Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Dinner's on George Clooney in Germany!

By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, TODAY

Dinner's on George Clooney! One group of diners at the Grill Royal restaurant in Berlin?were treated to a free meal because the actor was worried that he and his friends at a nearby table were making too much noise, Clooney's representative has confirmed to TODAY.

Mario Anzuoni / Reuters

According to English-language publication The Local, German newspaper Bild reported that Clooney and Co. weren't disturbing the others in any way.

"They had behaved in a very cultivated manner," one man in the group told the paper, "I was stunned."

According to The Local, the man never recognized Clooney, even when he stopped by the star's table to leave a business card in hopes he could repay the gesture some day.

The newspaper reported that the dinner bill was around 100 Euros, or $135 U.S.

It's far from Clooney's first generous gesture. Back in October, paparazzi captured a photo of the actor giving money to a man sitting on a New York street wearing military dog tags.

Clooney is in Germany to direct and star in "Monuments Men," an upcoming big-screen drama also starring Daniel Craig and Cate Blanchett. Based on Robert M. Edsel's book, the film is about a group of Allied art experts racing to save priceless artworks from destruction by the Nazis.

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Source: http://todayentertainment.today.com/_news/2013/01/29/16757072-george-clooney-pays-diners-bill-in-germany?lite

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Friday, January 25, 2013

Science needs a second opinion: Researchers find flaws in study of patients in 'vegetative state'

Jan. 24, 2013 ? A team of researchers led by Weill Cornell Medical College is calling into question the published statistics, methods and findings of a highly publicized research study that claimed bedside electroencephalography (EEG) identified evidence of awareness in three patients diagnosed to be in a vegetative state.

The new reanalysis study led by Weill Cornell neurologists Drs. Andrew Goldfine,Jonathan Victor, and Nicholas Schiff, published in the Jan. 26 issue of the journal Lancet, reports the statistical results and methodology used by a research team led by University of Western Ontario scientists and published online Nov. 9, 2011, also in the Lancet, was flawed in a number of crucial ways. Due to these errors, the reanalysis concludes it is impossible to determine whether or not these vegetative state study subjects demonstrated any degree of awareness during the testing.

The University of Western Ontario researchers in the original study set out to use bedside EEG technology to identify any changes in brain activity in vegetative patients and also healthy subjects as controls. During the study, each subject was asked to either imagine moving their hand or foot each time they heard an electronic beep. The brain activity following hand or foot commands was recorded using EEG and then compared in the study. The published study claimed that three of the 16 tested vegetative patients successfully performed the task, along with 9 of the 12 healthy controls. The reanalysis of this study is important, the Weill Cornell researchers say, because if the method was indeed valid, it would mark an important breakthrough in the field -- the first evidence using a bedside testing method that patients reported to be in a vegetative state could perform high-level cognitive tasks.

"Sadly, our reanalysis of the research team's original data shows these particular methods do not work, and it is important that scientists, physicians, and most importantly, the families of severely brain injured patients understand that the conclusions reached in the original study were most likely due to chance findings," says the corresponding author of the reanalysis, Dr. Schiff, the Jerold B. Katz Professor of Neurology and Neuroscience, professor of neuroscience in the Feil Family Brain and Mind Research Institute and professor of public health at Weill Cornell.

"We see the urgency and need every single day for tests that can be used to help establish awareness and consciousness in brain injured patients. However we won't help patients or their families by using a flawed research method and data that cannot accurately provide the information we are all hoping to find," says Dr. Schiff, who is also a neurologist at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center.

"The reanalysis points to the importance of the peer review process, data sharing and analytic tools to confirm research findings, especially those which are biologically complex and where misinterpretation could have major implications on clinical practice," says study co-author Dr. Joseph J. Fins, the E. William Davis Jr., MD Professor of Medical Ethics and chief of the Division of Medical Ethics at Weill Cornell, and director of medical ethics at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell. "EEG techniques are an inexpensive and portable method of assessment, and a premature endorsement and dissemination of this technique could provide families with false hope about whether patients thought to be vegetative are in fact conscious," says Dr. Fins.

"Methods Have Consequences"

This reanalysis study by Weill Cornell and its colleagues from Burke Medical Research Institute and the University of Li?ge was made possible by a data-sharing agreement between their research group and the authors of the original study, Dr. Damian Cruse, Dr. Adrian Owen and colleagues from the University of Western Ontario. The Weill Cornell, University of Liege and the University of Western Ontario investigators are jointly supported by a multicenter research grant from the James S. McDonnell Foundation.

"We set out to validate the original Lancet study findings about EEG, not disprove them, because it is critically important that tests purporting to assert the presence of consciousness be carefully vetted by peer-review," says senior author Dr. Victor, the Fred Plum Professor of Neurology and professor of neuroscience in the Feil Family Brain and Mind Research Institute at Weill Cornell and a neurologist at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell.

The reanalysis study doesn't criticize the use of bedside EEG technology for detection of consciousness, but questions the appropriateness of the statistical methodology applied to the data, Dr. Victor explained. The Weill Cornell research team's main finding was that the original study failed to take into account several aspects of EEG signals present in the vegetative patients who were said to show awareness -- including the contamination of the EEG signals with muscle activity and the random characteristics of the EEG over extended periods of time, he says. Also, basic task-related EEG signals observed in the healthy subjects were not identifiable in any of the vegetative patients.

"The false-positive EEG brain activity responses in vegetative patients may have been reported because of flawed statistical methods, a problem that was exacerbated because a large number of statistical features were extracted from a small amount of data," says lead author Dr. Goldfine, assistant professor of neurology at the Burke Medical Research Institute, a neurologist at New York Presbyterian /Weill Cornell and Burke Rehabilitation Hospital. "Our reanalysis showed that because of the statistical assumptions and methodology used in the original study, random phenomena could be misinterpreted as a 'response'."

In addition to identifying flaws in the statistical approach used in the original study, the Weill Cornell research team also reanalyzed the original data with methodologies that take into account the presence of contamination of EEG data by muscle activity artifact, and the kind of randomness that EEG signals manifest over time. "But critically, the data from the vegetative subjects showed no changes indicative of consciousness or command following. Our analysis only revealed random fluctuations of brain activity," says Dr. Goldfine, who is also an assistant professor of neuroscience in the Feil Family Brain and Mind Research Institute at Weill Cornell.

"This reanalysis study shows methods have consequences," says Dr. Fins. "This is really difficult science, and we must do everything in our power to work together, to share our data and methods and peer review it, so that we can reach our goal of properly defining consciousness in severely brain injured patients."

The study's other co-authors include: Jonathan Bardin, a neuroscience graduate student at Weill Cornell Graduate School of Medical Sciences, and Dr. Quentin Noirhomme of the Coma Science Group, Cyclotron Research Centre and Neurology Department at the University and University Hospital of Li?ge, in Li?ge, Belgium.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Weill Cornell Medical College.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Andrew M Goldfine, Jonathan D Victor, Mary M Conte, Jonathan C Bardin, Nicholas D Schiff. Bedside detection of awareness in the vegetative state. The Lancet, 2012; 379 (9827): 1701 DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(12)60714-4

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/grB-j5V__5I/130125104206.htm

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Reflections of an animation student | The Sheridan Sun

Miele-Profile3

A still of backgrounds from Amy He?s thesis film.

Dana Miele

Amy HeAmy He has been interested in creating art as far back as she can remember.

Originally from Tai Yuan, more than 400 kilometres south of Beijing, He moved to Canada with her parents Ping and Laura He at 8 years old.

He is a 4th-year Animation student who hasn?t looked back since she first heard about the reputation of Sheridan College?s Animation program.

He?s parents have always supported her decision to choose a career in art.

?The competition in the art field is overwhelming. The likelihood of success is minimal. My parents have always acknowledged my interest in art, even when I was? much younger.?

Animation takes patience. The hours spent at school can be equal to a full-time job.

?It was easy for me to decide what I wanted to do for school. It?s the only thing I am willing to admit I am good at and the only thing I have the passion to do,? He explained. ?With the students coming in at al odd hours, we?ve become a studio family. Everyone knows one another.?

He doesn?t fail to notice the talent and dedication of her peers.

Companies campaign for students in their final year to grab dibs on recent graduates.

?There is a factor of luck,? said He. ?It isn?t that one student is better than the other. It?s a combination of talent, exposure at the right moment, networking and luck.?

He continued to practise her skills this summer when Sheridan College was working toward rebranding.

As a part-time designer for Sheridan, He worked on the flyers and posters that are still plastered throughout the school hallways.

He also interned with friends at Chuck Gammage, a commercial studio with connections to Warner Brothers.

?The studio produced background paintings and produced a lot of commercials I remember from when I was a kid.?

The bigger picture for He involved working in the production of family entertainment.

The world of animation has had a major shift toward 3D in the past five years, but He is determined to stay 2D.

?I?m not immediately compelled to drawing monsters but I know I wanted to work for Disney when I was 11 years old after I saw Tarzan. Pencil to the paper is what matters for me.?

He has applied for a fine arts program in Florence but is hoping to get work with a major animation company before then.

Check out some of Amy He?s work at meeheesketch.blogspot.ca.

?

?

Source: http://thesheridansun.ca/2013/01/reflections-of-an-animation-student/

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Thursday, January 24, 2013

Burn Silicon Valley to The Ground (NSFW)

What you're about to watch is a real video advertisement created by a real venture capital fund in Silicon Valley, ostensibly a real place in the United States. If you didn't hate the startup world before, you'll now instantly die. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/PtYRHvxHPpU/burn-silicon-valley-to-the-ground-nsfw

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China's Lenovo sees RIM as M&A option, CFO says

TORONTO (Reuters) - A senior Lenovo executive said on Thursday that the Chinese computer maker may consider Research in Motion as a takeover target, sending the Blackberry maker's shares up 2 percent just a week before it launches a make-or-break line of redesigned smartphones.

But Levovo, which vaulted into the personal computer market with its 2005 purchase of IBM's PC division, would face formidable hurdles if it tried to buy a company that Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper once described as a national "crown jewel." The Chinese company would also encounter tough regulatory scrutiny in Washington, cybersecurity experts say.

Lenovo, on track to become the world's largest PC maker, has held talks with RIM and its bankers about various combinations or strategic ventures, its chief financial officer, Wong Wai Ming, said on Thursday.

"We are looking at all opportunities - RIM and many others," Wong told Bloomberg in an interview at the World Economic Forum's annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland. "We'll have no hesitation if the right opportunity comes along."

A spokesman for Lenovo said Wong was asked about RIM by the Bloomberg journalist and that Wong was speaking broadly about Lenovo's M&A strategy.

CRUCIAL JUNCTURE

RIM, once a pioneer in the smartphone industry, has struggled in recent years as its aging line-up of devices have ceded market share to Apple Inc's iPhone and devices based on Google Inc's Android operating system.

RIM hopes its new touch-screen and keyboard devices, powered by its new BlackBerry 10 operating system, will help it claw back some of the lost ground. Optimism surrounding the launch has powered the stock higher in recent weeks.

Last May the Waterloo, Ontario-based company announced a far-reaching strategic review under which it was expected to examine all options, from software licensing deals to an outright sale of the company.

Earlier this week, RIM shares surged to a 13-month high after Chief Executive Thorsten Heins said RIM might consider strategic alliances with other companies after next week's BlackBerry 10 launch.

In an interview with a German newspaper on Monday, Heins said RIM's ongoing strategic review could lead to the sale of its handset business or the licensing of its software to rival smartphone companies.

Even so, analysts expressed skepticism about a Lenovo bid.

"Anybody who's serious about buying a company doesn't go talking it up. ... It sounds to me like a comment made more for publicity's sake than a serious approach for RIM," said Charter Equity analyst Ed Snyder. "It is a very long shot at the best.'

NET BENEFIT TEST

Any bid for RIM would face a rigorous review by the Ottawa to determine whether the deal would bring a "net benefit" to Canada. The Investment Canada Act gives the government the authority to kill deals that could harm Canadian interests or threaten the country's national security.

In response to the comments by Heins, Canada's Industry Minister Christian Paradis told Reuters earlier this week that Canada may even go to the extent of reviewing a sale of RIM's handset business if such a deal was proposed.

"Research in Motion has made an important contribution to information and communications technology in Canada, a sector that is so important to the Canadian economy. We hope they continue to do so well into the future," Paradis said in an emailed response to the Lenovo comments on Thursday.

Cybersecurity experts said Lenovo would likely go up against tough U.S. government scrutiny as well since the Defense Department and other agencies rely on the Blackberry, which is considered more secure than other smartphones.

"A potential acquisition of RIM by Lenovo would raise a number of important security issues," said Michael Wessel, a Commissioner on the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission, appointed by Congress.

"Government employees are one of the largest users of RIM's BlackBerry products and the security of their communications has to be of paramount concern," said Wessel, adding that he was speaking on behalf of himself and not the Commission.

After the comments from Lenovo, a RIM spokesman said the company had nothing new to report on its strategic review.

RIM shares closed 2.2 percent higher at $17.74 on Thursday the Nasdaq. The Toronto-listed shares closed 2.9 percent higher at C$17.80. RIM is a volatile stock, and moves of 3 percent and more are not uncommon.

Its shares are down almost 90 percent from an all-time high of over $148 in 2008, but the stock has rallied in the last four months as the launch of the BlackBerry 10 devices nears. The company's shares have nearly tripled in value since dipping as low as $6.22 in late September.

(Reporting by Euan Rocha in Toronto, Diane Bartz in Washington, Randall Palmer in Ottawa and Sinead Carew in New York; Editing by Frank McGurty and Leslie Gevirtz)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rim-shares-rally-report-lenovo-interest-161024694--finance.html

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Wednesday, January 23, 2013

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Some shore towns eye sea walls to guard boardwalks (Providence Journal)

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The Book of the Future, Sliced Into Little, Searchable Pieces : The ...

At the Digital Book World conference, held in New York last week, one could hardly pass muster by holding up a stack of pages bound together. The crowd?s sensibility was more conceptual; the word that filled the air was ?content.? This was a fairground for companies like Innodata, DigiServ, Biztegra, and Datamatics, with booths snaking through the hallways of the Hilton Hotel. They passed out business cards and flowcharts, decked out with spritely taglines: ?Unleash your inner book ~ just $99.? In a conference room, Linda Holliday, the C.E.O. of a digital publishing company called Semi-Linear, leaned against a presenter?s table, having just wrapped up a panel discussion on ?Making Content Searchable, Findable, and Shareable.? She spoke in an excited stream. ?A book is an amount of knowledge that I feel good about finishing,? she told me. ?A book is a clump of knowledge that goes together.?

?Look at a book as a bag of words,? suggested Matt MacInnis, another panelist, who had been working on education projects at Apple before forming an interactive-book company called Inkling. ?Bag of words,? he pointed out, is a computer-science term: a model by which a machine represents natural language. ?Computers are terrible at natural language,? he said. ?Humans are shitty at multiplication and division.? For a reader searching the Internet for information, he explained, ?the word rank is going to be terrible for a bag of words of book length.? But a book that is broken up into component parts would show up higher in an online search result, because each discrete section coheres around a single idea, which can be tagged, indexed, and referenced by other sites. This is known in the business as ?link juice.?

During the conference, on Wednesday, Inkling announced it was launching a new ?Content Discovery Platform,? which would draw searchers from Google into broken-off sections of a book. They?ve divided about four hundred titles into one hundred and fifty thousand indexed ?cards,? as they?re called?hacked-up book parts organized into key topics. Readers who reach a card through Google can click around on a limited basis. From there, individual cards are available for purchase?and link out to the rest of the chapter, or the whole book. MacInnis explained this to the audience: ?We delude them??customers??into believing that they?re in a book. They?re in a Web page.? There was a ripple of laughter, cut off by the moderator, who asked, expectantly, ?But you want to sell them a book?? ?We?ll sell them a book,? said MacInnis. ?Or a cow. Or a monkey. We?ll sell them the content.?

When I first spoke to MacInnis, several months ago, he told me that today?s digital shelves are the equivalent of a ?mechanized horse and carriage.? ?What they?re selling is essentially a book,? he said. ?They haven?t added anything. Who cares?? He described his approach to publishing as a shift ?from being a book to being software. I don?t know where that line is, but I think we?ve already crossed it.? Around that time, Holliday?s company came out with a publishing platform called Citia, which breaks up a book into modules, pared down, CliffsNotes-style, ?without so many illustrative examples,? she said. Citia has two book-chunk collections on the market now??What Technology Wants? and ?Predictably Irrational??with a few more in the works. Speaking on the panel, Holliday threw up her hands, wishing to dispel ?the myth that a book is a straight line, or a string of pages,? as publishers see it. ?Nonfiction is a constellation of ideas that you have to string into a straight line,? she said. Holliday envisions a Pinterest-type board, where readers could post their favorite cards. ?They might read pieces of hundreds of thousands of books, and not one whole book,? she said. ?Is that so bad??

MacInnis, Holliday, and others on the panel were quick to emphasize that they give their attention to nonfiction. In particular, MacInnis said, ?we focus on content that people use. You don?t use ?Fifty Shades of Grey.?? He paused, letting the joke sink in. Inkling?s titles include textbooks, how-to guides, and cookbooks. ?Tasting Beer,? displayed on one of Inkling?s iPad stations, in its booth at the D.B.W. Expo, begins, ?The history of beer is a wide and deeply fascinating subject and deserves a great deal more attention than I?m going to be able to give it in this short chapter.? There is more to nonfiction than a mash of facts, after all. A hand shot up in the back of the audience: ?What do you think about the impact on readers?? ?Curiosity is gasoline,? Holliday said. If you change the way you assemble a book, ?everything sparks some kind of curious sidebar.? ?Organize the Internet in the way the human brain operates,? MacInnis added. ?You can enter at just the point you want, and that, to me, is the point of this structure.?

Often, in this bright future of the book, what you get is something more like a book in its nascent stages. Cards with disparate facts, details, ideas?they are, essentially, notes. Holliday told me that when she pitches Citia to writers, they say, ?This is how I work.? Each stack of digital files?tagged with search terms, scattered across the Web?can be redistributed as fragments from a book-as-mothership, to which a reader might never return. So what happens to writing? ?Some people are such great writers,? Holliday said, dreamily. ?Like Steven Pinker. I could read every word he writes.? She has been in touch with him about doing a series of book cards for Citia. ?He said he would want to write his own. And I was like, great!?

Illustration by Olimpia Zagnoli

Source: http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/books/2013/01/the-book-of-the-future-sliced-and-diced.html

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Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Eurogroup bids farewell to mercurial Juncker, heralds new era

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - It started as an informal dinner among European finance ministers more than 14 years ago and has steadily gained prominence under its veteran president, Jean-Claude Juncker.

But on Monday the grey-haired Juncker, 58, handed the reins of the Eurogroup to a polished 46-year-old Dutchman, promising a new approach to how economic policy among the 17 euro zone countries is shaped and decided.

After a 16-1 vote, the finance ministers named Jeroen Dijsselbloem, an Irish-educated social democrat with flawless English, to succeed Juncker, a Luxembourger who had headed the group for eight years. Only Spain opposed the appointment.

Juncker's departure signals the end of an era during which policy - including some of the most critical decisions of the debt crisis - was frequently discussed until the early hours of the morning over dinner and wine in a smoke-filled room.

Part of a generation of old-school politicians, Juncker disarmed but often irritated ministers with his dry sense of humor, speaking openly of having to lie about issues to the media and discussing his problems with kidney stones.

Olli Rehn, the European commissioner for economic and monetary affairs, praised Juncker as one of a kind.

"His shrewd and witty locker-room talk helped to boost morale," Rehn told a news conference as Juncker bowed out, although he will continue as Luxembourg's prime minister.

A mercurial dealmaker, Juncker was pushed to the forefront of Europe's financial firefighting when Greece revealed in 2009 that it had lied about its borrowings and run up huge debts, forcing Athens into a multi-billion-euro bailout.

Crafty and quick-witted, with a gravelly voice from heavy smoking, Juncker was always the first official to brief the media at the end of monthly Eurogroup meetings, making him one of the most prominent communicators in the EU.

But it was a tall order for a man from a country of just 500,000 people to run arguably Europe's most important decision-making body. He faced criticism in early 2011 when he told a conference in Brussels he sometimes lied, telling his audience that he favored "secret, dark debates."

Those comments fostered a sense of disarray and prompted France and Germany to favor creating a permanent, full-time post, something which has not yet come to pass. Dijsselbloem will serve for two years, although it can be renewed.

With the debt crisis calming down, the Anglophile Dutchman indicated that Eurogroup meetings might even end earlier.

"Hopefully the economic situation of the euro area will allow us to meet at normal hours, not very, very early in the morning," Dijsselbloem said.

POWER ELSEWHERE?

Despite complaining of the exhaustion of the job, Juncker won credit for overseeing a series of unprecedented decisions in 2010-2012 that eventually saved Greece from insolvency and helped stem the spreading debt contagion.

"If the Eurogroup hadn't existed before the crisis, someone would have had to had invented it," said Andre Sapir, an economist at Brussels-based think tank Bruegel.

Privately, EU diplomats and officials hope Dijsselbloem, who has won plaudits for his conciliatory and straightforward style, will help restore a sense of discipline.

The meetings have at times degenerated into unstructured arguments in a room, some present have said. A session in November that failed to reach agreement on how to make Greece's debt manageable culminated in a clash between Juncker and International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde.

But Dijsselbloem's relative inexperience - he had been finance minister of the Netherlands barely six weeks when his name was first floated as a Eurogroup contender - also signals that he remains reliant on Berlin to take decisions.

Germany, Europe's biggest economy and the largest donor to the euro zone's permanent rescue fund, is setting the agenda on European policymaking at a time when Germany voters are increasingly wary of bailouts for southern Europe.

"The power in elsewhere, in Berlin, and to a much lesser extent in Paris," said Paul De Grauwe at the London School of Economics. "This is going to be the same - an ineffectual Eurogroup dominated by what's decided in Berlin."

(Editing by Luke Baker)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/eurogroup-bids-farewell-mercurial-juncker-heralds-era-231005038--business.html

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Inspirational Video for Self Improvement | My Blog

January 21, 2013

www.patricchan.name ? I hope this inspirational video will inspire and motivate you to think bigger ? to be ?bigger? than who you are, to achieve greater success in your personal and business life. Below is the transcript of the video ?Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness that most frighten us. We ask ourselves, Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous? Actually, who are you not to be? You are a child of God. Your playing small doesn?t serve the world. There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won?t feel insecure around you. We are all meant to shine, as children do. We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us. It?s not just in some of us; it?s in everyone. And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we?re liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberate others.? ? Marianne Williamson To your self improvement success, Patric Chan www.patricchan.name

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Source: http://www.forselfimprovement.org/inspirational-video-for-self-improvement/

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Obama says 'America's possibilities are limitless'

President Barack Obama waves after his speech while Vice President Joe Biden applauds at the ceremonial swearing-in at the U.S. Capitol during the 57th Presidential Inauguration in Washington, Monday, Jan. 21, 2013. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

President Barack Obama waves after his speech while Vice President Joe Biden applauds at the ceremonial swearing-in at the U.S. Capitol during the 57th Presidential Inauguration in Washington, Monday, Jan. 21, 2013. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

President Barack Obama speaks at his ceremonial swearing-in at the U.S. Capitol during the 57th Presidential Inauguration in Washington, Monday, Jan. 21, 2013. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

President Barack Obama receives the oath of office from Chief Justice John Roberts as first Lady Michelle holds the bible at the ceremonial swearing-in at the U.S. Capitol during the 57th Presidential Inauguration in Washington, Monday, Jan. 21, 2013. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

President Barack Obama, with daughter Sasha, waves as they leave St. John's Church in Washington, Monday, Jan. 21, 2013, followed by first lady Michelle Obama, talking with Rev. Luis Leon, after attending a church service during the 57th Presidential Inauguration. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

Crowds congregate in The National Mall for the ceremonial swearing-in for President Barack Obama at the U.S. Capitol during the 57th Presidential Inauguration in Washington, Monday, Jan. 21, 2013. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Declaring "our journey is not complete," President Barack Obama took the oath of office for his second term before a crowd of hundreds of thousands Monday, urging the nation to set an unwavering course toward prosperity and freedom for all its citizens and protect the social safety net that has sheltered the poor, elderly and needy.

"Our country cannot succeed when shrinking few do very well and a growing many barely make it," Obama said in a relatively brief, 18-minute address. "We believe that America's prosperity must rest upon the broad shoulders of a rising middle class," he added, echoing his calls from the presidential campaign that catapulted him to re-election.

The president declared a decade of war is ending, as is the economic recession that consumed much of his first term.

He previewed an ambitious second-term agenda, he devoted several sentences to the threat of global climate change and said that failure to confront it "would betray out children and future generations." Obama's focus on climate change was notable given that he barely dealt with the issue in his first term.

In an era of looming budget cuts, Obama said the nation has a commitment to costly programs such as Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security. "These things do not sap our initiative, they strengthen us," he said.

Sandwiched between the bruising presidential campaign and continuing fiscal fights, Monday's inaugural celebrations marked a brief respite from the partisan gridlock that has consumed the past two years.

Standing in front of the flag-bedecked Capitol, he implored Washington to find common ground over his next four years. And seeking to build on the public support that catapulted him to the White House twice, the president said the public has "the obligation to shape the debates of our time."

"Not only with the votes we cast, but with the voices we lift in defense of our most ancient values and enduring ideals," Obama said.

Moments earlier, Obama placed his hand on two Bibles ? one used by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and the other used by Abraham Lincoln ? and recited the brief oath of office. Michelle Obama held the Bibles, one on top of the other, as daughters Malia and Sasha looked on.

Vice President Joe Biden was also sworn in for his second term as the nation's second in command.

Monday's oats were purely ceremonial. The Constitution stipulates that presidents begin their new term at noon on Jan. 20, and in keeping with that requirement, Obama was sworn in Sunday in a small ceremony at the White House.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-01-21-Obama-Inauguration/id-d8b9d170e6304f1da26989f5a0154b9e

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Monday, January 21, 2013

Watch All of Kim Dotcom's Totally Ludicrous Mega Launch Event

For those of you who couldn't be bothered to haul yourselves out of bed in a (presumably drunken) stupor at 2:30 EST just to get a taste of the totally insanity that we all knew Kim Dotcom's Mega launch event would offer, good news. It's on YouTube and it's insane. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/ERQyjzP_C9k/watch-all-of-kim-dotcoms-totally-ludicrous-mega-launch-event

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Genetic basis of high-risk childhood cancer points to possible new drug treatment strategy

Jan. 20, 2013 ? Research led by St. Jude Children's Research Hospital scientists has identified a possible lead in treatment of two childhood leukemia subtypes known for their dramatic loss of chromosomes and poor treatment outcomes.

The findings also provide the first evidence of the genetic basis for this high-risk leukemia, which is known as hypodiploid acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Normal human cells have 46 chromosomes, half from each parent, but hypodiploid ALL is characterized by fewer than 44 chromosomes. Chromosomes are highly condensed pieces of DNA, the molecule that carries the inherited instructions for assembling and sustaining a person. The research appears in the January 20 advance online edition of the scientific journal Nature Genetics.

The study, the largest ever focused on hypodiploid ALL, confirmed that this tumor has distinct subtypes distinguished by the number of chromosomes lost and the submicroscopic genetic alterations they harbor. Researchers found evidence suggesting more than one-third of patients with a subtype known as low hypodiploid ALL have Li-Fraumeni syndrome. Families with Li-Fraumeni syndrome harbor inherited mutations in the TP53 tumor suppressor gene and have a high risk of a range of cancers. Hypodiploid ALL had not previously been recognized as a common manifestation of Li-Fraumeni syndrome.

Researchers reported that the major hypodiploid subtypes are both sensitive to a family of compounds that block the proliferation of cancer cells. The compounds include drugs already used to treat other cancers. The subtypes are low hypodiploid ALL, characterized by 32 to 39 chromosomes, and near haploid ALL, which has 24 to 31 chromosomes.

"This study is a good example of the important insights that can be gained by studying the largest possible number of patients in as much detail as possible. This approach led us to key insights about these leukemia subtypes that we would otherwise have missed," said the study's senior and corresponding author, Charles Mullighan, MBBS(Hons), MSc, M.D., an associate member of the St. Jude Pathology Department. Mullighan is a Pew Scholar in Biomedical Sciences.

The near haploid and low hypodiploid ALL subtypes represent 1 to 2 percent of the estimated 3,000 pediatric ALL cases diagnosed annually in the U.S. But they account for a much larger number of ALL treatment failures. Today more than 90 percent of young ALL patients will become long-term survivors, compared to 40 percent for patients with these two high-risk subtypes. St. Jude researchers led the study in collaboration with investigators from the Children's Oncology Group, the world's largest organization devoted exclusively to childhood and adolescent cancer research.

"The cure rate for hypodiploid ALL is only about half that obtained overall for children with ALL. The findings of this study are very important and have the potential to impact how this high-risk subset of childhood ALL is treated," said Stephen Hunger, M.D., chair of the Children's Oncology Group ALL committee and one of the paper's co-authors. "This study grew out of the efforts of Hank Schueler, a teenager who died from hypodiploid ALL. He wanted to find ways to help treat other children with this type of leukemia. After he passed away, his parents established a foundation to support research in hypodiploid ALL. We thought that one way to do this was to conduct the genomic analyses reported in this paper. These findings would not have been possible without Hank's idea and without support from the Schueler family."

Researchers used a variety of laboratory techniques to look for genetic abnormalities in cancer cells from 124 pediatric patients missing at least one chromosome. The patients included 68 with near haploid ALL and 34 with low hypodiploid ALL. Investigators also checked white blood cells collected when 89 of the 124 patients were in remission. The study included whole-genome sequencing of the entire cancer and normal genomes of 20 patients with near haploid or low hypodiploid subtypes. For another 20 patients, investigators deciphered just DNA involved in protein production. Researchers also screened cancer cells from 117 adult ALL patients, including 11 with the low hypodiploid subtype.

The whole genome sequencing was done in conjunction with the St. Jude Children's Research Hospital -- Washington University Pediatric Cancer Genome Project. The project has sequenced the complete normal and cancer genomes of more than 600 children and adolescents with some of the most aggressive and least understood cancers.

Near haploid ALL was characterized by alterations in six genes and increased activity in key pathways that help regulate cell division and development. Disruption of these pathways, known as Ras and PI3K, has been linked to other cancers. The changes were found in 71 percent of near haploid ALL patients and included deletion of the NF1 gene. The gene had not previously been linked to high-risk leukemia. Other alterations involved the genes NRAS, KRAS, MAPK1, FLT3 and PTPN11.

Low hypodiploid ALL in both adults and children was linked to mutations in the TP53 tumor suppressor gene. The gene was altered in 91 percent of pediatric patients with the ALL subtype and in 10 of the 11 adults with low hypodiploid ALL included in the study. Other common alterations involved RB1, another tumor suppressor gene.

About 38 percent of children with low hypodiploid ALL also carried TP53 abnormalities in non-cancerous blood cells. The mutations included many previously linked to Li-Fraumeni syndrome, which is characterized by changes in TP53.

Further evidence linking low hypodiploid ALL to Li-Fraumeni syndrome came when researchers found the same TP53 mutation in two generations of the same family. The father was 31 years old when he was found to have a brain tumor associated with Li-Fraumeni syndrome. His son later developed low hypodiploid ALL.

"Identification of children with low-hypodiploid ALL and inherited TP53 mutations could help expand the use of life-saving cancer screening," said Linda Holmfeldt, Ph.D., a St. Jude postdoctoral fellow. She and Lei Wei, Ph.D., of the St. Jude Department of Computational Biology and formerly of Pathology, are the study's co-first authors. "Screening helps save lives by finding cancers much earlier when the odds of a cure are greatest," Holmfeldt said.

Investigators also reported deletions involving Ikaros gene family members that are rare in other ALL patients. The genes play a role in normal immune system development. The IKZF3 gene, also known as AIOLOS, was deleted in 13 percent of near haploid ALL patients. IKZF3 was deleted in nearly 53 percent of patients with low hypodiploid ALL.

Despite such differences, when researchers tested a variety of compounds against cells from both subtypes growing in the laboratory, they found compounds that targeted the PI3K pathway inhibited proliferation. Researchers are testing the effectiveness of these drugs in mouse models.

The authors are Ernesto Diaz-Flores and Mignon Loh, both of University of California School of Medicine, San Francisco; Michael Walsh, Jinghui Zhang, Debbie Payne-Turner, Michelle Churchman, Shann-Ching Chen, Kelly McCastlain, Jared Becksfort, Jing Ma, Gang Wu, Letha Phillips, Guangchun Song, John Easton, Matthew Parker, Xiang Chen, Michael Rusch, Kristy Boggs, Bhavin Vadodaria, Erin Hedlund, Christina Drenberg, Sharyn Baker, Deqing Pei, Cheng Cheng, Geoffrey Neale, David Ellison, Sheila Shurtleff, Ching-Hon Pui, Raul Ribeiro, Susana Raimondi and James Downing, all of St. Jude; Anna Andersson of St. Jude and Lund University Hospital, Sweden; Samir Patel and Susan Heatley, both formerly of St. Jude; Li Ding, Charles Lu, Robert Fulton, Lucinda Fulton, Yashodhan Tabib, David Dooling, Kerri Ochoa, Elaine Mardis and Richard Wilson, all of Washington University; Mark Minden, Princess Margaret Hospital/University Health Network, Toronto; Ian Lewis and L. Bik To, both of the Institute of Medical and Veterinary Science, Adelaide, Australia; Paula Marlton, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Queensland, Australia; Andrew Roberts, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Australia; Gordana Raca and Wendy Stock, both of University of Chicago School of Medicine; Hans Drexler, German Collection of Microorganisms and Cell Cultures, Braunschweig, Germany; Ross Dickins, Walter & Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Parkville, Australia; Meenakshi Devidas, University of Florida, Gainesville; Andrew Carroll, University of Alabama at Birmingham; Nyla Heerema and Julie Gastier-Foster, the Ohio State University; Brent Wood, Seattle Children's Hospital; and Michael Borowitz, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore.

The research was funded in part by the Pediatric Cancer Genome Project, including Kay Jewelers, a lead partner; The Henry Schueler 41&9 Foundation in conjunction with Partnership4Cures; the St. Baldrick's Foundation, grants (CA156329, CA21765, GM92666, CA98543, CA98413, CA114766 and CA023944) from the National Cancer Institute and National Institutes of Health; the AACR Gertrude B. Elion Cancer Research Award, Swedish Research Council and ALSAC.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by St. Jude Children's Research Hospital.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Linda Holmfeldt, Lei Wei, Ernesto Diaz-Flores, Michael Walsh, Jinghui Zhang, Li Ding, Debbie Payne-Turner, Michelle Churchman, Anna Andersson, Shann-Ching Chen, Kelly McCastlain, Jared Becksfort, Jing Ma, Gang Wu, Samir N Patel, Susan L Heatley, Letha A Phillips, Guangchun Song, John Easton, Matthew Parker, Xiang Chen, Michael Rusch, Kristy Boggs, Bhavin Vadodaria, Erin Hedlund, Christina Drenberg, Sharyn Baker, Deqing Pei, Cheng Cheng, Robert Huether, Charles Lu, Robert S Fulton, Lucinda L Fulton, Yashodhan Tabib, David J Dooling, Kerri Ochoa, Mark Minden, Ian D Lewis, L Bik To, Paula Marlton, Andrew W Roberts, Gordana Raca, Wendy Stock, Geoffrey Neale, Hans G Drexler, Ross A Dickins, David W Ellison, Sheila A Shurtleff, Ching-Hon Pui, Raul C Ribeiro, Meenakshi Devidas, Andrew J Carroll, Nyla A Heerema, Brent Wood, Michael J Borowitz, Julie M Gastier-Foster, Susana C Raimondi, Elaine R Mardis, Richard K Wilson, James R Downing, Stephen P Hunger, Mignon L Loh, Charles G Mullighan. The genomic landscape of hypodiploid acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Nature Genetics, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/ng.2532

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/2Tyvu5GyBPA/130120145819.htm

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Sunday, January 20, 2013

Sales Letter | Articles | Copywriting | Ghostwriting | Reviews ...

Tax Type Tax Rate Tax ID or Company no.

eg. VAT, GST ? Registration no.

Source: http://www.freelancer.com/projects/Copywriting-Technical-Writing/Sales-Letter.4142728.html

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kukurorpuri: binudsingh: Health And Fitness: Mens Issues Article ...

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Segun Arinze, Family Cover Motherhood Magazine - Trends.com.ng ...

Former president of the Actors Guild of Nigeria (AGN), and his beautiful family, grace the cover of the December-January edition of Motherhood magazine. On the cover with Segun Arinze are his wife, Julie, and their two sons. The magazine has a feature on the veteran actor, in which he discusses marriage and parenting. Segun Arinze is a veteran actor, and some of his movies are Silent Night , Black Arrow , Royal Engagement , and Battle of Love . He and his wife were married in 2008. Their first son was born February 2011, and their second son March 2012, in

Read complete article from content source:
Segun Arinze, Family Cover Motherhood Magazine

Source: http://trends.com.ng/2013/01/segun-arinze-family-cover-motherhood-magazine/

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David Morgan: Investing in Silver | The Victory Report - Precious ...

David Morgan returns to The Ellis Martin Report with his post-2012 take on silver investing, market manipulation (or not) and the relativel stability of the physical metal, coupled with opportunities for investments in stocks. The ?surge? really hasn?t happened yet. Stay positioned!

from opportunityshow:

~TVR

Source: http://thevictoryreport.org/2013/01/18/david-morgan-investing-in-silver/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=david-morgan-investing-in-silver

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Saturday, January 19, 2013

Gun stores: Stocks running low as sales surge

Brian Blanco / Reuters

Gun shop customers shop for weapons as they listen to live streaming video of an announcement about gun control by U.S. President Barack Obama at the Bullet Hole gun shop in Sarasota, Fla., on Wednesday.

By Matthew DeLuca and Bill Briggs, NBC News

The shooting at an elementary school in Newtown, Conn., last month touched off a wave of gun buying -- and President Barack Obama's gun-control speech this week appears to have done little to slow it down.

Documents obtained by NBC News from the state of Connecticut through a Freedom of Information Act request show a spike in gun sales in the hours and days after the deaths of 20 schoolchildren and six staffers at Sandy Hook Elementary.

Interviews with gun store owners in four states after Obama's speech show that passion among buyers has not decreased over the month since Newtown; if anything, Obama's speech appeared to set off a new frenzy of buying, with some stores running low on guns.

?We were just swamped in here as soon as he got off the news,? manager Bill Loane of Pasadena Pawn & Gun in Maryland said of the reaction to Obama?s gun proposals. ?People were just pouring through the door.?


As the first news was breaking in Connecticut a month ago, buyers were having the same reaction. Between 11 a.m. and noon Dec. 14, firearms retailers in the state were busy performing 105 background checks ? nearly double the amount logged in the same lunchtime hour a week earlier.

A total of 725 background checks were performed that day, up from 585 a week before. The trend continued in the days ahead, resulting in a 55 percent week-over-week increase in checks.

Across the country, background checks were also surging: 900,000 more background checks were reported in December 2012 than in the same month of 2011. In total, over 3.1 million more background checks were recorded in 2012 than in 2011.

And the trend appeared to continue this week.

?My phone's been ringing off the hook this morning,? Loane said. ?I got here 9:30 and it?s been nonstop.?

He said his store used to sell five or six AR-15-style rifles a month before the shooting in Newtown. He sold 55 in December. He sold 12 to 14 handguns on Wednesday and a half-dozen rifles.

Customers have been coming into Fairground Trader in Massachusetts looking for ?anything and everything? since the Newtown school shooting, said store owner Tom Downey. Most of his inventory is sold out now, but his phone keeps ringing.

?I had a lot of phone calls yesterday looking for stuff I don?t have,? Downey said. ?I?d say that people are on the phone just dialing every gun shop around asking questions.?

Joe Raedle / Getty Images file

A Bushmaster XM-15 .223-caliber rifle like this was used in the school massacre in Newtown, Conn. This style of rifle, modeled after the Colt AR-15, has been highly sought after since the attack, gun store owners say.

Sellers say they?ve had to turn away people looking to buy what has become a marquee item ? the AR-15-style assault rifle.

The AR-15-style rifle, which is among the most popular firearm models in America, came to wider attention after Adam Lanza used one in Newtown. Fearing a ban, Loane said, his customers are paying unprecedented prices for the few guns still available.

?I just sold a lower model one the other day for $2,195 over the phone,? Loane said of a gun that a few months ago might have gone for about $1,200. ?The guy had to have it. He didn?t even see the gun.?

David Stone said his Dong?s Sporting & Reloading Goods in Tulsa, Okla., was packed wall-to-wall all day on Wednesday. Stone said buyers barely paused during what he described as a ?buying frenzy? to listen to the president speak over a local reporter?s iPhone.

?We?re having people call on the phone,? Stone said. ?I?m the only store in Oklahoma from what customers are telling me that has AR-15s.?

Clive Courty said the racks at his GunFun Firearms store in Quincy, Ill., have been nearly fully cleared out over the last three weeks. He?s seen the largest surge in interest for ?semi-auto, military-style looking? guns, he said.

?I?ve just got some basic rifles and shotguns and basically a handful of handguns, revolvers, a few semi-autos left,? Courty said. ?Ammunition?s very low. I?ve got orders for just about everything, but don?t expect them.?

With distributors telling them they don?t know when supply will stabilize, some store owners say they may be in trouble if they don?t get more guns in stock soon.

?It?s a great thing for our business for the minute, but it?s really interrupted things,? Downey said. ?It?s probably in the long term going to hurt me. If you don?t have anything to sell, the bills go on.?

President Obama promised to "put everything I've got" into passing a series of proposals intended to crack down on gun violence, as Republicans and the NRA are already signaling it will be an uphill battle for the administration. NBC's Peter Alexander reports.

Related stories:

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/18/16570552-gun-stores-running-low-on-weapons-as-sales-surge-owners-say?lite

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Temple Run 2 becomes number one free app on Apple iTunes App Store

Temple Run 2 becomes number one free app on Apple iTunes App Store

www.thinkdigit.com

Temple Run 2 has been available on the Apple App Store for a little over a day but it became the number one free app on the store in less than 12 hours of launch. The app is closely followed by Angry Birds Rio (free for today), which is on the second place. The third place is held by Documents by Re...

Source: http://www.facebook.com/thinkdigit/posts/301581149944531

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Friday, January 18, 2013

Improve Your Willpower by Reminding Yourself of Your Goals and Values

Improve Your Willpower by Reminding Yourself of Your Goals and ValuesImprove Your Willpower by Reminding Yourself of Your Goals and Values Whether you believe you've only got a limited supply of willpower or not, resisting temptation and making better choices can still be challenging. Epipheo.TV continues their month-long series on life hacks, showing us how to strengthen your willpower by tapping into the more unknown facets of willpower.

Kelly McGonigal, author of The Willpower Instinct, breaks willpower into three different powers:

  1. I Won't Power: what we normally think of as willpower (resisting temptation)
  2. I Will Power: the ability to remember you want the consequences of doing that difficult thing (e.g., drinking more water instead of a big box of wine for a healthier future self)
  3. I Want Power: the ability to keep a clear memory of what you care about most

Those last two things are a more positive framework that tap into your long-term goals and values and could make it easier to change habits. Just saying "no" to all the short-term temptations may not be enough.

How To Say "No!" to Almost Anything | YouTube

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/8O5KUNMjCmE/improve-your-willpower-by-tapping-into-the-long+term-planning-part-of-your-brain

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Rhapsody and MetroPCS announce new $5 unlimited on-demand plan for monthly subscribers

Rhapsody and MetroPCS announce new $5 unlimited ondemand plan for monthly subscribers

In a move that could be considered slightly similar to what Muvu's been doing with Cricket, Rhapsody announced today it's teamed up with MetroPCS to bring a more desirable music plan to the carrier's subscribers. What this means, essentially, is that MetroPCS customers can now pay an extra $5 per month on their plan to stream as many on-demand tunes as possible from Rhapsody's extensive repertoire, so long as it's one of those recently introduced "simpler" deals. Naturally, how much music folks can stream will also depend on which month-to-month plan they are on, but the $5 monthly Rhapsody subscription is set to be the same across MetroPCS' $40, $50 and $60 plans. According to Rhapsody's president, Jon Irwin, the MetroPCS partnership was a no-brainer, as he believes it will be "instrumental in the growth of the on-demand streaming music business," adding that the service is "eager to continue to bring new offers to customers that benefit all parts of the digital music value chain."

Show full PR text

Rhapsody and MetroPCS Offer Best Unlimited On-Demand Mobile Music Deal Anywhere

More than16 million songs and original editorial content available to MetroPCS customers at lowest cost

SEATTLE-January 17, 2013- Rhapsody introduced a new mobile music offer with MetroPCS that will help millions of consumers make good on their resolutions to spend less by offering the best value for unlimited on-demand mobile music bundle anywhere.
"We recognize that music is an important aspect of many of consumers' lives and we are committed to providing services that enhance our customers' mobile experiences at a price they can afford," said Phil Terry, senior vice president, corporate marketing, MetroPCS. "We've seen great success with our Rhapsody Unlimited offer and now that we have the best value in town for unlimited, on-demand mobile music, we expect even greater success for MetroPCS."

Available now, MetroPCS customers can add Rhapsody for $5 to its newly simplified $40, $50 and $60 monthly smartphone plans.
"We are thrilled to work with MetroPCS to bring on-demand music to the consumer with these amazing plans," said Jon Irwin, president, Rhapsody. "The future of digital music is the mobile phone, whether it's in your pocket, in your car or connected to an in-home audio system, and our future will be built on partnerships with service providers like MetroPCS, who can bring Rhapsody to a broader audience through compelling offers like this one."

Rhapsody works closely with MetroPCS to tailor its service to MetroPCS subscribers by offering customized programming and editorial content that is updated regularly, a strategy that has been elemental to the success of the offer.

Rhapsody has seen significant growth in mobile with 56 percent of all listening coming from mobile phones, up from 27 percent in 2011. Rhapsody's Irwin predicts the trend will only accelerate. "This partnership is going to be instrumental in the growth of the on-demand streaming music business," said Irwin. "This offer brings value to the customer, without compromising how artists and rights holders are compensated, which is a key tenet in how we do business. We're eager to continue to bring new offers to customers that benefit all parts of the digital music value chain."

About Rhapsody
The Rhapsody(R) digital music service (www.rhapsody.com) gives subscribers unlimited on-demand access to more than 16 million songs, whether they're listening on a PC, laptop, Internet connected home stereo or TV, MP3 player or mobile phone. Rhapsody allows subscribers to access their music through mobile phones from Verizon Wireless, AT&T and MetroPCS, through Rhapsody applications on the Apple iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad, RIM BlackBerry, Windows and Android mobile platforms as well as through devices from Vizio, SanDisk, HP, Sonos and Philips. Rhapsody is headquartered in Seattle, with offices in Frankfurt, London, Luxemburg, New York and San Francisco. Rhapsody, and the Rhapsody logo are registered trademarks of Rhapsody International Inc. Follow @Rhapsody on Twitter and keep up with the latest on the Rhapsody Facebook page.

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REVIEW: 'The Last Stand' | Movies & TV | Arts & Entertainment ...

By Ian Kane
Epoch Times Contributor
Created: January 16, 2013 Last Updated: January 17, 2013


'The Last Stand' Lionsgate Films

'The Last Stand' Lionsgate Films

After completing his stint as a California governor, the acting itch calls back to the screen, larger than life 80s and 90s action god Arnold Swartzenegger, in a wham-bam, neo-spaghetti western style shoot?em-up.

?The Last Stand

Distributor:?Lionsgate
Director:?Kim Ji-Woon
Cast:?Arnold Swartzenegger, Forest Whitaker, Johnny Knoxville, Rodrigo Santoro
Producers: Lorenzo Di Bonaventura
Screenwriters:?Andrew Knauer?
Genre:?Mystery & Suspense,?Action & Adventure
Rating:?R for strong violence, language
Running time:?107 minutes
Release date:?January 18, 2013

Arnie is back, and it will be interesting as to whether he can still manage to pull the masses back to multiplexes like an uber-magnet, as he did in decades past. With a bouncy script by emerging writer Andrew Knauer, and directed by Korean sensation Kim Ji-woon, Lionsgate is betting heavy that audiences will be nostalgic enough to want to see this mainly conventional actioner.

Swartzenegger plays Sheriff Ray Owens, a former LAPD narcotics detective, who, after botching a special operation, moves away from the big city and settles down in the quiet border town of Sommerton Junction. The role seems to have been written specifically for him, and he uses the opportunity to ham it up on screen, channeling any one of Sergio Leone?s archetypal heroes, such as Clint Eastwood or James Coburn.?

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The quaint sanctity of the small town doesn?t last long however. All hell breaks loose when Mexican Drug kingpin Gabriel Cortez (played by Spaniard Eduardo Noriega) escapes FBI custody with an agent in tow, and heads strait for the border in an outrageously souped up Corvette, and the town is the only obstacle between the main baddy and his freedom. It isn?t long before Cortez meets up with, and is backed up by, a scurrilous outlaw gang led by a man named Burrell, played with bad intentions by Peter Stormare. Meanwhile, Sheriff Owens puts together a motley crew of local supporters including Brazilian film star Rodrigo Santoro, and Jackass firebrand Johnny Knoxville.

In charge of the region is FBI Special Agent Bannister, played delightfully by Forest Whitaker, who can?t go in and stop the escaped prisoner with guns blazing, since a hostage is involved. Instead, he enlists the help of local lawman Owens in order to try and stop the villain before he slips away.

The film lets the separate narratives percolate on medium before turning the heat up and letting them all collide in a hyper-kinetic hail of bullets, and some pretty immersive and impressive, albeit by-the-numbers, car chases. I was a little let down by the lack of style and panache which is usually exhibited by Hollywood newcomer Kim Ji-Woon (?The Good, the Bad, the Weird,? ?I Saw the Devil?), especially considering that this is his much anticipated US debut. I was not surprised however. When John Woo first made his US debut with Jean Claude Van Damm?vehicle ?Hard Target,??audiences were let down when Woo?s usual unique action style, made famous in movies such as ?Hard Boiled,? and ?The Killer,? didn?t show up on the silver screen. Woo later attributed this to not being allowed by the Hollywood studios to change the way scenes played out on the fly, as he did back in Hong Kong with much success. He had complained that in Tinseltown, there were too many restrictions on changing things, and that any minor item that needed to be addressed had to be approved by a long chain of self-important film brass types. That may be the case here as well.

Although formulaic in nature and tonality, there is something special at play here. Helmed by a less capable director, and without the cheeky performances of the formidable international cast, this film could have slumped into the minor leagues. However, Stand doesn?t take itself too seriously, and hopefully neither will audiences. I went in with low expectations and came out feeling a twinge of nostalgia, but also as though I had been on one fun rollercoaster ride of a film.

To catch up with Ian, visit his new website:?Ascension Media Unlimited.

The Epoch Times publishes in 35 countries and in 20 languages.?Subscribe to our e-newsletter.

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Source: http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/arts-entertainment/review-the-last-stand-336701.html

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