Friday, December 30, 2011

Raspberry Pi, a Tiny But Powerful $25 PC, Coming Soon [VIDEO] (Mashable)

The holidays have been particularly jolly for the gang making Raspberry Pi, the tiny Linux-based PC that's going to cost just $25. If the reports coming from the site are to be believed, you could be able to buy one as early as next month. Right before the holiday, the creators got a batch of circuit boards in for testing. The site says all the initial testing showed the boards to be performing "as solid as a rock," despite an issue with the power supply.

[More from Mashable: New York Times, Not Hackers, Accidentally Spams Its Readers]

However, that problem was easily fixed via a red wire and a quick soldering job, and the team promises it won't appear in any future units. Once fixed, fired up and connected to a display, the prototype Pi appeared to effortlessly output a 1080p video through its HDMI port:

[More from Mashable: How Many Emails Did You Handle in 2011? This App Knows All]

The final Raspberry Pi will come in two flavors: A $25 version with 128MB of RAM and no network connection and a $35 one with256MB and Ethernet. Both versions will have USB and HDMI ports as well as analog video and audio outputs. It's driven by a The 1080p video magic is driven by a 700MHz ARM processor, and the whole thing is powered by a 5-volt power supply.

The whole idea behind creating a small, decently powerful computer is to provide something cheap enough that anyone can afford -- even kids in developing countries. The key is that it's also programmable, letting owners hack and modify the 1.4-ounce machine at will. Of course, if someone just wants to use it as cheap machine for everyday Web browsing and email, its ideally suited for that, too.

The site promises to auction off the recent crop of boards before Raspberry Pi goes on sale next month. Will you get one? What will you do with it? Let us know in the comments.

[via The Verge]

This story originally published on Mashable here.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/linux/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/mashable/20111228/tc_mashable/raspberry_pi_a_tiny_but_powerful_25_pc_coming_soon_video

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Baylor vs. Washington

Final Score: Baylor (67) - Washington (56)

And no, this was not a basketball game. This was the Valero Alamo Bowl in San Antonio. They were two points shy of tying the record for the most combined points in a bowl game.

Exciting for those who watched, but in the end it was totally sad at how pathetic the defenses were. These two teams have been giving out points like candy all season, but jeez. Did anyone else catch this game?

I would say that this has been the most fun-to-watch bowl game of the year, but that's not saying much as mostly all of this year's match ups seem a little dull. Also, Notre Dame lost today. Take that Lou Holtz!

Source: http://forums.wrestlezone.com/showthread.php?t=198790&goto=newpost

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

This Nerdy Instrument is Part Atari Console Part Guitar [Video]

The gAtari is a "musical instrument" that basically consists of an Atari 2600 playing pre-programmed tunes, that has been hacked together with a few guitar effects processors. It's kind of like an Atari keytar. The resulting music is scatterbrained weirdness that's impossible to describe. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/ochBMkMyu6g/this-nerdy-instrument-is-part-atari-console-part-guitar

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RedWingsFeed: Former Red Wings Coach, Player Johnny Wilson Dies At 82: Former Detroit Red... http://t.co/KX6AnX0R via @sbnationdetroit #NHL #RedWings

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Source: http://twitter.com/RedWingsFeed/statuses/151771573538398208

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Microsoft OneNote for Apple iPad Review

?

After trying to ignore or repel the iPad for years, Microsoft has finally come around and released an Office app for Apple?s tablet with?OneNote for iPad. The app is free but limited. For starters, it comes with a limit of 500 notes, after which you?ll need to make a $14.99 in-app purchase to continue taking notes. For another, it feels as if Microsoft was afraid to let iPad users go full-bore with OneNote, holding some key features back and forcing you to use the PC or Web app for seemingly basic tasks such as creating new notebooks and sections, organizing notes, and assigning tags.

For current OneNote users that have an Apple iPad, it?s worth checking out, which isn?t high praise for a free app. For all others, it?s unlikely you?ll find OneNote for iPad up to the note-taking challenge.

Design
When you launch the app for the first time, you?ll need to log in using your Windows Live account or create a new one. Along with that, account comes 25GB of free online storage via Microsoft's SkyDrive service, which OneNote uses to sync files among your various devices.?

OneNote for iPad has a simple design. In portrait mode, a page of a spiral notebook fills the screen, with a menu bar at the top that features but four buttons. The Home button sits on the left, while buttons to delete, email, and create notes sit to the right. In landscape mode, you get a two-column design with the home button turning into a thin column on the left where you can navigate your various notebooks, sections, and notes.

In OneNote?s scheme, a notebook is filled with sections, which are filled with notes. On the app itself, however, you can create only notes. OneNote for iPad starts you off with one default notebook, awkwardly named Personal (Web). To create a new notebook or a new section within a notebook, you need to use the PC or Web app. Also, the app doesn?t let you move notes from one notebook or section to another.

OneNote

Features
To create a note, tap the icon in the upper-right corner. This new note is placed in the Unfiled section of the Home menu. Again, to move these files into a notebook, you must use the PC or Web app. Perhaps you wouldn?t mind the inability to organize your notes on OneNote for iPad if the app allowed you to tag your notes. Sadly, a simple and effective tool like tagging isn?t supported. Again, you must scramble back to your PC or Mac to add tags to notes created on the iPad. Why the runaround, Microsoft?

If you have created notebooks with sections with the PC or Web app, you can then create a new note within a specific section with the app instead of to the Unfiled list. When you drill down to a section within a notebook, a "create" button appears in the upper-right corner of the Home menu. You can also swipe on a note from the list to delete it.

In addition to the Notebooks and Unfiled views on the Home menu, you can also view recent notes. Each item on this list has a grayed-out pin, which you can tap to pin the note to the top of the list. You can?t drag to reorder a list of notes, and the only way to see the date of a note is to open it (it?s listed in the upper-right corner). And while you can search by keyword, there is no way to search by date or even view notes by chronological order. OneNote doesn?t use the iPad?s location services, so neither can you search by location. Be sure you give your notes descriptive titles.

The app syncs automatically, but it?s not continual. It syncs when you move from one note to another note, but it doesn?t while you are busily typing away in a note. Changes you make to a note using the iPad app do not immediately show up in the note in the Web app, for example, and vice versa.

Note Taking
The keyboard appears when you tap on a note. It?s the standard iPad onscreen keyboard, with three additional buttons. One creates a checkbox next to a line of text, which you can then tap when that item is completed. The second button creates bulleted lists, and the third lets you embed a photos into a note, either by snapping one yourself right from the app or selected a shot from your library. If you work best with numbered lists, I?m sorry to report, you won?t find them here. Also, you can?t insert audio clips as you can with Evernote.

OneNote

Oddly, there is not a way to remove a photo inserted in into a note, at least not one that I?ve found. Another annoyance is the inability to highlight more than one paragraph of text, which forces you to go line by line when creating a checklist or a bulleted list out of an existing free-form list.?

And that?s it for additional controls. Formatting options such as font, font size, font style and color, are not offered. There is no inking support either, and given the large screen of the iPad, being able to quickly scribble a reminder or draw a rudimentary diagram or any number of things, it would have been a welcomed addition.

CONCLUSION
It?s never a good sign when you spend more time discussing what an app can?t do than what it can. Note-taking apps need not be feature packed, and in fact, they are best when they are as simple as possible. While OneNote for iPad boasts a streamlined design and is easy to get in and out of, it lacks too many basic features to offer true utility. If you aren?t already using OneNote, then this app isn?t about to get you to start.

Pros

  • It's free, and it's OneNote
  • Streamlined design

Cons

  • Very limited functionality?
  • Missing basic features

Related Articles:

Source: http://www.tabletpcreview.com/default.asp?newsID=2901&review=apple+ipad+microsoft+onenote

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Swedish reporters sentenced to 11 yrs in Ethiopia (AP)

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia ? A court in Ethiopia on Tuesday sentenced two Swedish journalists to 11 years in prison on charges of supporting terrorism after the two illegally entered the country with an ethnic Somali rebel group in a case that has been criticized by media rights groups.

Judge Shemsu Sirgaga ruled that the two freelance journalists ? Johan Persson and Martin Schibbye ? will serve "rigorous imprisonment" following their convictions last week.

Ethiopian troops had captured Persson and Schibbye six months ago during a clash with rebels in eastern Ethiopia's restive Somali region, a no-go area for reporters. Ethiopia considers the rebel group a terrorist organization, and it is very difficult for journalists to gain access to the region. Rights groups say that is so abuses there are not exposed.

The judge has accused the Ogaden National Liberation Front ? or ONLF ? of organizing the Swedes' journey starting in London. Outlawed groups in many countries frequently facilitate the travels of reporters in order to have their version of events told.

The chairman of the Swedish Union of Journalists, Jonas Nordling, has said that the court's decision was aimed at deterring reporters from investigating alleged human rights abuses in the Ogaden. Nordling said there was no evidence to support the journalists' conviction on terror charges.

Persson and Schibbye are both freelance contributors to the Sweden-based photojournalism agency Kontinent. Schibbye is also a writer. The two regularly had their work published in national newspapers in Sweden and Norway.

The pair said they had been gathering news about a Swedish oil company that is exploring Ethiopia's Somali region for oil. Sweden's foreign minister, Carl Bildt, was a member of the board of the company ? Lundin Petroleum ? between 2000 and 2006, and left the board when he was appointed foreign minister.

Persson and Schibbye have acknowledged that they entered Ethiopia illegally.

Swedish government officials have said that the two Swedes were on a "journalistic mission," and have pushed for the two to be freed.

The international community has closely followed the terror trial against the Swedes. Rights groups and diplomats say Ethiopia's anti-terrorism proclamation restricts freedom of expression and is used as a tool to crack down on dissent.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111227/ap_on_re_af/af_ethiopia_journalists

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Texas Oil Production Great for State's Economy, Tax Collections

Texas crude oil and natural gas producers are leading a historic expansion of domestic supplies, which is having a huge impact on the state's economy and tax collections.

"We are witnessing a stunning crude oil renaissance in Texas and across the U.S., and the state and the nation are clearly better for it," petroleumeconomists Karr Ingham said following the release of numbers from the Texas Petro Index for October and the office of Texas Comptroller Susan Combs.

The Texas Petro Index climbed another 2.8 points to 253.0, registering the largest month-tomonth increase since last spring.

"The expansion of North American crude oil reserves is clearly shifting the supply picture from reliance on unstable regions to much more stable and politically predictable sources," Ingham said.

"The turnaround in the supply picture is staggering, and was largely unfathomable just a few short years ago." Ingham added. "This is what the industry is capable of when it is turned loose to do its job."

A composite index based upon a comprehensive group of upstream economic indicators, the Texas Petro Index (TPI) increased in October for the 22nd consecutive month to 253.0, from a low in December 2009 of 186.6. The TPI peaked at 286.0 in September and October 2008.

Among leading TPI indicators during October: Crude oil production in Texas totaled an estimated 38.2 million barrels, nearly 1.5 million barrels (3.1 percent) more than in October 2010. The value of Texas-produced crude oil totaled an estimated $3.16 billion, 8.8 percent more than the same month last year.

Estimated Texas natural gas output was nearly 576.8 billion cubic feet, a year-over-year monthly decline of more than 10 percent. With natural gas prices in October trailing prices in October 2010 by about 2.4 percent, the value of Texas-produced gas declined 12.1 percent to about $2.13 billion.

The Baker Hughes count of active drilling rigs in Texas averaged 914, 27.5 percent more than in October 2010. Drilling activity in Texas peaked in September 2008 at a monthly average of 946 rigs.

The number of Texans on oil and gas industry payrolls appeared to reach a record high in October for the fourth consecutive month, according to the Texas Workforce Commission, totaling an estimated 237,800. Until the past four months, the previous high - a n estimated 223,200 workers following a revision to reflect new industry employment data for 2009 and 2010 - o ccurred in October 2008.

The increase oil and gas activity has sparked a surprising increase in tax revenues that has made the Texas comptroller predict a billion dollar increase in revenues.

The comptroller's latest estimate predicts a $1.6 billion increase than was budgeted for 2012-13, the two-year budget that started Sept. 1.

Through the first three months of fiscal 2012, sales tax revenues are up 13.2 percent. During fiscal 2011 (Sept. 1, 2010, to Aug. 31, 2011), sales taxes increased 9.4 percent over fiscal 2010.

Oil and gas production taxes increased 46 percent and 53 percent, respectively, in fiscal 2011 over fiscal 2010.

Copyright 2011 Wichita Falls Times Record News. All Rights Reserved.

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.


Source: http://www.rigzone.com/news/article.asp?a_id=113653&rss=true

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College Football Bowl Schedule

Famous Idaho Potato Bowl

At Boise, Idaho

Ohio 24, Utah State 23

New Orleans Bowl

Louisiana-Lafayette 32, San Diego State 30

Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl

At St. Petersburg, Fla.

Marshall 20, FIU 10

Poinsettia Bowl

At San Diego

TCU 31, Louisiana Tech 24

MAACO Bowl

At Las Vegas

Boise State 56, Arizona State 24

Hawaii Bowl

At Honolulu

Southern Mississippi 24, Nevada 17

TODAY

Independence Bowl

At Shreveport, La.

North Carolina (7-5) vs. Missouri (7-5), 5 (ESPN2)

TOMORROW

Little Caesars Pizza Bowl

At Detroit

Western Michigan (7-5) vs. Purdue (6-6), 4:30 (ESPN2)

Belk Bowl

At Charlotte, N.C.

North Carolina State (7-5) vs. Louisville (7-5), 8 (ESPN)

WEDNESDAY, DEC. 28

Military Bowl

At Washington

Air Force (7-5) vs. Toledo (8-4), 4:30 (ESPN)

Holiday Bowl

At San Diego

Texas (7-5) vs. California (7-5), 8 (ESPN)

THURSDAY, DEC. 29

Champs Sports Bowl

At Orlando, Fla.

Florida State (8-4) vs. Notre Dame (8-4), 5:30 (ESPN)

Alamo Bowl

At San Antonio

Baylor (9-3) vs. Washington (7-5), 9 (ESPN)

FRIDAY, DEC. 30

Armed Forces Bowl

At Dallas

Tulsa (8-4) vs. BYU (9-3), Noon (ESPN)

Pinstripe Bowl

At Bronx, N.Y.

Rutgers (8-4) vs. Iowa State (6-6), 3:30 (ESPN)

Music City Bowl

At Nashville, Tenn.

Mississippi State (6-6) vs. Wake Forest (6-6), 6:40 (ESPN)

Insight Bowl

At Tempe, Ariz.

Oklahoma (9-3) vs. Iowa (7-5), 10 (ESPN)

SATURDAY, DEC. 31

Meineke Car Care Bowl

At Houston

Texas A&M (6-6) vs. Northwestern (6-6), Noon (ESPN)

Sun Bowl

At El Paso, Texas

Georgia Tech (8-4) vs. Utah (7-5), 2 (CBS)

Liberty Bowl

At Memphis, Tenn.

Vanderbilt (6-6) vs. Cincinnati (9-3), 3:30 (ESPN)

Fight Hunger Bowl

At San Francisco

UCLA (6-7) vs. Illinois (6-6), 3:30 (ESPN)

Chick-fil-A Bowl

At Atlanta

Virginia (8-4) vs. Auburn (7-5), 7:30 (ESPN)

JAN. 2

TicketCity Bowl

At Dallas

Penn State (9-3) vs. Houston (12-1), Noon (ESPNU)

Capital One Bowl

At Orlando, Fla.

Nebraska (9-3) vs. South Carolina (10-2), 1 (ESPN)

Outback Bowl

At Tampa, Fla.

Georgia (10-3) vs. Michigan State (10-3), 1 (ABC)

Gator Bowl

At Jacksonville, Fla.

Florida (6-6) vs. Ohio State (6-6), 1 (ESPN2)

Rose Bowl

At Pasadena, Calif.

Oregon (11-2) vs. Wisconsin (11-2), 5 (ESPN)

Fiesta Bowl

At Glendale, Ariz.

Stanford (11-1) vs. Oklahoma State (11-1), 8:30 (ESPN)

JAN. 3

Sugar Bowl

At New Orleans

Michigan (10-2) vs. Virginia Tech (11-2), 8 (ESPN)

JAN. 4

Orange Bowl

At Miami

West Virginia (9-3) vs. Clemson (10-3), 8 (ESPN)

JAN. 6

Cotton Bowl

At Arlington, Texas

Kansas State (10-2) vs. Arkansas (10-2), 8 (Fox)

JAN. 7

BBVA Compass Bowl

At Birmingham, Ala.

Pittsburgh (6-6) vs. SMU (7-5), Noon (ESPN)

JAN. 8

GoDaddy.com Bowl

At Mobile, Ala.

Arkansas State (10-2) vs. Northern Illinois (10-3), 9 (ESPN)

JAN. 9

BCS National Championship

At New Orleans

LSU (13-0) vs. Alabama (11-1), 8:30 (ESPN)

Source: http://www.heraldonline.com/2011/12/26/3622518/college-football-bowl-schedule.html

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Chris Brown Directing 'Slight Work' A 'Secret Weapon,' Wale Says

'This is my last video directed by Chris Brown; we won't be able to afford it after today,' Ambition MC tells MTV News.
By Rob Markman, with reporting by Vanessa White Wolf


Big Sean and Wale
Photo: MTV News

These days, getting Chris Brown to sing or rap on your song will most likely yield positive gains on the charts. But getting him to direct your music video — who knows what the end result will be?

Brown doesn't have much of a track record behind the lens, but when it came time to choose a director for his and Big Sean's "Slight Work" video, Wale decided to give his chart-topping buddy a shot.

"I really wanted to do something special amongst the young guys," Wale told MTV News while on set in Huntington Park, California, last week. "It means so much to me, as far as the genre goes and the preservation of the genre, for us to keep giving back to each other and keep working with each other and make beautiful music and do important things for our culture."

Brown has long established himself among music's most prolific artists with his catchy songs, stunning videos and unbelievable dance routines. Breezy has branched out as an actor (2007's "Stomp the Yard," "This Christmas" and 2010's "Takers"), and now he's branching out even further.

"Me reaching out to Chris is bigger than me reaching out to a homeboy, it's me reaching out to an aspiring director," Wale explained. "I think a lot of people put a lot of us into one box and don't know we have other passions. I wasn't surprised, a guy that creative and that talented, I'm sure he has other things that he wants to do."

Big Sean had much success working with CB on his 2010 #1 Billboard rap single, "My Last," but when he found out Brown was directing this clip, he scratched his head a bit. "At first I was kinda skeptical," Sean said. "Then I saw it and was blown away."

Wale is pretty confident in the end result, predicting that after "Slight Work" premieres, Brown will become a sought-after music video director. "My secret weapon is gone," he joked. "This is my last video directed by Chris Brown; we won't be able to afford it after today."

How do you think Chris will fare as a music video director? Tell us in the comments!

Related Artists

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1676389/chris-brown-wale-slight-work-video.jhtml

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Government shutdown? Congress suddenly uniting to avert it.

Government shutdown looms because of the absence of spending legislation. But GOP, Democratic leaders are sounding bipartisan notes to resolve conflict over payroll tax cuts and unemployment benefits and avert a government shutdown.?

Shifting from confrontation to cooperation, congressional leaders expressed optimism Thursday that agreement was near on extending this year's payroll tax cut, renewing unemployment benefits and averting a federal government shutdown.

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"We can extend payroll tax relief for American workers and create new jobs and keep the government running and, frankly, we can do it in a bipartisan way," House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, told reporters, a turnabout from weeks of partisan sniping from both sides.

"No more show votes," Boehner said after praising earlier remarks by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., that lingering disagreements on a mammoth spending bill could be easily resolved. "It's just time to legislate."

Reid opened the Senate's morning session by saying he and the chamber's top Republican have held talks to resolve remaining disputes. With lawmakers itching to return home before the holidays, Reid said he and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., hope they can reach a deal "that would get us out of here in a reasonable time, in the next few days."

Standing just across the aisle, McConnell agreed with Reid ? a stark contrast to recent days, when the two have fired sharp partisan volleys at each other.

"We're confident, optimistic we'll be able to resolve both on a bipartisan basis," said McConnell, referring to one bill that would renew the payroll tax cut and jobless benefits, and a separate spending measure that would keep federal agencies open.

President Barack Obama applied pressure of his own, saying Congress "should not and cannot" go home until it had resolved the issues.

"There's no reason why we shouldn't be able to extend these items, the payroll tax cut, u.i. before holidays," he said, using the abbreviation for unemployment insurance. "There's no reason the government should shut down over this, and I expect all of us to do what's necessary in order to do the people's business and make sure that it's done before the end of the year."

In part, the turnabout reflected the calendar: 160 million Americans would get a sudden tax increase on Jan. 1 if the payroll tax cut was not renewed, and most government agencies would close this Saturday without agreement on spending legislation.

The drive to broker agreements also underscored a sense that weeks of partisan battling, in which each party accused the other of causing tax increases and a federal?shutdown, had finally run their course.

"We've done enough back-and-forth, the Republican leader and me, staking out our positions, and our positions are fairly clear to the American people," Reid said.

A clear sign of movement came late Wednesday, when aides said Democrats were abandoning their demand for a surtax on millionaires to help finance payroll tax cuts.

On a separate spending dispute, House Republicans had said Wednesday night that they would try pushing a massive $1 trillion spending bill through the House on Friday, relying only on GOP votes, to prevent a federalshutdown. Reid said Thursday that he believed remaining partisan disputes on that bill could be quickly settled.

Neither party wants to risk the wrath of voters by closing government agencies.

White House communications director Dan Pfeiffer said Wednesday that Obama had problems with some social, environmental and other provisions in the spending legislation. Pfeiffer said Congress should approve a short-term bill to keep the government open while disputes are resolved.

The pre-Christmas wrangling caps a contentious year in a capital hindered by divided government, with Democrats controlling the White House and Senate while Republicans run the House. Lawmakers have engaged in down-to-the-wire drama even when performing the most mundane acts of governing, such as keeping agencies functioning and extending federal borrowing authority, tasks that are only becoming more politically delicate as the calendar nears the 2012 election year.

The GOP-run House approved its version of a payroll tax cut bill this week, but it drew solid opposition from Democrats and Obama in part because it would force work on the Keystone XL oil pipeline from western Canada to Texas Gulf Coast refineries, which Obama would rather delay. They are also unhappy that the bill is financed by cuts to civilian federal workers, Obama's health care overhaul bill and other programs that Democrats say would avoid meaningful contributions from the rich.

In one instance of cooperation, the Senate was expected to give final congressional approval Thursday to a $662 billion defense bill that would allow the administration to prosecute terrorism suspects in the civilian justice system.

The White House had initially issued a veto threat against the bill over language requiring the military to handle some terrorism suspects. An agreement was reached by including a provision ensuring that the role of domestic law enforcement agencies would be unchanged.

The spending bill would finance the Pentagon and nine other Cabinet-level departments, as well as scores of smaller agencies. It would trim the budgets of the Environmental Protection Agency, foreign aid and Congress itself while providing funds to combat AIDS in Africa, patrol the U.S.-Mexico border, operate national parks and boost veterans' health care.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/R3YzxzyMUv8/Government-shutdown-Congress-suddenly-uniting-to-avert-it

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Accusations flare as Egyptians vote in 2nd round

Egyptians line up outside a polling station in front of the Giza Pyramids in Giza, Egypt, Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2011. Egypt held Wednesday the second round of parliamentary voting, part of the first elections since President Hosni Mubarak was ousted in February. (AP Photo/Amr Nabil)

Egyptians line up outside a polling station in front of the Giza Pyramids in Giza, Egypt, Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2011. Egypt held Wednesday the second round of parliamentary voting, part of the first elections since President Hosni Mubarak was ousted in February. (AP Photo/Amr Nabil)

Egyptians crowd outside a polling station in Giza, Egypt, Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2011. Egyptians in nine provinces voted Wednesday in the second round of the first parliamentary elections since a popular uprising ousted President Hosni Mubarak in February. (AP Photo/Amr Nabil)

Egyptian candidates representatives wearing the Niqab, covers the face except the eyes, at background watch a voter as she reads list of candidates in Giza, Egypt, Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2011. Egypt held Wednesday the second round of parliamentary voting, part of the first elections since President Hosni Mubarak was ousted in February. (AP Photo/Amr Nabil)

An Egyptian official wearing the Niqab stands next to a ballot box in Giza, Egypt, Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2011. Egyptians in nine provinces voted Wednesday in the second round of the first parliamentary elections since a popular uprising ousted President Hosni Mubarak in February. (AP Photo/Amr Nabil)

(AP) ? Islamists and liberals made accusations of abuses during the second round of Egypt's first post-Hosni Mubarak parliamentary elections as voters cast ballots Thursday in mostly rural parts of the country.

Most of the reports accused election officials at a number of polling stations of filling out ballot forms for elderly or confused voters. If confirmed as a pattern, the reports could chip away at the credibility of what has so far been modern Egypt's most free and fair vote.

In response, judges stationed at polling centers said the election law permits them to provide help to voters who need it. And the head of the election commission called accusations of irregularities "rumors and lies."

During Mubarak's nearly 30 years in power, elections were systemically manipulated and voters were on many occasions turned away from polls while supporters of the ousted president's now-dissolved National Democratic party were rigging the vote to ensure the NDP dominated every parliament.

Two alliances led by Islamists won close to 70 percent of seats in the first round on Nov. 28-29, according to an AP tally compiled from official results. The secular and liberal forces that largely drove Egypt's uprising against Mubarak were trounced, failing to turn their achievement into a victory at the polls.

The second round of voting, which took place Wednesday and Thursday in nine provinces, and a third round to be held in early January are not expected to dramatically alter the result and could even strengthen the Islamists' hand. Rural areas in Egypt are traditionally more conservative, and some are Islamist strongholds.

The elections will lead to the formation of a parliament that in theory will be tasked with selecting a 100-member assembly to draft Egypt's new constitution. Liberals fear that an Islamist-dominated parliament might result in an Islamic constitution, setting the new Egypt on the path of more religious fundamentalism.

The Muslim Brotherhood's political arm, which is leading the polls, and an alliance of liberal youth parties have filed complaints, saying officials at several stations were "dictating to voters whom to vote for."

The Islamist group issued a report Thursday accusing judges in the province of Beheira, 180 kilometers (112 miles) north of Cairo, of guiding voters to select candidates from the ultraconservative Salafi Muslim party called Al-Nour, the Brotherhood's key Islamist rival, which is in second place in results so far.

In another polling center, two judges, a school administrator and a village mayor filled in ballots for candidates who were members of Mubarak's dissolved National Democratic party and are now running as independents or members of new parties.

A day earlier, the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party said officials in several populous districts of Giza, Cairo's twin city, "forced female voters to vote for (Brotherhood) competitors."

The Brotherhood's statement quoted an official at a polling station as telling voters that it's "enough what Freedom and Justice got so far."

It was difficult to say how widespread any abuses or irregularities were, but more allegations surfaced in the second round than in November. Among other problems, parties continued to campaign outside polling centers in violation of the election law, which imposes 48 hours of campaign silence before polls open.

Election commission chairman Abdel-Moez Ibrahim denounced the accusations as "rumors and lies," and added that officials at polling stations were there "to serve their country."

"They work day and night, and their hands are clean," he said late Wednesday.

Meanwhile, in Cairo's Dokki district, officials at polling centers flooded with ultraconservative Islamist party banners were seen filling out ballot papers for voters, according to a statement by a liberal and secular youth party called The Egyptian Current.

Another secular alliance of mostly liberal youth parties, Revolution Continues, said its representatives in the Suez Canal city of Ismailia were kicked out of polling centers after complaining that officials there were "dictating to voters whom to vote for."

Nashwa el-Houfi, an independent candidate and a journalist, gave a detailed account of a judge marking ballots on his desk inside a polling center. El-Houfi told the private Egyptian TV network CBC on Wednesday that she tried to take a picture of the judge when he refused to stop marking the ballots. The judge later held el-Houfi inside the polling center after closing its doors and summoned police.

On Wednesday, an Associated Press reporter saw an official overseeing the vote in Giza's impoverished Kerdassa district filling out a ballot for an old man. When the judge noticed the reporter, he shouted to the voter: "Why are you here, old man, if you don't know whom to vote for?"

Judge Ahmed Helal, who was monitoring the voting at a polling station in Shebein el-Kom in the province of Menoufia, 60 kilometers (40 miles) north of Cairo, said it was his legal duty to assist people who cannot mark ballots on their own. According to an official Cabinet report in June, illiteracy in Egypt is nearly 27 percent of the country's 85 million people.

"It's the law that we have to help the voter to vote in case they are incapable or cannot see," he said. "We tell them what's on the ballot and they tell us how they want to vote."

Helal held a copy of the election law, which included a clause that said it is the legal right of judges to assist voters when needed. It specified, as an example, that judges can mark ballots for the blind.

Another judge, Mohamed Omar, who has been among those required to oversee elections for several years, said he believed judges should not be involved in politics.

Judges should be "far away from elections" and not be asked to monitor them to ensure the judiciary remains independent from the political process, he said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-15-ML-Egypt/id-41dcff0f551f42cd95f48a9351a41250

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Planet in sweet spot of Goldilocks zone for life (AP)

WASHINGTON ? A newly discovered planet is eerily similar to Earth and is sitting outside our solar system in what seems to be the ideal place for life, except for one hitch. It's a bit too big.

The planet is smack in the middle of what astronomers call the Goldilocks zone, that hard to find place that's not too hot, not too cold, where water, which is essential for life, doesn't freeze or boil. And it has a shopping mall-like surface temperature of near 72 degrees, scientists say.

The planet's confirmation was announced Monday by NASA along with other discoveries by its Kepler telescope, which was launched on a planet-hunting mission in 2009.

That's the first planet confirmed in the habitable zone for Kepler, which had already found Earth-like rocky planets elsewhere. Twice before astronomers have announced a planet found in that zone, but neither have been as promising.

"This is a phenomenal discovery in the course of human history," Geoff Marcy of University of California, Berkeley, one of the pioneers of planet-hunting outside our solar system, said in an email. "This discovery shows that we Homo sapiens are straining our reach into the universe to find planets that remind us of home. We are almost there."

The new planet ? named Kepler-22b ? has key aspects it shares with Earth. It circles a star that could be the twin of our sun and at just about the same distance. The planet's year of 290 days is even close to ours. It likely has water and rock.

The only trouble is the planet's a bit big for life to exist on the surface. The planet is about 2.4 times the size of Earth. It could be more like the gas-and-liquid Neptune with only a rocky core and mostly ocean.

"It's so exciting to imagine the possibilities," said Natalie Batalha, the Kepler deputy science chief.

Floating on that "world completely covered in water" could be like being on an Earth ocean and "it's not beyond the realm of possibility that life could exist in such an ocean," Batalha said in a phone interview.

Kepler can't find life itself, just where the conditions might be right for it to thrive. And when astronomers look for life elsewhere they're talking about everything ranging from microbes to advanced intelligence that can be looking back at us.

So far the Kepler telescope has spotted 2,326 candidate planets outside our solar system with 139 of them potentially habitable ones. Even though the confirmed Kepler-22b is a bit big, it is still smaller than most of the other candidates. It is closest to Earth in size, temperature and star than either of the two previously announced planets in the zone.

The confirmation of one of two, though, has been disputed. The latest discovery has been confirmed several ways, including by two other telescopes.

Earlier this year, a European team of astronomers said they had confirmed another planet in the habitable zone, but that one was hot and barely on the inside edge of the habitable zone.

For Marcy, who is on the Kepler team, the newest planet is a smidgen too large. But, "that smidgen makes all the difference," he said.

Because its size implies that it's closer to Neptune in composition than Earth, "I would bet my telescope that there is no hard, rocky surface to walk on," Marcy said.

Chief Kepler scientist William Borucki said he thinks the planet is somewhere between Earth and gas-and-liquid Neptune, but that it has a lot of rocky material. It's in a size range that scientists don't really know anything about. Measurements next summer may help astronomers have a better idea of its makeup, he said.

The planet is 600 light years away. Each light year is 5.9 trillion miles. It would take a space shuttle about 22 million years to get there.

Kepler spots a planet when it passes in front of its star. NASA requires three of those sightings before it begins to confirm it as a planet. Borucki said the third sighting for 22b happened a year ago, just before the telescope shut down for a while. It took several months to finish the confirmation.

"It's a great gift," Borucki said. "We consider this sort of our Christmas planet."

___

Online:

NASA's Kepler Telescope: http://www.nasa.gov/kepler

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111206/ap_on_sc/us_sci_alien_planet

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Plasma-based treatment goes viral

ScienceDaily (Dec. 5, 2011) ? Life-threatening viruses such as HIV, SARS, hepatitis and influenza, could soon be combatted in an unusual manner as researchers have demonstrated the effectiveness of plasma for inactivating and preventing the replication of adenoviruses.

When exposed to plasma -- the fourth state of matter in addition to solids, liquids and gases -- for a period of just 240 seconds, it was found that only one in a million viruses could still replicate -- practically all were inactivated.

The study, published in IOP Publishing's Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics, is one of the first to concentrate specifically on viruses and builds on research that has already shown the usefulness of plasma in eradicating bacteria from skin (http://www.iop.org/news/09/november/page_42357.html) and sterilising water (http://www.iop.org/news/11/nov/page_52641.html).

Within a hospital environment, a plasma generating device could realistically rid hands of potentially lethal viruses that relay on a host organism to replicate and spread. In the long-term, plasma could be inhaled directly to treat viruses in the lungs, or applied to blood outside of the body to remove any viruses before transfusion.

The researchers, from the Max-Planck Institut f?r extraterrestrische Physik and Technische Universit?t M?nchen, specifically chose adenoviruses to examine as they are one of the most difficult viruses to inactivate. Illnesses resulting from this specific virus, for example, can only be managed by treating symptoms and complications of the infection, rather than targeting the actual virus itself.

Adenoviruses predominantly cause respiratory illnesses such as pneumonia and bronchitis and are hard to inactivate as the whole virus is encased in a protein layer, helping it to remain physically stable and tolerate moderate increases in heat and pH.

In this study, the adenoviruses were diluted to specific concentrations and then exposed to plasma for 240 seconds, before being incubated for an hour. A control group of adenoviruses were given the exact same treatment apart from the plasma exposure.

Two separate cell lines were then infected with the two sets of adenoviruses: the ones that were treated with plasma and the control group. To test whether a cell had the virus or not, the researchers programmed the virus to produce a protein that fluoresced green when a specific type of light was shone onto it.

Whilst the exact mechanisms behind the plasma?s impressive effects are relatively unknown, it is thought that they are a result of a combination of reactions between the plasma and surrounding air, which create similar species to the ones found in our own immune system when under microbial attack.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Institute of Physics (IOP), via AlphaGalileo.

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


Journal References:

  1. J L Zimmermann, K Dumler, T Shimizu, G E Morfill, A Wolf, V Boxhammer, J Schlegel, B Gansbacher, M Anton. Effects of cold atmospheric plasmas on adenoviruses in solution. Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics, 2011; 44 (50): 505201 DOI: 10.1088/0022-3727/44/50/505201
  2. Matthew J Traylor, Matthew J Pavlovich, Sharmin Karim, Pritha Hait, Yukinori Sakiyama, Douglas S Clark, David B Graves. Long-term antibacterial efficacy of air plasma-activated water. Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics, 2011; 44 (47): 472001 DOI: 10.1088/0022-3727/44/47/472001
  3. G E Morfill, T Shimizu, B Steffes, H-U Schmidt. Nosocomial infections?a new approach towards preventive medicine using plasmas. New Journal of Physics, 2009; 11 (11): 115019 DOI: 10.1088/1367-2630/11/11/115019

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/12/111205102313.htm

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Baylor unanimous No. 1 in AP women's poll

Baylor is the unanimous choice as the No. 1 team in The Associated Press women's college basketball poll.

The Lady Bears received all 39 first-place ballots Monday after two easy victories this week. They host Milwaukee before heading to New York to play St. John's in the Maggie Dixon Classic on Sunday.

Connecticut and Notre Dame remain second and third. The Huskies face defending national champion Texas A&M on Tuesday night. The Aggies fell from fourth to eighth after losing to then-No. 13 Purdue on Sunday.

Stanford, Maryland, Duke and Tennessee Duke all move up in front of Texas A&M. Miami and Kentucky round out the top 10. The Hurricanes host No. 11 Rutgers on Monday night.

For the first time season, no team fell out of the Top 25.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-12-05-BKW-T25-Women's-Bkb-Poll/id-43902b51d058458bbf4d4b5b49d2f728

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'All My Children' star Denise Vasi joins "Single Ladies" (Reuters)

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Reuters - "All My Children" star Denise Vasi has joined the cast of VH1's "Single Ladies," replacing Stacey Dash, who exited after the show's first season.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111205/tv_nm/us_denisevasi

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Monday, December 5, 2011

Scarlett Johansson: Why Ryan Reynolds & I Split Up

Married for two years, Scarlett Johansson and Ryan Reynolds kept their relationship private -- and their divorce even more so. Now, in the new issue of Cosmopolitan, Johansson opens up about her marriage, and explains why she and Reynolds parted ways one year ago.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/scarlett-johansson-marrying-ryan-reynolds-was-best-thing-i-ever-did/1-a-407850?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Ascarlett-johansson-marrying-ryan-reynolds-was-best-thing-i-ever-did-407850

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Stanford women's soccer reaches College Cup final

Stanford coach Paul Ratcliffe won't be taking any chances after his top-ranked Cardinal advanced to its third consecutive NCAA championship with a convincing

3-0 victory Friday over Florida State in Kennesaw, Ga.

After losing in the past two College Cup finals by identical 1-0 scores, Ratcliffe plans to keep tighter reigns on the Cardinal players Saturday.

"In the past maybe I've been too nice and let them socialize," he said Friday. "It's a hard one because I want them to see their parents but we have to realize we have a job to do. We have to be disciplined and be smart about it."

Ratcliffe has reason to be concerned. Stanford has gone through three unbeaten seasons until losing in the College Cup. In 2008, it lost in the semifinals to Notre Dame. In 2009, Stanford fell 1-0 to North Carolina and it lost again by a 1-0 score to Notre Dame in last year's finale.

The Cardinal (24-0-1) will face Duke, which routed Atlantic Coast Conference rival Wake Forest 4-1 in the other semifinal match at KSU Soccer Stadium.

Stanford displayed its versatility Friday when leading goal scorer Lindsay Taylor (20 goals) was held without a shot. The Cardinal didn't collapse because its star was shutout.

After the Seminoles (18-7-1) made a strong run in the first 10 minutes Cardinal freshman Chioma Ubogagu took over.

The London-born striker got a lead pass from Mariah Nogueria off a Florida State corner kick in the 22nd minute. With too many Seminoless, eventually

passed to the right where midfielder Teresa Noyola quickly gave it right back. Ubogagu did the rest by beating two defenders and Seminoles goalkeeper Kelsey Wys for a 1-0 lead.

"We talked about in the scouting report how they sent a little too many players on corners," Ubogagu said. "We just countered."

But it wasn't that simple. Florida State recovered by the time the Texas freshman collected the ball in the box.

"Chi's so talented on the ball I don't think it matters how many people are around her," Stanford defender Cami Levin said.

Ubogagu set up the Cardinal's second goal two minutes later when taking the ball down the left off a Taylor pass She served a nice ball in front of the net where senior Kristy Zurmuhlen popped it into the net to stun Florida State, the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament champion.

Stanford finished off the Seminoles in the 64th minute when Madeleine Thompson lobbed a long serve toward the far post. Alina Garciamendez, a Mexican international center back, beat Florida State's Toni Pressley to head the ball past Wys.

"That whole play was really perfect, playing the ball to the back post," Taylor said.

Florida State outshot Stanford 12-9 but the Cardinal converted on all three shots on goal. The three goals were the most for Stanford in seven College Cup matches all-time.

But Stafnord might have faltered in the early going if not for sophomore goalkeeper Emily Oliver, who was credited with six saves. The national leader in goals-against average (0.24) got her 11th shutout of the season while Stanford earned its 17th as a team.

Once Ubogagu got going, the Seminoles had no answers. She got her 10 goal and 10th assist of the team. Both are ranked second on the team.

"There's not doubt I've been blessed to have some great freshmen," Ratcliffe said. "Chioma is way up there, she's a special player. It seems in the big games she steps up."

Source: http://www.thereporter.com/ci_19462708?source=rss_viewed

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Sunday, December 4, 2011

Russia's ruling party wary as nation votes

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, left, signs autographs while visiting a shipbuilding plant in St. Petersburg, Russia, Friday, Dec. 2, 2011. (AP Photo/RIA Novosti, Yana Lapikova, Pool)

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, left, signs autographs while visiting a shipbuilding plant in St. Petersburg, Russia, Friday, Dec. 2, 2011. (AP Photo/RIA Novosti, Yana Lapikova, Pool)

An election commission official prepares a voting booth adorned with the coat of arms of the Russian state, left, and of the Smolensk region, right, at a polling station in the village of Kozlovka, 380 kilometers (236 miles) west of Moscow, Saturday, Dec. 3, 2011. A parliamentary election will be held in Russia on Sunday. (AP Photo/Sergei Grits)

An election commission official prepares a voting booth adorned with the coat of arms of the Russian state, right, and of the Smolensk region, left, at a polling station in the village of Kozlovka, 380 kilometers (236 miles) west of Moscow, Saturday, Dec. 3, 2011. A parliamentary election will be held in Russia on Sunday. (AP Photo/Sergei Grits)

An election commission official prepares a voting booth adorned with the coat of arms of the Russian state, right, and of the Smolensk region, left, at a polling station in the village of Kozlovka, 380 kilometers (236 miles) west of Moscow, Saturday, Dec. 3, 2011. A parliamentary election will be held in Russia on Sunday. (AP Photo/Sergei Grits)

Russia's independent election monitor Golos (Voice) leader Lilya Shibanova speaks during a news conference in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 3, 2011. Shibanova was detained at a Moscow airport for 12 hours, a colleague said Saturday - the latest government pressure on a watchdog that has documented thousands of election law violations ahead of Sunday's parliamentary vote. (AP Photo/Ivan Sekretarev)

(AP) ? Russia's long dominant party appeared likely to lose its edge as voters across the sprawling country cast ballots for Parliament on Sunday, many of them frustrated over corruption and the gap between ordinary Russians and the super-rich.

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's United Russia party has signaled it is worried about polls showing it could receive only a bit more than half the votes, cracking down on an independent election monitor and warning of political instability.

The Kremlin is determined to see United Russia maintain its two-thirds majority, an unassailable dominance that allows it to amend the constitution. Both Putin and President Dmitry Medvedev made final appeals for the party on Friday, the last day of campaigning, warning that a parliament made up of diverse political camps would be incapable of making decisions.

The view underlines Russian authorities' continuing discomfort with political pluralism and preference for top-down operation. As president in 2000-2008, Putin's strongman leadership style won wide support among Russians exhausted by a decade of post-Soviet uncertainty.

But United Russia has become increasingly disliked, seen as stifling opposition, representing a corrupt bureaucracy and often called "the party of crooks and thieves." Putin needs the party to do well in the parliamentary election to pave the way for his return to the presidency in a vote now three months away.

With so much at stake, there are doubts about how honestly the election will be conducted. An interim report from an elections-monitoring mission of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe noted that "most parties have expressed a lack of trust in the fairness of the electoral process."

The only independent Russian election-monitoring group, Golos, has come under strong pressure in the week leading up to the vote.

Golos' leader, Lilya Shibanova, was held at a Moscow airport for 12 hours upon her Friday return from Poland after refusing to give her laptop computer to security officers, said Golos' deputy director Grigory Melkonyants. On Friday, the group was fined the equivalent of $1,000 by a Moscow court for violating a law that prohibits publication of election opinion research for five days before a vote.

Putin last Sunday accused Western governments of trying to influence the election. Golos is funded by grants from the United States and Europe.

Golos has complied some 5,300 complaints of election-law violations ahead of the vote. Most are linked to United Russia, the party headed by Putin, who has dominated Russian politics for a dozen years as president and prime minister.

Roughly a third of the complainants ? mostly government employees and students ? say employers and professors are pressuring them to vote for the party.

Only seven parties have been allowed to field candidates for parliament this year, while the most vocal opposition groups have been denied registration and barred from campaigning.

Some of the parties in the running are unlikely to clear the 7-percent threshold for winning seats, which are proportionally allocated; critics say the 7-percent level is prohibitively high, effectively ensuring that most minority views are denied representation.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-03-EU-Russia-Election/id-7406e4457bd84bd5b3a3d83c063eb011

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Video: Jobs Report: Great Expectations?

Joseph LaVorgna, Deutsche Bank, discusses whether investors can expect an upside surprise in jobs numbers later this week.

Related Links:

Business & financial news headlines from msnbc.com

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/45511940/

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Saturday, December 3, 2011

Apple juice can pose a health risk _ from calories

FILE - In this Sept. 15, 2011 photo, an apple and a pitcher of apple juice are posed together in Moreland Hills, Ohio. Despite the government's consideration of new arsenic limits on the juice, the real danger, nutrition experts say, is to waistlines and teeth. Apple juice and other juice-based beverages have relatively few natural nutrients, many calories and more sugar, in many cases, than a can of soda. (AP Photo/Amy Sancetta)

FILE - In this Sept. 15, 2011 photo, an apple and a pitcher of apple juice are posed together in Moreland Hills, Ohio. Despite the government's consideration of new arsenic limits on the juice, the real danger, nutrition experts say, is to waistlines and teeth. Apple juice and other juice-based beverages have relatively few natural nutrients, many calories and more sugar, in many cases, than a can of soda. (AP Photo/Amy Sancetta)

Chart shows per capita consumption of juice

It's true ? apple juice can pose a risk to your health. But not necessarily from the trace amounts of arsenic that people are arguing about.

Despite the government's consideration of new limits on arsenic, nutrition experts say apple juice's real danger is to waistlines and children's teeth. Apple juice has few natural nutrients, lots of calories and, in some cases, more sugar than soda has. It trains a child to like very sweet things, displaces better beverages and foods, and adds to the obesity problem, its critics say.

"It's like sugar water," said Judith Stern, a nutrition professor at the University of California, Davis, who has consulted for candy makers as well as for Weight Watchers. "I won't let my 3-year-old grandson drink apple juice."

Many juices are fortified with vitamins, so they're not just empty calories. But that doesn't appease some nutritionists.

"If it wasn't healthy in the first place, adding vitamins doesn't make it into a health food," and if it causes weight gain, it's not a healthy choice, said Karen Ansel, a registered dietitian in New York and spokeswoman for the American Dietetic Association.

The American Academy of Pediatrics says juice can be part of a healthy diet, but its policy is blunt: "Fruit juice offers no nutritional benefit for infants younger than 6 months" and no benefits over whole fruit for older kids.

Kids under 12 consume 28 percent of all juice and juice drinks, according to the academy. Nationwide, apple juice is second only to orange juice in popularity. Americans slurp 267 ounces of apple juice on average each year, according to the Food Institute's Almanac of Juice Products and the Juice Products Association, a trade group. Lots more is consumed as an ingredient in juice drinks and various foods.

Only 17 percent of the apple juice sold in the U.S. is produced here. The rest comes from other countries, mostly China, Argentina, Chile and Brazil, the association says.

Television's Dr. Mehmet Oz made that a key point a few months ago when he raised an alarm ? some say a false alarm ? over arsenic in apple juice, based on tests his show commissioned by a private lab. The Food and Drug Administration said that its own tests disagreed and that apple juice is safe.

However, on Wednesday, after Consumer Reports did its own tests on several juice brands and called along with other consumer groups for stricter standards, the FDA said it will examine whether its restrictions on the amount of arsenic allowed in apple juice are stringent enough.

Some forms of arsenic, such as the type found in pesticides, can be toxic and may pose a cancer risk if consumed at high levels or over a long period.

All juice sold in the United States must be safe and meet U.S. standards, said Pat Faison, technical director for the juice association. As for making good nutrition choices, "a lot of the information that people need about fruit juices is on the label," she said.

So what's on those labels?

Carbohydrates, mostly sugars, in a much higher concentration than in milk. Juice has a small amount of protein and minerals and lacks the fiber in whole fruit, the pediatrics academy notes.

Drinking juice delivers a lot of calories quickly so you don't realize how much you've consumed, whereas you would have to eat a lot of apples to get the same amount, and "you would feel much, much more full from the apples," Ansel said.

"Whole fruits are much better for you," said Dr. Frank Greer, a University of Wisconsin, Madison, professor and former head of the pediatrics academy's nutrition committee.

He noted that the WIC program ? the U.S. Department of Agriculture's nutrition program for Women, Infants and Children ? revised its rules in 2005 to replace juice with baby food fruits and vegetables for children over 6 months. More than half of all infants born in the U.S. are eligible for WIC, and the government "really cut back severely on the ability of mothers to get fruit juices" through the program, Greer said.

If you or your family drinks juice, here is some advice from nutrition experts:

?Choose a juice fortified with calcium and vitamin D-3.

?Give children only pasteurized juice ? that's the only type safe from germs that can cause serious disease.

?Don't give juice before 6 months of age, and never put it in bottles or covered cups that allow babies and children to consume it throughout the day, which can cause tooth decay. For the same reason, don't give infants juice at bedtime.

?Limit juice to 4 to 6 ounces per day for children ages 1 to 6, and 8 to 12 ounces for those ages 7 to 18.

?Encourage kids to eat fruit.

?Don't be swayed by healthy-sounding label claims. "No sugar added" doesn't mean it isn't full of naturally occurring sugar. And "cholesterol-free" is silly ? only animal products contain cholesterol.

___

Marilynn Marchione can be followed on Twitter at http://twitter.com/MMarchioneAP

___

Online:

Academy of Pediatrics on juice: http://tinyurl.com/qtkls

FDA: http://www.fda.gov/ForConsumers/ConsumerUpdates/ucm271394.htm

WIC program advice: http://bit.ly/sYXqAi

Industry: http://www.fruitjuicefacts.org

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-12-01-Apple%20Juice-Advice/id-9f5732af8aa04a778948f7137efb7814

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Fresh iPhone Apps for Nov. 30: TED update, Football Connect, Sea Stars, Extraction: Project Outbreak (Appolicious)

Get plugged into the Technology, Entertainment and Design Conferences wherever you are with TED, today?s leading Fresh iPhone App. Formerly available only for the iPad, TED has made the jump to the smaller screen as a free download. It?s followed by Football Connect, a social app that plugs you into NFL football games and lets you play a social game with your friends while you watch. Sea Stars, an endless running title with a nautical theme, leads our games selection today, followed by the decidedly less cute Extraction: Project Outbreak, a zombie shooter with some very intuitive touch controls.

Straight from the Technology, Entertainment and Design Conferences comes TED, an app filled with the interesting talks by notable people that the events are known for, ranging from former President Bill Clinton to Bill Gates and beyond. The official TED app previously was only available to iPad owners, but has made its way to the iPhone and the iPod Touch with a new update, bringing along with it the conferences? full library of presentations.

TED allows you to watch videos from conferences past and present, as well as save and bookmark your favorite or most interesting talks to check out later. You can also play videos on other devices with TED?s Air Play support, or listen to a continuous stream of TED discussions using the app?s TEDradio feature.

Part play-by-play, part social game, Football Connect is a companion app you fire up during National Football League games that keeps you up on the action. It?ll provide you with updates on what?s happening in the game you?re watching (as well as others), info on players and teams, and even a look at where the ball is on the field at any given moment. But that?s only half of what the app is all about.

The other half is a social game you can play with your friends in which you all try to guess what?s about to happen in the game. When you connect to a game, you get a game board filled with players and you can choose actions for each one, like ?reception? or ?touchdown.? If that players makes that event in the game happen, you earn points ? and if you?re able to make a Bingo-style line of four adjacent pieces, you get triple points. It?s an easy and fun way to play against your friends (or enemies, or strangers) using Facebook while enjoying the game on TV.

Sea Stars (iPhone, iPad) Free

An endless running game, Sea Stars feels a lot like Halfbrick?s spectacular Jetpack Joyride, but with a much cuter presentation. That?s not a bad game to draw comparisons with, seeing as?Jetpack Joyride is pretty phenomenal. Sea Stars is equally compelling. This time, you play a dolphin trying to swim as far as possible to rack up points and grab coins. Touching the screen causes your dolphin to dive, and releasing makes him rise or even leap through the air.

While there are dangers to avoid, Sea Stars feels like it?s much more about grabbing coins and other power-ups along the way to maximize your distance. Jumping high in the air enough times brings ?rainbow birds? that inundate you with coins, and you can also recruit the help of several friendly characters that change the way your dolphin controls. Coins can buy you power-ups to help you get further, or help you to complete the game?s various additional objectives that help keep it interesting.

Zombies are loose (again), and you have to shoot them all (again), as an elite private military contractor tasked with performing high-risk extractions. But you only need one finger to play Extraction: Project Outbreak ? tapping the screen causes your character to move to a place, while dragging your finger over zombies automatically targets them. The key is to keep moving as you blast enemies to avoid being overrun.

Extraction: Project Outbreak includes a single-player campaign ranging between four and five hours long, as well as four other game modes to work through. It also includes role-playing game elements as you progress through it, allowing you to earn experience points that can be spent to improve your character to make him more powerful and more resilient.

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