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  • Performance is a requirement, too

    Performance testing is a notoriously difficult undertaking. So much so, in fact, that it is sometimes not done at all, or only done when a performance problem arises in production, making some sort of investigation unavoidable.

    Testing the performance characteristics of a system in advance of its rollout is particularly difficult, because it’s hard to know how to simulate real-world usage situations. Developer and QA-lab setups rarely replicate real-world environments. In the real world, machines have fragmented hard disks, superfluous extra files on the file system, anti-virus and other software running, etc., while end-users do crazy things like start and stop applications, run hard-disk searches, flush the browser cache, leave Gmail, Skype, and other "chatty" applications running in the background, and so on.  This can all affect the performance of WCM or DAM applications in particular. The real world of end-users (and of real servers running in real data centers) is not easily duplicated in a sandbox environment.

    Some CMS vendors (for example, PaperThin and Sitecore) provide built-in reporting capability for determining time-to-render for various content elements. But in general, onboard profiling capability is woefully lacking from most WCM and DAM systems.

    A few vendors are beginning to delve more deeply into this area. One that does is Day Software: The next release of its Communiqué offering (version 5.3, slated for March) has what I might call (tongue in cheek) pervasive thermometry. Almost any operation that takes (or can take) a noticeable length of time has a thermometer bar or other progress indicator associated with it, and in many cases a comparative bar-graph is available at the click of a button. The bar graphs are drawn using the Google Charts API, which means that a graph can be stored, sent, and managed as a bookmark — the charts are essentially REST URLs.

    As with any vendor — and especially Day — you need to be careful that the engineering vision of a reporting subsystem is matched by its usability.  So Day customers will want to test closely when it comes out. 

    Until more CMS or DAM systems start offering good tools for profiling or performance monitoring, we recommend that you be sure to address those requirements up front.  Make it part of your requirements process, before undertaking a system implementation, or for that matter, before choosing a vendor. Determine ahead of time what your performance goals are — then put them in writing, in your RFPs and RFIs. Structure them into purchase agreements as well. "Pay for performance" isn’t a bad policy. But if you don’t spell it out, it’s like anything else; it won’t get implemented.

  • Fifth teen charged in Fenger beating death

    lapoleoncolbert.jpgA fifth teen has been charged in the beating death of Fenger High School student Derrion Albert, authorities said tonight.

    Lapoleon Colbert, 19, was charged today with first-degree murder in connection to the Sept. 24 death in front of a Roseland community center, according to Sally Daly, a spokeswoman for the Cook County state’s attorney’s office.

    Colbert, who another law enforcement source said was of the 0-99 block of West 113th Street, is expected to appear for a bond hearing Wednesday at the Cook County Criminal Courts Building.

    Footage of Albert’s death, captured on a camcorder, caused a firestorm after it was circulated over the Internet and to news outlets nationwide.

    Daly said that Colbert’s image was captured on a videotape of the attack, but she could not say if he was seen on the widely publicized camcorder tape.

    Albert’s death, part of a melee between neighborhood teens and those who lived in the Altgeld Gardens-area, prompted U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder and Education Secretary Arne Duncan to visit Chicago last October to talk about what the Obama administration is doing to combat youth violence.

    Already charged with murder in Albert’s death are Silvonus Shannon, 19, Eugene Riley, 18, Eric Carson, 16, and a 14-year-old boy charged as a juvenile.

    Staff report


  • Despite All The Hype, It Sucks To Be A BRIC

    Even though nations such as Brazil, Russia, India, and China will account for most the world’s growth over the next five years, here’s why it actually sucks to be a BRIC.

    As shown in this chart from the Financial Times, people living in exciting-growth BRICs nations will remain unexcitingly poor for a long time to come. Meanwhile, the boring developed nations will keep getting richer. This relationship won’t change for a very, very long time. (Via Paul Kedrosky)

    Chart

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  • Opera buys mobile ad network also

    opera_logo It seems mobile ad networks are a hot commodity at present, with Opera the latest to snap one up.  This follows Google buying AdMob for $750 million and Apple buying Quattro Wireless.

    Opera, who served web pages to 41 million people directly in November last year, up 150% from the same month the year earlier, purchased AdMarvel for an initial $8 million, with a further $15 million available depending on performance.

    "Every month about 50 million people surf the Web with Opera for mobile phones," says Lars Boilesen, who recently replaced Jon S. von Tetzchner at the head of Opera Software.  "With AdMarvel we believe we can play an important role in mobile advertising.”

    According to StatCounter, in December 2009 Opera had 26% of all mobile web browsing, ahead of Apple’s iPhone with only 21%. Gartner estimates that by in 2013 25% of revenues shops mobile downloads will come from advertising versus only 5% in 2009.

    It is not known yet if how this will affect users of either Opera Mini or Opera Mobile, but Opera Mini is most likely to see changes first, as all web traffic for the free browser travel through Opera’s servers at present.

    Via Mobinaute.com

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  • DermMatch Topical Shading Hair Loss Concealer, Red

    Product Description
    DermMatch Topical Shading Hair Loss Concealer. DermMatch the topical shading hair loss concealer colors your scalp to match your hair color…. More >>

    DermMatch Topical Shading Hair Loss Concealer, Red

  • A Coruña. Rehabilitaciones

    Abro un nuevo post para ir comentando obras de rehabilitacion en edificios y zonas historicas de nuestra ciudad:

    1. Estas primeras foto son para mostrar una joya de nuestra ciudad poco conocida, la casa Salorio, en la Pza. Pontevedra. Cuando pase por alli estaban retirando el andamio y dando los ultimos retoques. La rehabilitacion me parece excelente aunque los colores elegidos me parecen menos vistosos que los que tenía. Es la primera vez que entro en el portal y me parece precioso, una buena muestra del modernismo coruñes.

    2. Estas otras dos fotos son de la casa de la esquina de la plza. de Lugo, donde tambien han terminado y estaban retirando los andamios. A simple vista, la rehabilitacion tambien parece excelente.

  • Nueva generación del Mazda 5

    Mazda_5

    En el próximo salón de Ginebra que se celebrará dentro de unas semanas se presentará la nueva generación del Mazda 5. Entre sus cambios más importantes en su exterior destaca su nuevo diseño que contribuye a una mayor eficiencia energética, y en consecuencia un menor consumo.

    En cuanto a su motorización lo más importante es la introducción del motor de gasolina e inyección directa, 2.0 DISI de 151 CV acoplado a una caja de cambios de seis velocidades de transmisión manual. Esto permite reducir hasta un 15% las emisiones de CO2 con respecto al motor que sustituye un 2.0 de gasolina.

    Además el nuevo Mazda 5 nos ofrece un interior bastante amplio y cómodo con unas puertas traseras correderas lo que facilita la entrada a su interior. Por último destacar que este monovolumen de 7 plazas se pondrán a la venta en Europa este otoño.

    Fuente | Mazda



  • LIVE: Warren Buffett Talks Wells Fargo, The Economy, And The Bernanke On CNBC

    Berkshire Hathaway (BRK) CEO Warren Buffett is on CNBC talking to Becky Quick. We’re watching and hitting the key points.

    Key highlights:

    • Says he’s been a huge beneficiary of the government bailout, though he’s disappointed by the requirement that Wells Fargo (WFC) raise more shares. He mentions it several times.
    • He’s befuddled by the bank tax. “I don’t really understand the thinking behind the bank tax.”
    • Why not go after the members of Congress who let Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac fester?
    • On “Too Big To Fail”: If a bank ever has to go to the Federal Government, the CEO and any CEO previous is wiped out. “I want the CEO’s equation to be, if this place ever goes down, I’m busted!”
    • If I could vote twice for Bernanke, I would. If he’s not re-confirmed: “Tell me a day ahead of time so I can sell stocks”
    • Massachusetts: Definitely a referendum on healthcare on other matters.
    • On stimulus: Could have been done in a way that had more of an immediate impact.
    • On hiring: I’m not going to hire people just to stand around. “We’re worrying about hiring people because of what’s going in our order book… we’re not getting orders yet.”
    • On Kraft’s raied offer: “I feel poorer.” “If I had the chance to vote on this, I’d vot no!”
    • Still, he thinks the stock is undervalued.
    • On Burlington Northern: He says he hates issuing stock, and that if they had to pay any more, they wouldn’t have done the deal.
    • On Korean steelmaker POSCO: He says he has no plans to buy more unless the stock drops a lot.
    • Says he if had choice between holding cash or 30-year-bonds or equities, he wouldn’t hesitate for a second to hold equities. That’s the equivalent of not buying a farm because of one bad lousy weather year.
    • On real estate: The housing crisis is over, the commercial real estate problem is not.
    • Great line on investor uncertainty: “There was a lot of uncertainty on September 10, 2001, investors just didn’t know it was uncertain.”
    • Barring some huge exogenous factor, the odds of another financial crisis is low.
    • Biggest economic concern: a terrorist act.

    And that’s it!

    Video coming later.

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  • uganda —what is it turning into?

    Kampala — IT is perverse and a challenge to human cognitive faculties to see all sorts of atrocities take place in a country, one time described as the Pearl of Africa and the people therein seem not to be bothered.

    What is therefore, bereft of this nation? The answer is straight on the wall: Cry the beloved country!

    To wit: A country where child sacrifice is on the rise and the culprits are never brought to book just because of evidence beyond reasonable doubt has not been adduced and in defense of the human rights of the killer as if the killed did not have rights also.

    A country where female genital mutilation (FGM) is practiced abundantly and with abandon in the name of culture. The next time a culture that removes people’s eyes will evolve and in the same vein, this country will obviously absolve it. Primitive Idi Amin would have criminalised such a culture.

    A country where fires incinerate markets, night clubs, schools and nobody learns a lesson to prevent future fires by way of criminalising all such institutions without functional fire extinguishers, sand or training in fire drills?

    According to the press in the recent Nakivubo inferno, the water hydrants around the area were empty at the time of the catastrophe. Where were the people responsible for monitoring the state of the hydrants? Unless charges are preferred on people for negligence, no sobriety will prevail in Uganda and with forests of petrol stations in and around Kampala, this country is apt to become ashes one day.

    A country where building standards are not followed and the powers that be stand aloof as these dangerous structures proliferate at the alter of killing innocent, poor site porters. I bet, even if Mulago collapsed, the country would only shed crocodile tears and life would go on because Ugandans never learn through experience. Cry the beloved country.

    A country where safety belts, helmets, life jackets and speed governors are deemed a burden from the Police instead of a primordial prevention for accidents.

    A country where, in the implementing of its constitutional mandate in preventing diseases such as malaria, the health ministry is taken to court just for trying to save the lives of 320 persons that succumb to the disease, because the plaintiffs have obscurant political and economic and other myopic intentions against the wananchi. If this country was not crying, it would have charged such people for murder afore thought!

    A country where some people have jiggers and want the Government to extract the jiggers for them. These are the same people who will get cholera after eating fresh feaces because they do not want to build and use pit latrines.

    A country where most people cannot afford health charges at any health facility when they or their siblings become indisposed and when the Government endeavours to ameliorate the situation by the introduction of the health insurance scheme, they cry foul including the elite who pretend to be protecting these people.

    Ironically, when these people become victims of disease, the said opponents of the scheme cannot even contribute one shilling for these people’s treatment at the critical time of need!

    A country where poor women sweep Kampala roads and drain feacal infected drainage systems without masks or gloves and with dust entering their lungs with a potential of acquiring chest infections. Nobody ever bothers to sue companies that flout labour laws in this regard. Cry the beloved the country!

    A country where the youth smoke bangi, use khanabis, inhale aviation fuel and sober members of society watch as if they do not know that these youths will be a danger to them and their families tomorrow.

    A country where we talk of modernisation of agriculture without even the concerned ministry putting one hand tractor in at least one village. How do you expect the wananchi to walk the talk when they are still using muscle power like the stone age man?

    A country where government property, such as vehicles rot in ministry compounds without being disposed of by the Public Procurement and Disposal Authority so that monies accruing from such sales are used to procure replacements?

    A country where people living at the equator cry foul when there is no hydro power when the majority would have invested in solar energy for domestic use and pay no bills to God who created the sun rather than Umeme?

    A country which discovers oil and people start writing and discussing and calling this blessing a ‘curse’. If this country was not crying, it would curse these people instead.

    A country where patriotism let alone nationalism is deficient. Where support for Air Uganda, the country "flag" bearer is not even in the minds of government officials who ply the routes that this airline operates, but preference is to foreign airlines. If I had powers, I would make all government officials use this airline to inculcate the element of patriotism.
    Relevant Links

    There are many other things this country can continue lamenting over. The quest bereft of us is, do we have to continue like this? The answer to any sober thinking person is, no. I would personally suggest the following; that government strengthens and ensures that laws, policies, ordinances in regard to the above are implemented. Parliament should honour budgets in connection to items related to these cries.

    Secondly, Parliament should pass a Bill creating an autonomous body to regularly monitor and evaluate the state of affairs in every sector, ministry or organisation and report to the concerned ministries and Parliament for action. The wananchi are entitled to living in a country that can protect them rather than crying everyday without any rescue.

  • Michael Jackson 3-D Tribute Grammy Awards 2010

    The Recording Academy is staging a special 3-D tribute to the late King of Pop Michael Jackson at the 2010 Grammy Awards later this month.

    The year’s broadcast will feature a never-before-seen clip MJ made for his hit “Earth Song,” The Academy said Tuesday. The clip would have been part of Jackson’s London comeback shows last year.

    “It was one of the most important portions of the concert tour to Michael and when Michael saw the film for the first time at his last rehearsal, there were tears in his eyes,” Ken Ehrlich, Grammy co-executive producer and longtime Jackson associate, said in a release.

    Celine Dion, Jennifer Hudson, Smokey Robinson, Carrie Underwood, and Usher will sing in a tribute to the star.

    The 52nd Annual Grammy Awards will air live from the Staples Center in Los Angeles Jan. 31 on CBS.


  • Wells Fargo Easily Beats Estimates

    wellsfargo-sign.jpg

    On first glance, it appears that unlike some of its other mega-financial peers, Wells Fargo (WFC) is kicking ass.

    The company beat on the top and bottom line and the stock is drifting higher pre-market.

    EPS of $.08 was ahead of exected loss of -$.01.

    More to come…

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  • Cold snap fatal to many of Fla.’s native fish

    GreenWire: Floating fish carcasses littered Florida’s waters after this month’s record-setting cold snap, and ecologists predict it may take some native fish years to rebound. In southern Florida, the death toll was too large to be estimated.

    “Millions and millions of pilchards, threadfin herring, mullet” were killed by the cold, said Pete Frezza, an ecologist for Audubon of Florida and an expert flats fisher. “Ladyfish took it really bad. Whitewater Bay is just a graveyard,” he said.

    In Florida Bay, one of the hardest hit areas judging by the floating bodies, the water temperatures were in the low 50s for several days this month and then dropped to a record 47.8 degrees at their lowest, according to the National Weather Service. The high winds compounded the problem, pushing colder, heavier waters off shallow flats into deeper channels where fish typically seek warm refuge.

    Despite the warm-up, scientists say the chill will continue to claim victims for weeks. Infections from common bacteria such as aeronomas have preyed on weakened survivors of cold fronts in the past, said William Loftus, a retired aquatic ecologist for Everglades National Park.

    The cold snap is expected to give less-popular freshwater natives such as sunfish a leg up, however, at least temporarily, since it killed off large numbers of walking catfish, Mayan cichlids and other tropical exotics that have invaded the Everglades and many of South Florida’s canals and ponds, Loftus said (Curtis Morgan, Miami Herald, Jan. 15). – DFM

  • Pilgrim Pub Fawcet St.

    Looked like they were doing work on that today.
  • Roylaty Theatre to close

    Just seen the Echo billboard which said the above iin Chester Rd s going to close
  • (Mega Proyecto) ¿PLAYAS EN SANTO DOMINGO?

    Las playas son el gran caramelo de nuestro turismo. Pero nuestra capital no las tiene, lo cual es una gran desventaja en el mercado turístico. Si esta situación pudiese cambiar en el mediano plazo, Santo Domingo se convertiría en el segundo más importante polo turístico después de Bávaro-Punta Cana.

    El tema de la creación de playas artificiales en el litoral capitalino es viejo. Durante la gestión de Peña Gómez como síndico (1982-1986), ese proyecto estuvo muy sobre el tapete. La intención entonces era dotar a la ciudad con una opción atractiva de recreación para la población, además de atraer el turismo extranjero.

    Tal vez por razón de ese interés, la compañía francesa Sogreah elaboró en 1987 un anteproyecto para habilitar la playa de Sans Soucí. Esa playa fue creada cuando, en época de Trujillo, se erigió el espigón protector para el estuario del río Ozama y su puerto.

    La Sogreah esbozó un proyecto que incluía las obras requeridas por la playa y otras obras en tierra (boceto adjunto). Ahí la playa era el epicentro de un complejo de edificios que se ubicarían en el espigón mismo y en el saliente de costa que le queda al Este. Estas obran incluían hoteles, una marina y un centro de convenciones.

    En relación a la playa, la Sogreah produjo cuatro alternativas de solución para proteger el área de baño del embate de las olas. Estas fueron discutidas localmente con un grupo de expertos y se seleccionó la mejor. Todas, sin embargo, contemplaban la construcción de tres espigones o rompeolas frente a la actual playa con separación de espacio entre uno y otro.

    Lo que comprobó el estudio de la Sogreah fue que la ampliación y uso de la playa de Sans Soucí es perfectamente posible. Además, que el costo de habilitarla para el baño y la recreación era aceptable (US$17 millones en ese entonces). La pendiente de la playa, sin embargo, no sería tan suave como la de Boca Chica.

    Los corrillos turísticos han reportado otros proyectos para crear playas la capital. Hubo uno de una firma local de arquitectos que no se ha podido revisar. Pero la más reciente visualización de estas playas fue la plasmada por el Grupo Acciona de España en el contexto de su proyecto de Isla Artificial (www.novomundoxxi.com).

    Ese proyecto contempla la creación de un lago entre el litoral y la isla. La isla misma discurriría desde la hoy Plaza Juan Barón hasta el Centro de los Héroes, evitando la contaminación con obras de saneamiento ambiental que incluyen emisores marinos en su extremo Oeste. Se bombearía agua fresca desde el extremo Este del lago, la cual saldría por unas compuertas del extremo Oeste.

    Las tres playas visualizadas estarían ubicadas en las inmediaciones del Hotel Meliá, en Güibia y frente al restaurante Vesubio. Puesto que las aguas del lago no serían contaminadas por las corrientes del Ozama, las actividades recreacionales acuáticas serían factibles, incluyendo el baño.

    Apena que el proyecto de la Isla Artificial esté hoy en un limbo jurídico. Aunque aprobado por el Congreso, el Poder Ejecutivo desistió del mismo para apaciguar a una opinión pública crispada por los rumores de turbios manejos. De ahí que hoy no exista otro proyecto que no sea el anuncio del ADN para rehabilitar, de manera todavía no especificada, la playa de Güibia.

    Aunque loables, estas pretensiones son financieramente inviables en el mediano plazo. Los recursos necesarios deberán provenir del Gobierno central y las perspectivas fiscales no son buenas en el corto plazo. Además, el proyecto de Güibia no lograría acabar la contaminación.

    Las posibilidades de que Santo Domingo pueda contar con playas son inciertas. La actual de Sans Soucí ha sido concesionada a la compañía (Vicini y otros) que están ahora creando el puerto madre de cruceros. Pero se reporta que no planean acometer ningún proyecto en relación a esa playa, por lo menos en el mediano plazo.

    Huelga decir que a la ciudad le convendría mucho tener playas. La afluencia de cruceristas y de turistas de Bávaro-Punta Cana será enorme con el desarrollo del puerto madre y de la autopista El Coral. También conviene tenerlas para hacer más viable el Centro de Convenciones, un proyecto dormilón de activa necesidad.

    La opción más a la mano sería la de que la Asociación de Hoteles de Santo Domingo y el Grupo Vicini se abocaran a desarrollar la playa de Sans Soucí. La primera podría convencer a la segunda de que el beneficio seria mutuo. Y si bien una pendiente pronunciada no gustaría mucho a los capitalinos, también ellos podrían acceder aunque tengan que pagar.

    Texto e imagen extraído de Diario Libre
    Escrito por: Juan Llado

  • Almost half of poor live in suburbs, study says

    The number of poor people increased 5.2 million in the last decade and almost of half of them are living in America’s suburbs, according to a report released Wednesday by the Brookings Institution.

    The number of poor grew by 25 percent in suburbs from 2000 to 2008–almost five times the growth rate in primary cities–making the suburbs home to the largest and fastest growing poor population in the country, according to the study, “The Suburbanization of Poverty: Trends in Metropolitan America, 2000 to 2008.”

    Chicago too has seen a significant increase in the suburban share of the metro area’s poor. In 2008, 51.9 percent of poor people lived in the Chicago area’s biggest cities, which include Naperville and Joliet, compared to 48.1 percent in the suburbs.

    Based on increases in unemployment throughout 2009, Brookings projects that the Chicago metro area may experience an increase in its poverty rate of approximately 2.3 percentage points.

    “This trend toward the ’suburbanization’ of poverty is only likely to continue in the wake of the most recent recession,” said Elizabeth Kneebone, a Brookings senior research analyst and co-author of the report.

    Nationwide, the poor population increased by 15.4 percent from 2000 to 2008, which led to a significant increase in the nation’s poverty rate. By 2008, 13.2 percent of Americans lived below the poverty line, which is $21,834 for a family of four.

    Kristen Mack

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Knome Challenged to Keep in Step with Falling Genetic Sequencing Prices

    Knome logo
    Ryan McBride wrote:

    Knome, the personal genomics startup co-founded by leading Harvard geneticist George Church, is navigating rapid change in its business. The Cambridge, MA-based launched in 2007 to make whole-genome sequencing and analysis a personal luxury item rather than just a marvel of modern science, but now it’s facing more competition on the sequencing side of its business and a dramatic decline in fees for its bread-and-butter consumer services.

    About two years ago the startup announced that it was charging its first three wealthy customers $350,000 to sequence their entire genomes and then have its scientists interpret and analyze the data for each person. A year or so ago the firm dropped the price for that service to around $100,000, due in large part to a sharp decrease in the cost of sequencing. Last June, that price was then dropped again, to $68,500, where it has stayed, says Jorge Conde, the firm’s co-founder and CEO.

    If you had your entire genome sequenced just five years ago, you might have been considered a pioneer on par with the first handful of astronauts who ventured into outer space. But there have since been a series of technological advances in tools used to map DNA, innovations that have brought down the price of whole genome sequencing from about $1 million dollars per genome a few years ago to less than $5,000 today.

    Conde says the falling costs of genomic sequencing are a positive development for human health and science. He’s even confident that the lower costs of sequencing opens up a much larger market for Knome than possible at its original $350,000 price tag. Still, the company operated profitably in its early days when its small staff of around five full-time employees served clients who paid six figures for their services. Today, the company is trying to find a way to get back in the black with a larger staff of closer to 20 people and a premium service that costs the same as a fancy Mercedes rather than a nice condo near Kendall Square.

    “I think the biggest challenge for us has been in clearly communicating the difference between sequencing and interpretation,” Conde says. He adds that while the price of whole-genome sequencing has fallen sharply, the costs of employing teams of scientists to interpret the data have not decreased nearly as much. The firm is spending more money today on salaries, given that its staff is larger than it was two years ago.

    Conde says that the greatest value that his firm brings customers is in the analysis and interpretation of genomic data, for which it employs geneticists, bioinformatics experts, and clinicians. (Indeed, co-founder Church, in addition to heading the non-profit Personal Genome Project, stays involved in the business as a chief scientific advisor.) The actual genomic sequencing is handled by the startup’s partners at the Beijing Genomics Institute in China and SeqWright, a genomic analysis lab in Houston, TX. Indeed, plain genomic sequencing has become a commodity business, with firms such as Mountain View, CA-based startup Complete Genomics advertising whole genome sequencing for less than $5,000 per genome.

    Fairly or unfairly, Knome is also often compared with the personal genomic analysis services of firms such as Foster City, CA-based Navigenics, and Silicon Valley startup 23andMe, which was started by a team that includes Google co-founder Sergey Brin’s wife, Anne Wojcicki. Both firms offer DNA tests, not sequencing, for $1,000 or less to tell people whether they have genes for certain diseases. 23andMe also gives customers clues about their ethnic roots based on the genes detected in the firm’s genotyping service. (Rather than sequencing a person’s genome to uncover all the genes in their DNA, those firms get a person’s DNA from their saliva and use test chips to find out whether the person has certain genes for diseases related to diseases or heredity. Conde notes that such DNA tests don’t uncover many genes or variants that give people a more complete picture of their genetic makeup, making it difficult to predict whether a person is at risk of developing, say, heart disease.

    Even for those who do get their entire genome sequenced, there are limits to what scientists can tell them about the data because there are vast regions of the genome that are not yet fully understood. But that is expected to change as the U.S. government’s investment in genetic research leads to new discoveries about what the reams of genetic data really mean for human health. The National Human Genome Research Institute, a division of the NIH, received a windfall of …Next Page »







  • Michelle O In Wax

    I saw this over at FlyStyleLife and I had to share it with my fellow MOWatchers. Madame Tussaud has unveiled a new waxwork of First Lady Michelle Obama in London. While I don’t agree with Mecca Donna that the image is “spot on”. I will say that it is better than that awful Danbury Mint doll thing. But what’s up with the President’s hair? I guess if people keep trying one day someone will get the images just right. I hope.

     

     

     

     

     

    Posted by Aminah Hanan

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  • In the field: Temple of Berenike discovered at Kom el Dikka

    drhawass.com

    Press Release. With photos.

    An archaeological mission of the Supreme Council of Antiquities (SCA) led by Dr. Mohamed Abdel Maqsoud, Head of Antiquities of Lower Egypt, discovered the remains of a temple of Queen Berenike, the wife of king Ptolemy III (246-222 BC), along with a cachette of 600 Ptolemaic statues.

    The discovery was made during routine excavations at the Kom el Dikka area in Alexandria, in an area that belongs to Alexandria Security Forces.

    Dr. Zahi Hawass, Secretary General of the SCA, said that the discovered remains are 60 meters tall and 15 meters in width and extend under Ismail Fahmy street. He explained that the temple was subjected to destruction during later eras when it was used as a quarry, which led to the disappearance of many of its stone blocks.

    Dr. Abdel Maqsoud said that the mission, which includes 18 skilled excavators and restorers, unearthed a large collection of statues depicting the cat goddess Bastet, the goddess of protection and motherhood, which indicates that the temple was dedicated to this goddess.

    Dr. Maqsoud pointed out that the Bastet statues were unearthed in three different areas of the site along with other limestone statues of unidentified children and women. Clay pots as well as bronze and faience statues of different ancient Egyptian deities have been also uncovered, along with terracotta statues of the gods Harpocrates and Ptah.

    Early studies on site revealed that the temple’s foundation can be dated to the reign of Queen Berenike, making this the first Ptolemaic temple discovered in Alexandria to be dedicated to the goddess Bastet. It also indicates that the worship of the goddess Bastet continued in Egypt after the decline of the ancient Egyptian era.

    An inscribed base of a granite statue from the reign of King Ptolemy IV (205-222 BC) was also unearthed. It bears ancient Greek text written in nine lines stating that the statue belonged to a top official in the Ptolemaic court. Dr. Maqsoud believes the base was made to celebrate Egypt’s victory over the Greeks during the Battle of Raphia in 217 BC.

    The mission also found a group of old structures, including a Roman water cistern, a group of 14 meter-deep water wells, stone water channels, and the remains of a bath area, well as a large number of clay pots and sherds that can be dated to the fourth century BC.

    Abdel Maqsoud believes that this find is the first trace of the real location of Alexandria’s royal quarter.

  • 2 surveyors killed in Ore. plane crash

    Two federal wildlife managers working on a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service aerial survey of migratory waterfowl were killed when their plane went down in Oregon on Sunday.

    Pilot Ray Bentley, 52, an agency employee, and David Pitkin, 59, a contractor, were conducting a midwinter count of the birds and were headed back to Corvallis when the crash occurred.

    About 50 people assisted in a search beginning Sunday evening, and the wreckage was found Monday morning.

    Wind warnings were in effect Sunday, but the flight path reportedly was clear. The cause of the crash has not yet been determined, though the Federal Aviation Administration and the National Transportation Safety Board are conducting an investigation of the single-engine Cessna registered to the Interior Department.

    This is the first crash in the history of the survey program, which has been conducting aerial counts since the 1930s, according to a Fish and Wildlife Service spokesman (Bennett Hall, Corvallis Gazette-Times, Jan. 18). – EL