Thursday, November 29, 2012

The Surprising Health Benefits of the Great Outdoors - Outside Online









I was supposed to be listening to the cicadas and the sound of a flowing creek when a Mitsubishi van rumbled across a small steel bridge just downstream. It was probably depositing campers at a nearby tent village, where kids were running around with their fishing poles and pink bed pillows. This was nature, Japan style. I was in Chichibu-Tama-Kai National Park, a 75-minute train ride northwest of Tokyo, with half a dozen other hikers out for a dose of shinrin-yoku, or forest bathing. The Japanese go crazy for this practice, which is standard preventive medicine here. It essentially involves hanging out in the woods. It?s not about wilderness; it?s about the nature-civilization hybrid the Japanese have cultivated for thousands of years. You stroll a little, maybe write a haiku, crack open a spicebush twig and inhale its woodsy, sassy scent.

?People come out from the city and literally shower in the greenery,? our guide Kunio explained. ?This way they are able to become relaxed.? To help us along, Kunio?a volunteer ranger?had us standing still on a hillside, facing the creek, with our arms at our sides. I glanced around. We looked like earthlings transfixed by the light of the beamship. Or extras in a magical-kingdom movie. Kunio could have been one of the seven dwarves. Elfin, with noticeably large ears, he told us to breathe in for a count of seven, hold for five, release. ?Concentrate on your belly,? he said.

We needed this. Most of us were urban desk jockeys, including Tokyo businessman Ito Tatsuya, 41, standing next to me. Like many Japanese day hikers, he was carrying an inordinate amount of gear, much of it dangling from his belt: a cell phone, a camera, a water bottle, and a set of keys. The Japanese would make great Boy Scouts, which is probably why they make such fervent office workers, logging longer hours than almost anyone else in the developed world. They?ve even coined a term, karoshi, meaning death by overwork. Since he began lollygagging in the woods and picnicking on octopus, Ito?s shoulders seemed to be unclenching by the minute.

?When I?m out here, I don?t think about things,? he said.

?What?s the Japanese word for stress?? I asked.

?Stress,? he said.

WITH THE LARGEST CONCENTRATION of broad-leafed evergreens in Japan, mountainous Chichibu-Tama-Kai is an ideal place to put into practice the newest principles of wellness science. In a grove of rod-straight Japanese red pine, Kunio pulled a thermos from his massive daypack and served us some mountain-grown, bark-flavored wasabi-root tea. The idea with shinrin-yoku, a term coined by the government in 1982 but inspired by ancient Shinto and Buddhist practices, is to let nature enter your body through all five senses, and this was the taste part. I stretched out across the top of a cool, mossy boulder. A duck quacked. I was feeling pretty mellow, and tests would soon validate this: between the beginning and the end of the two-hour hike, my blood pressure had dropped a couple of points. Ito?s had dropped even more.

We knew this because we were on one of Japan?s 48 official Forest Therapy trails, designated for shinrin-yoku by Japan?s Forestry Agency. In an effort to benefit the Japanese and find nonextractive ways to use forests, which cover 67 percent of the country?s landmass, the government has funded about $4 million in forest-bathing research since 2004. It intends to designate a total of 100 Forest Therapy sites within 10 years. Visitors here are routinely hauled off to a cabin where rangers measure their blood pressure, part of an effort to provide ever more data to support the project.

Source: http://www.outsideonline.com/fitness/wellness/Take-Two-Hours-of-Pine-Forest-and-Call-Me-in-the-Morning.html

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Sunday, November 4, 2012

Veterans not told of lung cancer risk

INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) - An I-Team 8 investigation is already prompting congressional action in Washington D.C. In a six-month long investigation, I-Team 8 uncovered information raising more questions than answers about government accountability to American troops.

I-Team 8?s investigation began with a U.S. Marine in Indianapolis. The investigation is now centered in Washington D.C. as we question top commanders, Veterans Affairs and congressional leaders about the deadly cancer predicted 20 years ago in what some called "The Black Lung Tour."

THE MARINE

Colonel Mark Smith is a fighter.

"I kill freakin' terrorists. That ain't hard. It's what I was born to do. These people kill cancer,? Smith said.

He is a battalion commander ? a U.S. Marine.

In 2004 he led 1,200 Marines into one of the fiercest battles of Iraq, the battle of Fallujah. Looking at pictures of the Marines his battalion lost, he says, "I cried like a baby every time we lost one of our outstanding Marines in combat."

Many in central Indiana came to know Mark, also an Indiana State Trooper, his wife and daughters through letters home from Iraq that were featured on WISH-TV.

THE BATTLE

But in those letters years ago, his real battle was just beginning.

"The morning I got up, I had a bizarre pain in my calf," Smith recalled.

At a commanders conference in New Orleans, he was about to take his morning run.

"Being athletic you automatically think strain, sprain, overtraining," he said.

The pain persisted. Doctors found a blood clot in his leg, so they ordered a CT scan.

THE TURN

It was lung cancer.

"The only thing I heard in that room that night was in my own mind, planning my funeral," Smith said.

24-Hour News 8 cameras have spent months documenting how a Marine commander, always prepared, battles cancer.

"This is just something I was completely and utterly unprepared for,? Smith said. ?The Marine Corps steels you."

Smith admitted it was hard to get into the car to go for his first double dose of chemotherapy and radiation.

"It's really hard because everything from the time you are diagnosed is about finding 'the new normal,?? he said.

Chemotherapy and radiation became his "new normal."

DAY ONE

Leaving his first day of treatment, Smith describes it as "awesome" then lifts his shirt to show the box outlined in marker on his chest to show the area doctors will hit with radiation. Day after day he undergoes both radiation and chemo ? long, hard, grueling treatments.

He sits with an IV in his arm for chemotherapy, holding a book and saying, "This is just the Marine Corps way."

The Marine Battlebook is replaced by Mark's Cancer Battlebook. He fights fatigue and nausea as a Marine ? through martial arts, the treadmill and swimming.

"THE BLACK LUNG TOUR"

Sitting on his couch at home, Smith explains where the cancer may have originated.

"My personal belief is Desert Storm," he said.

His team of doctors points to Desert Storm as a possible source for the cancer. When asked if there could be any connection between Smith's lung cancer and his time served in the Gulf War, Dr. Peter Garrett says, "He certainly had exposure."

In 1991 Smith deployed with the 3/24 Marines to Saudi Arabia ? "Camp Coyote."

"Prior to the ground war ? starting when the Iraqis torched some of the oil wells ? we were in a significant path of the smoke from one of those oil fires for a very long time,? he said. ?Four to six weeks."

His pictures tell the story.

"At high noon the sky had a blackish blue hue to it. We would routinely, constantly blow our nose and have nothing but black in the Kleenex. It wasn't uncommon to be standing there and another instructor go like this (wipes his nose) to let you know you had black gunk coming out of your nose,? Smith said.

Young and bulletproof, they joked it would kill them one day.

20 YEAR WARNING

I-Team 8 discovered experts sounding the alarm as early as 1991 that deaths "from lung cancer...are expected to rise dramatically..." (Source: John Horgan, The Danger from Kuwait's Air Pollution: Smoke from Oil Fires Threatens Healthy, Scientific American October 1991)

And I-Team 8 uncovered documentation showing Gulf War veterans with a "higher rate" and "substantially higher risk" of lung cancer. (Source: The Congressionally Directed Medical Research Program )

"We've known for years that our veterans are being diagnosed and dying of lung cancer at higher rates than civilians," Admiral T. Joseph Lopez, USN (Ret) said. He's on record saying early "screening not only saves lives but money."

NO ACCOUNTABILITY

While Veterans Affairs has been urged to offer CT screenings for veterans at high risk for lung cancer so far, the VA has not implemented it ? relying solely on the less efficient X-rays. Remember, it was civilian doctors who discovered stage 3b cancer in Smith with a CT Scan. So if doctors, the VA, and the military all know veterans from the Gulf War are at higher risk: Why isn't DOD notifying those at higher risk and why isn't the VA screening them

aggressively?

Should Smith have been on a priority list to be screened each year? His medical records show after returning from the Gulf War in 1991 he was diagnosed with asthma. The records show an abnormality on his right upper lobe ? the same spot now riddled with cancer. I-Team 8 showed those medical records to his current doctor, asking if there is a correlation.

"Could be but I couldn't tell you for sure there was," Dr. Garrett said.

When told Smith believes the cancer originates to his time served in Desert Storm Garrett replied, "Could be."

RESEARCH BACKS WARNING

Even at the time, British scientists predicted a jump in lung cancer over the following 20 years. (Source: American University International Law Review "Environmental Terrorism: Lessons from the Oil Fires of Kuwait" 1991 Volume 10/Issue 1)

Dr. Garrett confirms it can take that long for the cancer to develop. Smith is right on target. So, if members of the military are coming back and there is a higher risk and higher rate of lung cancer that has been documented, are members of the military supposed to just wait for it to show up?

"Well, I think that is the role for the Department of Defense," Dr. Garrett said.

ALWAYS A MARINE

Smith wore his uniform for his final treatment ? the same uniform that may have led to the cancer.

"One of his nurses said, ?What is the occasion?? He goes, 'Last treatment.' Then he said he just wanted to show respect,? Mark's daughter Nichole explained.

Respect for his Marines he still considers on his watch.

"I knew when he said that even though they are up in heaven, they were part of the team too,? Nichole said. ?Part of him fought it (the cancer) because they didn't have the choice or the chance to fight something like that if it ever came up. I know a part of him did it for them and their families too."

PROGNOSIS

Smith has spent a career fighting terrorists to protect American lives. Now his fight is for his own life.

"The prognosis is good,? he said through tears. ?Chances are everything will work out. But if they don't, I worry about others."

Asked if he means his daughters he breaks down with emotion and simply says, "Yeah."

And other Marines. At risk. Dying. Unaware.

I-TEAM 8 INVESTIGATION PROMPTS CONGRESSIONAL ACTION

Through months of research and digging for answers, I-Team 8 uncovered a disturbing trend. We discovered documentation that governments of Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and the United States suppressed information and a "gag order" led to a scarcity of data. (Source: John Horgan "Why are Data Being Witheld? Scientific American, July 1991) (Source: William Booth, Washington Post June 25, 1991. Also, Daphne Bramham Black Death in the Gulf: Environmentalists Accue Governments of Playing Down Potential Dangers from Blazing Oil Wells, Vancouver Sun July 27, 1991 B1, B4, B6)

Indiana Congressman Marlin Stutzman, Indiana's only member on the House Veterans Affairs committee, is launching his own investigation.

"After hearing about this case, I am very concerned,? Stutzman said. ?This is an issue that needs to be brought to the immediate attention of the VA and DOD. I know one thing, being proactive in regard to early detection is the best prevention for cancer. We also need to make sure high-risk soldiers and Marines are getting the appropriate notification so they can be screened in a timely fashion. I will be following this story very closely."

Research and resources:

Source: http://www.wishtv.com/dpp/news/i_team_8/veterans-not-told-of-lung-cancer-risk

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NYC Marathon runners fill unexpected free time

Dressed to run, people pose for photos at the finish line for the 2012 New York Marathon, Saturday, Nov. 3, 2012 in New York?s Central Park. NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg canceled the marathon on Friday, Nov. 2, amid rising criticism as he planned to go ahead with the race less than a week after much of New York City was damaged by Superstorm Sandy. (AP Photo/Cara Ana)

Dressed to run, people pose for photos at the finish line for the 2012 New York Marathon, Saturday, Nov. 3, 2012 in New York?s Central Park. NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg canceled the marathon on Friday, Nov. 2, amid rising criticism as he planned to go ahead with the race less than a week after much of New York City was damaged by Superstorm Sandy. (AP Photo/Cara Ana)

Pallets of food are lined up near what would have been the finish line for the 2012 New York Marathon, Saturday, Nov. 3, 2012 in New York?s Central Park. The food was intended for the marathon participants after they finished the race. NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg canceled the marathon on Friday, Nov. 2, amid rising criticism for planning to go ahead with the race less than a week after much of New York City was damaged by Superstorm Sandy. (AP Photo/Cara Ana)

Sue Johnson refused to give New York City any more money.

She preferred to shell out for the change fee to move her flight home to Pittsburgh up by 24 hours ? leaving on the day she was supposed to run the NYC Marathon.

Many of the runners who had descended on the city from all over the globe worked out their frustrations with a jog Saturday through Central Park, site of a finish line that will never be crossed. Some scrambled to rebook return flights. Others made sightseeing plans for the unexpected free time.

Whether from Europe, South America or Pennsylvania, their sentiment was the same. Sympathy for the victims of Superstorm Sandy. Understanding of why city officials canceled Sunday's race. But bitterness that the decision was made Friday instead of earlier in the week, before they boarded planes.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-11-03-Superstorm-Marathon/id-1400d195cf44446f9920d390e4cbf34e

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Saturday, November 3, 2012

Translation Guy ? Business Continuity, Disaster Recovery, and a ...

My daughter Izzi and I went out in the storm for some Facebook photo fodder Monday afternoon. Here she?s taking in Sandy just as the first waves began to sweep over the sea wall. She got 250 likes for this one, and I got 4.

Hurricane Sandy?s left hook has put NYC down for the count. Like all our mid-Atlantic neighbors, we are on the mat.

1-800-Translate?s headquarters at 865 United Nations Plaza is built right over what used to be Turtle Bay, just a few meters from the East River and our other location on the West Side is in splashing distance of the Hudson, at least when the waters rise. So we were in the thick of it, along with millions of our mid-Atlantic neighbors.

A few weeks ago I took some clients on a tour of Norm Bloom & Sons. Norm owns the largest oyster farm in Connecticut, and I was deeply impressed by his operation, with fleets of oyster boats churning back and forth among wharfs and sheds piled high with oysters and the shells used to cultivate his beds on 12,000 acres of Long Island Sound.

As we stood on the deck of one of his boats, shucking and slurping oysters dripping fresh from the sea, it became clear from our conversation that Norm?s chief business concern was not the number of boats or bushels of oysters sold. Those were just data points in his master plan. Like all sailors and farmers, he is a horizon-watcher, and his entire approach is designed to ensure the firm survives the next storm, which must surely come.

Now this was before Sandy was even a glint in a meteorologist?s eye. For Norm even two inches of rain leaves his boats docked for fear of runoff contamination, and a serious storm can reduce harvests for years, as carefully groomed oyster beds are destroyed by silt and sand in a single raging tide. All the impressive externals of Norm?s operation are just the tip of the business continuity iceberg, his primary concern.

A few weeks ago, Joe Thomas, my cattleman friend from Wyoming?s Pitchfork Ranch, stopped by for a visit, and told me about the hellish summer of drought and grasshoppers he had just endured. With hay at $1600 a ton, Joe was grieved at the cattle he would have to cull once he got back to the ranch, not so much for the annual loss, painful as it would be, but for what a cull would do to the genetics of his herd, which is the key to his operational success. Business continuity.

Those of us in the translation business are familiar with notions of business continuity and disaster recovery. It?s often a requirement in contracts we are eager to sign. But what use a slip of paper when the rubber hits the road? I know that many of my competitors in the region are now struggling mightily to get up and running. Not me.

As a provider of on-demand language services, we can?t go down for even one minute before the phone will start ringing from clients in search of their telephone interpreter. So I?ve had to take that squinty-eyed farmer?s view since I got into this business, necessity being the mother of successful continuity planning.

So despite the fires and the floods and Con-Ed transformers exploding like strings of firecrackers last Monday, we haven?t missed a beat. We had ditched backup for redundancy years ago. Everything is up in the cloud, or on multiple servers in secure locations (well above the high watermark, I insist). And if the cloud goes down (because it does, you know) then we run the same set of data from our servers in the home office, automatically.

The idea is to anchor the business boat with a chain that can lose a link without breaking. Team member who can make it to work, do. Those who can remote from home, do. And those completely off-line are covered by those far from the danger zone. And I get a good night?s sleep.

We had to do it this way for our ISO quality assurance program and for the contractual obligations to our clients, but it?s also in perfect alignment with the anxiety and paranoia that drives me in business.

So as the storm approached, I hefted sandbags and furniture to help my low-water friends prepare. I didn?t lift a finger at work. The best business continuity plan is one where the business just continues. We drill. Everyone was ready. The systems were ready.

So on Monday night, when Manhattan started to slip beneath the waves, I did exactly nothing, except chase the rats off the roof, a boarding party clambering up telephone line hawsers to escape the sinking island below.

Were we just lucky? Probably, but I?m not complaining, I?ll take it where I can get it. This includes translation business lessons from oystermen and cattlemen and all the other horizon-watchers.

For all fellow Sandy sufferers, best wishes for a rapid recovery and minimal loses. No word yet from Norm.

Source: http://www.1-800-translate.com/TranslationBlog/translation/business-continuity-disaster-recovery-and-a-good-nights-sleep/

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Macky II 'swags' hometown fans | Times of Zambia

? Mark II giving the fans the Kopola Swag-dance at Chingola Arts Society during the Miss Summer 2012 Beauty Pageant. Picture courtesy of Gillan Mumba (Jet Rock Technologies).

By JOHN SAKALA? ? ?

THE King of Kopala Swag and the man of the moment Macky II last Saturday thrilled his home town fans during the Miss Summer Beauty Pageant held at Chingola Arts Society.

Self proclaimed local Rap Legend, Macky II the multi-talented artiste stepped on stage half to mid night only to the cheers of his fans that seemed to know every lyrics of each song even before he sang it.

The singer who is a producer, song writer, cover designer and video editor seemed to have perfectly diagnosed his entertainment sick fans and administering the rightful drug the deprived music to his fans.

Stepping on stage with Nangu Banchinge, Seka Uponoke, the artiste charmed the fans with his Kopola Swag dance no wonder he is among the few local artists not to have recruited the dancing queens.

Yet the perfect moment was when the Kopola Swag King retuned on stage inviting the coolest ?super natural? woman of the night Judy to perform the duet Without You.

This was the time Judy showed that she is an artiste standing tall in the music industry and her unique dance coupled with decency made the crazy and wild fans to stand and watch in amazement.

Judy?s sweet melodies stepped up the tempo when she dropped the Anaka, the track denouncing gender violence and condemning husbands that beat their wives without apparent reason or on petty issues.

The divas performance was above reproach this night as B-Nell the artist that had gone in oblivion showed that she had not gone on musical holiday.

With Bola the artiste that has gained weight lately, seemed not to have forgotten her dancing prowess though at times seemed to have taken the role of the dancer rather than that of the performer.

B-Nell is a dancer; song writer and singer that at times under estimate herself as she has great potential to grow into a household name.

At this wonderfully organised event Starface stepped up with Gender and Mwaume Mwaume, the young boy appears to have much to have to offer on music stage especially with the passage of time.

Landlord who in his early music career has recruited two dancing queens offloaded his Chitemweko Chiwama Chungulo.

The beat and the lyrics are excellent and the young man has risen on the ladders of Bravo Records Studios.

But it would be appropriate for the artist to realise that he is an upcoming artist and once allowed to share stage with Big names such as Macky II and Judy to go straight into performance and reduce much talking.

Actually he didn?t complete the performance of his first track as much time was consumed by his much talking.

Source: http://www.times.co.zm/?p=18248

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Crescent City Connection toll extension draws support of sheriffs ...

Just days before the Nov. 6 referendum on whether to extend the Crescent City Connection tolls, law enforcement officials from around the metro area will announce their support for keeping the tolls in place during a news conference this morning. It will be the third event sponsored by Bridging Progress, a political action committee of regional business groups that has raised $200,000 to campaign for extending the tolls beyond their Dec. 31 expiration date.

Sheriffs and police chiefs are expected to argue the tolls, which bring in $21 million annually, will pay for a dedicated police force essential to maintaining safety, controlling traffic and assisting with crime fighting. State transportation officials have said that more than 155,000 vehicles cross the Mississippi River bridge daily, making it the nation's fifth busiest.

The cost to cross the bridge east bank-bound is 40 cents for a toll tag and $1 cash.

Voters in Orleans, Jefferson and Plaquemines parishes will cast ballots on the issue, which if approved would continue the tolls for 20 years.

Expected to attend this morning's news conference are Jefferson Parish Sheriff Newell Normand, Orleans Parish Sheriff Marlin Gusman, Plaquemines Parish Sheriff Lonnie Greco, Kenner Police Chief Steve Caraway, Gretna Police Chief Arthur Lawson, Harahan Police Chief Mac Dickinson and Lafitte Police Chief Marcell Rodriguez.

On Thursday, New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu said?the region would be hampered in its effort to compete nationally if the tolls were defeated, ending a dedicated source of funding to pay for infrastructure improvements.

"We need a bridge that is structurally sound ... We need a funding source ... that is what the tolls, provide,'' Landrieu said.

Toll opponent Gibby Andry of Belle Chasse disagreed that a rejection of extending tolls would have an economic impact on New Orleans. Andry said Baton Rouge is a greater generator of revenue economically for the state than New Orleans and Baton Rouge, whose population surpassed?New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, has more people crossing its own?Mississippi River bridge.

"They (Baton Rouge) have more people. They have more industry. They have as many Fortune 400 companies as we do. They have just as many universities as we do. All of that is done and happens without a toll on the Mississippi River Bridge,'' Andry said. "A toll on the bridge has nothing to do with economic development, especially if a bridge is paid for.''

Today's news conference will be held at the Port of New Orleans at 10:30 a.m.

Source: http://www.nola.com/politics/index.ssf/2012/11/crescent_city_connection_toll_10.html

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A look at telecom-industry subscriber reports

Telecommunications companies have begun releasing their earnings reports for the latest quarter. Here is a summary of reports for selected telecommunications companies and what they reveal about their own and the industry's prospects.

? Oct. 18: Verizon Communications Inc.'s wireless division added a net 1.5 million devices to contract-based plans in the third quarter, more than it has in many years. Analysts were expecting it to add about 900,000. Including non-contract devices, overall additions were the strongest in four years. Verizon Wireless got a boost from its new Share Everything plan, which made it cheaper for households to add wireless service to tablets and laptops.

The launch of the iPhone 5 at the end of the quarter also helped Verizon's numbers. It activated 650,000 units of the new model in just over a week. It activated 3.1 million iPhones of all kinds in the quarter, accounting for 46 percent of its total smartphone activations.

? Oct. 24: AT&T Inc. says it added a net 151,000 new customers on contract-based plans from July through September, the lowest number for that period since at least 2003. AT&T blamed short supplies of the iPhone 5, which launched a week before the end of the quarter. AT&T said the shortage of iPhones meant that most of them went to people who were already AT&T customers. But that didn't hold back Verizon Wireless, which reported adding 10 times as many contract-signing customers as AT&T did.

? Oct. 25: Sprint Nextel Corp. says it lost an overall 423,000 subscribers in the July-to-September period, as trends across its product lineup were weak. Excluding recaptured Nextel customers, it lost contract-signing subscribers from the Sprint network for the first time in years. Customers on contract-based plans are the most lucrative, and keeping them has been a linchpin of CEO Dan Hesse's turnaround plan. For non-contract plans, the company added just 19,000 customers, the smallest number in more than three years.

? Oct. 26: Comcast Corp. says it gained a net 123,000 voice customers, beating the 116,000 gain expected.

? Tuesday: MetroPCS Communications Inc. says it lost about 312,000 subscribers to end with 9 million.

Coming up:

? Wednesday: Leap Wireless International Inc.

? Thursday: T-Mobile USA, a unit of Deutsche Telekom AG; Windstream Corp.

Note: T-Mobile and MetroPCS have reached a deal to combine their cellphone businesses, but they will report separately until the deal is completed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/look-telecom-industry-subscriber-reports-230208847.html

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Microsoft Wedge Touch Mouse


Microsoft is clearly pushing itself to appear more innovative. This is pretty clear with Windows 8, but just as clear with Microsoft's Windows 8 peripherals, like the ultra-portable Wedge Mobile Touch Mouse. It crams all of the touch functionality of the Editors' Choice Microsoft Touch Mouse ($79.95 direct, 4.5 stars) into a tiny mouse with Bluetooth connectivity. The tiny size and extra functionality won't do much for deskbound users or systems running Windows 7, so it's tough to recommend to a broad audience.

Design and Features
The Wedge Touch Mouse is tiny, weighing 2.08 ounces (0.13 pound) and measuring 1.1 by 2.3 by 2.0 inches (HWD)?about the size of a thick stack of Post-it Notes, but with a distinctive wedge profile. As wireless mice go, it's the polar opposite of the HP Wi-Fi Touch Mouse X7000 ($59.99 direct, 3 stars), which boasted Wi-Fi connectivity, but was a whopping six ounces and too big for comfortable use.

The Wedge Mouse takes compact design to a new level, chopping off the entire back half of the traditional mouse, leaving only the right and left buttons. But these aren't your usual mouse buttons, either, as the two clickable buttons are actually part of a single clickable surface, and the entire surface also functions as a touchpad. Your first inclination may be to grab it with the tapered end facing toward you, but that's backwards. The downward slope serves as the two buttons for your mouse. With no palm rest, however, your hand will either rest on the desk or tabletop being used, or held just off the surface, which I can't imagine will do good things ergonomically.

The design isn't simply compact, it's made for portability as well. The small mouse features "Backpack Mode," which senses when the mouse has been lifted from the desk surface and inactive for a while, switching power off automatically. Microsoft's BlueTrack technology, allows the Wedge Mouse to be used on virtually any surface that doesn't have a mirror finish, meaning that you can use it nearly anywhere?on the back of a book, across the leg of your pants, on the arm of a couch. It's nearly as versatile as the Logitech Couch Mouse M515 ($49.99 direct, 4 stars).

Scrolling (both vertical and horizontal) is simple and intuitive, done by simply dragging a finger on the touch surface. Horizontal scrolling becomes all the more important in Windows 8, because the Start Screen stretches out to the sides whether in portrait or landscape orientations.

Setup and Performance
Setup is simple: Insert an AA battery and power on the mouse. Press the Bluetooth Connect button for 3-5 seconds, and then add the mouse using your Control Panel under Add a Device. Within moments, you'll be up and running.

Once you're connected, all of your usual cursor control and left- and right-clicking functions will work without any trouble. The one area you might find troublesome is scrolling, as the mouse uses its touchable surface for both vertical and horizontal movement. While vertical scrolling is pretty simple, horizontal scrolling might take some getting used to, as it means swiping your finger side to side, a move that isn't as ingrained for longtime mouse users. You'll also need to grow accustomed to scrolling without clicking, as the same finger used for clicking is the same one you'll be swiping side to side.

The Wedge Mobile Touch Mouse is easily one of the most portable and versatile mice we've reviewed?it's certainly the smallest?and the addition of four-way scrolling is indispensable for Windows 8 users that may not have a touch screen to work with. However, the super-compact design may be a bit further outside of the box than some users want to go. It's definitely the mouse to grab if you need both portability and Windows 8-friendly four-way scrolling, but for deskbound users and other operating systems, there are better, cheaper mice available. For similar four-way scrolling in a more traditional form-factor, check out the Editors' Choice Microsoft Touch Mouse, which is getting a Windows 8 upgrade.

More computer mouse reviews:
??? Microsoft Wedge Touch Mouse
??? Targus Ultralife Wireless Mouse
??? HP Wireless Mouse X4000
??? Logitech G600 MMO Gaming Mouse
??? Razer Taipan
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/V7ddzGKLXNY/0,2817,2411473,00.asp

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BSkyB posts strong first-quarter earnings

LONDON (Reuters) - Pay-TV group BSkyB reported strong first-quarter earnings growth on Thursday as price rises and the sale of additional products to subscribers helped reassure investors who had been fearing a slowdown.

BSkyB, which sells pay-TV, broadband and telephony, has launched an online offering and promoted new products to existing customers after the heady rate of subscriber growth seen in previous years started to drop off.

The solid performance will likely please investors gathering later in London for the group's annual general meeting, where director James Murdoch will make his first public appearance since he stepped down as chairman over a phone hacking scandal at his newspaper group.

Shares in BSkyB were up 3.8 percent in early trading, against an otherwise flat FTSE 100 Index, after they slipped in the run up to the results. The group is now valued at 12.1 billion pounds ($19.49 billion).

"BSkyB's first-quarter numbers were solidly reassuring, with all key metrics showing improvement over Q1 2012," Peel Hunt analyst Patrick Yau said in a note.

"We see this as a robust start to the year for this defensively positioned company. We remain comfortable with our forecasts for now."

In the first three months of its new financial year, BSkyB signed up 48,000 new households, in line with forecasts, with 20,000 additions to the core pay-TV offering.

That is someway off the often 100,000-plus pay-TV subscribers it used to sign up per quarter, but the group said one in three of its customers now took TV, broadband and telephony services, which helped to lift the average amount each customer spent with the group.

Customer loyalty also remained strong, despite the first price rise in two years kicking in.

"Despite market fears over new competition, TV adds continued to grow with 20,000 net adds," Morgan Stanley said in a note to clients after the results were announced.

"This puts into perspective recent concerns that Sky might suffer a fall."

Chief Executive Jeremy Darroch said the service had enjoyed strong demand from customers for its sports programming over the quarter, including Europe's success in the Ryder Cup and Andy Murray's win at the U.S. Tennis Open.

The solid operating performance, the price rise and a share buyback programme helped lift earnings per share 16 percent to 13.4 pence, while revenue rose 4 percent to 1.7 billion pounds and adjusted operating profit climbed 5 percent to 310 million pounds.

All three numbers were either in line with or slightly above forecasts.

"We have made a strong start to the year, delivering another good quarterly performance and continuing to position the business for the long term," Darroch said.

Analysts had been expecting a "lacklustre" number of new customer additions due to the tough economy, the distraction of the Olympic Games in London and the fact that the business is becoming more mature after years of rapid growth.

They had also been keen, however, to see how the business was operating after Virgin Media reported upbeat trading earlier this month and following the arrival of U.S. online DVD rental company Netflix in Britain.

($1 = 0.6207 British pounds)

(Reporting by Kate Holton; Editing by Guy Faulconbridge and Helen Massy-Beresford)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bskyb-posts-strong-first-quarter-earnings-071048279--finance.html

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Friday, November 2, 2012

LitPick, A Startup Founded By A Harvard Lad And His Dad, Aims To Rate Young Adult Literature

Screen Shot 2012-11-02 at 11.02.58 AMThe founders of LitPick have known each other since birth. Seth Cassel and his dad Gary founded their first company, FlamingNet in 2002 when Seth was in fourth grade. Designed as a book review site, Seth and his dad Gary built the site themselves and began taking a profit.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/bd32_oVgaxE/

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Bloomberg: NYC Marathon will go on

(AP) ? Mayor Michael Bloomberg came under fire Friday for pressing ahead with this weekend's New York Marathon in a city still reeling from Superstorm Sandy, with some New Yorkers saying that holding the race would be insensitive and divert police, generators and other resources when many are still suffering.

Joan Wacks, whose Staten Island waterfront condo was swamped with 4 feet of water, predicted authorities will still be recovering bodies when the estimated 40,000 runners from around the world hit the streets for the 26.2-mile race Sunday, and she called the mayor "tone deaf."

"He is clueless without a paddle to the reality of what everyone else is dealing with," she said. "If there are any resources being put toward the marathon, that's wrong. I'm sorry, that's wrong."

At a news conference, Bloomberg defended his decision as a way to raise money for the stricken city and boost morale less than a week after Sandy flooded neighborhoods, knocked out power to hundreds of thousands homes and businesses and killed at least 39 people.

Bloomberg said New York "has to show that we are here and we are going to recover" and "give people something to cheer about in what has been a very dismal week for a lot of people."

"You have to keep going and doing things," he said. "You can grieve and you can cry and you can laugh, and that's what human beings are good at."

He noted that his predecessor, Rudolph Giuliani, went ahead with the New York Marathon two months after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

"If you go back to 9/11, Rudy made the right decision in those days to run the marathon and pull people together," Bloomberg said.

One of the world's pre-eminent road races, the New York Marathon generates an estimated $340 million into the city. This time, the marathon's sponsors and organizers have dubbed it the "Race to Recover" and intend to use the event to raise money for the city to deal with the crisis. New York Road Runners, the race organizer, will donate $1 million and said sponsors have pledged more than $1.5 million.

"It's hard in these moments to know what's best to do," NYRR president Mary Wittenberg said. "The city believes this is best to do right now."

The course runs from the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge on hard-hit Staten Island to Central Park, sending runners through all five boroughs. The course will not be changed, since there was little damage along the route.

Earlier this week, the mayor gave assurances the race wouldn't siphon off resources from the storm recovery, noting electricity is expected to be restored to all of Manhattan by race day, freeing up "an enormous number of police."

New Yorker Michael Sofronas used to run the marathon and has been a race volunteer for four years, serving as an interpreter for foreign runners. But he said he won't volunteer this year.

"I'm also really very aghast at the fact that we've just gone through the Sandy hurricane and I believe that the people should not be diverted to the marathon. They should focus on the people in need," he said. "It's all about money, money from everybody. The sponsors, the runners."

A Swede who arrived in New York this week to run in the marathon sided with the mayor.

"It doesn't feel good, coming to New York," said Maria Eriksson, 27. "But the marathon has been planned for such a long time. And besides, it brings so much money to the city. That should help. What help would it be to cancel?"

But John Esposito, a Staten Islander helping his elderly parents clean out their flooded home, said: "They brought giant generators to power the marathon tents while we've got thousands of people without power. ... How about putting one of these generators here? Have some compassion."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-11-02-Superstorm-Marathon/id-a49fa917657e4a22a9d7bed06fd204a7

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A next-generation X-ray telescope ready to fly

A next-generation X-ray telescope ready to fly [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 1-Nov-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Susan Hendrix
Susan.m.hendrix@nasa.gov
301-286-7745
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center

Those who watch the sun are regularly treated to brilliant shows dancing loops of solar material rise up, dark magnetic regions called sunspots twist across the surface, and dazzling flares of light and radiation explode into space. But there are smaller, barely visible events, too: much smaller and more frequent eruptions called nanoflares. Depending on how many and how energetic these are, nanoflares may be the missing piece of the puzzle to help understand what seeds the cascade that causes a much bigger flare, or to explain how the sun transfers so much energy to its atmosphere that it's actually hotter than the surface.

At the beginning of November, 2012 a NASA mission called FOXSI (for Focusing Optics X-ray Solar Imager) will launch from White Sands, N.M. to study these nanoflares. To do so, it will make use of a state-of-the-art x-ray telescope that will be able to focus incoming x-rays from the sun in a way that has never before been possible.

"Most people like to look at the really big flares. They're complicated and do crazy things," says Steven Christe, a solar scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. who is the project scientist for FOXSI. "But FOXSI is geared to look at very, very faint events."

FOXSI is due to launch no earlier than Nov. 2, 2012 on board what is known as a sounding rocket, rockets that take short trips some 200 miles up and gather as much data as possible in about six minutes. During that time FOXSI will first look at an active region on the sun, with its characteristic flares or loops and then switch its gaze to a more quiet region to observe an undiluted patch of smaller flares. Since the nanoflares happen constantly, Christe points out that the sounding rocket need not wait for a special time frame to launch, an advantage when it comes to finding an acceptable launch window.

However, viewing such faint events requires extra sensitive optics. FOXSI carries a telescope -- built by NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. that is unlike any previous ones launched into space for solar observations.

"This is really the next generation solar hard x-ray telescope we are testing out here," says Sm Krucker, the principal investigator for FOXSI and a solar scientist at the University of California, Berkeley, and at the University of Applied Sciences Northwestern Switzerland. "The technology we're using will capture much better images of the sun at this particular range of x-rays."

Previously, techniques to collect and observe the high energy x-rays streaming from the sun were hampered by the fact that x-rays at high energies cannot be focused with conventional lenses the way visible light can be. When an x-ray encounters a standard glass lens it passes through the lens completely. X-ray telescopes have therefore relied on imaging that doesn't rely on focusing. This is a very effective technique when looking at a single bright event on the sun, such as the large burst of radiation and x-rays from a solar flare, but doesn't work as well when searching for many faint events occurring simultaneously.

The FOXSI instrument, however, makes use of new iridium-coated nickel/cobalt mirrors that do successfully cause x-rays to reflect, as long as the x-rays come in from a nearly horizontal direction. Several of these mirrors in combination help collate the x-ray light before funneling it to the detector. These focusing optics make faint events appear brighter and crisper.

Another advance for the telescope comes in the very building of the optics system. In general, better optics require more accurate mirrors, which in turn requires labor- and money-intensive polishing to get a flawless finish. The FOXSI mirrors use a replication technique whereby a surface is perfectly polished once and mirrors are created off of that surface by nickel-plating it. This process can be repeated many times thus saving time and money.

By using such optics on the sounding rocket, Christe hopes they'll be able to perfect their performance for use on a sun-observing satellite some day. This is another benefit of sounding rockets: testing innovative technology on a less expensive rocket sets the instruments up for potential deployment on a permanent spacecraft. Instruments like those on FOXSI will be important to nail down the mystery of what causes these small flares and what they in turn effect.

"There are two basic possibilities," says Christe. "One is that small flares are similar to large flares. But then we'd have to explain why they appear at a different rate and in different places than the big ones. So we need to determine whether these small events are really happening all the time, all over the sun. The other possibility is that they are fundamentally different than large flares and that would be extremely interesting and would point to a difference in the physics that powers large versus small flares."

Another question to solve is whether all those tiny flares add up to enough energy shooting into the sun's corona to heat it to the temperatures of over a million degrees K (kelvin). Just what heats the corona is part of what's known as the "coronal heating problem" a question of how it gets so much hotter than the sun's surface, which is a mere 6,000 K.

"If you think of a stove," says Krucker, "the surface of the stove is hotter, and the air gets cooler as you move farther away. But with the sun, something else is happening to make the atmosphere 1,000 times hotter than the surface."

Answering such large questions will not be solved by a single rocket launch, but FOXSI's data will provide new insights into the x-ray portion of the sun's spectrum, filling in yet another piece of the puzzle while also paving the way for future sun-observing technology.

###


[ 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.


A next-generation X-ray telescope ready to fly [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 1-Nov-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Susan Hendrix
Susan.m.hendrix@nasa.gov
301-286-7745
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center

Those who watch the sun are regularly treated to brilliant shows dancing loops of solar material rise up, dark magnetic regions called sunspots twist across the surface, and dazzling flares of light and radiation explode into space. But there are smaller, barely visible events, too: much smaller and more frequent eruptions called nanoflares. Depending on how many and how energetic these are, nanoflares may be the missing piece of the puzzle to help understand what seeds the cascade that causes a much bigger flare, or to explain how the sun transfers so much energy to its atmosphere that it's actually hotter than the surface.

At the beginning of November, 2012 a NASA mission called FOXSI (for Focusing Optics X-ray Solar Imager) will launch from White Sands, N.M. to study these nanoflares. To do so, it will make use of a state-of-the-art x-ray telescope that will be able to focus incoming x-rays from the sun in a way that has never before been possible.

"Most people like to look at the really big flares. They're complicated and do crazy things," says Steven Christe, a solar scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. who is the project scientist for FOXSI. "But FOXSI is geared to look at very, very faint events."

FOXSI is due to launch no earlier than Nov. 2, 2012 on board what is known as a sounding rocket, rockets that take short trips some 200 miles up and gather as much data as possible in about six minutes. During that time FOXSI will first look at an active region on the sun, with its characteristic flares or loops and then switch its gaze to a more quiet region to observe an undiluted patch of smaller flares. Since the nanoflares happen constantly, Christe points out that the sounding rocket need not wait for a special time frame to launch, an advantage when it comes to finding an acceptable launch window.

However, viewing such faint events requires extra sensitive optics. FOXSI carries a telescope -- built by NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. that is unlike any previous ones launched into space for solar observations.

"This is really the next generation solar hard x-ray telescope we are testing out here," says Sm Krucker, the principal investigator for FOXSI and a solar scientist at the University of California, Berkeley, and at the University of Applied Sciences Northwestern Switzerland. "The technology we're using will capture much better images of the sun at this particular range of x-rays."

Previously, techniques to collect and observe the high energy x-rays streaming from the sun were hampered by the fact that x-rays at high energies cannot be focused with conventional lenses the way visible light can be. When an x-ray encounters a standard glass lens it passes through the lens completely. X-ray telescopes have therefore relied on imaging that doesn't rely on focusing. This is a very effective technique when looking at a single bright event on the sun, such as the large burst of radiation and x-rays from a solar flare, but doesn't work as well when searching for many faint events occurring simultaneously.

The FOXSI instrument, however, makes use of new iridium-coated nickel/cobalt mirrors that do successfully cause x-rays to reflect, as long as the x-rays come in from a nearly horizontal direction. Several of these mirrors in combination help collate the x-ray light before funneling it to the detector. These focusing optics make faint events appear brighter and crisper.

Another advance for the telescope comes in the very building of the optics system. In general, better optics require more accurate mirrors, which in turn requires labor- and money-intensive polishing to get a flawless finish. The FOXSI mirrors use a replication technique whereby a surface is perfectly polished once and mirrors are created off of that surface by nickel-plating it. This process can be repeated many times thus saving time and money.

By using such optics on the sounding rocket, Christe hopes they'll be able to perfect their performance for use on a sun-observing satellite some day. This is another benefit of sounding rockets: testing innovative technology on a less expensive rocket sets the instruments up for potential deployment on a permanent spacecraft. Instruments like those on FOXSI will be important to nail down the mystery of what causes these small flares and what they in turn effect.

"There are two basic possibilities," says Christe. "One is that small flares are similar to large flares. But then we'd have to explain why they appear at a different rate and in different places than the big ones. So we need to determine whether these small events are really happening all the time, all over the sun. The other possibility is that they are fundamentally different than large flares and that would be extremely interesting and would point to a difference in the physics that powers large versus small flares."

Another question to solve is whether all those tiny flares add up to enough energy shooting into the sun's corona to heat it to the temperatures of over a million degrees K (kelvin). Just what heats the corona is part of what's known as the "coronal heating problem" a question of how it gets so much hotter than the sun's surface, which is a mere 6,000 K.

"If you think of a stove," says Krucker, "the surface of the stove is hotter, and the air gets cooler as you move farther away. But with the sun, something else is happening to make the atmosphere 1,000 times hotter than the surface."

Answering such large questions will not be solved by a single rocket launch, but FOXSI's data will provide new insights into the x-ray portion of the sun's spectrum, filling in yet another piece of the puzzle while also paving the way for future sun-observing technology.

###


[ 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.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-11/nsfc-anx110112.php

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Home Is Where the Heart Is ? Homeless Prenatal Program

After a multi-year journey to find a permanent home, HPP purchased its three-story building in 2005 for $4.65 million, solidifying the agency?s permanent place in our community.?? However, HPP put its capital needs on hold in 2007 to better support programming in response to the recession.? Last year, the agency re-launched the Capital Campaign following a very generous $650,000 gift from a donor advised fund of the San Francisco Foundation, which was directed by the late Dr. Gilbert W. Cleasby and his wife Mrs. Marie Mendenhall Cleasby.? Now with a remarkable donation from Board Member Barry Lipman and his wife Marie HPP is thrilled to announce that our building will be paid off by the new year, and will now be named the Barry and Marie Lipman building!? In addition, the Lipmans? gift will launch the agency?s first ever endowment.

Barry and Marie Lipman with Barbara Kimport (center)

?

HPP is honored to be the recipient of such inspiring philanthropic vision.? With many thanks to the Cleasby Family, the San Francisco Foundation, the Lipman family and all the donors and volunteers who have invested in the agency?s mission to end the cycle of childhood poverty, we look forward to sharing our home with families in need for years to come.

?

Our home at 2500 18th Street.

?

Source: http://www.homelessprenatal.org/featured/home-is-where-the-heart-is

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Work now under way on Pennsylvania Ballet's new home ...

Pa. Ballet new homeThis building at Broad and Wood streets in the Callowhill Loft District, which looks like a little brother of the Packard Motor Car Building next door, represents the return of the Pennsylvania Ballet to the Avenue of the Arts ? only this time, north of Market Street.

Actually, the Ballet has never left the thoroughfare ? its performances take place in the National Historic Landmark Academy of Music and the University of the Arts? Merriam Theater next door. But its administrative offices did once the Ballet outgrew the building at Broad Street and Washington Avenue in Passyunk Square that it had converted in 1992 to house the company and its school, now the independent Rock School for Dance Education.

Site of new Pennsylvania Ballet complex

Two of the three buildings that stood on this site are being repurposed for the Pennsylvania Ballet. The third has been demolished; its site will serve as an entrance courtyard to the new Louise Reed Center for Dance.

So in 2007, the Ballet purchased the plot of land at the northeast corner of Broad and Wood streets with the goal of building its new home on it. That building, the Louise Reed Center for Dance, an adaptive reuse project by Erdy McHenry Architecture, is now on its way to completion in January 2013, the start of the Ballet?s 50th anniversary year. In addition to the Ballet?s administrative offices and studios, the complex will also house the brand-new School of the Pennsylvania Ballet, a pre-professional training academy.

?

Wood Street studio building

Work has already progressed quite a ways on the one-story Wood Street building that will house the company's studios and dance school. It appears that work has yet to commence on the Broad Street building that will house administrative offices.

A $25 million fundraising campaign, including $17.5 million to build the center, is ongoing as construction proceeds.

Promotional sign

The billboard at the site includes a rendering of the completed facility by Erdy McHenry Architecture. Now that Hurricane Sandy has passed through the area, the Ballet might want to consider spending a little of the money it raises in its campaign to repair the banner announcing it, which Sandy blew off its frame.

-By Sandy Smith for PhiladelphiaRealEstate.com

All photos by the author

Thanks to former contributor Joseph Brin for tipping us off to this project.

Media professional with more than 30 years' experience in journalism and public relations. Launched award-winning newspapers at the University of Pennsylvania and Widener University. Editor-in-chief of this blog since May 2012.

Source: http://blog.philadelphiarealestate.com/work-now-under-way-on-pennsylvania-ballets-new-home/

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Verizon Business Security Blog ? Blog Archive ? Everyday I'm CIFfling

So as we?ve talked about before, preventive controls by themselves do not provide sufficient defense in today?s threat environment. Instead, defenders must continually adapt to their adversaries, and this includes sharing threat intelligence with trusted partners.

The open-source Collective Intelligence Framework (CIF), developed by the REN-ISAC with support from the National Science Foundation, Internet2, and Indiana University, enables the sharing of basic technical indicators between systems. This post will give an overview of the system and its usage, discuss tools we have developed to extend and integrate it, and lay out a roadmap for future development with plenty of opportunity for community involvement.

Fundamentals

As previously discussed, when planning a framework for sharing intelligence, operational security (OPSEC) concerns require significant thought and consideration. CIF tries to reduce the opportunities for an analyst to leak information out to attackers by downloading data and performing the lookups locally rather than perform remote lookups.

Just as (or perhaps more) importantly, CIF enables the inter-system exchange of threat data. This enables faster reactions by bringing data immediately into a watch list or even a block list, though you must take care to choose which data to use for blocking. Waiting for an analyst to have time to download the data manually and then enter it into your systems introduces too much chance for problems, whether related to the analyst?s workload, typical hours, or just human error.

CIF Dev team

The core Collective Intelligence Framework is primarily developed at the REN-ISAC by a team headed by Wes Young. Other committers include Gabriel Iovino, Jeff Murphy, and Kevin Benton.

The Verizon RISK team focuses on two development roles around CIF: QA / debugging and contributing to the ecosystem of tools that work with CIF. (We have some posts lined up to discuss some of these tools like CIFGlue, IOC Extractor, and integration with other analysis tools in greater detail.) Generally, that means we try to make CIF more usable in our environment and contribute this work back out to the broader community. We believe that making these capabilities more widely accessible will improve the overall state of security. We also help maintain a bleeding-edge repository of additional OSINT sources.

Tech

CIF currently runs on a typical LAPP (LAMP-type) stack: Linux / Apache / PostgreSQL / Perl. Internally, the data is stored in an IODEF-like format as JSON. However, according to the roadmap, the framework will soon be rewritten in C and the data structures will use protocol buffers, though JSON output will of course continue to be supported.

We?ve worked with it for quite a few months now, and we?ll tell you that the suggested system specifications definitely matter. You?ll want to run CIF on a server with multiple cores, lots of RAM, and good I/O throughput. Separating out the database from the application server may also improve performance significantly once you need to scale past a pilot deployment.

Usage concepts

CIF works by ingesting public or private feeds of structured threat data. It can handle most delimited and non-delimited text formats (CSV, tab, etc.) as well as RSS/XML and JSON. Other formats can be parsed with helper scripts written in whatever language you prefer.

Analysts can issue two core query types: searches for specific indicators or feeds for particular indicator types subject to parameters. CIF has a command-line tool for interactive use (or building into local tools) as well as support for a RESTful API for integration into other web interfaces. A prototype web interface exists, but your environment may already allow for using the API in conjunction with your SIEM or similar tool.

To properly understand the data contained within CIF, analysts must understand the defined taxonomies: impact, severity, and confidence. Impact describes the general type of threat; examples might include phishing-related indicators, botnets, scanners, or perhaps even informational only. Severity is relatively straightforward: how much pain could this cause a victim? Confidence is slightly more subtle and represents your belief in the accuracy of the indicator. Information that an investigator has thoroughly vetted might carry a score of 95 (on a scale of 0-99), whereas public lists of scanning IP addresses might instead have a score of 50.

Community

As open-source (libre/free) software, CIF relies on community help to grow. Contributing back to the project in the form of testing, documentation, code, or (at a minimum) discussing your use cases and deployments helps everyone. The ROI from assisting the project may surprise you.

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Source: http://securityblog.verizonbusiness.com/2012/11/01/everyday-im-ciffling/

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San Diego Military Divorce Lawyers at The Men?s Legal Center Offering Free Initial Consultations to Active Duty Military Personnel

The San Diego military divorce lawyers at The Men?s Legal Center, a law firm is dedicated to fighting for the rights of husbands, fathers and noncustodial parents with regards to California family law issues hereby announces that the firm is offering free initial consultations to all active duty military personnel who may be experiencing family law-related problems. Their Web site can be found at http://www.menslegal.com.

San Diego, CA (PRWEB) November 02, 2012

The San Diego military divorce attorneys at The Men?s Legal Center, Family Law Advocates?, a law firm, announces the firm is offering a waiver of their initial consultations for active duty military personnel who may be experiencing family law difficulties such as custody, visitation and support with regards to their spouses and children.

This free initial consultation offer comes as a response to the Department of Defense?s news release indicating that since the beginning of the military actions in Afghanistan and Iraq in 2001, the military divorce rate has increased by a factor of about 40 percent in 2011 and is still increasing in 2012. Family law-related problems will increase as troops begin to come home from overseas deployment. Returning home, to California, for a married soldier means attempting to reunify with a spouse with whom they have not been living with. For those already separated, coming home means attempting to return to the pre-deployment child sharing arrangement and support level.

The Men?s Legal Center is uniquely qualified to represent military personnel in family law matters of all types. Their managing attorney, Craig A. Candelore, has been practicing family law for more than 26 years. In addition, Attorney Candelore earned his Bachelor of Science from West Point before serving on active duty and the Reserves, ultimately earning the rank of Colonel from the United States Army. His active tours of duty include Operation Desert Storm and Operation Iraqi Freedom. Since 2008, he worked as a senior military police and an anti-terrorist officer. Attorney Candelore and his team have also organized, produced and given a MCLE accredited military divorce seminar.

The San Diego military divorce lawyers at The Men?s Legal Center encourage military personnel who may be experiencing family law problems to schedule a free initial consultation before their problems become more severe. The firm will use this initial consultation to advise potential clients regarding their legal rights and options.

About the Men?s Legal Center

The Men?s Legal Center, Family Law Advocates? is a San Diego family law firm whose attorneys dedicate themselves to representing and fighting for the legal rights of husbands, fathers and noncustodial parents. The firm handles cases that include military divorce, California divorce, legal separation, property division, child support, spousal support, child custody, child visitation, child support modification and high asset divorces among many others.

Allan Candelore
Men's Legal Center
619-234-3838
Email Information

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/san-diego-military-divorce-lawyers-men-legal-center-130235259.html

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Italy cops: US teen critical after stabbing

Praxilla Trabattoni / NBC News

A student was allegedly stabbed in this building in Rome, Italy, on Thursday.

By Praxilla Trabattoni, NBC News

ROME - A 19-year-old American was in a critical condition Friday after he was allegedly stabbed while he slept by a fellow student following a night of partying in the Italian capital, officials told NBC News.

The victim, New Jersey-born Fabio Malpeso underwent surgery for stab wounds to his lungs and other parts of his body.?Police said Friday that Malpeso was in a critical but stable condition in intensive care at a hospital in Rome.?

Authorities said the motive for the attack, which happened in an apartment that overlooks Rome's famous Colosseum?early Thursday morning, was unclear. However, detectives suspect "drug- and alcohol-related delirium" might be a factor.

The alleged assailant, who was taken to a police station and then a prison central Rome, was named in a police document as Alexander Schepis Reid, 20. Police said Reid, a resident of Reggio Calabria in southern Italy, appeared to have joint U.S. and Italian citizenship but were working to establish his nationalities.

A third man, an Italian aged in his 30s called Andrea Rinaldi, suffered injuries to his arms and hands trying to defend Malpeso, and was also in hospital, police said.

Paolo Guiso, a judiciary police inspector who is leading the investigation, told NBC News Friday that Reid, Malpeso, Malpeso's sister Federica and her boyfriend, Rinaldi, had returned to the apartment after partying in a nightclub Wednesday night and early Thursday.

Cop: Suspect 'at times catatonic'
Malpeso had drank alcohol, while Reid, Federica and Rinaldi had consumed "alcohol, hashish and ecstasy," Guiso said, explaining that all four had been tested for drugs and alcohol.

"Federica, Rinaldi and Fabio went to bed at 6 a.m. [Thursday]. Reid stayed in the living room. At a certain point, he went to the kitchen fetched a knife and went into Fabio's room, where he started to stab the sleeping youth," Guiso alleged.?

"Hearing the screaming and commotion, Rinaldi and the victim's sister ran in to see what was happening. They stepped in to defend Fabio, which resulted in Rinaldi suffering cuts to his hands and arms," he said.

"The motive of the attack is still not clear. At present we ? believe that the violence was brought on due to a drug- and alcohol-related delirium," Guiso added.

More international coverage from NBC News

Guiso said he had not been able to speak properly with Reid as he was "still half asleep and at times catatonic ... ?he was almost in a state of unconsciousness at times."

"We have taken him to Regina Coeli prison in the heart of Rome. Within 48 hours from the arrest, he will have to go before the judge who will need to confirm his arrest,? he added.

Reid's lawyer Vincenzo Comi was visiting his client in jail on Friday and declined to comment further until after the meeting.

Thursday was the fifth anniversary of the brutal murder of British student Meredith Kercher in Perugia, Italy, that led to the arrest, trial and eventual acquittal of American student Amanda Knox.

More world stories from NBC News:

Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

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Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/11/02/14873005-italy-police-us-teen-stabbed-in-his-sleep-by-fellow-student?lite

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Rove: Sifting the Numbers for a Winner (WSJ)

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