Saturday 30 June 2012

Syria talks begin but no letup in violence

GENEVA (Reuters) - International talks on a way to resolve the increasingly bloody conflict in Syria opened in Geneva on Saturday with world powers still in dispute over whether President Bashar al-Assad can have any role in a political transition.

Kofi Annan, the former U.N. chief and the special international envoy on Syria, is hoping for consensus on a plan for a unity government that would exclude controversial figures from leadership - effectively meaning Assad would step down.

However, Moscow, a long-time ally of the Syrian strongman and an opponent of what it sees as foreign meddling in domestic affairs, objects to any solution imposed on Syria from outside.

A senior U.S. official said the talks "remain challenging" and may or may not reach a deal.

"Discussions remain challenging. We're continuing to work on this today, but we need a plan that is strong and credible. So we may get there, we may not," the official told reporters.

The United States and its European and Arab allies see no way ahead while power remains in Assad's hands.

Even as the diplomats gathered at the United Nations complex by the shores of Lake Geneva, the Syrian army rained mortar fire on pro-opposition areas in Deir al-Zor, Homs, Idlib and the outskirts of Damascus, activists said.

Government troops were fighting rebels of the Free Syria Army at several points. Syria's border with Turkey was also tense following a Turkish military build-up in response to Syria's shooting down of a Turkish warplane last week.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least 16 people were killed on Saturday.

More than 10,000 people have been killed in the 16 months since the anti-Assad uprising broke out and the past few weeks and days have been amongst the bloodiest yet.

Arriving for the talks in Geneva, British Foreign Secretary William Hague said: "It has always been our view that a stable future for Syria, a stable political process means Assad leaving power as part of an agreement on transitional process".

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said nothing to reporters as he went in.

He and U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton met in St. Petersburg, Russia, on Friday night but a U.S. official said differences with Moscow over the conflict remained.

"Our Western partners want themselves to decide the outcome of the political process in Syria although it is the job for the Syrians," Lavrov's Deputy Gennady Gatilov said prior to the Geneva meeting.

Clinton offered no further insights as she arrived for the talks, but Hague made clear he expected a day of hard bargaining.

"There is an opportunity for the international community to be much stronger and act more robustly but we can only do it with the agreement of Russia and China," he said.

The foreign ministers of the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council - Russia, the United States, China, France and Britain - were attending Saturday's talks.

Turkey, Kuwait, Qatar, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and Arab League chief Nabil Elaraby and European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton are also taking part.

Also present was Norwegian Major General Robert Mood, who headed a failed U.N. ceasefire monitoring mission to Syria and was witness to the violence and suffering on the ground.

However, Iran, Syria's closest regional ally, and Saudi Arabia, a foe of both Damascus and Tehran and leading backer of the rebel forces opposing Assad, are not represented. Nor is anyone from the Syrian government or opposition.

NATIONAL UNITY

The United States and its European and Arab allies see no way ahead while power remains in the hands of Assad.

According to a draft document from Annan, seen by Reuters, the envoy envisages the setting up a transitional government of national unity which can establish a neutral environment for political change. It would have full executive powers.

"It could include members of the present government and the opposition and other groups, but would exclude from government those whose continued presence and participation would undermine the credibility of the transition and jeopardize stability and reconciliation," it said.

That proposal is the stumbling block as it effectively means Assad cannot be involved. The Syrian opposition also demands that he is barred from any role.

The U.N.'s Ban, opening the closed-door meeting, underlined the need to reach an agreement "today" and his appeal was echoed by the Arab League's Elaraby, diplomats told Reuters.

The Syrian conflict has evolved from peaceful protests against the Assad family's four-decade rule to something akin to a civil war with a sectarian dimension.

Although the world has condemned the ferocity of Assad's forces' crackdown on the opposition, it has been unable to halt violence which threatens to draw in more of the region's religious and political rivalries and alliances.

Senior officials holding preparatory talks failed to overcome differences and Western diplomats said Russia was pressing for changes to Annan's text.

"It is absolutely essential that the violence stops and that a political transition can begin. Kofi Annan made reasonable propositions and I hope that they will be upheld and that's the point of today's discussions," French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, said as he arrived for the talks.

An Arab diplomat had said things were looking bad.

"If there is no agreement, Bashar al-Assad will know he had every possible opportunity to fly his planes and burn towns and the international community will do nothing," he said on Friday.

Russia and China have objected to what they see as Western interference which brought about the downfall of rulers like Libya's Muammar Gaddafi.

Western governments, however, have shown little will to repeat last year's Libyan experience of military support for rebels in Syria, where Assad's forces are formidable and the complexities of religion and ethnicity much greater.

Video posted on Saturday by activists in the eastern desert city of Deir al-Zor showed smoke rising from apartment blocks as explosions rang out, some shaking the camera. Activists also reported shelling in Homs, Idlib and the outskirts of Damascus.

State media agency SANA also reported an assault of the town of Douma, 15 km (9 miles) from Damascus, where activists say more than 50 people have been killed since Thursday.

"The authorities continued cracking down on armed terrorist groups and raiding the hideouts of terrorists in Douma, killing scores of terrorists and injuring and arresting big numbers," SANA said.

Although the government routinely refers to its enemies as "armed terrorist groups", Assad himself conceded this week that the country was now in a state of war.

(Additional reporting by Andrew Quinn, Tom Miles and Emma Farge in Geneva, Oliver Holmes in Beirut; Writing by Angus MacSwan; Editing by Diana Abdallah)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syria-writhes-divided-powers-meet-geneva-034811011.html

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Oyster: Life Of The Potty: 10 Of The World's Great Public Bathrooms (PHOTOS)

Who hasn't ducked into a hotel to make use of a clean public restroom while on vacation? While hotels across the board often have nicer public bathrooms than, say, the local gas station, some hotels' bathrooms go beyond just clean.

Whether employing attractive streamlined design or antique decor, hotels are upping the ante when it comes to their public bathrooms, and we at Oyster have seen the best of the best.

Check out our ten favorites in this slideshow.

-- Kristina Fazzalaro, Oyster.com

  • Hotel Costanza Barcelona

    Check out the public restroom at the Hotel Constanza Barcelona. This hip boutique is known for its stylish, modern decor and low lighting that keeps guests in a chic state of mind. The clean lines, funky, modern sinks, and dark color palate continue this theme into the bathroom, but playful raindrop detailing on stall doors keeps the look from being too somber. <a href="http://www.oyster.com/barcelona/hotels/hotel-constanza-barcelona/" target="_hplink"><strong>See more photos of Hotel Costanza Barcelona ?</strong></a>

  • The Tophams Hotel ? London

    Offering nouveau-classical decor with bright pops of color, the Tophams Hotel is a stylish boutique in one of London's quieter corners. The hotel combines rich fabrics with modern lines to create quaint, comfortable, and unexpected looks, and this goes for the public bathroom as well. The patterned accent wall in the bathroom is typical of the boutique's whimsical elegance. <a href="http://www.oyster.com/london/hotels/the-tophams-hotel/" target="_hplink"><strong> See more photos of the Tophams Hotel ?</strong></a>

  • Ritz-Carlton Buckhead ? Atlanta

    This luxury brand is known for its outstanding amenities, impeccable service, and glamorous design. And its public bathrooms do not escape its careful attention to detail. Floor-to-ceiling striated white marble offers a clean, opulent aesthetic that is emphasized by gold fixtures. The contemporary design is bright and elegant--especially for a bathroom. <a href="http://www.oyster.com/atlanta/hotels/the-ritz-carlton-buckhead/" target="_hplink"><strong>See more photos of the Ritz-Carlton Buckhead ?</strong></a>

  • W Fort Lauderdale

    Okay, so everyone may not be on board with unisex public bathrooms, but the W's modern style makes it hard to pass up at least a peak into it's public bathroom stalls. The bathroom's use of streamlined design and stark black-on-white decor is in keeping with the hotel's young, sleek look. <a href="http://www.oyster.com/fort-lauderdale/hotels/w-fort-lauderdale/" target="_hplink"><strong>See more photos of the W Fort Lauderdale ?</strong></a>

  • Ayres de Libertad ? Buenos Aires

    Though still modern in design, this bathroom couldn't be more different from the one at the W Fort Lauderdale. The soft lighting highlights the warm tone of the marble as well as the orange and blue tones of the painting. Though we could do without the generic potpourri basket, the Ayres de Libertad retains its sleek sense of style -- even in the public bathroom -- that permeates throughout the rest of the hotel. <a href="http://www.oyster.com/buenos-aires/hotels/ayres-de-libertad/" target="_hplink"> <strong>See more photos of the Ayres de Libertad ?</strong></a>

  • Liberty Hotel ? Boston

    We never thought we'd be particularly impressed by a urinal, but the men's public bathroom at the Liberty Hotel may have proven us wrong. The sleek design -- coupled with the exposed brick -- is actually pleasing to the eye (considering our subject matter, of course). The bathroom also picks up the hotel's theme of toying with its origins as a former jailhouse particularly well (note the wire fence wall-paper to the left). <a href="http://www.oyster.com/boston/hotels/liberty-hotel/" target="_hplink"><strong> See more photos of the Liberty Hotel ?</strong></a>

  • The Inn on Bourbon Ramada Plaza Hotel ? New Orleans

    This is no ordinary chain hotel: located on site of the historic Old French Opera, the Inn on Bourbon plays host to today's young opera singers who perform in the hotel lobby. But the much coveted balcony rooms overlooking Bourbon Street (at a competitive price) are the hotel's biggest draw. And this bathroom isn't so bad either. Its vintage design harkens back to classical French decor, and the brushed gold accents and candelbras provide a certain richness. <a href="http://www.oyster.com/new-orleans/hotels/the-inn-on-bourbon-ramada-plaza-hotel/" target="_hplink"><strong> See more photos of the Inn on Bourbon Ramada Plaza Hotel ?</strong></a>

  • The Algonquin ? New York City

    Old-world style meets contemporary amenities at this Midtown West landmark. The looming marble stalls in this public bathroom feel opulent, as do the gold fixtures. It fits well with the hotel's overall look -- and it's not too shabby for a public bathroom, either! <a href="http://www.oyster.com/new-york-city/hotels/algonquin-hotel/" target="_hplink"> <strong>See more photos of The Algonquin ?</strong></a>

  • Windsor Court Hotel ? New Orleans

    Exuding English manor charm, this hotel has attracted celebrities and royals alike. Could it be because of this classically designed loo? Well, it's probably at least a contributing factor. After all, it's the details here that count: The mirrors' gold frames with just a strip of green. The white marble sinks. The surprisingly attractive and decorative laundry basket. Windsor Court, consider us charmed. <a href="http://www.oyster.com/new-orleans/hotels/windsor-court-hotel/" target="_hplink"> <strong>See more photos of the Windsor Court Hotel ?</strong></a>

  • Hotel Palazzo Dal Borgo Aprile ? Florence, Italy

    Housed in a beautiful Renaissance building, this family-run establishment in the heart of Florence is rich on traditional Italian design. But, it also has a quirky and whimsical side to its decor that is simply delightful. The bathroom, decked out in full seashell splendor, may be the most unique -- and detailed -- public bathroom we've ever seen. <strong><a href="http://www.oyster.com/florence/hotels/hotel-palazzo-dal-borgo-aprile/" target="_hplink"> See more photos of the Hotel Palazzo Dal Borgo Aprile ?</a></strong>

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Follow Oyster on Twitter: www.twitter.com/Oysterhotels

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/oyster/potty-talk-10-posh-public_b_1635638.html

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IBM India likely to give salary increment

BANGALORE: IBM is likely to give a salary increment to its employees in India next month.

Early on Thursday, international media reported about a mail that IBM had sent to employees, saying those in the global technology services (GTS) division would not receive a salary increment this year. However, the mail also said people "who have high-demand skills" would receive an increment .

Sources within IBM India indicated that "high-demand skills" refers, among others, to employees in India . The sources said that the performance assessment exercise had been completed and increments were expected across the organization in India next month. IBM follows a July-June cycle. "For the best performers, the increment may be in double digits ," one source said.

IBM does not break up its headcount by geography, but it is estimated that the company employs over 1.3 lakh people in India. The company has been an aggressive hirer in India for several years. With several Indian IT companies - the one prominent exception being Infosys Technologies - announcing salary increments earlier this year, it may be difficult for IBM not to follow suit.

In an email to employees, Bob Zapfel, general manager in IBM's global technology services, North America, said, "To balance our ability to remain competitive with the need to invest in people who have high-demand skills, there will not be a broad-based salary program in GTS in 2012. Instead, we will target the 2012 investment to skill groups or focus areas as identified by each GTS line of business, based on local market needs...Our objective is to ensure a competitive labor cost structure while moving aggressively into areas that are strategic to our clients and require innovative solutions."

GTS is a services division within IBM that helps clients to plan, implement and manage its IT infrastructure.

The news about the salary freeze had Big Blue employees venting their anger on Alliance@IBM website, the union representing Big Blue workers. The anger was more so because it had recently asked its employees in the US to sign up for a voluntary retirement programme.

The website has employees criticizing IBM for shipping jobs to low-cost destinations like India and Brazil. Alliance@IBM estimates that the US workforce has reduced to 94,000 in 2012, from 133,789 in 2005. Globally, the company employs 4.5 lakh people.

Source: http://timesofindia.feedsportal.com/fy/8at2Etf0bHiUi2ef/story01.htm

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Friday 29 June 2012

Better Techniques To Buy And sell London ... - Real Estate Forum







The rate of prime of properties have been jumped up to 51% from 2009, however this is only possible because of the large investors who are spending billions of money into this trading platform. The real estate London market turns several individuals rich, so if you are intended to buy properties in London then you need to hire the perfect agent who can help you in trading successfully. The U.K taxation loophole allowed individuals to concentrate on buying and selling London properties. As the rates of properties are increasing very frequently, therefore you should concentrate on buying and selling profitable properties so as to get the desired income easily.

London is the city that has big buildings and narrow streets which enhances the beauty of this city. Basically buyers spend their lots of money on buying properties online; as the demand of touring home is increasing individuals are earning money while providing accommodation to them. To meet your need you should focus on the laser strategy that can help you to make better profit in this market. However, sometime problem created when buyers don?t take proper view of the property. For potential buyer one such best strategy is to find the real estate agent of local area. To find perfect agent you can also take help of internet as it is one such best source of finding of finding perfect agent. Investing in London properties is now becoming very popular and profitable idea. Investors around the world are looking forward to buy properties in London and this will ultimately increases the value of London properties. Though this trading is not very risky still individuals need to gather enough knowledge and expertise to trade efficiently in this trading platform.

From past several years real estate London market is gaining huge popularity as its depreciating and appreciating value of properties allows individuals to earn better rate of return from this market. Perhaps trading in real estate market is not so easy so if you are intended to make better profit then you should concentrate on some best strategies that can really help you in finding one such appropriate opportunity. For residential property you need to determine the surrounding so as to get the perfect result. To find appropriate property you should check out the listings of properties as individuals find some profitable property just like properties for sale in Regents Park. So if you have dream of buying one profitable property then consider the points that are mentioned in this articles.

Source: http://www.realestateforum.com/blogs/amelia22brown/7857-better-techniques-buy-sell-london-properties.html

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Glasenberg's dealmaker renown at mercy of Qatar

LONDON (Reuters) - By rejecting Glencore's coveted acquisition of miner Xstrata, Qatar could also put paid to the reputation of Ivan Glasenberg, chief executive of the commodities trader, as consummate dealmaker.

Those who have worked with him on takeovers - and against him defending the companies he targeted - say Glasenberg's self-belief is second to none. That, plus unbending determination, means he normally gets his way.

But this time he appears to have been wrong-footed, thinking the support of major Xstrata shareholder Qatar Holdings was in the bag.

"Did Glencore misread the Qataris? Absolutely," said one banker familiar with the mining sector, but not involved in the deal. "Qatar does not like the limelight, so they must feel pretty strongly to end up going public."

Apparently undeterred by the rejection, Glasenberg showed little relish for compromise, letting it be known he would not overpay.

Glencore's position had not changed, a person familiar with the matter said, and the company would rather walk away than offer more. Bankers said such talk was a standard M&A tactic and to be expected of any company in such negotiations.

It is not only Glasenberg's track record that is under the microscope following Qatar Holdings' surprise demand for better terms for the takeover. The bankers advising him may also have been caught napping.

The stakes are high for all involved, with banking teams working on the deal standing to lose out on a pay day worth up to $130 million if the $26 billion deal collapses. Xstrata was due to pay up to $80 million to its financial advisers, while Glencore may have to shell out up to $50 million.

With fee income in retreat after a 25 percent fall in worldwide M&A volumes in the first half of the year, such pay days are more important than ever for bankers struggling to bring in revenue for their increasingly cost-conscious employers.

The combination of Glencore and Xstrata would rank as the biggest-ever done deal in a sector littered with the skeletons of failed deals. These include the $144.5 billion hostile bid for Rio Tinto by BHP Billiton in 2008, and BHP Billiton's more recent $39.7 billion offer for Canada's Potash.

Glasenberg is not the only executive to have been exposed by the failure to get "Glenstrata" blessed by shareholders.

His opposite number at Xstrata, CEO Mick Davis, was not listening to the mood music over executive pay when he secured himself a $45 million three-year retention package to seal the miner's deal with Glencore. The mining group was forced to convert it to an all-share, performance-related package after an embarrassing shareholder outcry.

Qatar Holdings, which has remained silent for months as it built up the second-largest stake in miner Xstrata - about 11 percent - pushed the deal to the brink on Tuesday, demanding better terms before it would support the deal.

The wealth fund is part of a new breed of investors in the mining sector, focused on creating long-term value and acting on motivations that are sometimes at odds with a more numerous body of investors looking at a shorter timeframe.

Despite the apparent blow to Glasenberg's plans, hedge fund managers said it was too soon to say he had been outwitted by the Qataris.

"Glasenberg is always the smartest man in the room and always one step ahead of everyone. We don't know what is going on behind closed doors," a hedge fund manager who owns Xstrata stock said.

"Hedge funds always think they are smarter than the chief executive, but not when it comes to Ivan," he added.

A second hedge fund manager said Glasenberg would do whatever was in the best interests of Glencore, whether that was to stump up more or let the deal die.

"He is one of the most capitalist individuals I have ever seen. He will change what he needs to change to get the best outcome," the second hedge fund manager said.

BANKING ON A DEAL

The deal was already proving difficult for bankers before the Qatari move. They are facing lower fees due to the unique role of former Citigroup grandee turned independent go-between Michael Klein.

It was Klein's ability to get Glasenberg and arch-rival Mick Davis to agree on a valuation that put the deal on the table. Klein is expected to earn between $10 million and $15 million for his work and could be called upon to help smooth out the latest wrinkle, sources said.

Klein's slice of the fees will mean less for Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, Credit Suisse and BNP Paribas, Glencore's advisers.

Deutsche Bank, JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Nomura and Barclays, advisers for Xstrata, will also receive a smaller proportion because of Klein's intervention.

London's "mining king", Ian Hannam, the veteran rainmaker who resigned from JP Morgan last month to fight a 450,000-pound fine imposed by British regulators for passing on inside information, is also involved in the transaction, and teams at Citigroup and Morgan Stanley include veteran UK advisers David Wormsley and Simon Robey, among the biggest names in corporate finance in the City of London.

With stakes so high, all will be banking on Glasenberg showing his usual ability for getting the deal done.

"Is he the smartest man in the room? Let's see where the deal goes," the second hedge fund manager said.

(Additional reporting by Clara Ferreira-Marques; Editing by Alexander Smith and Will Waterman)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/glasenbergs-dealmaker-renown-mercy-qatar-140427829--sector.html

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PhilMoscovitch: @bbhorne Anyone reporting trouble with the Android app? Mine only updates reported stories.

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Thursday 28 June 2012

Your Color Red Really Could Be My Blue

Anyone with normal color vision agrees that blood is roughly the same color as strawberries, cardinals and the planet Mars. That is, they're all red. But could it be that what you call "red" is someone else's "blue"? Could people's color wheels be rotated with respect to one another's?

"That is the question we have all asked since grade school," said Jay Neitz, a color vision scientist at the University of Washington. In the past, most scientists would have answered that people with normal vision probably do all see the same colors. The thinking went that our brains have a default way of processing the light that hits cells in our eyes, and our?perceptions of the light's color?are tied to universal emotional responses. But recently, the answer has changed.

"I would say recent experiments lead us down a road to the idea that we don't all see the same colors," Neitz said.

Another color vision scientist, Joseph Carroll of the Medical College of Wisconsin, took it one step further: "I think we can say for certain that people don't see the same colors," he told Life's Little Mysteries.

One person's red might be another person's blue and vice versa, the scientists said. You might really see blood as the color someone else calls blue, and the sky as someone else's red. But our individual perceptions don't affect the way the color of blood, or that of the sky, make us feel.

Some sort of perception

An experiment with monkeys suggests color perception emerges in our brains in response to our experiences of the outside world, but that this process ensues according to no predetermined pattern. Like color-blind people and most mammals, male squirrel monkeys have only two types of color-sensitive cone cells in their eyes: green-sensitive cones and blue-sensitive cones. Lacking the additional information that would be picked up by a third, red-sensitive cone, the monkeys can only perceive the wavelengths of light we call "blue" and "yellow;" to them, "red" and "green" wavelengths appear neutral, and the monkeys cannot find red or green dots amid a gray background. [How Dogs See the World]

In work published in the journal Nature in 2009, Neitz and several colleagues injected a virus into the monkeys' eyes that randomly infected some of their green-sensitive cone cells. The virus inserted a gene into the DNA of the green cones it infected that converted them into red cones. This conferred the monkeys with blue, green and red cones. Although their brains were not wired for responding to signals from red cones, the monkeys soon made sense of the new information, and were able to find green and red dots in a gray image.

The scientists have since been investigating whether the same gene therapy technique could be used to cure red-green color blindness in humans, which affects 1 percent of American men. The work also suggests humans could one day be given a fourth kind of cone cell, such as the UV-sensitive cone found in some birds, potentially allowing us to?see more colors.

But the monkey experiment had another profound implication: Even though neurons in the monkeys' brains were wired to receive signals from green cones, the neurons spontaneously adapted to receiving signals from red cones instead, somehow enabling the monkeys to perceive new colors. Neitz said, "The question is, what did the monkeys think the new colors were?"

The result shows there are no predetermined perceptions ascribed to each wavelength, said Carroll, who was not involved in the research. "The ability to discriminate certain wavelengths arose out of the blue, so to speak ? with the simple introduction of a new gene.? Thus, the [brain] circuitry there simply takes in whatever information it has and then confers some sort of perception."

When we're born, our brains most likely do the same thing, the scientists said. Our neurons aren't configured to respond to color in a default way; instead, we each develop a unique perception of color. "Color is a private sensation," Carroll said.?[How Colors Got Their Symbolic Meanings]

Emotional colors

Other research shows differences in the way we each perceive color don't change the universal emotional responses we have to them. Regardless of what you actually see when you look at a clear sky, its shorter wavelengths (which we call "blue") tend to make us calm, whereas longer wavelengths (yellow, orange and red) make us more alert. These responses ? which are present not just in humans, but in many creatures, from fish to single-celled organisms, which "prefer" to photosynthesize when the ambient light is yellow ? are thought to have evolved as a way of establishing the day and night cycle of living things.

Because of how the atmosphere scatters sunlight throughout the day, blue light dominates at night and around midday when living things lie low, to avoid darkness or harsh UV light. ?Meanwhile, yellow light dominates around sunrise and sunset, when life on Earth tends to be most active.?

In a study detailed in the May issue of the journal Animal Behavior, Neitz and his colleagues found that changing the color (or wavelength) of ambient light has a much bigger impact on the day-night cycle of fish than changing the intensity of that light, suggesting that the dominance of blue light at night really is why living things feel more tired at that time (rather than the fact that it's dark), and the dominance of yellow light in the morning is why we wake up then, rather than the fact that it's lighter.?[Busting the 8-Hour-Sleep Myth: Why You Should Wake Up in the Night]

But these evolved responses to color have nothing to do with cone cells, or our perceptions. In 1998, scientists discovered a totally separate set of color-sensitive receptors in the human eye; these receptors, called melanopsin, independently gauge the amount of blue or yellow incoming light, and route this information to parts of the brain involved in emotions and the regulation of the circadian rhythm. Melanopsin probably evolved in life on Earth about a billion years prior to cone cells, and the ancient color-detectors send signals along an independent pathway in the brain.

"The reason we feel happy when we see red, orange and yellow light is because we're stimulating this ancient blue-yellow visual system," Neitz said. "But our conscious perception of blue and yellow comes from a completely different circuitry ? the cone cells. So the fact that we have similar emotional reactions to different lights doesn't mean our perceptions of the color of the light are the same."

People with damage to parts of the brain involved in the perception of colors may not be able to perceive blue, red or yellow, but they would still be expected to have the same emotional reaction to the light as everyone else, Neitz said. Similarly, even if you perceive the sky as the color someone else would call "red," your?blue sky?still makes you feel calm.

Follow Natalie Wolchover on Twitter @nattyover. Follow Life's Little?Mysteries on Twitter @llmysteries. We're also on?Facebook?&?Google+.

Copyright 2012 Lifes Little Mysteries, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Quirky Plumbing No More


by celinacony
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More Details about http://www.chanlongroup.co.uk/ here.

Everybody's home plumbing has quirks. Maybe you have to hold the toilet flusher down for a few seconds before it works or maybe you have to flush twice because your toilet just does not do the job of getting rid of the solid wastes like it is supposed to. Maybe you have to baby your dishwasher by not filling it to full. Maybe you can't put anything down your garbage disposal because it just clogs up. Maybe no one is allowed to use the shower in your master bath because water leaks into the room below, or maybe your water heater barely makes enough water for one short shower before it runs out completely and you're standing shivering in a freezing downpour.

So many times homeowners just accept that this is how their house is and they just learn to live with the quirks, not even thinking about it unless they have to tell a guest that they can't use the shower or that they have to hurry to get showered before someone else hops in and takes all the available hot water. Then they might be embarrassed at the problem, but still do not do anything about it.

A plumber in Glasgow can address these various problems and make your home plumbing less quirky and more wonderful. They can clean out clogged drains that keep your toilet from flushing properly or cause your sinks to back up. They can replace plumbing fixtures such as an old leaky sink or that malfunctioning disposal. They can clean out or inspect your hot water heater and tell you whether you need a new one or whether yours just needs to be drained like it should be every year. They can also replace leaky pipes and drains, improve water pressure if necessary, and replace valves that are hard or impossible to turn.

A plumber in Glasgow can make your house more efficient when it comes to using water by fixing leaky faucets that do not seem to be wasting much water, but in actuality are sending multiple gallons a week down the drain for absolutely no purpose. They can also fix leaky toilets, help improve toilet flushing power so you do not have to flush twice or more, and replace an old dishwasher that uses more water than a modern one would.

Plumber Glasgow - C. Hanlon Multi Trade Specialists provides emergency 24/7 residential and commercial plumbing services in Glasgow and surrounding areas.

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Quirky Plumbing No More

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German circumcision ban sparks outrage

By msnbc.com and news services

BERLIN - Jewish and Muslim groups protested on Wednesday after a German court banned the circumcision of young boys for religious reasons, Reuters reported. The ban applies to the Cologne region of Germany.

The court in the western city of Cologne handed down the decision on Tuesday in the case of a doctor who was prosecuted for circumcising a four-year-old Muslim boy.

The doctor circumcised the boy in November 2010 and gave him four stitches, the Guardian reported. When the boy started bleeding two days later, his parents took him to Cologne's University hospital, where officials called police. The doctor was ultimately acquitted on the grounds that he had not broken a law.


The court ruled that?involuntary religious circumcision should be made illegal because it could inflict serious bodily harm on people who had not consented to it. Male circumcision is part of Jewish and Muslim religious tradition.

The ruling said boys who consciously decided to be circumcised could have the operation. No age restriction was given, or any more specific details.

The Central Council of Jews in Germany called the ruling an "unprecedented and dramatic intrusion" of the right to religious freedom and an "outrageous and insensitive" act.

"Circumcision for young boys is a solid component of the Jewish religion and has been practiced worldwide for millennia. This religious right is respected in every country around the world," President Dieter Graumann said in a statement.

Fewer than 20 percent of boys are circumcised in Germany; by contrast, 56 percent of male newborns in the United States?were circumcised in?2005, according to the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

In the U.S., circumcision rates vary by region. In the?West, fewer than one-third of newborn boys are circumcised; in the Northeast, nearly two-thirds of newborn boys are circumcised.

Parents who choose to circumcise their boys have said they did so because they believe it improves hygiene and can?reduce the risk of the spread of disease, HIV in particular.

"Fatal to the freedom of religion"
According to the court ruling, "the fundamental right of the child to bodily integrity outweighs the fundamental rights of the parents."

But the Central Council of Muslims in Germany called the sentence a "blatant and inadmissible interference" in the rights of parents.

Rabbi Aryeh Goldberg called the ruling ?fatal to the freedom of religion,? the Guardian reported. He told Haaretz that it went against the European Union?s convention on human rights.

"The child's body is permanently and irreparably changed by the circumcision. This change runs counter to the interests of the child, who can decide his religious affiliation himself later in life," it said.

Germany is home to about four million Muslims and 120,000 Jews. In Judaism, 8-day-old boys are circumcised to recall the covenant established between God and the Hebrew patriarch Abraham.

The time for Muslim circumcision varies according to family, region and country.

Concerned the ruling could be followed in other parts of the country and that it could prevent doctors carrying out circumcisions for fear of prosecution, the Central Council of Jews urged the German parliament "to provide legal clarity in order to prevent attacks on religious freedom."

Reuters and msnbc.com's Isolde Raftery contributed to this story.

More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

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Wednesday 27 June 2012

Riva Greenberg: Why Can't Meters Tell Me My Blood Sugar?

The 72nd American Diabetes Association scientific session took place a few weeks ago.

More than 16,000 medical professionals, scientists, researchers, pharma industry representatives and some well-versed patients attended.

The exhibition hall boasted one of the largest displays of new-to-market, and coming-to-market devices, technologies and other products to make managing diabetes easier, safer and more precise.

But I, and you, are still checking our blood sugar on a glucose meter that's allowed to be anywhere within 20 percent of the laboratory standard 95 percent of the time.

What that means is when my meter says my blood sugar is 145 mg/dl (8 mmol/l) it might be -- or, given the up to plus or minus 20 percent, it might be 113 mg/dl (6.2 mmol/l) or 173 mg/dl (9.6 mmol/l), or anywhere in between.

In 2010 the FDA wrote, "Glucose meters are increasingly being used to achieve tight glycemic control despite the fact that these devices have not been approved for this use." The article goes on to say that patients at home and those in clinical settings are using glucose meters that have not been approved as safe and effective.

Nearly 26 million people have diabetes in the U.S. Nearly 80 million have pre-diabetes. While they don't all use meters, meter accuracy is not limited to a small, exceptional group. Since within 10 years most people with pre-diabetes will go on to get Type 2 diabetes, meter accuracy will grow to affect up to a third of the nation.

So while manufacturers keep adding bells and whistles to meters, and we're on the launch pad for an artificial pancreas -- where accuracy will be even more critical -- why don't I have a meter that gives me an accurate reading of my blood sugar?

Think about it: would you buy a scale that's 20 percent off? Your 145 pounds on the scale might really be 113, 127, 165 or 173 pounds, or anywhere in between. Would you drive a car whose speedometer gave the speed up to plus or minus 20 miles per hour? How useful would a watch be that was sometimes too fast and sometimes too slow and you didn't know when it was which?

Six to 10 times a day when I check my blood sugar, I'm making a decision to either eat more calories -- eating sugar if my blood sugar's too low, to bring it up -- or take more insulin if my blood sugar's too high, to bring it down. And that, my friend, can be a life-threatening action if I'm basing it on faulty numbers.

To minimize some worry, you should know that the governing body, the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), states that the rate of allowable accuracy on your meter must be within 15 percent of the laboratory standard when your blood sugar is lower than 75 mg/dl. But still...

Variance Meter to Meter
Not only do we not know how off the mark our meter readings are, testing your numbers on one meter next to another will drive you mad. Different meters give you different results, almost a different range of results.

Last month at a pre-launch press meeting at Sanofi, I got an iBGStar meter. I've been using Bayer's ContourUSB meter for the last two or three years, so I immediately checked my blood sugar on both meters. For the sake of these lists being difficult to read, here are the results in the U.S. mg/dl value:

2012-06-25-firsttest.png

I checked twice more over the next day and in each case my ContourUSB showed I was 20-25 points lower than the iBGStar.

Fascinated, I wanted to check on more meters. I had a VerioIQ and Freestyle Lite meter at home and ordered a Freestyle Freedom Lite meter.

Here are my results from eight checks of my blood sugar at the same moment, same finger, using the same drop of blood. (I only checked on Freestyle Freedom Lite twice because it arrived toward the end of my testing.)

2012-06-25-Screenshot20120625at11.44.24AM.png

Here's another thing that happened when I checked, and then checked again a minute later:

2012-06-25-moretests.png

So if you check twice in a row on the same meter you won't necessarily get the same result.

I've been told the only way to know if your meter is accurate is to check your blood sugar on your meter when you're having it drawn for a lab test and compare when the lab test result comes back. I did this two weeks ago. The number on my ContourUSB was 115 mg/dl (6.3 mmol/l). The lab came back with 139 mg/dl (7.7 mmol/l).

While I titled this post "Why Can't Meters Tell Me My Blood Sugar?" I plan to do a second post on "Why Meters Can't Tell Me My Blood Sugar" if that's the case. I want to find out what is at the root of meter readings and disparities and what manufacturers are doing about it.

For now, I've been told the reason for accuracy distortion is largely the interplay between the strip and the meter. Plus a host of other variables like the calibration of the meter, dirt on the meter or strip, what's in your blood from medications you may be taking, what's on your fingers from what you last ate and environmental conditions like climate and altitude.

Here's my plea to the FDA, government, pharma and health insurance companies -- with all the new gizmos and cool designed products, which I applaud, let's also get our priorities straight. When 1 in 20 people with diabetes die from low blood sugar, why are we dragging our feet on getting our meters accurate? What are we waiting for?

So what's your experience? Have you checked on different meters?

Do you think one meter is more accurate than the others? Why?

Have you compared checking your blood sugar on your meter with the hospital standard lab draw?

Have you switched meters and then found you have to get used to new numbers?

On a personal note I want to say to those of us who live with diabetes and constantly feel we are judged by our numbers -- our health care providers judge us, our family may judge us and we judge ourselves -- we really don't know what our numbers are. Plus no matter how hard we work at keeping our blood sugar in our target range, there are other forces at work -- stress, illness, the 20 percent margin of error the FDA allows food manufacturers on food nutrition labels -- that we can't always have the numbers we'd like. Let's try to remember that each time we check our blood sugar and when we do get meter accuracy.

Riva speaks to patients and health care providers about flourishing with diabetes and is the author of "50 Diabetes Myths That Can Ruin Your Life and the 50 Diabetes Truths That Can Save It" and "The ABC's Of Loving Yourself With Diabetes." She is finishing her third book, "Diabetes Dos & How-Tos due out this fall. Visit her website DiabetesStories.com.

For more by Riva Greenberg, click here.

For more on diabetes, click here.

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Follow Riva Greenberg on Twitter: www.twitter.com/diabetesmyths

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Video: New poll shows some think Obama is Mormon

14 worst hospital mistakes to avoid

Apart from interfering with your beach vacation, there's another, more serious reason to steer clear of summer surgery if you can: a 10% spike in fatalities at teaching hospitals in July, confirmed by a new Journal of General Internal Medicine study.

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Apple Has Shipped 250 Million iPhones In The ... - Business Insider

The fifth anniversary of the iPhone is coming up this week and what a five years it has been.

Apple has shipped 250 million iPhones worldwide since the product launched back in 2007, according to new data from Strategy Analytics, a global research firm.

While the first five years have been good for the iPhone, Strategy Analytics suggests the next five could prove to be more challenging as carriers rethink the cost of subsidizing the phone and Apple faces greater competition from companies like Samsung.

That said, there's still plenty of opportunity for growth. Apple is looking to expand into new markets abroad, perhaps most notably by partnering with China Mobile, a wireless carrier with more than 650 million subscribers. And Apple is expanding into new markets at home by finally making the iPhone available on the prepaid market.

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Tuesday 26 June 2012

Greek president to head delegation to EU summit

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$277200 :: 10331 E Kaibito Place, Tucson AZ, 85749 | Tucson Real ...

$277,200 :: 10331 E Kaibito Place, Tucson AZ, 85749

7 beds, 3 full, 1 part baths
Home size: 4,326 sq ft
Lot Size: 43,996 sq ft
Added: 06/22/12, Last Updated: 06/25/12
Property Type: Single Family, Residential
MLS Number: 21215390
Tract: Catalina Highlands (1-35)

Spacious ranch style home on acre lot in Catalina Highlands. Open floorplan. Spacious kitchen with plenty of cabinet space. 5BD/3BA main house. 2BD/1-3/4BA guesthouse. Enclosed backyard with covered patio and pool, perfect for outdoor entertaining. 2 car garage. Amazing mountain views. Great home for a growing family. Come and take a look today!

Listed with Top Gun Realty


Brought to you by Top Gun Realty. Call me today at (520) 777-7717, or visit my website at www.BLASSHOMES.com!
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Bless Their Hearts Mom: Product Review: Wildflower Wishes App

Don't have time for a written greeting, and internet greetings seem impersonal?

I have an answer to your dilemma!

Some authors look forward to releasing an e-copy of their book, but Patti Callahan Henry was different, Instead of releasing the e-version of her novel?Coming Up For Air, she took her favorite part of?the book and turned it into it's own app! The first time this has been done!? In the story,?In a memory from her childhood, Ellie (the main character) overhears her mother call her a ?wildflower?, so she scatters wildflower seeds throughout her mother?s finely manicured rose garden, believing her mother must love the beauty and wild nature of these flowers. But when the wildflowers finally bloom, Ellie?s mother pulls them from the earth, telling her that they don?t belong. This destroys Ellie?s childlike heart. But as the adult Ellie discovers secrets from her mother?s own wild past after her death, and as love grows between Ellie and a man who cherishes her wild nature, Ellie reclaims the spirit of a ?wildflower?. the main character Ellie is dealing with her mother?s death and recalls her childhood nickname ?wildflower,??


The FREE?Wildflower Wishes?app lets users send virtual flowers with custom messages to their friends.?The app comes with five wildflower icons, and each hold a special meaning ("I?m sorry"," I love you", "Good luck"). ?Additional wildflowers ("sending encouragement", "don't forget me", "farewell", for example) can be purchased for $0.9. All can be sent to email, other WW friends or Facebook friends, along with a heartfelt personal message!


The app is really cool, and if you're friend/family member is into the meaning of flowers, they will really appreciate your thoughtfulness!


You can find?the QR code for the Wildflower Wishes App on the cover?of the newly released paperback edition of COMING UP FOR AIR?! Talk about new school technology meeting old school technology!

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Monday 25 June 2012

Reasons To Sell Ebooks | Tips, Reviews and ... - Internet Business

It?s not true that everything that has been said has already been written. Since that unfortunate axiom came into use, the whole universe has changed. Technology has changed, ideas have changed, and the mindsets of entire nations have changed.

The fact is that this is the perfect time to write an E-Book. What the publishing industry needs are people who can tap into the world as it is today innovative thinkers who can make the leap into the new millennium and figure out how to solve old problems in a new way. E-Books are a new and powerful tool for original thinkers with fresh ideas to disseminate information to the millions of people who are struggling to figure out how to do a plethora of different things.

Let?s say you already have a brilliant idea, and the knowledge to back it up that will enable you to write an exceptional E-Book. You may be sitting at your computer staring at a blank screen wondering, ?Why? Why should I go through all the trouble of writing my E-Book when it?s so impossible to get anything published these days?

Well, let me assure you that publishing an E-Book is entirely different than publishing a book in print. Let?s look at the specifics of how the print and cyber publishing industry differ, and the many reasons why you should take the plunge and get your fingers tapping across those keyboards!

Submitting a print book to conventional publishing houses or to agents is similar to wearing a hair shirt 24/7. No matter how good your book actually is, or how many critique services and mentor writers have told you that ?you?ve got what it takes,? your submitted manuscript keeps coming back to you as if it is a boomerang instead of a valuable mine of information.

Perhaps, in desperation, you?ve checked out self-publishing and found out just how expensive a venture it can be. Most ?vanity presses? require minimal print runs of at least 500 copies, and even that amount will cost you thousands of dollars. Some presses? minimal run starts at 1,000 to 2,000 copies. And that?s just for the printing and binding. Add in distribution, shipping, and promotional costs and ? well, you do the math. Even if you wanted to go this route, you may not have that kind of money to risk.

Let?s say you already have an Internet business with a quality website and a quality product. An E-Book is one of the most powerful ways to promote your business while educating people with the knowledge you already possess as a business owner of a specific product or service.

For example, let?s say that you?ve spent the last twenty-five years growing and training bonsai trees, and now you?re ready to share your knowledge and experience. An E-Book is the perfect way to reach the largest audience of bonsai enthusiasts.

E-Books will not only promote your business ? they will help you make a name for yourself and your company, and establish you as an expert in your field. You may even find that you have enough to say to warrant a series of E-Books. Specific businesses are complicated and often require the different aspects to be divided in order for the reader to get the full story.

Perhaps your goals are more finely tuned in terms of the E-Book scene. You may want to build a whole business around writing and publishing E-Books. Essentially, you want to start an e-business. You are thinking of setting up a website to promote and market your E-Books. Maybe you?re even thinking of producing an E-zine.

One of the most prevalent reasons people read E-Books is to find information about how to turn their Internet businesses into a profit-making machine. And these people are looking to the writers of E-Books to provide them with new ideas and strategies because writers of E-Books are usually people who understand the new cyberspace world we now live in. E-Book writers are experts in Internet marketing campaigns and the strategies of promoting and distributing E-Books. The cyberspace community needs its E-Books to be successful so that more and more E-Books will be written.

You may want to create affiliate programs that will also market your E-Book. Affiliates can be people or businesses worldwide that will all be working to sell your E-Books. Think about this. Do you see a formula for success here?

Figure out what your subject matter is, and then narrow it down. Your goal is to aim for specificity. Research what?s out there already, and try to find a void that your E-Book might fill.

What about an E-Book about a wedding cake business? Or an E-Book about caring for elderly pets? How about the fine points of collecting ancient pottery?

You don?t have to have three masters degrees to write about your subject. People need advice that is easy to read and easily understood. Parents need advice for dealing with their teenagers. College students need to learn good study skills ? quickly. The possibilities are endless.

After you?ve written your E-book

Getting your E-Book out is going to be your focus once you?ve finished writing it, just as it is with print books. People will hesitate to buy any book from an author they?ve never heard of. Wouldn?t you?

The answer is simple: give it away! You will see profits in the form of promoting your own business and getting your name out. You will find affiliates who will ask you to place their links within your E-Book, and these affiliates will in turn go out and make your name known. Almost every single famous E-Book author has started out this way.

This doesnt mean you should stop here. Eventually, you will move into where most of the wealth mountains are selling them, and then maybe their Resell Rights and Private Label licenses!

Another powerful tool to attract people to your E-Book is to make it interactive. Invent something for them to do within the book rather than just producing pages that contain static text. Let your readers fill out questionnaires, forms, even crossword puzzles geared to testing their knowledge on a particular subject. Have your readers hit a link that will allow them to recommend your book to their friends and associates. Or include an actual order form so at the end of their reading journey, they can eagerly buy your product.

When people interact with books, they become a part of the world of that book. The fact is just as true for books in print as it is for E-Books.

That?s why E-Books are so essential. Not only do they provide a forum for people to learn and make sense of their own thoughts, but they can also serve to promote your business at the same time.

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For legion of fans, Apple retail jobs prove a letdown

June 24, 2012 1:06 am

By David Segal?/?The New York Times

Last year, during his best three-month stretch, Jordan Golson sold about $750,000 worth of computers and gadgets at the Apple Store in Salem, N.H. It was a performance that might have called for a bottle of Champagne -- if that were a luxury Mr. Golson could have afforded.

"I was earning $11.25 an hour," he said. "Part of me was thinking, 'This is great. I'm an Apple fan, the store is doing really well.' But when you look at the amount of money the company is making and then you look at your paycheck, it's kind of tough."

America's love affair with the smartphone has helped create tens of thousands of jobs at places like Best Buy and Verizon Wireless and will this year pump billions into the economy.

Within this world, the Apple Store is the undisputed king, a retail phenomenon renowned for impeccable design, deft service and spectacular revenues. Last year, the company's 327 global stores took in more money per square foot than any other U.S. retailer -- wireless or otherwise -- and almost double that of Tiffany, which was No. 2 on the list, according to the research firm RetailSails.

Worldwide, its stores sold $16 billion in merchandise.

But most of Apple's employees enjoyed little of that wealth. While consumers tend to think of Apple's headquarters in Cupertino, Calif., as the company's heart and soul, a majority of its workers in the United States are not engineers or executives with hefty salaries and bonuses but rather hourly wage earners selling iPhones and MacBooks.

About 30,000 of the 43,000 Apple employees in this country work in Apple Stores, as members of the service economy, and many of them earn about $25,000 a year. They work inside the world's fastest growing industry, for the most valuable company, run by one of the country's most richly compensated chief executives, Tim Cook. Last year, he received stock grants, which vest over a 10-year period, that at today's share price would be worth more than $570 million.

And though Apple is unparalleled as a retailer, when it comes to its lowliest workers, the company is a reflection of the technology industry as a whole.

Much of the debate about U.S. unemployment has focused on why companies have moved factories overseas, but only 8 percent of the U.S. work force is in manufacturing, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Job growth has for decades been led by service-related work.


First Published June 24, 2012 1:04 am

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Sunday 24 June 2012

Android Central international round-up - June 23, 2012

Android Central

It's been an unusually quiet week for international Android news, with much of the buzz in the past seven days focusing on the U.S. Galaxy S III launch and Google IO expectations (we'll be there, by the way!) But in amongst all the hype surrounding Samsung's new flagship and Jelly Bean and Nexus 7 rumors, we got the chance to go hands-on with LG's latest and greatest, the Optimus 4X HD. The 4X sees LG upping the ante considerably, and building on last year's offerings with a fantastic IPS screen and a speedy quad-core CPU. You'll want to go check out our initial review and hands-on video if you haven't already.

We also posted our exhaustive walkthrough of the TouchWiz Nature UX -- that's the latest version of Samsung's TouchWiz UI that you'll find on the new Galaxy S III. If there's anything at all you want to know about the S III's software, that's the place to find out.

Elsewhere, T-Mobile UK joined the list of UK carriers lowering European roaming rates on their customers in time for the summer, meaning significantly cheaper data rates for Brits traveling to the continent over the next few months. And LG hopped on the voice control bandwagon in its native South Korea, with the news of "Quick Voice", its own take on Samsung's S Voice and Apple's Siri.

And Canadians wanting to get their Samsung phones updated to Ice Cream Sandwich got some good news this week -- TELUS's Galaxy S II is on track to receive it on July 13, while Rogers' Galaxy S II LTE can be updated to ICS right now through Kies.

Be sure to keep watching AC over the next week -- we'll have at least two new device reviews for you, in addition to all the Google IO coverage you could want. In the meantime, check out some of the past seven days' highlights --

Special Features:

News:



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5.7-magnitude earthquake hits SE China

backgroundblue line Sunday 24th June, 2012

5.7-magnitude earthquake hits SE China ??



?????Sunday 24th June, 2012??Source: SINA ??
BEIJING, June 24 (Xinhua) -- A 5.7-magnitude earthquake jolted the border of southwest China's Yunnan and Sichuan provinces at 3:59 p.m.
Sunday (Beijing Time), said the China Earthquake Networks Center. The epicenter, with a depth of 11 km, was located at the border area between Ninglang county of Yunnan and Yanyuan county of Sichuan at 27.7 degrees of north latitude and 100.7 degrees east longitude.
No information about casualty has been avail...
Read the full story at SINA

Breaking News
Sunday 24th June, 2012


Our network flyer service provides a medium for putting your important news into a flyer on the web.
Whether it be a new product launch, announcing a community event, promoting a Web site, or advertising your business, then our Network Flyers service is for you.
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Hyperthyroidism linked to increased risk of hospitalization for heart and blood-vessel disease

Hyperthyroidism linked to increased risk of hospitalization for heart and blood-vessel disease [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 23-Jun-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Aaron Lohr
alohr@endo-society.org
240-482-1380
The Endocrine Society

An overactive thyroid gland, or hyperthyroidism, may increase the risk of hospitalization for heart and blood-vessel disease even after surgery to remove the gland, according to a new study. The results will be presented Saturday at The Endocrine Society's 94th Annual Meeting in Houston.

"Overactive thyroid gland has long-lasting effects on the patient's heart and vessels," said study principal investigator Saara Metso, M.D., Ph.D. assistant chief of endocrinology in the Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Endocrinology, at Tampere University Hospital in Tampere, Finland. "Therefore, it is important to monitor the patient's heartbeat and blood pressure even years after the overactive thyroid gland has been cured."

The thyroid gland, located in the front of the neck, produces thyroid hormone, which helps regulate the process of turning food into energy. When the gland is overactive and produces excessive hormone, many bodily processes speed up. Symptoms include unexplained weight loss, rapid heart rate, increased appetite, profuse sweating, and feelings of anxiety.

Diagnosis of an overactive thyroid gland usually involves a simple blood test, and effective treatments are available. These include radioactive iodine, which destroys part of the thyroid gland; antithyroid medication to reduce thyroid-hormone synthesis; and surgery, or a thyroidectomy, to remove it.

Recently, however, questions were raised about the long-term health effects of treatment after some studies found that patients who had received radioactive iodine treatment or antithyroid medication had an increased risk of hospitalization for heart and blood-vessel disease. This risk persisted long after therapy ended, but it was unclear whether it was associated with the treatment itself or the prior overactive thyroid.

In findings implicating the disease rather than the treatment, the current study showed that patients who had undergone surgical thyroid removal also were at greater risk of being hospitalized for heart and blood-vessel disease. Overall, their risk was 17 percent greater compared to those without a history of overactive thyroid, and the increased risk persisted for as long as two decades after surgery.

"Although overactive thyroid gland is usually easy to diagnose and treat, it may be injurious to the patient's heart and vessels," Metso said. "It is probably the disease rather than the treatment that affects the patient's heart and vessels permanently."

Participants included 4,334 patients diagnosed with overactive thyroid who underwent thyroidectomy in Finland between 1986 and 2007, and 12,991 age- and gender-matched controls. They were 86 percent female, their average age was 46 years, and all were white. Average follow-up was 10.5 years.

Investigators obtained hospitalization information from Finland's national Hospital Discharge Registry for the study. They received funding from Research Funding of the Pirkanmaa Hospital District, Finland.

Hyperthyroidism affects approximately 1 percent of the U.S. population. The most common cause is an autoimmune disorder called Grave's disease.

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Hyperthyroidism linked to increased risk of hospitalization for heart and blood-vessel disease [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 23-Jun-2012
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Contact: Aaron Lohr
alohr@endo-society.org
240-482-1380
The Endocrine Society

An overactive thyroid gland, or hyperthyroidism, may increase the risk of hospitalization for heart and blood-vessel disease even after surgery to remove the gland, according to a new study. The results will be presented Saturday at The Endocrine Society's 94th Annual Meeting in Houston.

"Overactive thyroid gland has long-lasting effects on the patient's heart and vessels," said study principal investigator Saara Metso, M.D., Ph.D. assistant chief of endocrinology in the Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Endocrinology, at Tampere University Hospital in Tampere, Finland. "Therefore, it is important to monitor the patient's heartbeat and blood pressure even years after the overactive thyroid gland has been cured."

The thyroid gland, located in the front of the neck, produces thyroid hormone, which helps regulate the process of turning food into energy. When the gland is overactive and produces excessive hormone, many bodily processes speed up. Symptoms include unexplained weight loss, rapid heart rate, increased appetite, profuse sweating, and feelings of anxiety.

Diagnosis of an overactive thyroid gland usually involves a simple blood test, and effective treatments are available. These include radioactive iodine, which destroys part of the thyroid gland; antithyroid medication to reduce thyroid-hormone synthesis; and surgery, or a thyroidectomy, to remove it.

Recently, however, questions were raised about the long-term health effects of treatment after some studies found that patients who had received radioactive iodine treatment or antithyroid medication had an increased risk of hospitalization for heart and blood-vessel disease. This risk persisted long after therapy ended, but it was unclear whether it was associated with the treatment itself or the prior overactive thyroid.

In findings implicating the disease rather than the treatment, the current study showed that patients who had undergone surgical thyroid removal also were at greater risk of being hospitalized for heart and blood-vessel disease. Overall, their risk was 17 percent greater compared to those without a history of overactive thyroid, and the increased risk persisted for as long as two decades after surgery.

"Although overactive thyroid gland is usually easy to diagnose and treat, it may be injurious to the patient's heart and vessels," Metso said. "It is probably the disease rather than the treatment that affects the patient's heart and vessels permanently."

Participants included 4,334 patients diagnosed with overactive thyroid who underwent thyroidectomy in Finland between 1986 and 2007, and 12,991 age- and gender-matched controls. They were 86 percent female, their average age was 46 years, and all were white. Average follow-up was 10.5 years.

Investigators obtained hospitalization information from Finland's national Hospital Discharge Registry for the study. They received funding from Research Funding of the Pirkanmaa Hospital District, Finland.

Hyperthyroidism affects approximately 1 percent of the U.S. population. The most common cause is an autoimmune disorder called Grave's disease.

###


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

?


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


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