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  • 3,500 Potential Witnesses in Aurora Shooting Trial

    Nearly one year ago, James Holmes entered a Century movie theater in Aurora, Colorado with tear gas and guns, killing 12 people and injuring over 60 others. The shooting took place during an opening weekend showing of The Dark Knight Rises, turning crowded summer movie blockbuster premieres into yet another place where Americans are now wary of guns (though at least one Missouri movie theater recently forgot this).

    Now, Holmes’ murder trial is about to begin, and prosecutors seem to have an incredible amount of evidence to demonstrate that he was the shooter. According to an Associated Press report, prosecutors this week filed a motion in court that states they have close to 3,500 potential witnesses that could be called on to testify. In addition, prosecutors estimated they have almost 40,000 pages of evidence that have been filed.

    Holmes will be tried on multiple counts of first-degree murder. Prosecutors have turned down a plea offer from Holmes’ defense for the suspect to plead guilty if they agree not to seek the death penalty, stating they do intend to seek the death penalty. Holmes’ lawyer recently requested the suspect’s plea be changed to not guilty by reason of insanity, which the judge in the case is currently deciding whether or not to accept.

  • Google Wallet Gets Integrated With Gmail

    Google announced a lot of things today, but some it didn’t all make into the Google I/O keynote.

    On the Gmail blog, Google announced new Google Wallet integration for Gmail, which comes in the form of an “Attach Money” button. Yep, you can send money as an attachment. A pretty good idea, as long as it doesn’t land in the spam folder.

    The feature lets you send money by email even if the recipient does not have a Gmail address.

    “It’s free to send money if your bank account is linked to Google Wallet or using your Google Wallet Balance, and low fees apply to send money using your linked credit or debit card,” says Google Wallet product manager Travis Green. “To send money in Gmail, hover over the attachment paperclip, click the $ icon to attach money to your message, enter the amount you wish to send, and press send.”

    The feature will only be available for desktop at first, but will likely come to mobile Gmail in the future. In the meantime, you can still use the Google Wallet app or wallet.google.com.

    The feature is rolling out over the coming months to U.S. Gmail users who are 18 and over.

  • YouTube Live Streaming Expands to All Channels with 1000+ Subscribers

    Back in April of 2011, YouTube launched YouTube Live, which offered live streaming capabilities to a select number of partners. Today, they’re announcing a massive expansion of the program which will allow tons of new channels to live stream content as they wish.

    Starting today, all YouTube channels in good standing (you know, following the YouTube Community Guidelines) with over 1,000 subscribers are eligible for live streaming. If you want to know if you are eligible, simply check your account features page. If you’re eligible, you’ll see an “enable” button and there you’ll be able to sign up. YouTube says that live streaming capabilities will officially come to these channels in the following weeks.

    Here’s what YouTube has to say about what content creators will get with the YouTube Live expansion:

    YouTube Live allows you to offer your audience a great viewing experience, with great streaming quality and instant scalability and reliability. Here are some key features:

    • You get real-time transcoding in the cloud, so you only need to send us your highest quality stream and we make it instantly available in all resolutions and device formats
    • You can show multiple camera angles, add closed captions, and insert ads and slates
    • Viewers can watch the live stream from any device, get the best quality constantly adjusting to their Internet connection, and can skip back and forth in the live stream

    Last month, YouTube for iOS finally got live streaming. And last week, YouTube pulled the curtain back on their long-rumored paid channels. Only a few select partners currently have access to those paid channels at launch, but in the future you can see how expanded live streaming and paid channel subscriptions could prove an interesting match.

  • Google Launches New Reporting Features For AdSense

    Google has been full of announcements today as its developers conference, Google I/O, takes place. Not everything the company announced today came from I/O, however.

    For one, the company announced on its Inside AdSense blog that it has added dome new features to AdSense to provide users with more detailed segmentation of traffic in their reports.

    “The Countries report shows your performance broken down by the country of users who engaged with the ads on your pages,” says AdSense product manager Matt Goodridge. “In addition to viewing a country breakdown for reports by ad type, bid type, and targeting type, you’ll now also be able to see a Countries report when viewing the reporting dimensions URL channel, custom channel, and ad unit. This will allow you to segment your traffic further and get a better understanding of your account performance in different locations.”

    “In order to help you get more granular insights into your performance on a site level, we’re introducing a new reporting type for Owned sites,” says Goodridge. “‘Owned’ sites are all sites specified as owned in the site management feature, and the new reporting dimension for Owned sites will be a subset of the Sites report. In contrast to the Sites report, however, you’ll be able to combine the Owned sites report with the Countries report. This will allow you to segment your traffic in more detail and understand the performance of your sites across different countries.”

    Country breakdown of reports by URL channel, custom channel and ad unit will only be available for reports with date ranges starting March 9th and later. Historical data in Owned sites reports will be available from the date that a site was added or claimed as “owned”. Users will only be able to view country data breakdowns for Owned sites for reports with date ranges starting March 22 or later.

  • Google Hangouts officially announced at Google I/O, now live in the Google Play Store

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    The long-anticipated Google Hangouts application was announced this afternoon at Google I/O 2013 and is now available in the Google Play Store for download.

    The app allows for one-to-one chat, group chat, picture/video sharing, emojis, as well as video calling. It’s multi-platform integrated, meaning you can use it on your computer, your Android, or your iOS device— everything will remain perfectly synced. Conversation threads will remain on the Hangouts application until you delete them, so you can always look back and see a timeline of old photos and videos you shared with others through the app.

    One pretty big disappointment is the lack of SMS support in the application. However, some have said otherwise. Google knows that apps like “Hangouts” are the future of smartphone communication, so they may just be paving the way for the abandonment of SMS-use. We’ll just have to wait and see how users react to this new technology! Check out a photo gallery and the link to the Google Play Store after the break!

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    QR Code generatorPlay Store Download Link

    Come comment on this article: Google Hangouts officially announced at Google I/O, now live in the Google Play Store

  • Here’s Everything You Need To Know About Google Play Game Services

    During today’s Google I/O keynote, the company announced Google Play game services – a series of APIs that help developers add more features and value to their Android and iOS games.

    Much like Apple’s Game Center or Xbox Live, Google Play game services adds a number of features to Android or iOS games that users expect, and developers have been wanting to implement. What’s unique about Google Play game services is that it’s not exclusive to Android, as it can be integrated into iOS games via a native SDK for iPhone and iPad.

    So, what does Google Play game services offer to developers and users? Here’s the full list:

  • Achievements that increase engagement and promote different styles of play.
  • Social and public leaderboards that seamlessly use Google+ circles to track high scores across friends and across the world.
  • Cloud saves that provide a simple and streamlined storage API to store game saves and settings. Now players never have to replay Level 1 again.
  • Real-time multiplayer for easy addition of cooperative or competitive game play on Android devices. Using Google+ Circles, a game can have up to 4 simultaneous friends or auto-matched players in a game session together with support for additional players coming soon.
  • Google has also enlisted the help of developers to make sure that some of the most popular games on the Android platform are already using Google Play game services. Some of those games include World of Goo, Super Stickman Golf 2, Beach Buggy Blitz, Kingdom Rush, Eternity Warriors 2 and Osmos.

    For more information on all things Google and gaming, check out Google’s game developer portal.

  • Fear of American pop culture drives European smartphone, tablet taxes

    European Smartphone, Tablet Tax Analysis
    European governments are casting a baleful eye on the explosive smartphone and tablet growth. The problem for many Europeans lies in the way these devices promote vehicles for American entertainment — from Amazon and Netflix to Apple and Disney. The new proposal made by the president of France would slap a 1% tax on all smartphone and tablet retail sales, with a goal to protect “l’exception culturelle”. This exception is a concept France created in 1992 to defend protectionist measures aimed at preserving the cultural heritage of France.

    Continue reading…

  • And, bam! Here’s Google Compute Engine

    Drum roll, please. Google Compute Engine is now available to everyone, not just those who pay $400 per month for Google Gold support. (Update: Actually, it turns out folks can sign up for GCE starting at 6 p.m. PDT on Wednesday.)

    Google Compute Engine logoNotably, Google will offer its resources in sub-hour increments — something that public cloud kingpin Amazon Web Services does not support (although other providers like Cloud Sigma and Profitbricks do). Users don’t have to buy a whole hour of an instance, but can buy instances by the minute with a 10-minute minimum, Google SVP Urs Hölzle, said in a Google I/O 2013 session Wednesday afternoon.

    Other perks, per Hölzle’s blog post:

    • Shared-core instances provide smaller instance shapes for low-intensity workloads.
    • Advanced Routing features help you create gateways and VPN servers that enable you to build applications spanning your local network and Google’s cloud
    • Large persistent disks support up to 10 terabytes per volume, which translates to 10X the industry standard

    Hölzle also noted that Google will offer 10TB persistent disks, something an “unnamed cloud competitor” does not offer after seven years in business. As some expected, Google also announced PHP support for Google App Engine (GAE).

    Google announced GCE at last year’s event in June, and started opening up access to select users a few months later. Last month, it let Google Gold customers in.

    The ecosystem is getting ready too: MongoLab announced support for the Google cloud platform.

    This story was updated at 1:47 p.m. PDT to update availability information. 

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  • Uptime: Flash Storage is Top Data Center Disruptor

    Andy Lawrence, who leads the data center technologies and the Eco-Efficient IT research practices at 451 Research, mentioned the chief claims of modular vendors as speed of deployment, lower costs, better reliability and efficiencies.

    Andy Lawrence, the VP Research for Datacenter Technologies at 451 Research, presented ratings on which new technologies will create the most disruption in the data center industry at the Uptime Symposium.

    Which new technologies will genuinely gain traction in the data center industry? At this week’s Uptime Symnposium 2013, analyst Andy Lawrence provided The 451 Group’s take on disruptive tech, using a grading system to separate marketing hype from real-world adoption.

    The winners? Lawrence sees Flash storage as the leading disruptive force, followed by cloud-level resiliency, “advanced” data center infrastructure management (DCIM) and prefabricated modular data centers. The technology we’re least likely to see? Onsite clean power generation, which trailed the pack by a considerable margin.

    The 451 Group’s “Disruptive Rating” system includes feedback from 17 analysts from 451 and the Uptime Institute, who assessed new technologies using three criteria: how big the impact will be, how fast it will happen, and how likely it is to happen. The ratings used a 1 to 5 scale, which 5 equating to “prepare for competitive, disruptive change now.”

    Here’s a summary of the findings, presented Tuesday by Lawrence, the VP Research, Datacenter Technologies at 451 Research:

    • Flash storage: The use of fast, low-energy. non-volatile solid state memory is the most disruptive data center technology out there, according the the 451 Research team. It provides performance gains and uses less space and power than existing storage technologies. The drawbacks: Flash is expensive and unsuited for lower tier long-term storage. It earned a Disruption Rating of 4.11, the only entry to score above the 4.0 benchmark, which translates to “some impact likely soon.” 
    • Cloud-level resiliency: This strategy weighed in at 3.79 on the Disrupt-O-Meter. Managing redundancy with software and shifting data across wide area networks wins points for its ability to reduce investment in a facility’s infrastructure plant, significantly lowering capital expenses while improving reliability.  
    • Advanced DCIM:  Keeping in mind that not all “DCIM” is created equal, 451 Research sees “advanced” DCIM that ties IT service management to data center infrastructure as having serious disruptive potential, with a score of 3.72. Although the technology is expensive and mostly unproven for high availability scenarios, many data center operators are yearning for worthy DCIM tools that can provide effective capacity planning.
    • Prefabricated Modular Data Centers: This was a major focus of last year’s Symposium, and Uptime/451 sees it gaining further traction. Benefits include rapid deployment, reliable designs and reduced costs. But modular designs aren’t right for many requirements, and the economic gains can suffer at scale. 

    Then there’s onsite clean power generation, like Apple’s massive solar array and slew of landfill-powered Bloom boxes. The 451 Group analysts say deploying on-site green power is in the “con” column on two key decision drivers for data centers: high cost and unproven reliability. Onsite clean power scored just 2.62 on the Disrupt-O-Meter.

    Technologies falling between 3.3 and 3.6 included silicon photonics, chiller-free data centers, power-proportional computing and memristors.

    You can follow all the action from The Uptime Symposium on Twitter with the hashtag #Uptime13.

  • Arias Death Penalty Trial To Begin Today

    Jodi Arias, the young woman who was found guilty last week of first degree murder in the death of her boyfriend, is awaiting the results of a new phase of her trial: that which decides her fate.

    The court reconvened today to decide whether or not Arias will receive the death penalty for the murder of Travis Alexander, who was found in his bathtub in 2008 with multiple stab wounds, a gunshot wound, and a slit throat. Arias pinned the murder on an intruder at first, but after evidence was introduced that put her at the crime scene, she admitted she’d killed Alexander and said it was in self-defense. The defense attorneys painted a picture of a woman in love, who often wrote poetry to Alexander; the prosecution, however, said she was a jealous, spurned woman out for revenge after Alexander rejected her.

    In order to get a death penalty sentence, prosecutor Juan Martinez will inevitably argue that Alexander died a cruel and bloody death, as evidenced by the numerous defensive wounds found on his body. He’ll also be calling on more witnesses and speaking to members of Alexander’s family in order to convince the jury that Arias deserves to die for her crime.

    As for Arias, she says she’d rather die than spend the rest of her life in prison, which is the alternative to the death sentence.

    “Longevity runs in my family, and I don’t want to spend the rest of my natural life in one place,” she said. “I believe death is the ultimate freedom, and I’d rather have my freedom as soon as I can get it.”

  • Google TV will receive Android 4.2.2 update as well as latest version of Chrome

    Google will update its Google TV platform to Android 4.2.2, the company announced on Google+ Wednesday. The update will be rolled out to existing devices in the coming months, and it will bring all the major features of the latest version of Android and Chrome to TV screens.

    From the announcement post:

    “Today, Google TV is moving to the latest version of Android (Jelly Bean, 4.2.2), and we’ve refactored Google TV so that our TV OEM partners can update to future versions of Android in a matter of weeks rather than months. For developers, this means you can build TV experiences using the latest Android APIs, including the NDK.

    Today Google TV is also moving to the latest version of Chrome, and from now on Google TV benefits from Chrome updates on the same six week cycle that you’ve come to expect from Chrome. In Chrome on Google TV, we’ve added support for hardware-based content protection, enabling developers to provide premium TV content in HD within their web apps.”

    Some Google TV hardware partners have been working with the new version since February.

    This will be a big step for Google TV, which has been based on Android 3.2, or Honeycomb, since the last major OS update in late 2011. However, some Google TV owners won’t be able to take advantage of the update: A Google spokesperson confirmed Wednesday that it will only be available for ARM-based Google TV devices, and not on first-generation Intel-based Google TV set-top-boxes and TVs.

    Coming next to Google TV: video games?

    The update could bring a number of new features to Google TV that owners of newer Android handsets take for granted, including a better performance, a much-needed UI-update and an all likelihood some form of Google Now integration. It should also help developers by making it easier to port their Android 4.x-optimized apps to Google TV.

    But there’s another aspect that’s interesting about this step: Google also announced Google Play games services, a cloud gaming service that makes it possible to develop multi-player games and save game plays across devices, at I/O Wednesday.

    With Google TV switching to Android 4.2.2, it’s reasonable to assume that Google TV devices should have access to Google Play Games sooner or later as well. This could give the smart TV platform, which has so far only seen modest adoption, another leg to stand on, and potentially enable future Google TV devices to function as full-blown game consoles as well.

    This post was updated at 1:35pm with additional information about the devices that will receive the update.

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  • Google Music All Access Goes Live, Here’s What to Expect

    If you’re still looking to add a streaming music service to your collection of services (which, admittedly, could be pretty massive by now), Google wants to throw their hat in the ring. Today, Google launched Google Play Music All Access, which is their new subscription music service that puts millions of tracks at your fingertips, and cozies them up to all of your existing music to produce recommendations. Google says that All Access is all about music discovery.

    They’re not lying – it’s very heavy on the discovery. But more on that later.

    It’s now live, available at music.google.com. The first thing you’ll be prompted to do upon arrival is sign up for the free trial. Google is offering a 30-day free trial, after that the service will be $9.99 a month (the same as Spotify’s premium service). But if you sign up for a free trial before June 30th, Google will knock two bucks off that price. Not bad. When you sign up for the trial (via Google Wallet, but you won’t be charged anything right now), you then be prompted to upload your music to Google Play using Music Manager. Google tells you that All Access is “even better when you combine your collection with ours.”

    The first thing you’ll see is the “Listen Now” section. Google wasn’t kidding when they said at the I/O conference that it would be a true mix of your own music and all of the other music available via All Access. At first, it looks a bit confusing, but you quickly realize that it’s simply made up of a bunch of tiles – each tile representing something different. One tile may suggest an album or track or even a playlist because you recently played it. Right next to that tile, another may suggest a new release based on what you’ve been listening to. Another tile will suggest that you start a radio station based on a song you’ve played.

    Google says that the Listen Now section will improve the more you listen, as it will learn to surface better stuff based on your tastes.

    The “Explore” section is another tool for discovering music, albeit it slightly less-focused on your own personal library and interest. Sure, there’s a “recommendation” section, but it’s not as intensive as the “listen now” section. Two other tabs that help you discover new music inside Explore are “featured” and “new releases.”

    The featured section shows you featured playlists, top albums, and top songs from across the Google Play network.

    And the new releases section is pretty self-explanatory. The Explore tab is also where you can browse music by genre. Google currently suggests 22 different genres, which when clicked on open up options for sub-genres. For instance, if I click on Alternative/Indie, I can then click on ’80s Alternative, Emo/Hardcore, or Neo-Folk. Within each genre you’re given featured playlists, top albums, key albums (the classics in that genre for instance Radiohead’s Kid A), and top new albums.

    From anywhere in the service, just click on an album to open up it’s album page. From there, you can begin playing tracks, and get information on it.

    Also, you can always just play any song that you see by clicking the play button. If it’s on an album, it’ll just start playing the first track on the album.

    As you can see above, there are buttons to “add to my library,” which puts the album alongside all of your owned music in your library, and “play radio.”

    Radio is one of the features that Google seemed really excited by at the I/O conference. With Google Music Radio, all you have to do is base it off of one song, and Google will generate a never-ending playlist of related tracks – not exactly a breakthrough technology within the streaming music service world. But one cool thing about the playlists are that they fully customizable, as you can click and drag to reorder them however you please. Plus, you can play any track in the station whenever you want.

    Clicking on the “Radio” tab on the left-hand side accesses all of your created radio stations, plus gives you some suggested stations.

    Artist pages looks nice, an feature bios, top songs, albums, and related artists:

    Very early, probably misguided and subject to change thoughts:

    Look, there are other streaming music services that offer millions of songs ready to play at the click of a button. Google Music All Access looks to be at least a competent service by this criteria, if not better than that. Time will tell as you search through artists to see what’s available and what isn’t. Google has major labels as partners in the venture, so I think we’ll be good in that department.

    The “Listen Now” section is probably the most notable feature of the service so far. The way that Google interweaves your personal music library with all of the other music available through All Access is nice, and could lead to some good discoveries. Mainly, Google says that it will help remove the paralyzing “what the hell to listen to now” problem.

    One of the major strikes that it has is the lack of a free, ad-supported option. You’re either all-in or all-out with that $9.99 per month fee. And even the free trial requires a credit card signup. I feel that many users will be wary of that.

    But it’s worth a try, and with the free trial why not? Plus, if you sign up before June 30th, you can get All Access for $7.99 a month. Give it a try now.

  • Google shares close above $900 for first time, market cap at over $300 billion

    Google Share Price: $900
    Google’s shares continued to rise on Wednesday in the wake of the Google I/O conference, closing at over $900 for the first time and giving the company a market cap of over $300 billion for the first time in its history. The company’s stock value has been increasing at a rapid pace all year, growing from the low $700 range at the start of 2013 to the low $900 range by the end of trading on Wednesday. The continued rise in shares Wednesday was somewhat curious given that Google didn’t unveil a new Nexus tablet or a new version of Android at I/O this year as many had been expecting. Some analysts have slapped the company with a $1,000 price target in recent months and it appears that it has a legitimate shot of hitting that target now that its shares have surged past the $900 mark.

  • Jekyll into Hyde: Breathing auto emissions turns HDL cholesterol from ‘good’ to ‘bad’

    Academic researchers have found that breathing motor vehicle emissions triggers a change in high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, altering its cardiovascular protective qualities so that it actually contributes to clogged arteries. 
     
    In addition to changing HDL from “good” to “bad,” the inhalation of emissions activates other components of oxidation, the early cell and tissue damage that causes inflammation, leading to hardening of the arteries, according to the research team, which included scientists from UCLA and other institutions.
     
    The findings of this early study, done in mice, are available in the online edition of the journal Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis and Vascular Biology, a publication of the American Heart Association, and will appear in the journal’s June print edition.
     
    Emission particles such as those from vehicles are major pollutants in urban settings. These particles are coated in chemicals that are sensitive to free radicals, which have been known to cause oxidation. The mechanism behind how this leads to atherosclerosis, however, has not been well understood.
     
    In the study, the researchers found that after two weeks of exposure to vehicle emissions, mice showed oxidative damage in the blood and liver — damage that was not reversed after a subsequent week of receiving filtered air. Altered HDL cholesterol may play a key role in this damaging process, they said.
     
    “This is the first study showing that air pollutants promote the development of dysfunctional, pro-oxidative HDL cholesterol and the activation of an internal oxidation pathway, which may be one of the mechanisms in how air pollution can exacerbate clogged arteries that lead to heart disease and stroke,” said senior author Dr. Jesus Araujo, an associate professor of medicine and director of environmental cardiology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. 
     
    For the study, one group of mice was exposed to vehicle emissions for two weeks and then filtered air for one week, a second was exposed to two weeks of emissions with no filtered air, and a third was exposed to only clean, filtered air for two weeks. This part of the collaborative research took place at the Northlake Exposure Facility at the University of Washington, headed by study author Michael E. Rosenfeld.
     
    “The biggest surprise was finding that after two weeks of exposure to vehicle emissions, one week of breathing clean filtered air was not enough to reverse the damage,” said Rosenfeld, a professor of environmental and occupational health sciences and pathology at the University of Washington.
     
    Mice were exposed for a few hours, several days a week, to whole diesel exhaust at a particulate mass concentration within the range of what mine workers usually are exposed to.
     
    After the exposures, UCLA scientists analyzed blood and tissue specimens and checked to see if the protective antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties of HDL, known as “good” cholesterol, were still intact. They used special analytical laboratory procedures originally developed by study author Mohamad Navab at UCLA to evaluate how “good” or “bad” HDL had become. The team found that many of the positive properties of HDL were markedly altered after the air-pollutant exposure.
     
    For example, the HDL of mice exposed to two weeks of vehicle emissions, including those that received a subsequent week of filtered air, had a much-decreased ability to protect against oxidation and inflammation induced by low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, known as “bad” cholesterol, than the mice that had only been exposed to filtered air.
     
    According to researchers, without HDL’s ability to inhibit LDL, along with other factors, the oxidation process may run unchecked. Moreover, not only was the HDL of the mice exposed to diesel exhaust unable to protect against oxidation, but, in fact, it further enhanced the oxidative process and even worked in tandem with the LDL to promote even more oxidative damage.
     
    Researchers also found a twofold to threefold increase of additional oxidation products in the blood of mice exposed to vehicle emissions, as well as activation of oxidation pathways in the liver. The degree of HDL dysfunction was correlated with the level of these oxidation markers.
     
    “We suggest that people try to limit their exposure to air pollutants, as they may induce damage that starts during the exposure and continues long after it ends,” said first author Fen Yin, a researcher in the division of cardiology at the Geffen School of Medicine. 
     
    The current research builds on the team’s previous findings that ambient ultrafine particles commonly found in air pollution, including vehicle emissions, enhance the build-up of cholesterol plaques in the arteries and that HDL may play a role. 
     
    “Our research helps confirm that the functionality of HDL may be as important to check as the levels,” said study author Dr. Alan Fogelman, executive chair of the department of medicine and director of the atherosclerosis research unit at the Geffen School of Medicine.
     
    The study was funded by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences; the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute; and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
     
    Additional authors included Akeem Lawal, Jerry Ricks, Julie R. Fox and Tim Larson.
     
    For more news, visit the UCLA Newsroom and follow us on Twitter.

  • Brain rewires itself after damage or injury, life scientists discover

    When the brain’s primary “learning center” is damaged, complex new neural circuits arise to compensate for the lost function, say life scientists from UCLA and Australia who have pinpointed the regions of the brain involved in creating those alternate pathways — often far from the damaged site.
     
    The research, conducted by UCLA’s Michael Fanselow and Moriel Zelikowsky in collaboration with Bryce Vissel, a group leader of the neuroscience research program at Sydney’s Garvan Institute of Medical Research, appears this week in the early online edition of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
     
    The researchers found that parts of the prefrontal cortex take over when the hippocampus, the brain’s key center of learning and memory formation, is disabled. Their breakthrough discovery, the first demonstration of such neural-circuit plasticity, could potentially help scientists develop new treatments for Alzheimer’s disease, stroke and other conditions involving damage to the brain.
     
    For the study, Fanselow and Zelikowsky conducted laboratory experiments with rats showing that the rodents were able to learn new tasks even after damage to the hippocampus. While the rats needed more training than they would have normally, they nonetheless learned from their experiences — a surprising finding.
     
    “I expect that the brain probably has to be trained through experience,” said Fanselow, a professor of psychology and member of the UCLA Brain Research Institute, who was the study’s senior author. “In this case, we gave animals a problem to solve.”
     
    After discovering the rats could, in fact, learn to solve problems, Zelikowsky, a graduate student in Fanselow’s laboratory, traveled to Australia, where she worked with Vissel to analyze the anatomy of the changes that had taken place in the rats’ brains. Their analysis identified significant functional changes in two specific regions of the prefrontal cortex.
     
    “Interestingly, previous studies had shown that these prefrontal cortex regions also light up in the brains of Alzheimer’s patients, suggesting that similar compensatory circuits develop in people,” Vissel said. “While it’s probable that the brains of Alzheimer’s sufferers are already compensating for damage, this discovery has significant potential for extending that compensation and improving the lives of many.”
     
    The hippocampus, a seahorse-shaped structure where memories are formed in the brain, plays critical roles in processing, storing and recalling information. The hippocampus is highly susceptible to damage through stroke or lack of oxygen and is critically inolved in Alzheimer’s disease, Fanselow said.
     
    “Until now, we’ve been trying to figure out how to stimulate repair within the hippocampus,” he said. “Now we can see other structures stepping in and whole new brain circuits coming into being.”
     
     Zelikowsky said she found it interesting that sub-regions in the prefrontal cortex compensated in different ways, with one sub-region — the infralimbic cortex — silencing its activity and another sub-region — the prelimbic cortex — increasing its activity.
     
    “If we’re going to harness this kind of plasticity to help stroke victims or people with Alzheimer’s,” she said, “we first have to understand exactly how to differentially enhance and silence function, either behaviorally or pharmacologically. It’s clearly important not to enhance all areas. The brain works by silencing and activating different populations of neurons. To form memories, you have to filter out what’s important and what’s not.”
     
    Complex behavior always involves multiple parts of the brain communicating with one another, with one region’s message affecting how another region will respond, Fanselow noted. These molecular changes produce our memories, feelings and actions.
     
    “The brain is heavily interconnected — you can get from any neuron in the brain to any other neuron via about six synaptic connections,” he said. “So there are many alternate pathways the brain can use, but it normally doesn’t use them unless it’s forced to. Once we understand how the brain makes these decisions, then we’re in a position to encourage pathways to take over when they need to, especially in the case of brain damage.
     
    “Behavior creates molecular changes in the brain; if we know the molecular changes we want to bring about, then we can try to facilitate those changes to occur through behavior and drug therapy,” he added. I think that’s the best alternative we have. Future treatments are not going to be all behavioral or all pharmacological, but a combination of both.”
      
    Fanselow and Vissel have worked closely over the last several years. For more information on Fanselow’s research, visit the Fanselow Lab website. For more on the Garvan Institute of Medical Research, visit their website.
     
    The research was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health (grant MH 62122), part of the National Institutes of Health, and by the National Science Foundation (EAPSI award 0914307 to Zelikowsky).
     
    UCLA is California’s largest university, with an enrollment of more than 40,000 undergraduate and graduate students. The UCLA College of Letters and Science and the university’s 11 professional schools feature renowned faculty and offer 337 degree programs and majors. UCLA is a national and international leader in the breadth and quality of its academic, research, health care, cultural, continuing education and athletic programs. Six alumni and six faculty have been awarded the Nobel Prize.
     
    For more news, visit the UCLA Newsroom and follow us on Twitter.

  • Broccoli takes a magical journey in the trailer for Mary Roach’s new book

    Mary Roach is the kind of journalist who gets excited about the details of embalming, court cases involving ghosts and the mechanics of how exactly one uses the bathroom in space. So we are excitedly awaiting the release of her new book, Gulp, in which she explores the eccentricities of the digestive system. We have to admit, we are pretty amused by this trailer for the book, in which broccoli rides the roller coaster of the alimentary canal and then plays a little intestinal skeeball.

    Watch the trailer and then watch Roach’s amazing TED Talk, “10 things you didn’t know orgasm.”

    And bonus: check out Jon Ronson’s talk “Strange answers to the psychopath test,” as Ronson had the honor of reviewing Gulp in The New York Times.

  • Robin Williams CBS Comedy Coming This Fall

    CBS Entertainment today announced its new fall lineup, which includes an emphasis on the network‘s comedy programming.

    One of the more interesting new comedies announced is The Crazy Ones, a new show featuring comedian Robin Williams and Sarah Michelle Gellar of Buffy the Vampire Slayer fame. The show will premiere this fall in the 9:00 EST slot, just after The Big Bang Theory and The Millers, a new comedy starring Arrested Development‘s Will Arnett. It is being produced by David E. Kelley, the Emmy Award-winning creator of shows such as Ally McBeal, Boston Legal, The Practice, and Chicago Hope.

    The Crazy Ones will be a single-camera comedy about the head of an advertising agency named Simon Roberts (Williams), whose eccentric behavior is matched only by his skill in advertising. Gellar will play Sydney Roberts, Simon’s daughter and business partner, whose ambition and work ethic put her at odds with her father. The pair are joined by a varied cast of employees played by James Wolk, Hamish Linklater, and Amanda Setton.

    Last month, Williams teased fans by tweeting out several photos from the set of The Crazy Ones:

  • Google Search gets expanded functionality for users, brings new cards and improved Voice Search abilities

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    One of the major pieces of awesomeness at Google I/O was the introduction of the revamped Search function. Right off the bat, the new Search function for you Google Now users includes not only new cards, but also the ability to set reminders or see real-time public transportation updates. So whenever you want that reminder to “take out the trash before 7am” or want to see continuous updates for the A train at New York’s Penn Station (or other select cities), then Google certainly has you covered. Voice Search users aren’t left in the dust either, as Google has gone ahead and implemented some extra functionality to the nifty tool— so users can ask more questions such as “what time it is my flight leaves Thursday” or something of that nature.

    The update is already live in the Play Store now, so be sure to grab it by clicking on the Play Store link below.

    Google_Search_QR

    Play Store download link

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  • Zivix Announces Wireless iOS Connectivity For The Jamstik MIDI Guitar

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    When we first met the team from Zivix their wild MIDI guitar, the Jamstik, promised a unique music-making experience thanks to a tether that connected it to a computer or iOS device. In the few short months since CES, however, they’re now preparing to announce that Jamstik works nearly flawlessly over Wi-Fi with iPhones and iPads, thereby reducing the need for a physically tethered device.

    The Jamstik, which has surpassed its Indigogo goal with 13 days to go, is the first product by Zivix that aims to make music education and composition far easier than on a normal guitar. Not unlike the GTar, the Jamstik outputs MIDI signals as you play. However, instead of electrical connections with the strings the Jamstik uses IR sensors to “see” where your fingers are on the fretboard, allowing for tricks like string bending and hammer-ons and -offs.

    The new prototypes have full MIDI over WiFi support, allowing you to connect to an iOS device completely wirelessly. The Jamstik actually creates its own ad hoc network with your device, allowing you to maintain a connection to your favorite audio program without having to connect cables. In the demo I saw today the Jamstik maintained a solid connection for most of an hour and, using Audiobus, you could transmit audio from one program to another, allowing for some amazing mixed MIDI and audio recordings.

    The company plans to go into production in 30 days and they have 17 days left on their Indiegogo campaign. The device itself is $299 and the company is in talks to get it into retail stores in Q4 for general consumers. It’s an exciting time to be a musician, that’s for sure.

  • Watch out, Ustream and Co: YouTube is expanding its live streaming offering

    YouTube took another big step towards fully embracing live video Wednesday: The video site opened up live streaming to a much larger crowd of publishers, allowing anyone who has an account in good standing and at least 1,000 channel subscribers to stream live on the site. The changes were announced on the YouTube Creator blog Wednesday, and they come conjunction with Google I/O, the internet giant’s annual developer conference.

    YouTube first introduced live streaming two years ago with select partners, and has since gradually expanded the number of approved live streamers by opening up the service to nonprofits and other partners. The site has also been offering any Google+ user to live stream so-called Hangouts on Air, which are essentially Hangouts that can be watched by an unlimited number of users.

    YouTube has been working behind the scenes for some time to make live streaming on its service more robust and attractive. It added the ability for select publishers to charge for live streams a year ago, and rolled out a completely revamped live streaming platform earlier this year.

    YouTube’s announcement could put pressure on dedicated live streaming services like Ustream, Livestream or Justin.tv. All of these companies at some point directly competed with each other for the live streaming masses, but most have since tried to differentiate themselves with their own take on live video: Justin spun out Twitch.tv to double down on video game live streams, and Livestream has been moving away from pre-roll advertising towards native monetization.

    Image courtesy of Flickr user kevindooley

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