord Carnarvon, they could never have dreamed of the treasures which awaited them inside. These two men worked together to track down King Tut’s burial place, as explained in a Heritage Key video with Lord Carnarvon’s modern day ancestors the Earl and Countess of Carnarvon (Watch the Video).Egyptology photographer Sandro Vannini has spent much of the past decade photographing the fascinating artefacts discovered inside KV62, as well as capturing the tomb itself on film. But an angle that isn’t seen very often is that of the tomb’s entrance – the path walked down numerous times by Carter and his team as they excavated arguably the greatest find in archaeology.
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Ask Engadget: Best noise cancelling Bluetooth headset?
We know you’ve got questions, and if you’re brave enough to ask the world for answers, here’s the outlet to do so. This week’s Ask Engadget question is coming to us from Jonathon, who’s currently preparing for a summer of fun with top dropped. If you’re looking to send in an inquiry of your own, drop us a line at ask [at] engadget [dawt] com.
“I’m looking for a Bluetooth headset with the best noise reduction. I’ve got a convertible and would like to be able to have a conversation with the top down (at least around town, highway would be fantastic but probably unrealistic). So, any thoughts and / or suggestions?”BT headsets have come a long way since we first posted a similar question in 2005, so we suspect the answers here will be quite a bit different. Do you have a particular earpiece that you enjoy while cruising under the open skies? Don’t hold back on us, now.
Ask Engadget: Best noise cancelling Bluetooth headset? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Jan 2010 23:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Sungale adds a touch of sleek, a pinch of ugly to 4.3-inch Kula TV PMP

Approximately 7.234 Earthlings showed any semblance of caring about Sungale’s 4.3-inch Kula when we reported on it back in December, and that’s clearly due to the blatant omission of a huge, inappropriate antenna on the top. Inexplicably, the Kula TV — which is essentially the exactly same 4.3-inch PMP with 2GB of internal storage space — ships with a flip-up WiFi antenna that’s supposed to net you better signal than the month-old Kula. We can’t say we’re eager to ever find out if said claim is true or not, but you can be our guest this March when it ships for $199.99.
Continue reading Sungale adds a touch of sleek, a pinch of ugly to 4.3-inch Kula TV PMP
Sungale adds a touch of sleek, a pinch of ugly to 4.3-inch Kula TV PMP originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Jan 2010 22:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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