Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Nicole Scherzinger, Steve Jones Leaving 'X Factor'

Former Pussycat Doll reportedly wants to focus on her music career.
By Kara Warner


Steve Jones and Nicole Scherzinger on "X Factor"
Photo: FOX

"The X Factor" has said goodbye to two of its familiar faces: mentor Nicole Scherzinger and host Steve Jones.

E! News reported that the former Pussycat Doll and "Dancing With the Stars" champ has decided not to return to the show in order to focus on her music career. "She's spoken to Simon [Cowell], and he's given her his blessing," a source told E! Scherzinger often became emotional during elimination episodes, shedding tears and expressing sympathy for ousted contestants.

As for inaugural "X Factor" host Jones, the cheeky Welshman broke the news himself via Twitter on Monday. "I won't be hosting next seasons X Factor which is a shame but I cant complain as I've had a great time," Jones tweeted to his more than 94,000 followers. "Good luck to everyone on the show."

Jones had decidedly big shoes to fill stepping into the gig, with comparisons instantly made to "American Idol" host/ media mogul Ryan Seacrest. Throughout the season, the reviews of Jones' hosting skills were decidedly mixed.

Fox Entertainment president Kevin Reilly's comments during the TCA panels earlier this month now seem as though a decision was made awhile ago. "I think everyone has come to realize the value of a Ryan Seacrest," he told reporters during the network's press tour panel. "If you dialed the clock back 11 years, I'm not sure everybody in this room would have given him all the credit at that time. Those are very hard jobs to do. So whether Steve's the guy or not, it comes under the heading of 'growth' in general. There will be some tweaks to the show, but I'll tell you, I'm very happy to have it, and it's gonna be part of us for a long time."

The 34-year-old Jones seemed to take the criticism in stride and didn't appear to have high hopes for a return for the second season. "There's been no contract conversations and there won't be until the New Year," Jones told Metro UK in December. "If I'm back, great. If not, I'll do something else. Simple as that."

One thing Jones does have hope for is a possible romantic connection with Scherzinger, who was originally supposed to be his co-host before she replaced Cheryl Cole on the judging panel.

"If I ever leave 'X Factor,' Scherzinger's phone will be smoking hot from me ringing it constantly," Jones joked to Metro. "If we are not colleagues, then she's fair game."

Will you miss Steve Jones on "The X Factor"? Let us know in the comments below!

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1678186/nicole-scherzinger-steve-jones-leaving-x-factor.jhtml

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Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Plink Pays You Facebook Credits To Eat Out

PlinkBuy a hamburger and get rewarded with Facebook Credits to spend on a virtual cow. That's the mouth-watering promise of startup Plink, which is launching a virtual currency loyalty rewards system for restaurants. You register a credit card with Plink, and then when you make purchases at Taco Bell, 7-Eleven, Dunkin Donuts, or one of Plink's other clients you'll get Facebook Credits automatically deposited into your account.?As demand for Facebook Credits to spend on social games and media increases, expect more virtual currency incentive companies like Plink to pop up.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/gEn7-YV62aA/

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Actor James Farentino dies of heart failure at 73 (omg!)

FILE - This Nov. 11, 1980 file photo shows James Farentino and Faye Dunaway, who star in "Evita Pero," in Los Angeles. A family spokesman says actor Farentino, who appeared in dozens of movies and television shows, has died in a Los Angeles hospital. He was 73. (AP Photo/Richard Drew, File)

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Actor James Farentino, who appeared in dozens of movies and television shows, died Tuesday in a Los Angeles hospital, according to a family spokesman. He was 73.

Farentino died of heart failure at Cedars-Sinai Hospital after a long illness, said the spokesman, Bob Palmer.

Farentino starred alongside Kirk Douglas and Martin Sheen in the 1980 science fiction film "The Final Countdown." The movie featured a modern aircraft carrier that travels back in time to Pearl Harbor hours before the Japanese attack.

Farentino also starred opposite Patty Duke in 1969's "Me, Natalie."

In 1967, he won a "Most Promising Newcomer" Golden Globe for his performance in the comedy "The Pad and How to Use It."

He also had recurring roles on "Dynasty," ''Melrose Place," ''The Bold Ones: The Lawyers" and "ER," playing the estranged father to George Clooney's character.

In 1978, he was nominated for an Emmy for his portrayal of Saint Peter in the television mini-series "Jesus of Nazareth."

A four-time divorcee, Farentino's tumultuous personal life made headlines, too.

In March 1994, he pleaded no contest to stalking his ex-girlfriend Tina Sinatra, daughter of Frank Sinatra.

In 2010, the actor was arrested at his Hollywood home on suspicion of battery when he tried to physically remove a man from his home.

Born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1938, Farentino is survived by two sons, David and Saverio.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news_actor_james_farentino_dies_heart_failure73_015232432/44293672/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/actor-james-farentino-dies-heart-failure-73-015232432.html

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Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Oscar nominations announced for supporting actress (AP)

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. ? The 84th annual Academy Award nominations for supporting actress in a motion picture have been announced in Beverly Hills, Calif., by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

The nominees announced Tuesday morning are: Octavia Spencer, "The Help"; Berenice Bejo, "The Artist"; Jessica Chastain, "The Help"; Janet McTeer ("Albert Nobbs"); and Melissa McCarthy, "Bridesmaids."

The Oscars will be presented Feb. 26 at the Kodak Theatre in Los Angeles, hosted by Billy Crystal and broadcast live on ABC.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/movies/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120124/ap_en_mo/us_oscar_nominations_supporting_actress

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In bin Laden town, father mourns another militant (AP)

ABBOTTABAD, Pakistan ? On Jan. 14 at 8:12 p.m., Khushal Khan's wife got a call on her cell phone.

"Your son has been martyred," the voice said at the other end of the line. The man then hung up.

The end for Khan's youngest son, Aslam Awan, came when a drone piloted remotely from the United States fired a missile at a house along Pakistan's border with Afghanistan. Awan was among four people killed, U.S. officials said this week, describing Awan as an "external operations planner" for al-Qaida. British authorities say he was a member of a militant cell in northern England who had fought in Afghanistan.

The Jan. 10 strike in the militant stronghold of North Waziristan that killed Awan was a victory for the CIA-led drone program at time when relations between Washington and Islamabad are very strained, in part by the missile strikes. It was one of the first drone attacks after a hiatus of some six weeks following a friendly fire incident in which U.S. forces killed 24 Pakistani border troops, nearly leading to a severing of ties with Islamabad.

The drone attacks generate anti-American sentiment inside Pakistan, but have been credited with significantly weakening al-Qaida in one of its global hubs.

For his family, the call came as a final curt word about the fate of a son they had heard little from in over a year.

Awan grew up in the northwestern Pakistani town of Abbottabad, a few kilometers away from the house where Osama bin Laden was slain. His father worked in a bank in Britain in the 70s and then in Abbottabad until he retired a few years ago. His four other sons remain in Britain, where they have prospered ? one is a surgeon, another is a doctor, the third an engineer and the fourth is a banker.

It seems doubtful Awan had any contact with bin Laden in the town. But Awan's background here reinforces a striking association between this well-ordered, wealthy Pakistani army town and al-Qaida militants, which began before bin Laden was killed here in May last year when a team of American commandos flew in from Afghanistan.

Now 75 and recovering from a heart operation, Khushal Khan answered questions Saturday from an Associated Press reporter in the garden of his house, making the most of some winter sun. He defended his son's memory against charges of militancy.

"I don't believe this is true, my son was not indulging in these things," he said. "It can't be correct."

Khan said Awan followed his brothers' footsteps and went to Britain in 2002 on a student visa.

Awan lived in Manchester for four years, during which time he joined a militant cell that aimed to bring Muslims to Pakistan for militant training, according to prosecutors at the time and a British media report. He told his father he was studying at Manchester University, but it's unclear whether he ever graduated.

The cell was headed by a British al-Qaida commander called Rangzieb Ahmed who was captured in Pakistan in 2006 and sent for trial in Britain, where he was sentenced to life in prison for directing terrorism, according to Britain's Daily Telegraph.

A letter he wrote a to a longtime friend and fellow Pakistani, Abdul Rahman, rhapsodized over the "fragrance of blood" from the battlefield of jihad and his commitment to militancy, according to prosecutors in the trial of Rahman, who was sentenced to six years in jail in 2007 for spreading terrorist propaganda in Manchester. It apparently referred to a stint fighting jihad in Afghanistan, but when that occurred is not known.

The judge said then Awan was believed to have left England for Afghanistan.

"Awan was very well connected to known extremists in the UK. It highlights that the threat is still there," said Valentina Soria, a terrorism researcher at the London-based Royal United Services Institute. "This group were not just wannabes, they were active and with links to al-Qaida central."

There are thought to be about 900,000 Pakistani Muslims in England ? many of them living in London and in northern cities. British authorities have said nearly all the plots and attacks on British soil have some connection to Pakistan.

Awan returned to Abbottabad in 2007, around the time that bin Laden was settling in to his large house, though that doesn't mean Awan was in touch with him or any of his couriers. U.S. officials have previously said the al-Qaida leader was cut off from the rest of his network and wasn't meeting other militants for security reasons.

Awan began to associate with Sipah-e-Sahaba, an extremist group that has a political wing as well links to al-Qaida, according to a police officer in the town who knows the family. The officer didn't give his name because he didn't want to be seen as adding to Khan's pain.

Khan said he last saw his son or heard his voice in 2010, when Awan asked for funds to build a house and they fought over the fact he wasn't working.

"That was the point when I had to forcefully ask him to go out to earn some money," he said. "But my words hurt him, and he left home with only the clothes he was wearing."

Khan said he initially feared his son had been kidnapped when he didn't return or contact him. But after a few months, Awan called his wife and told her he was in Miran Shah, the largest town in North Waziristan. He said he was running a general store and dealing in second-hand clothes.

Local intelligence officials said Awan was known by the nom de guerre Abdullah Khurasani, and was highly prized in al-Qaida circles because of his education, computer skills and foreign contacts.

Al-Qaida, Taliban and other militants from around the world congregate for training and networking in North Waziristan, and Miran Shah is a key logistical base. The town is too dangerous for reporters to visit, but locals who have traveled there say hundreds of Pakistan and foreign militants live there openly, unmolested other than by the U.S. missile attacks on its outskirts. The Pakistani army says it doesn't have enough resources to launch an operation in the region.

The missile strike program began in earnest in 2009 and has been stepped up by the Obama administration.

Abbottabad is home to the Pakistan army's top military academy and hundreds of officers and soldiers live in what is one of the country's more secure towns. The fact that bin Laden hid there for so long in plain sight triggered intense international suspicions that the military was sheltering him.

Al-Qaida's No. 3, Abu Faraj al-Libi, lived in Abbottabad before his arrest in 2005 elsewhere in northwest Pakistan, American and Pakistani officials have said. Five months prior to the bin Laden raid, Indonesian al-Qaida operative Umar Patek was arrested in the town following the arrest of an al-Qaida courier who worked at the post office.

U.S. officials have said Patek's arrest in Abbottabad was a coincidence.

_____

Brummitt reported from Islamabad. Associated Press reporters Riaz Khan in Peshawar, Ishtiaq Mehsud in Dera Ismail Khan, Zarar Khan in Islamabad and Raphael Satter in London contributed to this story.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/personaltech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120122/ap_on_re_as/as_pakistan_slain_militant

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Monday, January 23, 2012

Mitt Romney Joins the Race-Baiters (Little green footballs)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/190210047?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Ill. man jokes after nail removed from his brain (AP)

OAK LAWN, Ill. ? Dante Autullo thought his doctors were joking. The suburban Chicago man was sure he'd merely cut himself with a nail gun while building a shed. But they assured him the X-ray was real: A nail was lodged in the middle of his brain.

Autullo was recovering Friday after undergoing surgery at Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, where doctors removed the 3 1/4-inch nail. It had come within millimeters of the part of the brain that controls motor function.

"When they brought in the picture, I said to the doctor `Is this a joke? Did you get that out of the doctors joke file?'" the 32-year-old recalled. "The doctor said `No man, that's in your head.'"

As he was rushed by ambulance to another hospital for surgery, he posted a picture of the X-ray on Facebook.

Autullo, who live in Orland Park, said he was building a shed Tuesday and using the nail gun above his head when he fired it. With nothing to indicate that a nail hadn't simply whizzed by his head, his long-time companion, Gail Glaenzer, cleaned the wound with peroxide.

"It really felt like I got punched on the side of the head," he said, adding that he continued working. "I thought it went past my ear."

While there are pain-sensitive nerves on a person's skull, there aren't any within the brain itself. That's why he would have felt the nail strike the skull, but he wouldn't have felt it penetrate the brain.

Neither he nor Glaenzer thought much about it, and Autullo went on with his day, even plowing a bit of snow. But the next day when he awoke from a nap, feeling nauseated, Glaenzer sensed something was wrong and suggested they go to the hospital.

At first Autullo refused, but he relented after the two picked up their son at school Wednesday evening.

An X-ray was taken a couple hours later. And there, seeming to float in the middle of his head, was a nail.

Doctors told Autullo and Glaenzer that the nail came within millimeters from the part of the brain that controls motor function, and he was rushed by ambulance to the other hospital for more specialized care.

"He feels good. He moved all his limbs, he's talking normal, he remembers everything," Glaenzer said earlier Friday. "It's amazing, a miracle."

Neurosurgeon Leslie Schaffer acknowledged that Autullo's case was unusual, but not extremely rare. Schaffer said having a nail penetrate the skull is not like being shot in the head, noting that a bullet would break into multiple pieces.

"This (the nail) is thinner, with a small trajectory, and pointed at the end," he said. "The bone doesn't fracture much because the nail has a small tip."

Schaffer said the man's skull stopped the nail from going farther into his brain. He said he removed the nail by putting two holes in Autullo's skull, on either side of the nail, then pulled the nail out along with a piece of the skull.

The surgery took two hours, and the part of the skull that was removed for surgery was replaced with a titanium mesh, Hospital spokesman Mike Maggio said.

Glaenzer said Autullo hasn't really talked about how scared he was about what might have happened, but he did express a recognition about coming close to death.

"He was joking with me (after surgery), `We need to get the Discovery Channel up here to tape this,'" she recalled him saying. "`I'm one of those medical miracles.'"

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120121/ap_on_fe_st/us_odd_nail_in_the_brain

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Sunday, January 22, 2012

Catching a comet death on camera

ScienceDaily (Jan. 20, 2012) ? On July 6, 2011, a comet was caught doing something never seen before: die a scorching death as it flew too close to the sun. That the comet met its fate this way was no surprise -- but the chance to watch it first-hand amazed even the most seasoned comet watchers.

"Comets are usually too dim to be seen in the glare of the sun's light," says Dean Pesnell at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., who is the project scientist for NASA's Solar Dynamic Observatory (SDO), which snapped images of the comet. "We've been telling people we'd never see one in SDO data."

But an ultra bright comet, from a group known as the Kreutz comets, overturned all preconceived notions. The comet can clearly be viewed moving in over the right side of the sun, disappearing 20 minutes later as it evaporates in the searing heat. The movie is more than just a novelty. As detailed in a paper in Science magazine appearing January 20, 2012, watching the comet's death provides a new way to estimate the comet's size and mass. The comet turns out to be somewhere between 150 to 300 feet long and have about as much mass as an aircraft carrier.

"Of course, it's doing something very different than what aircraft carriers do," says Karel Schrijver, a solar scientist at Lockheed Martin in Palo Alto, Calif., who is the first author on the Science paper and is the principal investigator of the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly instrument on SDO, which recorded the movie. "It was moving along at almost 400 miles per second through the intense heat of the sun -- and was literally being evaporated away."

Typically, comet-watchers see the Kreutz-group comets only through images taken by coronagraphs, a specialized telescope that views the Sun's fainter out atmosphere, or corona, by blocking the direct blinding sunlight with a solid occulting disk. On average a new member of the Kreutz family is discovered every three days, with some of the larger members being observed for some 48 hours or more before disappearing behind the occulting disk, never to be seen again. Such "sun-grazer" comets obviously destruct when they get close to the sun, but the event had never been witnessed.

The journey to categorizing this comet began on July 6, 2011 after Schrijver spotted a bright comet in a coronagraph produced by the SOlar Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO). He looked for it in the SDO images and much to his surprise he found it. Soon a movie of the comet circulated to comet and solar scientists, eventually making a huge splash on the Internet as well.

Karl Battams, a scientist with the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, DC, who has extensively observed comets with SOHO and is also an author on the paper, was skeptical when he first received the movie. "But as soon as I watched it, there was zero doubt," he says. "I am so used to seeing comets simply disappearing in the SOHO images. It was breathtaking to see one truly evaporating in the corona like that."

After the excitement, the scientists got down to work. Humans have been watching and recording comets for thousands of years, but finding their dimensions has typically required a direct visit from a probe flying nearby. This movie offered the first chance to measure such things from afar. The very fact that the comet evaporated in a certain amount of time over a certain amount of space means one can work backward to determine how big it must have been before hitting the sun's atmosphere.

The Science paper describes the comet and its last moments as follows: It was traveling some 400 miles per second and made it to within 62,000 miles of the sun's surface before evaporating. Before its final death throes, in the last 20 minutes of its existence when it was visible to SDO, the comet was some 100 million pounds, had broken up into a dozen or so large chunks with sizes between 30 to 150 feet, embedded in a "coma" -- that is the fuzzy cloud surrounding the comet -- of approximately 800 miles across, and followed by a glowing tail of about 10,000 miles in length.

It is actually the coma and tail of the comet being seen in the video, not the comet's core. And close examination shows that the light in the tail pulses, getting dimmer and brighter over time. The team speculates that the pulsing variations are caused by successive breakups of each of the individual chunks that made up the comet material as it fell apart in the Sun's intense heat.

"I think this is one of the most interesting things we can see here," says Lockheed's Schrijver. "The comet's tail gets brighter by as much as four times every minute or two. The comet seems first to put a lot of material into that tail, then less, and then the pattern repeats." Figuring out the exact details of why this happens is but one of the mysteries remaining about this comet movie. High on the list is to answer the not-so-simple question of why we can see the comet at all. Certainly, there are a few basic characteristics of this situation that help. For one, this comet was big enough to survive long enough to be seen, and its orbit took it right across the face of the Sun. It was also, says Battams, probably one of the top 15 brightest comets seen by SOHO, which has observed over 2,100 sun-grazing comets to date. The SDO cameras, in of themselves, also contributed a great deal: despite being far away and relatively small compared to the sun, the comet showed up clearly on SDO's high definition imager. This imager, called the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) takes a picture every 12 seconds so the movement of the comet across the face of the sun could be continuously watched. Most other similar instruments capture images every few minutes, which makes it hard to track the movement of an object that's only visible for 20 minutes.

But ultimately, the fact that one can see this comet against the background of the sun means there is some physical process not yet understood. "Normally," says Goddard's Pesnell, "a comet passing in front of the sun absorbs the light from the sun. We would have expected a black spot against the sun, not a bright one. And there's not enough stuff in the corona to make it glow, the way a meteor does when it goes into Earth's atmosphere. So one of the really big questions is why do we see it at all?"

Figuring out this question should offer information not only about material in the comet, but also about the sun's atmosphere -- and so this opens up the door to a new niche of study. Assuming, of course, that one can spot some more comets. So far SDO has only seen the one passing in front of the sun, though SDO did spot Comet Lovejoy traveling through the corona, as it went behind the sun and reappeared.

Stay tuned, as new sun-grazing comets appear every few days . . .

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. C. J. Schrijver, J. C. Brown, K. Battams, P. Saint-Hilaire, W. Liu, H. Hudson, W. D. Pesnell. Destruction of Sun-Grazing Comet C/2011 N3 (SOHO) Within the Low Solar Corona. Science, 2012; 335 (6066): 324 DOI: 10.1126/science.1211688

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://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/01/120120010600.htm

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Saturday, January 21, 2012

Want an ?Assassin?s Creed? arm blade? Here?s how

Ubisoft

Only serious "Assassin's Creed" cosplayers need apply.

By Matthew Hawkins

Die-hard fans love replicating various aspects from their favorite games in the real world. Usually it's attire, along with the accessories. And 99.9 percent of the time, such things are just for show and not at all functional. Well, get ready for the 0.01 percent.

If you're crazy for 'Assassin's Creed' and wish you had either Alta?r or Ezio's weapon of choice, now you can thanks to detailed instructions courtesy of The Midnight Angel (real name: Eric Rolon), as highlighted by Albotas. And to see it in action, please refer to the following video:

Looks insanely cool and insanely dangerous. Also, insanely illegal. Given how much trouble "Assassin's Creed" cosplayers have with security at conventions with their very much fake arm blades to begin with, sporting the real thing will surely get one expelled from any convention center and sent straight to jail.

Same applies to pretty much anywhere else, so think before you strap such a creation onto your arm.

Related stories:

Be sure to check out In-Game on Facebook, and follow Matthew Hawkins on Twitter, who is thinking of making one himself, and he doesn't even like the game.

"Assassin's Creed: Revelations" explores a mind collapsing under the weight of genetic memories and a plot to control the future by exploring our past. In-Game's Todd Kenreck reports.

?

Source: http://ingame.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/20/10200742-want-an-arm-blade-just-like-in-assassins-creed-heres-how

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EBay results top estimates but outlook is cautious (Reuters)

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) ? EBay Inc reported a higher-than-expected quarterly profit on solid growth in its online marketplaces and an increase in transactions processed through its PayPal electronic payments business.

The e-commerce company's shares were up nearly 2 percent in after-hours trading, even though eBay gave a cautious outlook for first-quarter profit and revenue.

The company reported fourth-quarter net income of $2 billion, or $1.51 a share, compared with $559 million, or 42 cents a share, a year earlier. Revenue rose 35 percent to $3.38 billion.

EBay recognized a big gain from the sale of its remaining stake in Skype during the fourth quarter. Excluding that and other items such as stock-based compensation expenses, profit was $788.6 million, or 60 cents a share, the company said.

Analysts, on average, expected eBay to earn 57 cents a share on revenue of $3.32 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

EBay is riding an e-commerce growth wave as shoppers buy more items online and through smart phones and tablet computers.

The company benefits from this trend because its online marketplaces charge fees on transactions and other activity. The company's PayPal unit takes a small cut of a rising volume of electronic payments processed on its network.

CAUTIOUS OUTLOOK

EBay forecast first-quarter profit of 50 cents or 51 cents a share and revenue of $3.05 billion to $3.15 billion. Profit for 2012 will be $2.25 to $2.30 a share and revenue will be $13.7 billion to $14 billion, the company added.

Analysts were expecting first-quarter earnings of 54 cents a share and revenue of $3.16 billion. For the full year 2012, analysts estimated earnings of $2.31 per share on revenue of $13.66 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

EBay generates about 30 percent to 40 percent of its revenue in Europe, where many economies have been dented by the debt crisis.

The recent decline of the euro against the U.S. dollar reduces the value of sales in euro zone countries when they are converted to dollars by California-based eBay. Currency volatility also restrains cross-border transactions, a profitable source of growth for PayPal.

"They're exemplifying the bearish outlook for the currency by telling people how much the weak euro will affect their earnings in the next quarter. They want to under-promise and over-deliver," said Bill Smead of Smead Capital Management, which owns eBay shares.

"But earnings are going to grow 15 to 20 percent a year for years and all these little wiggles in the short run are just noise," he said.

EBay described the performance of its business in Europe as "stable," while its performance in Asia improved.

(Reporting By Alistair Barr; Editing by Andre Grenon, Bernard Orr and Steve Orlofsky)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/earnings/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120118/bs_nm/us_ebay

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Friday, January 20, 2012

Why Is San Francisco So Liberal?

It began with sailors and booze. As a former mining boomtown and a bustling port, San Francisco has always been slightly more permissive than the average American metropolis. Sailors loved to visit the city?s bars and bawdy houses in the late 1800s and early 1900s. But San Francisco?s national reputation for liberalism and libertinism really got going after Prohibition ended in 1933. California was one of the few states that did not establish an alcoholic beverage control board, which meant there was little regulation of bars and nightclubs. San Francisco, with its large population of Irish and German Catholics, tended to be?more lax about drinking than?cities farther south, where Protestants were more common?and there was?a strong, permanent military presence. The local government was also weak by comparison and largely controlled by labor unions with little interest in suppressing the burgeoning bar scene. The ?Bohemian clubs? around the city?s North Beach neighborhood became gathering places for marginalized groups?communists, anarchists, homosexuals, and African-Americans, among others?and word spread that the city was safe for freethinkers and other black sheep.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=082036d8601f92dde721f646b105c5f2

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Thursday, January 19, 2012

Facebook launches Timeline Apps platform, socialites rejoice

Facebook, along with its launch partners, has finally let loose its Timeline Apps platform, setting Open Graph apps free to roam the web. Announced at the company's f8 conference in September, Timeline Apps allow third-parties to build Facebook applications that facilitate information sharing amongst users and their social network. While FB initially focused on the music and movie genre, Zuckerberg & Co. seem to have keyed-in on a variety of markets for today's launch, from travel (TripAdvisor) to cuisine (Foodspotting), and even ticketing companies like ScoreBig, Eventbrite, StubHub, TicketFly and Ticketmaster. So now everyone will know immediately when you scored those backstage passes to Ricky Martin because you're living la vida loca with Timeline. Get the full story from Facebook at the source and PR from ScoreBig awaits after the break.

Continue reading Facebook launches Timeline Apps platform, socialites rejoice

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Time for gay players to come out

Associated Press Sports

updated 10:57 a.m. ET Jan. 17, 2012

FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) -The departing German football federation president says it's time for gay players to come out.

Theo Zwanziger, who will leave the post in March, called on gay players "to have the courage to declare themselves," although he conceded it was surely difficult to acknowledge one's homosexuality within a team.

Zwanziger pointed to the example of Berlin Mayor Klaus Wowereit, who came out years ago.

Speaking at a discussion on the subject organized by the federation, Zwanziger said on Tuesday that society was more understanding than a few years ago for any gays in football willing to out themselves.

Germany captain Philipp Lahm, however, disagrees.

"Football is like being the gladiators in the old times," Lahm said in an interview published Monday. "The politicians can come out these days, for sure, but they don't have to play in front of 60,000 people every week.

"I don't think that the society is that far ahead that it can accept homosexual players as something normal as in other areas."

Zwanziger said Lahm is a tolerant person "and if that's how he sees the situation, I am not going to be the one to criticize him."

No player in Germany's professional leagues has so far acknowledged his homosexuality.

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Cup relief

??Queens Park Rangers and Bolton both avoid upsets in their FA Cup replay games on Tuesday.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/46026118/ns/sports-soccer/

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Wednesday, January 18, 2012

The greatest Twitter account of all time.

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://jakefogelnest.com/post/16054024183

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Make Pill Bottles Easier to Open with Sugru [Sugru]

Make Pill Bottles Easier to Open with SugruIf you or a family member has arthritis opening standard child-safety pill bottles can be a real pain. Use a bit of Sugru to give the lid a textured grip that makes it easier to open.

This idea comes from Instructables user Surfer24. All you need for this hack is to open a packet of Sugru and mold it into a long "snake" shape. Wrap the Sugru around the the bottle lid tightly and let it cure for 24 hours before use.

If the same prescription is used every month remember to keep the lid to transfer to the new pill bottle. If you don't already have Sugru on hand you can order it from the official website for as little as 6 packets for $12.

Sugru Pill Bottle Hack | Instructables

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/zIKSKjTerak/make-pill-bottles-easier-to-open-with-sugru

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Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Revealing plan: Official tries to ban pajamas in public

By msnbc.com staff

Privates ought to remain private, says a Louisiana lawmaker who wants to ban people from wearing pajama pants in public.

Caddo Parish District 3 Commissioner Michael Williams is pushing for an ordinance that would prohibit residents from appearing in public places in pajama pants, defined as ?a garment sold in the sleepwear section of department stores.?

Williams told the Shreveport Timeshe was moved to push for an ordinance after an incident at a local Walmart in which he and others were offended by a customer clad in pajamas.

"I saw a group of young men wearing pajama pants and house shoes," he said, according to the Times. "At the part where there should have been underwear," his private parts were showing through the fabric.

He told Williams the Times that ?pajamas are designed to be worn in the bedroom at night."

?If you can't (wear pajamas) at the boardwalk or courthouse, why are you going to do it in a restaurant or in public? Today it's pajamas," Williams said. "Tomorrow it's underwear. Where does it stop?"

Williams? proposal may have a hard time passing legal muster.

Marjorie R. Esman, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Louisiana, last week sent Williams a letter saying clothing is a form of expression protected by the Constitution, The Advertiser reported.

?To ban the wearing of pajamas, like any other form of attire,? Esman wrote, ?would violate a liberty interest guaranteed under the 14th amendment of the U.S. Constitution. ? The government must demonstrate a rational basis for its ban ? and Caddo Parish?s has no legitimate rational basis for regulating the attire of its residents."

Caddo Parish Sheriff Steve Prator said such a ban would be "very difficult to enforce the way it's described.?

Shreveport, which is in Caddo Parish, already has a ban on saggy pants.

Would you wear PJs in public?

More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

Source: http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/17/10174577-revealing-proposal-la-official-wants-to-ban-pajamas-in-public

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Candidates disagree over indefinite detention (AP)

MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. ? The Republican candidates have sharp disagreements over a new policy to detain American citizens suspected of terrorism.

President Barack Obama signed the National Defense Authorization Act that would allow indefinite detention of such terror suspects. Many civil liberties activists believe the law is unconstitutional.

Front-runner Mitt Romney said he would have signed the law and insisted it was "appropriate" to detain American members of al-Qaida. Romney called membership in the group "treason" and said the U.S. government has the right to impose indefinite detention.

Rick Santorum said a U.S. citizen who is detained as an enemy combatant should have the right to a lawyer and to appeal their case before a federal court.

Ron Paul said holding American citizens indefinitely is a breach of the U.S. judicial system.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120117/ap_on_el_pr/us_gop_debate_indefinite_detention

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Monday, January 16, 2012

Children Born by C-Section at Slightly Higher Asthma Risk (HealthDay)

MONDAY, Jan. 16 (HealthDay News) -- Children delivered by Cesarean section appear to be at a slight increased risk of developing asthma by age 3, a new study says.

The findings support the results of previous research.

Researchers analyzed data from more than 37,000 participants in the Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort Study in order to compare the health of children who were delivered by planned or emergency C-section with those who were born vaginally.

The results showed that children delivered by C-section had a slightly increased risk for asthma at age 3, but no increased risk for wheezing or frequent lower respiratory tract infections. The risk of asthma was highest among those whose mothers did not have allergies.

"It is unlikely that a Cesarean delivery itself would cause an increased risk of asthma, rather that children delivered this way may have an underlying vulnerability," study primary author Maria Magnus, a researcher at the department of chronic diseases at the Norwegian Institute of Public Health, said in an institute news release.

Possible reasons for the increased risk of asthma among children delivered by C-section include an altered bacterial flora in their intestine that affects their immune system development, or the fact that these children are more likely to have serious respiratory problems during their first weeks of life, the researchers said.

The study was recently published in the American Journal of Epidemiology.

While the study found an association between C-section birth and asthma, it did not demonstrate a cause and effect.

More information

The American Lung Association has more about children and asthma.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/parenting/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20120116/hl_hsn/childrenbornbycsectionatslightlyhigherasthmarisk

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Actor Gene Hackman OK after bike crash, spokeswoman says (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? Actor Gene Hackman was taken to the hospital on Friday after he was in a collision while riding his bicycle in the Florida Keys, but the Oscar winner was released after routine tests, a spokeswoman said.

Hackman was riding his bike and got bumped from behind by a car, said Susan Madore, a spokeswoman for the actor.

Because he was on an island, he had to be airlifted to the hospital, she said.

But he only suffered "a couple minor bumps and bruises" and has been released from the facility, she said.

Hackman, 81, has won two Oscars, one for his leading role in 1971 film "The French Connection" and the other for his supporting part in 1992 picture "Unforgiven." He more recently starred in "The Royal Tenenbaums," which came out 10 years ago.

(Reporting By Alex Dobuzinskis; editing by Paul Thomasch)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/celebrity/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120114/people_nm/us_actor_crash_hackman

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Sunday, January 15, 2012

Crash of Falling Russian Spacecraft Imminent, Experts Say (SPACE.com)

Russia's botched Mars probe mission Phobos-Grunt is fast-approaching a fiery death, with just one or two days remaining before it falls from space, experts and Russian space officials say.

"The European Space Agency's current re-entry prediction for Phobos-Grunt ? points to the early evening (Central European Time) on Sunday, Jan.15, with an uncertainty of plus/minus five orbits," equal to plus or minus 7.5 hours, Heiner Klinkrad, head of the space debris office at ESA?s European Space Operations Centerin Darmstadt, Germany, told SPACE.com today (Jan. 14) in an email.

A statement today by Russia's Federal Space Agency (Roscosmos) also pegged Sunday as the crash day for Phobos-Grunt, but went even farther. According to the statement, released in Russian, the 14-ton spacecraft filled with fuel is expected to fall on Jan. 15 and may crash in the Pacific Ocean, off the coast of Chile.

The translation of the statement and map released by Russian space officials depict the potential crash time as occurring at about 2151 GMT (4:51 p.m. EST),? although major uncertainties still remain. There is a chance the spacecraft could fall earlier in the day, or later on Monday, Jan. 16.

Falling Russian Mars probe

ESA, among a host of other space agencies and organizations, has been closely monitoring the decay of the doomed Russian spacecraft. [Infographic: The Fall of Russia's Doomed Phobos-Grunt]

Russian space agency officials have reported that they expect that, at most, about 20 to 30 fragments of Phobos-Grunt may survive the fiery re-entry and reach Earth's surface.

But given that most of the Earth's surface is covered with water, the odds that these leftovers ? a predicted total mass of less than 440 pounds (200 kilograms) ? would fall onto dry land is very small, scientists have said.

Russia launched the Phobos-Grunt mission into space on Nov. 8 (Nov. 9 Moscow time). The spacecraft was designed to fly to Phobos, one of two moons circling Mars.

Once at Phobos, the space probe was expected to collect samples from the Martian moon and then return them to Earth in 2014. However, shortly after launch, the spacecraft failed to boost itself out of Earth orbit to begin the trip to Mars.

Packed with toxic fuel

One unique aspect of the Phobos-Grunt re-entry is its large cache of onboard fuel.

While the dry mass of the wayward satellite is just 2.5 tons, the probe totes about 11 tons of toxic propellant, unused when the craft became marooned in Earth orbit and not outbound to Mars. [Photos of the Phobos-Grunt Mars Mission]

Orbital debris experts suggest that Phobos-Grunt's fuel tanks, reportedly made of aluminum that contains the unsymmetrical dimethylhydrazine (UDMH), will explode high above the Earth. Those heat-succumbing tanks would therefore release the load of propellant to burn up in Earth's atmosphere.

"The 'it just burns up' issue remains invisible frankly," said Martin Ross, Director of The Aerospace Corporation's Center for Launch Emissions and Atmospheric Research in El Segundo, Calif.??

"What is needed is a full accounting of the material that gets vaporized and re-condenses into small particles that may remain in the upper atmosphere for many years," Ross told SPACE.com. "Some of these particles may influence chemistry, since the vaporized materials are exotic in some cases, in that region of the atmosphere in subtle ways. It remains a question mark," he said.

Flying in space is hard

Phobos-Grunt is also outfitted with a nose-cone shaped descent vehicle wrapped in a thermal protection system. It was meant to haul back to Earth samples collected at Phobos. That hardware was designed to sky dive through Earth?s atmosphere and hard land without parachute into the Sary Shagan missile test range in Kazakhstan ? if the Mars mission achieved success.

Nestled inside that re-entry sample capsule is the Planetary Society's tiny Living Interplanetary Flight Experiment (LIFE) biomodule that carries a select set of microorganisms.

"Trackers won't be able to predict where debris may fall until just a few hours before the event, so it?s impossible to say whether the biomodule will be recovered," Planetary Society officials explained in a statement on Jan. 13.

?What we?ve seen is heartbreaking reinforcement of an oft-repeated maxim. Space is hard! We are disappointed that our remarkable test of the hardiness of living organisms will not get the 34 months in deep space we had hoped for," said the Planetary Society's Chief Executive Officer Bill Nye, also known as Bill Nye the Science Guy.

"We also offer our condolences to the China National Space Administration; it's their first Mars mission and a disappointment," Nye added.

Like LIFE, China's Yinghuo-1 orbiter hoped to catch a ride to Mars on Phobos-Grunt in order to study the Red Planet.

Russia's satellite crash past

The former Soviet Union (USSR), and now Russia, has a bit of history regarding satellites falling from space and tumbling onto land.

Due to a propulsion system failure, the Cosmos 954 spacecraft ? a Soviet nuclear-powered Radar Ocean Reconnaissance Satellite ? fell into Canada's Northwest Territories in January 1978. It had only been in space for four months.

Large amounts of radioactive material from the satellite's fall was scattered from Great Slave Lake into northern Saskatchewan and Alberta.

Subsequently, a joint U.S.-Canadian clean-up operation picked up roughly 0.1 percent of Cosmos 954's power source. The spacecraft's nuclear reactor worked on uranium, enriched with isotope of uranium-235.

Liability for damage

Canadian authorities determined that all but two of the Cosmos 954 fragments recovered were radioactive. Some fragments located proved to be of lethal radioactivity.

The spacecraft's plummet into Canada also marked the first time that the adjudicative process built into the United Nation's Convention on International Liability for Damage Caused by Space Objects was put to the test.

Canada claims from the USSR added up to more than $6 million. In the end, in 1981, the Soviet Union coughed up $3 million to settle the Canadian claim of reimbursement.

Unlike the Cosmos satellite, Russia's Phobos-Grunt is a solar-powered spacecraft. One instrument on the probe does carry a small amount of the radioactive element cobalt-57.

However, Lev Zelenyi, director of the Space Research Institute in Moscow and chairman of the Russian Academy of Sciences? Solar System Exploration Board, has stated that the amount contained in that instrument is less than 10 micrograms and no significant problems are anticipated.

Standby alert

Meanwhile, as Phobos-Grunt draws closer and closer to its fiery finale, a worldwide team of skywatchers is on standby alert in the hopes of spotting the fall.

"Experienced observers know that the probability of seeing any given satellite re-entry is very small, so they maintain very low expectations," said Toronto, Canada-based Ted Molczan, a leader in the citizen network of observers.

"Those who are keen to observe one [a re-entry of space hardware] will monitor the trend in the decay estimates," Molczan told SPACE.com.

"If it appears that re-entry will occur at about the time Earth?s rotation drags their location through the plane of the orbit, then they may go out and have a look, still fully expecting to see nothing, but knowing they have maximized their personal odds," Molczan said.

Leonard David has been reporting on the space industry for more than five decades. He is a winner of last year's National Space Club Press Award and a past editor-in-chief of the National Space Society's Ad Astra and Space World magazines. He has written for SPACE.com since 1999.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/science/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/space/20120114/sc_space/crashoffallingrussianspacecraftimminentexpertssay

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Saturday, January 14, 2012

Is West waging 'covert war' against Iran?

The Obama administration is denying any role in the killing of an Iranian university professor working at a key nuclear facility. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

By msnbc.com staff

Story updated 3 a.m. ET:

The Obama administration denied any role in the assassination on Wednesday of an Iranian nuclear scientist, in response to suspicion that Israel or the United States were involved in the attack - and similar previous incidents.

Nuclear scientist Mostafa Ahmadi Roshan, 32,?was killed?Wednesday by a magnetic bomb reportedly attached to his car by two assailants on a motorcycle in traffic. The cars of three other Iranian scientists, at least two of whom were working on nuclear activities,?were?blown up in 2010 and 2011 in similar circumstances.


Iran, and many analysts in the region, suspect outside involvement in the incidents.

"Instead of actually fighting a conventional war, Western powers and their allies appear to be relying on covert war tactics to try to delay and degrade Iran's nuclear advancement," said Theodore Karasik, a security expert at the Dubai-based Institute for Near East and Gulf Military Analysis.

But the U.S. has insisted it had nothing to do with Wednesday's killing.

Iranian Vice President Mohammad Reza Rahimi, in charge while President?Mahmoud Ahmadinejad travels in Latin America, told state television that?"this terrorist act was carried out by agents of the Zionist regime (Israel) and by those who claim to be combating terrorism (the United States) with the aim of stopping our scientists from serving" Iran.

He said Iran's nuclear program would go on.

Iran has said it is?developing nuclear capabilities only?for energy and other peaceful purposes, but the United States and its allies accuse it of wanting to create a nuclear weapon. Four rounds of sanctions have been imposed on Iran.?On Jan. 23, European Union foreign ministers plan to discuss a possible oil export embargo, adding further pressure.

Iran urged the U.N. Security Council and Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon?to condemn the assassinations of scientists, calling the killings?"cruel, inhumane and criminal acts of terrorism." Iran's U.N. Ambassador Mohammad Khazaee appealed to Ban and the 15-nation council,?"Any kind of political and economic pressures or terrorist attacks targeting the Iranian nuclear scientists, could not prevent our nation in exercising this right" to pursue its nuclear program, Khazaee said in a letter obtained by Reuters.

'Unnatural' happenings
The Obama administration denied any U.S. involvement. Israel did not deny involvement, and there are hints that the Jewish state at least had advance knowledge.?

The Associated Press reported that??Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz told a closed meeting of Israel's Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee on Tuesday that "2012 is expected to be a critical year for Iran." He cited "the confluence of efforts to advance the nuclear program, internal leadership changes, continued international pressure and things that happen to it unnaturally."

Gantz's testimony was leaked by a meeting participant who spoke on condition of anonymity.

On Wednesday, Israel's chief military spokesman, Brig. Gen. Yoav Mordechai, posted on Facebook: "I don't know who settled the score with the Iranian scientist, but I certainly am not shedding a tear," according to a Reuters report.

Hazhir Teimourian, an Iran expert at the Limehouse Group of Analysts in London, stressed to Reuters that it was impossible to be certain who carried out the attack. But he said Israel was a logical candidate.

"The Israelis really have the ability and the incentive," he said.

List of attacks
Iran has accused the Mossad, the CIA and Britain's spy agency of engaging in an underground campaign against nuclear-related targets, including at least four killings since early 2007. They include:

  • In January 2010, a physics professor, Massoud Ali Mohammadi, was killed by a bomb in a motorcycle?that blew up near his car as he left his Tehran home?for work.
  • In November 2010,?scientist Majid Shahriari, who managed a "major project" for Iran's Atomic Energy Organization was killed and?colleague?Fereydoon Abbasi, on the U.N. Security Council?s sanctions list for ties to the Iranian nuclear effort, was wounded when motorcyclists attached magnetized bombs to?their cars in separate parts of Tehran.
  • In July 2011, Darioush Rezaeinejad, who allegedly was working on a nuclear detonator, was shot in the neck outside his daughter's Tehran kindergarten.
  • In 2007, nuclear scientist Ardeshir Hosseinpour died of gas poisoning.

Another key attack was the release of a malicious computer virus known as Stuxnet in 2010 that temporarily disrupted controls of some Iranian centrifuges ? a key component in nuclear fuel production.

Ronen Bergman, an investigative journalist with the Yediot Ahronot daily and expert on Israeli intelligence affairs, said the Mossad has "for years" targeted enemies that include "nuclear proliferators."

"The outcome of such assassinations are the actual neutralization of the main scientists and the intimidation of those left behind," he said.

Israel measures the gains in terms of the delays they cause Iranians.

"They are not keeping to the schedules they would like to keep to," former Mossad spymaster Meir Dagan said in a recent television interview, smilingly crediting the apparent sabotage spree to "God, who controls everything."

It also provokes panic in surviving colleagues, said an Israel official, generating a phenomenon that Mossad veterans dub "virtual defection."

"It's not that we've been seeing mass resignations, but rather a sense of spreading paranoia given the degree to which their security has been compromised," the official, who has extensive Iran expertise, told Reuters.

"It means they have to take more precautions, including, perhaps, being a little less keen to stand out for excellence in their nuclear work. That slows things down."

Israeli attacks
Israel has an admitted history of state-sponsored assassination and intimidation, from letter-bombs it sent German scientists serving Egypt's missile program in the 1960s to the Mossad hunt, using guns and booby-traps, for Palestinians involved in killing 11 Israeli athletes at the 1972 Olympics.

More recently, Israeli air-launched missiles and special forces picked off Palestinian uprising leaders. In 1995, motorbike-borne gunmen killed Islamic Jihad chief Fathi Shiqaqi in Malta, and another suspected Mossad team smothered Hamas commander Mahmoud al-Mabhouh in his Dubai hotel in 2010.

Proponents of such tactics say they stave off more ruinous open war and few voices are raised in Israel in condemnation. Mabhouh had helped smuggle rockets to Palestinians, a threat Israel cited in justifying its 2008-2009 offensive on the Gaza Strip, amid international outcry at the high civilian toll.

Also on Wednesday:

Clinton cites danger:?Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, reiterating that the U.S. played no role in the killing of Roshan, said the United States is looking for an international understanding with Iran that ends its uranium enrichment program.called recent Iranian threats to close off the Persian Gulf "provocative and dangerous." She said the U.S. was committed to keeping the international waterway open. She called it "part of the lifeline that keeps oil and gas moving around the world." About 35 percent of the world's seaborne traded oil passes through the Strait of Hormuz.?

Slammed at the U.N.: France, Britain, Germany and the United States on Wednesday took advantage of a closed-door meeting of the U.N. Security Council to condemn Iran's decision to begin enriching uranium at an underground bunker.?"It's a worrying development," French Deputy Ambassador Martin Briens told reporters. He added that Tehran's new move was a violation of multiple resolutions of the U.N. Security Council and the International Atomic Energy Agency's board of governors.?"We see this as a step of escalation by ... Iran," Deputy German Ambassador Miguel Berger said.

Cuba visit:????Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad arrived in Havana for a one-day visit. Reuters reported that Ahmadinejad was greeted by one of Cuba's vice presidents, Esteban Lazo, and was driven away in a black Mercedes ahead of a meeting with President Raul Castro.?Cuba was his third stop on a Latin American tour meant to show support from four leftist-led nations - Venezuela, Nicaragua, Cuba and Ecuador -- as Iran is increasingly isolated by tightening Western economic sanctions over its uclear program.

Reuters, The Associated Press, The New York Times and msnbc.com's Jim Gold contributed to this article.

More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

?

Source: http://worldnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/11/10118910-nuclear-killing-is-west-waging-covert-war-against-iran

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How To Select an Automotive Screw Jack ? Article Directory Site

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Friday, January 13, 2012

Bank of England keeps stimulus steady as UK economy slips (Reuters)

LONDON (Reuters) ? The Bank of England stopped short of announcing further stimulus for Britain's fragile economy on Thursday, but is widely expected to do so in February as the economy may have shrunk at the end of last year.

Britain is at risk of recession as global growth slows, government spending cuts bite and all-important consumers struggle with high inflation, tax hikes and slow wage rises.

And with the government's hands tied by its pledge to erase the country's large budget deficit in order to defend its top credit rating, the onus is all on the central bank.

British industrial output, which accounts for around 15 percent of the economy, posted a surprise fall in November, data showed earlier on Thursday. According to some economists, that added to signs of an economic contraction in the final quarter of 2011.

However, Britain's National Institute of Economic and Social Research estimated that the economy still grew in the period, albeit very slightly.

The finance ministry gave a cautious welcome to the estimate, saying in a statement: "We should be realistic about the risks; the uncertainty in the euro area continues to have a chilling effect on the UK as well as elsewhere."

Either way, analysts see a strong case for the BoE to expand its 275 billion pound asset-buying quantitative easing (QE) program, aimed at boosting growth.

"Overall 50 billion pounds more QE next month seems to us to be virtually 'baked in the cake'," said Investec economist Philip Shaw. "Steep declines in inflation should facilitate a further 50 billion pounds of asset purchases in May, taking the QE target to 375 billion pounds."

The BoE also kept interest rates at a record-low 0.5 percent, where they have been for nearly three years.

FALLING PRICES

All but one of the economists polled by Reuters had forecast the central bank would keep the target for its asset purchases unchanged, after raising it by 75 billion pounds in October.

Instead, economists expected it to unveil an extra 50 billion pound injection next month. BoE policymakers have been warning about the risk of an economic contraction and even recession in Britain, amplified by a debt crisis in its main trading partner, the euro zone.

The region's central bank also held its main interest rate at 1.0 percent on Thursday.

Recent mixed economic news in Britain had bolstered the view that the BoE might want to wait until February before deciding on more QE. By then the current round of asset purchases will be concluded and the bank will have its latest growth and inflation estimates.

A profit warning from Tesco (TSCO.L), the world's third-biggest retailer, after it reported its worst Christmas sales performance for decades, and other weak retail results have underscored that Britons have been cutting back on spending.

Some of Tesco's limp performance was due to its "Big Price Drop" campaign in September, said chief executive Phil Clarke, adding that the group would cut more prices in coming months.

Centrica (CNA.L), the owner of British Gas, and EDF Energy (EDF.PA) also announced cuts in utility prices this week after raising them last year.

The news lends support to forecasts by the BoE that inflation - still just off a recent three-year high above 5 percent - will tumble early this year and dip below its 2 percent target towards the end of 2012, as economic weakness weighs on prices and one-off effects such as a 2011 sale tax increase disappear.

(Additional reporting by David Milliken, Fiona Shaikh and Sven Egenter; editing by Anna Willard)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120112/bs_nm/us_britain_boe_rates

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Alabama?s offensive coordinator McElwain facing 2 big tasks: LSU defense, head coaching job ( Washington Post )

By Associated Press,

NEW ORLEANS ? Jim McElwain sported a blazer, a mock turtleneck and a smile while surveying the festivities at BCS media day.

After all, No. 2 Alabama?s offensive coordinator has a shot at being part of a second national championship team in four seasons on the job when the Crimson Tide face No. 1 LSU on Monday night. Then, before the confetti stops swirling and the champagne stops flowing, he?ll board a plane with Colorado State officials to embark on his first head coaching job.

Who needs sleep?

McElwain?s days have gone something like this, he says: ?Usually, 6 to midnight Alabama and then until I fall asleep late, late at night? attending to matters at Colorado State.

His to-do list:

1. Prepare to face the nation?s No. 2 defense and All-American cornerbacks Tyrann Mathieu and Morris Claiborne.

2. Deal with media obligations that usually are a non-issue since the boss, Nick Saban, only makes assistants available to reporters during the season under BCS or bowl game mandates.

3. Work on assembling a coaching staff and assorted other duties for Colorado State.

?A lot of the contacts are out on the West Coast so you gain an hour calling back there,? he said.

McElwain has been pulling double duty for nearly a month since accepting a five-year deal with the Rams, worth $1.35 million annually, plus bonuses.

His final challenge with the Tide is a doozie. After all, the McElwain-led offense barely sniffed the end zone Alabama?s first meeting with LSU this season, a 9-6 overtime loss that left him seeking comfort from his pet dog ? who hadn?t seen the stat sheet.

?All I can say is thank God that my dog Clarabelle was there, because she didn?t know that we didn?t score and she was excited to see me when I got home,? McElwain joked. ?That did lift my spirits a little bit.?

His spirits are pretty high now, even facing a loaded defense with ends that can outrun many linebackers and matching All-Americans blanketing his much-less heralded receiving corps.

The offense has quietly flourished for the most part on a team that is dominated by the defense of Nick Saban and Kirby Smart. The Tide is averaging 36.0 points a game, third in the Southeastern Conference. No Alabama team has averaged more points since Bear Bryant?s 1973 squad ran up 38.8 points a game.

The Tide has committed a nation?s best 1.08 turnovers a game since McElwain replaced Major Applewhite after the 2007 season. That?s the kind of number that Saban can wrap his arms around.

?He?s worked as hard as anybody as I?ve ever had coach for us in our program, and I certainly appreciate the job he has done,? Saban said. ?He is very conscientious, he is really driven to do well, he?s a perfectionist in a lot of ways. He takes it as hard as anybody if things don?t work out the way he?d like for them to or we don?t get the kind of results we?d like to get. He?s done a fantastic job and I?m sure he?ll be great head coach at Colorado State.?

Saban has helped McElwain with the juggling act, reaching back to his own experience before leaving the NFL?s Cleveland Browns for Michigan State. During recruiting periods, McElwain has been allowed to devote some of his efforts toward potential future Rams.

The remote Saban and the affable McElwain have been an interesting but effective pairing. McElwain?s players aren?t worried about him not giving this game his best, and speak fondly of him.

?He?s our coach. He?ll always be our coach even if he does leave,? quarterback AJ McCarron said. ?Everybody loves him to death. He?s a great guy. Coach Mac?s focused on this game.

?We want to send him out on a good note.?

Left tackle Barrett Jones said McElwain has been ?all about Alabama.? At least while Jones is awake.

?I see him up there working late, late hours,? the Outland Trophy winner said. ?He?s not thinking about Colorado, he?s breaking down LSU game film.?

Alabama?s spot in the title game has been a nice bonus for Colorado State in publicity and recruiting.

Rams athletic director Jack Graham, who traveled to New Orleans for the game, said he and McElwain quickly agreed that the coach should remain through his final game.

?That?s what I would call a nice problem to have,? Graham said.

It will be an adjustment beyond the new title and duties for a guy going from a program that has won 47 games the past four seasons. Colorado State fired Steve Fairchild after a third straight 3-9 record.

Graham envisions McElwain bringing a hard-nosed style that helps make the Rams a group that ?other teams might not look forward to playing? and helping to change the culture.

?We?re not out to win a press conference or win a media battle,? Graham said. ?I want to win on the football field.?

That?s McElwain?s goal Monday night, too. That way, Clarabelle won?t be the only one from Tuscaloosa with warm and fuzzy feelings toward him.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/colleges/alabamas-offensive-coordinator-mcelwain-facing-2-big-tasks-lsu-defense-head-coaching-job/2012/01/08/gIQAoXBhjP_print.html

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Thursday, January 12, 2012

The Best Image Editing App for Windows [Windows App Directory]

The Best Image Editing App for WindowsWindows users have a few image editors to choose from, but as you probably expected Photoshop comes out as king. Here's a look at why it's the best, as well as a number of (much cheaper) alternatives you can try.

  • Layer-based editing allows for flexible adjustments
  • Several image adjustment tools for a variety of options
  • Layer styles save time when creating common effects
  • Includes a robust set of filters for image alteration and manipulation that can be expanded with third-party plug-ins
  • Supports importing and exporting many image formats
  • Built-in Camera RAW plug-in is like a specialized RAW image editor app inside of Photoshop
  • Excellent image exporting tool for getting images ready for use on the web
  • Excellent color management tools for images that will be printed
  • Smart Objects make it possible to easily re-use common assets
  • Healing brush and content-aware fill tools help you easily remove unwanted blemishes and even objects in photos
  • Create animations with Photoshop's frame-by-frame animation tools
  • Several tools for quickly making complex selections and removing backgrounds
  • HDR imaging tools
  • Complex brush tool for great painting effects, including custom brushes you can create yourself
  • A lot more!

Note: This doesn't even begin to dive into the features in Photoshop, which are too long to name here. You can visit Adobe's official Photoshop page to learn more, but even they don't detail every single feature. Your best bet is to make use of their 30-day trial and explore for yourself.

The Best Image Editing App for Windows

Photoshop is absurdly powerful. Not only can you do a ton of things to your images, but it does them in a much simpler way than a lot of image editors?functions that would take a few clicks or keystroke in other programs take one in Photoshop, and you can even make your own macros to perform repetitive tasks instantly. It works equally well for photos as it does for web site layout and illustration, and supports a ton of different file formats. It also has a great exporting tool for the web, great color management, and tons more. It's been the go-to program for image editors everywhere, and there's a good reason why: it's amazing.

The Best Image Editing App for Windows

Photoshop's biggest downside is, obviously, it's $699 price tag. Most people can't afford software that expensive, and while you can get some student discounts, it's still way out of most people's price range, which is a big deterrent. If you want to buy it, though, and want to get the best price possible, you can buy into the Adobe product family as a student and get a Creative Suite bundle for around $600 (and sometimes less). You can also upgrade to a retail version for about the same price later on, without ever paying full price for the bundle. If you aren't a student, there are always ways to get that student discount anyway.

Apart from that, Photoshop is made by Adobe?which means it's full of bloat. As its grown over the years to include things like 3D modeling, it's only gotten more chances to be big and slow, which is very annoying when you just want to hop in and tweak a photo. It does so much that, frankly, you probably won't use most of its features all the time, which makes that big price tag seem all the more annoying. Still, the time it'll save you on the features you do use is awesome enough to keep it in the top spot among image editors for Windows.

The Best Image Editing App for Windows

GIMP is a free, open-source image editor that aims to do a lot of what Photoshop does. In fact, there are quite a few Photoshop tricks it can do just fine, though sometimes it can be a bit more tedious and quirky than Photoshop. If you prefer Photoshop's interface, however, you might want to check out GIMPshop instead, as it is basically the same program made to emulate the style of Photoshop.

Paint.NET is our other favorite image editor. It isn't quite as advanced as Photoshop or the GIMP, but it will work for the majority of people. It still has a layer-based interface, lots of effects, and easy access to your recent actions, it just can't do quite as much as the other two. If you're looking for an image editor, we recommend starting here, then moving to the GIMP if you aren't happy.

Any other Photoshop alternatives you love? Share 'em in the comments!


Lifehacker's App Directory is a new and growing directory of recommendations for the best applications and tools in a number of given categories.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/UhiTzxtrKwM/the-best-image-editing-app-for-windows

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