Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Morocco accuses Algeria and Polisario of destabilizing the Sahara ...

By Youssef El Kaidi

Morocco World News

Fez, April 30, 2013

It seems that the US withdrawal of its draft resolution to expand the mandate of the MINURSO to monitor human rights in the Sahara was disillusioning and traumatic to the Polisario and Algeria. Following the adoption by the UN Security Council of the resolution on the Moroccan Sahara by consensus?the resolution that makes no mention of a human rights monitoring mechanism in the Moroccan Sahara?the separatists in the southern provinces went into riots in Laayoune and Boujdour to provoke the security forces and instigate violence.

The US withdrawal of its draft resolution, which is perceived as a political victory for Morocco, puts Algeria and Polisario in an embarrassing situation. In response to this political victory, Algeria and Polisario plan to sow the seeds of discord and anarchy in the Moroccan Sahara by ?inciting minors to engage in clashes with Moroccan security forces to promote the claim that Morocco does not respect human rights,? the mayor of Laayoune Khalil Eddakhil said in a press conference on Monday.

The mayor added that there is information indicating that a number of ?young men benefit from training in the Tindouf camps (of Polisario in the Algerian territory) and then infiltrate Morocco?s southern provinces to carry out acts of sabotage.?

The plan to drag the region into instability, of which Morocco is fully aware, is carried out by the separatists in the cities of the Moroccan Sahara. These individuals were not arrested despite the damage that they caused to public property in these cities. ?No one was arrested despite the acts of vandalism and serious damage that occurred to public property, as well as the injury of a number of members of the security forces who were pelted with stones,? says Mr. Khalil Eddakhil who also stressed that ?Morocco is committed to the policy of restraint so as to not give the opponents of its territorial integrity excuses that they later may use against it.?

? Morocco World News. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, rewritten or redistributed

Source: http://www.moroccoworldnews.com/2013/04/89065/morocco-accuses-algeria-and-polisario-of-destabilizing-the-sahara/

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Gary Busey plays blame game on 'Apprentice'

Douglas Gorenstein / NBC

Gary Busey on "All-Star Celebrity Apprentice."

By Ree Hines, TODAY contributor

On Sunday night, Team Power nabbed another rare victory on "All-Star Celebrity Apprentice" when they bested Plan B in a video ad battle. But the real battle of the night was between Plan B's project manager and the rest of the team.

Gary Busey headed the effort for the Bs -- which mainly consisted of an ad featuring Busey transforming into a mechanical dog -- and his teammates knew how it would end from the start.

"I think we're on Team Moby Dick, and Ahab is in charge," Penn Jillette said.

So no matter what Jillette or Lisa Rinna proposed, Busey wasn't going to budge. That is, until he found himself on the wrong side of the boardroom.

Once Busey learned his concepts didn't charm the client du jour, he suggested the real problem was with Jillette and Rinna all along -- they undermined him.

But boardroom boss Donald Trump just wasn't buying what Busey was selling. After much bickering, including Busey's claim that Rinna yelled and screamed at him and Jillette just didn't help, Trump settled it.

"Gary, you're fired!"

Source: http://theclicker.today.com/_news/2013/04/29/17971873-gary-busey-throws-team-under-the-boardroom-bus-on-celebrity-apprentice?lite

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Equip Yourself With Slingshots For The Zombie Apocalypse

When you think about how you would deal with a zombie invasion, the weapons that come to mind probably don't include slingshots. But if the story of David and Goliath has taught us anything it's that slingshots are pretty deadly. Plus that whole underdog thing. Whatever.

Joerg Sprave wanted to make sure he was ready for the undead so he got fellow YouTubers, Zombie Go Boom, to send him two of their rubber zombie heads. Then he filled the head cavities with red wine. Because of course he did. He tested a homemade slingshot and a commercially made model and the results were pretty solid. You can inflict a lot of damage with a slingshot. At least if you're Joerg. The main takeaway here? A zombie apocalypse where the monsters bleed red wine will be way more relaxing and full of antioxidants than any alternative. [Slingshot Channel]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5995488/equip-yourself-with-slingshots-for-the-zombie-apocalypse

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Kobo Aura HD Review: A Beautiful Reader Screen Trapped in an Ugly Body

Everyone loves a pretty screen. The Kobo Aura HD is aiming to lead that charge in the ereader space. Armed with a best-in-class screen and an unusually powerful processor under the hood, the Aura HD tries its best to be a real luxury reader. It doesn't quite make it.

What Is It?

A front-lit ebook reader with a big, high-resolution screen.

Who's It For?

Readers who really, really want a pretty screen and more power than usual under the hood.

Design

The Kobo Aura HD's body is smooth plastic, unlike the Kindle Paperwhite's black soft-touch coating. It has two buttons at the top, one to wake the device, the other to toggle the front-light. The Aura HD is stark and simple from the front, but its back is contorted into a strange, asymmetric design intended to invoke crumpled paper or something like it. This back is awkward to look at and to hold. It's got a very distinctive look, but it sacrifices any semblance of comfort. And since the Aura HD is using infrared touch tech instead of the capacitive found in the Kindle Paperwhite, it?s got more bulk than you?d expect in a brand new ereader.

Using It

The Aura HD has that 6.8-inch 1080?1440, 265 DPI screen, and it really is world class. With the backlight off, it feels like you could be looking at ink on paper, and to the extent you might scrutinize the edges of the letters in the words in your ebook, that's nice. But it?s not a massive step ahead of the fidelity of the Kindle Paperwhite or Kobo Glo, really. The extra screen space doesn?t really add enough real estate to make much of a difference?especially not at the cost of a larger body.

Physically, the Aura is just slightly too wide to be comfortable for one-handed use. Palming it requires a bit of straining, and if you opt to hold it by the corner, its weight will get the better of you. This is compounded by the odd angles on the side of the Aura HD, which make holding it by the very edge slipperier than it ought to be.

The Aura also has a 1 GHz processor, but you'd be hard-pressed to really notice; the infrared screen effectively throttles max speed, so it?s hard to differentiate. There's cloud-syncing built in if you read books across devices (in a Kobo app on a phone, for instance) and the reader's achievement system is cute, if superfluous.

Kobo's software has been problematic in the past, and it still has its annoying quirks. Brightness, font-size, and other options are all controlled by finicky draggable bars when they'd be better suited software buttons, since it?s still using IR touch tech. Turns out there are little buttons there, but the bars steal the spotlight so it's easy to miss.

The Best Part

The screen. It?s wonderful. Large and beautiful and bright. Oh, it?s very bright. While it might not be a humongous improvement over other high quality E Ink screens out there, it?s a wonderful thing to look at.

Tragic Flaw

Everything but the screen. Compared to its contemporaries, the Aura HD is large, heavy, and awkward. For every second you find yourself thinking "this screen is nice!" there will be five where you think "I wish I wasn't holding this!"

This Is Weird...

The back of the Aura is just bizarrely designed. If you set the Aura HD on its back on a flat surface and poke the corner, it wobbles slightly. It?s ugly and uncomfortable to hold and it makes you wonder if the back's shape was decided at random.

Test Notes

  • At its max, the Aura's backlight is stronger than the Paperwhite's, and more even around the edges. The downside is that it tends to bleed through the text at higher levels, and the contrast suffers.
  • Kobo rates the Aura HD's batter as lasting 2 months?backlight on or off?with 30 minutes of reading a day. Over about half a week of heavier use (45-60 minutes, backlight on, brightness at 50 percent) we took it down to about 70 percent.
  • The Kobo store has about 2.5 million books, newspapers, and magazines, coming out just slightly on top of Amazon?s 2 million Kindle store results. You?ll have no trouble finding best-sellers at either store, though Amazon?s prices are occasionally a few dollars cheaper than Kobo?s offerings. And Kobo has no lending system in place, unlike both Amazon and Barnes and Noble, so expect to pay for everything you want to read.

Should You Buy It?

No. The Kobo Aura HD has a really nice screen, sure, but everything around that screen just drags it down. From the ergonomically bizarre design to its weight and size, the actual meat of the Aura HD is just not up to snuff. And besides that, pushing an E Ink screen's resolution this high is sort of a questionable pursuit here. You don?t need that extra resolution to read, and it?s reached a point of diminishing returns. That screen?s not nice enough to cancel out other basic problems with the design.

Props to Kobo for being the best at something, but the compromises born of that tunnel vision aspiration are just too high. At $169 the Kobo Aura HD is too expensive for something that does the wrong things right and the right things wrong.

Kobo Aura HD

? Display: 6.8 inches, 265 dpi, 1440 x 1080 resolution

? Dimensions: 6.91 x 5.05 x 0.46 in (175.7 x 128.3 x 11.7 mm)

? Weight: 8.5 oz (240g)

? Storage: 4 GB, microSD expansion slot

? Connectivity: Wi-Fi only

? Color: "Espresso, Ivory, or Onyx"

? Supported File Types: EPUB, PDF, and MOBI, CBR, CBZ

? Price:$169

Source: http://gizmodo.com/kobo-aura-hd-review-a-beautiful-reader-screen-trapped-5995330

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Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Woman unknowingly takes 30 pounds of pot across U.S.-Mexico border

This is awkward. A woman who lives in Mexico and works in San Diego called the cops on herself when she apparently unknowingly transported 30 pounds of marijuana across the border.

According to a report by NBC New York, the unnamed 33-year-old drove her car to work Friday morning, arrived early and was sitting in her car in a parking lot around 4 a.m. when two unidentified men approached her car and began removing packages from underneath it.

The driver surprised the men, who got in their car and drove off. She called the police, who discovered 30 pounds of pot divided into six packages attached by heavy-duty magnets to the undercarriage of the vehicle.

Who put the drugs there?the woman said it wasn?t her?remains a mystery. Police tell NBC New York that no arrests have been made.

Officials want to remind people who regularly cross the border to check their car?as some people become targets by drug cartels as unwitting mules in the narcotics business.

Regular border travelers may be a boon to drug smugglers.

Last year, CNN reported a similar story of a
regular commuter from his home in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, to the University of Texas at El Paso.

Even though the man, who goes under a fake name to protect his identity, said he was targeted and ferried drugs without his knowledge, he was sentenced to six months in prison.

Pot package found on undercarriage of woman's car in San Diego (SDPD)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/woman-unknowingly-takes-30-pounds-pot-across-u-144432116.html

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Monday, April 22, 2013

Gay marriage: A matter of conscience | Opinion | Jewish Journal

April 22, 2013


In the sphere of human rights there comes a time when people of conscience are morally required to stand up and declare what they believe is right based on principles of justice and fairness, not for themselves but for others. While this may be especially true for politicians, opinion leaders, parents, religious figures and the like, it doesn?t end there; it is the moral duty of every citizen in a free society, and arguably the duty of every human being in any society, to take a stance on issues of conscience. Being a bystander may be convenient and comfortable, but it doesn?t meet the test. For me, as a prominent publicly identified Republican, the time is now and the issue is same-sex marriage. As the controversy continues to swirl around us and people have begun to take sides, I feel it is time to state my own opinion; that is to declare my support for the right of same-sex couples to marry.?

This, of course, doesn?t take any particular courage on my part. For me personally the stakes are low, but for others the consequences are high. Selfishly, when the history of the consequences of our time is written, I want to be recorded by my friends and family as having been on the right side, on the side of those who seek equal rights for all. In my view, the outcome of this debate is inevitable, but for now the question is how long it will take to get there and at what cost to the American fabric.

There were times before when I wanted to step into this fray, but the point seemed moot. The matter went to the Court; polls began to shift in favor of same sex-marriage; and 131 Republicans activists stepped forward to lend their support in an amicus brief to the court. No less a conservative voice than Ted Olsen has defended the rights of same-sex couples to marry, as have Meg Whitman, David Frum, Ken Mehlman, Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, Rep. Richard Hanna, Sen. Rob Portman and Sen. Mark Kirk. Unfortunately, last Friday the Republican National Committee unanimously passed a resolution reiterating its opposition to same-sex marriage. Therefore, I can no longer be silent on the issue.

The arguments to allow same-sex marriage to proceed and be recognized are many. Even if the Supreme Court finds no constitutional right, Federalism, which Republicans hold dear, would at least allow states to decide the issue for themselves (Proposition 8 aside, it can only be a matter of time before Californians make this choice). From a pure political standpoint, Republicans are playing a losing hand, with public attitudes shifting, especially among young voters (Gallop found that 73 percent of voters aged 18-29 favor legalization). Philosophically, the party that supports individual freedom, commitment and less government intrusion ought to get out of the way of people wanting to express their individual liberties. In another example, the ?death tax? that Republicans oppose also falls unfairly on unmarried same-sex couples; for married couples the government doesn?t collect their levy until the second partner dies. Not true for same-sex couples who may own a business or a house together and be forced to sell to pay the taxman when their partner dies.

It is easy to be taken in by some for the arguments against same-sex marriage. Since switching my own thinking on the subject and discussing it with friends ? notably both Democrats and Republicans ? I hear them all the time: ?You can?t redefine a word?; ?This will undermine ?traditional? marriage?; ?I am in favor of civil unions, but not marriage?; and on and on. This is all nonsense; it sounds logical, but is not.

The concept of traditional marriage is a nice fairy tale: Boy meets (virginal) girl; they fall in love; their nuclear families walk them down the aisle; they have children and live together faithfully until death. So this is marriage. Except that it doesn?t always happen that way anymore. People cohabitate before marriage; they get divorced, they remarry (for some this cycle repeats itself over and over ? all are called marriage). If a 90-year-old near-senile man marries a 20ish gold-digger, that?s a legally recognized marriage. If two strangers meet at a Las Vegas casino one night and run off half-drunk to the local chapel to get married ? that?s a legally recognized marriage. If a high school teacher who goes to jail for having sex with an underage boy marries that boy when she is through serving her term and he has reached adulthood ? that?s a legally recognized marriage. If a woman falls in love with a serial killer awaiting execution on death row, corresponds with him and they decide to marry ? that?s a legally recognized marriage. But if two men who are committed to each other and live together for 50 years wish to be married, somewhere along the way we can?t call this marriage??

Fundamentally, we as Americans believe that we are all entitled to be free and to pursue our own dreams and happiness (while we think this is some uniquely American idea, consider that same-sex marriage is already legal in Argentina, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Iceland, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, South Africa, Spain and Sweden as well as in some parts of other countries). I do not see how allowing same-sex couples to have the same right that I have to get married will in any way diminish my own freedom or my own happiness. How? Which right will I lose? (Rights, fortunately, are not a zero-sum game.) Why is something that is allowed for me denied to someone else? Where is the concept of fairness in all this?

I am hoping that other Republicans will step forward along with me and tell our party leadership that they are making a mistake. Now is the time to get on the record, one way or the other. Abstaining from an important moral issue is not a choice.

Joel Geiderman is California chairman of the Republican Jewish Coalition and former vice chairman of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, appointed by President George W. Bush. The views expressed by the author are his own and do not represent the official views of any organization with which he is currently or was previously affiliated.

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Source: http://www.jewishjournal.com/opinion/article/gay_marriage_a_matter_of_conscience

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Rivers crest across Midwest, but rain in forecast

CLARKSVILLE, Mo. (AP) ? Those fighting floods in several communities along the Mississippi River were mostly successful Sunday despite the onslaught of water, but an ominous forecast and the growing accumulation of snow in the upper Midwest tempered any feelings of victory.

The surging Mississippi was at or near crest at several places from the Quad Cities south to near St. Louis ? some reaching 10-12 feet above flood stage. Problems were plentiful: Hundreds of thousands of acres of swamped farmland as planting season approaches; three people died; roads and bridges closed, including sections of major highways like U.S. 61 in Iowa and Missouri and crossings at Quincy, Ill., and Louisiana, Mo.

The U.S. Coast Guard said 114 barges broke loose near St. Louis on Saturday night, and four hit the Jefferson Barracks Bridge in St. Louis County. The bridge was closed about six hours for inspection but reopened around 8 a.m. Sunday. Most of the runaway barges were corralled but at least 10 sank and two others were unaccounted for, Coast Guard Lt. Colin Fogarty said.

Two of the confirmed flood-related deaths occurred near the same spot in Indiana; another was in Missouri. In all three cases, vehicles were swept off the road in flash floods. High water could be responsible for two more, both in Illinois, where a decomposed body was found Thursday in an Oak Brook creek and a body was found Saturday in the Mississippi River at Cora. Investigations continue.

And the danger is far from over, as spots south of St. Louis aren't expected to crest until late this week. Significant flooding is possible in places like Ste. Genevieve, Mo., Cape Girardeau, Mo., and Cairo, Ill.

Adding to concern is a forecast that calls for heavy rain Monday night and Tuesday throughout much of the Midwest. National Weather Service meteorologist Julie Phillipson said an inch of rain is likely in many places, some places even more. Rain is projected from Wisconsin through Missouri.

"That's not what we want to see when we have this kind of flooding, that's for sure," Phillipson said.

Harley-Davidson riders and bicyclists zipped through Grafton, Ill., a tourist town 40 miles north of St. Louis, many pausing to snap pictures of the swollen river.

Floodwaters were lapping against the side of Grafton's Artisan Village, a flea market-type business for artists. Owner Marty Harp, 53, sipped a Miller Lite as he cast a wary eye to the sky.

"If we can hold off the crest and it doesn't rain for a couple of days, it'll be OK," Harp said.

But anxiety looms regarding the heavy snow the northern Midwest has received this month and what happens when it melts and makes its way into tributaries of the Missouri and Mississippi rivers. Forecasters said up to 6 inches of new snow was possible in the Black Hills area of South Dakota through Monday morning.

Hundreds of miles to the southeast, in La Grange, Mo., Lewis County emergency management director David Keith wasn't bothered by the soggy forecast. Sandbags were holding back the murky Mississippi from La Grange City Hall, a bank and a handful of threatened homes. The water was receding.

"What we're worried about now is all that snow melt in North and South Dakota and Minnesota," Keith said.

AccuWeather meteorologist Alan Reppert said the timing of the snow melt could prove lucky: It may stay cold long enough up north to make for a gradual melt, giving the rivers time to thin out. Of greater concern, he said, is the Red River in North Dakota, which could see significant flooding in the coming weeks.

Along the Mississippi, a handful of river towns are most affected by the high waters ? places like Clarksville, Mo., and Grafton that have chosen against flood walls or levees.

By Sunday, sandbagging had all but stopped in Clarksville, evidence of the confidence that the makeshift sandbag levee hurriedly erected to protect downtown would hold. Volunteers, including nearly three dozen prison inmates, worked since Wednesday, using 6,000 tons of sand and gravel.

The river was at 34.7 feet Sunday, nearly 10 feet above the 25-foot flood stage ? a somewhat arbitrary term the NWS defines as the point when "water surface level begins to create a hazard to lives, property or commerce" ? and expected to rise another foot before cresting Monday.

"We believe we'll have a successful conclusion," said Jo Anne Smiley, longtime mayor of the 442-resident hamlet.

Richard Cottrell, a 64-year-old antique shop owner, was hopeful, but nervous. After two days of endless sandbagging, Cottrell thought he could rest Saturday night, but the constant beeping of heavy equipment outside and flood worries kept him up.

"I had a rough night last night. I had an anxiety attack," he admitted.

Many towns on smaller rivers in other states were dealing with floodwaters, too.

In Grand Rapids, Mich., Mayor George Heartwell declared a state of emergency as the flooding Grand River poured into the basements of several hotels and other downtown buildings.

Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn declared at least 41 counties disaster areas from flooding. The Fox River in northern Illinois reached record levels, and several record crests were possible along the Illinois River.

Indiana officials were still determining whether flooded communities like Kokomo, Tipton and Elwood will be eligible for disaster aid.

___

Salter reported from St. Louis.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rivers-crest-across-midwest-rain-forecast-190951310.html

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Gillmor Gang: Kaleidoscope Eyes

gillmor-gang-test-pattern_excerptThe Gillmor Gang ? Robert Scoble, Kevin Marks, John Taschek, and Steve Gillmor ? pictured themselves in a boat on a river, as the first wave of Google Glass hit the network, aka Scoble's forehead. @scobleizer promises to never take off this thing, and even the hyperbole doesn't refute the central notion. The whole world is not only watching but feeding the realtime stream. Social meets mainstream.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/3sjmDIHwUIc/

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Wednesday, April 10, 2013

'Sustainable fishing' certification too lenient and discretionary

Apr. 10, 2013 ? The certification of seafood as "sustainable" by the nonprofit Marine Stewardship Council is too lenient and discretionary, a study by a consortium of researchers has found.

"When consumers want sustainable fish there are two options to meet the demand: fisheries can become more sustainable or the definition of sustainable can be watered down to be practically meaningless -- with MSC seafood, the definition has been repeatedly watered down," said Jennifer Jacquet, a clinical assistant professor in New York University's Environmental Studies Program and one of 11 authors of the study, which appears in the journal Biological Conservation.

The expansion of fishing in the oceans -- further offshore, deeper, and for different species -- has led to the depletion of many marine fish populations. In response, market-based efforts aimed at consumers, which include "eco-labeling," have emerged to change demand. Among these was the establishment of the London-based Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) in 1997. A joint project between World Wildlife Fund and Unilever, MSC was created as a conservation tool -- intended to provide ''the best environmental choice in seafood'' to consumers and to create positive incentives that would improve the status and management of fisheries.

However, conservation groups have raised concerns about MSC's certification process, calling into question the organization's claim that its eco-labeling program is "the best environmental choice in seafood." Its certification process is paid for by the fisheries, with rates dependent on the size and complexity of the fishery. MSC estimates that most certifications cost between $15,000 and $120,000. Since its founding, MSC has attached its certified label to more than 170 fisheries, with fishery clients spending between $2.3 and $18.7 million on certification.

To gauge the viability of MSC's labeling program, the researchers examined 19 formal objections -- raised primarily by environmental groups and amounting to one-third, by weight, of all MSC-certified seafood -- to certifications MSC has granted to fisheries for Chilean sea bass, Antarctic krill, and others. Objections are heard by an independent adjudicator appointed by MSC. In all but one of these 19 cases, the certification was upheld.

In the Biological Conservation analysis, the researchers sought to determine whether these fisheries, in fact, met the MSC's principles for certification.

The MSC uses three major principles that third-party certifiers interpret in determining whether a fishery is "sustainable" and may use the MSC label: sustainability of the target fish stock; low impacts on the ecosystem; and effective management. However, the researchers found many of these fisheries -- representing 35 percent of eco-labeled seafood -- did not meet MSC standards.

For instance, the longline fishery for swordfish in Canada appears to violate the "low impacts on the ecosystem" principle. This fishery has high levels of bycatch -- sea life accidentally caught in pursuit of other fish. The targeted catch of 20,000 swordfish per year results in bycatch of approximately 100,000 sharks as well as 1,200 endangered loggerhead and 170 critically endangered leatherback turtles.

"The MSC's narrow definition of sustainability is out of step with the general public perception of what that term means," said Claire Christian, one of the study's co-authors and a policy analyst at the Antarctic and Southern Ocean Coalition. "When the MSC labels a swordfish fishery that catches more sharks than swordfish 'sustainable,' it's time to re-evaluate its standards."

The Alaska pollock fishery, one of the largest fisheries in the US, also received MSC certification even though, the researchers noted, several court rulings had determined that the fishery was not in compliance with national law -- an indication that it didn't meet MSC's "effective management" principle.

The authors believe the MSC needs to enforce the principles it created for certified fisheries. Otherwise, consumers believe they are buying "the best environmental choice" in seafood, when in fact there is a very good chance they are not.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by New York University, via Newswise.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Claire Christian, David Ainley, Megan Bailey, Paul Dayton, John Hocevar, Michael LeVine, Jordan Nikoloyuk, Claire Nouvian, Enriqueta Velarde, Rodolfo Werner, Jennifer Jacquet. A review of formal objections to Marine Stewardship Council fisheries certifications. Biological Conservation, 2013; 161: 10 DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2013.01.002

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/Frc1KAWQrqA/130410154902.htm

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Young carers invisible to society: study - ANU News - ANU

Photo by Pink Sherbert Photography. Taken from Flickr
Photo by Pink Sherbert Photography. Taken from Flickr

Research into the characteristics and experiences of young carers in Australia has revealed a need for stronger policies to support this group, according to a researcher from The Australian National University.

Mr Rob Bray from the ANU College of Business and Economics drew on a detailed five year longitudinal dataset study that recorded the experiences of 20,000 carers who commenced caring aged under 25 years.

The carers studied were young people who were receiving assistance from the Commonwealth Government in recognition of the care they provide to people who were frail, aged or had a severe disability or medical condition.

Mr Bray said that this group of young people was often invisible in our society despite the important caring role they provided.

?These young carers, some aged as young as 15 years, often spend extensive periods providing care,? he said.

?For those aged under 20 years around a third were still caring five years into the study period, and for those aged 21 to 25 a half were.?

The younger groups of young carers were most frequently caring for their parents and grandparents. Older young carers were more frequently caring for a child of their own who had significant disabilities.

Mr Bray said that young carers were highly concentrated in the most disadvantaged locations in Australia.

?In the least disadvantaged locations there were only two young carers receiving support for every 1000 young people, in the most disadvantaged areas the figure was 17,? he said.

Mr Bray noted that while the group of young carers he studied represented those with the most intensive care responsibilities there were many more young people providing varying levels of care and support.

Mr Bray?s research is published as an Occasional Paper by the Department of Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs. A copy can be found here http://www.fahcsia.gov.au/sites/default/files/documents/02_2013/op47_text_print_ready.pdf

Source: http://news.anu.edu.au/2013/04/09/young-carers-invisible-to-society-study/

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Otterbox Commuter case for the HTC One

Otterbox Commuter for HTC One.

Does one of the biggest names in smartphone protection turn a sexy piece of silver into a tank? Let's find out

Ever think about buying a Corvette and then wrapping it in the shell of an Abrams tank? That's often what you think about when you take the latest and greatest Android smartphone and put it inside an Otterbox case. But you're not buying an Otterbox for sex appeal alone, right? You're buying it because it protects your phone. Period.

So we've got the HTC One. And we've got the Otterbox Commuter case, with its rubber sleeve and hard, outer plastic shell. Beauty and the beast? We've got a quick look, after the break.

read more

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/JSDTaQ6Le7w/story01.htm

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Monday, April 8, 2013

Red meat chemical 'damages heart'

A chemical found in red meat helps explain why eating too much steak, mince and bacon is bad for the heart, say US scientists.

A study in the journal Nature Medicine showed that carnitine in red meat was broken down by bacteria in the gut.

This kicked off a chain of events which resulted in higher levels of cholesterol and an increased risk of heart disease.

Dieticians warned there may be a risk to people taking carnitine supplements.

There has been a wealth of studies suggesting that regularly eating red meat may be damaging to health.

In the UK, the government recommends eating no more than 70g of red or processed meat a day - the equivalent of two slices of bacon.

Saturated fat and the way processed meat is preserved are thought to contribute to heart problems. However, this was not thought to be the whole story.

Continue reading the main story

?Start Quote

I would strongly recommend that unless you're a vegetarian or vegan, there is a potential risk from taking L-carnitine, lecithin, choline or betaine supplements in an attempt to ward off cognitive decline or improve fat metabolism ?

End Quote Catherine Collins Dietitian

"The cholesterol and saturated fat content of lean red meat is not that high, there's something else contributing to increases in cardiovascular risk," lead researcher Dr Stanley Hazen told the BBC.

Gut bugs

Experiments on mice and people showed that bacteria in the gut could eat carnitine.

Carnitine was broken down into a gas, which was converted in the liver to a chemical called TMAO.

In the study, TMAO was strongly linked with the build-up of fatty deposits in blood vessels, which can lead to heart disease and death.

Dr Hazen, from the Cleveland Clinic, said TMAO was often ignored: "It may be a waste product but it is significantly influencing cholesterol metabolism and the net effect leads to an accumulation of cholesterol.

"The findings support the idea that less red meat is better.

"I used to have red meat five days out of seven, now I have cut it way back to less than once every two weeks or so."

He said the findings raised the idea of using a probiotic yogurt to change the balance of bacteria in the gut.

Reducing the number of bacteria that feed on carnitine would in theory reduce the health risks of red meat.

Vegetarians naturally have fewer bacteria that are able to break down carnitine than meat-eaters.

Continue reading the main story

Red meat meals versus daily guidelines

Meal or processed meat Cooked weight Within guideline?

Source: NHS/World Cancer Research Fund

1. Cooked breakfast

130g

No

Assumes two standard sausages and two thin rashers of bacon

2. Spaghetti bolognese

140g

No

Standard portion of minced beef

3. 5oz rump steak

102g

No

A 5oz steak is smaller than a typical restaurant serving

4. Doner kebab

130g

No

Typically comprising several slices of processed marinated lamb

5. Big Mac

70g

Yes

Contains two thin burgers

6. Sunday roast

90g

No

Assumes three slices of beef, lamb or pork

Victoria Taylor, Senior Dietitian at the British Heart Foundation, said: "This is certainly an interesting discovery and sheds some light on why red meat might have an impact on heart health.

"While the findings won't necessarily mean a change to existing recommendations, these scientists have served up a good reminder for us to think about alternative sources of protein if we regularly eat a lot of red or processed meats."

Catherine Collins, a dietitian at St George's Hospital, said: "It's a very persuasive argument, but we know that eating a couple of portions of red meat weekly is of no risk, heart wise.

"There's no need to change our dietary recommendations from this - a Mediterranean-style diet with modest meat, fish, dairy and alcohol intake, coupled with more pulses, vegetables fruits, wholegrains and mono-unsaturated fats, remains the nutritional blueprint for a healthy and healthful life.

"But I would strongly recommend that unless you're a vegetarian or vegan, there is a potential risk from taking L-carnitine, lecithin, choline or betaine supplements in an attempt to ward off cognitive decline or improve fat metabolism.

"If the evidence is confirmed these supplements would do more to damage arteries than provide health benefits."

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-22042995#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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Supra Women's Society - Sneaker News


April 7th, 2013 by Aaron Hope |

Supra Womens Society

Supra launched its women?s footwear line last July, a collection that has to date been anchored by Chad Muska?s original Skytop. ?Today we see more variety added to the catalog, as Terry Kennedy?s even hightop-er signature arrives in a new colorway that?s sure to attract attention from dudes in the 1.5-up range. ?This new Supra Society for women utilizes a bold snakeskin upper, adding select metallic gold accents opposite black canvas for a look that?s timely, organic and ever so slightly flashy. ?Take a closer look so you can compare this?scaly?style to the sequined A-Morir Skytops, then grab yours straight from Supra.

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Supra Womens Society

Supra Womens Society

Supra Womens Society

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Filed under: Just Released, Skate, Supra, WMNS // Tags: Supra Society


Source: http://sneakernews.com/2013/04/07/supra-womens-society/

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Sunday, April 7, 2013

Only weeks after amputation, combat vet swoops slopes with Sochi dreams

U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs

Carlos Figueroa monoskis in Aspen Snowmass on Thursday as part of a VA sports clinic for disabled veterans.

By Bill Briggs, NBC News contributor

An Iraq war veteran who yearns to snowboard next March at the Sochi Paralympics recently told a priest he would give his left leg to compete for his country. And then, he did.

Six weeks ago, retired Army Sgt. Carlos Figueroa allowed a surgeon to amputate below his left knee ? 10 years after an IED blast rendered the limb nearly useless. The decision was surprisingly simple, he said, because it sliced away a decade of mounting pain. Yet he also acknowledged: ?I did give it up because I want to get into the Paralympics.?

?When I went in, my doctor asked me: ?What?s your biggest goal?? I told him: ?Be on my board within three months.? He just said, ?Dude, most people aren?t walking within three months,? ? Figueroa recalled.?

Walking will come. What he can do ? already ? is carve down a mountain, the lone place Figueroa, 34, feels at peace: ?Up there, I?m no different from anybody. No PTSD. I?m at my happiest.? On Thursday, Figueroa beamed while manhandling an Aspen, Colo., slope atop a monoski at a sports clinic for disabled veterans. As a familiar, cool breeze brushed his face, he also dreamed?about racing in Russia.


?My love for snowboarding is about loss, the loss of what I had in the military, where you?re used to being on the move, on patrols, on raids. That?s how I treat my races. The moment that gate drops, it?s like the door opening on a raid. I go full blast. I?m able to get something back that I felt was taken away. That rush. I love it.?

U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs

"Up there, I'm no different from anybody. No PTSD. I'm at my happiest," said Carlos Figueroa of the feeling of carving down slopes.

The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have borne a bittersweet byproduct: scores of American Paralympic hopefuls. The Sochi Paralympics, to be held just after the 2014 Winter Games in that city, marks the inaugural Paralympic snowboarding event for disabled athletes. The U.S. men?s Paralympic snowboarding squad will consist of five members.

'Slim chance'
Figueroa (and those close to him) knows he?s the longest of long shots. His own coach, Mike Shea, estimates he took two years to, literally, make the leap from his own leg amputation to landing jumps. The raw nerve endings in an amputated limb must become desensitized to the harsh pounding. When the board hits the snow, the stump pushes into the prosthetic leg, ?sending chills up your spine,? Shea said. ?It doesn?t feel good.?

Then there?s the calendar. If Figueroa is indeed back on his board by autumn, he?ll have a limited number of sanctioned races ? beginning in January 2014 ? to rack up enough points to rank among the top five American men. And the U.S. Paralympic snowboarders, including Shea, compose the world?s deepest talent pool in that sport. The roster likely will be named in February.

?It?s a slim chance, a super, super small window,? Figueroa said, ?but we?re still going to push.?

He needs only a sliver of possibility to kindle his hope ? or better yet, someone telling him he can?t. He certainly doesn?t need two legs.

The Feb. 15 amputation came 10 years after a bomb detonated beneath his armored vehicle, ejecting him through an open roof hatch. A decade spent lugging a useless left limb (with no heel), suffering increasing back and knee pain, instantly convinced him to say ?Let?s do it,? when an orthopedic surgeon in San Diego suggested, ?Let?s cut.? He was done, he said, wasting another day ?in a bubble? due to his injury, calling the operation ?liberating.?

'Go fast and have fun'
Nobody who has heard that account is betting against Figueroa.

?With any military athlete, you can definitely see that sense of pride and determination above and beyond what you see with other athletes. Part of it is just a chance to represent their county again,? said Kevin Jardine, high performance director of Parlaympic alpine skiing and snowboarding for the U.S. Olympic Committee. ?They?re willing to sacrifice a lot.?

Added Shea, who lost his leg in a 2002 wake-boarding accident: ?Anything you tell Carlos, he?ll get it done. He always seems to find a way. He has no fear up there. He has passion. And I?ve learned from him the smiling gets you a long way in life.?

This week at the National Disabled Veterans Winter Sports Clinic in Aspen, organized by the Department of Veterans Affairs, Figueroa has been tempted to grab a board and shred. This is his fourth year attending. As a testament to his disregard for other people?s timelines, he couldn?t even stand on a snowboard four years ago due to his injury, yet he competed in a World Cup event for disabled snowboarders not long after that.

Until his prosthetic leg arrives, he?ll stick to monoskiing, during which he sits in a ?bucket? atop one ski, using his arms to hold smaller, balancing skis.

?The first run, I took it slow. After that, I opened it up,? Figueroa said. ?I just want to go fast and have fun.?

When the instructor noticed his raw speed, he warned Figueroa: ?You do realize if you go down, you may peel off half your face.?

Figueroa simply grinned: ?That?s alright.?

On the 10th anniversary of the war in Iraq, a special group of people in Vail, Colo., are also marking the tenth anniversary of their unique program designed to help war amputees regain independence through skiing. NBC's Kevin Tibbles reports.

Related:?

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653387/s/2a686853/l/0Lusnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A40C0A60C175898670Eonly0Eweeks0Eafter0Eamputation0Ecombat0Evet0Eswoops0Eslopes0Ewith0Esochi0Edreams0Dlite/story01.htm

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Saturday, April 6, 2013

Aspirational Travel Site Peek Hits The East Coast, Adds New York, Miami, And Orlando As Destinations

Peek_logoOnline travel site Peek wants to make it easy for its users to discover and book unique experiences in a variety of destinations. And so, it?s added three new cities that it?s rolled out services in ? New York, Miami, and Orlando. Users can now eat their way through the High Line?s food trucks, book a catamaran off the coast of Miami, or charter a private sword fishing trip near Ft. Lauderdale.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/7wQYDQdvbF0/

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Friday, April 5, 2013

Energy Storage: Why We Need It, Why We Don't

It's almost a clich? that there's a "friendly debate" pitting utilities against renewable energy. But concerns on the utility side of the table are real: intermittency, potential destabilization at the feeder level, non-baseload, and peaks in generation that don't necessarily match demand peaks. Today's power infrastructure involves unpredictability in both supply and demand that is extremely difficult to manage. The choice comes down to two options: over-generate so as to not undersupply, or find ways to better match up supply and demand.

"To balance the grid and keep it in a stable condition, you're going to need energy storage," said Doug Staker, VP of business development for Demand Energy. "Every customer interaction, every presentation, one question I'm getting now: what can you do to help me with storage?" He said there's a "huge lack of information and education" about whether energy storage is ready and in what form (e.g. which technology to use, and whether it's centralized vs. distributed) "People really want to understand how to integrate energy storage into a variety of applications."

As more renewable energy comes into the power mix, "high-response energy storage seems to be the way," added Chris Wheaton, CFO of Energ2. "We think storage is an equivalent leg of the chair" alongside solar and wind energy generation.

"In general energy storage is a good thing ??except that it is not cost-effective for bulk energy storage," counters Mahesh Morjaria, VP of PV technology applications at First Solar.?If the goal is to manage variable energy generation, Morjaria suggests, then the whole grid can act as energy storage, if managed properly. "When part of the resource is not available or generating, other resources are able to provide the load," Morjaria said. "That's the beauty of it, in a more cost-effective manner." Storage too can provide grid flexibility, agreed Morjaria, but it's simply not yet cost-effective enough.

What's It For?

Discussing large-scale energy storage depends on what problems are being solved. "People forget what energy storage is: an enabler," explained Erick Petersen, VP of marketing at Demand Energy. It's not that grid-scale energy storage *can't* be deployed ??it's a question of what do you want do with it, whether it's achieve true grid stability, or flatten loads to reduce peak congestion, or provide ancillary services. "The benefits stack up the highest as you move the edge of the grid," he said. "People get lost in the debate whether it should be grid-scale, which battery is right ??the answer is, 'All of it,' depending on the problem you're trying to solve."

Reliability and Flexibility

Germany is widely accepted as having a much more robust incorporation and management of renewable energy generation. But even there, many believe the nation's energy overhaul means storage is a matter of not if but when. Wheaton thinks "the jury's still out whether Germany will have an energy storage program." Rick Luebbe, CEO of Energy2, points to a Sandia Labs calculation that problems start emerging at a 20 percent renewables mix at which point storage has to enter the discussion.

Germany has been able to accommodate roughly 22 percent of a renewables mix, mostly variable wind and solar ??and they're doing it by leveraging flexibility in their grid "without going out and acquiring a whole bunch of storage," Morjaria points out. Similarly, California's 33 percent renewables target won't rely on building massive amounts of bulk energy storage. In both cases, "they're figuring out other ways to achieve grid flexibility," he said.

In California the difference between trough and peak load on a summer day can be 20 gigawatts, Staker pointed out. "People talk about the [grid] having flexibility and capability to absorb excess generation ??and that's true," he said. "But more system saturation becomes more problematic," once you have to start doing things like firming up wind power with gas peakers that by definition want to run in a steady-state condition and not vary up and down to plug intermittent gaps.

Demand Response

"Demand response has been the cure-all for all kinds of system challenges," Staker said. He recalled an effort from Baltimore Gas & Electric with a demand/response plan to reimburse customers for turning off their air conditioners for a few hours during critical peak events. But the system was one-way and radio-based, and closed-loop ??no way to really know who responded. So an urban secret spread: wrap your AC in tinfoil to block the signals, and cash in the reimbursement. That, he said, illustrates a problem with demand/response: "at the end of the day, customers can just opt out."

If response time is the target, hydro and possibly compressed air make sense, balancing on a 24-hour cycle, says Luebbe. But either of those options are selective based on geography. For shorter-timeframe needs, electrochemical storage comes into play, with multiple technologies to choose from (lead/acid, lithium-ion, flow, molten, ultracapacitors, hybrid configurations). For balancing solar power into a facility or a grid, lead-acid batteries "will probably be just fine," he said, while flow and molten batteries will emerge at point-of-use to balance intermittent power from a local grid (e.g. cell-phone towers).

Still, Morjaria thinks the costs for energy storage still aren't low enough to make it feasible for this time-shifting. Even if there's a significant difference in the cost of every kilowatt-hour that can be fed into and pulled out of the grid, adding costs associated with energy storage eliminates those potential gains. "In California they're talking about PPAs on the order of $85/MWh [$0.08/kWh]. That's what they expect from solar energy," he points out. (Note that a recent deal in New Mexico was for less than six cents/kWh, and ironically for a First Solar [FSLR] project.) Storing energy and pumping it out adds to that cost ??Morjaria ballparks it at $0.20/kWh ??which quickly snuffs out any price arbitrage.

Frequency Regulation

Morjaria did acknowledge one area where energy storage is indeed viable: frequency regulation. Constantly adjusting power input to offset increased/decreased demand and keep frequency constant, responding very fast with charging and deploying energy in very short cycles ??"that's where energy storage has an interesting role to play," Morjaria said. A123 and Beacon Power have explored that in NY ISO and other places, FERC has tweaked regulation to support it, and "it seems to be making some sense," Morjaria noted. But that isn't necessarily a practice that depends on variable generation from renewables.

Frequency response can stretch out some power output at the expense of some quality, but power coming from renewable sources "is simply not high enough for most independent power producers and transmission to handle," said Chris Wheaton, CFO of Energ2.

What It Costs

The big question in energy storage, Wheaton says, boils down simply: what does it cost to build more generation (to oversupply), vs. how to store and manage energy? Today it's more "economically rational" to build more generation, whether it's solar or wind or even coal, he noted. As energy storage technology costs come down ??and as there is better understanding and calculation of externalized costs, such as societal impacts ??"we will see those lines cross, and more utilities will go to energy storage as a more economical means to serve the grid."

Fundamentally, economics determines the decision of over-generation vs. energy storage; right now "either energy storage is not cheaper, or the payback is not enough to shift over," noted Luebbe. As the cost (dollars per kilowatt-hour) come down and energy storage costs intersect with those in over-generation, "then everyone will do it because it's economically the logical thing to do."

Part of that economic determination, Luebbe says, has to define, manage and regulate the externality of emissions. That will play out differently in different countries and economies, he noted ??how will many countries hit the Kyoto Protocol targets without big changes to grid infrastructures, and how is oxygen interpreted as contributing to emissions calculations. Even the presence of some pilot stage energy storage projects "tells me we're pretty close" to that cost intersection, Luebbe said.

Jim Montgomery is Associate Editor for RenewableEnergyWorld.com, covering the solar and wind beats. He previously was news editor for Solid State Technology and Photovoltaics World, and has covered semiconductor manufacturing and related industries, renewable energy and industrial lasers since 2003. His work has earned both internal awards and an Azbee Award from the American Society of Business Press Editors. Jim has 15 years of experience in producing websites and e-Newsletters in various technology.

This article was first published on RenewableEnergyWorld.com, and is reprinted with permission.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/AlternativeEnergyStocks/~3/Ta9Z2RlGWMI/energy_storage_why_we_need_it_why_we_dont_1.html

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Judge strikes restrictions on "morning-after" pill

By Jessica Dye

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A federal judge on Friday ordered the Food and Drug Administration to make the "morning-after" emergency contraception pill available without a prescription to all girls of reproductive age.

The ruling by U.S. District Judge Edward Korman in Brooklyn, New York, comes in a lawsuit brought by reproductive-rights groups that had sought to remove age and other restrictions on emergency contraception.

Currently, only women age 17 or older can obtain emergency contraception pills without a prescription. Point-of-sale restrictions require that all women present identification to a pharmacist before obtaining the drug.

In his ruling, Korman said the FDA's rejection of requests to remove age restrictions to obtain the pill had been "arbitrary, capricious and unreasonable."

Nancy Northup, president of the Center for Reproductive Rights, hailed the ruling. "Women all over the country will no longer face arbitrary delays and barriers just to get emergency contraception," she said.

FDA spokeswoman Erica Jefferson declined to comment on the ruling, saying it was an ongoing legal matter.

(Reporting by Jessica Dye; Editing by Martha Graybow, Gerald E. McCormick and Lisa Von Ahn)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/judge-strikes-restrictions-morning-pill-123759152.html

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Wednesday, April 3, 2013

A longer life for lithium-sulfur batteries

Apr. 2, 2013 ? Electric cars have still got it tough in the German marketplace. They are too expensive and their range is too short. This is an opportune time for a breakthrough in efficient and low-cost lithium-sulfur batteries.

There are currently over 40 million cars on Germany's roads. Only a fraction of them are powered by electric energy -- around 6,400 vehicles according to the Federal Ministry of Transport, Building and Urban Development. The comparatively short range of electric cars doesn't help their popularity, with drivers often having to start the search for a charging station after a mere 100 kilometers, not to mention the high price of the batteries, which cost several thousand euros. Remedying this situation has researchers looking at new options in developing more efficient technologies. An extremely promising avenue of research is the lithium-sulfur battery, which is significantly more powerful and less expensive than the better-known lithium-ion battery. Although their short lifespan has made them unsuitable for use in cars before now, this may be about to change in the foreseeable future.

Scientists at the Fraunhofer Institute for Material and Beam Technology IWS in Dresden have developed a new design that increases the charge cycles of lithium-sulfur batteries by a factor of seven. "During previous tests, the batteries scarcely crossed the 200-cycle mark. By means of a special combination of anode and cathode material, we have now managed to extend the lifespan of lithium-sulfur button cells to 1,400 cycles," says Dr. Holger Althues, head of the Chemical Surface Technology group at IWS, who is delighted with his team's breakthrough. The anode of the team's prototype is not made from the usual metallic lithium, but from a silicon-carbon compound instead. This compound is significantly more stable, as it changes less during each charging process than metallic lithium. The more the structure of the anode changes, the more it interacts with the liquid electrolyte, which is situated between the anode and the cathode and carries the lithium-ions. This process causes the liquid to break down into gas and solids and the battery to dry out. "In extreme cases, the anode "grows" to reach the cathode, creating a short circuit and causing the battery to stop working altogether," explains Althues.

The interplay between anode and cathode is the critical factor determining the performance and lifespan of a battery. In the lithium-sulfur model, the cathode is composed of elemental sulfur. The advantage here is that unlike cobalt -- the main cathode material used in lithium-ion batteries -- sulfur is available in almost unlimited quantities and is therefore cheaper. The problem remains, however, that sulfur also interacts with the liquid electrolyte, which impairs the performance of batteries and, in the worst case, causes them to lose capacity entirely. The IWS researchers are using porous carbons to slow down this process. "We have precisely altered the pores to allow the sulfur to lodge there, slowing down the rate at which it combines with the electrolyte," clarifies Althues. He and his colleagues have developed a method of manufacturing these special cathodes.

The experts at IWS measure the capacity of a battery in watt-hours per kilogram (Wh/kg). Over the long term, they expect lithium-sulfur batteries to reach an energy density of up to 600 Wh/kg. For comparison: the maximum energy density of the lithium-ion batteries currently in use is a mere 250 Wh/kg. "In the medium term, figures around the 500 Wh/kg mark are more realistic. In practical terms, this means you can drive twice as far with the same battery weight," says Althues. This of course implies that significantly lighter battery models are possible -- an interesting prospect not only for automakers but for smartphone manufacturers too. After all, the overall weight of smartphones would be greatly reduced if they had lighter batteries. "Lithium-sulfur technology might even make electric flying a realistic possibility. Although such progress is still a long way off," adds Althues.

The researchers are currently working on further optimizing the material and using it in larger battery models. They are also turning their attention to suitable manufacturing methods. And with good reason, as this is the only way the technology will reach a mass market, leading to a significant increase in the number of electric cars on Germany's roads.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/kg-pLe_c9xY/130402091245.htm

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The First and Best Place to Find Investment Property Loans | Epic ...

Hot Tip! Your creativity can be a bigger financial resource than actual money; to the point where you don?t even need money or conventional investment property loans. Think about it, no money (at least not your own) and no credit, just words and imagination ? it?s like one red paperclip, you know the kid who traded from a paperclip to a house in a year? Except not nearly as difficult.

If he can do that, you can do this.

Hang on to your eyeballs, because my primary method of funding deals might shock you.

Here it is.

FIRST, I look to the seller to provide financing for my deal as opposed to getting a conventional investment property loan. Typically, this is referred to seller financing or seller carry-back.

Listen up before you fry your brain.

There are endless ways to creatively finance a deal (See 9 different ways here), but before you craft your numerical masterpiece, you?ve got to first know WHAT the seller needs and WHEN they need it.

You?ll also need to know:

How much money they owe on the property, and if the payments are current.

After you?re firm on those items, you can get to work massaging terms to see how they can help you help them.

The three scenarios you?re likely to encounter are:

seller financing1. FREE & CLEAR PROPERTIES

If they own it free and clear, and they?re open to seller financing, then that?s an easy deal.

But wait! Why would someone want to take payments instead of cash out?

Well, maybe they don?t want to be landlords, but they?d like the cash flow. Maybe they?re old and have no use for a chunk of money but would rather live out their days in extra comfort. Maybe they don?t want to pay the taxes on the whole amount. Who knows?!

The reason doesn?t matter, either. I can tell you there are more reasons than you can conceive of, so stop trying to figure out why they wouldn?t finance the sale, and just ask.

?

2. EXISTING LOANS

The property won?t always be owned free and clear. If there?s a loan in place, my first choice is to leave it there and transact what?s known as a ?subject to? deal. Subject to means I take ownership subject to the existing loan. At the end of the transaction, I?m on title but the loan remains in the seller?s name.

Essentially I?ve become their loan-sitter. I make the payments on time and in full, and I?m free to flip the property and pocket the profit or rent it out and hold on to it for cash flow.

Remember! Don?t try to figure out why they won?t, but rather focus on why they will.

3. THE LOAN AND THEN SOME

Sometimes the seller wants cash above and beyond the existing loan. In those cases I look to the seller AGAIN and present them with the option to carry back an additional investment property loan. (Snazzy eh?)

If they agree, you can either keep the loans separate, i.e.: pay the bank and pay the seller. Or, my preference, wrap them into one using a third party servicing company who then distributes the payments to each lender accordingly. It?s tidy, it?s simple, it?s safer, and it?s my first choice.

Listen, the more I creatively fashion deals involving the sellers, the less money I use. But, understand it?s a SKILL. It takes patience and PRACTICE to develop. You might self-combust in the beginning (not really), but stick it out because it?s WORTH it.

Not everyone has the ability to make money appear from the words they speak, but those who do can be found sipping fruity cocktails on remote beaches whenever they feel like it.

The majority of my Epic Pro Academy focuses on negotiating and creative deal structuring. If you?re serious about honing your skills, click here to check it out.

Source: http://epicprofessionals.com/the-first-and-best-place-to-find-investment-property-loans/

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