Category: News

  • American Humane to Help Pets in Haiti

    While relief efforts for people affected by the earthquake in Haiti are ongoing, a new relief effort focused on Haiti’s pets will soon begin.

    American Humane, the only national organization dedicated to protecting both children and animals, is the first organization to join the efforts of Animal Relief Coalition for Haiti (ARCH). They’re committing significant resources to ARCH, created by the World Society for the Protection of Animals and the International Fund for Animal Welfare.

    A boy whose family has taken refuge at Coram Deo Orphanage, hugs the orphanage's pet dog as Karen Bultje, the camp's director, explains the needs of earthquake survivors on Saturday, January 16, 2010 in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. (Newscom/Carl Juste/Miami Herald/MCT)

    A boy whose family has taken refuge at Coram Deo Orphanage, hugs the orphanage's pet dog as Karen Bultje, the camp's director, explains the needs of earthquake survivors on Saturday, January 16, 2010 in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. (Newscom/Carl Juste/Miami Herald/MCT)

    Due to restricted access, ARCH personnel are not yet on the ground in Haiti, but they hope to be there very soon. You can follow the work of American Humane on Twitter.

    Relief efforts by professional animal rescue responders will include:

    • Setting up a mobile animal clinic and staff to perform outreach work
    • Assessing and assisting with the needs of animals belonging to people displaced by the earthquake

    To donate to help with emergency animal programs, visit American Humane.

    (Image via Newscom)

    Post from: Blisstree

    American Humane to Help Pets in Haiti

  • Video: 2011 Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG does a barrel roll inside a tunnel

    2011 Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG Tunnel Flip

    There is no doubt that Mercedes-Benz is really proud of its new SLS AMG supercar – so much so that the Stuttgart automaker came up with a couple of outstanding TV spots for the vehicle in Germany. One spot, which has a lot of people talking (especially on YouTube) features the SLS AMG doing a barrel roll inside a tunnel (and we mean crawling on the walls and everything). Thinks its real? Let us know your thoughts in the comments section after the jump.

    You can check out the ad spot and a bunch of others after the jump.

    Click here for more Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG news.

    Refresher: Power comes from a 6.2L V8 making 563-hp with a maximum torque of 479 lb-ft. Mated to an E-SELECT system that controls the AMG SPEEDSHIFT DCT 7-speed sports transmission, the SLS AMG can go from 0 to 62 mph in just 3.7 seconds (with the Race Start launch control system) with a top speed of 196 mph.

    2011 Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG:

    2011 Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG 2011 Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG 2011 Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG 2011 Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG

    2011 Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG Tunnel Flip

    2011 Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG Aluminum Chassis

    2011 Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG Aerodynamics

    2011 Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG Engine Production

    2011 Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG The Engine

    2011 Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG Racestart

    2011 Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG:

    – By: Omar Rana


  • Your freedom of speech|votre liberté de parole

    Right I thought about opening a new thread so that everyone shares their own thoughts and Ideas of whats happening in life today and how we can support our own country, by supporting our country I mean working together and getting along..,

    I have a question to ask and I am sure some other people, I have Noticed that ‘Algerians’ have changed completely and has grown more Islamic and stricter it keeps on going, comparing to decades ago! what i want to ask is what is the reason of this ?

  • HTC Espresso Coming Out in May from T-Mobile?

    Found under: HTC, Espresso, MyTouch Slide, myTouch2, T-Mobile,,

    T-Mobile USA is going to launch a new HTC mobile phone. The HTC Espresso also known as the MyTouch Slide and the myTouch2 will apparently be available in American T-Mobile stores starting this May. The phone is scheduled for a May 17 launch but we have no prices just yet. The Android device will come with Android 2.1 on board and is said to sport a 528MHz processor a full QWERTY keyboard and a 320 x 480 display. This new Android Expresso handset could be the successor of the myT

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  • CALIFÍCALO | Maracaibo | Edificio Las Laras

    EDIFICIO LAS LARAS


    Maracaibo

    Construido en 1928 en Maracaibo por la Royal Dutch_Shell como oficina central de sus operaciones petroleras en el oeste de Venezuela. El edificio fue declarado patriminio cultural de la nación desde 1991 y re-utilizada por la Shell desde el año 2005. Es un sobresaliente ejemplo de la adecuación de la Arquitectura al clima tropical.



    el 28 de octubre de 1991, la Junta Nacional Protectora y Conservadora del Patrimonio Histórico y Artístico de la Nación declaró monumento histórico y artístico de la Nación al edificio Las Laras, que está ubicado en Maracaibo, Estado Zulia.

    el 24 de junio de 1994, se produjo un incendio en el edificio Las Laras, el cual, según el informe de los bomberos, fue “intencional”.

    luego de una década en la que el edificio ha estado al servicio de “Malandros y huele pegas”, en noviembre de 2003 se iniciaron unos trabajos de construcción que incluían la tala y quema de los árboles “Laras” que circundan al edificio, hecho que denunciaron en la Guardia Nacional, pero no han obtenido respuesta.

    Remodelacion Edificio Las Laras




  • David Jaffe Reflects on Calling All Cars Server Shut Down

    Calling All Cars

    This past Wednesday, the servers for David Jaffe’s PSN multiplayer game Calling All Cars were taken offline, meaning you’ll likely never be able to play it online gain. And on his official blog, Jaffe shared a number of fascinating thoughts on the occasion — looking back at both what they achieved with Calling All Cars, and want went wrong (via Joystiq).

    “I’d say she had a good run online, but she really didn’t,” Jaffe began. “With the exception of the first few hours when the game hit PSN, there were never more than 3-5 people playing at a time.” Jaffe explains that ultimately the biggest problem with the game was what he called a “lack of stickiness.”

    “I think we did a really good job making a fantastic piece of bubble gum that was sweet and jam packed with sugar and had a hell of a bang when you put it in your mouth,” he wrote. “But for some reason I still have not totally figured out, the flavor faded VERY fast. You could come back to it after 2-4 weeks and have that same great experience, but it was always a really short ride.”

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  • Rotterdam: De Werelden

    Vandaag eens naar dit project wezen kijken in Hillesluis. Beetje klein voor een echt project topic, dus daarom maar in het café geplaatst.

    De Werelden is een nieuwbouwproject in Hillesluis voor betaalbare grondgebondenwoningen. Bijgaan de foto’s

    17-01:

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  • L.A July 2009

    An extremely interesting city….for a variety of reasons.


    From the air while flying in.


    Hollywood Blvd at night…and the former tallest building in L.A.


    Lied flat on my back for this one.


    The Spank Bank of America tower is in my top 5 fave towers so I got a lot of pictures taken with it.


    L.A only had like 10 subway stations…so as a result they were able to make them all look utterly mental. TBH I think this was rush hour.


    While in NY I visited a Paul Smith store there to buy my gf some clothes…they didn’t have what I wanted and without batting an eyelid the teller said, ‘you could try visit the L.A store if you want?’ Sure mate…I’ll just travel 2,500 miles to see if somewhere else has the t-shirt I want.
    Little did he actually know I was actually going to L.A anyway…but their store still didn’t have the jacket I was after.


    I will forever remember this statue due to the fact there was a heavy petting couple near-by!

    Probably more later.
    Any questions about L.A?

  • Windows Mobile 7 Version Out in the Wild Already?

    Found under: Windows Mobile 7, Microsoft, MWC, ,

    We have some good news for you folks Well they are mostly good news as we arent talking about the final WinMo 7 version. It looks like an early version of Windows Mobile 7 build has been spotted in the wild and we might just see Microsofts latest OS arriving proudly at the next MWC in Spain.From the hands on experience of Eldar Murtazin it seems that the new OS has been built on scratch and Windows Mobile 7 is not backwards compatible with any of the apps for the previous versions

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  • The Crumbling Pillars of Climate Change by Doug L. Hoffman

    Article Tags: Doug L. Hoffman, Headline Story

    Image Attachment

    One well accepted definition of the “Three Pillars of Science” lists the three as theory, experimentation and computation. For climate science this translates into climate theory, gathering climate data, and climate modeling. The three pillars are due a update in this post Copenhagen, post Climategate world. After reviewing the past year’s crop of discoveries and disclosures, it seems that all three pillars are still wobbly at best—even without questionable conduct on the part of warm-mongering researchers.

    No doubt about it, it has been a hard year for the global warming true believers—a frigid cold winter, Climategate, and faltering political support, all capped off by the yawn-in at Copenhagen. Among the public, global warming fatigue continues to spread while global warming boosters become ever shriller. But what about the actual science behind the global warming theory? In The Resilient Earth we based our evaluation of anthropogenic global warming (AGW) on the three pillars of climate science given above. This article revisits the evaluation of each pillar starting with the state of climate theory.

    Click source to read FULL report by Doug L. Hoffman

    Source: theresilientearth.com

    Read in full with comments »   


  • Next Android Version to be Called Froyo?

    Found under: Android, Froyo, Google, OS, ,

    Dont act so surprised now as everyone is expecting Google to launch a new Android version soon And rumors concerning such version have started to circle the Internets. In fact it looks like you the new Android version will be called Froyo and theres nothing you can do about it. Froyo stands for frozen yoghurt and were not surprised to see Google continue its sweet Android line with another desert name. The only problem that I foresee is that at some point the alphabet will be ov

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  • FREE: NASA Space Shuttle Engines [Space Shuttles]

    Since no one wanted to buy the space shuttles when NASA first offered them up for sale, the agency has decided to slash the price to a more modest $28.8 million each. And the engines? Free (pay only S+H).

    Discovery is already headed to the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum, but those other two? Atlantis and Endeavour? Totally available and looking to score.

    And the engines I mentioned above originally went for about $400,000 to $800,000 apiece, but no one bit when they were put up for sale in December 2008. Now, when they go out of service with the rest of the shuttle program, they’ll be yours if you pony up the cost of shipping. [NYT via Slashdot]







  • Gene variant prolongs anxiety reactions in mice and men




    Mice are often used in studying behavior because of their genetic similarities to humans, but whether the mouse engages in the same behavior as humans is not always clear. But a study of a gene implicated in anxiety suggests that not only are the behaviors similar, but the underlying mechanism is as well. Although the genetic variant appears to cause anxious behavior in both mice and humans, the genetic change actually caused an impairment in unlearning fearful stimuli, which makes it difficult for individuals to learn that a certain cue signals safety rather than threat.

    The gene in question is called brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), and past studies have noted a link between BDNF variants and elevated anxiety-related behavior in mice. Scientists were unsure whether the same gene variant caused similar behavior in humans and how exactly it produced the overt behavioral changes.

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  • Learning How to Prevent Hair Loss – 2 Secrets You Should Know

    Do you know how to prevent hair loss? This is a question that always crops up from people who are having this kind of condition. A good thing about this problem is that it can be prevented. Although men are the ones usually affected by this condition, women are not spared. Reality dictates that hair fall is happening and that it affects most people today, young and old, men and women alike. It is equally embarrassing for both sexes to experience balding, especially at a young age. Hair loss has more commonly been implicated with genetics and hormones. In fact, 90 percent of thinning hair stems from these two causes.

    Other Causes 

    Dihydrotestosterone or DHT is the key hormonal byproduct of testosterone that retards or stops the growth of the hair follicles in men. The more of this byproduct is being ingested in the body, the more that hair follicles become finer and thinner until they are completely lost. For women, hair loss is more visible during menopause. Not so with age because we do not expect balding women nor do we anticipate this kind of condition in the same appearance and order with men.  

    How to Prevent Hair Loss  

    This is one of the most common questions asked today. Losing hair is definitely bad news to anyone. It adds more worry to the everyday stress one is already experiencing. Knowing the exact cause is the first step, how to prevent hair fall comes next. Once you know the cause, you will be able to find the best treatment for such condition. Preventing balding should not be a problem. You just have to learn to take care of your hair and of your whole body in general. Clean and stress-free living may just decrease your potential of experiencing shedding hair.  

    And Finally A Breakthrough That I came across…

    Don’t wait for this problem to start, because you can prevent it. I came across a  breakthrough in treating balding conditions naturally. Healthy hair is regained by supplementing the nutritional building blocks with natural ingredients and this breakthrough is the answer to the most asked question today – how to prevent hair loss.

    The author has struggled with hair loss for years, trying one product after another to figure out how to prevent hair loss till he came across this breakthrough product that not only blocked his hair fall, but also helped him grow back his hair. Go to http://www.squidoo.com/how-to-prevent-hair-loss-now now to find out more!


    Original article source: http://ezinearticles.com/?Learning-How-to-Prevent-Hair-Loss—2-Secrets-You-Should-Know&id=1916414

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    Therapro Mediceutical Therarx Pre-shampoo Antibacterial Scalp & Skin Treatment 12 Fl. Oz.

  • News Round-Up: January 2010 1st Edition

    In the earthquake tragedy in Haiti, social media is being used to aid donations as well as to get information out to the rest of the world. This is covered in this article here. Professor Richard Williams, is interviewed in this article and discusses some of the effects that the earthquake might have on children in Haiti and approaches to responding to this.

    A recent study that has attracted media interest is a murine study suggesting that looking at nerve cell death in the retina can be used to predict Alzheimer’s Disease. This is covered in more detail at the NHS Choices site where it is noted that human trials are awaited before such conclusions can be drawn. Several studies providing evidence of an association between amyloid protein-induced damage to the microtubule system in human and murine cells and Down’s Syndrome, Alzheimer’s Disease and atherosclerosis. It will be interesting to see further supporting in-vivo studies.

    The Psychiatric Bulletin familiar to British Psychiatrists has been renamed ‘The Psychiatrist’ and includes articles submitted by allied mental health professionals. There are 2 interesting articles on the recovery model as well as a meta-analysis of low and high-dose quetiapine. The latter article looks includes two studies (combined n=175) and concludes from the evidence that low and high dose quetiapine show equal efficacy in schizophrenia on outcome measures including positive symptom score on the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale although these were 6-week trials  (Painuly, 2010). There is another interesting article by a nurse and psychologist team reviewing the standard community mental healthcare for people with severe personality disorder. The researchers were interested in the standard management against which other treatments were compared and conclude by recommending further empirical evidence for the standard approach (Koekkoek et al, 2010).

    Round-Ups

    MindHacks has another good round-up of the news and links to a number of articles including a novel drug with anxiolytic properties. Mental Nurse have another round-up of blog articles including a look at Frontier Psychiatrist’s article on antidepressant use in dogs. The grand rounds includes a link to the Dr Shock article on virtual reality therapy for PTSD.

    Evolutionary Psychiatry

    A recent finding has been the interpretation of a 50,000 year-old Neanderthal clam shall which contains remnants of yellow and red pigmentation together with a black mineral substance. The researchers have concluded that this pigmentation was being used as make-up. Since humans did not arrive in Europe till much later, it was concluded that this is evidence of a Neanderthal culture and this adds to other evidence about Neanderthal intelligence (see here also). This also raises possible questions about the transformation of human art on entering Europe. The most interesting question however is whether Neanderthals are part of our genetic heritage and that question will hopefully be answered with the sequencing of specimens of the Neanderthal genome. The recent sequencing of the Chimpanzee y chromosome suggests that chimpanzees have between one-third and one-half of the genes in the human genome and that the y chromsome has undergone rapid changes relative to the other chromosomes which have been sequenced in both humans and chimpanzees. This should have implications for the kind of inferences we can draw.

    References

    Koekkoek B, van Meijel B and Hutschemaekers G. Community Mental Healthcare for people with severe personality disorder: narrative review. The Psychiatrist. Review Article. 34. 24-30.

    Painuly N. High v low-dose quetiapine in schizophrenia: meta-analysis. The Psychiatrist. 2010. 34. 9-12.

    Twitter

    You can follow ‘The Amazing World of Psychiatry’ Twitter by clicking on this link

    Podcast

    You can listen to this post on Odiogo by clicking on this link (there may be a small delay between publishing of the blog article and the availability of the podcast).

    TAWOP Channel

    You can follow the TAWOP Channel on YouTube by clicking on this link

    Responses

    If you have any comments, you can leave them below or alternatively e-mail [email protected]

    Disclaimer

    The comments made here represent the opinions of the author and do not represent the profession or any body/organisation. The comments made here are not meant as a source of medical advice and those seeking medical advice are advised to consult with their own doctor. The author is not responsible for the contents of any external sites that are linked to in this blog.

  • Pro-Russian Candidate Wins First Round Of Ukrainian Election

    ukraine swine flu yulia

    Four years ago, Ukrainians took to the streets to support an ostensibly open democratic movement dubbed the “Orange Revolution.”

    But the country has stagnated since then, and today voters offically took steps to turn back the clock, as former loser Victor Yanukovich won the first round of the country’s national election.

    Yanukovich is Putin’s preferred candidate, and his election would take the country much closer to Moscow — perhaps an appealing prospect for a country that lives in fear of freezing winters, and the threat of Russians shutting off national gas.

    But his election is no sure thing.

    Current prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko (pictured) won the second place in the election, and when all the voters go to the polls to select between just two candidates (in the next round) she could easily pull ahead.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • January 2010 Links: Foundation Giving, Weatherization, Science, Borders, and More

    * Drop in Foundation Giving May Be Steeper than Anticipated. Those of you who want a piece of the action should read Isaac’s post PSST! Listen, Do You Want to Know a Secret? Do you Promise Not to Tell?* Here’s How to Write Foundation Proposals.

    * You’ve gotta love the convoluted program titles used by the feds, or, in this case, the Department of Energy, which is offering “Recovery Act – Weatherization Assistance Program Training Centers And Programs grants.”

    Whoever wrote the RFP also conflates goals and objectives. They should read Isaac’s post “The Goal of Writing Objectives is to Achieve Positive Outcomes (Say What?),” which is much clearer than its intentionally verbose title.

    * It turns out that microfinance isn’t a silver bullet. For those of you unfamiliar with the concept, microfinance involves making very small loans to very poor people in developing countries; Muhammad Yunus and Grameen Bank won a Nobel Peace Prize for inventing and/or popularizing the practice.

    * One person wrote us an e-mail we responded to, and in a follow-up he said:

    Thanks for the info, and I look forward to reading the blog post. I’ve learned more about grants and grant writing from reading your blog than I did earning my B.S. in Emergency Admin. and Planning.

    Now that’s a compliment! Depressingly enough, the last section is probably true.

    * Along the same lines as above, but from a Tweet: “Not to send business elsewhere, but I highly recommend this #grant newsletter: http://blog.seliger.com/ #foundations.”

    * Megan McArdle says that jobs programs don’t work from a macroeconomic perspective:

    Even if you could surmount union opposition, the federal government has an ever-increasing thicket of red tape that makes such a thing impractical. It takes months to get hired for a job with the federal government. It takes months to ramp up a new program. By the time you’d gotten your NWPA through Congress over strenuous union objections, appointed someone to head it, set up the funding and hiring procedures, and actually hired people, it would be 2011. Maybe 2012. Perhaps you could waive all the civil service and associated procedure surrounding federal hiring, but I don’t see how.

    * Grants.gov will close for four days in February. When is the last time Amazon.com intentionally closed at all?

    * Terrorists hurt America most by making it close its borders. In other words, the United States is doing more harm through its reaction to terrorism than the terrorism itself has done, in part because terrorism is highly visible, reported, and immediately obvious while the effects of making border crossing more difficult are diffuse and too seldom discussed.

    * For Elderly in Rural Areas, Times Are Distinctly Harder. Do you suppose the reporter has seen or read The Last Picture Show?

    * “[…] neither private or public sector efforts are going to take a significant bite out of the digital divide in the foreseeable future.” Sounds like a call for more grant programs. The only really awesome municipal broadband I’ve seen is in Monticello, Minnesota.

    * “[Prostitution] involves a good or service (or whatever you want to call it) — sex — which, when undertaken for free by consenting adults is legal but which becomes illegal when money changes hands. Can you think of other goods and services that share this trait?

    Me neither.

    * In Latino Gardens, Vegetables, Good Health and Savings Flourish.

    * Remember: If you apply for a grant program, you might actually win and then have to run said program. This comes up by way of “In Race for U.S. School Grants Is a Fear of Winning:” “One major concern is that should Illinois succeed in the national competition for Race to the Top money, it might not have the ability to finance the long-term costs of any new programs once the federal money has been spent.”

    * Prohibition: A Cautionary Tale.

    * Prisons or colleges? California “chooses” prisons because of structural issues relating to prison guards’ unions, politics, and laws, all of which interact with one another to produce a nasty outcome. See how at the link.

    * Why public domain works matter.

    * U.S. Keeps Science Lead, But Other Countries Gain. Compare this to Neal Stephenson’s excellent piece in the New York Times, “Turn On, Tune In, Veg Out.”

    * According to the New York Times: The Obama administration’s $75 billion program to protect homeowners from foreclosure has been widely pronounced a disappointment, and some economists and real estate experts now contend it has done more harm than good. They’re referring to the Making Home Affordable program.

    * Why you should use the revolving doors.

    * How China wrecked the Copenhagen talks. See also James Fallows’ excellent commentary.

    * Manzi’s error: economic growth rate differences between America and Europe are almost entirely explained by population growth rate differences.

    * “15th Century Greenland has something in common with IBM in 1980: a belief that historically successful behavior will succeed in the future.”

    * A crime theory demolished (or at least altered):

    The recession of 2008-09 has undercut one of the most destructive social theories that came out of the 1960s: the idea that the root cause of crime lies in income inequality and social injustice. As the economy started shedding jobs in 2008, criminologists and pundits predicted that crime would shoot up, since poverty, as the “root causes” theory holds, begets criminals. Instead, the opposite happened. Over seven million lost jobs later, crime has plummeted to its lowest level since the early 1960s. The consequences of this drop for how we think about social order are significant.

    * News from Seattle: Rainier Beach High School anti-drug mentor also a dealer, police allege.

  • Lexus brings IS F Circuit Club Sports Concept to TAS

    Filed under: , , , , ,

    The Lexus IS F is a curious car. 416 bristling horsepower, one of the world’s sweetest-sounding engines and an 8-speed flappy-paddle ‘box that shifts faster than you blink are all excellent. However, it looks a little odd, has funny tailpipes and weighs too much. That last little bit – the IS F’s big bones – turn a really great road car into something of a pig on the track. We know this because we drove an IS F at Laguna Seca.

    Seeking to rectify this a bit, while also fulfilling Mr. Toyoda’s corporate sportiness maxim, Lexus brought the IS F Circuit Club Sports (CCS) Concept to the Tokyo Auto Salon (Japan’s version of SEMA). What turns an IS F into an IS F CCS? We’re glad you asked. Short answer: carbon fiber, and plenty of it. The hood, roof, trunk, front winglets, door sills and rear extractor are all made from lightweight, unpainted carbon fiber. Can’t forget about the wing – it’s also CF.

    Lexus saw fit to upgrade the power a bit, too. The engine is untweaked, but a new exhaust system reportedly adds a dozen ponies, raising the 5.0-liter V8’s output to 428. It’s hard to say for certain from just the photos, but those brakes also appear to be carbon ceramic, too. All in all, the mods probably save around 125 pounds. That’ll certainly help out on the track, though an additional 125 lbs. on top of that would be even better. Also, the odds of the IS F CCS making it to a Lexus dealer near you are zero.

    [Source: Le Blog Auto]

    Lexus brings IS F Circuit Club Sports Concept to TAS originally appeared on Autoblog on Sun, 17 Jan 2010 16:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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