Sunday, April 7, 2013

Obama: Budget not 'ideal' but has 'tough reforms'

WASHINGTON (AP) ? President Barack Obama says his soon-to-be released budget, already criticized by friends and foes, is not his "ideal plan" but offers "tough reforms" for benefit programs and scuttles some tax breaks for the wealthy.

That's a mix, he contends, that will provide long-term deficit reduction without harming the economy.

In his first comments about the 2014 spending blueprint he's set to release Wednesday, Obama said he intends to reduce deficits and provide new money for public works projects, early education and job training.

"We don't have to choose between these goals ? we can do both," Obama said in his weekly radio and Internet address, broadcast Saturday.

Obama's plan for the budget year that begins Oct. 1 calls for slower growth in government benefits programs for the poor, veterans and the elderly, as well as higher taxes, primarily from the wealthy.

Some details, made public Friday, drew a fierce response from liberals, labor unions and advocates for older Americans. House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, was not impressed, either.

"It's a compromise I'm willing to accept in order to move beyond a cycle of short-term, crisis-driven decision-making, and focus on growing our economy and our middle class for the long run," Obama said.

Obama proposes spending cuts and revenue increases that would result in $1.8 trillion in deficit reductions over 10 years, replacing $1.2 trillion in automatic spending cuts that are otherwise poised to take effect over the next 10 years.

Counting reductions and higher taxes that Congress and Obama have approved since 2011, the 2014 budget would contribute $4.3 trillion to total deficit reduction by 2023.

The main deficit reduction elements of the plan incorporate an offer Obama made to Boehner in December when both sought to avoid automatic, across-the-board spending cuts and broad tax increases

Obama's plan includes $580 billion in new taxes that Republicans oppose. There's also a new inflation formula, rejected by many liberals, that would reduce the annual cost of living adjustments for a range of government programs, including Social Security and benefits for veterans.

In his address, Obama said he would achieve deficit reduction by making "tough reforms" to Medicare and enacting "common-sense tax reform that includes closing wasteful tax loopholes for the wealthy and well-connected."

Obama made no mention of the effect his budget would have on Social Security and other social safety net programs. That idea drew a hostile reaction from some of his most ardent political backers.

An Associated Press-GfK poll conducted late last year found that 49 percent of those asked were opposed to changing the way Social Security benefits are calculated to produce smaller annual increases and reduce the federal budget deficit.

The poll found 30 percent supported the idea and 15 percent were neutral. Of those opposed to a recalculation, 32 percent said they "strongly opposed" the change, compared with just 11 percent who strongly support it.

Obama rejected a House Republican plan that aims to balance the budget in 10 years with steep cuts in domestic spending.

His remarks reflected the White House's argument that Obama's blend of tax increases and spending cuts have widespread public support and will ultimately change the terms of the fiscal debate in Washington.

"My budget will reduce our deficits not with aimless, reckless spending cuts that hurt students and seniors and middle-class families, but through the balanced approach that the American people prefer, and the investments that a growing economy demands," he said.

Still, Obama has been unable to move House Republicans from their opposition to higher taxes, and his proposed reduction in the growth of benefits drew swift objections from allies.

"The president should drop these misguided cuts in benefits and focus instead on building support in Congress for investing in jobs," AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka said in a statement Friday.

Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback delivered the Republican radio and Internet address, arguing that "the ideas on how to fix the federal government are now percolating in the states."

"You see, you don't change America by changing Washington ? you change America by changing the states," he said. "And that's exactly what Republican governors are doing across the country ? taking a different approach to grow their states' economies and fix their governments with ideas that work.

Brownback, a former House member and senator, called for a "taxing structure that encourages growth, an education system that produces measurable results, and a renewed focus on the incredible dignity of each and every person, no matter who they are."

___

Online:

http://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/weekly-address

http://www.youtube.com/gopweeklyaddress

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-budget-not-ideal-tough-reforms-153158597--politics.html

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CA-BUSINESS Summary

Canada posts worst monthly job losses in more than four years

OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canada posted its worst monthly jobs loss in more than four years in March, another sign the economy is struggling to cope with weak foreign markets and a strong Canadian dollar. Canada shed 54,500 positions in March, more than wiping out the 50,700 jobs that were added in February, Statistics Canada said on Friday. Market operators had expected a modest gain of 8,500 jobs.

Canada's Flaherty: big March job losses just a snapshot in time

OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canada's job losses in March are disappointing, Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said on Friday, but he described the broader performance of employment since the global recession as much more positive. "After strong job growth in February I am disappointed with the job numbers announced by Statistics Canada today," Flaherty said in a statement, referring to the loss of 54,500 positions in the month.

Judge approves BofA $2.43 billion settlement over Merrill

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Bank of America Corp on Friday won a federal judge's approval for a $2.43 billion settlement with investors who said the lender hid crucial information when it bought Merrill Lynch & Co. The accord, among the largest investor settlements stemming from the recent global financial crisis, was approved by U.S. District Judge Kevin Castel in Manhattan.

TSX in five-day losing streak on lackluster jobs data

TORONTO (Reuters) - Canada's main stock index capped a five-day losing streak by slumping to its lowest in more than 3-1/2 months on Friday, led by declines in the financial sector, as gloomy Canadian and U.S. jobs data suggested the North American economy could be losing steam. The economic uncertainty weighed on oil prices, which fell to a five-month low, but a rising bullion price took gold shares higher.

China's big banks "faking" their micro loans: researcher

BOAO (Reuters) - China's big banks are not delivering on their promise to lend more to the smallest firms and are instead "faking" their micro loans, a researcher said on Saturday, suggesting a government drive to increase micro-lending is struggling. Ba Shusong, a researcher from the Development Research Center, a think-tank that advises China's cabinet, said the biggest Chinese banks are still setting tough collateral standards for small firms, who often cannot meet the demands.

IKEA halts moose lasagne sales after pork traces found

STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - Furniture retailer IKEA said on Saturday it had halted sales of moose lasagne after traces of pork were found in a batch of the product. Sales of the lasagne, of which about 10,000 tonnes has been produced by a Swedish supplier for IKEA, were stopped at its stores in 18 countries across Europe after tests by Belgian authorities late last month revealed traces of pork.

BizJet officers charged with bribing Latin American officials

(Reuters) - Two officers of a Lufthansa subsidiary were indicted in Oklahoma on charges of bribing foreign officials to secure aircraft maintenance contracts, while two others pleaded guilty to related criminal charges, the U.S. Department of Justice announced. The charges, unsealed on Friday, were filed in January of 2012 against four directors of BizJet International Sales & Support, a U.S.-based unit of Lufthansa that provides aircraft maintenance, after a joint probe by the DOJ and FBI.

Boeing completes 787 Dreamliner test flight for battery fix

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Boeing completed a test flight on Friday of its 787 Dreamliner jet, part of a regimen of tests aimed at certifying a reworked system to prevent fire or overheating of the plane's lithium-ion batteries. The flight lasted about 1 hour and 50 minutes, landing at 12:28 pm Pacific Time (1928 GMT), according to Boeing. Data from the flight, which had Federal Aviation Administration officials aboard, will be submitted to the FAA, which will decide whether to approve the plane for flight. The 787 was grounded by regulators in January after batteries overheated on two planes.

Big funds pick sides as Agrium-Jana battle nears climax

TORONTO (Reuters) - Agrium Inc's fierce battle with activist investor Jana Partners could go down to the wire as Agrium's large institutional investors look to be split on who they are backing ahead of a shareholder vote at Agrium's annual meeting next week. The big Canadian fertilizer maker and farm products retailer has been locked in a war of words for months with Jana Partners, a New York-based hedge fund, over the direction the company should take. Jana has named a slate of five nominees for election to Agrium's board and the battle is now set to come to a head at Agrium's AGM on its home turf in Calgary, Alberta, on April 9.

Boeing finishes 787 testing, focus shifts to regulators

NEW YORK (Reuters) - With a successful flight on Friday, Boeing moved closer to proving that a revamped safety system can prevent batteries on its new 787 Dreamliner from catching fire or overheating, and getting back the plane into service. Friday's test flight concludes testing after little more than three weeks, and moves the Dreamliner closer to resuming passenger flights, restarting jet deliveries, and stemming millions of dollars in losses that have piled up at airlines and Boeing since the jet was grounded more than two months ago.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ca-business-summary-000057342--finance.html

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Thursday, April 4, 2013

What An SEO Company Can Do For Your Business

by Dan B. on April 2, 2013

By Dennis Evseev

Because of the global recession happening today, small business are slowly fading into the background unable to recover what they have lost in this crisis. Sadly, because of it, more and more people are getting unemployed. Other than recession, there are still so many factors that might have affected the loss of the business. Publicity might not be that good because advertisements are seldom put up for the awareness of the local population. Another reason might be because your services are not satisfactory on the side of the client. If that is the case, then you can still do something about it before it completely falters. Having a website and having it optimized is one of the ways in which business improve. This can be done with the help of an SEO company.

In this day and age, computers are almost everywhere. You can even see it in the hands of children expertly navigating it. With this kind of computer awareness in all age group, one can assume that you can make use of that fact to build your business little by little. Over half of the world?s population is civilized, with access to advanced technology and the information superhighway commonly known as the internet, the people is at ease in retrieving and storing all kinds of data. With this advancement, business men took advantage of the benefits that technology could offer, and thus the internet marketing was born.

More and more businessmen transfer their interests in improving their websites, rather than making another commercial for their company. The reason is that, their websites can get through to those people which traditional marketing strategies can?t. It is easier for clients to look for the best products or services in the internet because the information that they need in order for them to decide rationally is complete. Unlike 30 second commercials, websites can give a broader explanation on how your business works, and thanks to SEO companies, these business are at top rank in leading search engines like Google and Yahoo.

The process of optimizing is easier compared to making a TV commercial where you spend thousands and thousands of dollars just to complete it. Because of its cheap and accessible nature, businessmen are switching to this form of marketing method.

There are a lot of SEO services that you can find when you need one. All you have to do is to look for them and compare each, so that you will choose the company who share the same ideals as you.

The author writes for http://www.MDesignMedia.com which provides information regarding tampa seo company. MDesign Media offers full-service, design-driven marketing creations ala carte, bundled as a complete campaign or anything in between.

Source: http://liveamericandreamnow.com/?p=6870

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Friday, March 29, 2013

Fly in formation ? Business Management Daily: Free Reports on ...

You want to improve teamwork. So you reward group performance, praise any signs of collaboration and prod loners to become joiners.

That?s a good start, but why stop there?

Raising teamwork to the next level doesn?t mean you must hire team-building consultants and send employees on Outward Bound. Take these simpler steps:

Campaign against an enemy. People will band together if they see themselves as fighting a formidable adversary, especially if they view themselves as the underdog. Focus a group?s attention on a fierce rival. If you run a small retail chain, build team spirit by calling for your troops to trounce the big national department stores.

Publish a ?team book.? Ask every employee to prepare a one-page biography. It can include a photo, a list of hobbies, personal interests and family information. Collect their responses and assemble them in a bound volume that you distribute to everyone, or create a simple web page.

As employees read through the bios, they?ll become better acquainted with their co-workers. They?ll also bond more readily when they learn what they have in common.

Exchange praise. Play the ?anonymous praise? game in which everyone lists what he admires about a specific co-worker. Collect the responses and summarize the highlights in a memo to each team member.

This way, employees see a compilation of praise based on what their peers think of them. By keeping it anonymous, the compliments count even more because the messages?not the messengers?stand out.

Unclog team communication channels. You want teammates to share ideas, but if they?re scattered in field offices or different floors, they may lack ?face time? to update each other. Solution: Use your company?s networking capabilities so that employees can inform each other of new developments. For a low-tech option, designate a centrally located bulletin board as the place for team members to post notices, give progress reports and pose questions.

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Source: http://www.businessmanagementdaily.com/35114/fly-in-formation

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94% The Sapphires

All Critics (94) | Top Critics (18) | Fresh (87) | Rotten (6)

A very conventional story of a '60s Australian girl group gains extra power from its context and setting in this fact-based story set to the beat of Motown soul.

The performers improve it, or save it, depending on your viewpoint.

"The Sapphires" is a bit like a puppy you're trying to house break. It may have its bad cinematic moments but it's just so darn appealing that you have to love it.

While the fish-out-of-water story remains a little overused, the sweet soul music still provides a terrific hook.

For the most part Aussie director Wayne Blair's feature debut is snappy and fresh.

Mauboy has one hell of a voice, and the Sapphires' vocal performances speak to the endless power of great soul songs.

Irresistibly feel good, sound good movie, wears hearts and social relevance on its sparkly sleeve. . .Fun and racial tolerance amidst war [with] sterling aborigine talent.

The most affable, innocuous outing ever set in a war zone.

With O'Dowd in the lead, and a hit-soundtrack-ready selection of tunes from the Stax and Motown catalogs and more, The Sapphires is popcorn entertainment, with some earned laughs and a genuine heart.

It helps that the leading actors are so skillful and appealing, beginning with Chris O'Dowd as a roguish Irishman who becomes the girls' manager...

You've seen this type of tale many times before...but the inspired-by-a-true-story Aboriginal slant adds interest, the actresses create unique characters and Chris O'Dowd really shines.

This familiar but supremely well-told and produced tale of the unlikely rise of an Aboriginal female pop group in the Vietnam War-era is feel-good entertainment at its best. Performances, solid script and great music all hit the high notes.

It sidesteps the usual cliches. Fame and fortune matter less than the human connections that are fostered and repaired on this unlikely journey.

Melodramatic and clich?d to a fault, The Sapphires is however elevated by winsome performances, particularly O'Dowd, and plentiful musically-driven charm.

Not even sweet soul music can turn Vietnam circa 1968 into a feel-good trip, but "The Sapphires" tries its darnedest.

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Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_sapphires_2012/

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Sunday, March 17, 2013

Dumervil, Jennings top Day 4 of NFL free agency

Elvis Dumervil was staying with the Denver Broncos.

And then, he wasn't.

On another busy day of NFL free agency, the highlight ? or lowlight ? came after a strange sequence of events in which the Broncos and the defensive end reached an agreement on a new deal that ended up not valid because the paperwork was filed too late.

And now, Dumervil is a free agent.

Also Friday, Greg Jennings left Green Bay to head to rival Minnesota, Dustin Keller became the latest member of the Jets to leave and Kevin Kolb was released by Arizona.

A person familiar with the negotiations gave The Associated Press details about the confusion involving Dumervil and the Broncos. The person did not want to be identified because the negotiations were not public.

According to that person, the day played out like this:

? At 1:25 p.m., Denver time, Dumervil agreed to take a $4 million pay cut to remain with the AFC West champions for 2013.

? The paperwork was ready to be signed and sent to the league. But with the clock ticking on a 1:59 p.m. deadline, the Broncos were not seeing any sign of the signed copy on their fax machine.

? With no signed contract in hand as 1:59 approached, the Broncos were forced to cut Dumervil, because once the 1:59 deadline passed, they were on the hook for the $12 million they owed him in the original contract.

? The team received the signed contract via fax at 2:06 p.m. That was seven minutes past the deadline and about 15 minutes later than they needed to receive it so they could review it and send it to the league.

Broncos front office chief John Elway said the team delivered its final contract proposal to Dumervil at 11 a.m. and set a 1 p.m. deadline for a decision. Elway said Dumervil accepted the contract at around 1:25 and "although we expressed our concern regarding the time constraints, we were assured that the signed documents would be submitted to us before the league's waiver deadline."

"We did not receive the documents from Elvis by the league's deadline and were forced to release him shortly before 2 p.m. MDT," Elway said.

Dumervil's agent, Marty Magid, did not return messages left by AP via text and voicemail.

Though the sides had agreed on a deal, the odds of Dumervil returning to Denver are hampered because cutting him could leave them with a salary cap hit of up to nearly $5 million.

Jennings spent seven years getting the best of the Vikings' secondary while playing for their bitter rivals in Green Bay. No longer feeling as important to the Packers after two seasons shortened by injuries, Jennings crossed the border and found a team that welcomed him with desperately open arms.

Jennings signed a five-year contract with the Vikings on Friday, leaving Aaron Rodgers and that high-octane passing offense in Green Bay for the unproven Christian Ponder and the ground-and-pound Vikings. In 2011, he missed three games with a sprained left knee. He said he felt lost in the shuffle behind younger Packers receivers such as James Jones, Jordy Nelson and Randall Cobb and sounded determined to prove that his best years are not behind him.

"I can definitely still do it," said Jennings, who will turn 30 on Sept. 21. "I can definitely still make plays and be as exciting as I was in my earlier years."

Arizona released Kolb, ending the quarterback's two injury-filled seasons with the team. The move came just ahead of the deadline for paying Kolb a $2 million roster bonus. The Cardinals paid Kolb some $20 million over two seasons after acquiring him in a trade that sent a second-round draft pick and cornerback Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie to the Philadelphia Eagles.

The move reportedly saved $7 million in salary cap space. Meanwhile, the Cardinals were spending the money left and right, agreeing to terms on one-year contracts with former San Diego and ex-University of Arizona cornerback Antoine Cason and ex-Oakland defensive end Matt Shaughnessy.

In Miami, Ryan Tannehill now has plenty of potential pass targets, thanks to a spending spree by the Dolphins.

Miami signed Keller and wideout Brandon Gibson to complete a much-needed upgrade of the receiving corps. The Dolphins earlier added Mike Wallace, the top pass-catcher in free agency, and re-signed wideout Brian Hartline last week.

The moves transform the passing game into a potential strength.

"We feel that we have added some very good pieces to our passing game," general manager Jeff Ireland said.

Keller and Gibson agreed.

"In today's NFL, you've got to have more than one or two ways to get people the ball," Gibson said. "This is a young and talented group. If we stick together, we could be very good."

Gibson spent the past four seasons with the St. Louis Rams, where he made 38 starts. Last year, he had 51 receptions for a career-high 691 yards and five touchdowns while starting 13 games.

Keller, who had 17 career touchdown catches with the Jets, signed a one-year contract as a replacement for Anthony Fasano. Keller was slowed by a left ankle injury last year, when he made 28 catches for 317 yards and two scores in eight games.

"It was pretty frustrating," he said. "This is a fresh start for me. It's an opportunity to go somewhere and re-prove myself."

Meanwhile, the Jets had their busiest day yet of free agent signings after watching several of their key players leave during the early days of free agency.

New York signed running back Mike Goodson, offensive lineman Willie Colon and nose tackle Antonio Garay. The team announced the deal with Goodson, along with the re-signing of fullback Lex Hilliard. Two people familiar with the situations told The Associated Press that the Jets had signed Colon, a former favorite of Ben Roethlisberger in Pittsburgh, and Garay, who spent the last three-plus seasons in San Diego. The people spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the team had not announced the signings.

Since free agency began, the Jets have lost several starters, including Keller, running back Shonn Greene (Tennessee), safeties LaRon Landry (Indianapolis) and Yeremiah Bell (Arizona), defensive lineman Mike DeVito (Kansas City) and nose tackle Sione Po'uha (released).

The San Diego Chargers made deals with two running backs, agreeing to a two-year contract with former New England Patriots fan favorite Danny Woodhead and a one-year deal to bring back Ronnie Brown.

Meanwhile, free agent safety Ed Reed left the Houston Texans with no deal in place. The nine-time Pro Bowl safety departed Reliant Stadium after two days of talks with the team. He arrived in Houston on Thursday morning aboard team owner Bob McNair's private jet and the team announced on its Twitter site that he was back at its facility on Friday.

The Texans are trying to sign Reed to make up for an otherwise disappointing free-agency period so far. Receiver Kevin Walter was cut, safety Glover Quin signed with Detroit and tight end James Casey and linebacker Connor Barwin signed with Philadelphia.

Also Friday:

? Oakland found the potential replacement for disappointing former first-round pick Rolando McClain, agreeing to a free-agent contract with former Chicago linebacker Nick Roach. The Raiders announced the deal with Roach, who is the second linebacker signed by the team this week, following a three-year, $6 million deal given to Kaluka Maiava on Wednesday.

? Louis Delmas agreed to a two-year contract to stay with the Detroit Lions, a person with knowledge of the deal told The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity Friday because no announcement had been made. Delmas played only eight games last season but started them all. He was limited by left knee problems.

? Philadelphia acquired wide receiver Arrelious Benn and a seventh-round pick from Tampa Bay for the Eagles' sixth-round choice this year and a conditional draft pick in 2014. Benn, a second-round selection (39th overall) by the Buccaneers in 2010, has 59 receptions for 862 yards and five touchdowns in three seasons.

? Jacksonville signed cornerback Alan Ball, running back Justin Forsett and defensive tackle Roy Miller.

? Chicago agreed to a one-year contract with cornerback Zack Bowman.

? Kansas City signed veteran offensive lineman Geoff Schwartz, who can play both guard and tackle and spent last season as a backup in Minnesota.

? Linebacker Keith Rivers signed a new one-year deal with the New York Giants. Rivers, a former first-round pick of the Cincinnati Bengals, was traded to New York for a fifth-round pick on April 11, 2012. He missed five games with the Giants because of a slow-healing hamstring injury.

? Indianapolis released safety Tom Zbikowski after one season with the team.

Source: http://www.mysanantonio.com/sports/article/Dumervil-Jennings-top-Day-4-of-NFL-free-agency-4359542.php

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Monday, March 4, 2013

Steelcase Gesture chair adjusts to support our smartphone slump (video)

Steelcase Gesture chair supports our smartphone slump

As advanced as office chairs can be, they're still based on one increasingly bad assumption: that we're sitting upright in front of a traditional computer. Steelcase's upcoming Gesture chair at last acknowledges that we're living in a world of smartphones and tablets. Its back and seat shift in tandem to maintain support in any number of real-world postures, whether it's leaning back to check text messages or curling up for an e-book. The armrests are equally flexible to save us from the added strain that comes from holding a gadget in-hand. As long as habitual mobile device users can wait until the fall release, and aren't worried about the eventual price, the Gesture might literally have their backs.

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Via: Gizmodo

Source: Steelcase

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/02/steelcase-gesture-chair-adjusts-to-support-our-smartphone-slump/

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Friday, February 22, 2013

The winners of the 2012 Engadget Awards -- Editors' Choice

DNP  The winners of the 2012 Engadget Awards  Editors' Choice

Yesterday, we announced your picks for the 2012 Engadget Awards, and today it's our turn. The Editors' Choice selections below cover the same 15 categories you voted on earlier this month, but the results weren't limited to reader-selected finalists. (In other words, it's a favorite gadget free-for-all for this bunch of geeks.) Without further ado, we present our top products of 2012 -- click past the break for the full list.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/21/winners-2012-engadget-awards-editors-choice/

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Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Armenian president promises security after election victory

YEREVAN (Reuters) - Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan promised on Tuesday to make the country secure and stable after cruising to victory in an election which international vote monitors said lacked real competition.

But Sarksyan faces a challenge in his second five-year term to prevent tensions increasing with Azerbaijan over the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh that could lead to a new war in the South Caucasus, where pipelines carry Caspian oil and gas to Europe.

Preliminary results showed Sarksyan won 58.6 percent of the votes cast in Monday's election, enough to avoid a second-round run-off. His closest rival, U.S.-born former Foreign Minister Raffi Hovannisian, trailed on nearly 37 percent.

"Armenia chose the path towards a safe Armenia and I am happy and proud of the fact that every resident of Armenia will be on that path," Sarksyan, 58, told celebrating supporters.

International observers said the vote was an improvement on recent elections in the former Soviet republic, including the 2008 presidential ballot in which 10 people were killed.

"However, the limited field of candidates meant that the election was not genuinely competitive," representatives of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe said in a statement.

"The candidates who did run were able to campaign in a free atmosphere and to present their views to voters, but the campaign overall failed to engage the public's interest."

Several of Sarksyan's potential rivals, most notably former President Levon Ter-Petrosyan, decided not to run because they feared the election would be skewed in the president's favor.

A minor candidate was shot and wounded during campaigning, and police received 70 complaints of voting violations. The result was in line with opinion polls, however.

One group, the opposition Heritage Party, alleged some ballots cast for Sarksyan's opponents had been thrown out and said it planned a protest in the capital Yerevan later on Tuesday. It was not clear if other parties would take part.

EXPECTED OUTCOME

Armenians had expected Sarksyan to win and there was little celebrating. "I expect that things will get better in the next five years. And after that of course we will need to change (the president). That's all," said Yerevan resident Roza Atovyan.

Another woman in Yerevan, Elana Akapova, said: "The president has a lot of administrative power. Therefore it's natural that he received the majority of the vote."

The result strengthens Sarksyan's hold on Armenia, which borders Iran, Georgia, Turkey and Azerbaijan, after his Republican Party won a parliamentary election last year.

Sarksyan's promises of economic recovery went down well with voters in the country of 3.2 million, where more than 30 percent live below the poverty line. The average monthly wage is about $300 and unemployment was 16 percent last year.

Armenia is an important potential ally for the West which is trying to ensure Iran does not develop nuclear weapons, although tightening international economic sanctions on its neighbors could affect Armenia's trade and economy.

Sarksyan has outlined no big policy changes and investors and foreign governments are worried by Armenia's fraught relations with Azerbaijan.

FEARS OF NEW CONFLICT

About 30,000 people were killed in the war over Nagorno-Karabakh in the 1990s and Azerbaijan uses its diplomatic and economic muscle to isolate Yerevan. It has vastly increased military spending in the last few years, alarming Yerevan.

Nagorno-Karabakh is an ethnic Armenian-majority enclave inside Azerbaijan, which Armenia-backed rebels wrested from Azeri troops. Firefights along the border still kill troops on both sides and experts say a wider conflict is possible.

Sarksyan has accused Azerbaijan of threatening a new conflict. Azerbaijan denies it is the aggressor and says Armenians should hand back control of the mountainous enclave.

"In terms of domestic policy, we should expect a continuation of deepening ties with the West and the European Union," said Richard Giragosian, director of the Regional Studies Centre think tank in Yerevan.

He ruled out a breakthrough over Nagorno-Karabakh, saying: "Both sides remain too far apart."

Without a shift in regional politics, durable economic growth will be difficult for Armenia while its borders with Azerbaijan and Turkey remain closed. Turkey shut the border in 1993 in solidarity with its ethnic kin in Azerbaijan.

Most regional pipeline projects between growing regional power Turkey and the oil and gas-producing Azerbaijan isolate Armenia, making Yerevan more dependent on ties with its Soviet-era master Moscow, which has a military base on Armenian soil.

(Reporting by Hasmik Mrktchyan and Margarita Antidze; Writing by Timothy Heritage; Editing by Pravin Char)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/armenian-president-promises-security-election-victory-105519041.html

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Monday, February 11, 2013

World-Herald editorial: Set priorities for military spending

Congress and the White House so far have refused to make the hard choices necessary on federal spending. There is no long-term budget agreement, and Congress can?t even muster the will to agree on an annual budget.

The only action, unless an 11th-hour agreement decides otherwise before March 1, will be the automatic ?sequestration? cuts in spending.

Sequestration is the one thing our elected officials in Washington could agree on ? but none of them like it. With good reason: It would lop off chunks of the federal budget in meat-ax fashion, using across-the-board cuts undirected by sound policymaking.

The outgoing U.S. secretary of defense, Leon Panetta, is a veteran budget expert in Washington, and in recent days he has vented about the federal government?s abdication of its fiscal responsibility.

?This is no way to govern the United States of America,? he said. ?Not only have they failed to come together around a big plan to reduce the deficit, they have also failed in their basic responsibility to pass appropriations bills that provide the resources and certainty needed to run the government.?

And in congressional testimony, he added: ?Sequester was not designed as a mechanism that was supposed to happen. It was designed to be so nuts that everybody would do everything possible to make sure it didn?t happen.?


As we?ve said many times, the federal government?s fiscal mess is so huge that military spending must be part of any overall strategy to address it. At the same time, the Pentagon should base its spending decisions on a responsible weighing of our defense needs. It should set sound priorities, then stand up to the defenders of the status quo.

Too often, responsible priority-setting is short-circuited by a host of self-serving, nearsighted factors: Congressional pork-barreling. Parochial maneuvering by the individual service branches. Acquisition boondoggles and cost overruns.

Sequestration ? which would cut defense spending by $42 billion this year, on top of $487 billion in 10-year cuts Panetta is already implementing ? worsens the problem because, unlike Panetta?s current plan, it isn?t guided by priority-setting.

Mich?le Flournoy, who served as undersecretary of defense for policy from 2009-12, noted in the Wall Street Journal last week that ?whether or not Congress avoids sequestration by March 1, defense spending will likely be cut by at least 10 percent over the next decade. As 20 percent of the federal budget and 50 percent of discretionary spending, it will be part of any longer-term budget deal.?

Flournoy outlined general ideas that would help keep cutbacks from undermining military effectiveness: a reduction in the military?s civilian work force (over the past decade it increased by more than 100,000); reducing the costs of military health care (it?s increasing annually at 10 percent, compared with 6 percent in the nation overall); and a new round of base closings.

The Pentagon?s acquisition process ? no surprise ? is rife for greater efficiency, she wrote: The Department of Defense ?is still operating with procurement timelines unresponsive to need, perverse incentives for program managers, inadequate numbers of trained acquisition professionals and insufficient dialogue with industry.?

And U.S. Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., to his credit, continues to prod his colleagues to look at specific weapons systems for reduction or elimination.

Was there a focus on any of this during the recent Senate hearing on the nomination of former Sen. Chuck Hagel to succeed Panetta as defense secretary? No. And that?s a poor reflection on the lawmakers presuming to guide national policy.

Meanwhile, the Navy just announced it will be deploying only one, rather than two, aircraft carrier groups to the Persian Gulf due to fiscal constraints. That?s just one of many cutbacks that will be necessary in an era of restrained military spending.

Again, such cutbacks are not necessarily a bad thing. But as long as our elected leaders in Congress and the White House neglect their duties to settle the big budget questions, our military is unduly burdened by that failure of leadership at the top.

Source: http://jaystoday.com/article/20130211/NEWS0802/702119999

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Wednesday, February 6, 2013

$99 OUYA Game Console Coming to Retail Partners in June

OUYA, the company behind the Android gaming console that became a Kickstarter sensation when it raised over $8.5 million on the crowdfunding platform, has announced its release schedule for the much-anticipated device ? Kickstarter backers will get the console in March, online preorders will arrive in April and retailers will begin sales in June, The Wall Street Journal reports.

CEO Julie Uhrman provided details of the launch timings to the paper. The console will sell for about $100 and touch controllers should cost about $50, and it is slated to go on sale on Amazon and at retailers, including Target and Best Buy. OUYA had over 68,000 backers on Kickstarter and has sold additional units through pre-orders.

Part of the excitement around OUYA is the number of third-party partners that have already signed on. The company has already announced deals with XBMC, iHeartRadio, and VEVO, and Uhrman says the system should have as many as 200 titles available. Games are expected to be in all genres. Uhrman highlighted an important partnership with Square Enix to bring Final Fantasy 3 onto the TV through OUYA.

In keeping with the open theme of the console, developers will be free to implement OUYA controllers for use with other devices.

?One of the promises of being open is you can use what we build for other things. But you can create accessories and peripherals for our device as well. At the end of the day, it makes our ecosystem richer,? Uhrman told the Journal.

OUYA?s going to arrive with some looming competition, as the mainstream console makers are gearing up for a new generation of systems. Nintendo has already launched its Wii U console, selling 3 million units in its first quarter. It will also be up against some new entrants, like chipmaker Nvidia, which plans to release a Project Shield console/handheld hybrid later this year.

Source: http://thenextweb.com/gadgets/2013/02/05/ouya-99-android-game-console-on-track-for-march-launch-for-backers-ahead-of-june-retail-release/

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Monday, February 4, 2013

Avoiding a cartography catastrophe

Avoiding a cartography catastrophe [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 4-Feb-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Catherine Crawley
ccrawley@nimbios.org
865-974-9350
National Institute for Mathematical and Biological Synthesis (NIMBioS)

Study recommends new tools to improve global mapping of infectious disease

KNOXVILLE, TN Since the mid-nineteenth century, maps have helped elucidate the deadly mysteries of diseases like cholera and yellow fever. Yet today's global mapping of infectious diseases is considerably unreliable and may do little to inform the control of potential outbreaks, according to a new systematic mapping review of all clinically important infectious diseases known to humans.

Of the 355 infectious diseases assessed in the review, 174 showed a strong rationale for mapping and less than 5 percent of those have been mapped reliably. Unreliable mapping makes it difficult to fully understand the geographic scope and threat of disease and therefore make informed policy recommendations for managing it, write the authors of the study, which appears as open access on Feb. 4 in the journal Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B.

An online, open-access database, which accompanies the study, provides a quantitative scheme for evaluating the quality of data available for each infectious disease as well as specific mapping recommendations for each disease. Among the recommendations for improving disease cartography are the use of new crowdsourcing techniques to gather data, such as analyzing the content and frequency of Twitter messages about disease. Twitter feeds during the 2009 H1N1 flu outbreak, for example, predicted outbreaks sooner than traditional disease surveillance methods.

"We have shown that novel solutions exist to enable us to use up-to-date data and technology to rapidly improve our geographic knowledge of a wide range of clinically important pathogens," said Katherine Battle, one of the study's co-authors from the University of Oxford.

Unique to the review is the inclusion of how the basic reproduction rate, which is the primary epidemiological number used to determine the degree which a disease can spread through a population, might vary among pathogens.

"There is a clear need for better estimates of the potential growth of infectious diseases that allow spatial variations to be taken into consideration, and this paper is a wonderful contribution to help us meet this need," said Louis Gross, the director of the National Institute for Mathematical and Biological Synthesis, which sponsored a workshop in 2011 that produced the paper.

###

Citation: Hay SI et al. 2012. Global mapping of infectious disease. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B. Published online 4 February 2013.

The National Institute for Mathematical and Biological Synthesis (NIMBioS) brings together researchers from around the world to collaborate across disciplinary boundaries to investigate solutions to basic and applied problems in the life sciences. NIMBioS is sponsored by the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture with additional support from The University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

Contact Information:

Catherine Crawley, NIMBioS

Katherine Battle, University of Oxford
katherine.battle@zoo.ox.ac.uk
44-1865-281210


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Avoiding a cartography catastrophe [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 4-Feb-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Catherine Crawley
ccrawley@nimbios.org
865-974-9350
National Institute for Mathematical and Biological Synthesis (NIMBioS)

Study recommends new tools to improve global mapping of infectious disease

KNOXVILLE, TN Since the mid-nineteenth century, maps have helped elucidate the deadly mysteries of diseases like cholera and yellow fever. Yet today's global mapping of infectious diseases is considerably unreliable and may do little to inform the control of potential outbreaks, according to a new systematic mapping review of all clinically important infectious diseases known to humans.

Of the 355 infectious diseases assessed in the review, 174 showed a strong rationale for mapping and less than 5 percent of those have been mapped reliably. Unreliable mapping makes it difficult to fully understand the geographic scope and threat of disease and therefore make informed policy recommendations for managing it, write the authors of the study, which appears as open access on Feb. 4 in the journal Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B.

An online, open-access database, which accompanies the study, provides a quantitative scheme for evaluating the quality of data available for each infectious disease as well as specific mapping recommendations for each disease. Among the recommendations for improving disease cartography are the use of new crowdsourcing techniques to gather data, such as analyzing the content and frequency of Twitter messages about disease. Twitter feeds during the 2009 H1N1 flu outbreak, for example, predicted outbreaks sooner than traditional disease surveillance methods.

"We have shown that novel solutions exist to enable us to use up-to-date data and technology to rapidly improve our geographic knowledge of a wide range of clinically important pathogens," said Katherine Battle, one of the study's co-authors from the University of Oxford.

Unique to the review is the inclusion of how the basic reproduction rate, which is the primary epidemiological number used to determine the degree which a disease can spread through a population, might vary among pathogens.

"There is a clear need for better estimates of the potential growth of infectious diseases that allow spatial variations to be taken into consideration, and this paper is a wonderful contribution to help us meet this need," said Louis Gross, the director of the National Institute for Mathematical and Biological Synthesis, which sponsored a workshop in 2011 that produced the paper.

###

Citation: Hay SI et al. 2012. Global mapping of infectious disease. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B. Published online 4 February 2013.

The National Institute for Mathematical and Biological Synthesis (NIMBioS) brings together researchers from around the world to collaborate across disciplinary boundaries to investigate solutions to basic and applied problems in the life sciences. NIMBioS is sponsored by the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture with additional support from The University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

Contact Information:

Catherine Crawley, NIMBioS

Katherine Battle, University of Oxford
katherine.battle@zoo.ox.ac.uk
44-1865-281210


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-02/nifm-aac020113.php

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Wednesday, January 9, 2013

10 Things You - Comfort Bites... - Yes

Comfort Bites...: 10 Things You (Probably) Didn't Know You Could Cook in a Slow Cooker

10 Things You (Probably) Didn't Know You Could Cook in a Slow Cooker

Slow cookers. Or crockpots. Whatever you call them, you've got to love them. Invented in the 1970s in the US, they've been a time and effort-saving device for home cooks for decades. And while we often talk about cooking stews and curries in the slow cooker, I think we can often neglect to cook other, more modern dishes in there. Did you know you could cook all this in your slow cooker??

Ribs
Soft, tender meat falling from the bone, doused in a rich, sticky barbecue sauce. Ribs are a great dish to cook in the slow cooker because it saves you so much time. Slather them in sauce and then pile them into your slow cooker's crockpot, on top of a sliced onion, for 4-6 hours. They'll be rich and really tender but they won't be charred or caramelised. For that, you'll need to give them a blast in a hot oven or under the grill just to blacken the edges and set all that sticky marinade. Check out how I do them here.


bbq ribs

Whole chicken
I've needed to clean my oven a whole lot less since discovering how to cook an entire chicken in the slow cooker for Sunday lunch. Yes, you'll end up with soggy skin, but we don't generally eat that anyway. The flesh is tender and just falls from the bones, meaning you won't waste a scrap of meat. Save the cooking liquid for stock and make another batch by re-immersing the bones in fresh water and slow-cooking overnight. Check out Kavey's original post on this and also how I got on too.?

Frankfurters
They only take about 4 minutes to heat up in a pan, but someone came up with the idea of cooking 60 hotdog frankfurters all in one go, in the slow cooker. I suppose it makes sense if you're feeding lots of people, and it will save you a lot of fiddling at the stove. Dump them in the slow cooker (you'll fit more in if you stand them upright) with nothing else (no liquid, no onions, nothing) and heat for 2 hours on high.?

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Cakes
I'd known for a while that you could cook cakes in the slow cooker, by scraping cake batter into a small round tin which you immerse in the crockpot in a little water. And you can also make little ramekin custards in the same way. My problem is that I don't own any cake tins that fit inside my slow cooker. But then I found a recipe that just asked you to bung the cake mixture into the crockpot directly and cook it for two hours. This hot fudge cake doesn't seem 'cakey' as a sponge would be, but the author says that they serve it warm with ice cream and it looks pretty good.?

Drinks
This is one I don't quite understand. I've seen quite a few crockpot recipes for coffee and hot chocolate-based drinks, along with mulled wines and ciders. But why make a hot drink in the slow cooker that only takes a few minutes to heat up and infuse in a saucepan? There's no less washing up. The only reasons I can think of is a) if you're expecting a lot of people and you need to keep it warm for a long time (like at a Bonfire Night party for example, for people to dip into with their cups). And b) maybe somehow the flavours are stronger after it's simmered slowly like this. I don't know. (I feel an experiment on its way on this one...)

Risotto
I've tried cooking risotto in the oven, more than once, and it hasn't worked. It goes all crispy and burnt at the edges (I don't know what I'm doing wrong but it does). So it's always ?diligently stirred on the stove. But then I found a crockpot recipe from The Crockpot Ladies which just asks you to soften some onions, bung them into the crockpot, along with risotto rice and stock and whatever else is going into your risotto (meat needs to be browned first, folks) and leave it there. Tempting, when you're saving yourself from all that stirring, but it will take about 4 hours to cook.?

Bread
This is definitely one I am going to try. If you look for them, there are a number of bread-based recipes that are designed for the crockpot. Some of them you cook the dough in a tin or bowl and others, like this one, you just form into mini rolls and then slow cook them in a greased and lined crockpot for an hour. Brilliant.?

Macaroni Cheese and Lasagne
For some reason, I've always thought that pasta wouldn't fare well in a slow cooker. But I was surprised at the number of slow cooker pasta recipes that there are, including macaroni cheese and also?lasagne. You just use the crockpot as you would a lasagne dish and spread the sauces, lasagne sheets and meat or veggies straight into it before replacing the lid and leaving completely alone for 4-6 hours.?

Scallops
Hmmm. As with the drinks, I'm not sure about this one. Scallops only take a couple of minutes to pan-fry in a little butter, so I'm not sure why you'd put them in the slow cooker and cook them (gently, I know) for half an hour. The creator of this recipe says that they're foolproof and perfect for if you're worried you'll overcook your scallops on the hob, which is fair enough. I'm not sure though if the 'environmental' argument for slow cookers would work here: the amount of energy to keep a hob going for 2 minutes probably isn't the equivalent of an hour's electricity for the slow cooker. Or maybe I'm wrong.?

Pan Fried Scallops with Butter and Lemon


Baked Potatoes
Ah, yes. An hour in a roaring, 220?C oven or a slow-cook in the crockpot for four hours? I like the sound of these, just pricked, rubbed with olive oil and sea salt and then gently cooked. I'm not sure if the skins would turn crisp though, (the way I like them) but then I guess once you've got your toppings on you probably wouldn't notice that much.?

Do you cook any unusual recipes in the slow cooker??

Source: http://comfortbites.blogspot.com/2013/01/10-things-you-probably-didnt-know-you.html

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