Sunday, October 20, 2013

French far right accuses minister of defamation

PARIS (AP) — France's far-right party said Sunday that it would file a complaint against the justice minister, who called the party's ideas "murderous" after one of its members compared her to a monkey.

On French television last week, a National Front candidate in a municipal election acknowledged she had posted a montage on Facebook that juxtaposed a photo of a baby monkey with one of Justice Minister Christine Taubira, who is black. The caption implied the photo of the monkey was a baby picture of the minister.

Anne-Sophie Leclere said she didn't think the photos were racist and were only meant to imply Taubira is not fit for office. The National Front has since suspended Leclere's candidacy.

Taubira responded Saturday that the "deadly and murderous thinking" of the National Front party should come as no surprise, accusing them of holding racist views, even if they are not always so public.

That prompted the party to issue a statement, saying it would bring Taubira to justice. Wallerand de Saint-Just, a lawyer for the party, said it would file a complaint for defamation and insults.

The move appears to make good on the promise of Marine Le Pen, the leader of the National Front, to pursue in court anyone who characterizes the party as part of the "extreme right." She has complained such characterizations are smear tactics, meant to paint the party as a fringe movement that is not representative of French people.

It's all part of Le Pen's efforts to soften the image of the National Front, stigmatized as racist and anti-Semitic during her father's tenure. And the party does seem to be gaining strength: Last week, a National Front candidate won a local by-election, and Le Pen herself drew 17.9 percent of the vote in the first round of last year's presidential election.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-10-20-France-Far%20Right/id-b9fb28ed70b441dc961f2ad1e257965e
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Insert Coin semifinalist: BlinkScan lets you scan multiple objects in a single go

So maybe its "scanning at the speed of light" claims are a bit overstated, but BlinkScan's capabilities are still pretty impressive. The peripheral scans, crops and straightens images in the speed its name implies, pulling out individual files when you can several images at once. After the break, ...


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/pdM5C_62Rns/
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China economy showed signs of slowing in September: stats bureau


BEIJING (Reuters) - China's economy showed signs of slowing growth in September, the state statistics bureau said on Friday, after announcing that GDP grew 7.8 percent in the third quarter, its fastest pace this year and in line with expectations.


National Bureau of Statistics spokesman Sheng Laiyun told a news briefing that net exports had subtracted 0.1 percentage point from growth in the first three months of the year.


(Reporting by China Economics Team; Editing by Paul Tait)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/china-economy-showed-signs-slowing-september-stats-bureau-061128705--business.html
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Flexible Solar Panel Wings Could One Day Let Robot Birds Fly Forever

Hawks, eagles, and other birds of prey have been known to stay aloft for hours on end using a strategic mix of flapping and gliding. Robotic birds can do the same, except that they can't replenish their batteries by snatching a mid-flight snack. However, researchers at the University of Maryland are perfecting a set of flexible solar cell wings that could allow flying bots to stay aloft indefinitely, as long as they get a peek at the sun every so often.

Read more...


    






Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/s2Jekk909LY/flexible-solar-panel-wings-could-one-day-let-robot-bird-1446328557
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Saturday, October 19, 2013

GOP caught changing House rules on Oct. 1 to ensure govt stays shut down (video) (Americablog)

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Robin Williams in Talks for 'Night at the Museum 3' (Exclusive)




Courtesy Everett Collection


Robin Williams in "Night at the Museum"



Robin Williams is in negotiations to return to Fox’s Night at the Museum franchise. The third film in the series will begin shooting in February 2013.



Night at the Museum 3 will see Ben Stiller return as security guard Larry Daley and Shawn Levy returning to the director’s chair for a series that has grossed close to a billion dollars.


TV REVIEW: The Crazy Ones


Williams has played Teddy Roosevelt in both Night at the Museum and Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian and will reprise the role as the action moves to London.


It’s not known at this time if Smithsonian castmembers such as Amy Adams, Bill Hader, and Christopher Guest, who also played historical figures, will return as well.


Williams is on a high these days with a hit CBS sitcom, The Crazy Ones. On Friday, the show was picked up for a full season as it has been a solid performer for the network and had one of the biggest debuts of the fall season.


He is repped by WME, MBST and Manatt Phelps.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/news/~3/ouZDNXP4vbg/robin-williams-talks-night-at-649554
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TV Ratings: 'Voice' Tops Monday as 'Castle,' 'Dancing' and '2 Broke Girls' All Improve



Driven by a steady episode of The Voice and a slightly boosted Blacklist, NBC nabbed another Monday night -- one month into the new fall season. The two-hour battle round of the singing competition came in just a tenth of a point shy of last week's outing, averaging a 4.5 rating with adults 18-49. Blacklist (3.2 adults) was up by the same measure, though affiliate NFL preemptions leave the two's scores subject to change. NBC averaged a 4.0 adults rating and 13 million viewers for the night.



PHOTOS: 81 of Fall TV's Biggest Stars


A steady Bones kicked off Monday on Fox, down just a tenth for a 2.1 rating among adults 18-49. Sleepy Hollow (2.6 adults) followed, off two-tenths from last week to give the net a nightly average of a 2.3 adults rating and 7.3 million viewers.


ABC saw boosts throughout its lineup, with Dancing With the Stars (2.1 adults) up a tenth of a point in its two-hour episode, and Castle (2.2 adults) jumping three-tenths. ABC pulled a 2.1 adults rating and 12.2 million viewers.


STORY: 'Sleepy Hollow' Is DVR's Most Improved, While 'SHIELD' and 'Big Bang Theory' Top Premieres


How I Met Your Mother, steady with a 3.0 rating among adults 18-49, kicked off CBS' slightly tweaked lineup. It led into 2 Broke Girls' (2.5 adults) new slot, up two-tenths in the move. Mom (1.9 adults) shed two-tenths without an original lead-in, while Hostages (1.2 adults) held last week's score. The net averaged a 2.0 rating with adults 18-49 and 7 million viewers.


Hart of Dixie (0.4 adults) held even on The CW, while Beauty and the Beast (0.3 adults) was off by a tenth. The CW brought in a 0.4 adults rating and 997,000 viewers over the night.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/television/~3/_fe54JER8gk/story01.htm
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Sherman, Revis make lock-down CBs an NFL must-have

Seattle Seahawks' Richard Sherman (25) intercepts the ball in front of Houston Texans' Owen Daniels (81) during the fourth quarter an NFL football game on Sunday, Sept. 29, 2013, in Houston. Sherman returned the ball for a touchdown. (AP Photo/Patric Schneider)







Seattle Seahawks' Richard Sherman (25) intercepts the ball in front of Houston Texans' Owen Daniels (81) during the fourth quarter an NFL football game on Sunday, Sept. 29, 2013, in Houston. Sherman returned the ball for a touchdown. (AP Photo/Patric Schneider)







FILE - In this Dec. 12, 1999, file photo, Arizona Cardinals quarterback Jake Plummer (16) tries to tackle Washington Redskins cornerback Darrell Green (28) who intercepted Plummer's pass during the fourth quarter of an NFL football game at FedEx Field in Landover, Md. The former Washington Redskins cornerback, elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2008, looks around today's NFL and sees a lack of talent at his old job. "I would say this: The cornerback position is probably at its lowest level. (AP Photo/Doug Mills, File)







Tampa Bay Buccaneers cornerback Darrelle Revis (24) breaks up the pass to Arizona Cardinals running back Rashard Mendenhall (28) during the sec ond half of an NFL football game on Sunday, Sept. 29, 2013 in Tampa, Fla.. (AP Photo/Reinhold Matay)







FILE - In this Aug. 2, 2008 file photo, former Washington Redskins cornerback Darrell Green stands next to his bronze bust at the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio. The former Redskins cornerback looks around today's NFL and sees a lack of talent at his old job. (AP Photo/Kiichiro Sato, File)







Darrell Green is not impressed.

The Hall of Famer looks around today's NFL and sees a lack of talent at his old job.

"When it is most needed, in my opinion, the cornerback position is probably producing at its lowest level," Green said. "Guys like myself and Deion Sanders and Mike Haynes — this is the time when we would be saying, 'Yes! This is great! We want you to pass.'"

Seattle's Richard Sherman, Tampa Bay's Darrelle Revis and Denver's Champ Bailey think that way, too, making lock-down cornerbacks must-haves nowadays. With quarterbacks flinging the football around like never before, those back-end guys get more chances to flourish or fail. They define their teams' Ds.

Still, as Green points out, special ones are rare. Check the numbers: Through Week 6, QBs averaged a passer rating of 81 when targeting players covered by cornerbacks, higher than any season since at least 1995, according to STATS.

"This generation, they're behind the 8-ball, because these offenses and quarterbacks are incredible," said Green, who played for the Washington Redskins from 1983-2002. "Better cornerbacks would make defenses better."

Thanks to rules changes and offensive innovation, games are averaging 45.90 points in 2013, which would be the second-most in NFL history (the record is 46.48 in 1948). Games are averaging about 710 total net yards and slightly more than 490 yards passing, both on pace to break marks set in 2012. The 289 touchdown passes are the most through Week 6, an average of 3.14 per game that would be the highest in the Super Bowl era.

"If you keep getting that passing game going more and more, you're going to keep seeing how important it is to have good corners," Bailey said.

"I would say now you've got to have more than one," he said, "and that's the hard part."

Seattle pairs the 6-foot-3 Sherman with 6-foot-4 Brandon Browner.

"If you don't have good corners, it can be a long day," Sherman said, "regardless of what you're doing on offense or how your front seven is playing."

Used to be wideouts got a ton of attention: Randy Moss, Terrell Owens, Chad Ochocinco.

Now it's the diva DBs.

Sherman, for one, is "a vociferous guy," as his college teammate at Stanford, Colts quarterback Andrew Luck, put it. Sherman isn't shy about telling the world just how good he is — he engaged Revis in a Twitter spat over who's better — and the entire NFL notices what he says and how well he defends.

"The kid from Seattle's got a big mouth," Jets coach Rex Ryan said in a bit of takes-one-to-know-one commentary from a top defensive mind, "but he can play, you know?"

Ask Sherman to list top corners, and he'll mention Revis, New England's Aqib Talib, Cleveland's Joe Haden, Tennessee's Alterraun Verner, Arizona's Patrick Peterson.

"Elites," Sherman called them.

Ryan used to have Revis; he still has Antonio Cromartie.

"You can be more aggressive. You can play more man coverage — true lock-down, man coverage — if you're fortunate to have one like that. Some of the other ones, you've just got to play zone," Ryan said. "We want to attack you and we want to dictate. We don't want to ... just play zone or play scared."

Revis thinks the same way.

"I think a lot of DBs panic in this league, because the (receivers) get up on them and get on top of them," he said.

"I flip it," Revis explained. "They're the ones who are the prey."

Even if Revis didn't have his best outing against Philadelphia's DeSean Jackson on Sunday, he still helped the Bucs with a fumble recovery. Even if Bailey, in his first game this season after spraining his left foot, was troubled Sunday by Justin Blackmon, he still picked off a pass intended for Blackmon on a 2-point conversion attempt that could have pulled the Jaguars into a surprising halftime tie with the Broncos.

These guys change a game's complexion, and not only with pick-6s: There have been 25 interceptions returned for TDs already, putting the league on pace for 70, one fewer than last season, which had the most since the NFL expanded to 16 games in 1978, STATS said.

Superior cornerbacks give a defense more options.

They force offenses to alter game plans.

Look at the way Talib shadowed Saints tight end Jimmy Graham on Sunday, helping hold him without a catch.

Through Week 6, STATS has Talib ranked second among NFL cornerbacks for lowest opponent QB rating when targeted, behind only Verner. They're tied with an NFL-high four interceptions.

From 1995 (when STATS data begins) through 2012, Sanders ranked No. 1 in opposing QB rating, followed by Patrick Surtain. Among active corners, Revis was fourth, Atlanta's Asante Samuel sixth, Bailey 13th, Talib 17th. Sherman, in his third NFL season, doesn't have enough targets to qualify; his numbers for 2011-12 would put him second.

And Green? He was eighth during that period.

"Cornerbacks (are) born with something. Not a lot of coaches can teach it. Not a lot of players can play it," Green said. "It's definitely one of the toughest positions. I don't want to get too down on them, because I know what they have to face."

___

AP Sports Writers Dennis Waszak Jr., Michael Marot, Fred Goodall and Tim Booth, and AP Pro Football Writer Arnie Stapleton contributed to this report.

___

Follow Howard Fendrich on Twitter at http://twitter.com/HowardFendrich

___

AP NFL website: www.pro32.ap.org

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-10-15-FBN-Diva-DBs/id-64ee39c818bc4f29bdcf90806dfa0178
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McConnell Says He Will Not Allow Another Shutdown (Taegan Goddard's Political Wire)

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Over 1,600 migrants rounded up after ethnic riots in Moscow


By Gabriela Baczynska and Igor Belyatski


MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russian police rounded up more than 1,600 migrants on Monday in Moscow after rioting swept through a southern neighborhood over a fatal stabbing of a Russian that many residents blame on a man from the Caucasus region.


Advocacy groups warned migrants from Russia's mainly Muslim Caucasus region and Central Asia of an increased risk of attacks in the worst ethnic disturbance in Moscow in three years. Authorities stepped up police patrols in the capital.


Some 200 residents rallied in the Biryulyovo district on Monday night to call for tougher policing of labor migrants, in a second day of protests over the stabbing death of an ethnic Russian, 25-year-old Yegor Shcherbakov.


Police detained ten people, local media reported


A bigger protest a day earlier had turned to violent riots.


"We are scared to walk the streets at night," blond-haired resident, Alexei Zhuravlyov, said. "They (migrants) are always attacking, stealing from and killing people. They don't even abide by basic rules like stopping at a red light."


Migrant labor has played a significant role in Russia's transformation during an oil-fuelled economic boom that took off around the time President Vladimir Putin came to power in 2000.


But many in Moscow are uneasy at the influx of migrants from Russia's heavily Muslim North Caucasus and ex-Soviet states of the Caucasus and Central Asia, although many do low-paying jobs, such as in construction, that few local residents want.


"They come here and act as if it were their home," local Biryulyovo resident Tatiana said.


In an apparent attempt to appease residents, police said they rounded up some 1,200 people detained at a wholesale vegetable market that had been stormed on Sunday night.


Another 450 were detained in northeastern Moscow, also near a vegetable market employing migrant workers.


Police said they were all detained to check whether they were involved in any wrongdoing, but they have not been accused of any specific crime. Footage showed detainees standing against walls or lined up in front of camouflage-clad police.


HEIGHTENED RISK


On Sunday, people fought with police, smashed shops, vending stalls and other sites employing migrant workers.


Police arrested at least 380 people as they struggled to quell the violence, which injured several police and shone a spotlight on persistent ethnic tensions in the capital.


"The situation shows what the sudden call by a handful of nationalist scum can lead to," Moscow's Deputy Mayor Alexander Gorbenko said in comments on state television.


Russian authorities frequently carry out raids detaining illegal immigrants but critics say such efforts are undermined by corruption in law enforcement agencies.


"We must learn to live together ... and counteract rampant corruption and related attempts to break up our country," Russia's human rights ombudsman, Vladimir Lukin, told state TV.


A group that lobbies for labor migrants in Russia warned of an increased risk of ethnic violence in Moscow on Monday.


"The nationalists are pursuing their political goals. This is clearly very dangerous. We are warning migrants to be careful for now in crowded areas and on public transportation," said Mukhamad Amin, head of the Federation of Migrants of Russia.


The rioting came before Eid al-Adha, an Islamic holiday that most Russian Muslims begin celebrating on Tuesday. In Moscow, ethnic tension is often higher during such holidays because large numbers of Muslims gather at the city's few mosques.


Putin has frequently warned of the dangers of ethnic and religious violence in multicultural Russia, which is mostly Slavic and Orthodox Christian but has a large Muslim minority.


Putin said this month Russia needed migrant laborers in industries such as construction but, in a nod to anti-migrant sentiment, suggested their numbers could be restricted in trade.


(Additional reporting by Alissa de Carbonnel and Ludmila Danilova; Editing by Steve Gutterman and Ralph Boulton)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/over-1-000-migrants-rounded-being-targeted-moscow-132128842.html
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Rose Scores 32 To Lead Bulls Over Pacers


CHICAGO (AP) — Derrick Rose scored 32 points, including eight in the final three minutes, and Luol Deng added 22 as the Chicago Bulls remained unbeaten this preseason with a 103-98 victory over the Indiana Pacers on Friday night.


Rose, who played 31 minutes, also had nine assists and was 9 for 15 from the field, including 4 for 7 from 3-point range, as the Bulls improved to 5-0.


Paul George led the Pacers (0-5) with 22 points.


The Bulls were without Jimmy Butler (left knee contusion) and Joakim Noah (right groin strain). Noah will be shut down for a week in hopes that the rest will clear up the injury that has bothered him since early in training camp.


The schedule said it was a preseason game, but the atmosphere in the United Center definitely had a regular-season feel as the teams expected to compete for the Central Division title battled down the stretch. Both teams finished with mostly starters on the court, which usually isn't the norm in the preseason.


Rose appeared done for the night when he went to the bench late in the third quarter after playing 26 minutes. He had averaged 21.8 points in three previous games as he returns after missing last season following major knee surgery.


But he returned with just over 5 minutes left and led the Bulls to victory as the crowd of 21,783 cheered as if it were a playoff game.


Source: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=237318438&ft=1&f=
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Friday, October 18, 2013

Obama, Congress at odds over Iran sanctions relief

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif briefs the media after the two days of closed-door nuclear talks, during a press conference at the CICG, in Geneva, Switzerland, Wednesday, Oct.16, 2013. (AP Photo/Keystone, Martial Trezzini)







Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif briefs the media after the two days of closed-door nuclear talks, during a press conference at the CICG, in Geneva, Switzerland, Wednesday, Oct.16, 2013. (AP Photo/Keystone, Martial Trezzini)







EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Catherine Ashton smiles during a press conference after two days of closed-door nuclear talks on Iran in Geneva, Switzerland, Wednesday, Oct. 16, 2013. Talks between Iran and six world powers have ended an upbeat note, with the European Union's top diplomat Ashton calling them "very important," in efforts to end international tensions over Tehran's nuclear program. (AP Photo/Keystone, Martial Trezzini)







(AP) — The Obama administration is considering helping Iran recoup billions of dollars in frozen overseas assets if Tehran scales back its nuclear program.

But Congress is determined to set a high bar for any relief for Iran.

Officials say the proposal is under consideration to spur nuclear negotiations.

A skeptical Congress is weighing in, too.

Illinois Sen. Mark Kirk has a plan to give the U.S. more sticks and carrots.

He wants to freeze all remaining Iranian assets overseas. He'd do that by threatening to block from the U.S. market any bank that does business with Iran.

Kirk would let Iran get at some of the $50 billion to $75 billion that's already blocked.

But Iran would only get the money after ending all uranium enrichment activity.

Iran rejects such demands.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-10-18-US-United-States-Iran/id-bc37543676d04f3ab856b29927cc05c8
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Fuselage panel falls from Boeing 787 Dreamliner in flight


SEATTLE (Reuters) - Boeing Co said a body panel fell off of a 787 Dreamliner operated by Air India while the plane was in flight on Saturday, a new problem for the high-tech jet that has suffered a string of mishaps since its introduction two years ago.


Boeing said the loss of the fuselage panel posed no safety risk to passengers. It was not immediately known where the panel landed.


The jet was carrying 148 people, including crew, on a flight from Delhi to Bangalore, The Times of India newspaper reported. The pilots did not realize the eight-by-four-foot panel was missing until after the flight landed, the newspaper said, adding that India's aviation authorities are investigating.


Boeing said the missing panel fell from the underside of the plane on the right side. A photo on The Times of India website showed a large opening with components and aircraft structure visible inside.


"It was the mid-underwing-to-body fairing located on the belly of the airplane on the right side," Boeing spokesman Doug Alder said. The part "provides a more aerodynamic surface in flight."


He said Boeing is working to understand what caused the panel to fall and declined to say whether the plane was made at Boeing's South Carolina factory. A number of Air India jets have come from that assembly line.


The Times of India said the panel was replaced with one taken from a just-delivered 787 Dreamliner that was not yet ready for service. That plane is now awaiting a spare part, the paper said.


Problems that have afflicted the 787 include battery overheating that prompted regulators to ground the entire fleet in January. Flights resumed in April. Despite the problems, Boeing's stock has stayed near record levels. It closed Tuesday at $118.18, down $1.28.


(Reporting by Alwyn Scott; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fuselage-panel-falls-boeing-787-dreamliner-flight-030152002--finance.html
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“Could You Be an Animal If You Didn’t Have Any Bones?”

Bone by Bone: Comparing Animal Skeletons

Illustration and text by Sara Levine/T.S Spookytooth








In some of the best children’s books, dandelions turn into stars, sharks and radishes merge, and pancakes fall from the sky. No one would confuse these magical tales for descriptions of nature. Small children can differentiate between “the real world and the imaginary world,” as psychologist Alison Gopnik has written. They just “don’t see any particular reason for preferring to live in the real one.”










Children’s nuanced understanding of the not-real surely extends to the towering heap of books that feature dinosaurs as playmates who fill buckets of sand or bake chocolate-chip cookies. The imaginative play of these books may be no different to kids than radishsharks and llama dramas.










But as a parent, friendly dinos never steal my heart. I associate them, just a little, with old creationist images of animals frolicking near the garden of Eden, which carried the message that dinosaurs and man, both created by God on the sixth day, co-existed on the Earth until after the flood. (Never mind the evidence that dinosaurs went extinct millions of years before humans appeared.) The founder of the Creation Museum in Kentucky calls dinosaurs “missionary lizards,” and that phrase echoes in my head when I see all those goofy illustrations of dinosaurs in sunglasses and hats.












I’ve been longing for another kind of picture book: one that appeals to young children’s wildest imagination in service of real evolutionary thinking. Such a book could certainly include dinosaur skeletons or fossils. But Bone by Bone, by veterinarian and professor Sara Levine, fills the niche to near perfection by relying on dogs, rabbits, bats, whales, and humans. Levine plays with differences in their skeletons to groom kids for grand scientific concepts.  










Bone by Bone asks kids to imagine what their bodies would look like if they had different configurations of bones, like extra vertebrae, longer limbs, or fewer fingers. “What if your vertebrae didn’t stop at your rear end? What if they kept going?” Levine writes, as a boy peers over his shoulder at the spinal column. “You’d have a tail!”










“What kind of animal would you be if your leg bones were much, much longer than your arm bones?” she wonders, as a girl in pink sneakers rises so tall her face disappears from the page. “A rabbit or a kangaroo!” she says, later adding a pike and a hare. “These animals need strong hind leg bones for jumping.” Levine’s questions and answers are delightfully simple for the scientific heft they carry.










With the lightest possible touch, Levine introduces the idea that bones in different vertebrates are related and that they morph over time. She starts with vertebrae, skulls and ribs. But other structures bear strong kinships in these animals, too. The bone in the center of a horse’s hoof, for instance, is related to a human finger. (“What would happen if your middle fingers and the middle toes were so thick that they supported your whole body?”) The bones that radiate out through a bat’s wing are linked to those in a human hand. (“A web of skin connects the bones to make wings so that a bat can fly.”) This is different from the wings of a bird or an insect; with bats, it’s almost as if they’re swimming through air.













Bone by Bone: Comparing Animal Skeletons

Illustration and text by Sara Levine/T.S Spookytooth








Of course, human hands did not shape-shift into bats’ wings, or vice versa. Both derive from a common ancestral structure, which means they share an evolutionary past. Homology, as this kind of relatedness is called, is among “the first and in many ways the best evidence for evolution,” says Josh Rosenau of the National Center for Science Education. Comparing bones also paves the way for comparing genes and molecules, for grasping evolution at the next level of sophistication. Indeed, it’s hard to look at the bat wings and human hands as presented here without lighting up, at least a little, with these ideas. So many smart writers focus on preparing young kids to read or understand numbers. Why not do more to ready them for the big ideas of science? Why not pave the way for evolution? (This is easier to do with older kids, with books like The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate and Why Don’t Your Eyelashes Grow?)













131016_DX_BoneByBone

Courtesy Lerner Publishing Group








The whimsical illustrations in Bone by Bone, by T.S Spookytooth, also speak to imagination in its native tongue. The boys’ and girls’ bodies stretch and morph, and one little boy collapses into a puddle of mud with a baseball cap on top: “Could you be an animal if you didn’t have any bones at all?” the text asks. Answer: Yes! Just check out the starfish, the beetle, and the clam on the next pages. No didactic preaching here. Still other big ideas flash by wordlessly, like a vestigial hipbone in a whale. Vestigial structures, in case your child asks, also provide evidence of evolution, suggesting ways in which structures that were perhaps once useful no longer are.










Maybe it’s a shame that evolution skeptics are so busy with textbooks in Texas right now. If they had time, they might take exception to Bone by Bone, generating the kind of attention that could turn it into a best-seller. The book really ought to needle them: It prepares young minds for evolution without ever using the word, appealing to kids just starting out in school. If you’re a parent who thinks science matters, you’ll go for the provocation.








Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/family/2013/10/bone_by_bone_the_picture_book_that_will_show_your_kid_how_evolution_works.html
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How to create calendar events in iOS directly in the Messages and Mail apps

How to create events in iOS directly in the Messages and Mail apps

It's not uncommon for us to email and message people about plans we're making with them. If you pay close attention, iOS seems to know when we do this by underlining certain text. That isn't just to make it stand out more, it's to make it easier for you to add events to your Calendar app.

Here's how:

  1. From the Messages app or Mail app, find the message that contains information on your plans.
  2. Find the underlined text detailing a time or place. This is usually a time, sometimes even linked to a place. Tap on it.
  3. In the menu that pops up, tap on Create Event. Alternately, you can tap on Show in Calendar first to make sure it doesn't conflict with something else you've already got planned.
  4. The event creation screen will now come up and allow you to finish entering any details you need to about the event. When you're finished, just tap Done in the upper right hand corner.

That's all there is to it. Your event will be saved and you never even had to enter the Calendar app itself in order to do it.


    






Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/RJneCzWBfzc/story01.htm
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Today and Tomorrow (Jin Tian Ming Tian): Tokyo Review



The Bottom Line


A cliché-laden tale offering too few insights about urban malaise among young migrant workers in Beijing.




Venue


Asian Future, Tokyo International Film Festival


Cast


Tang Kailin, Shu Yao, Wang Daotie, Yin Shanshan


Director


Yang Huilong




It's perhaps apt that two of the major onscreen emotional breakdowns in Today and Tomorrow involve characters bawling their eyes out while singing well-known musical numbers about dislocation and disappointment. Yang Huilong's directorial debut about the three disfranchised youngsters in Beijing is abundant in second-hand emotions and lacking in original ideas in both aesthetics and narrative -- and most devastatingly, it's missing a genuine understanding of and empathy toward the have-nots cast to the wayside as China lurches towards its glaring capitalist future.



Today and Tomorrow betrays a wide range of influences from yesteryears: the handheld camera work depicting angst-ridden, lustful young people living in gloomy rooms harkens back to the work of Sixth Generation Chinese filmmakers like Lou Ye and Wang Xiaoshuai, while the TV melodrama gets a look-in with plot points about characters choosing between profit and principle (think Teng Huatao's hit series Wo Ju) and caricatured characters (the prostitute with a heart of gold; excessively effeminate fashion designers). The film has been given some festival pedigree after its bow in Tokyo International Film Festival's Asian Future section, but its middling mix of mainstream and alternative approaches might put off viewers of both cinematic camps.


PHOTOS: Inside Hollywood's Surprise Trip to 'China's Oscars'


Set in the soon-to-be-demolished migrant-workers ghetto of Tangjialing in Beijing's northwestern outskirts, the film revolves around three disillusioned provincial-born twenty-somethings whose miserable material existence in the Chinese capital makes them part of the "ant tribe." No need to fret for those who don't know the backdrop and the term: Yang has made sure viewers will understand everything by playing out official announcements about the demolition plans -- not just once, but three times throughout the film -- and also an oddly-inserted radio program news bulletin snippet about the underemployed and underpaid workers toiling in the city. It's the kind of exposition that betrays a lack of elliptical approach towards the story -- a formalist flaw that mirrors the story that follows.


The story begins with a couple, the jobless Jie (Wang Taodie) and the fashion-design college graduate Ranran (Shu Yao) moving into a cramped room next to their friend Wang Xu (Tang Kaikin) -- the first time the pair have had a space to their own, and a footing that might allow them to make inroads into a stable life in Beijing. Needless to say, it's a greasy social pole they're trying to scale; Ranran is forced to endure the advances of the tailor she is an apprentice to, while Wang's dreams of becoming a CEO are constantly upended by either his conscience (when he refuses to partake in crooked practices as an insurance salesman) or his intellect (when he saves himself from a pyramid scheme unfolding in a disintegrating back-alley room). And Jie does, well, mostly nothing -- with his main vocation being lamenting about having done nothing.


And so this triumvirate of jaded young minds march on, their enthusiasm dimmed and hopes trampled with Jie's seemingly ill-advised attempts to sell his girlfriend's portfolio to established designers, while Wang's affection for a streetwalker (Yin Shanshan) only end in stones being thrown and flats being emptied out. So far, so realistic -- until the characters' anguish is somehow resolved, all thanks to humility and human persistence.


If this sounds uplifting to the point of being dogmatic, one is to be reminded that Today and Tomorrow begins with the aforementioned public-information announcement ("Let us create a wonderful future!") and ends with an upward-looking shot of the Chinese national flag fluttering in the wind in Beijing's Tiananmen Square. It would be erroneous to daub Yang's film as propaganda, but it's certainly fair to say the film, like state ideology, which praises resilience and suppresses rebellion, reduces a social problem into this simple, hope-springs-eternal discourse.


But what's most disturbing is how the film fails to connect with the downtrodden when it posits itself as a champion of the underdogs. In one of the final scenes of the film, Wang Xu -- who is happily working away in a small glass bottle factory -- is asked by a middle-aged colleague why a university graduate like him would want to become a laborer. Without battling an eye, the young man says he's treating his job as merely a break, a "year off" before he goes in for the kill in the corporate universe again.


Pity his comrades who have no such futures to aspire to; same goes to Ranran's neighbors whom she dreams of as bumbling quirks in a reverie about parading her dress along the corridor of her tenement -- a presaging of the good news she will inevitably receive later, a stroke of luck that wouldn't befall the others. This negligence is consistent with how the low are left nameless (the prostitute is never called by name, even if the character is listed as "Zhang Hui" in the credits) and how the Tangjialing community is merely a backdrop to the three characters' lives, its erasure (along with its down-and-out inhabitants) from history only returned to in a brief onscreen text before the credits roll at the end. Today and Tomorrow certainly reveals an uncertain future -- for Chinese filmmaking and Chinese society in general.


Asian Future, Tokyo International Film Festival
Production Company: Beijing Jiamao Pictures Television Culture
Director: Yang Huilong
Cast: Tang Kailin, Shu Yao, Wang Daotie, Yin Shanshan
Producer: Wang Yaxi
Executive Producer: Ursula Wolte
Screenwriter: Lin Shiwei
Director of Cinematography: Sun Tian
Editor: Hugues Danois
Music: Henri Huang
Sound Director: Liu Yang
In Mandarin
90 minutes


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/HollywoodReporterAsia/~3/Arkk66XI7Xc/story01.htm
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Apple iPhones, iPads get intrusion-detection and prevention from startup


Startup Skycure today makes its debut with what's described as intrusion-detection and prevention package for mobile devices. The IDS/IPS from Skycure initially supports Apple iOS iPhones and iPads, with Android anticipated for a later date.


Skycure says this IDS/IPS for Apple iOS works by installing agent software on the device, which interacts with the Skycure cloud service for security purposes. Yair Amit, co-founder and chief technology officer at Skycure, says the goal is to prevent and mitigate any impact from attackers exploiting configuration profiles on mobile devices.


[ InfoWorld presents the Bossies 2013, the best open source software for security, data centers, clouds, and more. | Keep up with key security issues with InfoWorld's Security Adviser blog and Security Central newsletter. ]


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"An attacker, in the wild, can configure the device to route all your traffic to their servers," Amit says. This could mean a compromise of information the user shares with everything from Facebook to bank accounts to e-mail and more.


Amit calls it a "design flaw" in iOS that results in "malicious configurations" that aren't necessarily protected by mobile-device management software. He adds this type of exploit of mobile devices would be most likely to occur when using Wi-Fi networks, particularly in public locations, where man-in-the-middle attacks are fairly common.


Both of Skycure's  co-founders were previously with IBM and Watchfire, the vulnerability-assessment firm acquired by IBM in 2007. Adi Sharabani, Skycure's CEO, was in the security strategy and architecture group at IBM Software, and manager of the security and research group at Watchfire. Amit was previously manager of the applications security and research group at IBM and lead researcher at Watchfire. Based in Tel Aviv, Israel, Skycure has received about $3 million in venture-capital funding from Pitango Venture Capital and angel investors.


Skycure's software combined with its cloud service is intended to dynamically identify any attacks on the mobile devices and take certain steps to mitigate against them. One way is setting up a VPN back to the Skycure cloud to cut off the attacker's route, or to a VPN site designated by the enterprise customer. Skycure is seeking to use behavioral analysis to detect attacks, without causing a device slowdown.


Skycure's service is priced per device at between $5 to $10 per month.


Ellen Messmer is senior editor at Network World, an IDG publication and website, where she covers news and technology trends related to information security. Twitter: MessmerE. E-mail: emessmer@nww.com


Read more about wide area network in Network World's Wide Area Network section.


Source: http://www.infoworld.com/d/mobile-technology/apple-iphones-ipads-get-intrusion-detection-and-prevention-startup-228954?source=rss_mobile_technology
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Thursday, October 17, 2013

More Angst For College Applicants: A Glitchy Common App

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Applying to college is stressful at the best of times. But technical flaws in the online Common Application, used by hundreds of colleges, have sparked panic among some high school seniors. With deadlines approaching, some schools are making backup plans — like a return to mail or even faxed applications.Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NprProgramsATC/~3/yBixzHzX-Lw/more-angst-for-college-applicants-a-glitchy-common-app
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MARC travel awards announced for the 2013 Society for Leukocyte Biology Meeting

MARC travel awards announced for the 2013 Society for Leukocyte Biology Meeting


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Public release date: 17-Oct-2013
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Contact: Gail Pinder
gpinder@faseb.org
301-634-7021
Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology





Bethesda, MD FASEB MARC (Maximizing Access to Research Careers) Program has announced the travel award recipients for the 2013 Society for Leukocyte Biology (SLB) annual meeting in Newport, RI from October 20-22, 2013. These awards are meant to promote the entry of students, postdoctorates and scientists from underrepresented groups into the mainstream of the basic science community and to encourage the participation of young scientists at the SLB annual meeting.


Awards are given to poster/platform presenters and faculty mentors paired with the students/trainees they mentor. This year MARC conferred 2 awards totaling $2,375.


The FASEB MARC Program is funded by a grant from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, National Institutes of Health. A primary goal of the MARC Program is to increase the number and competitiveness of underrepresented minorities engaged in biomedical and behavioral research.


POSTER/ORAL PRESENTERS (FASEB MARC PROGRAM)


Angel Byrd, The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown Univ./Rhode Island Hospital [ASIP member]


Stephania Libreros, Florida Atlantic University [SLB member]


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MARC travel awards announced for the 2013 Society for Leukocyte Biology Meeting


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]
Public release date: 17-Oct-2013
[


| E-mail



| Share Share

]

Contact: Gail Pinder
gpinder@faseb.org
301-634-7021
Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology





Bethesda, MD FASEB MARC (Maximizing Access to Research Careers) Program has announced the travel award recipients for the 2013 Society for Leukocyte Biology (SLB) annual meeting in Newport, RI from October 20-22, 2013. These awards are meant to promote the entry of students, postdoctorates and scientists from underrepresented groups into the mainstream of the basic science community and to encourage the participation of young scientists at the SLB annual meeting.


Awards are given to poster/platform presenters and faculty mentors paired with the students/trainees they mentor. This year MARC conferred 2 awards totaling $2,375.


The FASEB MARC Program is funded by a grant from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, National Institutes of Health. A primary goal of the MARC Program is to increase the number and competitiveness of underrepresented minorities engaged in biomedical and behavioral research.


POSTER/ORAL PRESENTERS (FASEB MARC PROGRAM)


Angel Byrd, The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown Univ./Rhode Island Hospital [ASIP member]


Stephania Libreros, Florida Atlantic University [SLB member]


###


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




Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/foas-mta101713.php
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