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  • Sasha Grey PETA Ad

    Adult film “actress” Sasha Grey rarely needs an excuse to take off her clothes, but the star of This Ain’t The Brady Bunch XXX is disrobing for a good cause as part of PETA’s latest Animal Birth Control (ABC) ad.

    The porn darling has starred in hundreds of adult films and recently starred in Academy Award–winning director Steven Soderbergh’s film The Girlfriend Experience. Now the self-professed “sexpert” is encouraging pet owners to spay and neuter their animals in her new campaign for the animal rights group. Sasha’s PETA ad was revealed at the Adult Entertainment Expo in Las Vegas on Sunday.

    “I think spaying and neutering is incredibly important. … [I]t keeps the animals out of the shelters, and there’s too many unwanted animals out there already,” Sasha explains.



  • Beneath the Lion’s Gaze by Maaza Mengiste

    lionfinal-coverBeneath the Lion’s Gaze is a novel by Maaza Mengiste an Addis Ababa, Ethiopian born author with an MFA in creative writing from New York University.

    This novel is about “an epic tale of a father and two sons, of betrayals and loyalties, of a  family unraveling in the wake of Ethiopians revolution”. “It tells a gripping  story of family, of the bonds of love and friendship set in a time and place that has rarely been explored in fiction before. It is a story about the lengths human beings will go in pursuit of freedom and the human price of a national revolution. Emotionally gripping, poetic and indelibly tragic.

    This novel has been acclaimed to be a “transcendent and a powerful debut” by a very powerful writer.

  • Yamaha’s 1200cc Super Tenere secrets revealed

    The Yamaha 1200 Super Tenere twin

    The 2009 Tokyo Motor Show last October saw some bizarre non-debuts as there had been an accord between the Japanese manufacturers that all would cut back their expenditure on the show in deference to the retrenchments resultant from the GFC. We mentioned this with our coverage of the Yamaha stand’s Super Tenere “Art installation” at Tokyo. Here was a somehow fully formed motorcycle that was not really on show. Well the mystique has been maintained, because no images have been released yet, but we now know a lot more about the bike’s fine details – the 1200cc parallel twin will have a 270 degree crank (for a v-twin feel), and will use Yamaha’s YCC-T ride-by-wire throttle, have switchable engine-mapping, traction control, three-position anti-lock braking, a Unified Braking System that links the front and rear brakes, …..

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  • MacBook prices around the world

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    While researching MacBook Pros, the folks at cmyplay produced an infographic charting the relative prices of MacBook Pros around the world. The variation is amazing.

    The lowest cost was found in the US … mostly. Certain models cost less in Hong Kong, but as the author notes, that could be due to exchange rate fluctuations. Prices were significantly higher in South Africa. For example, an entry-level 13″ MacBook Pro 2.26GHz in South Africa retails for about the same prices as a mid-level 15″ MacBook Pro (2.53GHz) in the US. Note that Apple does not have official representation in South Africa.

    However, the highest prices were found in Brazil (where Apple does have official representation). As cmyplay notes, “For the amount to purchase a top-of-the-line MacBook Pro 2.8GHz in Brazil, a person could buy two of the same machine in the US.” One Brazilian commenter noted that Brazil’s import duties and sales tax, especially on electronics, is very high.

    Good work, cmyplay! Your graphic is beautiful and offers a perspective we might not otherwise have considered. Make sure you visit the post to see the full image.

    [Via Gizmodo]

    TUAWMacBook prices around the world originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Mon, 11 Jan 2010 14:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Google: The Word of the Decade

    google_dec_08.jpgThe American Dialect Society (ADS) has named google – the verb – as its Word of the Decade. According to the ADS, the verb google (meaning to “search the Internet”) won out over blog, which, according to Grant Barrett, the chair of the ADS’s New Word Committee, “just sounds ugly.” Tweet was named the top word of the year for 2009. Fail – “a noun or interjection used when something is egregiously unsuccessful” – was 2009’s most useful word.

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    Definitions:

    1. Tweet: noun, a short message sent via the Twitter.com service, and verb, the act of sending such a message.
    2. Google: Verb meaning “to search the Internet.” Generic form of the trademarked “Google,” the world’s dominant Internet search engine.
    3. Fail: A noun or interjection used when something is egregiously unsuccessful. Usually written as “FAIL!”

    The ADS’s members include linguists, grammarians, etymologists, writers, editors and university students. The ADS was founded in 1889.

    Twitter and other social networks have clearly captured the imagination of many language societies. Twitter was the top word of in the Global Language Monitor’s survey, and unfriend was the New Oxford American Dictionary’s 2009 Word of the year. To represent the 1990s, the ADS picked Web as the top word of the decade.

    Do You Agree?

    What do you think? Do you think google deserves to be the one word that represents the last decade? Or is this just another example of how Google is succeeding in its slow takeover of our culture?

    Discuss


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  • Judge: RealDVD Antitrust Case Real Stupid [Digital Daily]

    UnknownThe federal judge presiding over RealNetworks’ (RNWK) legal battle with Hollywood has confirmed what even the company’s attornies have likely known all along: there was no chance whatsover that the company would prevail in its claims against the film industry and the plight in which it now finds itself is entirely its own doing. On Friday, Judge Marilyn Patel — who in 2000 issued the injunction that shut Napster down — dismissed Real’s antitrust claims against Disney and the other movie studios over their alleged collusion to block RealDVD, its “legal” DVD ripper.

    The studios and the DVD Copy Control Association, she found, were well within their rights to band together to prevent what they believed to be the illegal copying of their content. Real was foolish to think otherwise and its claim that it has suffered significant losses because of its inability to sell a product of questionable legality is, in a word, ludicrous.

    Which is not to say that consumers shouldn’t have the right to copy and backup films they have legally purchased, just that the courts have never looked favorably on those who have claimed that right through a technology that bypasses DVD copy protection and consequently violates the DMC.

    “Real’s purported injury stems from its own decision to manufacture and traffic in a device that is almost certainly illegal under the DMCA,” Patel wrote. “In the circumstances of this case, there is no allegation Real could make that would give it antitrust standing,”

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  • Yahoo Will Announce Zimbra Sale to VMware Tomorrow, As It Considers Bids for Small Biz Unit [BoomTown]

    fsbo

    Yahoo is set to announce the sale of its Zimbra open-source email unit to VMware tomorrow, said sources, for a figure that is north of $100 million, but below the $350 million it paid for the unit in late 2007.

    A week ago, BoomTown reported the sale of the unit was likely.

    Sources said there is a large employee retention element to the sale, so Zimbra’s talent will move to VMware, as well as full retention of intellectual property by Yahoo of technology used in its email products. There will be ongoing IP giveback to VMware (VMW) over a period of time.

    In addition, other sources said that Yahoo (YHOO) is about to consider bids it has solicited for its small business unit, which it has also been trying to sell for some months.

    Sources added that Yahoo will not sell the unit if it can’t get a decent price of the division, which is estimated to be worth many hundreds of millions of dollars.

    BoomTown reported in late September that Zimbra was for sale by Yahoo, which has been targeting assets for “de-acquisition” that are not central to the strategies of its new management.

    Late last year when announcing its new $100 million marketing campaign, Bartz said at a media briefing: “Most of our assets are very core to the company. Those that aren’t, where it makes sense we will sell and where it makes sense we will shut down.”

    Yahoo has done that with several properties, such its JumpCut video editing service.

    But Zimbra, as well as its small business and jobs sites have been on the block.

    One source noted that the reason that VMware was interested in nabbing Zimbra was that its execs want to
    expand “up the stack” from the Silicon Valley software company’s position in virtualization.

    And Yahoo is now not interested in running Zimbra’s white-label, open-source email commercial product, which serves the university and ISP markets. There, its main rival has been Google (GOOG).

    Yahoo declined to comment, and VMware has not replied to an email query.

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  • China Scraps 70 Percent Locally Made Rule for Wind Turbines

    China is dropping a requirement that 70 percent of wind turbines used in the country be made domestically, according to Bloomberg.

    The decision was apparently driven by a desire to get the best turbine technology, which generally comes from Europe, into the country.

    Is there a political angle here too?

    Sen. Charles Schumer, D-NY, made a splash in November when he asked the Obama administration to block stimulus funding for a Chinese-backed 800-megawatt wind farm in Texas because the components would be made in China.

    It’s difficult for Chinese companies to cry foul about protectionism when they have home-made restrictions of their own.

    Still, big wind companies, like the Danish Vestas Wind Systems A/S shrugged at today’s news.

    A spokesman said, “The ruling will make no difference to our operations, as 70 percent to 80 percent of our turbines are already made in China,”

  • Detroit 2010: Mercedes-Benz E-Class Convertible promises four-season topless motoring

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    2011 Mercedes-Benz E-Class Cabrio – Click above for high res-image gallery

    We’ve been friendly with the new Mercedes-Benz E-Class since its introduction. As much as we liked the sedan, we enjoyed the Coupes even more so. That stated, it would figure that we’re going to really dig the new 2010 E-Class Convertible. Of course, here in the D, we just get to look at the latest Benz drop top and listen to the Daimler folks make the car’s case. If we did nothing but listen to them, the E-Class Convertible is literally the most exciting thing since bagels got holes.

    In reality, this is a pretty sharp looking car, especially with the top down. Turns out that the best way to remedy the awkward looking chunky C-Pillar is just to remove it altogether. Replacing the CLK as MB’s mass-market convertible, the new E-Class rag top has to be many things to many people. As such, Mercedes-Benz has equipped the E-Class Convertible with a couple of features that will allow the car to be driven with the top down year round.

    The biggie is the new AirCap, a small 2.4-inch wind deflecting device that, in conjunction with a baffle between the rear headrests, keeps things quiet in the open cabin at speeds up to 100 mph. Sunstroke aside, not being able to talk to the person 13 inches away from you is one of the big drags of convertible ownership. If they’re to be believed, Mercedes claims that AirCap solves the problem. That’s a great thing, should you opt for the 382 horsepower, 391 pound-feet of torque E550 Convertible as opposed to the V6-powered 268-hp, 258 lb-ft of torque E350 Convertible.

    There’s also a new Airscarf, a system that blows hot air at the necks of the people seated up front. Hence, short of hail, falling snow and rain, you could conceivably drive the E-Class Convertible year round. Unless you’re seated in the back seat… And even with AirCap and Airscarf, we’d be hesitant to drive the new E-Class ‘Vert in Detroit in early January. Just sayin’. Like what you’re seeing? Well, the new E-Class Convertible will go on sale in May of this year.

    Detroit 2010: Mercedes-Benz E-Class Convertible promises four-season topless motoring originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 11 Jan 2010 13:51:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Detroit 2010: Anti-Tea Party Protesters make their voices heard in the cold

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    While sucking down one of our favorite stimulants in the frigid air outside Cobo Hall, we heard a lone voice across the street scream, “Screw the tea-baggers!” Naturally, we had to investigate.

    Unlike the Tea Party protesters assembling outside General Motors’ Renaissance Center to voice their criticisms about the government’s bailout of General Motors and Chrysler, this ragtag militia of union officials and automaker employees assembled to support the Fed’s financial infusion.

    “We’re here to thank Barack Obama for his support of the automakers,” George Hardy, the vice president of UAW Local 174 told us, going on to say that the cash injection has helped him and his members retain their jobs in one of the worst employment environments in 30 years.

    Hardy was adamant that the government’s detractors refused to see the benefits of the bailouts, simply saying “The Tea Party has it wrong.”

    Detroit 2010: Anti-Tea Party Protesters make their voices heard in the cold originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 11 Jan 2010 13:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • ECB Paper Explores Withdrawal From European Union

    European Central Bank watchers are buzzing in their latest research notes over a recent ECB paper that explored the legal feasibility of withdrawal from the European Monetary Union.

    The paper, with the tantalizing headline “Withdrawal and Expulsion from the EU and EMU: Some Reflections” was released over the holidays and cited in a recent Journal article on Europe’s debt crisis.

    Written by the ECB’s legal counsel, it notes that “recent developments have, perhaps, increased the risk of secession (however modestly), as well as the urgency of addressing it as a possible scenario.”

    It concludes that unilaterally withdrawing from the European Union “would not, as a matter of public international law, be inconceivable, although there can be serious principled objections to it; and that withdrawal from EMU without a parallel withdrawal from the EU would be legally impossible.”

    As for expulsion, “the conclusion is that while this may be possible in practical terms — even if only indirectly, in the absence of an explicit Treaty mechanism — expulsion from either the EU or EMU would be so challenging, conceptually, legally and practically, that its likelihood is close to zero.”

    Though the odds of withdrawal or expulsion are very remote, the budget crisis in Greece has put the issue on the table, since its double-digit budget gap as a share of GDP is significantly above the limits set by EU budget rules.

    Still, as Deutsche Bank notes in a research report Monday, there is “no reason to expect member states to exit EMU.”

    Economists are increasingly dividing the euro zone into “core” economies like Germany, France, Italy, Belgium and The Netherlands — those that have emerged from recession — and “peripheral” countries like Ireland, Greece, Spain and Portugal that were the region’s main growth engines last decade but now face painful adjustments in terms of prices, state finances and labor markets.

    That divergence poses a dilemma for the ECB. As Deutsche Bank economists note, once the ECB starts raising interest rates — probably in late 2010 – there’s an argument to be made that it “will be disproportionately detrimental to peripherals which will probably not enjoy the same pace of recovery as the core countries.” Tighter policy could even trigger a “double dip” in some of those countries, Deutsche Bank said.

    So while expulsion is good for shock value, the likelier — and almost as worrying — scenario may just be slow growth in Europe for an extended time with its growth engines sidelined.

    “The euro area will have to learn to live with a lasting drag from the adjusting peripherals,” Deutsche Bank said.


  • “Heroism fatigue”: another hurdle for U.S. climate change action?

    Could “heroism fatigue” be yet another bump in the road for any U.S. law to curb climate change? And what is “heroism fatigue” anyway?


  • LIFE: Jet-Setting With the Cast of Avatar

    avatar-life-jet-setting

    There’s no doubt that Avatar was one of the biggest films of 2009. Amazing special effects combined with James Cameron’s genius and a talented cast allowed it to become an awe inspiring movie experience. In this LIFE magazine photo series, Photographer Jeff Vespa captures the people that made it all happen. Jet-Setting across different countries for interviews, photo ops, and openings, Vespa was able to capture some candid moments with Avatar stars Sigourney Weaver, Zoë Saldana, Sam Worthington, and James Cameron.

    You can view the entire series at LIFE.


  • Cannondale’s new Simon device takes bike suspension to the next level

    Screen shot 2010-01-11 at 10.23.53 AMCannondale Bicycles and Analog Devices are showing off of a new breed of bicycle suspension this week. Called Simon, Cannondale’s new front suspension monitors the terrain with internal sensors and adjusts the damping rate accordingly. For racers, this could mean faster times. For the weekend warrior, it means that your bike just got a lot more comfortable and easier to use.

    Designed by Analog, the Simon fork uses accelerometers to gauge the terrain at 2 millisecond intervals. If you hucked off a 10-footer (rode your bike off a small cliff, for example), Simon would be dialing in the suspension from the time your front tire hit the ground. It would, in fact, be responding and stiffening the fork while it was compressing on impact. The accelerometer is mounted in the center of the wheel, meaning you can’t just buy the fork. You have to rebuild the front end of your bike in order to bring Simon along.

    The hub-mounted accelerometer gives input to a computer, which then directs an Enfield-built electro-hydraulic flow controller that regulates how much shock fluid should move and how quickly. In terms of function, this is the stuff of Formula 1 auto racing. Most automotive applications use magnetic shock oil instead of electromechanical flow controls, however.

    Cannondale designs and builds high-end bikes for both mountain and road use. It is also one of the few to build bicycles in the U.S., assembling them in Bedford, Penn. The company boasts first place wins in cyclocross and has had its products ridden to great effect in the Tour de France. Cannondale’s racing pedigree and strong market presence means that Simon is probably going to become mainstream in the future. So far, though, there’s no price tag and no release date.

    In the future, real time suspension tuning for the front and rear wheels is going to result in even-faster downhill racing. Cross country riders will enjoy a new sense of confidence with a fork that can adjust itself for longer travel in downhill sections or firm itself up for an uphill climb. Hobby riders will be able to buy a single high-end bike that, if heavy, will still set itself up for the conditions at hand.


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  • Business management software maker Savvion sells to Progress

    Progress Software, maker of applications used to build the infrastructure of retail, manufacturing, financial or government organizations, has acquired Savvion, a producer of software targeted at business management, for an estimated $49 million, according to Private Equity Hub. Savvion, based in Santa Clara, Calif., was backed by H.I.G. Capital, Redwood Ventures, TransCosmos, Westaim Partners, Walden International and VantagePoint Venture Partners. It had raised about $52 million to date.


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  • Orange exec confirms Apple’s tablet upcoming launch

    apple-tablet2In a faux pas, an executive at telecom firm France Telecom/Orange confirmed that Apple is launching a tablet and the end of January.

    The executive, Stephane Richard, is the No. 2 executive at the telecommunications firm. He told French journalist Jean-Pierre Elkabbach that the tablet will include a webcam and that Orange customers would be able to buy it. It’s a little hard to back pedal on this one, since it’s on video (in French).

    The confirmation suggests that Apple is lining up a worldwide launch of the tablet, which means that it’s not just an experimental dipping of its toes in the water or something that will launch in the U.S. market only. Apple itself hasn’t commented on the existence of the tablet, which many see as a new generation of computers.


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  • T-Mobile makes mention of 3G issues with Nexus One, hopes to have ‘more information’ soon

    There’s no fix yet, but Nexus One users are getting a solid first step this week now that T-Mobile is officially investigating the 3G / EDGE fluctuation issues that folks have been reporting. A posting over on T-Mob’s official support forums is now asking for users with verifiable problems to report a few key stats including their location, the nature of the problem (no 3G or 3G / EDGE switching), and whether they’ve got another AWS 3G phone handy that’s performing better. The company says that it hopes “to have more information for you soon,” so, you know, keep that box handy just in case this puppy needs to get exchanged Nokia 5800-style.

    T-Mobile makes mention of 3G issues with Nexus One, hopes to have ‘more information’ soon originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 11 Jan 2010 13:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Airnergy uses Wi-Fi to harvest electricity

    wifi.JPG
    WiFi has the best thing that has ever happened to the wireless generation. Adding to this is the all new Airnergy Charger. This charger uses up energy out of the WiFi areas and converts it into usable electricity. The device has a little battery inside it that charges itself up in any WiFi zone. Being able to harvest electricity with a high enough efficiency, it has charged a BlackBerry from 30% to full in about 90 minutes, using nothing but ambient WiFi signals as a power source. Unlike solar chargers which also kind of perform a similar function, the Airnergy can charge itself even during the night, all thanks to the Wi-Fi proximity.
    wifi1.JPG
    [OhGizmo]

  • STREET CAPITALIST.COM: Is Berkshire Hathaway Undervalued?

    Jan 11, 2010

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    With Warren Buffett recently warning Kraft (NYSE:KFT) about issuing too many shares in pursuit of acquiring Cadbury, Andrew Bary over at Barron’s has an article regarding Berkshire Hathaway’s (NYSE:BRK.A) own share issuance related to its acquisition of Burlington Northern Santa Fe (NYSE:BNI). One of the areas that Bary touches on, is whether or not Berkshire itself is undervalued:

    Based on earnings and book value, Berkshire fans consider the Class A very attractive now, at around $100,000 a share. After rising just 3% in 2009, the stock, which is way below its late 2007 peak of $149,000, fetches a mere 1.2 times our estimate of the company’s year-end 2009 book value of $84,500 a share — compared with an average 1.65 times in the past decade. The stock rarely has been cheaper, relative to book value, in 15 years…

    Book value, moreover, understates what Buffett calls Berkshire’s intrinsic value: the discounted value of its cash flow. Buffett won’t estimate this, but has stated that it “significantly” exceeds book value, because auto insurer Geico and some other businesses are worth more than their carrying value on Berkshire’s balance sheet.

    Berkshire’s book value could hit $92,000 to $95,000 a share this year if the financial markets stay strong. Thus, Berkshire may be trading below its 1.1 times forward book value. Why, then, is Buffett willing to issue equity for Burlington? He declined to comment last week, but he likes the railroad business, having accumulated a 22% stake in Burlington prior to the deal. In the past, he’s called the transaction “an all-in wager on the economic future of the United States.” And he’s said that, while he’s not enthusiastic about issuing more shares, the deal is too large to be all-cash and that he wants to give Burlington shareholders a tax-free option. Some think the 79-year-old investor wants to trim Berkshire’s $24 billion in cash to cut the pressure on his successor to make investments.

    Still, Berkshire is paying a full price for Burlington — 18 times projected 2010 profits for a capital-intensive business. Other major rail companies are valued at about 15 times estimated 2010 earnings. One saving grace: Berkshire is using cash on its balance sheet and an estimated $8 billion in cheap financing for the deal, which uses a 60/40 mix of cash and stock.

    The Buffett Paradox (Barron’s)

    Bary goes on to note that it is interesting that Buffett is so willing to issue shares for Burlington as Berkshire trades around historically low price to book value multiples. He gives the General Re acquisition as a possible example where Buffett used his expensive stock as currency, at the time Berkshire traded at 3 times book value.

    Berkshire Hathaway appears undervalued as it stands and I think that the decision to issue shares stems mainly from a need to acquire Burlington Northern. For Berkshire, the deal makes a lot of sense. Berkshire will get a large business to add to its other lines and help create a new cash flow stream and become less reliant on the company’s financial division. The long-term economics of the rail business seem positive enough to warrant buying the company without a discount and the $8B cheap financing is not very much when one considers the current dividend that Burlington Northern already pays out. Buffett always refers to Berkshire Hathaway as his masterpiece and this acquisition should ensure that the company is built to last through good and bad economic periods, without being so reliant on one key leader like himself.

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  • Losing Your Crowning Glory: An Introduction To Hair Loss

    Hair loss is a very sad occurrence that is experienced by people both young and old. It has been a cause of great distress for people, mostly men, not only because it greatly affects one’s appearance negatively but also because it could be an indication of some health problem lying underneath.

    Types of Hair Loss

    The manifestations of hair loss encompass a wide range of expression from mild thinning of the hair to the complete loss of hair. While people normally shed hair everyday, there are cases when the head sheds more than the usual amount of hair, and this results into balding. People experience different kinds of hair loss:

    1. Telogen effluvium – this usually happens during episodes of great body stress such as after a major operation, a long bout of sickness, or a serious infection. This type of hair loss happens usually around two to three months of the stressful period and becomes evident by unusual amounts of hair in shower sink, a pillow, or on a comb.

    2. As a sign of a disease – loss of hair can also be a sign of an underlying medical condition such as syphilis, lupus, hypothyroidism, hyperthyroidism, vitamin and mineral deficiency, hormonal imbalance, and other illnesses.

    3. As a drug side effect – some medication can cause temporary or permanent hair loss. Among drugs that are known to have hair loss as a side effect are amphetamines, warfarin, beta-blockers, lithium, heparin, levodopa, among many others. Drugs used for cancer chemotherapy are also very known for their hair thinning effects.

    4. Traumatic alopecia – this is the technical term used to refer to hair loss due to blunt forces such us when using abusive hair styling techniques that subject the hair and scalp to pulling, tight braiding, extreme heat, and harmful chemicals.

    5. Tinea capitis – this is a fungal infection that occurs on the scalp. With this condition, hair breaks off from the surface of the scalp forming patches that lack hair. Children are susceptible to this form of hair loss.

    6. Alopecia areata – this type of hair loss is due to unknown causes. What experts know is that the immune system fights the body itself causing follicles to weaken and hair to fall out. This could result into total hair loss, technically known as alopecia totalis.

    7. Androgenetic alopecia or hereditary pattern baldness – this is a form of hair loss typically experienced by men, running in families. This is caused primarily by hereditary factors in conjunction with male hormones (e.g. testosterone) and aging. Women may also experience this type of hair loss, but it occurs rather rarely.

    Manifestations of Hair Loss

    A normal head loses around 50 to 100 hairs a day. Going beyond this range is a sign of abnormal hair loss. Most people discover hair loss when they see unusual amounts of hair on their brushes and clothing or in drains of their bathrooms.

    To diagnose hair loss, a doctor, usually a dermatologist would examine a person’s medical history, nutritional profile, and hair styling habits. One may also be tested or fungal infection or other diseases.

    Preventing Hair Loss

    Doctors usually recommend having a healthy diet, decreasing stress, and proper hair care to prevent hair loss. Doctors also avoid prescribing medication that may cause hair loss for people who have evident tendencies of getting bald.

    Treatment for Hair Loss

    Hair loss can be treated according to the cause of the condition. Drugs that cause hair loss should be discontinued. A healthy diet and a relaxed lifestyle is prescribed for stress-related hair loss. Underlying diseases that cause hair loss are to be treated accordingly. Some drugs that promote the growth of hair may also be prescribed for extreme cases of hair loss.

    Hair loss can be a devastating portion of a person’s life no matter how people say that it hair is just an indispensable part of the body. Knowing about hair loss is a key step in preventing it from happening or stopping it from occurring.

    All Rights Reserverd – Reprint of this article is only authorized when links remain intact.

    Ashton has written extensively on hair loss on his site http://www.preventinghairloss.info. You can also checkout some useful resources about acid reflux as well.

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