Sunday, August 11, 2013

iPad Apps of the Week: Grid, MixBit, and More

iPad Apps of the Week: Grid, MixBit, and More


iPad Apps of the Week: Grid, MixBit, and More Grid: Created by Josh Leong, Grid allows you to put any type of multimedia into tiles of a grid that are whatever size you want. You can make grids that mix photos, text, Google Maps data, symbols, whatever. And they're sharable so you can collaborate with other users. If you've ever used a GoogleDoc to organize a group of people, this is the beautiful version of that. Grid is only for iOS right now, but at least it's free. All you visual thinkers get crackin'. [Free]

Read more...


    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/AUPsf5YCjqs/ipad-apps-of-the-week-grid-mixbit-and-more-1083994795

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Jasmine Russell Gives Stillman College Something to Cheer About

Jasmine Russell didn?t flip in the air when she found out that she was accepted into Florida Coastal Law School, but she could have.? The former cheerleader who graduated in May 2012 spent much of her time off the ground during her Stillman days.? Serving as the squad?s flyer meant that, when she wasn?t impressing the crowd with her amazing round off backhand spring back tucks and other gravity-defying maneuvers, she was the cheerleader that her teammates tossed extremely high in the air and caught in poses that never failed to dazzle spectators.

?

Three years ago, Jasmine founded Tumble Your Way to the Top.?? Through the program, which provides tumbling and cheerleading lessons for kids at the Cooper Community Center in Alexander City, AL, Jasmine says she has been able to ?give back to the community? and ?give kids something positive to do.?

?

?The Lord blessed me with cheer skills that I can share with others.? It?s nice to see the kids smile.? Cheer and tumbling can also help to boost a child?s self-esteem.? Sometimes shy kids don?t have an opportunity to participate in cheer at school.? My program gives them an opportunity to cheer and it also helps them to open up and meet new friends,? says Jasmine, who graduated with a B.A. in history in May 2012.

?

Russell offers lessons for children between the ages of 4 and 12 each summer, which gives her an opportunity to remain in touch with students and hear about the impact that her program is having.? ?One young lady who tried out and didn?t make the squad at her middle school, came to my program to improve her skills.? The next year, she made the team at her school,? Jasmine recalls.

?

While being a former cheerleader en route to law school might sound enviably glamorous, Russell has had her share of challenges. When she was in grammar school, she remembers how neighbors used to come to her home bringing food and sympathy. Her father had cancer and couldn?t work. The power was turned off in their home because he couldn?t afford to pay the utility bills. Doctors were convinced that he wouldn?t make it, but he is now a 13-year cancer survivor.

?

Russell was again reminded of how fragile life can be when a powerful tornado ripped through Tuscaloosa on April 27, 2011, flattening homes and businesses while she and many of her classmates sat downstairs in Roulhac Hall waiting for the storm to subside. Among the 51 individuals in Tuscaloosa whose deaths were attributed to the tornado was Stillman senior William Chase Stevens, a baseball player who was known to his friends as ?Will.?

?

?It was really sad to learn that he had died.? He was a history major so he was in pretty much all of my classes. We had a memorial to remember his life.? He was a wonderful student.? He was very caring and willing to help anyone,? she recalls.

?

?After the storm, Stillman students came together to help.?? We cleaned debris and helped serve lunch at a soup kitchen.? We also held clothing and food drives at Central High School for kids who had lost their homes.? It?s important for me to continue to give back by sharing my gifts and talents with others.?? Because of my own experiences?the way people helped us when my father was ill, it means a lot to me to give back to others. I could relate to kids whose homes had been destroyed by the tornado.?

?

?My passion for service was also inspired by the various service projects hosted by my church, Greater Works Outreach Ministry, and this passion continued when I became a member of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Incorporated, whose mission is "Service To All Mankind.""

?

Through law, Russell hopes to have an even greater impact on the lives of young people. ?I?m interested in criminal law or in juvenile law?something dealing with youth because I am able to connect with kids.? Through community service and through my tumbling program, I?m around kids often.? I would like to be the type of lawyer who is able to help them.? Just because a young person makes a mistake, that doesn?t mean that the mistake has to define who he or she will become as an adult. That?s one of the reasons I have always wanted to become a lawyer.? When I found out that I was accepted into law school, I was so excited.?

?

This year, Russell has a record 41 children in her cheer and tumbling program. Her students are preparing to perform in a recital on August 4th, 3 p.m., at the Cooper Community Center in Alexander City.?

?

?Each age will perform a cheer, a dance and various tumbling routines,? states Russell.? And while she admits that she is more nervous about beginning that notoriously difficult first year of law school than her students are about landing their backhand springs, Russell can rest assured that thousands of proud Stillmanites will be cheering her on.

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Source: http://www.stillman.edu/jasmine-russell-gives-stillman-college-something-to-cheer-about.html

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Saturday, August 10, 2013

The Local Broker LLC Announces the Launch of Their Flagship Real Estate Website in Austin, Texas

Atlanta, Ga (PRWEB) August 08, 2013

The Local Broker LLC is proud to announce the launch of its first local real estate website in Austin, Texas, The Local Broker Austin.

With detailed descriptions and professional photography, the site brings Austin?s unique neighborhoods to life, offering a wealth of local listings that make the home shopping process simple and efficient. The Local Broker Austin site uses new IDX technologies and a customized WordPress platform to create a seamless and efficient real estate portal.

Local Broker Austin is the first of many Local Broker sites. Future cities already reserved by top local agents include Charlotte, Memphis and Nashville.

?Austin is our flagship city and I am proud to partner with Elizabeth Riley of Keller Williams Realty as we venture into this market,? said Ian Marshall, founder and president of the Local Broker. ?The online real estate market in Austin is one of the most competitive in the country. Our success in Austin against steep competition will be a great accomplishment.?

Based in Atlanta, The Local Broker is the brainchild of real estate veteran Ian Marshall, and the culmination of more than ten years of building and growing some of the country?s top local real estate websites. The Local Broker partners with top local real estate agents and brokers nationwide to create a state-of-the-art online presence.


Source: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2013/8/prweb11007569.htm

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Time Warner-CBS blackout reaches eighth day, viewers to miss golf major

By Liana B. Baker

(Reuters) - More than 3 million Time Warner Cable customers in New York, Los Angeles and Dallas will be blocked from watching golf's Major Championship and other popular shows this weekend if the cable company fails to reach an agreement with CBS to end the week-long blackout.

Neither side showed signs of making any progress on ending the dispute as negotiations continued on Friday.

The top U.S. communications regulator said it is ready to act if CBS and Time Warner Cable do not follow through on negotiating to end the blackout of CBS programming in New York and Los Angeles over Time Warner's cable television service.

The blackout started last Friday when the two companies could not agree on fees that Time Warner Cable pays CBS to carry some local stations owned by the broadcaster in some of the largest U.S. TV markets.

"We will continue to urge all parties to stay and resolve in good faith this issue as soon as possible. However, I will affirm to you that I am ready to consider appropriate action if this dispute continues," said the U.S. Federal Communications Commission Acting Chairwoman Mignon Clyburn.

Clyburn, speaking at a press conference in Washington on Friday, also said she was "really distressed" and "disappointed" by the blackout" and was in touch with both companies.

Time Warner Cable said it agreed with the chairwoman's comments and hopes "CBS soon will come to a reasonable agreement with us that is fair to our customers and their viewers."

CBS said it declined to comment on the remarks.

The FCC probably will not be able end the fight, said David Wittenstein, a communications attorney at the firm Dow Lohnes who has handled similar negotiations between cable companies and broadcasters.

"The FCC has taken a position that it has very limited authority to step in and end an impasse. What the FCC can do as a practical matter is quite limited," he said.

He said the FCC could only get involved if one of the parties files a complaint that says one of the sides is not negotiating "in good faith." The FCC could step in if one side is refusing to meet or not providing good reasons for rejecting offers, for example.

On Thursday, online video streaming services like Netflix Inc and Amazon Inc became a new sticking point in the increasingly acrimonious talks.

(Reporting by Liana B. Baker; Editing by David Gregorio and Richard Chang)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/time-warner-cbs-blackout-reaches-eighth-day-viewers-214212735.html

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Thursday, August 8, 2013

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Mass-Market Marathon

There was a time when I spurned mass-market paperbacks. They?re small and flimsy, unbefitting real literature. They?re cheap, and their disposability invites a certain unseriousness in the reader. Whenever I had the chance (and the funds), I replaced the mass-markets in my collection with hardcovers, or at least larger-sized trade paperbacks.

It?s funny how the things that once seemed like bugs now seem like features. Especially that wonderful disposability! If I?m just not that into a book, I want to be able to ditch it. I don?t want to feel beholden to a bad novel just because I spent $35 on the gorgeous hardcover, or because it?s so large and heavy that I couldn?t bring a backup book with me. At 38, with two kids and limited brainpower and scores of shelf-feet of unread books in my house, I am looking for books that I can cast aside without a care if it things don?t work out. On the beach this afternoon, this happens twice. Luckily, I?ve got backups.

I start with Fran Lebowitz?s Metropolitan Life, a terrific-looking orange-red-and-yellow paperback collection of essays by the garrulous New York fixture, who?s famously been not-writing her novel for 30-plus years. Published in 1978, Metropolitan Life collects short essays from Lebowitz?s stints at Mademoiselle and Interview, capturing her particular, fussy, neurotic, funny voice on just about everything?the weather, TV news, Soho, agents, deadlines, landlords, editors, the difficulty of writing, the difficulty of coming up with ideas for columns, digital clocks. That is to say, Fran Lebowitz?s writing seems narrowly tailored to a specific aficionado of the New York literary lifestyle, or maybe even more specifically tailored to Fran Lebowitz.

I wanted to love this book. Fran Lebowitz was the first famous person I ever interviewed, and she stayed on the phone with me for 45 minutes, giving me fantastic quote after fantastic quote for a short piece about New York bookstores. I have never experienced a more delightful interview in my career. (One of the things that is so great about Fran Lebowitz is that she will give a quote to anyone, even a journalist who has no idea what he is doing.) So I liked her, and I like the New York literary lifestyle, and I love the very idea that this collection of essays about, basically, being a louche Upper East writer, was published in mass-market?because it sold! According to the gold embossed badge on its cover, this sucker spent ?five months on the New York Times bestseller list?!

And there are one-liners in this book that I LLOL at. (On a phone call from a Hollywood agent: ?He was audibly tan.?) But by the sixth or seventh essay I?ve already figured out the Lebowitz template: a couple of paragraphs of throat-clearing, establishing at length that she?s going to write about the thing that she?s writing about; a couple of paragraphs of jokes, ranging from solid to very funny; a couple more paragraphs of less-good jokes; a weak kicker. The openers drive me totally crazy. Here?s how she gets into an essay about children:

That is for serious 203 words! I don?t mean to play editor here, but that could easily have been cut to six: ?Here are some jokes about children.? For that is what the piece is: a list of the pros and cons of children, in the voice of Fran Lebowitz. Some of the jokes are great! (?Con: Even when freshly washed and relieved of all obvious confections, children tend to be sticky. One can only assume that this has something to do with not smoking enough.?) Some are lame. ("Pro: Not a single member of the under-age set has yet to propose the world chairchild.") And every essay starts with that long, long wind-up. I give up on page 108, when a piece about manicures begins: ?During a recent luncheon with a practicing member of the leisure class the subject of fingernail care chanced (as it so often does) to come up.? Good grief. I put Fran back in my beach bag and go for a swim.

After a nap I pull out my backup book, a funny little collection of short stories by Steve Allen, the TV host and professional bon vivant. It?s called 14 for Tonight, and it contains, the back-cover copy informs me,

Fourteen stories?
some hilarious,
some frankly sexy,
some grim and macabre?but
all establishing Steve Allen,
in one giant step,
in the first
rank of
American writers.

Now as you may be aware Steve Allen did not, in the end, make it into the first rank of American writers. Though apparently he wrote 54 books, he?s remembered as the father of the modern talk show, and as a great panelist on What?s My Line, but not so much as (despite what an unattributed blurb on the book?s front cover suggests) ?a modern O. Henry.? That?s because the stories are really terrible. The worst is ?The Interview,? in which a reporter interviewing a famous person is insufferable. No, wait, the worst is ??I Hope I?m Not Intruding,?? in which a famous person eating dinner is interrupted by an insufferable fan. No wait! The worst is ?The Public Hating,? which is meant to be a horrifying tale of modern society?s dark, vindictive underbelly, but is just silly and obvious?a put-upon scold?s version of ?The Lottery.? As it happens, I have a second backup book in my bag, and it?s by the actual Shirley Jackson, so I toss 14 for Tonight aside and pick up Hangsaman instead. So long, Steve Allen. Thanks for costing 35 cents.

Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/books/features/2013/mass_market_marathon/books_by_fran_lebowitz_steve_allen_and_shirley_jackson_one_of_which_i_didn.html

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Salamdander Discovers Oil at G4/50-5 Well off Thailand

Salamander Energy plc announced that the G4/50-5 exploration well has discovered oil in the Surin prospect in the central portion of the Western sub-basin, Block G4/50, Gulf of Thailand.

Oil was discovered in good quality Miocene fluvial sandstones in the primary N40 target zone over the interval 5,003 to 5,030 feet (1,525 to 1,533 meters) TVDSS (True Vertical Depth SubSea). Wire-line logs and pressure data confirmed the presence of approximately 26 feet (8 meters) of oil pay. Oil samples recovered from the zone indicate a 31 degree API oil and mapping of the Surin fault block indicates between 49 and 66 feet (15 and 20 meters) of column height above the location of the well penetration. Further evaluation is required to determine the potential resource volume encountered in the Surin discovery. The well has been plugged and abandoned as an oil discovery.

James Menzies, chief executive of Salamander, commented:

?The discovery of oil in the Surin fault block, a 16 miles (25 kilometers) step out from the Bualuang field, has proven the access to an oil charge in the Western Central sub-basin, which had been identified as a key risk pre-drill.? Resource estimates for Surin are being assessed but this is clearly a positive step in de-risking the neighbouring prospects and in understanding the local petroleum system.?

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

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Source: http://www.rigzone.com/news/oil_gas/a/128270/Salamdander_Discovers_Oil_at_G4505_Well_off_Thailand?rss=true

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Friday, July 26, 2013

CU Buffs football team loses three players to transfer

Gerald Thomas (Karl Gehring, Denver Post file)

CULVER CITY, Calif. ? Wide receiver Gerald Thomas, tight end Vincent Hobbs and defensive end John Stuart will not return to the University of Colorado football roster, the school announced Friday.

Thomas finished fifth on the team last year in receptions with 18 for an average of 14.3 yards per game. He will transfer to Sam Houston State, an FCS school.

Stuart and Hobbs will transfer closer to their homes ? Hobbs due to family reasons and Stuart for personal reasons.

John Henderson: 303-954-1299, jhenderson@denverpost.com or twitter.com/johnhendersondp

Source: http://www.denverpost.com/cu/ci_23737582/cu-buffs-football-team-loses-three-players-transfer?source=rss

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Thursday, July 11, 2013

Space-time is not the same for everyone

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Before the Big Bang, space-time as we know it did not exist. So how was it born? The process of creating normal space-time from an earlier state dominated by quantum gravity has been studied for years. Recent analyses suggest a surprising conclusion: not all elementary particles are subject to the same space-time.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/strange_science/~3/kNilZaFNogk/130709115344.htm

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Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Photos: Woolly mammoth, 39,000 years old to be exhibited in Japan

Posted Jul 09, 2013

By

A 39,000-year-old female baby woolly mammoth, named Yuka, from the Siberian permafrost arrived at an exhibition hall in Yokohama, suburban Tokyo on July 9, 2013. The frozen woolly mammoth will be exhibited from July 13 until September 16.

  • A 39,000-year-old female Woolly mammoth, which was found frozen in Siberia, Russia is seen upon its arrival at an exhibition hall in Yokohama, south of Tokyo, July 9, 2013. The mammoth will be on display from July 13, 2013 till September 16, 2013.   REUTERS/Toru Hanai

    1 of 8

    A 39,000-year-old female Woolly mammoth, which was found frozen in Siberia, Russia is seen upon its arrival at an exhibition hall in Yokohama, south of Tokyo, July 9, 2013. The mammoth will be on display from July 13, 2013 till September 16, 2013. REUTERS/Toru Hanai

  • Members of Japan customs inspect a 39,000-year-old female baby woolly mammoth Yuka from Siberian permafrost upon its arrival at an exhibition hall in Yokohama, suburban Tokyo on July 9, 2013. The frozen woolly mammoth will be exhibited from July 13 until September 16. KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP/Getty Images

    2 of 8

    Members of Japan customs inspect a 39,000-year-old female baby woolly mammoth Yuka from Siberian permafrost upon its arrival at an exhibition hall in Yokohama, suburban Tokyo on July 9, 2013. The frozen woolly mammoth will be exhibited from July 13 until September 16. KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP/Getty Images

  • A foot of the 39,000-year-old female Woolly mammoth, which was found frozen in Siberia, Russia is pictured upon its arrival at an exhibition hall in Yokohama, south of Tokyo, July 9, 2013. The mammoth will be on display from July 13, 2013 till September 16, 2013.   REUTERS/Toru Hanai

    3 of 8

    A foot of the 39,000-year-old female Woolly mammoth, which was found frozen in Siberia, Russia is pictured upon its arrival at an exhibition hall in Yokohama, south of Tokyo, July 9, 2013. The mammoth will be on display from July 13, 2013 till September 16, 2013. REUTERS/Toru Hanai

  • A 39,000-year-old female baby woolly mammoth named Yuka from the Siberian permafrost is unveiled for the media at an exhibition in Yokohama, suburban Tokyo on July 9, 2013. The frozen woolly mammoth will be exhibited from July 13 until September 16. KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP/Getty Images

    4 of 8

    A 39,000-year-old female baby woolly mammoth named Yuka from the Siberian permafrost is unveiled for the media at an exhibition in Yokohama, suburban Tokyo on July 9, 2013. The frozen woolly mammoth will be exhibited from July 13 until September 16. KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP/Getty Images

  • A worker looks at a 39,000-year-old female Woolly mammoth, which was found frozen in Siberia, Russia upon its arrival at an exhibition hall in Yokohama, south of Tokyo, July 9, 2013. The mammoth will be on display from July 13, 2013 till September 16, 2013.   REUTERS/Toru Hanai

    5 of 8

    A worker looks at a 39,000-year-old female Woolly mammoth, which was found frozen in Siberia, Russia upon its arrival at an exhibition hall in Yokohama, south of Tokyo, July 9, 2013. The mammoth will be on display from July 13, 2013 till September 16, 2013. REUTERS/Toru Hanai

  • A 39,000-year-old female Woolly mammoth, which was found frozen in Siberia, Russia is carried by workers upon its arrival at an exhibition hall in Yokohama, south of Tokyo, July 9, 2013. The mammoth will be on display from July 13, 2013 till September 16, 2013.   REUTERS/Toru Hanai

    6 of 8

    A 39,000-year-old female Woolly mammoth, which was found frozen in Siberia, Russia is carried by workers upon its arrival at an exhibition hall in Yokohama, south of Tokyo, July 9, 2013. The mammoth will be on display from July 13, 2013 till September 16, 2013. REUTERS/Toru Hanai

  • The snout of a 39,000-year-old female Woolly mammoth, which was found frozen in Siberia, Russia is pictured upon its arrival at an exhibition hall in Yokohama, south of Tokyo, July 9, 2013. The mammoth will be on display from July 13, 2013 till September 16, 2013.   REUTERS/Toru Hanai

    7 of 8

    The snout of a 39,000-year-old female Woolly mammoth, which was found frozen in Siberia, Russia is pictured upon its arrival at an exhibition hall in Yokohama, south of Tokyo, July 9, 2013. The mammoth will be on display from July 13, 2013 till September 16, 2013. REUTERS/Toru Hanai

  • A 39,000-year-old female baby woolly mammoth named Yuka from the Siberian permafrost is unveiled for the media at an exhibition in Yokohama, suburban Tokyo on July 9, 2013. The frozen woolly mammoth will be exhibited from July 13 until September 16. KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP/Getty Images

    8 of 8

    A 39,000-year-old female baby woolly mammoth named Yuka from the Siberian permafrost is unveiled for the media at an exhibition in Yokohama, suburban Tokyo on July 9, 2013. The frozen woolly mammoth will be exhibited from July 13 until September 16. KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP/Getty Images

Source: http://photos.denverpost.com/2013/07/09/photos-wolly-mammoth-yuka-siberia-tokyo/

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Alzheimer's Disease & Cancer: Each May Lower Risk of the Other

Alzheimer's disease and cancer are both diseases of aging, but interestingly, having one of these conditions lowers the risk of developing the other, a new study from Italy suggests.

In the study, people with Alzheimer's disease were 43 percent less likely to develop cancer, and people with cancer were 35 percent less likely to develop Alzheimer's disease, compared with the general population.

The findings agree with those of earlier studies, which also showed a lower risk of cancer for people with Alzheimer's disease, and vice versa. The new study is the largest to explore the relationship between these two diseases, study researcher Dr. Massimo Musicco, of the National Research Council of Italy in Milan, said in a statement.

The study found an association, and cannot prove that the either disease is responsible for causing a ?reduced risk of developing the other.

However, it's possible that these two diseases result from opposite biological mechanisms, which in turn, lowers the risk of the second disease in a person who already has the first, the researchers said. The researchers noted that Alzheimer's disease results from the death of brain cells, while cancer results from uncontrolled cellular growth, and resistance to cell death.?

If future studies confirm the findings, "This knowledge may help in gaining a better understanding of and developing new treatments for both diseases," Catherine Roe, of Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, and Dr. Maria Behrens, of the Hospital Cl?nico Universidad de Chile, wrote in an editorial accompanying the study.

The study analyzed information from more than 204,000 people ages 60 and older in Italy, who were followed for six years.

During the study, 21,451 people in the study were diagnosed with cancer and 2,832 were diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease.

Those numbers include the 161 people who were diagnosed with both diseases. But the researchers expected that 246 people with cancer would have developed Alzheimer's disease, and 281 people with Alzheimer's disease would have developed cancer, based on the prevalence of both diseases among people of the same age and gender as the study participants.

So in both cases, the risk of the second disease was reduced.

The researchers found the same result among people who died during the study and those who lived, meaning that early death among people who acquired one disease and died could not explain the phenomenon. [Top 10 Leading Causes of Death]

What's more, people who eventually developed Alzheimer's disease had a lower risk of cancer both before and after their Alzheimer's diagnosis, and people with cancer had a lower risk of Alzheimer's disease both before and after their cancer diagnosis. This means that the diagnosis of the first disease did not appear to interfere with the diagnosis of the second disease, the researchers said.

The study did not take into account lifestyle factors, such as smoking, physical activity and diet, which may influence the risk of these diseases.

The study and editorial are published today (July 10) in the journal Neurology.

Follow Rachael Rettner @RachaelRettner. Follow LiveScience @livescience, Facebook & Google+. Original article on LiveScience.com.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/alzheimers-disease-cancer-may-lower-risk-other-201342796.html

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OT at Tax Dept., up 506 percent this year, got some attention

The state Department of Taxation and Finance officials continued to be reluctant to fully discuss the problems with paper tax return processing but began to tell a little more after being confronted with overtime data collected from the Office of the State Comptroller by the Times Union. The department said filers still waiting should get refunds by early August. Some have been waiting since February.

Given a day to look at this material below obtained by the Times Union from the Office of the State Comptroller after an official request and reported in the paper on July 4, the department released a statement just at deadline on July 3. They were sent this data the afternoon of July 2 and asked to comment:

OT at Tax & Finance
January ? June 2012:
$325,504
9,304 hours

January ? June 2013:
$1,973,382
57,698 hours

This statement came forth from spokesman Geoffrey Gloak, in which he continued to talk about the entire universe of person income tax returns, including the electronically filed ones, where the big problems have not been identified as a result of a new contract with the New York State Industries for the Disabled and their for-profit partner SourceHOV:

?The New York State Department of Taxation and Finance today issued an update on refunds for the 2012 income tax season.

Thus far, 5.95 million refunds have been issued this year representing $5.3 billion ? a dollar-for-dollar increase of 3% over last year at this time.

Overall, more than 96 percent of all refunds have been issued, and the remaining refunds are being delivered daily.

By law, refunds that are issued after May 30 for timely-filed returns include interest payments. Interest is paid only on that part of the refund resulting from over-withholding.

As a result of a new contractor for processing income tax returns, refunds for some taxpayers who submitted paper returns have been delayed.

To prioritize delivery of refunds, the Tax Department is assisting the vendor to both speed processing and provide quality assurance. Recovery of the Department?s costs associated with this effort ? including staff over time and interest payments ? is provided for in the contract, and will not come at additional taxpayer expense.

Outstanding returns filed by April 15 will be filled by early August.

E-filing Increases
This year, nearly 90% of taxpayers filed their returns electronically ? up from 87% last year and only 58% just five years ago.

E-filing is the safest and fastest way to file a return and receive a refund, and it saves taxpayer dollars. Since 2008, New Yorkers have saved more than $250 million in processing costs as a result of e-filing.

For more information
Taxpayers can check the status of their refunds at www.tax.ny.gov or call 518-457-5181 to talk with a Department representative.?

Source: http://blog.timesunion.com/capitol/archives/190778/overtime-at-the-state-tax-department-506-percent-up-this-year-got-some-attention/

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Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Video: 5 Dead in Oil Train Derailment

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Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/52422758/

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Turkey condemns Cairo shooting, calls it "massacre"

ANKARA (Reuters) - Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu condemned the Cairo shooting in which at least 42 people died on Monday, describing the incident as a "massacre" and calling for the start of a normalization process.

Islamist protesters angered by president Mohamed Mursi's overthrow said the killings occurred when they were fired on outside Republican Guard headquarters. The military blamed the bloodshed on a "terrorist group" that tried to storm the compound and said at least one soldier was killed and 40 hurt.

"I strongly condemn the massacre that took place in Egypt at morning prayer in the name of the fundamental human values which we have been advocating," Davutoglu said on Twitter.

He called for the start of a political normalization process that respects the national will of Egyptians.

Turkey's government has Islamist roots like Mursi's Muslim Brotherhood. Davutoglu last week denounced the Egyptian army's removal of Mursi after days of mass unrest against his rule "a military coup" and said this was "unacceptable".

(Reporting by Humeyra Pamuk; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/turkey-condemns-cairo-shooting-calls-massacre-091023588.html

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Human skull in clay pot found in canal near golf course

MARGATE?

? After finding a human skull and trinkets in a clay pot in a canal near the Oriole Executive Golf Course Monday morning, police launched a homicide investigation.

But such discoveries are not uncommon in South Florida and are often linked to ritualistic Afro-Caribbean religions.

The Margate skull was sent to the Broward County medical examiner for further examination, Lt. Andy Zettek, a spokesman for the Margate Police Department, said.

Uncertain whether the skull was acquired for "religious ritualistic purposes," detectives are ? for now ? handling the incident as a homicide investigation, Zettek said.

The race, gender and age of the skull are unknown, he said.

"We found it, it's human, and that's about all we know until the medical examiner, or someone in authority, can make a determination," Zettek said.

The skull was discovered about 11:30 a.m. near the ninth hole of the golf course at 8000 Margate Blvd., Zettek said.

The discovery generated a good bit of chatter on an otherwise slow day at the golf course and adjoining restaurant, bartender Jennifer Gallaudet said.

"As you can imagine, everybody that's here is definitely shocked," she said.

Divers from Sullivan Electric and Pump made the discovery in about 10- to 15-feet of water while working on an irrigation line, Zettek said.

The clay pot ? about the size of a one- or two-gallon jug ? broke apart when the diver brought it to shore, Zettek said.

As for the trinkets, Zettek declined to elaborate.

"They're dirty, obviously, with a lot of soil and mud," he said. "They have to be cleaned up to determine what exactly they are."

Human skulls found across South Florida often are traced to ritualistic Afro-Caribbean religions such as Santeria, Palo Mayombe or Voodoo.

Most recently, two women traveling to Baltimore from Cuba were detained at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport in April when pots containing what appeared to be human skulls were found in their carry-on baggage.

The women said they bought the terra cotta pots at a religious shop in Cuba and were told the artifacts would "ward off evil spirits," authorities said.

The remains were sent to a laboratory at the University of Florida for further investigation.

And last year, when a human skull and artifacts were found in a clay pot in a lake in Hollywood, a forensic anthropologist concluded that it had been used for the Paolo Mayombe faith.

There was no sign of trauma to that skull, and investigators did not suspect foul play.

Margate police divers continue to search the canal near the golf course for additional remains or evidence, Zettek said.

Investigators urge anyone with information about the skull to call Detective Julio Fernandez at 954-972-7111.

tealanez@tribune.com, 954-356-4542 or Twitter @talanez

Source: http://www.sun-sentinel.com/fl-margate-skull-20130708,0,5212772.story?track=rss

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Wood used by freed slaves stolen from SC church

WALTERBORO, S.C. --?

Wood that was used by freed slaves to build a schoolhouse in Clarendon County more than 130 years ago has been stolen.

The pine boards had been salvaged from the Saint James the Greater Catholic Mission after the congregation spent a decade trying to raise enough money to renovate the schoolhouse, church pastor Father Jeffrey Kendall told The Post and Courier of Charleston (http://bit.ly/12dcQgA).

Irish plantation owners founded the church in 1833, but slaves and their descendants became the lifeblood, especially after a fire destroyed it in 1856. Members couldn't immediately rebuild, but prayed together and kept meeting all the way through the Civil War before deciding to build the schoolhouse in the 1870s, Kendall said.

"The freed slaves who built that school house, their sweat and their blood is in that wood. The members of the church are descendants of those slaves," Kendall said. "It has such tremendous meaning for us. That is why it's so heartbreaking for us."

The wood was inside a trailer that was stolen from the church on June 29. Colleton County deputies haven't found the wood or the person who stole the trailer.

"I'm pretty angry. Either they don't know the value of the wood and dumped it somewhere or they know the value of the wood and they're going to try to use it themselves," Kendall said.

Church members planned to use the special wood to make a new alter, podium and baptismal font in the restored building, the pastor said.

Church member Geraldine Jenkins hopes the wood is still out there and will make it back to the church she joined 35 years ago after marrying into the family who kept it going for more than a century.

"They stole a part of our life. They didn't destroy it," she said. "We've come too far to be destroyed. But they took a part of our heritage away and we would truly like to have it back."

Source: http://www.fortmilltimes.com/2013/07/07/2805848/wood-used-by-freed-slaves-stolen.html

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Prince Andrew becomes first UK royal on Twitter

LONDON (AP) ? Twitter is now a bit more royal.

Britain's Prince Andrew has joined the micro-blogging service as @TheDukeOfYork.

Within hours of opening the account Monday, Andrew had more than 10,000 followers ? but also had received several abusive comments.

The son of Queen Elizabeth II has served as a navy helicopter pilot and a British business ambassador, and is following charities, arts organizations and the Hunstanton Golf Club on Twitter.

So far he is was not following his ex-wife Sarah Ferguson, who tweets as @SarahTheDuchess.

The British monarchy has two official Twitter accounts, but Andrew is the first family member to tweet in a personal capacity, signing messages he has written AY.

Asked about abusive tweets Andrew had received, a palace spokesman said the duke is a champion of free speech.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/prince-andrew-becomes-first-uk-royal-twitter-160444973.html

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Monday, July 8, 2013

Take a peek at your email metadata ... before the feds do

Technology

2 hours ago

Immersion

Immersion

This demo shows the email connections that an imaginary person, Lex Luthor, has made over six years

If this NSA data-snooping thing has you wondering about how much can be learned from your email metadata, there's an easy ? and safe ? way to find out.

A new public Web application from the MIT Media Lab picks up metadata from your Gmail emails and displays an easily readable map of your digital connections, just enter your Gmail details.

I sent my own first Gmail email a few weeks into my first semester at college. Since then, I've made and lost friends, foes and beaus ? and no one knows this better than my inbox.

Last Friday I handed over the contents of my personal account, tens of thousands of emails, to the trio running Immersion at the MIT Media Lab. In under 10 minutes my email history was digested and sent back to me as a web of wobbling dots of assorted colors and shapes that instantly showed me who was important to me and my mailbox.

Anyone I'd written to more three times appeared as a single dot, connected to anyone else I'd cc'd in a conversation. The better I'd kept in touch with someone, the larger they appeared on my page.

The color-coded communities were easily spotted: friends at work, college buddies, high school mates. I dragged the "Time" slider around to see how the bubbles swelled and shrank over the years.

"Email is always presented to users in the same way regardless of what service (you're) using," Deepak Jagdish, one of the co-creators of the Immersion told NBC News. "There's so much more of the data that they don't get to see about their email."

Immersion went live to the public on June 30, and has had more than 70,000 visitors so far, said Jagdish, who, along with fellow grad student Daniel Smilkov at Cesar Hidalgo's Macro Connections group at the MIT Media Lab, built the analytical tool. Once you've securely entered your Gmail details and had a look at your contact map, Immersion gives you the option of deleting your information and logging out, or letting Immersion keep your compressed email metadata and user profile. That data is not shared outside the research group.

Rather than looking at the body of the email or the subject line, the tool maps the senders and recipients of the email, and the time that it was sent. You've probably heard details like those referred to frequently in recent weeks regarding the NSA's controversial data-gathering approach.

Jagdish describes metadata as "bits of information that you don't pay attention to." He believes Immersion can reveal aspects of your behavior and relationships that you may not have noticed before.

For example, Jagish explains, one early tester of the tool isolated a previously unknown characteristic of his relationship with his girlfriend. When this tester looked at a map of his contacts, Jagdish said, he was surprised to find how often his girlfriend involved his mother in their conversations.

Jagdish's own response invoked nostalgia, he said. "It showed me that regardless of the ups and downs I've gone through in my life there's been this core group of people that have been with me no matter what."

The tool could be used for more than a walk down memory lane. The team has been asked about developing the tool for corporate use, Jagdish said. One company expressed interest in using Immersion to map the connections of employees who are leaving, so that their replacements can identify their most important connections.

The Immersion project grew out of an idea Cesar Hidalgo, leader of the Macro Connections group at the Media Lab, had developed for a more "visual" inbox that broke away from the time-organized layout of most email services like Gmail, Outlook and Yahoo. In a blog post published Sunday, Hidalgo wrote that Immersion helped him see how frequently he'd been traveling over the last year. He says he is resolved now to spend more time on campus so he can better connect with his students.

The Macro Connections group is no stranger to metadata. Earlier this year, a separate group working with Hidalgo showed how people could be identified from anonymized cell phone records using GPS data.

Nidhi Subbaraman writes about technology and science. Follow her on Facebook, Twitter, Google+.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663301/s/2e618a45/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Ctake0Epeek0Eyour0Eemail0Emetadata0Efeds0Edo0E6C10A569544/story01.htm

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Solar Impulse plane ends American odyssey with fears, tears and cheers

Cosmic Log

11 hours ago

Image: Solar Impulse landing

Solar Impulse

Solar Impulse chairman Bertrand Piccard flashes a thumbs-up sign as he greets pilot Andre Borschberg after the plane's landing Saturday night at New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport. The two men are wearing yellow scarves to pay tribute to Antoine de Saint-Exupery, author of "The Little Prince."

The Swiss-built Solar Impulse airplane ended its two-month-long, solar-powered trip across America with a nail-biter of a flight from Washington to New York on Saturday.

"Maybe if I didn't have 10 cameras pointed at me, I would cry," Swiss adventurer Bertrand Piccard, one of the pilots for the coast-to-coast journey, said just before the 11:09 p.m. ET landing at New York City's John F. Kennedy International Airport.

The extra drama came from the discovery in the trip's final hours that the ultra-light airplane had suffered an 8-foot-long (2.5-meter-long) tear in the fabric on the lower side of the left wing. Andre Borschberg, who was filling the pilot's seat for the Washington-to-New York segment of the "Across America" journey, noticed a balance issue with the wings on Saturday afternoon ? and pictures taken by a helicopter flying nearby confirmed the damage.

Neither Borschberg nor the plane were thought to be in danger; nevertheless, the Solar Impulse team did everything it could to reduce the risk. That meant considering all the options for ending the flight, including the possibility of bailing out over the Atlantic. It meant passing up a Statue of Liberty photo op and working out a deal with air traffic controllers to land the plane three hours earlier than originally planned. And it meant changing the landing procedure.

Borschberg brought the airplane in low and slow, without air braking, to reduce the stress on the wing. The spindly craft seemed to float to a stop on the runway ? prompting cheers at JFK as well as at Solar Impulse's mission control center in Switzerland. Moments later, a stepladder was set up so that Piccard could greet Borschberg in the cockpit. And despite what he said, Piccard could be seen wiping at his eyes after the two men hugged.

"It was supposed to be the shortest and easiest leg," Piccard said later. "It was the most difficult one."

Early takeoff, late landing
The "Across America" odyssey began on May 3 with a flight from Moffett Field, near San Francisco, to Phoenix, and continued with hops to Dallas-Fort Worth, St. Louis, Cincinnati and Washington. Piccard and Borschberg, co-founders of the Solar Impulse venture, traded turns piloting the single-seat plane. For most of those flights, the plane had to leave early and wait until late to land, so as to reduce the potential for disrupting commercial air traffic.

Image: Solar Impulse

Solar Impulse

A tear in the fabric on the underside of the Solar Impulse airplane's wing forced a slightly early end to the final flight of its two-month-long "Across America" odyssey.

Saturday's trip began with a 4:46 a.m. ET takeoff from Washington's Dulles International Airport. The solar-powered plane's top speed is around 45 mph (72 kilometers per hour), but even at that speed, there were plenty of hours to spare for the 228-mile (336-kilometer) trip.

While Borschberg flew in circles off the coast of New Jersey, waiting for clearance to land, he participated in media interviews and a video hangout with such luminaries as James Cameron, the famed film director and ocean explorer; and Erik Lindbergh, the grandson of aviation pioneer Charles Lindbergh.

Before the wing's damage came to light, Borschberg also had time to reflect on the meaning of Solar Impulse's odyssey: Swiss corporate backers have put up ?90 million ($115 million) over the past decade for the project, which is aimed at demonstrating technologies ranging from solar-power generation and storage to ultra-light composite materials.

Ultra-light, and powered by light
Solar Impulse weighs as much as an automobile, but has the wingspan of a Boeing 747 jumbo jet. Scooter-type electric motors drive the single-seat plane's propellers. All of the power comes from almost 12,000 solar cells installed on its wings and horizontal stabilizer. Excess electricity is stored in 800 pounds' (363 kilograms') worth of batteries, so the plane can theoretically fly day and night.

"We have an airplane which has almost unlimited endurance," Borschberg told NBC News. "This airplane could have flown directly from California to New York, so it?s fully sustainable in terms of energy. The limiting factor is the pilot."

Piccard is already in the record books for the first-ever nonstop balloon flight around the world in 1999 (which he flew along with Brian Jones). He and Borschberg have been flying the Solar Impulse prototype in Europe and Africa over the past couple of years, but with the end of the "Across America" trip, this particular prototype will be retired. A more advanced solar-powered plane is being built for an even more ambitious series of flights around the world in 2015.

Clean tech on the ground
Piccard has said that solar-powered planes could conceivably go commercial within five years or so, but Borschberg emphasized the potential applications for clean-energy technologies on the ground.

"All the partners who are involved with this project developed technologies not for the aviation world, but for their own customers," Borschberg told NBC News. "The customers are maybe homebuilding, maybe the automobile industry, maybe appliances. That?s what they are looking for, and that?s what?s slowly taking place. So if part of the legacy could be to show a way how to increase the efficiency of what we do and reduce the energy consumption but keeping the same quality of life, that would be a wonderful achievement for the project."

Cameron, who is as proud of his ocean adventures as he is of his blockbuster films "Titanic" and "Avatar," paid tribute to Borschberg and Piccard during Saturday's Google+ Hangout.

"What Solar Impulse stands for is renewable energy ? not just electric aircraft, but use of solar power in general, and this is something that?s going to be fundamental and critical to the survival of the human race," Cameron said. "You've got people that are standing for something, committing themselves, putting their personal asses on the line to make a point for the betterment of human civilization, and I greatly applaud that."

The consciousness-raising is due to continue after Saturday night's landing: Borschberg and Piccard will participate in a NASDAQ opening-bell ceremony and are to meet with U.N. Secretary General Ban-Ki Moon on Tuesday.

More about the Solar Impulse odyssey:

Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the NBC News Science Facebook page, following@b0yle on Twitter and adding +Alan Boyle to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663301/s/2e4e8fe6/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Csolar0Eimpulse0Eplane0Eends0Eamerican0Eodyssey0Efears0Etears0Echeers0E6C10A551691/story01.htm

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Sunday, July 7, 2013

Dos minutos de nosalgia gamer y grandes recuerdos

Quiz?s tambi?n te interese:

Los graficos no hacen los videojuegos, antes era la originalidad y diversi?n lo que los marcaba.

crash bandicoot y spyro los mejores!! :D

#3 por Ziggs
6 jul 2013, 22:47

Joder que recuerdos con Spyro, Crash y Sir Daniel Fortesque (Medievil)

#4 por varo_9
6 jul 2013, 22:49

La intro de PS casi me hace llorar, qu? recuerdos.

Que el logo de SONY al encender la Play durara tanto rato como en este v?deo, era mala se?al... ese juego no lo le?a muy bien.

Se echa en falta el Metal Gear Solid.

Source: http://www.notengotele.com/clasicos/dos-minutos-de-nosalgia-gamer-y-grandes-recuerdos

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Lobo big men fare well in first day at World University Games

The big men of Lobo basketball made their presence felt Sunday in the opening day of action at the World University Games in Kazan, Russia.

Both Alex Kirk for Team USA and Cameron Bairstow for Australia posted double-doubles in wins for their home countries.

Read the rest of the story?

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Source: http://www.abqjournal.com/main/218538/news/lobo-big-men-fare-well-in-first-day-at-world-university-games.html

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The Reference Frame: Tim Maudlin's right and (more often) muddled ...

Vincent has asked me what I thought about an interview with philosopher of physics Tim Maudlin at 3:am,

On the foundations of physics.
Regular TRF readers remember Maudlin as the main villain in the 2011 story about Tom Banks and anti-quantum zealots which was ignited by a discussion at Preposterous Universe (well, it was at Cosmic Variance at that time).

Yesterday, Maudlin mostly said the same wrong things as he did 1.5 years ago but let me discuss them again.

At the beginning, he's asked why he became a philosopher. As an undergrad, he dreamed about kibitzing about the fundamental issues in Nature but he didn't want to go through the hard exercise of learning what is needed for this kibitzing to be meaningful ? so he inevitably ended with a "compromise" which meant to become a philosopher of physics.

Maudlin thinks that the spats between philosophers of science and scientists are no different than spats between scientists themselves. There's one difference, however: scientists, even when they disagree with each other, usually agree that the right answers should be found by the scientific method. Philosophers including Maudlin disagree about this very first rule ? they want philosophical prejudices to be the most powerful players.

Some fruitless discussion is dedicated to the Liar Paradox, i.e. even more futile attempts to assign a truth value to the sentence "this sentence is false". This sentence can't be false because then its negation would have to be right and the negation would imply that the sentence is true; and vice versa. It can't be true and false at the same moment which means that it can't be attributed any particular truth value.

I think that most intelligent schoolkids understand the previous paragraph. On top of that, one may add some adults' interpretations. First of all, there's nothing wrong about a proposition's having an undefined truth value. Meaningless sentences can't be assigned truth values. That's the case when the fail to obey some rules of grammar or syntax. But even if they do, they may fail to obey other conditions, conditions linked to the "beef" of our axiomatic system.

This contradiction is avoided in any consistent framework to assign truth values to some propositions because any such consistent framework does forbid ? has to forbid (in order to be consistent) ? such sentences. These requirements are reflected by special refinements such as the GB or ZF set theory that overcome a similar paradox due to Bertrand Russell in Georg Cantor's naive set theory (which allowed a set \(M\) of all sets \(X\) such that \(X\notin X\) which makes the question whether \(M\notin M\) equally paradoxical).

Most trivially, axiomatic frameworks in physics avoid the Liar Paradox because the allowed propositions talk about external objects and don't legalize self-referring propositions at all.

The sequence of several paragraphs above really exhausts everything one may say about the Liar Paradox and some of the comments are "related applications" rather than aspects of the paradox itself. Maudlin hasn't even said the things above ? still, he has "studied" (?) this kindergarten problem for years. It's just stupid to study such a triviality for years especially if the result is that he is still totally muddled when it comes to rather closely related questions.

(Later, I realized that it may not be the best idea for a guy called Motl to build on the similarity between the words Maudlin and muddled but I won't revise the text because of that!)

And be sure that he is muddled. When they discuss philosophy of mathematics, he claims that the Axiom of Choice must be either true or false. He thinks that the validity of the Axiom of Choice is on par with the validity of Goldbach's conjecture (an unproven but almost certainly true claim about integers: every integer above 2 may be expressed as a sum of two primes). However, their status isn't the same at all. Only the Axiom of Choice has been proven to be undecidable in conventional axiomatic set theory. It means that you may add it as an axiom but you may also add its negation ? it is independent ? and these two choices are equally allowed, equally "true". This has been proven. There can be no mathematical proof bringing some asymmetry between AC and non(AC). There can't be any physical experiments, either, because physics prohibits experiments with arbitrary infinite sets. The relevant complicated systems of sets really can't be realized physically; physics doesn't build on the mathematics of arbitrary extensive sets and sets of sets. It's picking other, more specific and continuous-number-based portions of mathematics. AC and non(AC) will forever be equally valid and equally invalid.

Nothing like that has been proven about Goldbach's cojecture which is just another not-yet-settled problem in number theory. It is sort of unbelievable that Maudlin seems to be unaware of this difference. He may call himself by pompous words such as "mathematical Platonist" but if he isn't aware of the fact that it's been proven that the Axiom of Choice and its negation are equally true ? undecidable ? then he is just ignorant about basic results that should dictate the philosophy of mathematics. If one builds a "philosophy of mathematics" by ignoring the rigorously proven theorems, he is bound to end up in a cesspool.

That's also where one ends up if he builds a "philosophy of physics" while ignoring or denying key scientifically demonstrated results in physics. And Maudlin does that, too.

He says some incoherent things about the arrow of time. But a few paragraphs later, he clarifies why his text had to be incoherent when he says

I further believe that physicists have been misled by the mathematical language they use to represent the physical world.
Another math hater. He believes that the maths used by physicists isn't capable of attaching a directionality (sign) to timelike intervals in the spacetime. Be sure that it is possible to equip the spacetime with this structure because the set of nonzero timelike vectors isn't connected (it is composed of the future light cone and the past light cone) and physicists are fully aware of this trivial fact.

Maudlin also rejects Occam's razor, the preference for simpler theories with fewer (independent) defining concepts and laws. There are ways to use such a "razor" incorrectly but Maudlin is clearly throwing the baby out with the bath water. Some usage of the razor is inevitable in science because one must always abandon explanations that become too contrived. Quantitatively speaking, such contrived or fudged explanations with many ad hoc choices should be eliminated because they should be assigned a tiny prior probability in the Bayesian inference ? because they have to share the prior probability with many similarly contrived but inequivalent hypotheses. If one weren't able to reject any "fudged" or "too contrived" hypotheses at all, for their being "fudged" or "too contrived", we couldn't have made any progress in physics. Or any science, for that matter. We would be overwhelmed by posthumous children (ad hoc mutations) of hypotheses that were ruled out in the past. We wouldn't notice that something is wrong about this whole dynasty's DNA (whether the mutation is added or not) and more than a small mutation is needed to get the right picture.

Finally, he is asked about relativity and especially quantum mechanics. Maudlin says:

The list you give is a very, very mixed bag, so the immediate moral is not to adopt any default attitude about what physicists say.
The problem is that Maudlin fails to adopt the results of physics not only immediately but he fails to learn them even many years after he began to "be" a philosopher of science, whatever it means (it surely doesn't mean to possess any expertise on physics, as he demonstrates by his own example).
No clear, exact understanding of quantum theory implies that the health of a cat is dependent on being observed, and the claim about so-called ?black hole complementarity? is just as nonsensical as it seems.
Whether a physical system such as the cat (or, more fundamentally, an electron) may be assigned an objective property before it is observed doesn't depend on a philosopher's mood or feelings, on philosophical prejudices, or on "interpretations". It is actually a well-defined question about the way how Nature works and the only right answer that has been demonstrated by the scientific tools is that the property can't be thought of as being "objectively decided" prior to the measurement. This follows from the fact that two generic properties of physical systems are expressed by two operators that almost never commute with each other which implies that they don't share eigenstates.

The black hole complementarity is another true manifestation of this fact that observables in quantum mechanics (in the true description of Nature) refuse to commute, unlike their classical counterparts (in the description that has been falsified, namely classical physics).

Nonlocality in the physical world (which seems to be produced in part by entanglement in the quantum state) is proven by observed violations of Bell?s inequality, so we have to take that on board.
No, there is no violation of locality in any situation or experiment in the Minkowski space. Locality ? an exact one ? follows from special relativity, a principled theory supported by nearly waterproof empirical evidence. Bell's inequality implies that the laws of Nature can't be both local and "realist", and because relativity makes it very clear that they are local, it follows that they are not "realist". So both answers by Maudlin to the questions whether Nature is local and whether it is realist are wrong.

But Maudlin says some bizarre things about relativity, too.

The theory of Relativity is a theory of space-time structure. According to the theory that structure, the geometry of space-time, is perfectly objective and rather different from the space-time structure postulated in classical physics.
Relativity surely doesn't make space or time or spacetime any more "objective" than they were in classical physics. What it is doing is that it is forcing us to treat space and time in a unified way, as a spacetime, because the spacetime's separation or projection to space and time is not objective, as relativity shows. It is subjective, more precisely dependent on the inertial system (a rather transparent, innocent version of subjectivity, but quantum mechanics brings more intrinsically subjective aspects to physics).

So the identification "what is space" and "what is time" is something that relativity makes subjective or relative, just like the length of objects, duration of processes, and simultaneity of events. That's a good reason why relativity is called "relativity". Some concepts that used to be absolute are simply made relative. Nevertheless, this new apparent "vagueness" doesn't imply any genuine loss of predictivity because the viewpoints of the inertial observers are linked to each other by rigid principles ? by the Lorentz transformations that preserve certain "invariants". That's a reason why Einstein has proposed an "opposite" name for relativity, "Invariantentheorie", as well. Because of the invariants, the different observers' answers are not "arbitrary". The truth about everything isn't relative or subjective. Only some numbers etc. ? components of vectors and tensors ? have to be rotated into each other.

As the name "relativity" correctly indicates, certain questions ? such as the simultaneity of two events ? do become observer-dependent in relativity. Others, such as whether a bomb exploded in a city, remain observer-independent and "absolute" because these properties are functions of "invariants".

Relativity is intrinsically perfectly clear, but often presented more obscurely than it need be. Sometimes this is because it is presented in terms of coordinate systems, and coordinate systems are not physically real. The first step in understanding the theory is to learn a coordinate-free presentation, and to think in terms of pure geometrical structure.
There is nothing wrong about a description in terms of coordinates and in fact, it is pretty much needed when we want to calculate pretty much anything ? or at least a sufficiently general and complex problem. The fact that the choice of coordinates isn't unique isn't a lethal disease of coordinates as a concept in any sense. It just means that certain aspects or intermediate results are observer-dependent or relative or subjective, if you wish. One may still extract some properties that are observer-independent.

Maudlin's mysterious "purely geometric structure" is mathematically nothing else than the situation as seen in a coordinate system modulo all Poincar? transformations that identify "equally looking situations" with it. Such a quotient, something using the word "modulo", is omnipresent and increasingly omnipresent in physics (especially when we consider theories that are naturally formulated using gauge symmetries, BRST formalism, and so on). There's nothing wrong about it. It's so important that one should better learn how to work with it and to learn why there's nothing wrong with it ? instead of promoting a completely misguided philosophy that physics should only work with the observer-independent concepts (e.g. that it should even ban coordinates). Just to be sure, I am not telling you that you can't like a description of a subset of problems that avoid the explicit coordinates or numbers. I am just telling you that you will have a hard time to find a similar description for other contexts ? and the problems will be increasingly severe as you converge towards state-of-the-art physics because redundancy has simplified many things and physicists don't even know how to work without it.

After all, the "purely geometric structure" isn't a well-defined concept before we begin to define it using something that does use a mathematical representation of a space ? and a space is defined as a set of \(n\)-tuples of real numbers. There's no versatile enough "constructive" mathematical definition of geometric objects that would completely avoid numbers and coordinates.

One could say that Maudlin's misguided commandment that a scientific theory should avoid all not uniquely determined concepts and quantities and all quantities that are subjective or observer-dependent is also the root cause of his inability to comprehend quantum mechanics correctly. It's a fundamental postulate of quantum mechanics in general that the statements that quantum mechanics may answer are intrinsically subjective observations or "perceptions" if I use a word that emphasizes the non-classical and in this sense "non-materialist" character of Nature as quantum mechanics discovered it.

Maudlin criticizes the name "relativity":

It has often been remarked that ?The Theory of Relativity? is a very bad name for Einstein?s theory. One is told, for example, that in his theory simultaneity is ?relative? to an observer or to a reference system. What is correct is that simultaneity is nonexistent in the theory: there just is no such physical relation among events. ?Simultaneity in a coordinate system? is just a matter of how we (more or less arbitrarily) attach numbers to events, and has no intrinsic physical interest.
It's not true that simultaneity has no intrinsic physical interest. What is true is that it is observer-dependent, it is relative. But something's being relative doesn't mean that it has no intrinsic physical interest. As I said, every meaningful and natural enough description of every sufficiently general and complex situation has to work with quantities that are observer-dependent.

Maudlin's statement that simultaneity is unphysical is wrong and completely different from the right statement that simultaneity is relative. By his desire to outlaw relative i.e. observer-dependent quantities, he is denying both relativity as well as pretty much all of physics because relativity is saying that some quantities that have been used in physics for centuries are observer-dependent. If you declare them "unphysical", you throw the baby out with the bath water. You just shouldn't do such things unless you are a moron. Physics is composed of quantities such as time, space, energy, momentum, mass, electric fields, and so on. They're surely not unphysical but they're observer-dependent.

A related fact is that he is distorting the "degree of arbitrariness" that the Lorentz or Poincar? transformations bring to the coordinate description of physics. These coordinates aren't attached "almost arbitrarily"; there's just a 6- or 10-dimensional group so the inertial systems only form a 6-dimensional or 10-dimensional set. If you have 1006 or 1010 coordinates of many objects, 6 or 10 of them may be used to isolate the inertial system and the remaining 1000 coordinates tell us some objective, Lorentz-invariant information about the system. So the "attachment of the numbers" called coordinates is as far from "arbitrary" as you can get: a vast majority of the coordinate information about a complex enough system (everything except for 6 or 10 numbers) is the opposite of "arbitrary".

His attempt to criticize all notions that depend on the inertial system leads to some comical assertions ? well, at least I couldn't resist to laugh out loud when I was reading the following stupidities:

Phrases like ?clocks go slower as they approach the speed of light? are multiply misleading: accurate clocks do not ?slow down?, they always record the objective length of their trajectories, and there is no such objective state as ?approaching the speed of light?.
It makes a perfect sense to approach the speed of light. That's what the LHC has done with several quadrillion protons before they were collided. Their velocity ? relatively to the soil in Switzerland or relatively to the Sun, the difference isn't really detectable here ? increases up to 99.9999 percent of the speed of light. It approaches the speed of light. An observer moving by a similarly high speed relatively to the Earth may disagree but everyone else will agree that the protons are approaching the speed of light but never reach it ? unless he is a moron.

And arbitrarily accurate clocks do slow down by the Lorentz factor, \(\sqrt{1-v^2/c^2}\). This just means that the number of ticks that the moving clocks make per unit time is smaller exactly by this factor than the number of ticks that the same stationary clocks do during the same unit time. This statement is true and it is how "slow down" is defined. To deny this slowdown means to be an idiot, too. It's surely one of the basic high-school-level implications of relativity.

When he denies that one can talk about the time that a tick takes or about the velocity that is increasing, it is pretty much clear that he can't talk about any physically meaningful concept, so he can't possibly understand relativity. At most, his approach may be good to prevent you from talking about non-relativistic (today incorrect) physical questions. But it will prevent you from talking about almost all relativistic (correct) questions, too. His commandments are uncorrelated with the changes that relativity brought us.

Clocks never have objective speeds at all. All of these inappropriate and misleading phrases can be avoided. Relativity postulates an objective geometrical structure to space-time and accurate clocks measure that structure, i.e. the proper time along their trajectories.
Clocks don't have objective speeds because nothing has objective speeds. Speeds depend on the coordinate system. After all, they depended on the coordinate system ? they were relative ? already in Newtonian physics. But this relativity of the velocity doesn't make the concept of velocity unphysical or "misleading". Velocity remained as important a quantity for the description of any motion as it was in Newtonian physics.

But the full-fledged bigotry of Tim Maudlin is only uncovered when they begin to talk about quantum mechanics.

The situation with respect to quantum theory is completely different from that with respect to Relativity. Properly speaking, there is no such thing as ?quantum theory? that can be ?interpreted?.
LOL. There is not quantum theory, we learn. "Quantum theory" was the term reserved for Planck's first 1900 "quantum" results about the quantization of energy carried by electromagnetic waves. That's why people began to use a different term, "quantum mechanics", for the full new framework of physics that emerged in the 1920s. We use "quantum mechanics" for all the universal postulates that were defined in the 1920s and that are obeyed by many particular "quantum theories" and for the whole class of these theories as well, whether these theories are just "mechanical" or more complicated.

Quantum mechanics not only exists but it is the main theory underlying modern science. Claiming that it doesn't exist is a sign of the utter stupidity of the speaker.

A physical theory should make clear postulates about what physically exists and how it behaves.
Quantum mechanics clearly says that the outcomes of the measurements exist ? from the viewpoint of those who perceive them ? and gives us tools how the probabilities of different results may be calculated assuming the knowledge about the initial state. It also clearly says that no "objective properties" exist prior to the measurement. It's as clear as it can be.

Be sure that you won't be able to prove that quantum mechanics is incomplete just because it says that "there is no objective reality prior to the measurement". To prove that such a reality actually does exist, you would have to measure it, but to measure something before the first measurement is the same contradiction as the proposition that 3 is smaller than 3. The opinion that objective reality exists prior to the measurement is not only unprovable but, as quantum mechanics shows, incorrect.

If you want to squeeze Nature into a straitjacket where Nature is "obliged" to respect your rule that "something objective must exist prior to the measurement", then your efforts are equally foolish as if you "demand" that the right theory of the origin of species must assign a day of the week to every species to indicate when it was created by God. The right theory simply doesn't obey this condition, OK? Life didn't arise in this way. And the refusal of the theory to assign the days of the week isn't a flaw. Instead, it is your flaw if you demand such a thing because such a "demand" you are articulating shows that you are ignorant about something really basic about science. You may scream your "demands" loudly and seemingly authoritatively but that only shows how big a jerk you are.

The case of the "objective reality that physically exists" is identical. It just doesn't exist at the fundamental level, OK? If you don't like how Nature around us works, then please f*ck off and ask for asylum in a different Nature.

What is in physics books is not a theory in that sense, but rather a (somewhat imprecisely formulated) recipe for making certain sorts of predictions, which is (nonetheless) extremely accurate.
It's not a theory in a stupid sense but it's surely a theory in the scientific sense. The purpose of a scientific theory isn't to pay lip service to arrogant morons with invalid philosophical prejudices about Nature's inner workings. The purpose of a theory is to explain and predict the observations and experiments we have made, we are making, and we will make. That's what quantum mechanics does, too. So it is surely a theory. A paramount one.

The disrespectful word "recipe" that Maudlin offered to compare quantum mechanics in cooking doesn't show the inadequacy of quantum mechanics. Instead, it shows the inadequacy of himself as a thinker about physics. Is there any difference between a theory and a recipe? Well, the difference is arguably subtle and hard to pinpoint but there is surely a difference in the degree of respect that these words ignite. Quantum mechanics is nothing like a recipe for a single type of a pie. Instead, it is the right framework that underlies all of physics ? which includes not only the behavior of all pies and kinds of pies but also all other natural sciences. From this viewpoint, the word "recipe" is inappropriate. However, a "recipe" also conveys the message that the theory/recipe tells you very clearly what you should do to derive the predictions and how they're tested etc. This specific character of the "quantum recipe" ? the fact that it's not muddy ? is a virtue, not a vice.

What is called ?interpreting quantum theory? is really a matter of constructing clear and precise physical theories that return these same predictions, or nearly the same.
Indeed, this is what is usually meant by the people when they talk about "interpretations of quantum mechanics" and that's why almost all people who are working on "interpretations of quantum mechanics" are misguided bigots. They are trying to fabricate a non-quantum explanation that pretends to be the right theory ? quantum mechanics ? but it's not. Of course, they can never succeed but the very effort is painful.

The research of quantum mechanics is telling us certain important things ? much like heliocentric astronomy or Darwin's theory of evolution ? and whoever tries to "construct" a geocentric, creationist, or classical (i.e. "realist") framework to "present" these three theories has completely missed their point. Heliocentric astronomy isn't just a minor refinement of the geocentric one; evolution isn't just a minor refinement of creationism; and ? most undoubtedly ? quantum mechanics isn't just a particular version of a classical theory. Revolutions have taken place in all three situations and the quantum one is arguably the most profound one. People who deny that these revolutions took place and who want to return to the old ways of thinking by "demands" that it has to happen are idiots who have learned nothing.

There are several different general ideas for how to construct such theories that have been fleshed out in the non-Relativistic domain.
It is impressive that Maudlin has noticed that these misguided efforts ultimately fail because of relativity. But he apparently doesn't care even though special relativity has been known for 108 years to be a crucial requirement that every viable theory in fundamental physics has to obey.

A chaotic segment in which Maudlin ignores relativity and uncontrollably promotes various "realist interpretations" of quantum mechanics ? i.e. non-quantum, classical theories that are fudged to imitate some of the results of some quantum mechanical theories ? follows. It is very clear from the text that he doesn't prefer any "approach" to this misguided enterprise. He knows that none of them is any good so all of them are "equally good for his cause". The cause, namely his totally invalid dogma that quantum mechanics is "obliged" to be translated to the framework with an "objective reality" in the classical sense, is clearly more important to him than the validity of any statement he makes.

Some muddled paragraphs use convoluted terms such as "Theory of Linear Structures" which, as far as I can say, only have the purpose to assign the directionality (sign) to timelike intervals. The name is completely inappropriate and he doesn't even seem to solve the trivial problem of assigning the signs.

Following paragraphs talk about "thingyness", whatever it is, that Maudlin rejects. And he sort of correctly points out that other scientific disciplines reduce to physics ? except that he doesn't understand the basic framework in which modern physics operates. At the end, he recommends some outdated texts such as one by John Bell (well, texts that were obsolete already when they were first published) to emphasize that he hasn't learned ? and he doesn't want to learn ? anything about the revolution that kickstarted modern physics.

But I must end this blog entry with a praise. He has an amazing ratio of the money divided by knowledge+expertise that he is receiving for claiming to study the foundations of study. It is quite amazing that you may be paid for studying foundations of physics even though you have understood them much less correctly than an average undergraduate student.

Source: http://motls.blogspot.com/2013/07/tim-maudlins-right-and-more-often.html

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