Category: News

  • Southwestern Baked Egg Gratin

    This is such a fabulous brunch recipe and I hope you give it a try for New Years Day. You can make the Roasted Red Pepper Coulis and the Sweet Chili Bacon a day ahead. Just crisp up the bacon again while baking these gratins. This is my version of a very popular baked egg dish that is usually prepared with fresh herbs and a dash of heavy cream. I wanted different flavors and I wanted them to be distinctively different than the original recipe so southwestern was the answer for my twist. It is very easy to prepare and if you don’t have individual gratin dishes you can certainly use large ramekins or maybe even try it family style in one large baking dish. I hope you enjoy.

    Southwestern Baked Egg Gratin

    Ingredients:

    1/2 cup Roasted Red Pepper Coulis (recipe posted below)
    4 tsp. unsalted butter
    1 tsp. dried cilantro or 1 Tbsp. fresh, chopped
    1 Tbsp. fresh parsley, chopped
    1 tsp. garlic, minced
    1 Tbsp. scallion, chopped
    8 eggs
    1/4 cup cheddar cheese, shredded
    salt and pepper

    Preheat broiler

    Place 2 tablespoons of the roasted red pepper coulis in the bottom of each of four gratin dishes along with with 1 teaspoon of butter. Place gratins on baking sheet, or other oven proof tray that fits under broiler. Set aside.

    In the meantime combine the herbs, garlic and scallion in a small bowl and season with salt and pepper if desired. Place the gratins under the broiler for 2 to 3 minutes to melt the butter and heat the coulis. Remove and set aside. Break eggs carefully, two at a time into a measuring cup or bowl. Gently pour them into each hot gratin dish on top of the bubbly coulis. Divide the herb mixture and cheddar cheese between the four gratins, sprinkling across the tops. Return to broiler and cook for 5 to 7 minutes or until egg whites are set. The yolks will still be runny. If you prefer a more cooked yolk just continue to broil for another minute or two. Serve with a side of Sweet Chili Bacon if desired (recipe below) to complete the meal.

    Nutrition Facts (without bacon side dish)
    4 – 2 Egg Servings
    Amount Per Serving
    Calories 314.7
    Total Fat 26.0 g
    Saturated Fat 12.6 g
    Polyunsaturated Fat 2.1
    Monounsaturated Fat 8.8 g
    Cholesterol 475.4 mg
    Sodium 181.6 mg
    Potassium 229.3 mg
    Total Carbohydrate 5.0 g
    Dietary Fiber 0.8 g
    Sugars 1.2 g
    Protein 15.3 g

  • Could use some help

    I joined here in early October after being diagnosed and got some really good help. I have posted a bit since then but mostly I just read and continue to learn and feel inspired. I was doing pretty well with almost daily exercise, metformin and watching my diet (carbs). Unfortunately – though I have not gone absolutely off of the rails – I ran into some road bumps a few weeks ago and I think that I could use some help in motivating me back into healthy action. First, I caught a cold and my father was hospitalised right after that. Rather shockingly, what we thought was a treatable infection rapidly morphed into bacterial pneumonia, he never really got onto the road to recovery, was put on palliative care and died all in the space of seven days. I actually stayed with him in his room for his last night and I am so thankful that I had that gift. Anyway, it has been a rough few weeks and I still have the remnants of that cold. My BS has been higher, my diet much less focused between my dad and Christmas and I hurt my knee and was off exercise for four days over Christmas (as well as a hit or miss week when my dad was dying) so I feel like a mess. I did switch to Met XR while he was in the hospital because I did not have any meds with me and I had a script for the XR that I got from the doctor back when the regular Metformin was creating gastric havoc for me in early November. I do find it easier for a few reasons but it is about three times more expensive so I think I will treat myself to three months of the XR and then go back to the regular.

    Anyway, I need to get enthusiastic again. Right now I am so cold & tired that I do not want to do anything but eat and sleep. I went back to my treadmill after the injury rest yesterday but I did not do any exercise today and normally I would do it even if I did not feel like it. I am a little nervous about my slacking…though I am pretty sure that I will do something tomorrow morning because I have a massage booked for mid-morning and I would feel pretty guilty if I didn’t work out first.

    Thanks for listening.

  • USA Today counts down decade’s most improved looking vehicles

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    Hey good lookin’ – Click above for high-res image gallery

    USA Today looked at cars on sale between 2000 and 2009 and ranked them in order of most improved. Before you get hot and heavy in the comments, let us remind you that they are only talking about the way the cars look. Not how they perform. Trust us, there will be plenty for you to get angry about as is.

    We noticed that there were a few cars USA Today left off the list that the vehicular brain trust here at the blog about autos thinks are very much improved. The Ford Taurus being one example. Sure, the new Taurus is large, but the old Taurus (aka Ford 500) was a bulbous bore.

    But our real choice is the Maserati Gran Turismo, especially as the last generation Maser GT looked, well, lousy. Or at least like something Maserati might have sold when Chrysler owned them. That said, take a peek at the gallery, and discuss USA Today’s list amongst yourselves.

    [Source: USA Today]

    USA Today counts down decade’s most improved looking vehicles originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 29 Dec 2009 19:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Latest Study on High Fructose Corn Syrup

    There’s a couple of articles circling about (I like facebook for this, my friends post stuff they are concerned about and I get a little free pulse of the population) about high fructose corn syrup, which for the life of me, I can’t figure out why people consider it to the the bane of their existence.

    Of all the sweeteners to worry about, a sweetener made out of naturally occurring molecules like fructose and glucose, seems hardly a problem, it should be falling neatly in the “its natural” category since both sugars are found naturally. But apparently, if you dont serve the sugars in their natural form (much like table sugar BTW) it becomes the bane of humanity and is the cause all of our health problems.

    This attitude is evidenced by the media’s response to a recent study.

    High Fructose Corn Syrup Proven to Cause Human Obesity! Proven! Proven I say!
    Child diabetes blamed on food sweetener We have found the answer!
    For the first time – Scientists Link Fructose to Obesity, Diabetes in HUMANS That right folks, for the first time ever, sugar has been linked to obesity. Who would have known?
    Fructose: Cause Of Childhood Diabetes That’s right folks it’s THE cause
    How Sweet It Isn’t: High Fructose Corn Syrup Proven to Cause Human Obesity Proven!

    A little more reasoned approach came from Grist only after the author of the article got knocked in the head by one of the study’s authors.

    I make a little fun because its a rare instance in science when something is actually proven to be so. Usually what we get is evidence for or against a hypothesis. That very evidence is usually recorded in probabilities. As we will soon see, this is also the case here.

    Every one of these headlines references a single study that recently came out. As a responsible consumer of media information, who wants ot have an informed opinion onm this topic, it is your job to go to the source rather than just imbibe the predigested conclusions thrown at you by the advertising hungry media outlets.

    Here it is.
    Go read.
    Then lets discuss.

    Stanhope et al, rounded up 16 people (this makes this study extremely small) in a first of its kind study (which means the results of this study have yet to be verified or validated by anyone) which took a crack at evaluating the effects of one kind of sweetener over another. Its basically trying to get rid of the concern that we heard so often from the smoking lobby that results based on animal testing don’t necessarily apply to humans.

    When you read the abstract, know that I am in the same position as you about all the sciency sounding multisyllabic words the get thrown around. I honestly have no idea what they mean, nor will I go get a medical degree to find out. More on this later.

    Let’s start with the basics. Skeptoid has already gone over a lot of the hullabaloo of High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS), so I wont repeat a lot of it here.

    I found this list of sweeteners and their relative sweetness. I checked the numbers around the internet and found it to be accurate. Let me just put out some of the important ones here:

    Sugar Sweetness Calories
    Glucose 0.8 3.75
    Sucrose 1 3.94
    Fructose 1.75 4*
    Aspartame (Nutrasweet) 180 N/A
    Saccharine (Sweet n’ Low) 300 N/A
    Sucralose (Splenda) 600 N/A

    In this chart, sucrose, which is table sugar is given a ‘sweetness’ of 1. You can see that glucose is less sweet than table sugar. Fructose is 1.75 times more sweet. The artificial sweeteners are amazingly sweet, which is why they are in low calorie drink, you need very very little of them to achieve the same sweetness (never mind that I think they taste like crap).

    Glucose, fructose and sucrose are naturally occurring sugars. sucrose is a molecule that is simply a glucose molecule bonded weakly to a fructose molecule. When you eat table sugar, the first bond to go is the one holding these together, leaving your stomach with fructose and glucose separately, in about equal propostions.

    • Corn syrup is pure glucose, it is not as sweet as table sugar.
    • High fructose corn syrup is called that because it actually has fructose in it
    • Glucose is a chemical you body readily converts giving you a blast of energy (or conversion to fat)
    • Fructose is an atomically identical molecule that your body does not digest readily, giving you a more sustained flow of energy (or conversion to fat)
    • Fructose, in pure form, is not a sweetener that we use in any product.
    • High fructose corn syrup comes in a variety of blends of glucose and fructose. The most common blend HFCS-55 is about 55% fructose, matching the sweetness and calories of table sugar. It will deliver about the same amount of fructose to your body as table sugar does once you have ingested it.

    OK, I think we have enough background to discuss this paper now.

    Lets start witht he sugar intake: from the study

    To assess the relative effects of these dietary sugars during sustained consumption in humans, overweight and obese subjects consumed glucose- or fructose-sweetened beverages providing 25% of energy requirements for 10 weeks

    Since the caloric intake of glucose and fructose is about the same (4 kcal/gram – note kcal is what we call “calories”), these folks drank beverages with about the same amount of sweetener, in grams. That means that one group had drinks that were over twice as sweet as the other group.

    The population of the study were all similar in size, weight, and other aspect. There is no contention there. All the participants were an average age of around 54. There were some slight differences between the males and females, but these were matched pretty well in both groups. One of the groups (male, fructose) had a significantly lower starting LDL level, but that may not matter with respect to the results, lets see.

    We’ll just accept the procedure, although if I really doubted the veracity of the study, which I don’t, this would also be something to delve deeper into. The results after the 10 week period came in as follows:

    • No differences in blood pressure between the two groups
    • Both groups gained a similar amount of weight (slightly more for glucose)
    • Both groups gained a similar amount of body fat (again, the glucose groups scored higher)
    • Both groups gained a similar amount in waist circumference (Fructose winning here but by very little)

    These facts are extremely important when trying to assess the veracity of a hypothesis like “fructose causes obesity).

    The main differences, and they are significant, is in where the fat appeared. The fructose group showed significantly more abdominal fat. Plus the fructose group showed far higher amounts of LDL cholesterol (the bad one), and a variety of other things that are bad for you. Again most of this list is beyond my knowledge, but I accept the conclusion that most of the bad actors here are higher in the fructose group.

    So lets be clear here: there is no doubt that pure fructose is not a good or healthy sweetener. It is well known that glucose and fructose are different molecule that are metabolized differently, by different mechanisms, with excess energy stored differently. This study neither contradicts this data, nor does it provide any evidence that sweeteners the combine both glucose and sucrose are any different from one another. This study is not the one that came to any of these conclusions first. There is a large body of evidence supporting this. This study weaned out some specific responses that the body has when overfed these sweeteners and proposed a metabolism model for them.

    The authors themselves explain that they did not study sweeteners as they are used in our food:

    Foods and beverages in the US are typically sweetened with sucrose (50% glucose and 50% fructose) or high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS), which is usually 45%–58% glucose and 42%–55% fructose, rather than pure glucose or fructose.

    The authors have also previously reported that they have not found a difference in the response to the sweeteners that are actually consumed by the public.

    We have reported in a short-term study that the 23-hour postprandial TG profiles in male subjects consuming 25% energy as HFCS (55% fructose) or sucrose were elevated to a degree similar to that observed when pure fructose–sweetened beverages were consumed.

    So where is the evidence, as the media articles claimed, that this study has something to do with HFCS and childhood obesity?

    This study says nothing about childhood obesity since all participants were an average of 54 years old.
    This study says nothing about the use of HFCS since it only studied intake of pure glucose and pure fructose
    This study says nothing about the superiority of table sugar or honey to high fructose corn syrup since none of these sweeteners were tested, alone or against each other.

    Lets look at the TimesOnline article since that was the first one out:

    Scientists have proved for the first time that a cheap form of sugar used in thousands of food products and soft drinks can damage human metabolism and is fuelling the obesity crisis

    No, they did nothing of the sort. They showed that pure fructose, with the exact same caloric intake as pure glucose provide similar gain in weight. They showed that there are differences in metabolic response to sweeteners in a form that on one currently consumes.

    It [fructose] has increasingly been used as a substitute for more expensive types of sugar in yoghurts, cakes, salad dressing and cereals. Even some fruit drinks that sound healthy contain fructose

    Couldnt be more wrong. HFCS is substituting sucrose, which has the same amount of fructose in it. “Natural” fruit drinks (whatever that means) ought to have fructose in it, since fructose occurs naturally in fruit.

    researchers at the University of California who conducted the trial, said the levels of weight gain among the fructose consumers would be greater over the long term

    Unless the TimesOnline interviewed them and failed to provide quotation marks and source, this is simply a baseless claim and not in the study at all.

    Fructose bypasses the digestive process that breaks down other forms of sugar. It arrives intact in the liver where it causes a variety of abnormal reactions, including the disruption of mechanisms that instruct the body whether to burn or store fat

    This may be true, so what? No one eats pure fructose as a sweetener. Its completely irrelevant.

    what is going on here? A huge logical fallacy called equivocation. Fructose is bad in high quantities, therefore high fructose corn syrup is bad in any quantity. They are simply not the same thing, and as I have pointed out, there is no reason to believe that HFCS would do anything different in your body than table sugar would.

    Now let’s check out the alternet article:

    We finally have the smoking corn cob, as it were: the studyprocessed-food foes have been waiting for, indicating that highfructose corn syrup may be the cause of the huge upswing in childhood obesity and diabetes

    I dont really know anything about alternet, but if this is how they put together their information, I think we can pretty much discount anything they say. This is a digestion of a predigested article. They dont link to the study, they link to the times article! the is no smoking gun here, there is no evidence to support the idea the HFCS alone, has anything more to do with obesity than sugar does.

    The rise in childhood diabetes and obesity roughly corresponds to the period of time in which food processors started using high fructose corn syrup with such prevalence.

    And here we have out second largest logical fallacy of the day: Correlation-causation fallacy. Know what? Obesity also corresponds to the increased used of smartphones, what is your point? It’s not the HFCS, its the calories. Average caloric intake of american has increased year over year since the 70’s. It doesnt matter where you get your calories from, its how many you have. It especially doesnt matter since, and I sound like a record here, HFCS has the same amounts of fructose and glucose and table sugar.

    Further, this study says nothing about childhood anything.

    But this new finding is the first involving humans, and its results point to a different truth: high fructose corn syrup can actually damage human metabolism.

    Bzzt. Sorry, it specifically does not say that. It says nothing about high fructose corn syrup, this is what happens when you get your information predigested from someone else who is trying to make headlines.

    The control group of volunteers on the same diet, but with glucose sugar replacing fructose, did not have these problems.

    Fine, but both groups got equally fatter… which is what obesity is. In fact, the glucose folks scored higher there.

    Here is the rub on the whole study, the part that gets me the worst with all this nonsense reporting. HFCS is sweeter than glucose. Twice as sweet. If we banned sweeteners with fructose in it, then all we would have left are artificial sweeteners, glucose, and some sweeteners that are even less sweet than glucose.

    People don’t care if its fructose or glucose in the cookies and soda. They crave the sweetness or the taste that the sweetness makes. If you get rid of the fructose, then you have to put in twice the calories to get the same sweetness with glucose. Even if we just used sucrose, you would still need 75% more sugar and calories to acheive the same sweetness.

    Wanna see obesity? Lets try that experiment.

    * I was unable to find an exact energy count for fructose, but most sources said 4 calories, virtually the same as glucose and sucrose


  • January Housekeeping and Home Maintenance Tasks

    January can be a cold and rainy month for many people. Cabin fever begins to set in and they stare longingly out the windows at the brown and shriveled gardens. Wow. That window is a bit grimy looking, isn’t it? While you don’t necessarily want to clean your windows inside and out, this is the ideal time to clean the inside window glass if you didn’t get around to getting them all nice and clean in the warmer months. (You might also discover that you overlooked a few storm windows. Time to slide them down, too.) Here are a few other January home maintenance tasks you can do:

    january housekeeping tips

    • Check for spots in the yard where puddles covered in ice form. They are low spots and, if they are in high traffic areas, they could be dangerous. Fill them in to keep the water from settling there.
    • Make sure the furnace filter is clean. If you changed it right before you turned the furnace on for the winter months, it has been cleaning the air for several months and may be pretty dirty.
    • Take a look at all the appliances and gadgets you use heavily in the winter, like humidifiers and heaters. This can help you catch problems like moldy filters in the humidifier or a frayed cord on the heater.
    • Vacuum all the heat register grates. They’ve been working full time to help you keep warm and you want to be sure no dust or debris is blocking them.
    • Vacuum your fridge coils and clean out your fridge and freezer. It is a good idea to take all the shelves and drawers out of the fridge to really clean them a few times a year and starting off the new year without moldy leftovers or freezer burned mystery meat just seems like a nice thing.
    • Go through the house and make a checklist of chores for warmer months. This way, you won’t forget about the chipped paint behind the bread maker when you have a nice warm Spring day perfect for painting.
    • Think about improvements you want to make for the summer and whether you can do them now. For example, if you have a few nice days in a row this month, you can screen the porch so it will be ready for you to enjoy right away during warm weather.

    Do you have any other January cleaning or home maintenance tasks you do?

    Photo: SXC

    Post from: Blisstree

    January Housekeeping and Home Maintenance Tasks

  • VIDEO: Mythbusters tests skipping Lambo from Speed Zone, a.k.a. Cannonball Run 3

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    Mythbusters car skipping test — Click above to watch video

    In the movie Speed Zone, familiarly known as Cannonball Run 3 and ripe for an award for one of the most incredible ensemble casts ever, the opening sequence ends with a Lamborghini Countach eluding the police by skipping over a lake. You know, like a rock.

    Mythbusters’ new gearhead Kari Byron wanted to see if that could really be done, so they tested the stunt out on a scale model Lamborghini over an appropriately scaled body of water. Then they tested the stunt again with a full-sized car – Pontiac Fiero, not a Countach – over a real pond, and the results made us go something along the lines of “That’s awesome.”

    Follow the jump for the videos, which are broken up into a couple of segments. The scale model Lamborghini segment is cut short – they want you to watch the show – but the final test of the Pontiac Fiero Water Skimmer Edition is at Mythbusters.

    [Source: Mythbusters]

    Continue reading VIDEO: Mythbusters tests skipping Lambo from Speed Zone, a.k.a. Cannonball Run 3

    VIDEO: Mythbusters tests skipping Lambo from Speed Zone, a.k.a. Cannonball Run 3 originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 29 Dec 2009 19:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Daily U-Turn: What you missed on 12.29.09

    Quick Spin: TPCRacing Cayman S Turbo picks up where Porsche left off

    Porsche dropped the ball when it hobbled the Cayman with an underpowered engine. Thankfully, TPCRacing was there to grab the pigskin and run with it, creating a turbocharged 400-hp coupe that’s easily worth the price of admission.

    SYNC to offer iTunes tagging through HD radio

    Hear a song on the radio, tag it and buy it later. That’s what Ford’s latest SYNC system will allow users to do when it rolls out next year.

    Daily U-Turn: What you missed on 12.29.09 originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 29 Dec 2009 19:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Rumormill: Fabled Lexus GS F to use LFA’s V10

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    Lexus LFA – Click above for high-res image gallery

    We’ve been hearing rumblings about a Lexus GS F for over two years, with the most recent report indicating that the maxed-out super sedan was put on hold until the economic climate reached a balmy 75-degrees. However, the rumormongers at Japan’s BestCar seem to think that the GS F is back on track, and not only that, it’ll be powered by a detuned version of the LFA’s V10.

    Although that sounds simply insane at first blush, the possibility of a 500+ hp V10 powerplant coincides with an initial report released way back in September of 2007. Not only that, but the GS F’s closest competition — the BMW M5 — uses a bent-ten as well. However, even if Toyota is trying to spread out the costs of the LFA’s development, with BMW’s bahn burner about to get the twin-turbocharged V8 from the BMW X6/X5 M and Mercedes-Benz’ decision to drop its 6.2-liter engines in favor of force-fed eights, it could be bad timing… or a cunning marketing move, depending on your motivational perspectives.

    Speculation aside, if Toyota does pull the trigger and fit a reworked version of the 552-hp, 4.8-liter 1LR-GUE V10 into its staid sedan, expect the performance to strip the paint clean off it’s swollen fascia while leaving you over $100,000 lighter in the process.

    [Source: BestCar via Carscoop]

    Rumormill: Fabled Lexus GS F to use LFA’s V10 originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 29 Dec 2009 18:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Nokia Launches Another Patent Attack On Apple, Uses ITC Loophole To Get Second Shot At Hurting Apple

    We’ve seen how Nokia’s troubles in keeping up in the smartphone market have resulted in suddenly filing a whole bunch of patent lawsuits, including the big one against Apple over the iPhone. Of course, as usually happens in these types of situations, Apple fired back with a patent infringement lawsuit of its own against Nokia. Welcome to patent nuclear war.

    And, of course, if you thought the battles would end there, you haven’t been paying attention to how patent battles work these days. For years now, we’ve been pointing out that many patent holders actually get two cracks at companies over the same exact patents. They sue in the courts, and they use the ITC loophole to get a second crack, which could have even worse consequences. You see, the International Trade Commission is supposed to watch out for unfair trade practices. So many patent holders go to the ITC and claim that companies that infringe on patents are using unfair trade practices and should be barred from importing those goods into the US. Of course, the ITC could rely on the courts to determine if the products are actually infringing, but it does not. It decides for itself. And while the ITC cannot issue fines, it can issue an injunction barring the import of these products. With so many high tech products being manufactured overseas, this creates an effective injunction against selling many high tech products in the US… even as the Supreme Court has made clear that injunctions don’t always make sense. But, the ITC is not bound by the Supreme Court on this and can do what it wants. A recent study has shown that this ITC loophole is frequently abused.

    So, it’s not at all surprising that (yes, indeed), Nokia has jumped in with both feet and has filed a complaint with the ITC as well over the Apple iPhone and its alleged infringement on Nokia patents. So now we have two totally seprate processes, either of which could conceivably bar Apple from selling iPhones in the US, just because Nokia’s been too slow in coming up with its own iPhone competitor. That’s not encouraging innovation at all. It’s proactively trying to use the US government to slow it down.

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  • Sprixi Makes Searching for Free Photos Smart, Fast and Painless

    sprixi_logo_dec09.jpgLooking to spruce up that bland PowerPoint presentation for your next meeting with possible investors? Or do you need high-quality photographs for your product’s homepage or blog? Sprixi, a free use image search engine, is an excellent source for finding just the right image to add those finishing touches.

    Developed by Sydney, Australia-based company Thirsty Minds, Sprixi crawls Flickr and OpenClipArt.org for images licensed under Creative Commons and implements a user-based recommendation system to produce relevant results. While viewing photos, you can tell Sprixi whether or not an image is a useful result. Based on this data, Sprixi displays the most relevant images as rated by users at the top of the results.

    Sponsor

    sprixi_search_dec09.jpg

    The crowdsourced curation of images is what elevates Sprixi above other image searches. A Google Image search for “baseball” returns photos of varying qualities of balls, players, fields, video games and team logos. The same search on Sprixi uncovers a stunning photograph of a baseball laying in grass that has a “usefullness” rating 25.7.

    With no login required to browse and download photos, Sprixi displays the copyright information of each photo and can even embed the information into the photo for you, making the process of giving credit quick and painless.

    Discuss


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  • Which Natural Hair Loss Remedy Is The Most Effective?

    How do you determine which is the best natural hair loss remedy to choose. Well quite frankly it’s not that hard because there’s not very many really effective remedies that are worth trying.

    There are plenty of natural options you can try like massage and aromatherapy, a whole variety of vitamins and herbs or maybe even jojoba oil used for centuries by Mexicans for hair loss. There are supplements that might be beneficial, but don’t hold your breath on getting a fairly quick or successful lasting solution with these methods.

    Hair loss can be a bit of a tricky issue because there are so many potential causes, however with men the main culprit seems to be DHT. Therefore, you’re going to need substances in any treatment that can be beneficial in reducing DHT.

    Women on the other hand often get thinning hair caused by heredity where the 2 enzymes aromatase and 5-a reductase become a problem, also diet deficiencies, scalp fungal infections, stress and medications can contribute to your thinning hair amongst others.

    Just in case you don’t already know hair growth cycles through 3 stages usually over a 3 to 5 years time frame. The anagen growth phase happens roughly 85% of the time where hair grows up to half an inch a month or 6 inches a year. The catagen phase follows and lasts up to 2 weeks where the follicle shrinks to roughly one sixth of it length and the papilla breaks away. 

    The final process is the telogen resting phase, which can last up to 6 weeks, approximately 13-16% of hairs are in this stage at any one time. Then the growth process starts all over again — a new hair forms in the follicle and pushes the old one out if its still there.

    Your hair loss could be just part of this cycle and it might sort itself out in time, but if your losing hair and its definitely not being replaced you should get a medical opinion as to your condition.

    However, there is a proven natural hair loss remedy called Provillus that is very effective and has helped thousands of people before, it may be worth your while taking a closer look and evaluating it , Have a look at the video on the website below.

    Michael P. Myers has done considerable research on male hair loss issues. If you’re interested to find out more about natural remedies for hair loss, and the substances ordinary people are using every day to successfully stop and reverse hair loss and thinning. Have a look at this site = > http://www.hair-regrowth-review.com today.

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  • Enterprising DIYer adds boat tail to Pontiac Firefly to boost mileage

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    The Aerocivic apparently has a distant relative from Canada. Darin Cosgrove, founder of Ecomodder.com, has added a boat tail to the back of his 1998 Pontiac Firefly (which is what the Geo Metro was called up north). According to Wired, the modified bodywork was constructed from cardboard, aluminum and duct tape, and it joins a series of previous aero mods including rear wheel skirts and a bellypan.

    Cosgrove estimates that his most recent modifications improve the Firefly hatchback’s coefficient of drag from 0.34 to 0.23. While the aerodynamic improvement is an estimate, the fuel mileage benefits are very real and have been calculated at 64 miles per gallon – a 15.1 percent improvement at 56 miles per hour (90 kmh).

    So, it’s not exactly the most practical way to improve your fuel mileage – access to the rear hatch is, shall we say, limited, and the extra 4.5 feet at the aft end surely makes low-speed maneuvering a bit more difficult – but it does go to show how important aerodynamics are to overall fuel efficiency. Click here for a full description of the modifications and click past the break for a video.

    [Source: Ecomodder.com via Wired]

    Continue reading Enterprising DIYer adds boat tail to Pontiac Firefly to boost mileage

    Enterprising DIYer adds boat tail to Pontiac Firefly to boost mileage originally appeared on Autoblog Green on Tue, 29 Dec 2009 19:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Teens turn into DNA detectives










     

    Brenda Tan and Matt Cost via Rockefeller Univ.
      A cockroach found during a DNA barcoding survey  may represent a new species or subspecies.




    When high-school students did an inventory of the DNA in their own homes, they were amazed to find lots of mislabeled food products, a pesky invasive species … and what appears to be a new breed of cockroach.


    “The idea was to explore our environment through the lens of DNA,” Matt Cost, an 18-year-old senior at Manhattan’s Trinity School, told me. The experiment turned up more than 150 usable DNA fingerprints, found in common items ranging from apartment-building bugs to a feather duster.

    …(read more)

  • Economy and Markets: Harvard Swaps, Need Money, David Tepper Rocks, Commodities Volatility, Securitization, Long Treasury Yields, Thoughts on Bill Gross, Iacono on 3QGDP Revisions

    bill-coppedge-dec09-1 original content selection by MortgageNewsClips.com

     

    bloomberg

    Good explanation – Harvard Swaps Are So Toxic Even Summers Won’t Explain – By Michael McDonald, John Lauerman and Gillian Wee – … “For nonprofits, this is going to be written up as a case study of what not to do,” said Mark Williams, a finance professor at Boston University, who specializes in risk management and has studied Harvard’s finances. “Harvard throws itself out as a beacon of what to do in higher learning. Clearly, there have been major missteps.” … – Bloomberg

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    shanghai-daily

    not enough money – Harder to buy US Treasuries – Zhou Xin and Jason Subler – IT is getting harder for governments to buy United States Treasuries because the US’s shrinking current-account gap is reducing supply of dollars overseas, a Chinese central bank official said yesterday.  … “The United States cannot force foreign governments to increase their holdings of Treasuries,” Zhu said, according to an audio recording of his remarks. “Double the holdings? It is definitely impossible.” … – Shanghai Daily

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    hedgefund-net

    Is David Tepper The John Paulson of ‘09? – by Christopher Glynn – David Tepper pulled a John Paulson. Appaloosa Management, his New Jersey hedge fund, made $7 billion in 2009 betting big banking would do an about-face, according to The Wall Street Journal. Tepper himself earned $2.5 billion, the newspaper reported. – HedgeFund.net

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    pb1 plan-b-economics

    Big Drops Par for Course During Commodity Bull – … Bottom line: Commodities are volatile. Investors holding commodities during a secular commodities bull market should expect a violent ride with scary drops along the way. … – Plan B Economics

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    hw1

    Securitization Systematic Risk to Lessen in 2010, Barclays Says – By JACOB GAFFNEY – … “2010 promises to be an exciting year,” they write. “It will just not be the heart-pounding, spine-chilling excitement that we saw in early 2009; and for that, we should be thankful.” With all of this taken into consideration, the analysts are predicting the 2010 rate of growth, above Fed predictions, at 3.5% to 4% … – HousingWire

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    24-7 Wall street

    Longer Treasury Yields Reaching Critical Juncture – … Many market pundits have called longer-dated bond prices the next bubble that will burst.  If that occurs, then it won’t just be the 4.00% yield for the 10-Year Treasury and 5.00% yield for the 30-Year Treasury that will be debated.   … – 24/7- Wall Street 

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    marketwatch1

    8 reasons Gross’s ‘New Normal’ is old news, bad news – PAUL B. FARRELL – Just 5-6% returns in 2010? Warning: Buffett-Bogle’s 2002 ‘New Normal’ failed – MarketWatch
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    tmtgm

    That shrinking third quarter GDP – Tim IaconoTheMessThatGreensapMade

  • Government Related: Six Figures, TARP Repayments, Bonus Tax, Raising Rates, Community Bank Problems, IRS Auditors, Paying Over Par

    bill-coppedge-dec09-1 original content selection by MortgageNewsClips.com

     

    mish-logo mishphoto

    Police Officer Responds To “Six-Figure Federal Salary Gravy Train” Post – Michael Shedlock – Here is an interesting email from “David” in response to Six-Figure Federal Salary Gravy Train. The response was not what I expected when I first saw the Email. David Writes …. – MISH’s Global Economic Trend Analysis

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    sf-chronicle

    So what happens with TARP repayments? – Kathleen Pender – … Unfortunately there is no simple answer. Some Republicans say that any money returned to the Troubled Assets Relief Program or TARP, must go toward deficit reduction. President Obama and some Democrats say unused TARP money can be used for all sorts of things. … – SFGate.com 

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    wsj

    Banks Ponder Globalizing Their U.K. Bonus Pain – By SARA SCHAEFER MUÑOZ And DAVID CRAWFORD – As 2009 winds down, big banks around the globe are sorting out one last headache: whether to spread the pain of the U.K.’s new bonus tax among their global work forces by cutting bonus pools all over the world. – Wall Street Journal

    ————

    wsj-blogs

    NY Fed: Federal Reserve Will Indeed Be Able to Raise Rates – By Jon Hilsenrath – A new paper by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York offers some empirical support to the view among senior Federal Reserve officials that they do have the technical means to raise interest rates when needed, despite some naysayers who caution there is too much money in the system to do so effectively. – WSJ Blogs

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    washington-post

    More bailed-out community banks failing to pay U.S. dividends – By Binyamin Appelbaum – … Fifty-five banks failed to make dividend payments in November, a 67 percent jump over the number of delinquent banks three months earlier. … – Washington Post
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    yahoo-news

    Keep IRS auditors away: Earn less than $200,000 – By LARRY MARGASAK – Want to keep IRS auditors away? Keep your earnings under $200,000 and they won’t bother you 99 percent of the time. – AP Yahoo   

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    zero-hedge

    on paying over par – The Fed’s $27 Billion (And Counting) Call Provision – Submitted by Tyler Durden – Much has been written about the Fed’s Permanent Open Market Operations, or the technical name for Quantitative Easing’s Bond Repurchase, aka Monetization, program. What has been largely left out is the true cost in the form of a call premium that the Fed has paid out due to what amounts to an early redemption of $300 billion in par securities … – Zero Hedge

  • VIDEO: Mythbusters tests skipping Lambo from Speed Zone, a.k.a. Cannonball Run 3

    Filed under: , , ,

    Mythbusters car skipping test — Click above to watch video

    In the movie Speed Zone, familiarly known as Cannonball Run 3 and ripe for an award for one of the most incredible ensemble casts ever, the opening sequence ends with a Lamborghini Countach eluding the police by skipping over a lake. You know, like a rock.

    Mythbusters’ new gearhead Kari Byron wanted to see if that could really be done, so they tested the stunt out on a scale model Lamborghini over an appropriately scaled body of water. Then they tested the stunt again with a full-sized car – Pontiac Fiero, not a Countach – over a real pond, and the results made us go something along the lines of “That’s awesome.”

    Follow the jump for the videos, which are broken up into a couple of segments. The scale model Lamborghini segment is cut short – they want you to watch the show – but the final test of the Pontiac Fiero Water Skimmer Edition is at Mythbusters.

    [Source: Mythbusters]

    Continue reading VIDEO: Mythbusters tests skipping Lambo from Speed Zone, a.k.a. Cannonball Run 3

    VIDEO: Mythbusters tests skipping Lambo from Speed Zone, a.k.a. Cannonball Run 3 originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 29 Dec 2009 19:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • The Good Enough Squirrel Monkey

    As this is the 150th anniversary of the publication of ‘On the Origin of Species’, I have spent some of my spare time over the last year filming primates. I have no training in this field and would consider myself an amateur and something of a novice  at that. It was my hope that in coming to understand a little better those creatures which are most closely related to us on the evolutionary tree I could comment a little more sensibly on the emerging area of evolutionary psychiatry. On a trip to London Zoo, I was able to film a Squirrel Monkey with her baby and on reviewing the footage I thought there was something of interest in relation to Winnicott’s earlier writings on Transitional Objects (see review here). I have set forth the case in the following video.

    This is little more than speculation and is susceptible to a number of theoretical difficulties

    1. Given that I was already familiar with Winnicott’s writings my identification of some of his themes may represent confirmation bias – i.e selective identification of the material which fits with the prior hypothesis

    2. This is a single case study. Having little knowledge of Squirrel Monkeys I do not know if this represents a set of typical or atypical behaviours both for this mother and baby dyad as well as for others in the species.

    3. Since triangulation with the use of language is not possible inferences about the internal mental state of the mother and baby are of dubious validity

    4. The speculative conclusion about the concestor from 40 million years ago is unlikely to be verifiable. During this period the Squirrel Monkey lineage is likely to have evolved considerably and the behaviours observed in contemporary monkeys may not have been present in their ancestors even 100,000 years ago.

    Nevertheless the paradigm offers useful insights bearing in mind that in infant development primitive reflexes such as the grasp reflex are still present. Furthermore the hypotheses can be tested indirectly utilising a number of means including quantitative analysis of behavioural patterns in mother-baby dyads, similar analysis in closely related species (which would add support to conservation of genes that contribute to the dyad interactions which is also an implicit assumption in the above although I would suspect that such genetic influences would likely lead to flexible generic functions rather than specific behaviours), characterisation of atypical dyads as well as a characterisation of a progressive independence of the infant.

    While in evolutionary psychology and psychiatry there has been a number of references to a hypothetical characterisation of historic hunter-gatherers societies, primatology offers the possibility of identifying strongly conserved characteristics in living relatives of our species. The advent of video sharing sites such as YouTube offer the possibility of rapidly sharing footage of relevance and establishing interdisciplinary networks for further study in this area.

    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.

  • Zimmerman Swimwear – Summer 2010 Lookbook

    zimmerman-swimwear-spring20

    While its severely cold outside at the moment, we here at SwipeLife figured we’d heat things up a bit with some lovely ladies in bikinis. For your viewing pleasure is Zimmerman’s Swimwear Summer 2010 line. We don’t have the names of the models involved in the collection shoot, but we are definite fans already. Chalk this one up for our Women We Love section. Enjoy.

    Continue reading for more images.









    Source: Fashionising


  • TenYears: Biggest Losers in Tech

    ten-yearsIt’s almost January 1st, 2010 and we’ve been mulling over our favorites of 2009 – and the previous decade. Here we present another installment of our “Of the Decade” lists.


    Winner Loser: Brick and mortar stores

    bm2isw-20091230052938

    Once consumer trepidation regarding e-tailers wore off, it was really only a matter of time before physical stores with limited stock and pushy salespeople bit the dust. Among the fallen we have Circuit City, CompUSA, and Gateway stores among others. Sure, for sundries, your Wal-Mart and Big K are doing just fine, but they also sell sweaters and apples. Best Buy is doing all right, but they’re really the Alamo of tech retailers. Poor bastards know what’s coming to ‘em, too.

    The combination of low prices, reseller markets, the long tail effect, and the rise of internet literacy among the buying class has resulted in a ridiculous among of growth among the biggest e-tailers. And while I doubt we’re going to see a return of the glorious Kozmo.com, things like Amazon Fresh and Trojan horses like the Nook and Kindle suggest that even further dominance is to come.


    Runners Up

    razr-v3cMotorola

    Around the time of the iPhone being announced, the RAZR was the hottest handset on the market. It was thin as hell, looked futuristic, and did absolutely nothing different from any other phone. In fact, Motorola hadn’t made a phone that did anything different in years. And as things like Blackberrys and semi-smart phones began gaining traction on the mid-range-handset market, Moto continued to put out “improved” versions of the RAZR, or body modifications like the KRZR or whatever. Never mind that the phone was garbage fundamentally, let’s just keep pushing it! No long term plans necessary!

    They’ve salvaged themselves somewhat with the Droid, but that can’t last long; the Android market is too mercurial. Moto threw away an enormous lead and brand name, and barring a miracle, I don’t see any way they can get it back.

    MPAARIAA/MPAA

    What can I say here? These stodgy and litigious institutions continue to dig their grave to this day. A renaissance in media distribution was unfolding before their eyes, and instead of taking the bull by the horns, they sued the audience.

    Can you think of a worse way to handle the last decade of technological and cultural changes? I can’t. At every turn these Associations (and their counterparts throughout the world) have made the exact wrong choices. Suing children, fabricating numbers, instituting ridiculous DRM schemes — it’s been a decade-long disaster, and when the major labels all fall over dead, I’ll dance on their graves.

    aolAOL

    Let me just say: I appreciate what AOL did. It put a lot of people online. It put them into a weird pseudo-internet, sure, but it broke the ice for millions and familiarized them with the web, e-mail, and A/S/L. Unfortunately, there wasn’t really a lot of room for AOL in the new order of things — AOL or the other big services like it.

    AOL’s role in the world today is much different than what it was, but instead of becoming a powerful brand in itself (like Yahoo!), it has receded into the background. And the fact is that’s because it represents all that was going to go wrong with the internet: it represents the corporate-controlled, content-locked, closely-monitored internet that the big guys would just love to foist on us.


    Our take

    Doug: Internet Explorer, both the mobile and desktop versions. At the height of its reign in the middle of the decade, it had over 95% market share. Now that number’s hovering around 65% thanks to Safari, Firefox, Google Chrome and, to a certain extent, Opera (especially on mobile devices). I haven’t personally used Internet Explorer for any significant amount of time in the past three years despite using it for everything in the early part of the decade. It’s mind boggling that Microsoft sat on its hands and watched other browsers eat its lunch for so long.

    Matt: As much as Toshiba lost in its investment into HD DVD, the consumer lost even more because of the silly format war. All we ever wanted was an easy way to watch high definition content on our HDTVs. Instead we got the HD DVD vs Blu-ray format war that did nothing but confuse the general public and infuriate early adopters. Although the format war definitely caused more people to look take a serious look at digital downloads, which is somewhat of a win for everyone.

    Nicholas: I’d nominate myself as biggest tech loser of the past decade, but that would sorta violate the spirit of this here category. That aside, I might go so far as to say Sirius XM just based on what the two companies (back when they were two companies) were supposed to be: revolutionary radio~! It very much has lost its appeal, as has radio in general thanks to things like the iTunes Store, Spotify, Pandora, and the less-than-legal sources of acquiring music. Talk radio—Hannity, Limbaugh, Opie and Anthony, Ron and Fez, Howard Stern (I guess, not really a fan) and the like—is obviously a different story;XM channel 202 is the only reason I still bother to subscribe. If O&A and R&F were ever to leave so would I. So yeah, the whole idea of commercial, music radio, specifically Sirius XM and how it/they tried to be different but really aren’t, would be a pretty big loser.

    Dave: Print media has really taken it in the shorts in the last 10 years. Once considered the first, best, and only way to get your information, people have come to realize that traditional print media is a lumbering dinosaur, trying to keep pace with a fast changing world that they are always 12 hours behind. I do feel sympathy for the old guard, but unless they can learn to evolve quickly, print media will be going out with the baby boomers – because they are the only ones who actually buy newspapers any more.

    John: Dead tree books. I just bought a Stephen King book – Under the Dome – for the Kindle. My buddy showed me the actual book. It was a 1000 pages long and so horribly thick that it looked overly daunting. When guys like me, guys who like to read, just don’t want to carry around a ream of paper onto the plane, the publishing industry needs to worry. Maybe they’ll get a boost from Mr. Sparky Pants but as Seth Godin writes:

    Amazon and the Kindle have killed the bookstore. Why? Because people who buy 100 or 300 books a year are gone forever. The typical American buys just one book a year for pleasure. Those people are meaningless to a bookstore. It’s the heavy users that matter, and now officially, as 2009 ends, they have abandoned the bookstore. It’s over.

    I agree and I think books – in electronic form – still have a long and lucrative life ahead of them.


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