Category: News

  • Egypt finds hoard of 2,000-year-old bronze coins

    Thanks to everyone who sent links for this story.

    Boston Globe

    Archaeologists unearthed 383 bronze coins dating back to King Ptolemy III who ruled Egypt in the 3rd century B.C. and was an ancestor of the famed Cleopatra, the Egyptian antiquities authority announced Thursday.

    The statement said one side of the coins were inscribed with hybrid Greek-Egyptian god Amun-Zeus, while the other side showed an eagle and the words Ptolemy and king in Greek.

    Founded by one of Alexander the Great’s generals, the Ptolemaic Dynasty ruled Egypt for some 300 years, fusing Greek and ancient Egyptian cultures.

    The coins were found north of Qarun lake in Fayoum Oasis 50 miles (80 kilometers) southwest of Cairo.

    Other artifacts were unearthed in the area included three necklaces made of ostrich egg shell dated back to the 4th millennium B.C. and a pot of kohl eyeliner from the Ottoman Empire.


    Inquirer.net

    The 383 items dating back more than 2,250 years were found near Lake Qarun in Fayum oasis, around 120 kilometers (75 miles) from Cairo, the ministry said in a statement, adding that they were in excellent condition.

    The coins weighed 32 grams (1.12 ounces) each, with one face depicting the god Amun and the other the words “king” and “Ptolemy III” in Greek along with his effigy, the statement said.

    Other objects from different periods were also found during the dig, in addition to parts of a whale skeleton around 42 million years old, it added.

    The ministry said it was the first time Egyptian archaeologists had found necklaces made from ostrich eggshell at Fayum.

    Fox News

    With photographs.

  • Hawass chides museums over antiquities

    Indiana Gazette (Ula Ilnytzky)

    Zahi Hawass, secretary general of Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities, said Wednesday he had a wish list of objects he wants returned. He singled out several museums, including the St. Louis Art Museum, which he said has a 3,200-year-old mummy mask that was stolen before the museum acquired it.

    “We’re going to fight to get these unique artifacts back,” Hawass said at the New York preview of the “Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs,” an exhibition that has traveled to five other U.S. cities and London.

    Last week, he said, he turned over to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security “all the evidence that I have to prove that this mask was stolen, and we have to bring it back.”

    On Wednesday, St. Louis Art Museum spokeswoman Jennifer Stoffel, said the institution “had correspondence with Hawass in 2006 and 2007 and has not heard anything on the matter since.”

  • Questioning ‘one in four’

    The Guardian has an excellent article questioning the widely cited statistic that ‘1 in 4’ people will have a mental illness at some point in their lives. The issue of how many people have or will have a mental illness raises two complex issues: how we define an illness and how we count them.

    Defining an illness is a particularly tricky conceptual point and this is usually discussed as if it is an issue particular to psychiatry and psychology that doesn’t effect ‘physical medicine’ but it is actually a concern that is equally pressing in all types of poor health.

    The most clear-cut definition of an illness is usually given as an infectious disease that can be diagnosed with a laboratory test. For example, you either have the bacteria or you don’t.

    However, you will acquire lots of new bacteria that will continue to live in your body, some of which ’cause problems’ and others that don’t. So the decision rests not on the presence or absence of new bacteria, but on how we define what it means for one type to be ‘causing a problem’. This is the central point of all definitions of illness.

    For example, when are changes in heart function enough for them to be considered ‘heart disease’? Perhaps we judge them on the basis of their knock-on effects, but this raises the issue of what consequences we think are serious, and when we should consider them serious enough to count. Death within weeks, clearly, death within two years, maybe, but is still this the case if it occurs in a 90 year-old?

    The idea of a personal change ‘causing a problem’ is also influenced by culture as it relies on what we value as part of a fulfilling life.

    In times gone past, physical differences that caused sexual problems might only have been considered an illness if they prevented someone from having children. A man who had children, wanted no more, but was unable to have recreational sex with his wife due to physical changes might be considered unlucky but not ill.

    The idea of normal sexual function was different, and so the concept of abnormality and illness were also different.

    The same applies to mental illness. What we consider an illness depends on what we take for being normal and what someone has the ‘right’ to expect from life.

    The fact that the concept of depression as an illness has changed from only something that caused extreme disability (‘melancholy madness’) to something that prevents you from being content is likely due to the fact that, as a society, we have agreed that we have a right to expect that we enjoy our lives. There was no such expectation in the past.

    The problem of correctly diagnosing an illness is a related problem. After we have decided on the definition of an illness, there is the issue of how reliably we can detect it – how we fit observations of the patient to the definition.

    This is a significant issue for psychiatry, which largely relies on changes in behaviour and subjective mental states, but it also affects other medical specialities.

    Contrary to popular belief, most ‘physical’ illness are not diagnosed with lab tests. As in psychiatry, while lab tests can help the process (by excluding other causes or confirming particular symptoms) the majority of diagnoses of all types are made by what is known as a ‘clinical diagnosis’.

    This is no more than a subjective judgement by a doctor that the signs and symptoms of a patient amount to a particular illness.

    For example, the diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis depends on the doctor making a judgement that the mixture of subjectively reported symptoms by the patient and objective observations on the body amount to the condition.

    The key test of whether a illness can be counted is how reliably this process can be completed – or, in other words, whether doctors consistently agree on whether patients have or don’t have the condition.

    This is more of an issue for psychiatry because diagnosis relies more heavily on the patient’s subjective experience, but it is wrong to think that bodily observations are necessarily more reliable.

    For example, the Babinski response is where the toes curl upward after the plantar reflex is tested by stroking the bottom of the foot. It is commonly used by neurologists to test for damage to the upper motor neurons but it is remarkably unreliable. In fact, neurologists agree on whether it is present at a far lower rate than would be acceptable for the diagnosis of a mental illness or psychiatric symptom.

    The problem of reliably diagnosing a condition is relatively easy to overcome, however, as agreement is easy to test and refine. The problem of what we consider an illness is a deeper conceptual issue and this is the essence of the debates over how many people have a mental illness.

    The ‘1 in 4’ figures seems to have been mostly plucked out of the air. If this seems too high an estimate, you may be surprised to learn that studies on how many people qualify for a psychiatry diagnosis suggest it is too low.

    There is actually no hard evidence for one in four – or any other number – because there’s never been any research looking at the overall lifetime rates of mental illness in Britain. The closest thing we’ve had is the Psychiatric Morbidity Survey, run by the Office of National Statistics. The latest survey, done in 2007, found a rate of about one in four, 23%, but this asked people whether they’d suffered symptoms in the past week (for most disorders).

    We don’t know what the corresponding rate for lifetime illness is, although it must be higher. Several such studies have been done in other English speaking countries, however. The most recent major survey of the US population found an estimated lifetime rate of no less than 50.8%. Another study in Dunedin, New Zealand, found that more than 50% of the people there had suffered from mental illness at least once by the age of 32.

    Psychiatry has a tendency for ‘diagnosis creep’ where unpleasant life problems are increasingly defined as medical disorders, partly due to pressure from drug companies who develop compounds that could genuinely help non-medical problems. The biggest market is the USA where most drugs are dispensed via insurance claims and insurance companies demand an official diagnosis to fund the drugs, hence, pressure to create new diagnoses from companies and distressed people.

    Whenever someone criticises a diagnosis as being unhelpful a common response is to suggest the critic has no compassion for the people with the problem or that they are wanting to deny them help.

    The most important issue is not whether people are suffering or whether there is help available to them, but whether medicine is the best way of understanding and assisting people.

    Medicine has the potential to do great harm as well as great good and it is not an approach which should be used without seriously considering the risks and benefits, both in terms of the individual and in terms of how it shifts our society’s view of ourselves and the share of responsibility for dealing with personal problems.

    So when you hear figures that suggest that ‘1 in 4’ or ‘50%’ of people will have a mental illness in their lifetime, question what this means. The figure is often used to try and destigmatise mental illness but the most powerful bit of The Guardian article shows that this is not necessary:

    People who experience mental illness often face stigma and discrimination, and it’s right to oppose this. But stigma is wrong whether the rate of mental illness is one in four, or one in 400. We shouldn’t need statistics to remind us that mental illness happens to real people. By saying that mental health problems are nothing to be ashamed of because they’re common, one in four only serves to reinforce the assumption that there’s something basically shameful about being “abnormal”.

    If you want more background on the ‘1 in 4’ figure or discussion about how we understand what is mental illness and who has it, an excellent three part series on Neuroskeptic tackled exactly this point.

    Link to ‘How true is the one-in-four mental health statistic?’
    Parts one two and three of excellent Neuroskeptic series

  • Exhibition: Tutankhamun in New York

    abc local (Sandra Bookman)

    With video of exhibitin preview.

    For the first time in more than three decades, King Tut is back in New York. And this time around, we know a lot more about the ancient boy king.

    It’s the last stop of an eight-city tour, and this new Tut exhibit has already been seen by 7 million visitors.

    But curators say the New York stop, at the Discovery Times Square Exposition, features more new artifacts in a larger space, and they’re promising you’ve never seen the boy king like this.

    King Tut, whose golden treasures last captivated New York and the world 31 years ago, has returned.

    And organizers of the exhibition “Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs” are promising a show that’s even bigger and better the second time around.

    “This one has 130 artifacts, 50 of which are from Tutankhamun,” curator Dr. David Silverman said. “In actuality, they are two and a half times the size of last time.”

    New York Times (Edward Rothstein)

    There has always been something a little disorienting, almost out of proportion, about King Tut. Is there any Egyptian pharaoh now more widely known, any more celebrated? The extraordinary objects found in his tomb have been viewed by millions, and the more objects from that horde are seen, the larger Tut looms. Yet the more we know, the less imposing he becomes, and the more puzzling the contrast seems.

    Visit “Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs,” which opens on Friday at the Discovery Times Square Exposition, and if you have ever been astonished by the objects found in the king’s tomb — whether from seeing Tut’s first museum tour in the 1970s, or this more wide-ranging show in one of its six preceding locations — you will be amazed again. (New York is its last stop before the artifacts return to Egypt in January.)

    This show expands the historical horizon of the ground-breaking blockbuster that was Tut I by linking the king to his ancestors (and, incidentally, enshrining the now dominant spelling of his name). It also breaks with the museological origins of that first tour, which took shape under the oversight of Thomas Hoving, then director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.


    Heritage Key
    (Helen Atkinson)

    For me, the press preview of the Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs exhibition, which opened in New York today, was a momentous event because I’ve never met Dr. Zahi Hawass before, and I got to look him in the eye and shake his hand and even ask him a question. I’ll come to all that in a minute.

    The exhibition is impressive. I can’t deny that. There was a moment when I actually stopped dead in my tracks, mouth open (soon to be hustled out of the way by a pushy New York journo). This happened when I came upon a huge bust of Akhenaten, King Tut’s autocratic probable Dad, high, high atop a great slab of honeyed stone, lit with a powerful spotlight, his face astonishingly realistic, the lips curved, cruel, sensual. I felt like Shelley’s “traveler from an antique land” finding the ruined statue of King Ozymandias in the desert.

    The exhibition’s website is at
    http://www.kingtut.org/home

  • Make Your Neck Exercises Habit!

    So often after asking a patient how they have been doing with their home stretches and exercises, they reply: “Oh yeah, I haven’t been doing them as much as I’m supposed to.”

    One of the problems is this- he or she gets out of pain and tends to forget about doing them. The exercises, stretches, or our traction neck pillow may get you out of pain quickly, but that doesn’t mean you should stop using them. To really make change in the spine more permanent you need to continue with all of these things. If someone comes to see me that’s had neck pain or back pain for one year, the research shows it could take one year to get out of that pain and correct the problem. It depends on the severity and length of time the problem has been going on.

    Once one relieves their neck pain they can cut back on their neck exercises, but still do them once in awhile. One of the reasons is that there are constant stressors on our neck- working at a computer all day, general stress, gravity …

    One of the best ways to remember your neck stretches or exercises is to make it part of your daily routine, or habit! For example, do them every morning after you get out of the shower, do them in the shower, do them at work before your day gets going …

    If you do them regularly they start to become habit. So even after you get out of pain, it’s a good idea to do some simple stretches and exercises to prevent future injury. It will only take a couple of minutes and is very important for your health. Don’t neglect your body, or it starts neglecting you!

    Visit Arc4life.com for your online selection of cervical support neck pillows, orthopedic pain relief products and Home traction units. Products for pain relief. Add to Technorati Favorites Delicious Bookmark this on Delicious Stumble It!


  • Samsung Wave S8500 Gets Delayed

    Found under: Samsung, Wave, S8500, Bada, ,

    Samsungs first bada smartphone the Wave S8500 was announced back at MWC 2010 but it still hasnt made it to stores yet. Most importantly it looks like the device will be pushed back to June in the UK and we have no idea why Samsung decided to postpone the launch. While this bada OS might not be the talk of the town its still a more than dependable smartphone and it also happens to be the first bada phone coming from Samsung. The Wave S8500 comes with a Super AMOLED touchscreen dis

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  • WiFi n Features to be Enabled on Google Nexus One by Android Froyo?

    Found under: Google, Nexus One, Android, WiFi, Broadcom,

    After we found out that Google isnt working on those strange 3G issues its beloved smartphone keeps having we now hear a more interesting story according to which a future firmware update Android 2.2 aka Android Froyo will bring 802.11n connectivity to the Google Nexus One. Yes thats right it looks like the Google Nexus One can do WiFi n after all and it only needs some new drivers to have it enabled. Broadcom and Google have apparently been working on such drivers which will be

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  • HTC Not to Buy Palm Anymore, Lenovo Main Candidate

    Found under: HTC, Lenovo, Palm, ,

    You might recall how we told you a little while ago that Palm might be purchased by HTC. Well it looks like thats not the case anymore. HTC has decided not to bid for this problematic company although some of us really hoped to see HTC-made webOS-based smartphones soons. According to Reuters the company has decided against the idea as there just werent enough synergies to take the deal forward. Furthermore Palms CEO Jon Rubinstein said that his company has what it takes to stay t

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  • Bath & Body Works Le Couvent Des Minimes Formula No. 112 Honey & Shea Extra Gentle Sugar Scrub, 14.1 oz (400 g)



    Le Couvent des Minimes, located in the heart of Haute Provence, is a unique sun-drenched convent with an ancestral tradition of love and passion for aromatic plants and natural ingredients. Le Couvent des Minimes product recipes follow the traditions of the Sisters of the Convent, as these ingredients are carefully blended to create effective skincare products. Based on this Provencal tradition, Formula 112 blends almond, apricot, and grape seed oils with sweet sugar for a delightful experience. Enriched with Shea Butter, it leaves the skin soft to the touch and deliciously scented.

    View Bath & Body Works Le Couvent Des Minimes Formula No. 112 Honey & Shea Extra Gentle Sugar Scrub, 14.1 oz (400 g) details

  • Atlanta Hawks versus Milwaukee Bucks Game 3 ESPN TV NBA Basketball Betting Free Pick

    Our free pick on Saturday for our forum visitor comes from game 3 of the playoff series between the Atlanta Hawks and Milwaukee Bucks. This Eastern conference playoff game will tip off in Milwaukee at 7PM Eastern Time and you can watch it on ESPN. With our free pick we will play on the Atlanta Hawks and Milwaukee Bucks to play over the total of 187 points.

    The Atlanta Hawks have not been a good defensive club on the highway this season allowing their opponents over 46% shooting from the field. The team lacks size in the paint and I expect the Milwaukee Bucks to play fast here and drive it inside at the Hawks behind Brandon Jennings playmaking ability with the basketball. John Salmons and Ersan Ilyasova will come up big in front of the home crowd aiding our cause for an over play tonight.

    Bet Atlanta Hawks and Milwaukee Bucks over 187 points

    Courtesy of Tonys Picks

  • Solar Mobile Charging Kiosks aim to make cellphones greener

    solar charging kiosk_6

    Eco Factor: Concept charging station powered by renewable solar energy.

    Of all portable electronic gadgets that are out there on the market, cellphones seem to attract one and all. Smartphones also bundle various systems into one device that makes the offer even more lucrative. However, the rising concerns about energy and e-waste, have made industrial designers think about concepts that are green or make cellphones greener in one way or the other.

    (more…)

  • Michigan Tech students create air-powered moped

    air powered moped

    Eco Factor: Hybrid moped powered by compressed air.

    Seniors at the Department of Mechanical Engineering of Michigan Technological University have developed a hybrid moped that is powered by compressed air and human energy. The moped was exhibited at Tech’s Undergraduate Expo.

    (more…)

  • E. Rex three-wheeled EV beats Prius on the efficiency scale

    e

    Eco Factor: Zero-emission efficient vehicle powered by electricity.

    Silicon Valley startup OptaMotive is building the E. Rex for the Progressive Automotive X Prize, which is being claimed to be three time more efficient that a Toyota Prius. The E. Rex has a top speed of 144mph and offers a range of about 100 miles.

    (more…)

  • More+ Bus Handles generate renewable energy for handheld devices

    more_1

    Eco Factor: Concept bus handles designed to generate renewable electricity.

    More+ Bus Handle is the brainchild of industrial designer Junjie Zhang, who believes that while swinging from the bus poles on those hangers, you can do much more than simply pushing the person in front of you for more space. The concept relies on the use of piezoelectric ceramics that generate renewable electricity.

    (more…)

  • Pandur concept EV features automatically changing wheels

    pandur_1

    Eco Factor: Zero-emission vehicle powered by electricity.

    The Pandur by industrial designer Popescu Lucian is a zero-emission concept electric vehicle that is equipped with electric motors on its rear set of wheels and a battery pack mounted near the front wheels. The vehicle features a metallic frame that is strengthened by a band of durable plastic that acts as a chair too and sustains the three wheels.

    (more…)

  • 2010 Beijing: Honda LI NIAN Everus Concept, production model due end of 2010

    Honda LI NIAN Everus Concept

    At the 2010 Beijing Motor Show, Honda surprised the automotive world with a new concept for its LI NIAN brand, Guangqi Honda’s proprietary automobile brand (previously known as Guangzhou Honda).

    “The mass-production model of this concept car will be introduced at the Guangzhou Motor Show, scheduled at the end of this year,” Honda said.

    No additional details on the Honda LI NIAN Everus Concept were revealed. We’re not sure if this hints at the next-generation design of Honda sedans but it looks like Honda took some design hints from its Acura department. We’ll update you on the details as we get them.

    Honda LI NIAN Everus Concept:

    – By: Omar Rana


  • Sony PS3 Now Has MLB.TV


    One of the things that other systems, like Boxee, have going for them is app support. The ability to integrate apps into an existing system and expand it’s capabilities is something that more and more devices are adding and the PS3 is now no exception.

    MLB.tv is now available on the PS3 in quite an impressive way. According to PLAYSTATION.BLOG, the app supports the following:

    MLB Scoreboard – See a schedule of today’s games (and set options to control whether or not you see the scores)

    Home and Away Feeds – Choose to watch either the home or away broadcast feed

    HD quality video and DVR functionality – watch a live game in HD (with Live Game DVR functionality that lets you pause and rewind live games of fast-forward back to live game action)

    Season Archive – Want to re-live a great moment? Go back and watch games you’ve missed from earlier in the season.

    Scrollable Linescore – Go directly to any half-inning to watch only that portion of the game.

    Favorite Teams/Calendar Schedule – Scroll through the entire 2010 Major League Baseball schedule in calendar format or designate your favorite team(s) to see the schedule for that team.

    To see it in action, check out the video here:

    Talk about a feature list. What effectively makes me say “Like zoinks Scoob!” is the integration of DVR functionality. It’s now starting to approach the utopian IPTV future of a la carte services I have always dreamed of…ok well it’s a start.

    Given the PS3’s growing install base, let’s hope more and more content providers make the leap to the PS3.

  • Chevrolet Volt MPV5 Crossover Revealed in Beijing

    Chevy Looks Ready to Expand Volt Lineup
    Canadian Auto Press

    It’s taken Toyota a dozen plus years before mere rumblings of an expanded Prius “range” started hitting the news, but Chevrolet appears ready to capitalize on its Volt nameplate before the first car hits the road.

    2010 Chevrolet Volt MPV5 Crossover

    2010 Chevrolet Volt MPV5 Crossover

    The sedan is forthcoming as a 2011 model, but Chevy shows that it doesn’t want to stop there.  Revealed in Beijing, the five-door Volt MPV5 concept rides on the same Voltec architecture as the four-door Volt.

    The Volt MPV5 concept is just that, a concept, but the fact that Chevrolet is showing it verifies that it has plans to expand on the a name that’s almost become as well known as Prius.  The Voltec architecture, however, is far more advanced than the Prius, being an extended range EV that sources drive power from electric motors and uses a small gasoline engine as a generator to restore battery power; the Prius, like other hybrids, uses electric motors to support a conventional internal combustion engine.

    The Volt MPV5’s powertrain is the same as the Volt sedan, rated at 150 horsepower and powered by a 16 kilowatt-hour lithium-ion battery pack.  The Volt MPV5 should be capable of similar performance as the four-door model, but greater drag from its increased frontal area means its electric range is reduced to 51 km (32 miles) from the Volt sedan’s 64 km (40 miles).

    It doesn’t take an eye for detail to see the similarities between the Volt sedan and MPV5, the new crossover sporting the same grille design, basically the same headlamp cluster shape, like taillights, while the overall body style mimics the upcoming Orlando crossover.

    Inside, the MPV5’s dash and instrument cluster looks near identical to the Volt sedan, and doesn’t seat any more people either.  The new crossover would likely be more comfortable thanks to its upright stature, mind you, and as far as cargo space is concerned, the concept is much more accommodating than the real thing at 864 litres (30.5 cubic feet) compared to 301 litres (10.6 cu ft) for the sedan.

    So, will this concept become the real thing?  A production Volt MPV5 is more than likely for myriad reasons, the first being almost certain success.  Another bonus is reduced CAFE ratings for GM’s light truck lineup on the whole.

    China may be the locale of introduction, but the stylish crossover would likely be sold in North America as well due to strong name recognition and our penchant for all things hybrid-electric.

    Could a two-door coupe like the original Volt concept be next?

    2010 Chevrolet Volt MPV5 Crossover
    2010 Chevrolet Volt MPV5 Crossover
    2010 Chevrolet Volt MPV5 Crossover
    2010 Chevrolet Volt MPV5 Crossover
    2010 Chevrolet Volt MPV5 Crossover
    2010 Chevrolet Volt MPV5 Crossover
    2010 Chevrolet Volt MPV5 Crossover
    2010 Chevrolet Volt MPV5 Crossover