Monday, November 28, 2011

Pakistan says NATO ignored its pleas during attack (AP)

ISLAMABAD ? The NATO airstrikes that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers lasted almost two hours and continued even after Pakistani commanders had pleaded with coalition forces to stop, the army claimed Monday in charges that could further inflame anger in Pakistan.

NATO has described the incident as "tragic and unintended" and has promised a full investigation.

Unnamed Afghan officials have said that Afghan commandos and U.S. special forces were conducting a mission on the Afghan side of the border and received incoming fire from the direction of the Pakistani posts. They responded with airstrikes.

Ties between Pakistan and the United States were already deteriorating before the deadly attack and have sunk to new lows since, delivering a major setback to American hopes of enlisting Islamabad's help in negotiating an end to the 10-year-old Afghan war.

Army spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas said the Pakistani troops at two border posts were the victims of an unprovoked aggression. He said the attack lasted almost two hours and that commanders had contacted NATO counterparts while it was going on, asking "they get this fire to cease, but somehow it continued."

The Pakistan army has previously said its soldiers retaliated "with all weapons available" to the attack.

The poorly defined, mountainous border has been a constant source of tension between Pakistan and the United States. NATO officials have complained that insurgents fire from across the frontier, often from positions close to Pakistani soldiers who have been accused of tolerating or supporting the militants. NATO and Afghan forces are not allowed to cross over into Pakistan in pursuit of militants.

Saturday's strikes have added to popular anger in Pakistan against the U.S.-led coalition presence in Afghanistan. Many in the army, parliament, general population and media already believed that the U.S. and NATO are hostile to Pakistan and that the Afghan Taliban are not the enemy.

By claiming it was the victim of unprovoked aggression, the Pakistan army is strengthening this narrative.

While the United States is widely disliked in Pakistan, the army has accepted billions in American aid over the last 10 years in return for its cooperation in fighting al-Qaida. It has been accused of fomenting anti-American sentiment in the country to extract better terms in what is essentially a transactional and deeply troubled relationship with Washington.

Saturday's deadly incident also serves to shift attention away from the dominant perception of the Pakistani army in the West over the last five years ? that of an unreliable ally that supports militancy. That image was cemented after al-Qaida's chief Osama bin Laden was found to have been hiding in an army town close to the Pakistani capital when he was killed.

For Pakistan's weak and much criticized elected government, Saturday's airstrikes provide a rare opportunity to unite the country and a momentary relief from attack by rivals eyeing elections in 2013 or sooner.

By contrast, deaths of soldiers and civilians in attacks by militants, some with alleged links to the country's spy agencies, are often greeted with official silence.

Abbas dismissed Afghanistan's claims that the joint Afghan-NATO troops were fired upon first.

"At this point, NATO and Afghanistan are trying to wriggle out of the situation by offering excuses," he said. "Where are their casualties?"

Abbas said the two military posts, named "Volcano" and "Golden," were located on a ridge in Mohmand region around 300 yards (meters) from the border with Afghanistan. He said their exact location had been provided to NATO and that the area had recently been cleared of militants.

Hours after the attack on Saturday, Pakistan closed its western border to trucks delivering supplies to NATO troops in Afghanistan, demanded that the U.S. abandon an air base inside Pakistan used to operate drone strikes, and said it will review its cooperation with the U.S. and NATO.

However, a complete breakdown in the relationship between the United States and Pakistan is considered unlikely. Pakistan relies on billions of dollars in American aid, and the U.S. needs Pakistan to push Afghan insurgents to participate in peace talks.

After the bin Laden raid, ties almost collapsed but slowly resumed, albeit at a lower level and with lower expectations on the American side.

A year ago, a U.S. helicopter attack killed two Pakistani soldiers posted on the Afghan-Pakistani border, prompting the army to close one of the border crossings. A joint investigation by the two nations found that Pakistani troops had fired first at the U.S. helicopters. The investigation found that the shots were probably meant as warnings after the choppers passed into Pakistani airspace. The U.S. apologized, and the border was reopened.

______

Associated Press writer Deb Reichmann contributed to this report from Kabul, Afghanistan.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111128/ap_on_re_as/as_pakistan

alcohol poisoning alcohol poisoning mark ingram mark ingram between two ferns howard stern howard stern

Benefits and drawbacks of Galaxy Nexus having "No OEM Customization"

A new comparison chart from Verizon shows the Galaxy Nexus listed as having "No OEM Customization", the question still remains: will Verizon employees explain why that's a good thing? Verizon employees receive extensive training, so they undoubtedly understand the differences between stock and customized Android, but it is a very different thing to actually explain those differences to potential customers. ?Many of the features of the Galaxy Nexus are fairly easy to explain, including NFC and Android Beam, the 720p screen or the lack of capacitive buttons. OEM customization is a much more convoluted idea that many people don't fully understand, and many potential consumers may not care to understand. We're hoping that Verizon employees will explain the benefits and drawbacks (yes, there are drawbacks) of stock Android properly, because all consumers should be able to make informed decisions.?

Benefits

The benefits side is relatively easy to explain though it could become a lengthy discussion about faster updates, all features being open and available, performance boosts over customized phones, and easy root/unlock options. Faster OS updates not only mean getting the newest major version of the OS when it is released, but also in getting all bug fixes and minor feature updates as fast as Google can push them. Although, there is a chance that those updates will see a delay for Verizon testing now, they will still be released far faster for Nexus owners than anyone else.?

Having all features of Android open and available for use has traditionally been by far one of the best reasons to go with a Nexus device, but we're not sure that it fits here. In strict terms, we would assume that a device with "no OEM customization" means that no features have been turned off. The trouble is that we're not sure if the main target here - free tethering/WiFi hotspot - is still a part of stock Android. As we've mentioned before, Google did remove free tethering/hotspot from Nexus S devices with one of the incremental updates, so there is a fair chance that it isn't part of stock Android any more. Still, knowing that no other features will be removed is a benefit to stock.?

Custom UIs take up system resources, some far more than others (HTC Sense). With the power of today's smartphones, this may not translate to a big difference in performance, but there will be a difference. Especially moving forward, because the resource requirements for custom UIs tends to grow faster than the resource requirements for stock Android.?

The last benefit may not be one that many customers will care about, and if they do care, it's likely they wouldn't need the explanation of benefits/drawbacks to stock Android, but easy root access and device unlocking can be quite useful. As nice as stock Android may be, a lot of people prefer custom ROMs, which can add features to stock Android without sacrificing performance. Verizon Nexus owners may not have much reason to unlock because it's not as if they could swap in a new SIM card for a different carrier, but root access can be nice. Still, this is definitely not something Verizon employees would bother explaining anyway, because rooting/unlocking breaks your warranty.

Drawbacks

The drawbacks mostly fall under one major heading: do it yourself. With many OEM UIs, a lot of the things you may want are already there on screen, and you don't even need to drill into app folders or widgets lists too much to put what you want on your homescreens. For those who love the customization options of Android, this is a benefit of stock; it is a clean palette to work with. However, many people are lazy and don't want to do that. And, beyond having some customization done for you, some UIs, like HTC Sense, offer a number of extra features, like flipping the phone onto its screen to turn off the ringer, that users would only be able to get by installing 3rd party apps. Again, maybe you don't want these features built-in, but many customers won't go digging into the Android Market to replicate these features even if they want to have them.?

Another drawback of having stock Android is one that most don't consider: having the newest version of Android isn't always a good thing. Let's face it, developers can be lazy, and some may not update their apps in a timely manner to support the new version of Android. We have seen it with every Android update, and we already know that it will be happening with Ice Cream Sandwich. When Gingerbread first launched, we had to switch to a new default keyboard, because one of our favorites, FlexT9, took months to update for Gingerbread support. Now, we already know that the Adobe Flash player has not yet been updated for ICS. Adobe has promised the update before the end of the year, but it still illustrates the issue. It may be a somewhat minor annoyance, because there are often alternatives for any app that hasn't been updated for compatibility, but it is still an annoyance and something that will be a factor both in purchasing the Galaxy Nexus right now, and as a Nexus owner a year from now when Android Jelly Bean is released.?

Lastly, there is the general issue with being an early adopter: it can be a relatively lonely place. Granted, the Galaxy Nexus should sell far better than any previous Nexus device, but users still won't have too much practical use for things like Android Beam or even video chat through Google Talk because the requisite hardware (NFC and front-facing cameras) and software (Android 4.0 and Android 2.3.4 respectively) haven't been pushed out to all devices yet. If you do video chat with friends who are on PCs, that works fine, but unless your friends all have a Galaxy Nexus or Nexus S, Android Beam isn't too useful right now. And, with projections putting NFC adoption at just 50% of handsets within 2-3 years, you may not see much use in it all that soon.?

Conclusion

It is very nice to finally have clean stock Android as a choice on Verizon, but there is just as much to consider when choosing stock Android as there is when choosing a device with a custom manufacturer UI. As always, it comes down to choice. Some want to have full control over every aspect of their device, and want to be able to start fresh and choose everything that is put on that device. Stock Android offers this.?

However, many people don't want to have a clean slate when buying a new phone, and may want some of the customization and extra features added for them. Of course, there are drawbacks to this option in overall device performance and speed of OS updates, custom UIs take care of some of this work for you. Just because Android offers options for full customization doesn't mean that all consumers want to exercise those options, and that's where OEM customization can be a good thing for some users.?

Of course, the perfect option would be if all manufacturer UIs were made optional, and could be removed from devices. As far as we know, that may be the biggest unconfirmed benefit of Ice Cream Sandwich, and the new feature allowing users to remove any app could extend to manufacturer UIs, but we still need to see about that. Until that happens though, custom UIs fall under the realm of manufacturer differentiation, and consumer choice, and that includes the option for stock Android.?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/phonearena/ySoL/~3/Vi5E7cKv__M/Benefits-and-drawbacks-of-Galaxy-Nexus-having-No-OEM-Customization_id24117

ios 5 release date ios 5 update joojoo joseph addai joseph addai michael jackson autopsy michael jackson autopsy

Inside Syria's Resistance (ABC News)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/166946820?client_source=feed&format=rss

john edward psychic brandon marshall headless horseman headless horseman brandon lloyd brandon lloyd publishers clearing house

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Moroccans choose new parliament after protests (AP)

RABAT, Morocco ? Moroccans began voting for a new parliament Friday in Arab Spring-inspired elections that are facing a boycott by democracy campaigners who say the ruling monarchy isn't committed to real change.

A moderate Islamist party and a pro-palace coalition are expected to do well in the voting, but a key test for the authorities' legitimacy will be how many voters cast ballots.

The result will be watched by Morocco's U.S. and other western allies, as well as European tourists who cherish its beaches and resorts.

In the affluent Agdal neighborhood of Rabat a steady stream of professionals lined up early in morning at a polling station to vote before work.

"I've always voted but this time it is more important," said Mohammed Ennabli, a doctor. "Before it was the king who chose, now it is the people who choose."

Nadia Zerrou, a woman in her 30s, said voting "is a right which I always exercise."

"This time there have been developments, there is more transparency and voters are more aware," Zerrou said.

Morocco's reputation as a stable democracy in North Africa has taken a hit with this year's protests. And its once-steady economy is creaking from the amount of money the government has pumped into raising salaries and subsidies to keep people calm amid the Arab world turmoil.

The election campaign has been strangely subdued, unlike the lively politicking in nearby Tunisia when it held the first elections prompted by the Arab uprisings last month.

Morocco with its many political parties and regular elections was once the bright star in a region of dictatorships.

But all that has changed with the Arab uprisings that toppled dictators in Tunisia, Libya and Egypt. Now a political system that holds elections but leaves all powers in the hands of a hereditary king does not look so liberal.

Under the new constitution, the largest party must form the government, which could well be the Islamist party, known by its French initials PJD. But there's uncertainty over whether it can truly change anything.

The Islamists' biggest rival for the top spot is Finance Minister Salaheddine Mezouar's Rally of Independents, which leads an alliance of seven other pro-palace parties.

Mezouar said he expected his coalition to take a majority of the parliament and ruled out any kind of alliance with the Islamists. He also told The Associated Press that he expected a high turnout.

"I am confident about the level of participation, because during this campaign we've seen how interested the citizens are in this election, enormously more than in 2007," he said.

Like elsewhere in the Arab world, Moroccans hit the streets in the first half of 2011 calling for more democracy, and King Mohammed VI responded by amending the constitution and bringing forward elections.

But since then the sense of change has dissipated.

U.S.-based Human Rights Watch said that since Oct. 20 government has taken more than 100 activist in for questioning for advocating a boycott.

"Moroccans feel that aside from the constitutional reform, nothing has really changed, meaning that the elections of 2011 will be a copy of the elections 2007 and that is what will probably keep the participation low," said Abdellah Baha, deputy secretary general of the Islamist Justice and Development Party.

The 2007 elections, the first with widespread international observation, had just 37 percent turnout, and some fear it could be even lower this time around.

The constitutional referendum passed with over 98 percent voting in favor, and a staggering 72 percent turnout, which most observers found hardly credible.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111125/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_morocco_elections

widespread panic richard stallman richard stallman williston north dakota williston north dakota kody brown transylvania

Oil rises above $97 a barrel; US gas prices fall (AP)

Holiday shoppers driving from store to store in search of discounted toys and televisions and are getting a break at the gas pump.

The average price for a gallon of gas has fallen 7 cents in just a week to $3.31. The discount is 13 cents in the past month. That's because, holiday shopping aside, motorists tend to drive less in the colder months. And refiners are making cheaper winter blends of gas at this time of year.

Meanwhile, Oil continued its up and down week. The U.S. benchmark crude oil rose $1.07 to $97.23 a barrel, tracking the rise in U.S. stock markets. The contract closed Wednesday in New York at $96.17, down $1.84.

Markets in the U.S. were closed Thursday for the Thanksgiving holiday, and will close early Friday on what is certain to be a light trading day.

Oil had fallen earlier as Europe's debt crisis continues to undermine confidence the continent will avoid recession next year.

In London, Brent crude for January delivery fell 50 cents to $106.80 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.

Investor concern that fiscal austerity measures aimed at lowering Europe's debt levels will hurt global economic growth and oil demand has helped pull crude back from above $103 last week.

Uncertainty about contagion spreading from Greece to Portugal, Italy, Spain and Ireland has begun to undermine confidence in Germany and France. The yield on Germany's 10-year bond rose above the 10-year UK government bond for the first time since 2009. And late Thursday, Moody's downgraded Hungary's bonds to junk status.

"The eurozone sovereign crisis is starting to threaten the bond markets of even the most solid European economy ? Germany," Barclays Capital said in a report.

Gasoline is now cheaper than it has been since February.

The Oil Price Information Service says that U.S. households have spent 8.4 percent of their income on gasoline, up from 6.7 percent in 2010 and 7.9 percent in 2008.

In other Nymex trading, heating oil was flat at $2.97 per gallon and gasoline futures lost half a cent to $2.5165 per gallon. Natural gas added 4.2 cents to $3.65 per 1,000 cubic feet.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/energy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111125/ap_on_bi_ge/oil_prices

sister wives st louis weather kryptos student loan forgiveness amy winehouse cause of death amy winehouse cause of death white witch

3 American students arrested in Cairo leave Egypt (AP)

CAIRO ? Three American students arrested during a protest in Cairo caught flights out of Egypt early Saturday, according to an airport official and an attorney for one of the trio.

The three were arrested on the roof of a university building near Tahrir Square last Sunday. Officials accused them of throwing firebombs at security forces fighting with protesters. On Thursday, a court ordered them released. All three were studying at the American University in Cairo.

Luke Gates, 21, and Derrik Sweeney, 19, left the Egyptian capital Saturday on separate flights to Frankfurt, Germany, an airport official in Cairo said. Gregory Porter, 19, also left the country, his attorney said.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to brief reporters.

Attorney Theodore Simon, who represents Porter, a student at Drexel University in Philadelphia, said police escorted the three students to the Cairo airport Friday. Simon later said his client was on a flight.

"I am pleased and thankful to report that Gregory Porter is in the air. He has departed Egyptian airspace and is on his way home," Simon said, though he declined to say when Porter was expected back in the U.S.

Simon said he and Porter's mother both spoke by phone with the student, who is from the Philadelphia suburb of Glenside.

"He clearly conveyed to me ... that he was OK," Simon told The Associated Press.

Gates is a student at Indiana University. It wasn't clear when he was expected back in the U.S.

Joy Sweeney told the AP her son, a 19-year-old Georgetown University student from Jefferson City, Mo., would fly from Frankfurt to Washington, then on to St. Louis. She said family will meet him when he arrives late Saturday.

"I am ecstatic," Sweeney said Friday. "I can't wait for him to get home tomorrow night. I can't believe he's actually going to get on a plane. It is so wonderful."

Sweeney said she had talked with her son Friday afternoon and "he seemed jubilant."

"He thought he was going to be able to go back to his dorm room and get his stuff," she said. "We said, `No, no, don't get your stuff, we just want you here.'"

The university will ship his belongings home, she said.

Sweeney had earlier said she did not prepare a Thanksgiving celebration this week because the idea seemed "absolutely irrelevant" while her son still was being held.

"I'm getting ready to head out and buy turkey and stuffing and all the good fixings so that we can make a good Thanksgiving dinner," she said Friday.

___

Associated Press writers Sandy Kozel in Washington; Kathy Matheson and Maryclaire Dale in Philadelphia; and Dana Fields in Kansas City, Mo., contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111126/ap_on_re_us/us_egypt_american_students

koch brothers dash diet weather phoenix dippin dots lindsey vonn lindsey vonn triumph the insult comic dog

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Ravens beat 49ers 16-6 in duel of Harbaughs (AP)

BALTIMORE ? John Harbaugh could have gloated. He could have bragged.

Instead, the Baltimore Ravens coach played the role of gracious big brother after he bested Jim Harbaugh and the San Francisco 49ers 16-6 Thursday night in the first NFL game featuring brothers as opposing head coaches.

The Ravens (8-3) tied a franchise record with nine sacks to end San Francisco's eight-game winning streak.

"To the 49ers and to my brother, I can't tell you enough how proud I am of him and the job he's done building that football team," John said of Jim, a rookie NFL coach. "That's a football team. The way they're built, it's pretty hard to figure out a way to beat them."

John, 49, and Jim, 47, grew up dueling each other in all sorts of games. This, however, was the first time their sibling rivalry was displayed on a national stage.

During the final minute, John got a Gatorade bath from his players ? twice. After the game ended, the brothers hugged at midfield.

"There's a saying that says, `As iron sharpens iron, so does one man sharpen another,'" Jim said. "And I have to say my brother John is the sharpest iron I've ever encountered in my life."

The Ravens chased, hindered and battered 49ers quarterback Alex Smith for much of the night despite playing without middle linebacker Ray Lewis, the team's leading tackler and spiritual leader. Lewis was inactive for a second straight game with a foot injury.

Smith completed 15 of 24 passes for 140 yards and an interception, and San Francisco (9-2) was held without a touchdown for the first time this season. Smith never could get into a rhythm against an aggressive defense that rarely let him set up in the pocket.

"It's tough to get ready for a defense like that in a short week. They do so many things," he said. "They're a great front. At home with the crowd noise, they were teeing off."

Terrell Suggs had three sacks for first-place Baltimore, which moved a half-game ahead of the Pittsburgh Steelers in the AFC North.

"That's always the game plan, to get after the quarterback, but I think the No. 1 game plan was to win the Harbaugh Bowl," Suggs said. "Coach tried to downplay it ? act like it's not me against my brother, this is the Ravens vs. the 49ers and let's get win No. 8 and make sure our destiny is in our own hands ? but it was really important to him. We as a team went out there and really wanted to win for him."

Baltimore broke a 6-6 tie with a 76-yard, 16-play drive that lasted more than 7 1/2 minutes and ended with an 8-yard touchdown pass from Joe Flacco to tight end Dennis Pitta with 14:56 left. Flacco went 4 for 4 for 34 yards and a touchdown on third down during the drive.

"When you have that kind of game plan ? your line being so efficient on third downs ? you have to come through," Flacco said.

Billy Cundiff wrapped up the scoring with his third field goal, a 39-yarder with 4:16 remaining.

In a game dominated by both defenses, Flacco finished 15 for 23 for 161 yards and Ray Rice ran for 59 yards on 21 carries.

The 49ers began the third quarter with a 13-play drive that lasted 7 1/2 minutes and produced a 52-yard field goal by David Akers for a 6-6 tie. The key play was an 18-yard completion from Smith to Michael Crabtree on a third-and-17 from the San Francisco 26.

The Ravens responded with their lone touchdown drive of the game.

Baltimore sacked Smith four times in the first half and picked off a pass in taking a 6-3 lead.

The Ravens took the opening kickoff and moved 55 yards ? 38 of them on a pair of Flacco-to-Anquan Boldin completions ? before Cundiff kicked a 39-yard field goal.

Late in the first quarter, a 20-yard completion from Smith to tight end Vernon Davis set up a 45-yard field goal by Akers.

The 49ers blew a chance to take the lead when Frank Gore was penalized for a chop block on a 75-yard touchdown pass from Smith to Ted Ginn, who got behind Cary Williams deep down the middle.

Neither team had much luck moving the ball until San Francisco's Tarell Brown was called for pass interference on a long pass to Torrey Smith. The 50-yard penalty put the ball at the 15, and although the Ravens turned it into a first-and-goal at the 4, they had to settle for a 23-yard field goal with 2:51 left in the half.

NOTES: Baltimore has won all six home games this season and 15 of 16. ... Gore finished with 39 yards on 14 carries. ... Although the Ravens had a first-and-goal at the 4 in second quarter, the 49ers held and kept intact their distinction of not allowing a TD rushing all season. ... Lee Evans had a catch for the Ravens, his first reception since Week 2 after missing seven games with an ankle injury.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111125/ap_on_sp_fo_ga_su/fbn49ers_ravens

verdict in michael jackson trial verdict in michael jackson trial brian urlacher matt forte dr conrad murray verdict take care childish gambino camp

Obsession, Your Obsession (Balloon Juice)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/166671700?client_source=feed&format=rss

sister wives st louis weather kryptos student loan forgiveness amy winehouse cause of death amy winehouse cause of death white witch

Iraqi president says country still needs Americans (AP)

BAGHDAD ? Iraq's president says his country faces huge shortcomings defending its airspace and seas, and that Iraqi military commanders want American military training help.

In an interview with Iraqi state TV broadcast Friday, Jalal Talabani said he's read numerous reports by senior Iraqi army officers who all said the nation needs some sort of U.S. presence.

The U.S. and Iraq failed to agree on whether to keep American troops in Iraq into next year, and the U.S. military will pull out all its troops from the country by January.

Iraqi officials balked at giving the American forces the legal protections that Washington wanted.

Talabani is a Kurd from northern Iraq. The Kurds were the only political group in Iraq openly supporting a further American military presence in Iraq.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iraq/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111125/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_iraq

james arthur ray james arthur ray elisabeth shue erin brockovich avastin avastin robert wagner

Actress Sienna Miller tells inquiry of media abuse (AP)

LONDON ? Actress Sienna Miller told a media ethics inquiry Thursday that she was left paranoid and scared by years of relentless tabloid pursuit that ranged from paparazzi outside her house to the hacking of her mobile phone.

Miller said the surveillance, and a stream of personal stories about her in the tabloids, led her to accuse friends and family of leaking information to the media. In fact, her cell phone voice mails had been hacked at Rupert Murdoch's News of the World tabloid.

Miller, 29, became a tabloid staple when she dated fellow actor Jude Law. She said the constant scrutiny left her feeling "very violated and very paranoid and anxious, constantly."

"I felt like I was living in some sort of video game," she said.

She called the paparazzi focus on her terrifying.

"For a number of years I was relentlessly pursued by 10 to 15 men, almost daily," she said. "Spat at, verbally abused.

"I would often find myself, at the age of 21, at midnight, running down a dark street on my own with 10 men chasing me. And the fact they had cameras in their hands made that legal."

Miller, the star of "Layer Cake" and "Alfie," was one of the first celebrities to take the News of the World to court over illegal eavesdropping. In May, the newspaper agreed to pay her 100,000 pounds ($160,000) to settle claims her phone had been hacked.

The newspaper's parent company now faces dozens of lawsuits from alleged hacking victims.

Miller, who looked confident as she gave evidence at London's Royal Courts of Justice, said challenging Murdoch's media conglomerate had been a difficult decision.

"I was very nervous about taking on an empire that was richer and far more powerful than I will ever be," she said. "It was very daunting."

Prime Minister David Cameron set up the inquiry amid a still-unfolding scandal over illegal eavesdropping by the Murdoch-owned tabloid. Murdoch closed down the News of the World in July after evidence emerged that it had illegally accessed the mobile phone voice mails of celebrities, politicians and even crime victims in its search of scoops.

More than a dozen News of the World journalists and editors have been arrested over allegations of illegal eavesdropping, and the scandal has also claimed the jobs of two top London police officers, Cameron's media adviser and several senior Murdoch executives.

The inquiry, led by Judge Brian Leveson, plans to issue a report next year and could recommend major changes to media regulation in Britain.

Miller took the stand after another witness was allowed to give evidence in private. The courtroom was cleared of press and members of the public as the witness, identified only as HJK, testified about suffering intrusions while in a relationship with a well-known figure, whose identity was also kept secret.

"Harry Potter" author J.K. Rowling is due to give evidence later Thursday about the media intrusion on her life. The tribunal will also hear from former Formula One boss Max Mosley, who has campaigned for a privacy law since his interest in sadomasochistic sex was exposed in the tabloid.

High-profile witnesses still to come include CNN celebrity interviewer Piers Morgan, who has denied using phone hacking while he was editor of the Daily Mirror newspaper.

The hearings have heard allegations of media malpractice and intrusion that extend far beyond the News of the World.

Witnesses have included celebrities like actor Hugh Grant and ordinary people pursued in times of grief, including the parents of murdered 13-year-old Milly Dowler, whose voice mails were accessed by the News of the World after she disappeared in 2002.

Her parents said the hacking gave them false hope their daughter was still alive during the investigation into her disappearance.

On Wednesday, the parents of missing child Madeleine McCann said they were left distraught by false stories and the publication of private information by the tabloid press.

Kate and Gerry McCann told the inquiry they felt powerless in the face of stories, based on concocted evidence, suggesting they had killed their daughter. Madeleine had vanished when she was three during the British family's 2007 vacation in Portugal.

___

Leveson Inquiry: http://www.levesoninquiry.org.uk/

Jill Lawless can be reached at: http://twitter.com/JillLawless

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111124/ap_en_ot/eu_britain_phone_hacking

tmobile iphone van jones van jones dark energy dark energy sherri shepherd sherri shepherd

Friday, November 25, 2011

Jennifer Hudson: My Fiance ?Saved My Life?

Jennifer Hudson can truly say that her fiancé David Otunga saved her life.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/jennifer-hudson-my-fiance-saved-my-life/1-a-405474?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Ajennifer-hudson-my-fiance-saved-my-life-405474

badgers badgers the killing fields the killing fields texas killing fields burzynski pete seeger

Scientists turn on fountain of youth in yeast

ScienceDaily (Nov. 23, 2011) ? Collaborations between Johns Hopkins and National Taiwan University researchers have successfully manipulated the life span of common, single-celled yeast organisms by figuring out how to remove and restore protein functions related to yeast aging.

A chemical variation of a "fuel-gauge" enzyme that senses energy in yeast acts like a life span clock: It is present in young organisms and progressively diminished as yeast cells age.

In a report in the September 16 edition of Cell, the scientists describe their identification of a new level of regulation of this age-related protein variant, showing that when they remove it, the organism's life span is cut short and when they restore it, life span is dramatically extended.

In the case of yeast, the discovery reveals molecular components of an aging pathway that appears related to one that regulates longevity and lifespan in humans, according to Jef Boeke, Ph.D., professor of molecular biology, genetics and oncology, and director of the HiT Center and Technology Center for Networks and Pathways, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

"This control of longevity is independent of the type described previously in yeast which had to do with calorie restriction," Boeke says. "We believe that for the first time, we have a biochemical route to youth and aging that has nothing to do with diet." The chemical variation, known as acetylation because it adds an acetyl group to an existing molecule, is a kind of "decoration" that goes on and off a protein -- in this case, the protein Sip2 -- much like an ornament can be put on and taken off a Christmas tree, Boeke says. Acetylation can profoundly change protein function in order to help an organism or system adapt quickly to its environment. Until now, acetylation had not been directly implicated in the aging pathway, so this is an all-new role and potential target for prevention or treatment strategies, the researchers say.

The team showed that acetylation of the protein Sip2 affected longevity defined in terms of how many times a yeast cell can divide, or "replicative life span." The normal replicative lifespan in natural yeast is 25. In the yeast genetically modified by researchers to restore the chemical modification, life span extended to 38, an increase of about 50 percent.

The researchers were able to manipulate the yeast life span by mutating certain chemical residues to mimic the acetylated and deacetylated forms of the protein Sip2. They worked with live yeast in a dish, measuring and comparing the life spans of natural and genetically altered types by removing buds from the yeast every 90 minutes. The average lifespan in normal yeast is about 25 generations, which meant the researchers removed 25 newly budded cells from the mother yeast cell. As yeast cells age, each new generation takes longer to develop, so each round of the experiment lasted two to four weeks.

"We performed anti-aging therapy on yeast," says the study's first author, Jin-Ying Lu, M.D., Ph.D., of National Taiwan University. "When we give back this protein acetylation, we rescued the life span shortening in old cells. Our next task is to prove that this phenomenon also happens in mammalian cells."

The research was supported by the National Science Council, National Taiwan University Hospital, National Taiwan University, Liver Disease Prevention & Treatment Research Foundation of Taiwan, and the NIH Common Fund.

Authors on the paper, in addition to Boeke and Lu, are Yu-Yi Lin, Jin-Chuan Sheu, June-Tai Wu, Fang-Jen Lee, Min-I Lin, Fu-Tien Chian, Tong-Yuan Tai, Keh-Sung Tsai, and Lee-Ming Chuang, all of National Taiwan University; Yue Chen and Yinming Zhao, both of the University of Chicago; and Shelley L. Berger, Wistar Institute.

Recommend this story on Facebook, Twitter,
and Google +1:

Other bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Jin-Ying Lu, Yu-Yi Lin, Jin-Chuan Sheu, June-Tai Wu, Fang-Jen Lee, Yue Chen, Min-I Lin, Fu-Tien Chiang, Tong-Yuan Tai, Shelley?L. Berger, Yingming Zhao, Keh-Sung Tsai, Heng Zhu, Lee-Ming Chuang, Jef?D. Boeke. Acetylation of Yeast AMPK Controls Intrinsic Aging Independently of Caloric Restriction. Cell, 2011; 146 (6): 969 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2011.07.044

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/~3/lB6H-pq-pkw/111123190408.htm

nexus prime nexus prime new iphone new iphone tmobile iphone van jones van jones

Portable breast cancer detector | Ubergizmo

Forgive the typo on the banner that advertised Nihon University?s portable breast cancer checker over at Medica 2011, as the ultimate aim of the device is worth talking about instead of concentrating on how one spells the word ?cancer?. Nihon University?s exhibit is tipped to be further refined so that it will see action by being used to perform easy cancer tests at just about anywhere, be it at home or at a public area. Being diminutive in size and lightweight enough to be held in one hand, it will need to be applied to the breast to get a reading. It will not work in the same way as that of a mammogram, so you need not sandwich the breast.

While no images of the prototype are available, looking at the banner alone ought to give you a rough idea on how the final device will look like. Researchers over at the Nihon University used a technology known as ?phase shift method?, where light-emitting and light-receiving elements which rely on LEDs were formed on the surface so that it can be applied to the breast. A light with a wavelength of 850nm is emitted, where light reflected from the breast will be detected. As a cancerous part will reflect a slightly different color, it will be easier to detect any cancer in its early stages.

Source: http://www.ubergizmo.com/2011/11/portable-breast-cancer-detector/

alcohol poisoning alcohol poisoning mark ingram mark ingram between two ferns howard stern howard stern

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Miami Beach getting ready for Art Basel Dec. 1-4 (AP)

MIAMI BEACH, Fla. ? Live graffiti painting. A colossal rose bed soaring 20 feet high. Early photos of Andy Warhol, a Picasso up for auction and a naked woman living in a pig pen. They're all part of the lineup for Art Basel Miami Beach, which runs Dec. 1-4, with a host of related events beginning Nov. 30.

The pig pen installation will undoubtedly be the most jaw-dropping event at the art fair. Known for photographing herself nude in subway tunnels or in front of graffiti walls, performance artist Miru Kim will be living with pigs for her performance "The Pig That Therefore I Am."

"The immediate connection between pigs and me will be felt through seeing the living bodies mingle through skin," Kim told The Associated Press. A glass barrier will act as "an insatiable gap between the spectacle and the onlooker, just like in a zoo."

The international art fair, sister event to Art Basel in Switzerland, is celebrating its 10th year in South Florida this December. Miami's art scene has grown tremendously since it started, and last year 46,000 people attended, not counting thousands more who took in ancillary events piggy-backing on the main arts-filled weekend. The trendy exhibits, films, parties and performances attract not just art collectors but also art-lovers of all means, tourists and many others who want to see and be seen.

"The cultural growth emerged about 20 years ago when the world discovered Miami through the lens of South Beach," said Tony Goldman, chairman and CEO of The Goldman Properties Co., which has helped transform the city's historic districts into thriving, trendy neighborhoods like South Beach and the Wynwood Arts District.

"Ten years ago when we brought Art Basel to Miami, we moved into warp speed and it's been growing every year since," the real estate investor said.

Organizers for this year's event are promising another round of great art, with thousands of works by more than 2,000 artists from around the world. Painting, drawing, sculpture, installation, print, photography, film, performance, video and digital art will all be on display at various venues, galleries, satellite fairs, outdoor exhibitions and private parties. New this year is Art Video, a 7,000-square-foot outdoor projection wall on the New World Center building designed by architect Frank Gehry.

The art experience will begin for many at Miami International Airport with Harmonic Convergence, a 72-foot-long window wall with diamond-shaped panes of glass in 150 transparent colors. The installation by architect and composer Christopher Janney creates a gradually changing pattern of colors, similar to a rainbow. It was installed a few months ago in an airport entrance by a people-mover walkway. Travelers will hear sounds Janney recorded during trips to the Florida Everglades, scuba dives in the ocean, and other natural environments. At the top of each hour, a short composition with percussion instruments plays, marking the time of day.

Images of art world stars Warhol and Robert Indiana taken in the early 1960s by photographer William John Kennedy will be on display for a pop-up event on the heels of Art Basel. "Before They Were Famous: Behind the Lens of William John Kennedy" will be part of the special programming at SCOPE Miami in the Wynwood Arts District.

"I photographed Andy and other Pop Artists because I believed they were creating something different," Kennedy said. "Andy was completely devoted to his art. I'm sure at the time I photographed him, he believed the photos would become an important record of what he was trying to accomplish."

The exhibit will include images of Warhol creating his Marilyn Monroe painting and Indiana holding his iconic LOVE piece, printed from original negatives as silver gelatin fiber prints.

SCOPE president and founder Alexis Hubshman said the photos offer a look at Warhol and Indiana "at a time when Americans were undergoing radical changes both politically and culturally." He said the 1960s images present "a distinct reference point for many emerging and contemporary artists working today."

Elsewhere in the Wynwood district, which is known for open-air museums of street murals, street artists will be "buffing" ? or painting over ? dozens of the neighborhood's graffiti-clad walls. An organization called Primary Flight will help nearly 30 artists find walls to make art, and work by 16 artists will be on display at the organization's gallery space.

The pig pen installation will be among the Primary Flight shows. "Some people are really going to love it. Some are going to be shocked. And a handful won't really get it," said Primary Flight founder Books Bischof.

For the first time, works by artists from the outdoor art park Wynwood Walls will be for sale at "Shop at the Walls," its first pop-up gallery.

Miami gallery owner Gary Nader will launch an auction house during Art Basel featuring modern and contemporary work by big names like Fernando Botero, Damien Hirst and Roy Lichtenstein. Nader expects prices from $50,000 to $5 million, including for Picasso's "Buste de Femme," priced at $3.5 million to $4.5 million, and Lichtenstein's large-scale aluminum painted sculpture "Three Brushstrokes," estimated at $3 million to $5 million.

"Auctions like this only happen in New York and London," Nader said.

Hundreds of volunteers will help lift a 20-foot sculptural platform with models of attractions from the 1939 New York World's Fair for an installation by Los Angeles-based artist Glenn Kaino at Art Public.

Will Ryman's "65th Street" installation of four colossal rose buds will bloom 20 feet over the Sagamore Hotel in Miami Beach. The pink and red buds, 5 to 10 feet in diameter, with a brass aphid and beetle nesting in the tallest bud, were recently in New York City. Ryman said Art Basel is "the perfect platform to introduce them to another extraordinary city of the arts, one that offers a completely different backdrop."

Another side event, Design Miami, includes 28 galleries and explores the relationship between design and architecture, including furniture and lighting. One theme will be vintage and contemporary jewelry with pieces designed by sculptors Alexander Calder and Harry Bertoia. Design Miami also includes an installation of utopian architect Buckminster Fuller's 1970s Fly's Eye Dome alongside Lord Norman Foster's reconstruction of Fuller's Dymaxion car.

Art Miami, which predates Art Basel by a dozen years, will unfold in Wynwood with works by 1,000 artists including Henry Moore and Robert Rauschenberg, along with an installation by Finnish artist Kaarina Kaikkonen called "As A Tree, I Can Feel the Wind" consisting of palm trees strung with secondhand clothing.

Miami's Mandarin Oriental hotel will show work by 16 contemporary Chinese artists reflecting ancient traditions as well as Western influence. Among the artists on display will be Liu Bolin, who uses himself as a blank canvas by painting his body to blend with the background.

Ten Steinway pianos decorated with art ranging from graffiti and acrylic paints to 3D sculptures will be scattered throughout Miami and South Beach for Pop-Up Pianos Miami. The pianos will eventually be donated to public schools and other organizations.

___

If You Go...

ART BASEL MIAMI BEACH: http://www.artbaselmiamibeach.com/. Dec. 1-4, with related events like Art Miami ? http://www.art-miami.com/_ and Design Miami ? http://www.designmiami.com_ beginning Nov. 30.

TOURS: Art critics will also be giving walking guided tours ? in English and Spanish ? each day for an hour, $20; details from ArtNexus, 305-891-7270, ext. 4, http://www.artbaselmiamibeach.com/go/id/ijb/

WYNWOOD: Wynwood Walls: http://www.thewynwoodwalls.com/home.html. Primary Flight: http://www.primaryflight.com.

Vespa tours of street art in Wynwood are available from Roam Rides, $75, http://www.roamrides.com/ and walking tours are $50.

Volunteers interested in helping with the Glenn Kaino installation can visit: http://www.glennkainostudio.com/levitating

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111122/ap_en_ot/us_travel_trip_art_basel_miami

wisconsin badgers football easter island dallas weather badgers badgers the killing fields the killing fields

NASA's Curiosity Mars rover to 'lay the foundation' for search for life [Video]

The size of a small car, NASA's one-ton Curiosity Mars rover contains twice the number of scientific?instruments?as its predecessors, plus a drill that will allow it to bore into the Red Planet's rocks.?

After nearly a decade of planning, several cost overruns and a two-year delay, NASA is finally set to launch its next Mars rover this week.

Skip to next paragraph

The car-size Curiosity rover, the centerpiece of NASA's $2.5 billion?Mars Science Laboratory??(MSL) mission, is slated to blast off from Florida's Cape Canaveral Air Force Station on Saturday (Nov. 26) after a one-day delay due to a rocket battery issue. The launch comes two years later than the MSL team had originally planned, a slip that ultimately increased the mission's lifetime costs by 56 percent.

But with Curiosity now sitting on the pad, nestled?atop its Atlas 5 rocket, MSL's past issues are receding deeper into history. Most eyes are now on the rover's future ? its quest to determine if Mars is, or ever was, capable of supporting microbial life.

"This is a Mars scientist's dream machine," Ashwin Vasavada, MSL deputy project scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, Calif., told reporters on Nov. 10. "This rover is not only the most technically capable rover ever sent to another planet, but it's actually the most capable scientific explorer we've ever sent out." [Photos: NASA's Mars Science Laboratory Rover]

NASA began planning MSL's mission in 2003. Over the past eight years, scientists and engineers developed, built and tested Curiosity, a robotic behemoth that will take planetary exploration to a new level.

At 1 ton, Curiosity weighs five times more than each of its immediate Mars rover predecessors, the golf-cart-size twins?Spirit and Opportunity, which landed on the Red Planet in January 2004 to search for signs of past water activity.

While Spirit and Opportunity each sported five scientific instruments, Curiosity boasts 10, as well as a drill that will allow it to access the interior of Red Planet rocks.

The huge rover will use all of this gear to gauge the past and present habitability of its Martian environs. It will look for carbon-containing compounds ? the building blocks of life as we know it ? and assess what the Red Planet was like long ago.

MSL is not a?life-detection mission, but it will lay the foundation for future efforts that could hunt for evidence of microbial Martians, officials said.

"We bridge the gap from 'follow the water' to seeking the signs of life," said Doug McCuistion, head of NASA's Mars exploration program.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/m6egR9xwvaM/NASA-s-Curiosity-Mars-rover-to-lay-the-foundation-for-search-for-life-Video

van jones van jones dark energy dark energy sherri shepherd sherri shepherd sean avery

Miss Piggy and Kermit the Frog: How We've Stayed Together (omg!)

Miss Piggy and Kermit the Frog: How We've Stayed Together

It's too bad that Jennifer and Marc, Ashton and Demi or Kim and Kris couldn't follow the example of Kermit the Frog and Miss Piggy!

Hotter than ever, Kermit and Piggy (whose exact ages have never been disclosed) have stayed together longer than most Hollywood couples by far.

PHOTOS: Couples who couldn't make it work

In honor of the brand-new Muppets film, in theaters Wednesday and costarring Jason Segal and Amy Adams, the beloved duo sat down with Us Weekly for a chat about maintaining a high-profile romance -- and reality TV, too!

Us Weekly: What's the secret to a long term Hollywood relationship?

KERMIT: A Hollywood relationship is like any other relationship: You have to trust each other.

MISS PIGGY:
True, except in Hollywood, your publicists, managers, agents and hangers-on also have to trust each other.

PHOTOS: Biggest movies of the season -- which have you seen?

KERMIT: I don't have publicists, managers, agents and hangers-on.

MISS PIGGY:
Which is why it's so easy for us to get along.

KERMIT:
It also helps that we're different species.

MISS PIGGY: Woman and man?

KERMIT:
Pig and frog.

MISS PIGGY: Same thing.

PHOTOS: Biggest reality star ever?

Us: If you both had a reality show, what would it be called?

KERMIT: For me, The Real Houseflies of Hollywood.

MISS PIGGY: I haven't really thought of a name.

KERMIT: How about Extreme Makeover: Ham Edition?

MISS PIGGY: You're cancelled, frog!

Get more Us! Follow us on Twitter, Friend us on Facebook, Subscribe to Us Weekly

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news_miss_piggy_kermit_frog_weve_stayed_together194432159/43697410/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/miss-piggy-kermit-frog-weve-stayed-together-194432159.html

listeria kendall hunter 50 50 50 50 gene simmons family jewels dream house dream house

Tiny overdoses of Tylenol can turn deadly

By Rachel Rettner
My Health News Daily

Taking even slightly too much Tylenol over a period of several days can lead to an overdose with deadly consequences, a new study says.

The study looked at what are called "staggered overdoses," in which a person repeatedly exceeds the daily recommendation through small overdoses. This is in contrast to the more familiar single overdose, when a person takes too many pills at once.

In the study, staggered overdoses of Tylenol (acetaminophen) were more deadly than single overdoses, even though people who experienced staggered overdoses typically took smaller total amounts of Tylenol than those who experienced a single overdose.

Doctors may not identify staggered overdoses right away, researchers added. People with a staggered overdose may have levels of the drug in their blood below what a standard blood test would indicate as an overdose, even when their liver is badly damaged.

People taking acetaminophen should stay within the recommended limits of the drug and take even less of it when they are on other painkillers, said study researcher Kenneth Simpson of the University of Edinburgh in Scotland. Packets of regular Tylenol pills (325 mg) say: "Do not take more than 5 tablets in 24 hours."

And, Simpson said, doctors should realize the criteria used to identify overdose patients do not work as well for staggered overdoses.

The study was published online today in the British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology.

Simpson and colleagues examined information from 663 patients with liver problems caused by acetaminophen (also known as paracetamol) who were admitted to an Edinburgh hospital between 1992 and 2008.

The researchers found that nearly a quarter of them (161 patients) had taken staggered overdoses.

On average, staggered overdose patients took 24 grams of acetaminophen over several days, while single-overdose patients consumed 27 grams.

The researchers found that 37.3 percent of patients with staggered overdoses died, while 27.8 percent of single overdose patients died. Staggered overdose patients also were more likely to have liver and brain problems, require kidney dialysis and need help with breathing.

Close to 60 percent said they had taken the drug to relieve pain, including abdominal or muscular pains, headache or toothache.

During a staggered overdose, the drug likely builds up in the liver and kills the cells, Simpson said.

Staggered overdose patients may have fared less well because they did not receive the appropriate treatment soon enough, or because they had been drinking alcohol along with acetaminophen, he said.

The new study "sheds light on the fact that the maximum recommended daily dose should be strictly adhered to," said Dr. Joshua Lenchus, an associate professor of clinical medicine at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine.

Acetaminophen also appears in combination with other drugs in certain prescription products. In January the Food and Drug Administration asked all manufacturers of acetaminophen to lower the dosein a single tablet to 325 mg. Even at this dose, patients who took two tablets every four hours for 24 hours would be at risk for a staggered overdose, Lenchus said.

"It's pretty easy for people to take just a couple of tablets every four hours," Lenchus said.

Doctors need to consider the possibility of overdoses when patients come to the hospital after taking acetaminophen, even if the patients have not obviously taken many pills at once, Lenchus said.

7 Foods You Can Overdose On

7 Weirdest Medical Conditions

Abuse of Prescription Opioid Pain Medication A 'Vast Problem'

Source: http://vitals.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/11/22/8962056-tiny-overdoses-of-tylenol-can-add-up-to-deadly-damage

eric holder avengers trailer the avengers trailer the avengers trailer minka kelly presidential debate xbox live update

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Greyhound bus driver leaves passengers stranded

Greyhound is conducting an investigation after a bus driver left 45 passengers stranded for about eight hours in the middle of the night at a gas station in the state of Missouri.

  1. Don't miss these Travel stories

    1. Snowboarders flying high over recycled junk

      Updated 80 minutes ago 11/22/2011 9:55:08 PM +00:00 Satellite dishes, propane tanks, empty oil drums and even a Chevy Impala are popping up in terrain parks across the country. It's a new form of recycling, and snowboarders couldn't be happier.

    2. Flying over Thanksgiving? Here's what to expect
    3. Getting to Grandma's: How travel has changed
    4. Smart strategies to get you through winter travel
    5. Traveling by bus? Choose a safe ride

"It was certainly unprecedented and absolutely inexcusable," said company spokeswoman Maureen Richard, adding that the unidentified female driver, who is based in Memphis, Tennessee, was cooperating with officials.

The woman was driving a route on Friday from Memphis to St. Louis, which is normally a six-hour trip. But she left the bus 150 miles from her destination, turning the journey into a roughly 16-hour ordeal for passengers.

Traveling by bus? Choose a safe ride

The trouble began near Sikeston, Missouri when the driver put an unruly passenger off the bus. The driver then took the bus east to Charleston, Missouri where she abandoned it on Friday evening.

A Greyhound replacement driver didn't get to the bus until about eight hours after the driver walked off, the company said. Greyhound was offering full refunds, Richmond said.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45390880/ns/travel-news/

love and hip hop dancing with the stars results there will be blood there will be blood role models how to cook a turkey ucla basketball

Google's iOS search app gets a major overhaul, brings instant goodies to iPad users

Dismayed that Google's previous iOS tablet app was merely a thin wrapper around a glorified web view? That duress ends today, as the company's just released a significant overhaul to its mobile search app -- one that, frankly, makes it worthy of your home screen. Headlining the release is the ability to view search results in a slidable tab, enabling you to quickly oscillate between search results and those you've tapped. Also present are instant searches, which pre-load results as you type, and previews which visually display findings in a spiffy carousel. If you're already sold, take it for a spin at the source links below, but before you go, peep the changelog past the break.

Continue reading Google's iOS search app gets a major overhaul, brings instant goodies to iPad users

Google's iOS search app gets a major overhaul, brings instant goodies to iPad users originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 21 Nov 2011 15:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink AllThingsD  |  sourceGoogle Mobile Blog, Google Search (App Store)  | Email this | Comments


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/VybLXXzkz-g/

corporal kelsey de santis corporal kelsey de santis ufc on fox juan manuel marquez juan manuel marquez penn state stanford oregon

Molecules to Medicine: Pharma Trumps HIPAA?

This past week, I was jolted out of my chair by news that a Pfizer-led group plans to buy access to patient data in hospitals. My initial reaction was anger, on a variety of levels: as a researcher, as one who is increasingly wary of the reach of huge corporations, and as an individual.

Actually, it is not just Pfizer doing this?a new consortium called the Partnership to Advance Clinical Electronic Research (PACeR), includes Merck, Roche, Johnson & Johnson, Bayer, Hoffman-La Roche, Quintiles, and Oracle. Their pitch sounds very reasonable, with a noble goal of speeding clinical research and bringing new medicines to market. The focus of the article describing this initiative in Business Week aptly described the business advantages: Delays in drug development are estimated to cost $1 million per day. More rapid enrollment and clinical trial completion will increase the time a drug remains on patent?read, profitable?for the pharmaceutical sponsor. It also helps the sponsor company remain more competitive compared to its rivals. And hospitals stand to earn $75 million annually in exchange for patient data. What could possibly go wrong?

There is only one little thing standing between the companies and patient data?concerns about the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, or HIPAA, which includes onerous privacy protections for patients. I suppose that HIPAA has value, at least in its good intent to protect patient privacy, and its boost to job security for medical records clerks, accountants, attorneys, and the cottage industry of trying to explain the rules. Otherwise, I have yet to see the value and, as a physician and clinical researcher, I have had only negative experiences with it.

Background: HIPAA and HITECH

HIPAA, for the uninitiated, prevents disclosure of Protected Health Information (PHI) which is defined as ?information that can be linked to a particular person (i.e., is person-identifiable) that arises in the course of providing a health care service.? ?Individually identifiable health information? is information, including demographic data, that relates to:

  • the individual?s past, present or future physical or mental health or condition,
  • the provision of health care to the individual, or
  • the past, present, or future payment for the provision of health care to the individual,

and that identifies the individual or for which there is a reasonable basis to believe it can be used to identify the individual.Individually identifiable health information includes many common identifiers (e.g., name, address, phone number, birth date, Social Security Number, medical record number). If you have health insurance, you immediately waive all of these privacies in order to file any claim. Ironically, it seems health insurers are the most likely to abuse personal health information by asking intrusive questions and denying claims or care.

Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act (HITECH Act) is part of The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA, also known as the ?stimulus package?), that provided $10 billion for ?scientific research and facilities? through September 2010. One of the specified intents of the HITECH Act was to facilitate health outcomes and clinical research. Healthcare providers are being pushed into using electronic medical records. Medicare reimbursements to providers will increase significantly if there is ?meaningful use? of the electronic medical records (EMRs), defined as data used for health purposes (e.g., public health, quality reporting, or research), and decrease if there is not ?meaningful use.?

It seemed like a good idea?

Electronic medical records do have advantages for research, particularly for timely recognition of adverse events that might otherwise remain undetected in postmarketing surveillance. An example is using EMRs to identify patients with genetic mutations that are associated with specific serious adverse events.

As PACeR recognized, EMRs have the particularly promising potential to help identify and recruit study participants. Inclusion and exclusion criteria are becoming increasingly restrictive, resulting in expected accrual rates of less than one patient per month on many trials for even common illnesses. However, lab data can be successfully and efficiently used to screen large numbers of prospective patients. For example, University of South Carolina researchers screened 7,296,708 lab results from 69,288 patients, identifying 70 potential candidates who met automated criteria, 3 of whom ultimately participated in the trial. Since current research regulations preclude a third party from alerting an investigator about a potential study volunteer without that patient?s advance consent, however, the researchers developed a compliant but convoluted work-around with the IRB?similar to the process PACeR is trialing now. At USC, if the lab identified a potential subject, the ordering physician was notified of the patient?s potential eligibility. Then the ordering physician had to decide whether to make the effort to contact the patient to obtain permission to contact the clinical trial staff and then to follow through.

Screening health information is also particularly promising at sites that conduct multiple trials because it can alert investigators to multiple opportunities and guide patients to the most appropriate study. One solution to the various obstacles is to incorporate alerts about possible clinical trials into the EMR used at the time of a patient?s encounter with a physician. While still cumbersome, this method has the advantage of reminding physicians about trials while minimizing the additional work for them. It also overcomes HIPAA concerns because the physicians communicate directly with their patients.

But then reality sets in?EMRs

Electronic medical records may be a boon for hospital reimbursement and administrators, but appears to be a nightmare for physicians and patients. In my experience:

  1. They are very cumbersome and time-consuming to complete, adding at least an hour per day to documentation; this is time taken away from patient care.
  2. The documentation is focused on trivia needed for billing and coding rather than for patient care.
  3. This elaborate documentation clutters up charts and notes, making it difficult to find the important details about the patient?s condition.
  4. The physical layout of many EMR screens and systems seriously interferes with patient-physician communication and building a trusting relationship. Eye contact is minimized as the health care worker?s attention is instead focused on squinting at a screen.
  5. EMRs also destroy MD/RN communication. It is no longer necessary for the MD to actually walk over to the patient room and hear?relevant?information from the RN. This used to be essential. Then again, RNs are now less often at the bedside; they are too busy charting at a computer terminal.
  6. There is a significant increase in repetitive use injuries among health care workers using poorly designed EMR work stations.

However, EMRs also pose unique problems for research. Privacy issues have received the greatest attention. These affect researchers? ability to review records, recruit patients, and monitor study participants. Confusion also results from the different consent requirements of different groups and because the standard consent clause that allows the sponsor?s representatives to review the records does not meet the HIPAA rule?s requirements.

EMRs also pose problems for research monitors, both because the monitors have limited access to data stored electronically and because of problems verifying that the data have not been altered. The electronic date and time stamped audit trails are important here. While log-on names and passwords are not supposed to be shared, this is probably commonly done during monitoring visits since there is no other practical way of getting timely access to read-only records for auditing.

It gets worse with HIPAA and research?the Unintended Consequences

HIPAA requirements are extremely difficult to understand and subject to misinterpretation, and mistakes carry the chilling spectre of disproportionately high penalties. Even the feds understood the need to be able to identify potential subjects in order to do research, so they put in a carve-out, allowing ?waiver of authorization? with the IRB?s approval. (Full details are available in the Code of Federal Regulations Title 45?Public Welfare).

HIPAA, the ill-considered privacy rule, has had several unintended consequences (beyond the nuisance factor), the most serious of which is its negative impact on research. While those of us in the trenches immediately and directly felt the burden, a report from the Association of Academic Health Centers (AAHC), The HIPAA Privacy Rule: Lacks Patient Benefit, Impedes Research Growth,?affirms our suspicions about its chilling effect on research.

Let me share my own experiences with HIPAA and research. I already knew that HIPAA really hurt the numbers of volunteer referrals from my local hospital. For example, even when the Institutional Review Board (IRB) provided a ?carve-out? allowing us to be alerted about potential patients for a sepsis study, many hospital staff members had knee-jerk ?we can?t tell you anything? reactions, fearing for their jobs. Some staff fomented misunderstandings about HIPAA seemingly deliberately, as one way of derailing a study. Mostly, HIPAA caused rampant confusion that cost us a number of potential patients, which is especially painful given that qualified candidates were as rare as hen?s teeth?as they often were for the studies I generally got asked to do, with an expected participant accrual of 1-2 per month.

This past summer, I went to India to volunteer at a hospital and to try and help them with their self-identified problem with tuberculosis. There was considerable debate as to whether or not IRB approval was necessary?my infectious disease colleagues felt it was not, as it was part of a public health initiative and the ?research? was no different than that conducted every day in public health departments. The social science types at the U.S. university I was working with all insisted we obtain IRB approval, a time-consuming and, in some settings, expensive process. (Many IRBs levy an administrative charge of $1-2,000 per study). And the folks in India could have cared less, nor did they understand the fuss, as there is next to no patient privacy in their crowded facility, nor was it culturally relevant. All they wanted was help caring for their patients.

As mentioned above, an Association of Academic Health Centers (AAHC) study confirms these subjective findings, that the HIPAA rules are unclear and are subject to misinterpretation. Many researchers don?t understand a waiver of authorization can be provided by the IRB. As the AAHC?notes in HIPAA Creating Barriers to Research and Discovery, ?The fear of regulatory punishment is driving IRB, Privacy Officer and Organizational decision-making in clinical research.? The fear of liability dissuades many other parties from supporting research and distracts everyone from the goal of helping to develop new treatments. In addition, valuable personnel time and money are wasted on the unnecessary and excessive new administrative burdens.

Another example of HIPAA regulators run amok was that of the Office for Human Research Protections (OHRP). The OHRP recently extended privacy rules to ?research? done as part of infection control and quality improvement activities. In an irrational and counterproductive move, it closed down research at Johns Hopkins University and a network of hospitals throughout Michigan regarding the use and efficacy of a checklist in reducing life-threatening hospital-acquired infections. The data from each hospital were deidentified before being sent to Hopkins for analysis, yet the OHRP ruled that individual consents were required. See an excellent and scathing review by Dr. Atul Gawande for details.

Studies have demonstrated the dramatic reduction in recruitment rates for research since HIPAA was introduced. One University of Pittsburgh study cited by the AAHC showed recruitment was slashed by more than 50 percent after HIPAA. Similarly, a University of Michigan study showed volunteer consents dropped from 96 percent to 34 percent after HIPAA. An American Society of Clinical Oncology paper report that a ?reliance on consent impedes valuable research?sometimes causes physicians and entire hospitals to opt out of research.? Sometimes it seems the only beneficiaries of HIPAA are insurers, from whom we ironically have no privacy. The AAHC report concludes, ?Finally, the patient whom HIPAA is designed to protect does not appear to recognize, understand, or care about this complex law as it applies to research.?

There was an interesting review of the HIPAA complaints that were related to clinical research between 2003 and 2007. Of the 32,487 privacy complaints to the Department of Health and Human Services during this period, guess how many were related to clinical research? A whopping 17! Intriguingly, the author also extrapolates that, if obtaining a HIPAA consent takes 5 minutes, and a research site?s time is postulated as $60/hour, this translates to at least $10 million dollars per year spent just to obtain this cumbersome, and often misunderstood, authorization.

A report from the prestigious Institute of Medicine, Beyond the HIPAA Privacy Rule: Enhancing Privacy, Improving Health Through Research,?further expounds on HIPAA?s unintended interference with research and gives several recommendations, concluding that the Common Rule?s (Federal policy, codified in the Code of Federal Regulations 45 CFR part 46) human research protections be applied to interventional clinical research and that there be new federal oversight of the information-based research.

Problems with PACeR

Access to all this patient data would be extraordinarily helpful to companies to enable them to identify sites for research and even specific patients to target. The initial trial of this model begins this month in 13 hospital systems in New York, working in collaboration with PACeR.

Now since this identifying data can?t legally be shared with drug companies, PACeR has come up with a nifty work around, similar to that at the University of South Carolina, but on a much larger scale. PACeR will pay hospitals to be an intermediary. For between $50,000 and $200,000 per query, hospitals will search their database of medical records to identify patients who fit a particular protocol and give the company information about who the patient?s doctor is?without the specific PHI. The physician would then contact their patient and get consent to release any PHI.

This type of procedure for contacting patients is a cumbersome and time-consuming one for the physician in the trenches. In my setting, it would be unworkable for a variety of reasons, including the uncompensated time of the primary physician, the hassle factor, and the narrow time window for enrollment on trials for acute infections. In addition, many physicians are not familiar with either the needs of research or the benefits to their patients. This would put a large administrative burden on the physician?s practice, both in playing the middleman, and since there are also logs of release of PHI that must be maintained. Add this to the pressure already on physicians to be ?productive? and see patients quickly in a brief encounter. It seems the only ones profiting under the PACeR model are the corporations?certainly there is no direct benefit to the patient. This seems akin to the exploitation of patients like Henrietta Lacks, done without either consent or compensation.

Of broader concern is, of course, mistrust over industry?s access to vast amounts of health data. Although this would be deidentified, there have been too many reports in the news of breaches of security, exposing large amounts of private health information on the internet.

Another source of my mistrust is the June Supreme Court decision in Sorrell v IMS Health, in which the Supremes, ?by a 6-3 vote struck down a Vermont law that barred pharmacies, drug makers and others from buying or selling prescription records from patients for marketing purposes. Vermont?s physicians had sought passage of the law, arguing that their prescriptions were intended for private use of patients and should not become a marketing tool.? So much for patient privacy.

One of my other concerns is that PACeR appears to tilt the playing field towards a few giant pharmaceutical companies. As an individual researcher, I am frustrated that, because of HIPAA, I can no longer access data I need to recruit patients in a timely fashion. And, lacking industry?s deep pockets, I have neither the clout nor funds to buy this access. Nor can I even do chart reviews to describe patient outcomes. Frankly, rather than have this type of industry-hospital consortium, I would rather see HIPAA revamped to allow better access to all to data for research, if the data is held in a secure manner. Living in a small rural community, I?m not sure that I would even require IRB approval (cumbersome and costly) for things like record reviews of patients with a particular condition or public health issues. One other alternative to consider would be having all patients be offered a release on hospital admission or on an office visit, to indicate if their data would be accessible to researchers, with the appropriate privacy safeguards. This would be important, as now many potential volunteers are lost, especially on acute care studies, due to time constraints in the enrollment criteria.

So on the one hand, we have the push from the government and insurers to have electronic medical records and health outcomes research (HITECH Act), the Sentinel Initiative for postmarketing surveillance of electronic medical records for adverse events, and Medicare reimbursements linked to ?meaningful use? (i.e., providing data) of the EMR. On the other hand, we have the specter of HIPAA and more draconian penalties for breaches of personal privacy. Now we have industry making deals with hospital systems to buy data. While I have misgivings about this approach, there needs to be better access to medical records for research, given appropriate safeguards regarding privacy and permissions for reuse. We need to find a way to boost the current dismal participation rate in clinical trials?less than 5 percent?if we will succeed with medical research in the U.S.

With the growing consensus gathered from clinical researchers, reviews of patient complaints, surveys of academicians and now the imprimatur of the nation?s leading scientists that HIPAA is not only failing to provide any protection for clinical research subjects but is increasing research costs and probably reducing participation, we can only hope that reason will prevail, and the HIPAA rules will be eliminated for clinical research.

Cartoons: from Rogue Medic

Previously in this series:

Molecules to Medicine: Clinical Trials for Beginners
Molecules to Medicine: From Test-Tube to Medicine Chest
Lilly?s Shocker, or the Post-Marketing Blues

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=017697ddaa5f31390b5e25064ba3ceb1

generators generators lesean mccoy while you were sleeping while you were sleeping happy halloween happy halloween