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  • Peli™ launches the 1170 Case

    Extending their range of more than 50 cases, Peli Products, S.L.U., the global leader in the design and manufacture of advanced lighting systems and virtually indestructible cases, has introduced the 1170 Case.
    Designed as watertight/crush-resistant armour for handheld electronics and any small, delicate items, this case features a high-impact, heat and chemical resistant polymer shell that will stand up to some of the harshest conditions known to man.
    As additional protection, the case offers stainless steel hardware and double-throw latches that can stand up to 182 kilos of pull force, yet open with a light pull. The case’s tongue-and-groove lid construction and polymer o-ring creates a watertight seal and its built-in, automatic pressure equalization valve keeps moisture out and makes it easier to open the case at any altitude.
    The 1170 Case is available in black, silver, orange and yellow. Desert tan and OD green are available by request.

    Like all Peli Cases the 1170 is covered by the Peli Guarantee of Excellence:
    “You break it, we replace it… forever™”

  • Dynabrade: Perfect polishing in less than 20 seconds!

    Founded in 1969, Dynabrade® is a Global Leader in Abrasive Power Tools in the Automotive Aftermarket, AOEM, Aerospace, Industrial and Marine market. Dynabrade® tools are used in applications such as cutting, grinding, deburring, filing, sanding and polishing materials like metal, wood, plastic, rubber, stone, glass, fibreglass and composites.

    Thanks to continuous research and development, Dynabrade® produces reliable, long-lasting and ergonomic tools that are available through distribution networks worldwide. Together with our customers, we define the best solutions for their production processes, achieving perfect results and improving productivity.

    Dynabrade’s original Two-Step Polishing System is a proven method for repairing surface defects on clear coats in only two easy steps without leaving any residual holograms. Step One: Removal of minor surface defects by sanding. Step Two: Polish the working area using the Dynabrade® polishing compound. Our Two-Step System gives perfect results in less than 20 seconds!

    Our latest Electric Right Angle Polisher Kit is suitable for perfect finishing on lacquers, paints and clear coats. This new Kit includes the latest Electric Polisher and the Dynabrade® patented Random Orbital Head Kit that allows conversion from a rotary to a random orbital movement! Efficient for all your polishing and finishing applications this Dynabrade® Kit offers a hologram-free finish in a single step using only one polishing compound.

    For any further information, please contact us on [email protected], or visit us at JEC Paris 2010, Hall 1, Stand J50 and on our website www.dynabrade.com.

  • Glass recycling plant

    Cogelme starts a manufacturing of very cost efficient glass recycling plant in Eastern Europe country.
    Recycled material is glass bottles collected from municipal glass containers, which will be turned to 25 mm sizes glass pieces for further reuse by glass manufactures.
    Glass plant will be semi equipped – all what is hardly possible to do manually will be processed with machinery: transportation, crushing, screening, separation. Some separation part will be made manually to do remarkable savings and reach the best separation efficiency, and value from materials processing.
    The model of the plant is already tested with more than 20 years successful experience in similar projects.
    Cogelme has an important name in the field of recycling equipment manufacturing and is operating for worldwide clients in all recycling markets.

  • Ceramic metering systems ceradis – ceramix

    The new ceradis system is used to process single component materials, requiring only the addition of a suitable material supply system and metering computer.

    Multi component materials can be accommodated by using the ceramix system, which due to its modular construction simply comprises of two or more ceradis systems, connected by a mixing block with the addition of a disposable static mixer.

    When controlled by the Hilger u. Kern MR20 metering computer, precise flow rates as well as shot sizes can be preprogrammed. Speed proportional material dispensing can also be achieved for use with robotic application if required.

    Designed to be used in such industries as automotive, automotive component, aerospace, medical and many others where materials need to be metered and applied in a high precision and repeatable way, these advanced systems make use of lowwear, high performance ceramic technology.

    In order to easily process filled and abrasive materials without causing damage to the parts that are in contact with the material, neither seals nor valve technology is used, resulting in exceptionally low maintenance requirements and greatly increased service intervals.

  • Subtle Shift From Adm. Mullen on Iran Strikes?

    To take one more crack at Adm. Michael Mullen’s comments after a Columbia University address yesterday, it’s certainly clear that the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff took pains to keep any military option against Iran as a last resort. But he may have shifted his emphasis about what hypothetical military strikes might accomplish.

    According to Reuters (via Laura Rozen), Mullen said military strikes — presumably meaning missile strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities — would go “a long way” toward delaying Iran’s nuclear program. That’s tonally different than some of Mullen’s comments earlier this year that threw cold water on the efficacy of military action. Consider this February comment to the press, shortly after Mullen toured the Middle East:

    We owe the secretary and the president a range of options for this threat. We owe the American people our readiness. But as I’ve said many times, I worry a lot about the unintended consequences of any sort of military action. For now, the diplomatic and the economic levers of international power are and ought to be the levers first pulled. Indeed, I would hope they are always and consistently pulled. No strike, however effective, will be, in and of itself, decisive.

    My emphasis. In fairness, it’s possible to reconcile the two statements — while no single strike could be decisive, a bunch of them could go a long way toward slowing Iran’s nuclear program. But Mullen used to talk about what military strikes couldn’t accomplish, and now he’s venturing toward musing on what they can – while still cautioning that they still carry a big risk of unintended consequences and ought to be the very last resort. If Mullen was looking to tamp down Mideast speculation that a misinterpreted memo from Secretary of Defense Robert Gates meant the U.S. had few military options against Iran, that’s one way to go about it.

  • You Could Not Make It Up: Iranian cleric: Promiscuous women cause quakes

    Article Tags: You could not make it up

    BEIRUT — A senior Iranian cleric says women who wear revealing clothing and behave promiscuously are to blame for earthquakes.

    Iran is one of the world’s most earthquake-prone countries, and the cleric’s unusual explanation for why the earth shakes follows a prediction by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad that a quake is certain to hit Tehran and that many of its 12 million inhabitants should relocate.

    “Many women who do not dress modestly … lead young men astray, corrupt their chastity and spread adultery in society, which (consequently) increases earthquakes,” Hojatoleslam Kazem Sedighi was quoted as saying by Iranian media. Women in the Islamic Republic are required by law to cover from head to toe, but many, especially the young, ignore some of the more strict codes and wear tight coats and scarves pulled back that show much of the hair.

    “What can we do to avoid being buried under the rubble?” Sedighi asked during a prayer sermon Friday. “There is no other solution but to take refuge in religion and to adapt our lives to Islam’s moral codes.” Seismologists have warned for at least two decades that it is likely the sprawling capital will be struck by a catastrophic quake in the near future.

    Click source to read about this new theory on Earthquakes

    Source: google.com

    Read in full with comments »   


  • Experimental Polymerase Inhibitor Lowers HCV Viral Load Fast

    After just three days of a Phase 1b trial, Vertex’s VX-222 is asserting itself as a possible contender to partner with telaprevir for a new Hepatitis C combination therapy regimen.

    Hepatitis C Virus Polymerase Inhibitor VX-222 Reduced Viral Levels Over Three Days In Phase 1b Trial

    In conjunction with an oral presentation at the 45th Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) in Vienna, Vertex Pharmaceuticals Incorporated (Nasdaq: VRTX) today announced results from a Phase 1b clinical trial of the investigational oral hepatitis C virus (HCV) polymerase inhibitor, VX-222. In the trial, treatment with VX-222 for three days was well-tolerated, with all adverse events being mild to moderate in severity.

    Continue reading this entire article:
    http://www.thestreet.com/story/10726924/1/hepatitis-c-virus-polymerase-inhibitor-vx-222-reduced-viral-levels-over-three-days-in-phase-1b-trial.html?cm_ven=GOOGLEFI

  • How to get rid of weeds without pesticides

    Anngee

    EarthTalk is a Q&A column from E/The Environmental Magazine

    Dear EarthTalk: I pruned back an overgrown bush in my backyard last fall and now the soil around it is covered in dandelions and other weeds. Is there any way to get rid of these weeds without resorting to RoundUp and other chemical herbicides?–Max S., Seattle WA

    Weeds are nothing if not opportunistic. While you may not have bargained for getting one form of eyesore (weeds) by clearing another (an overgrown bush), dandelions and other fast-growing, quickly spreading plants know no bounds when some new territory opens up. They will colonize and spread out given the slightest opening—after all, that’s what defines them as weeds.

    Of course, conventional herbicides such as Monsanto’s RoundUp will take down the weeds in a jiffy, but the negative effects on people, animals and the environment may be both profound and long-lasting. Independent studies of RoundUp have implicated its primary ingredient, glyphosphate, as well as some of its “inert” ingredients, in liver damage, reproductive disorders and Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma, as well as in cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, nerve and respiratory damage.

    California’s Department of Pesticide Regulation reports that, year after year, RoundUp is the number one cause of pesticide/herbicide-induced illness and injury around that state. RoundUp is also blamed for poisoning groundwater across the U.S. and beyond, as well as for contributing to a 70% decrease in amphibian biodiversity and a 90% decrease in tadpole numbers in regions where it is used heavily.

    Given that you’ll have to manually remove dead weeds from your yard after applying RoundUp (or any other “post-emergent” herbicide), why not just pull them up by hand in the first place? No doubt, the most eco-friendly way to get rid of weeds is to yank them out without the aid of poisons. Unfortunately, many weeds have long, deep roots that need to be pulled completely if you don’t want them to grow back; if need be, use a metal weed puller with a hooked end or a mechanical grabber—available at any local garden supply or hardware store—if you don’t want to have to pull those very same weeds next year.

    Garden expert Dean Novosat of the Garden Doctor website suggests giving the weed beds a good watering the night before you pull weeds. “…the soil will be softened and will yield the entire weed plant, root and all,” he says. Another way to kill weeds, he says, is by pouring boiling hot water over them.

    Of course, once you’ve killed or pulled up all those weeds—and make sure you’re thorough or else it’s a waste of time—you’ll want to make sure new ones don’t start showing up in their place. Planting some regionally appropriate and ideally native plants in place of the removed weeds would be a good first step—check with a local nursery about what some good choices might be for your neck of the woods.

    Once the area is cleared (and replanted), cover it with three to six inches of mulch. Mulch forms a barrier between the soil and the sun, depriving any new germinating weeds of the sunlight they need to photosynthesize. Mulch is composed of large chunky material such as wood chips and bark nuggets, and works well for weed control also because it is low in nutrients and thus won’t fertilize plant starts below.

    GOT AN ENVIRONMENTAL QUESTION? Send it to: EarthTalk, c/o E/The Environmental Magazine, P.O. Box 5098, Westport, CT 06881; submit it here or via e-mail. Read past columns here and check out the recent book Earthtalk: Expert Answers to Everyday Questions about the Environment

    More from The Daily Green

    Reprinted with permission of Hearst Communications, Inc

  • Mac and cheese? Try macaroni gratin

    photo 3Sunday was one of those evenings when we were teetering between packing up the kids and walking into town for dinner or scrounging a pretty bare pantry for edibles. When the children started moaning loudly that didn’t want to get cleaned up for public viewing, I decided to scour the kitchen for food. I flung open the freezer (chicken tenderloins…done), the fridge (one head of romaine…done) and the pantry (15 boxes of penne because you never know when Barilla might go out of business.)

    So I started thinking chicken pasta. But as the chicken took shape in the skillet with bacon, onions, thyme and a splash of vermouth, it seemed like a dish that would be happier without pasta.

    The next logical step for the noodles? Mac and cheese, of course. Or, rather, penne and cheese. It was a fine idea, except the cheese drawer offered only a fossilized rind of some expensive gouda I bought months ago.

    At that point I recalled a meal I ate about 10 years ago in Lyon, France. It was a piece of …

  • U.S. financial reform is still a matter of faith

    The timing of the Securities and Exchange Commission’s suit against Goldman Sachs may sway a few doubters. But U.S. financial reform is still a matter of faith. That’s one reason for the partisan bickering. Preventing future government bank bailouts relies heavily on Wall Street believing new rules will be enforced and failures will be allowed.

    For skeptics, though, the current Senate bill leaves enough wiggle room to induce doubt.

    On paper, Democrats have a case to support their convictions. Their bill gives regulators new authority to wind down non-bank financial institutions. Tougher new capital and leverage requirements, as well as limits on risky activities, are supposed to make failures much less likely. A $50 billion bank-financed pool would fund resolution costs — though this whole idea may yet be dropped.

    The trouble is, teetering banks and their creditors might still assume that while not too big to sue — as Goldman can attest — Uncle Sam would still think them too big and interconnected to fail. And that’s the problem for many Republicans. The bill tends to favor discretion over hard and fast rules. While the feds would have the authority to shut down institutions, for instance, they wouldn’t be required to do it. History hints that regulators and politicians will continue to be tempted to rescue banks in a crisis.

    And those new rules on capital, leverage and risky activities will be spelled out only later by a new systemic risk council. The government would be able to guarantee financial firms’ debt without any automatic triggering of the resolution process. And it’s still fuzzy how the challenge of winding down cross-border obligations and operations would be met.

    There’s an argument for leaving less to officials’ discretion. If the threat of liquidation isn’t credible, banks will operate — and investors will treat them — as if a government backstop still existed.

    If the Democrats’ reform bill passes in its current form, believers might then look for signs that it’s working. One would be that big banks can no longer fund themselves so cheaply. Especially since the recent crisis, big banks — with, say, more than $100 billion in assets — have been paying less interest on deposits and debt than smaller brethren.

    If that too-big-to-fail subsidy doesn’t narrow significantly, Republicans would be justified in calling for a reform revival.

  • A look at the next iPhone, as it leaks across the Internet

    Today, Gizmodo won at the Internet, and all it took was $10,000$5000. That’s the current price being whispered amongst the blogging circles as what was paid for a prototype of the next iPhone — yep, next, as in the one that isn’t announced yet — purportedly found on the floor of a bar in San Jose.

    So what does all this mean? Is it real? Read on for the details.

    The hardware:

    The device won’t boot up (though it did briefly, and was seemingly remote wiped) and much of the internals are unlabeled, so only so much is known about the insides. But here’s what we know so far:

    • Dimensions: 4.50″x2.31″x0.37″ (For comparison, the 3GS is 4.5″x2.4″x0.48″)
    • Weight: 140 grams (3GS: 135 grams)
    • Battery: 5.25 WHr at 3.7v (3GS was 4.51 WHr at 3.7v, making the new model’s battery about 16.5% higher capacity)
    • The display: Giz says that the screen seems considerably higher resolution, but can’t determine a specific pixel count. From a technical standpoint, doing anything but doubling the pixel count both horizontally and vertically (effectively quadrupling the number of pixels on screen) would be problematic for the 180,000 apps already in the App Store. As such, if it’s a higher resolution, it’s almost certainly 960×640.
    • Front facing camera
    • Secondary rear camera, with a camera flash and seemingly larger lens
    • Uses Micro-SIM instead of a standard SIM. Nothing in the US besides the iPad 3G uses Micro-SIM at this point.
    • As shown in pictures, the rear of the case abandons the curves of the last few generations in favor of something almost perfectly flat.

    Is it real?
    If you asked me this question earlier this week, after the first pictures of it had emerged, I’d have said no — or, at least, “It’s too early to tell.”

    Given today’s evidence, however, it’s pretty much undeniable: Apple made this. Giz ripped the backing off the handset for a peek inside. I say this as someone who has disassembled one too many iPhones for their own good: that.. that is very much Apple’s work. From the shape of the clips to the types of connectors used, it’s all too familiar. Faking the outside of a phone to look like an Apple product would require man-power and cash money far beyond most people’s reach; faking the inside seems nigh impossible.

    But the new design! It’s, it’s.. so different!

    Yep. It is.

    And that’s by no means evidence against it being real. People seem to have this false idea that Apple doesn’t take rapid departures in their product designs — when in actuality, they do it often. Regularly, even.

    Every few years, Apple takes their flagship products, tears them apart, and rebuilds them from the ground up. Sometimes, they come back looking the same on the outside, but being drastically different inside (see the unibody MacBook Pros).

    The rest of the time, they come back looking nothing like their predecessors. In 1999, Apple released the iBook G1, a brightly colored clamshell that came in a rainbow of hues. In 2001, Apple dropped the colors (and took the “clamshell” design a bit less literally) in favor of a squared-off, sterile white design of the iBook G3. Look at the iMac of 2001 and the iMacs of 2004 and 2009 and try to say that Apple’s “design language” is unwavering.

    The Shroud:

    Perhaps I’m just overly geeky, but the case this thing was wrapped in is one of the coolest parts of the story.

    If this thing was out and about in someones pocket in some way that it could be dropped, the design team has apparently reached the point where it’s time for real world testing. With the iPhone reaching an almost ubiquitous level of popularity, however, an easily distinguishable new model wasn’t really something that could be carried around unnoticed.

    Apple’s solution? Make it look like a 3GS.

    Apple camouflaged this thing, much in the same way that car manufacturers tape all kinds of extra junk and obfuscation layers onto prototype cars when they’re testing them on the tracks. It sat inside a case that would make it look like a 3GS to anyone taking a cursory glance, with special holes cut in all the right places for the new bits.

    On Legality

    Before I get into this: this is by no means an indication of some moral objection on my part. Given the same opportunity — that is, to buy the next iPhone long before its release — I imagine I’d have done the exact same thing Giz has done.

    With that said, I do wonder about where all of this sits from a legal standpoint. The story, as it goes so far: guy finds what looks like an iPhone 3GS in a protective case sitting on the floor of a bar in San Jose. He pops the case off and, lo and behold, it’s not the iPhone 3GS at all, but a brand-stinkin’ new, unreleased iPhone. He sends some pictures to Engadget, and then sells the unit itself to Gizmodo for the aforementioned rumored price tag of $5k. Giz then spends a few days attempting to prove that it’s real before posting it.

    It goes without saying: I am not a lawyer. But given the circumstances and that all parties involved knew (or at least, have been working to prove) that this is an Apple prototype that didn’t rightly belong on a bar floor in San Jose, does this all fall into “possession of stolen goods”?

    Either way, it’ll be incredibly interesting to see how Apple responds to this. If they send a cease and desist, fight for some sort of injunction, or send in the A-Team to bust through the windows and steal the unit back, they’re essentially admitting its legitimacy. If they do nothing, they’ve got a prototype of their next handset floating around in the wild, months before its unveiling.

    Read Giz’s full coverage here.


  • 10 Most Outrageous Celebrity Twitter Tantrums

    Twitter fight
    Image source

    Twitter is great for staying in touch with friends, fans, family and one’s followers. Some people – celebrities especially – seem to forget that when they tweet, they’re reaching out to thousands of people. A little bit of griping can therefore quickly escalate into a full-blown Twitter tantrum. If you don’t believe us, here are some famous examples.

    1. Chris Brown

    Chris Brown
    Image source

    R’n’B star Chris Brown, better known as Rihanna’s ex-boyfriend, threw a Twitter tantrum back in December that deserves to be in the Twitter tantrum hall of fame for a long time. He got so mad that he deleted his Twitter account altogether. The reason? His latest album not being on the shelves at major stores (he had visited Wal Mart to check and it wasn’t there). Suspecting an evil conspiracy, Brown first vented via expletive-ridden tweets before signing out for good, alienating his loyal Twitter fans in the process who never did anything wrong. Maybe someone should explain social networking to him? Or maybe better not.

    2. Kanye West

    Kanye West
    Image source

    Kanye West threw a Twitter tantrum recently about not wanting to be on the popular social networking site in the first place. His response to being the victim of a fake celebrity Twitter account (with more than a million followers!) was an all caps message riddled with expletives. The gist of it? How could Twitter not know that it wasn’t him? Right, he would’ve used all caps and many more four-letter words than the impostor.

    3. Lindsay Lohan

    Lindsay Lohan
    Image source

    Lindsay Lohan’s and Samantha Ronson’s stormy relationship has been dissected ad nauseum in the press. On top of that, Lohan adds fuel to the fire by twittering often about their strained relationship, putting the blame heavily on Ronson’s family. No reconciliation in sight here.

    4. Liam Gallagher

    Liam Gallagher
    Image source

    This Manchester boy, proud of his roots, took offense at being called a “knobhead” by Peter Kay in response to Gallagher swearing it out when accepting a gong award during a recent award ceremony. Instead of retorting right then and there, Gallagher went home, logged into his Twitter account and, completely missing the irony, posted a rant tweet with some expletives calling Kay a sneak and himself someone who gives it people straight to their face. As a northerner.

    5. Lily Allen

    Lily Allen
    Image source

    The star recently threw a tantrum on and off Twitter, informing her 190,000 followers about her tough life, which included having to go out for a posh birthday dinner at Nobu with her family (that is hard), arguing over sake and being told off for being on her Blackberry. Like my grandmother used to say, “that plus pneumonia could really spoil it for you”. A wonder she never thought about how her mother, brother and his girlfriend must’ve felt the next day when they heard that a dinner with them wasn’t one of Allen’s favorite things in the world.

    6. Demi Moore

    Demi Moore
    Image source

    Glam actress Demi Moore started a Twitter fight earlier this year with Kim Kardashian over the latter’s use of the word “pimpin”. Pointing to the original meaning of the word (as in slavery), Moore criticized the usage of Kardashian, who was just making a point about her cool girls’ night out. Splitting hairs or does Moore have a point? We’re not sure if Twitter would be the right medium in the first place but the little fight in the social net surely gathered quite some publicity.

    7. Jim Carey

    Jim Carey
    Image source

    Jim Carey, motor mouth on screen and at live events, doesn’t do too well on Twitter. Seems like the actor’s temperament just doesn’t let itself be restricted to 140 characters. Though not a tantrum, the celebrity recently tried to side with golfer Tiger Woods, then speculated that his wife Erin must’ve known and when that tweet kind of backfired tried to bring Sandra Bullock into the game. A case in point that not everything that’s funny in person works on Twitter as well.

    8. Darren Bent

    Darren Bent
    Image source

    Footballer Darren Bent used Twitter to put a bit of pressure on the powers to be – those that were going to transfer him that is. Tired of keeping mum, Bent made an unfavorable remark about being transferred to Hull or Stoke instead of Sunderland and it worked. So much for the power of Twitter!

    9. Shawne Merriman & Chad Johnson

    Merriman & Johnson
    Image source 1 & 2

    Not one but two tantrum lovers got their money’s worth in a Twitter mud sling last December: San Diego Chargers linebacker Shawne Merriman and Cincinnati Bengals receiver Chad “Ochocinco” Johnson had an extensive Twitter fight, making full use of the First Amendment. Why have a one-on-one argument or phone call when you can have thousands of followers witness it?

    10. Perez Hilton and Pete Wentz

    Hilton & Wentz
    Image source

    A real Twitter brawl broke out when Perez Hilton chastised comedienne Sarah Silverman on Twitter when she cracked a joke about Michael Jackson. What Hilton didn’t say was that earlier he had done the same on his blog. Both Silverman and Fall Out Boy bassist Pete Wentz uncovered his hypocrisy and things got real ugly from then onwards, involving various Twitter followers who also wanted a piece of the mud pie.


  • P&G’s Bounty on mission to clean up (literally) American schools

    Bounty

    Procter & Gamble’s Bounty is embarking on a clean sweep of America’s classrooms. The paper-products brand kicks off a trailblazer effort this Tuesday to get volunteers to scrub U.S. schools clean—top to bottom, Bounty-style. "Make a Clean Difference," as the campaign is called, begins with an event in Washington, D.C., featuring celebrities like Mary J. Blige, Russell Simmons and Gabrielle Union. Though some might say you’d need more than spray bottle, a Swiffer stick and paper towels to clean up America’s schools, we’re glad to see that someone is doing finally something about it.

    —Posted by Elaine Wong

  • Gen Petraeus on taking out Al Q Iraq Ldrs

    The U.S. military announced the military leader of Al Qaeda in Iraq Abu Ayyub al Masri, and another top figure Abu Umar al-Baghdadi had been killed in a joint Iraqi-US raid Sunday morning. Below is a statement from the top U.S. military commander for the Middle East, General David Petraeus:

    I congratulate the Iraqi and U.S. forces who conducted the operation that resulted in the deaths of the heads of Al Qaeda-Iraq and the Islamic State of Iraq. 

    These two extremist leaders were responsible for barbaric attacks that killed thousands of innocent Iraqi citizens and Iraqi and Coalition Security Force members.  Their deaths constitute another major milestone in the effort to defeat extremism in Iraq.

    The operation that resulted in the deaths of the two leaders is a further illustration of the development of the capabilities of the Iraqi Security Forces. 

    The deaths of these two leaders represent significant blows against extremism in Iraq. While we recognize that AQI retains the capability of carrying out periodic extremist attacks, Iraqi leaders have vowed to press the fight against Al Qaeda and its affiliates in Iraq.  In accordance with the Iraq-U.S. Security Agreement, U.S. forces will continue to assist and enable our Iraqi partners in that effort.

  • Early HCV Study Outcome: PSI-7977

    Learn about the mid-trial results of PSI-7977’s effectiveness against Hepatitis C.

    Pharmasset jumps on hepatitis C study results

    PRINCETON, N.J.

    Pharmasset Inc. on Thursday reported promising early results from a clinical trial of a hepatitis C drug candidate.

    The company is testing a drug candidate called PSI-7977. In the midstage trial, a group of 63 hepatitis C patients are being treated with a combination of PSI-7977 and two older drugs, Pegasys and Copegus, or Pegasys and Copegus alone. None of the patients have received any previous treatment for the disease.

    Continue reading this entire article:
    http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D9F3JTC00.htm

  • 10 Dormant Volcanoes That Could Blow And Cost The Economy Billions

    Pompeii VolcanoWillis Research Network has put together a list of the European and Caribbean volcanoes that could erupt with spectacular results.

    Those results wouldn’t be limited to ash and fire, like the current Eyjafjallajökull eruption mostly is, but would hit population centers as well.

    Not just people would be under threat from the flow of lava and the density of ash, but residential homes as well.

    The value of the payouts insurance companies estimate for those flows is also provided, and some are staggering.

    Check out these potentially 10 devastating volcanoes >

    Mt Pelee

    Mt Pelee

    Location: Martinique, France

    Population Affected: 10,002

    Value of residential properties at risk: $0.4 Billion

    Source: Willis Research Network via MarketWatch

    Hekla

    Hekla

    Location: Iceland

    Population Affected: 10,024

    Value of residential properties at risk: $0.4 Billion

    Source: Willis Research Network via MarketWatch

    Sete Cidades

    Sete Cidades

    Location: Azores, Portugal

    Population Affected: 17,889

    Value of residential properties at risk: $0.7 Billion

    Source: Willis Research Network via MarketWatch

    Furnas

    Furnas

    Location: Azores, Portugal

    Population Affected: 19,862

    Value of residential properties at risk: $0.8 Billion

    Source: Willis Research Network via MarketWatch

    Soufriere Saint Vincent

    Soufriere Saint Vincent

    Location: Saint Vincent, Caribbean

    Population Affected: 24,493

    Value of residential properties at risk: $1 Billion

    Source: Willis Research Network via MarketWatch

    Agua de Pau

    Agua de Pau

    Location: Azores, Portugal

    Population Affected: 34,307

    Value of residential properties at risk: $1.4 Billion

    Source: Willis Research Network via MarketWatch

    Etna

    Etna

    Location: Italy

    Population Affected: 70,819

    Value of residential properties at risk: $2.8 Billion

    Source: Willis Research Network via MarketWatch

    La Soufriere

    La Soufriere

    Location: Guadeloupe, France

    Population Affected: 94,037

    Value of residential properties at risk: $3.8 Billion

    Source: Willis Research Network via MarketWatch

    Campi Flegrei

    Campi Flegrei

    Location: Italy

    Population Affected: 144,144

    Value of residential properties at risk: $7.8 Billion

    Source: Willis Research Network via MarketWatch

    Vesuvius

    Vesuvius

    Location: Italy

    Population Affected: 1,651,950

    Value of residential properties at risk: $66.1 Billion

    Source: Willis Research Network via MarketWatch

    Now check out a failed development in need of an insurance reappraisal

    Now check out a failed development in need of an insurance reappraisal

    Image: Business Insider

    Check Out Main St., The Most Depressing Development In America >

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Android ad numbers still climbing

    millennial media report shows huge Android growth

    This morning Millennial Media, the largest independent mobile advertising platform, released the numbers from its monthly Scorecard for Mobile Advertising Reach and Targeting (SMART).  No surprises here – they are seeing big growth from the Android platform.  Millennial Media reports that for the first time, Android OS is now in the top three in the
    smartphone ad impressions numbers.  Unlike AdMob, this is a third party mobile advertising company and has no ties to Google, who would be their competitor.  Highlights from the report:

    • Android impressions increased by 3% in March alone
    • 6% of all US Smartphone impressions for the month of March came from Android OS
    • Globally, Android ad impressions have increased a staggering 72% month over month during a one year period.
    • Manufactuers making Android handsets represent over 50% of the top 15 manufacturers, with Samsung at the number two spot.

    Of course, the giants are still Apple and RIM, but with this kind of growth Android can’t be too far from grabbing the number 2 spot.  I’m sure the release of the Droid Incredible and the EVO 4G will bump these numbers even higher. The whole situation has inspired me to remove my ad blocking software so I can do my part. [via businesswire.com]

  • PocketNavigator: Tactile Pedestrian Navigation

    As many of you are beginning to find out, there are scores of turn-by-turn driving apps for Android handsets.  Everyone has their own preferences, be it TeleNav, waze, CoPilot, or another.  But what about those of us who spend their days walking to and from our destinations? Google Maps offers pedestrian routes and there are those apps that take advantage of this.   The biggest problem with these apps designed for walking is that they pretty much require you to constantly be looking at your phone. Wouldn’t it be nice to throw your Droid into your pocket and still know which way to turn?

    Researchers from the OFFIS – Institute for Information Technology have put together an Android app that uses tactile feedback to help pedestrians find their way.   Called PocketNavigator, is uses different rhythms and durations to tell users when it’s time to turn left or right.  All without the need to remove your phone from the pocket.  The premise seems simple enough: If the first pulse is longer than the second one, the user has to turn left a bit. Accordingly, if the right pulse, is longer the user has to turn right. If both pulses have the same length, keep going straight.

    Scan to download PocketNavigator

    Starting immediately, you can download PocketNavigator from the Android Market for free. Be advised, this only works on handsets running Android 1.6 and above.  For convenience, you can scan the barcode to the left of this paragraph.


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  • In a Warmer World, Iceland’s Volcanoes May Get Even Livelier | 80beats

    Eyjafjallajökull_glacier_inThe volcanic eruption in Iceland that has disrupted air traffic in Europe is also a reminder that other volcanoes in the region could wake up if global warming continues unabated, experts say.

    Scientists say that if large icecaps on the island melt, they’ll ease the pressure on the rocks beneath the surface. Lifting the weight off the rocks would allow for more magma production, which could set off other eruptions. Says volcanologist Freysteinn Sigmundsson: “Our work suggests that eventually there will be either somewhat larger eruptions or more frequent eruptions in Iceland in coming decades” [Scientific American].

    Scientists clarified that while the current Eyjafjallajokull eruption occurred beneath a small glacier in Iceland, the explosion was not caused by global warming. The Eyjafjallajokull glacier is too small and light to have an impact on local geology, they say.

    Sigmundsson and his colleague Carolina Pagli published research in 2008 estimating that the melting of about a tenth of Iceland’s biggest icecap, Vatnajokull, over the last century had caused the land to rise about an inch a year and led to the growth of a vast mass of magma, measuring about a third of a cubic mile, underground [The Telegraph]. The researchers explain that heated rocks can’t melt into magma when they’re under high pressure–for example, when they’re squashed underneath the weight of an icecap. But when the ice melts, the water trickles away, and the pressure eases off, the rocks can then melt into magma, creating prime conditions for volcanic eruptions. The researchers note that the end of the Ice Age 10,000 years ago was marked by an increase in volcanic activity in Iceland.

    They warn that if ice sheets shrink, we can expect to see more eruptions in other frozen places like Alaska, Patagonia, and Antarctica. Says Pagli: “The effects would be biggest with ice-capped volcanoes…. If you remove a load that is big enough you will also have an effect at depths on magma production” [Scientific American].

    Related Content:
    Visual Science: Up Close and Personal With Iceland’s Volcanic Eruption
    80beats:Icelandic Volcanoes–Disrupting Weather & History Since 1783
    80beats: Volcanic Eruption in Iceland Causes Floods, Shuts Down European Air Travel
    Bad Astronomy: Iceland Volcano Eruption Making an Ash of Itself
    DISCOVER: Disaster! The Most Destructive Volcanic Eruptions in History (photo gallery)

    Image: Wikimedia/Chris 73


  • Mike The Mad Biologist: ‘the gloves are coming off’ | The Intersection

    Last week I posted an invitation that arrived from the Heritage Foundation for an anti-science briefing that was about to take place directed at Capitol Hill staffers. My purpose was simple:
    I’ve reposted the text because I don’t think most scientists understand the way policy decisions are influenced. We may have a more scientific Washington than when I worked in DC, but science and its allies must fight harder than ever before. Some groups are already effective. Some of us are trying new initiatives. I’m optimistic and realize that change happens slowly, but I hope those working in policy-related areas will take note and become more involved making sure that sound science moves beyond the lab. Because when we’re not explaining what we do and why it matters, someone else is telling the story for us. And we often won’t like the result.
    An interesting dialog followed in comments and around the internet. It also seems to have struck a nerve with a Mike The Mad Biologist, although I’m not clear why. He accuses me of ‘blaming the scientists’ as ‘a professional science communicator.’ Thing is, I never signed up to be a ‘professional science communicator.’ Or at least no more so …