Thursday, October 17, 2013

Timeline: Congress' path to federal shutdown

Highlights of Congress' battle over the partial government shutdown and expiring federal borrowing authority:


Sept. 20: Republican-run House ignores White House veto threat, votes to keep government open through Dec. 15 but only if President Barack Obama agrees to halt money for his 2010 health care law.


Sept. 24-25: Tea party Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and other conservatives speak on Senate floor for more than 21 consecutive hours about using shutdown bill to weaken health care law.


Sept. 27: Democratic-led Senate removes House-approved provision defunding health care law, sends bill keeping agencies open through Nov. 15 back to House.


Sept. 29: House shifts demands on health care law, votes to delay implementation for a year and repeal tax on medical devices. Separately, House votes to pay troops in case of shutdown. Senate approves bill next day, Obama signs it into law.


Sept. 30: Senate rejects latest House provisions curbing health care law. House reworks shutdown bill again, delaying for a year health care law requirement that individuals buy health insurance and requiring members of Congress and staff to pay full expense of health insurance, without government paying part of costs. Senate kills latest House health care provisions.


Oct. 1: Government's new fiscal year begins, partial federal shutdown starts, around 800,000 workers furloughed.


Oct. 2: House approves first of more than a dozen bills restarting popular programs, reopening national parks and National Institutes of Health medical research. Over the next two weeks, Democrats mostly vote "no," saying entire government must reopen, and Senate ignores the measures. Obama meets with congressional leaders at White House, no progress reported.


Oct. 4: Republicans increasingly tie shutdown fight to need for Congress to renew federal borrowing authority by Oct. 17 or risk economy-rattling government default. Their demands also evolve to deficit reduction.


Oct. 5: Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel says he is bringing most of his department's 350,000 furloughed workers back to work immediately.


Oct. 10: Boehner proposes six-week debt limit extension, conditioned on Obama bargaining over spending cuts and reopening government. House GOP leaders discuss standoff with Obama at White House without agreement. Congress gives final approval to bill providing death benefits for slain troops and Obama signs it.


Oct. 11: A bipartisan Senate group works on a measure that would reopen the government and prevent the U.S. from defaulting on its bills.


Oct. 12: Boehner tells House Republicans that negotiations with White House have stalled. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., begin talks.


Oct. 14: Reid and McConnell say they've made progress toward a deal extending debt limit and reopening government.


Oct. 15: House GOP effort to craft its own plan collapses after Boehner fails to gain enough Republican support for two alternatives that are more conservative than evolving Senate plan.


Oct. 16: Reid, McConnell announce deal on reopening government through Jan. 15, extending debt limit to Feb. 7. Senate approves bill 81-18, House passes it 285-144.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/timeline-congress-path-federal-shutdown-193956026.html
Similar Articles: miss america   brandon jacobs   Low Winter Sun   Hannah Anderson   regions  

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

SXSW Festival releases initial music lineup

(AP) — The South by Southwest Music Festival released its first list of artists for 2014 on Wednesday, featuring acts ranging from New Orleans rapper Vockah Redu to Texas country singer Rodney Crowell and Swedish rock band INVSN.

The first batch of 183 acts from 27 countries will only be the first of many, said Elizabeth Derczo, publicist for the six-day festival and music conference. South by Southwest was created to showcase up-and-coming acts, build industry contacts and include a handful of established talent.

In 2013, more than 25,000 people saw 2,278 acts during the festival that takes over downtown Austin every spring.

INVSN is one of the important European acts, featuring Dennis Lyxzen, lead singer of punk bands Refused and International Noise Conspiracy. INVSN is currently on a U.S. tour promoting their new self-titled album.

Other international acts include Germany's Hyenaz, Belgium's Sold Out and England's Glass Animals.

Dum Dum Girls drummer Sandra Vu brings her new genre-stretching band SISU to the festival. Other American bands include Brooklyn's Deidre and the Dark, Avi Buffalo from Los Angeles and Ohio's Jessica Lea Mayfield.

The festival also features fringe and experimental acts unlikely to ever make the charts or appear on TV. Austin's punk-rock drag queen Christeene is among the artists performing in 2014, mixing a homeless woman's appearance with explicit lyrics.

The music portion of South by Southwest lasts from March 11-16. South by Southwest also includes a film festival from March 7-15 and an interactive festival from March 7-11.

___

Online:

http://sxsw.com

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-10-16-SXSW%20Festival-Music/id-93e623ed9b1949918e9770e2c92b8a00
Similar Articles: NASA   Linda Ronstadt   Demi Lovato   Raz B   Eddie Lacy  

Obama backs Senate debt deal, urges Congress to approve it swiftly: White House


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama quickly endorsed a Senate deal aimed at averting a U.S. debt default and ending a government shutdown on Wednesday and wants Congress to approve it swiftly, the White House said.


Spokesman Jay Carney, briefing reporters on Obama's reaction to the bipartisan Senate deal that emerged on Capitol Hill, said the agreement will reopen the government and remove the threat of a debt default.


He said the United States is close to the point where the Treasury Department cannot borrow money to meet its debt obligations, which is why Congress needs to move fast.


While a wave of relief swept the White House at the prospect of an end to a 16-day government shutdown and the avoidance of a debt default, there was still a degree of uncertainty as to what would happen to the Senate legislation in the Republican-controlled House of Representatives, where a faction of conservatives has been in no mood to compromise.


"We are not putting odds on anything," Carney said when asked about prospects for House passage.


Carney was also reluctant to be seen declaring victory on behalf of Obama.


"There are no winners here," he said. "There is already a price that has been paid."


Looking ahead to the budget negotiations that the Senate deal requires, more partisan battles appear to be in the offing.


Carney said Obama would insist that "everything has to be on the table" as part of these negotiations, meaning the president would want new revenue generated from a budget deal, which Republicans have opposed.


Once the deal is approved, Obama wants to focus on gaining passage of a stalled overhaul of U.S. immigration laws. The Senate in June approved an immigration agreement but it has not advanced in the House.


(Reporting by Roberta Rampton, Mark Felsenthal and Steve Holland; Editing by Eric Beech)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-backs-senate-debt-deal-urges-congress-approve-171537121--business.html
Related Topics: channing tatum   Josh Freeman   House of Cards   Ariel Castro   Ichiro Suzuki  

Afghanistan Vet Who Criticized Superiors Awarded Medal Of Honor


President Obama presented the Medal of Honor Tuesday to Army Capt. William Swenson. Swenson is being cited for his actions during a 2009 battle in Afghanistan, when he risked his life to try to save others. It's taken years for him to be recognized, however. He criticized higher-ups after the battle, which cost the lives of five Americans. Swenson's nomination for the Medal was said to be lost at one point. He is the sixth living recipient of the Medal of Honor, the highest honor a member of the military can receive.



Copyright © 2013 NPR. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.


NINA TOTENBERG, BYLINE: President Obama awarded the Medal of Honor today, the nation's highest decoration for combat bravery. It went to an Army officer who risked his life to save his fellow soldiers and to recover the bodies of his fallen comrades. The battle happened back in 2009, a horrific six-hour firefight in Afghanistan. The president called former Army Captain William Swenson a leader who was there for his brothers.


NPR's Tom Bowman reports.


TOM BOWMAN, BYLINE: Captain Swenson was an advisor to the Afghan Border Police on the morning of September 8th, 2009. He and a team were heading to a meeting with village elders in a remote part of Eastern Afghanistan. Suddenly, they were met by 60 well-armed Taliban fighters. President Obama picked up the story.


PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA: Rocket-propelled grenades, mortar, machine fire, all of this is pouring in from three sides.


BOWMAN: Captain Swenson immediately returned fire and called in for air support. But he was told by superiors that he was too close to a village and that air strikes might kill innocent civilians. Swenson ran under fire and gave aid to Sergeant First Class Kenneth Westbrook, who was shot in the neck.


OBAMA: By this time, the enemy has gotten even closer, just 20 or 30 meters away. And over the radio, they're demanding the Americans to surrender. So, Will stops treating Kenneth long enough to respond by lobbing a grenade.


BOWMAN: The Taliban continued to swarm and there were still Americans trapped by the fighting.


OBAMA: So, Will does something incredible. He jumps behind the wheel of an unarmored Ford Ranger pick-up truck. A Marine gets in the passenger seat and they drive that truck - it's a vehicle designed for the highway - straight into the battle.


BOWMAN: Swenson hopped out and was able to recover the dead, all the while under fire.


SERGEANT DAKOTA MEYER: You know, we all were just trying to do whatever it took to get in and get those guys out.


BOWMAN: Marine Sergeant Dakota Meyer, who was in the vehicle that day, recalls what it was like. Meyer himself was awarded a Medal of Honor two years ago, an award that eluded Captain Swenson until today.


What was left unsaid at the ceremony is that the Army originally lost the paperwork for Swenson's Medal of Honor. Army officials called it a bureaucratic bungle. A second packet was submitted in 2011 by Marine General John Allen, then the top commander in Afghanistan. The general also wrote a letter of apology to Swenson for the delay.


Swenson's supporters say the delay was because Swenson criticized Army officers the day of the fight. He pleaded over the radio for help to save his team. Later, Swenson complained to investigators that he was being second-guessed by officers in air-conditioned headquarters. Two Army officers at that headquarters later received letters of reprimand for negligence that directly led to loss of life.


Dakota Meyer wrote a book last year about the 2009 ambush, questioning why Swenson was not awarded a medal. Meyer also wrote a letter to a senior national security official at the White House, calling Swenson a centerpiece of the fight.


MEYER: He's a true definition of a hero.


BOWMAN: Again, Dakota Meyer.


MEYER: I don't know why it took so long but, you know, I'm glad he's finally getting what he deserves.


BOWMAN: Swenson downplayed his own actions standing in the White House driveway after the ceremony.


CAPTAIN WILLIAM SWENSON: But this award was earned with a team, a team of our finest: Marines, Army, Air Force, Navy and our Afghan partners standing side-by-side.


BOWMAN: Swenson now lives in Seattle, and often hikes into the nearby mountains. He's been unemployed since he left the Army two years ago.


Tom Bowman, NPR News, Washington.


Copyright © 2013 NPR. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to NPR. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.


NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NprProgramsATC/~3/zTU98T6D-OA/story.php
Similar Articles: tom hanks   aldon smith   Romain Dauriac   Raz B   lollapalooza  

Booker's campaign path bumpier than anticipated

In this Oct. 9, 2013, photo. Senate candidate Democrat Cory Booker answers a question after debating Republican Steve Lonegan at Rowan University in Glassboro, N.J. Booker's path to the Oct. 16 Senate election has been bumpier than anticipated. Even Republicans had expected Booker to cruise to victory by a wide margin over Lonegan in the special election to replace former Sen. Frank Lautenberg, who died in June. While Booker holds a double-digit lead in most polls, the Newark mayor has faced sustained Republican criticism that has exposed vulnerabilities that could hamper him should he seek even higher office someday. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)







In this Oct. 9, 2013, photo. Senate candidate Democrat Cory Booker answers a question after debating Republican Steve Lonegan at Rowan University in Glassboro, N.J. Booker's path to the Oct. 16 Senate election has been bumpier than anticipated. Even Republicans had expected Booker to cruise to victory by a wide margin over Lonegan in the special election to replace former Sen. Frank Lautenberg, who died in June. While Booker holds a double-digit lead in most polls, the Newark mayor has faced sustained Republican criticism that has exposed vulnerabilities that could hamper him should he seek even higher office someday. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)







Republican candidate for Senate Steve Lonegan, center right, striped tie, greets people in Flemington, N.J., Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2013, as he campaigns for Senate at a trade show. Lonegan is running against Democratic Newark Mayor Cory Booker in Wednesday's election. Cory Booker's path to Wednesday's U.S. Senate election has been bumpier than anticipated. Even Republicans had expected Booker, a Democrat in a Democratic-leaning state, to cruise to victory over little-known Steve Lonegan. But the charismatic Newark mayor has faced sustained Republican criticism that has exposed vulnerabilities that could hamper him should he seek higher office someday. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)







Newark Mayor Cory Booker, right, talks to reporters near his tour bus while visiting supporters at a senior center, Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2013, in Newark, N.J. Booker will be going up against his Republican opponent Steve Lonegan Wednesday, Oct. 16, during a special election to fill New Jersey's vacant seat in the U.S. Senate. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)







Newark Mayor Cory Booker, center, laughs while talking to supporters at a senior center, Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2013, in Newark, N.J. Booker will be going up against his Republican opponent Steve Lonegan Wednesday, Oct. 16, during a special election to fill New Jersey's vacant seat in the U.S. Senate. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)







(AP) — Cory Booker's path to Wednesday's U.S. Senate election has been bumpier than anticipated.

Even Republicans had expected Booker, a Democrat in a Democratic-leaning state, to cruise to victory by a wide margin over little-known Republican Steve Lonegan in the special election to replace former Sen. Frank Lautenberg, who died in June.

While Booker holds a double-digit lead in most polls, the charismatic Newark mayor has faced sustained Republican criticism that has exposed vulnerabilities that could hamper him should he seek even higher office someday.

Lonegan has hammered Booker on Newark's economic troubles, tax increases, and violent crime. The GOP also has assailed him over a 2008 statement that a drug dealer he called a friend was actually an "archetype"; his G-rated Twitter exchanges with a Portland, Ore., stripper; his out-of-state fundraising trips; and a Washington Post interview where Booker, who talks about past girlfriends but prefers to keep his personal life private, said he "loves" when people on Twitter say that he is gay and asked, "so what does it matter if I am?"

After weeks of mostly ignoring Lonegan, the sustained assault has gotten Booker's attention.

He has aggressively hit back in the past several weeks, castigating Lonegan seemingly at every turn, using the brass-knuckled political skills he learned in the rough-and-tumble world of Newark politics.

"Sending him to Washington would be like pouring gasoline on a fire," Booker said, calling Lonegan a member of the "tea party fringe" that "hijacked" the government and caused a shutdown.

In a debate last week, Booker said the former mayor of Bogota, a small borough in Bergen County, "ran his city into a ditch" and asked for a state bailout. He painted Lonegan as an extremist, and said sending another Republican who supports the government shutdown to Washington would hurt the country.

Before deciding to return heavy fire, Booker had focused more on policy differences with Lonegan on issues like child poverty and criminal justice reforms, painting himself as a political uniter, while promoting Newark's growth. He told Lonegan to "bring on your wrecking ball" after the primary, but almost immediately shifted toward highlighting policy differences, fundraising and disregarding attacks. Booker largely avoided local media interviews, but held regular "run with Cory" events, where a group of supporters jogged a mile with the mayor.

For most of the campaign, Lonegan has gotten little help from Republicans outside the state, save for endorsements from Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul and Texas Gov. Rick Perry, both tea party favorites. The Senate Republican campaign arm hasn't sent any staffers into New Jersey — a standard practice in competitive races — and hasn't spent money on radio or television ads.

Booker had raised $11.2 million for his campaign through early October, compared to Lonegan's $1.4 million, according to campaign finance reports reviewed by the Newark Star-Ledger.

In an 11th hour push for Lonegan, tea party leaders have begun coordinating phone banks and a get-out-the-vote effort. The nation's largest tea party political action committee — the Tea Party Express — brought former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin in to campaign for the GOP nominee last weekend.

Tea party supporters dream of another surprise upset like Republican Scott Brown's unexpected victory in Democratic-leaning Massachusetts in a 2010 special election to replace the late Sen. Ted Kennedy.

Democrats in Washington mostly stayed out of the race until the final week. President Barack Obama released a video Monday urging voters to cast ballots for Booker and Democratic National Committee Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz stumped with Booker on Sunday. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, a longtime Booker supporter, spent $1 million on a television ad for Booker.

Booker campaign officials say they expected all along that the race would tighten, because no New Jersey Democrat running statewide has won with more than 60 percent of the vote in a generation. But they say they're confident that the double digit lead in the polls will be borne out on Election Day.

"We knew there would be a narrowing," Booker said in an interview with The Associated Press, "and so far the election has gone for us exactly according to plan."

Still, Republicans in Washington say they're pleased that Booker has had to work harder than anyone imagined. They're privately cheering the tea party's involvement.

And they suggest that Booker is making mistakes that could come back to haunt him as he eyes his political future. Some Democrats have mused about the possibility that Booker — a gifted public speaker who is young at age 44 — could make an attractive vice presidential candidate in 2016.

There's little doubt that Booker has national aspirations. He's spent a chunk of his mayoral tenure traveling the country, meeting with big Democratic donors and raising money in places like Hollywood and Silicon Valley. Hollywood star Matt Damon helped organize one Booker fundraiser in California.

Booker advisers suggest that the aggressive fundraising schedule has dual benefits, generating resources quickly for the special election, while giving Booker a head start for his next election. If he wins on Wednesday, he'll have to defend his seat next November.

Lonegan, however, says his campaign is "cresting."

"It's not a longshot," he told the AP. "We're going to win on Wednesday."

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-10-15-NJ%20Senate/id-4d43a89f9862475abcda0c99157a00dc
Similar Articles: james spader   Nina Davuluri   Nexus 4   Placenta   Beyonce Haircut  

Iran says powers receptive to ideas for ending nuclear stand-off


GENEVA (Reuters) - Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said on Tuesday world powers were receptive to Tehran's proposals for easing the stand-off over its nuclear program and details would be discussed in the afternoon.


The minister, speaking to reporters after Iran made a PowerPoint presentation at the start of a two-day meeting with the six powers in Geneva, said the atmosphere in the discussions had been "positive". He gave no details of the proposals, describing them as "confidential".


In subsequent comments made only to Iranian media, Araqchi said any final agreement should eliminate all sanctions on Iran and enable it to continue to enrich uranium, according to the ISNA news agency.


But he did not go into detail on what Iran might be willing to offer in return, apart from transparency and monitoring by the U.N. nuclear watchdog. He also said a religious decree by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei banning nuclear weapons should be "used as the most important confidence-building step".


Michael Mann, spokesman for European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, who leads the negotiations on behalf of world powers, said the Iranian presentation had been "very useful". Mann did not elaborate.


Western diplomats were not immediately available for comment. They had earlier called on Iran to put forward concrete proposals to allay their concerns about the Islamic state's nuclear energy program, which the West fears may aimed at developing a nuclear weapons capability. Iran denies this.


The six powers - the United States, France, Britain, Russia, China and Germany - want Iran to curb sensitive nuclear uranium enrichment. Iran wants them to ease tough energy and banking sanctions that have severely restricted its vital oil exports.


"There is a positive atmosphere. Our plan was given and it's planned that in the afternoon we will discuss more details, but the first reactions were good," Araqchi told reporters after the morning session broke for lunch.


"It's a completely realistic, balanced and logical plan." Talks were due to resume around 3 p.m. (1300 GMT).


The Geneva talks, the first since relative moderate Hassan Rouhani was elected Iran's president in June on a platform to ease its international isolation, is seen as the best chance for years to defuse a festering stand-off over Iran's nuclear ambitions that has heightened the risk of a new Middle East war.


(Reporting by Yeganeh Torbati; writing by Fredrik Dahl; editing by Mark Heinrich)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iran-says-powers-receptive-ideas-ending-nuclear-stand-124322329.html
Related Topics: iTunes   New Girl   Namaste   GTA 5 Cheats   Cecily Strong  

Supercell Dominates The Realm: Game Maker Sells A 51%, $1.53B ...


Another big move for Softbank into the gaming world, and a massive investment for Finnish gaming juggernaut Supercell: the company is selling a 51% stake for $1.53 billion to Japan’s SoftBank and games developer GungHo OnLine Entertainment. This strategic investment, which makes Supercell a subsidiary of Softbank, will be used to fuel Supercell’s global expansion. It effectively represents a quadrupled valuation for 100-employee Supercell to over $3 billion in the last seven months — bigger than that of publicly-traded social gaming giant Zynga at $2.86 billion.


GungHo (which also counts SoftBank as an investor) and Supercell have a pre-existing relationship announced earlier this year for in-game collaboration. Softbank, meanwhile, has been a major investor not just in mobile carrier networks, but also as a investor in services to run across those networks. It’s a major player both in Japan as well as in the U.S. with Sprint and has long held big ambitions to grow its business in mobile overall. In this deal, GungHo is investing 20% of the amount, and SoftBank the remaining 80%.


Under the terms of the deal, SoftBank notes that it and GungHo will jointly establish a special purpose company in Finland “by indirectly investing US$1,224 million (investment ratio: 80%) and $306 million (investment ratio: 20%), respectively.” That SPC will hold 51% of shares in Supercell’s voting stock on a fully-diluted basis for a total $1.53 billion.” Supercell will become a subsidiary of SoftBank, but it will continue to operate independently and maintain its headquarters in Helsinki, Finland, with co-founder Ilkka Paananen remaining CEO.


We heard about the deal earlier this morning. Then a tweet of the 51% stake and its value was the first mentioned publicly by a reporter at WSJ before we were able to get it confirmed by Supercell. (Now Index Ventures and Atomico, two of Supercell’s investors along with Accel and Institutional Venture Partners, are each also noting the deal.)


clash of clansSince opening for business in 2010 the maker of Clash of Clans has been on a growth tear. On a relatively small portfolio — essentially just Clash of Clans and Hay Day — the company has managed to hold on to the number-one games publisher position between February 2013 and August 2013 in indexes from analysts like App Annie. The two games, meanwhile, have been the top grossing games respectively in 137 and 96 Apple App Store countries. The business model is basic — free with in-app purchases — but combined with compelling content, it’s proven a to be a hit. For example in CoC, you buy assortments of gems to help you fight other clans and “dominate the realm.”


One of its lead investors once told me that he’d never seen growth like it, among all of the companies it has ever done business with, ever. (As a point of comparison on how well Supercell is doing at the moment: right now Zynga, with its bigger portfolio of games, is valued at $2.86 billion.) That trajectory resulted in the company raising a $130 million round at a $770 million valuation in April of this year. At the time, we were able to get some figures on Supercell’s performance: in the first quarter of this year, it made $179 million and netted $104 million of that after expenses and Apple’s 30% cut. In 2012, Supercell grossed $100 million. In April 2013, Supercell was making $2.4 million a day on 8.5 million daily active users. Considering that Supercell has now nearly quadrupled its valuation in the last seven months, those other metrics are likely to have kept growing.


Update: Below is the blog post from Supercell on the deal that we earlier managed to get before it was posted on the site. The photo above of Ilkka Paananen, CEO of Supercell, and Masayoshi Son, CEO of Softbank, is from that post.


The investment comes at a key moment in the question of how popular social and mobile gaming companies can best position themselves for sustained growth. King.com is reportedly gearing up for an IPO, and all eyes are on troubled Zynga and its upcoming quarterly earnings as an indication of whether the public markets are really the best home for fast-growing gaming companies.


In that context, Supercell so far has chosen to take a different route, backing away from turning to the public markets, with all their scrutiny, and instead giving employees and shareholders liquidity through secondary sales and going to VCs for further investments. That seems to be the motivation with taking this investment, too:


“This new partnership will accelerate Supercell towards our goal of being the first truly global games company, and gives us enough time to get there,” Paananen writes in the post below. (Emphasis mine.)


In this case, with SoftBank’s and GungHo’s investments come more secondary share sales. “As many of you know, a big part of Supercell’s culture is the idea of ‘we are all in this together.’” Paananen writes. “In line with this thinking, everyone at the company will participate in the upside and receive a portion of the proceeds from the investment. None of us work here just for of money, but when the company succeeds, everyone should get their fair share of it and this transaction is no exception.”


Masa, who Paananen describes the most long-term thinkers he has ever met, explains the rationale for SoftBank in Supercell’s blog post:


“In [SoftBank's] quest to become the #1 mobile Internet company, we scour the globe in search of interesting opportunities and right now some of the most exciting companies and innovations are coming out of Finland. Supercell is one of those rare and special companies. While your success is impressive, it is your amazing culture and deep passion that truly inspired me. After getting to know Ilkka and some of the team, it became clear to me that you, like us at Softbank, are on a similar long and aspirational journey to shape the future of entertainment for the next hundred years. And, I’m excited to see an independent Supercell continue to rise with great people and great games, delivering happiness to so many people around the world.”


This is also a significant growth story for Finnish Supercell. Although the company’s management now splits time between San Francisco and Helsinki, all development and operations are still in its home country and intends to remain that way. “I think more and more people in this country are realizing that there is life after Nokia!” Paananen writes.


Developing. Refresh for updated version of above story.


Hi Everyone,


I have some very exciting news to share with you today. We have received a strategic investment of $1.5 billion from SoftBank and GungHo. This new partnership will accelerate Supercell towards our goal of being the first truly global games company, and gives us enough time to get there.


Let me try to explain why.


The combination of tablets, mobile and the free-to-play business model has created a new market for games, one that will be accessible to billions of consumers, more people than ever before in the history of games. This truly is a new era of gaming and has opened up exciting opportunities for new kinds of companies.


At Supercell, one of our greatest aspirations is to become the first truly global games company, one that has a strong foothold in both the West and the East, including Japan, Korea and China. We want to build a company that people all over the globe will look back in 30 years and talk about all the great games that we developed and the impact they had on people’s lives. The same way I personally feel about Nintendo, for example.


This is a lofty goal and getting there takes persistence, passion, and luck – but just as importantly, it takes time, and requires a lot of patience. Even if we have had a pretty good start on our journey, it is still very early days. Creating history takes time.


The strategic investment from SoftBank helps us to accelerate towards our goal in two different ways:


1) SoftBank provides us with a massive selection of strategic resources that will help us deliver our games to hundreds of millions of new consumers all over the globe.


2) SoftBank is all about the long term. In fact, I have never met anyone who thinks as long term as its founder, Masayoshi Son, does. When we first met, he told me he has a 300-year vision, and I thought he was joking until the following day when he ran me through what it actually looks like and it is indeed very real and extremely inspirational. When you meet someone like Masa you realize what it takes to build a global business that will last forever. It further strengthened my belief that, we are just getting started. As a company, we are 3 years old so we’re only 1% done if we plan for the next 300 years.


In his own words, here’s what Masa wanted to tell our players, employees and friends about Supercell and our new partnership:


“In our quest to become the #1 mobile Internet company, we scour the globe in search of interesting opportunities and right now some of the most exciting companies and innovations are coming out of Finland. Supercell is one of those rare and special companies. While your success is impressive, it is your amazing culture and deep passion that truly inspired me. After getting to know Ilkka and some of the team, it became clear to me that you, like us at Softbank, are on a similar long and aspirational journey to shape the future of entertainment for the next hundred years. And, I’m excited to see an independent Supercell continue to rise with great people and great games, delivering happiness to so many people around the world.”


This new partnership also takes our collaboration with our good friends at GungHo to the next level. We are super excited to have them participate in this investment by putting in 20% of the total amount. We’ve had a great collaboration between Puzzle & Dragons and Clash of Clans. They’re an amazing bunch of people, and they have a terrific culture. Through them we’ve come to learn that the Japanese and Finnish cultures are pretty similar on many levels. Not only when it comes to taking your shoes off before you enter someone’s home, but also and more importantly, when it comes to partying, if you know what I mean.


It may sound like a detail, but I should also mention that the company that will end up owning 51% of Supercell is incorporated in Finland. This is both exciting and important for me personally. Although our aspirations are global, our roots and future are very much in Finland. Our operations remain in Finland, our management team remains in Finland and in San Francisco, and we continue to pay taxes in Finland. I think more and more people in this country are realizing that there is life after Nokia!


Naturally, this transaction is great for us from an economic perspective. As many of you know, a big part of Supercell’s culture is the idea of “we are all in this together”. In line with this thinking, everyone at the company will participate in the upside and receive a portion of the proceeds from the investment. None of us work here just for of money, but when the company succeeds, everyone should get their fair share of it and this transaction is no exception.


Although we now have a major new investor in Softbank, it is extremely important to understand that we are still in full control of our future and will continue to operate independently. In fact, and this may sound surprising to some, I feel that with this deal, we’re now more independent and in control of our future than we ever have been.


Lastly, I want to thank our players, all the Supercellians, and everyone else whose support has been so valuable in getting us this far. We’ve had an amazing journey together, and it will only get more exciting in the years to come.


Thank you for reading this far. I know this was a lengthy post, but since this is such an important milestone for the company, I wanted to take the time to fully explain our thinking behind it and exactly what it means to all of you.


Now, let’s go make history together! Kippis! Kampai!





Source: http://techcrunch.com/2013/10/15/softbank-teams-up-with-gungho-online-to-buy-51-of-gaming-giant-supercell-for-1-5b/
Similar Articles: Tom Clancy   Heisenberg   adam levine   Tami Erin   iOS 7 Beta 4  

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

A Day to Remember the First Computer Programmer Was a Woman ...

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Almost two centuries after Ada Lovelace wrote the first computer program, women remain in the minority in technology and engineering, though people are trying to change that. ... Technology · Personal Tech · Business Day.Source: http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/10/15/a-day-to-remember-the-first-computer-programmer-was-a-woman/
Related Topics: Kwame Kilpatrick   Cressida Bonas   Dancing With the Stars 2013   Niall Horan   K Michelle  

Italy rescues 370 migrants, steps up naval patrols


By Steve Scherer


ROME (Reuters) - Italy's navy rescued about 370 migrants in the waters between Sicily and Libya on Tuesday as the government deployed ships, helicopters and unmanned drones to help avert further shipwrecks that have already drowned hundreds this month.


A naval frigate and a patrol boat brought some 290 people, mostly Syrians, Somalis and Eritreans, to the tiny southern Italian island of Lampedusa after two migrant vessels used satellite phones to dial for help late on Monday, the navy said.


A Panamanian merchant vessel later picked up about 80 people adrift on a large raft in Libyan waters and took them to Sicily, the coastguard said.


The migrant boats risked the dangerous sea passage despite a shipwreck on October 3 that killed more than 360, mostly Eritreans, less than a kilometre from Lampedusa. Last Friday, at least 34 more migrants drowned when their boat capsized, though Italian officials say the true figure may be above 200.


Lampedusa, which lies southwest of Sicily and just 70 miles (113 km) from the coast of Tunisia, has been a stepping stone for migrants seeking a better life in Europe for two decades.


Now the Syrian civil war and unrest in Egypt and other Arab and African countries are fuelling the flow of refugees, many of whom have to pass through an increasingly unstable Libya.


Sicily's regional parliament declared a state of emergency on Tuesday, a move that allows it to tap additional funds to help its struggling immigration services.


The reception centre on Lampedusa, which is under Sicily's administration, is now hosting four or five times its capacity.


To try to stem the flow of rickety boats and prevent further tragedies, Italy began on Tuesday deploying more ships, long-range helicopters, an airplane equipped with night-vision, plus unmanned drone aircraft.


MILITARISATION


However, humanitarian organisations say the measures may leave more migrants stranded in the Sahara desert or delivered into the hands of Libyan militias and crime groups, which are known to have beaten, raped and imprisoned migrants in the past.


Libya is the departure point for two thirds of the boats.


Riccardo Compagnucci, head of the Interior Ministry's immigration office, ruled out Libya as a safe port because of its poor security and human rights situation.


Compagnucci told Reuters some migrants could be taken to "Malta and Greece" in order to facilitate rescue operations, but added: "Libya isn't safe even for its prime minister."


Libyan Prime Minister Ali Zeidan was kidnapped for several hours last week. This week, he asked for Europe's help to stem the flow of migrants.


European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso was heckled on Lampedusa last week by islanders who said the European Union was partly responsible for the October 3 shipwreck.


Italy and Malta have asked for more EU funds and have called for the migrant emergency to be put on the agenda of the next European Council meeting on October 24-25.



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/italy-rescues-300-migrants-sends-navy-ships-drones-094602010.html
Similar Articles: suntrust   Robin Quivers   boardwalk empire   Amber Riley   Only God Forgives  

Ramirez's status uncertain for Dodgers in NLCS

A logo for the Los Angeles Dodgers is painted on the field as the St. Louis Cardinals practice in preparation for Monday's Game 3 of the National League baseball championship series against the Dodgers, on Sunday, Oct. 13, 2013, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)







A logo for the Los Angeles Dodgers is painted on the field as the St. Louis Cardinals practice in preparation for Monday's Game 3 of the National League baseball championship series against the Dodgers, on Sunday, Oct. 13, 2013, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)







St. Louis Cardinals starting pitcher Adam Wainwright smiles while talking to reporters during practice in preparation for Monday's Game 3 of the National League baseball championship series against the Los Angeles Dodgers, on Sunday, Oct. 13, 2013, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)







St. Louis Cardinals' Yadier Molina smiles as he arrives for practice in preparation for Monday's Game 3 of the National League baseball championship series against the Los Angeles Dodgers, on Sunday, Oct. 13, 2013, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)







Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Clayton Kershaw jogs during practice in preparation for Monday's Game 3 of the National League baseball championship series against the St. Louis Cardinals, on Sunday, Oct. 13, 2013, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)







LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Dodgers' offense is struggling, and they might have to face St. Louis ace Adam Wainwright without their top hitter in Game 3 of the NL championship series.

Shortstop Hanley Ramirez had a CT scan on his painful left ribs Sunday, and the results weren't available by mid-afternoon. He got hit by a pitch from Joe Kelly in the opener but stayed in to play all 13 innings of a 3-2 loss Friday.

Ramirez was a late scratch for Game 2, a 1-0 defeat that left Los Angeles trailing the Cardinals 2-0 in the best-of-seven series.

He rested Sunday, along with the rest of the team, which didn't hit on the field.

"We're just working on that, taking the pain away so I can go," Ramirez said. "Even if it's cracked or something, I'm going to be able to get out there if we can take the pain away. It feels the same, but that doesn't stop me from trying to remain positive for tomorrow."

Ramirez had a .638 slugging percentage during the regular season, and the Dodgers desperately need an offensive boost to get back into the best-of-seven series. They batted .184 in the first two games on the road, including 1 for 16 (.063) with runners in scoring position.

"We've talked about it. It always comes back to, can you get that key out and can you get the key hit?" manager Don Mattingly said. "It doesn't get any easier for us with Wainwright. He seems like he's always coming up big."

Dodgers outfielder Andre Ethier didn't start Saturday, but he appeared as a pinch-hitter and ended the game with a strikeout. He's been bothered by shin splints, although he made his first start since Sept. 13 in the series opener.

"It's definitely a thing where we need all the hands we can to find a way to get back in the series," Ethier said.

Wainwright predicted both Ramirez and Ethier would play.

"He looks the best I've seen him in a long time," Wainwright said of Ramirez. "His swing looks great. His approach is awesome. As everyone knows, he's got power to all fields, so he's a very dangerous hitter and a very tough bat added to that lineup."

Dodgers rookie Yasiel Puig has yet to make an impact in the series. Hitting cleanup in place of Ramirez, Puig struck out four times Saturday, dropping to 0 for 10 with six strikeouts in the series.

"He is a positive kid and he told me, 'I'm going to get it tomorrow,'" Ramirez said. "Tomorrow he's going to come and get ready to play and he's going to do some damage."

The lack of offense and injuries to key players recalls the early season version of the Dodgers, when they were mired in the NL West cellar and were 12 games under .500. Then Puig arrived in early June and sparked their revival.

The Dodgers couldn't capitalize on stellar outings by Zack Greinke and Clayton Kershaw on the road and now must rely on rookie Hyun-Jin Ryu, who stumbled against Atlanta in his playoff debut in the division series. He allowed four runs and six hits in three innings, and made two major mistakes in the field.

"I feel really strong," Ryu said through a Korean translator. "There is no reason my arm isn't in good, top shape right now."

Wainwright last pitched against Los Angeles in the postseason in the 2009 NL division series, allowing one earned run in eight innings of a no-decision. He left leading 2-1 before the Dodgers scored twice in the bottom of the ninth to win.

"Thinking back, I know it's going to be rocking tomorrow," Wainwright said. "I don't know how many people are here, but it's a lot of fans, bigger than most stadiums and very loud. I love that though. The louder the better. That plays right into my hands."

The Cardinals went through a full workout on a sunny and cool day at Dodger Stadium.

Manager Mike Matheny said his team's mentality has stayed the same throughout the season.

"We've had some brutal losses and the guys came back the next day like it never happened. We've had some exciting wins and we've come back the next day with a lot of hunger," he said. "That's what we continue to preach. That consistency is really in my mind what separates the good players from the very good players and the good teams from the very good teams."

The Dodgers have been down before in best-of-seven postseason series and come back. Three times they've trailed 2-0 in the World Series, most recently against the New York Yankees in 1981, and rallied to win titles each time.

"This team has been counted out a lot of times this year," Ethier said. "We figured out a way to get it done. We definitely have it in ourselves. We've proved that."

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-10-13-BBN-NLCS-Cardinals-Dodgers/id-273a1ee14a024187bb0a75047ceab0a9
Category: reggie bush   twerking   Manny Diaz   NFL.com   elvis presley  

Obama, GOP Open Talks on Debt Fix

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Source: online.wsj.com --- Thursday, October 10, 2013
Obama and House Republicans began talks on a GOP proposal to extend the nation's borrowing authority for six weeks, marking a new opening in the budget stalemate that risks a U.S. debt crisis. ...

Source: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303382004579127241553500068.html?mod=rss_Politics_And_Policy
Tags: cnn   zach mettenberger   neil armstrong   usain bolt   nate robinson  

Monday, October 14, 2013

Sex over survival: Reproductive trait in fish impedes tissue regeneration

Sex over survival: Reproductive trait in fish impedes tissue regeneration


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]
Public release date: 14-Oct-2013
[


| E-mail



| Share Share

]

Contact: Mary Beth O'Leary
moleary@cell.com
617-397-2802
Cell Press






New research on the reproductive habits of zebrafish offers an explanation as to why some animals' bodies repair tissues. The research team previously noticed that male zebrafish regenerate their pectoral fins poorly, as compared to females. Their latest findings, publishing in the October 14 issue of the Cell Press journal Developmental Cell, reveal the basis for this sex-specific regenerative deficiency: structures that are used to improve reproductive success. The scenario represents an example of the tradeoffs between reproduction and survival.


Led by first author Junsu Kang, the scientists identified anatomical structures that male fish use during mating that produce a signal that impedes regeneration of the pectoral fins after injury. As such, fish appear to trade an ancient ability to regenerate tissue easily for a new-found way of enhancing reproductive success. This valuable information could help scientists begin to explain why humans are less able to regenerate tissue and could also be used to improve the body's tissue regenerative capacity.



"We discovered that male zebrafish have a very important set of structures on their pectoral fins that they use for breeding and that these structures secrete a potent molecular inhibitor of a key signaling pathway to aid their cycles of regular replacement," explains senior author Kenneth Poss of Duke University Medical Center.


Higher vertebrates like mammals generally have a diminished capacity for tissue regeneration compared with lower vertebrates like fish and salamanders. "The biology we describe here suggests a new paradigm for how tissue regenerative capacity may be lost during species evolution," says Poss. The researchers speculate that natural selection acting on traits like sexual features could have detrimental effects on tissue regenerative potential. For example, male zebrafish with more numerous or more effective breeding ornamentsand thus lower regenerative potentialmight contribute more to the gene pool, phasing out regenerative potential over generations.


Poss notes that growing attention in the field of tissue regeneration is being paid to factors that block signaling pathways. "Our results indicate that the presence or restriction of a pathway inhibitor is critical to whether regeneration occurs normally, providing new fuel for ideas of how to promote regeneration after injury in humans."


###


Developmental Cell, Kang et al.: "Local Dkk1 Crosstalk from Breeding Ornaments Impedes Regeneration of Injured Male Zebrafish Fins."




[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

[


| E-mail



| Share Share

]

 


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




Sex over survival: Reproductive trait in fish impedes tissue regeneration


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]
Public release date: 14-Oct-2013
[


| E-mail



| Share Share

]

Contact: Mary Beth O'Leary
moleary@cell.com
617-397-2802
Cell Press






New research on the reproductive habits of zebrafish offers an explanation as to why some animals' bodies repair tissues. The research team previously noticed that male zebrafish regenerate their pectoral fins poorly, as compared to females. Their latest findings, publishing in the October 14 issue of the Cell Press journal Developmental Cell, reveal the basis for this sex-specific regenerative deficiency: structures that are used to improve reproductive success. The scenario represents an example of the tradeoffs between reproduction and survival.


Led by first author Junsu Kang, the scientists identified anatomical structures that male fish use during mating that produce a signal that impedes regeneration of the pectoral fins after injury. As such, fish appear to trade an ancient ability to regenerate tissue easily for a new-found way of enhancing reproductive success. This valuable information could help scientists begin to explain why humans are less able to regenerate tissue and could also be used to improve the body's tissue regenerative capacity.



"We discovered that male zebrafish have a very important set of structures on their pectoral fins that they use for breeding and that these structures secrete a potent molecular inhibitor of a key signaling pathway to aid their cycles of regular replacement," explains senior author Kenneth Poss of Duke University Medical Center.


Higher vertebrates like mammals generally have a diminished capacity for tissue regeneration compared with lower vertebrates like fish and salamanders. "The biology we describe here suggests a new paradigm for how tissue regenerative capacity may be lost during species evolution," says Poss. The researchers speculate that natural selection acting on traits like sexual features could have detrimental effects on tissue regenerative potential. For example, male zebrafish with more numerous or more effective breeding ornamentsand thus lower regenerative potentialmight contribute more to the gene pool, phasing out regenerative potential over generations.


Poss notes that growing attention in the field of tissue regeneration is being paid to factors that block signaling pathways. "Our results indicate that the presence or restriction of a pathway inhibitor is critical to whether regeneration occurs normally, providing new fuel for ideas of how to promote regeneration after injury in humans."


###


Developmental Cell, Kang et al.: "Local Dkk1 Crosstalk from Breeding Ornaments Impedes Regeneration of Injured Male Zebrafish Fins."




[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

[


| E-mail



| Share Share

]

 


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




Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/cp-sos100813.php
Similar Articles: ny giants   Prince George  

Saturday, October 12, 2013

Detroit's in Great Financial Shape� Compared to Puerto Rico ...



While the U.S. is swept up in debt ceiling debates and shutdown finger-pointing, the crisis in Puerto Rico is accelerating.


“Economic growth has been stagnant or declining for many years, since 2006...and it’s not apparent to me or others whether there’s going to be an economic driver. So Puerto Rico has been relying on debt and I think we’re at a point where investors out there think we’re at capacity,” says Robert Donahue, managing director at Municipal Market Advisors.


The U.S. commonwealth is now $87 billion in debt (that’s $23,000 per citizen) and things aren’t getting any better. The summer sell-off in the Puerto Rican bond market hurt the already ailing territory and effectively shut it out from issuing new debt. Instead it’s funding essential operations with unsustainable, short-term solutions like bank credit. This is a problem that should worry many Americans because a large portion of the territories' bonds are held by U.S. mutual funds.


Related: Is Puerto Rico the Greece of the Caribbean?


Unlike Detroit, Puerto Rico is unable to file for bankruptcy, and because it is considered an unincorporated territory, it can’t be bailed out by the U.S. government. “The territorial clause of the Constitution says only Congress can come in and help,” says Donahue. Considering the current state of the federal government that seems unlikely at best.


The Executive Branch is also able to legally help through economic development, something the Puerto Rican Senate president hinted at in a conference moderated by Donahue earlier this week. The Treasury, however, has clarified that it will issue no assistance plan for the territory.


Puerto Rican officials, for their part, are doing all that they can to turn the territory around. “They’re moving in the right direction,” says Donahue. “The rating agencies are being very patient with them...but they have really hit a level where if they go further they’re into the junk bond category. The issue is whether Puerto Rico will continue to maintain market access and whether the buyers believe what the rating agencies are saying.”


Tell Us What You Think!


Send an email to: thedailyticker@yahoo.com.


You can also look us up on Twitter and Facebook.


More from The Daily Ticker


John McAfee: Of Course I’m a Little Crazy, Entrepreneurs Have to Be


Shutdown Could Literally Make America Sick


Why the Microsoft Surface Tablet is ‘Awkward and Confused’



Source: http://finance.yahoo.com/blogs/daily-ticker/detroit-great-financial-shape-compared-puerto-rico-124315399.html
Tags: once upon a time   jessica biel   kobe bryant   tesla model s   emma roberts  

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Suspicious vehicle found near the White House

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The Secret Service is investigating a suspicious vehicle parked near the White House.

Streets around the White House were shut down Wednesday morning, and Metro says one entrance to the McPherson Square subway station is closed while authorities investigate.

Buses are also expected to experience delays in both directions.

Secret Service spokesman Brian Leary says the vehicle was reported just before 5 a.m. in the area of the White House and the Department of Veterans Affairs. He declined to say what made the vehicle suspicious.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/suspicious-vehicle-found-near-white-house-101355124.html

the vow the voice season 2 ron paul maine safe house jay z and beyonce baby cpac powell

Friday, March 29, 2013

"Boardwalk Empire" taps "Killing" vet Eric Ladin to play J. Edgar Hoover

By Tim Kenneally

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Could the feds be preparing to close in on Nucky Thompson?

Eric Ladin - aka, campaign manager Jamie Wright on the AMC drama "The Killing" - has been cast in the upcoming fourth season of HBO's period gangster drama, starring Steve Buscemi as Atlantic City kingpin Thompson.

Ladin will play FBI director J. Edgar Hoover - an addition to the show that just might prove to be problematic to Thompson as he attempts to strengthen his position in the world of organized crime.

The HBO drama has been bolstering its cast for the fourth season. "Casino Royale" actor Jeffrey Wright has been cast as Harlem kingpin Valentin Narcisse, while Ron Livingston has signed on for the season as Roy Philips, who comes to town and captures the fancy of Gillian Darmody (Gretchen Mol).

In addition to the upcoming stint on "Boardwalk Empire," Ladin also has a role in the dramedy "Highland Park," which stars Danny Glover, "Twilight" alum Billy Burke and Parker Posey.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/boardwalk-empire-taps-killing-vet-eric-ladin-play-234939632.html

cinnamon challenge lou dobbs rock salt david letterman march of dimes

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Violins can mimic the human voice

Mar. 25, 2013 ? For many years, some musical experts have wondered if the sound of the Stradivari and Guarneri violins might incorporate such elements of speech as vowels and consonants. A Texas A&M University researcher has now provided the first evidence that the Italian violin masters tried to impart specific vowel sounds to their violins.

Joseph Nagyvary, professor emeritus in biochemistry at Texas A&M, says of the various vowels he identified in their violins, only two were Italian -- the "i" and "e," while the others were more of French and English origin.

His findings published in the current issue of Savart Journal, a scientific journal of musical instrument acoustics, have the potential to change the way violins are made and how they are priced.

"I expected to find more Italian vowels, what experts call the 'Old Italian' sound actually has the mark of foreign languages," Nagyvary confirms.

Nagyvary has held for decades that the great Italian violin makers, Stradivari and Guarneri del Ges?, produced instruments with a more human-like tonal quality than any others made at the time. To prove his theory, he persuaded the famed violinist Itzhak Perlman to record a scale on his violin, a 1743-dated Guarneri, during a 1987 concert appearance in San Antonio.

For the required comparison, Nagyvary asked Metropolitan Opera soprano Emily Pulley, a former College Station resident, to record her voice singing vowels in an operatic style.

"It has been widely held that violins 'sing' with a female soprano voice. Emily's voice is lustrous and she has the required expertise to sing all vowels of the European languages in a musical scale," Nagyvary explains.

"I analyzed her sound samples by computer for harmonic content and then using state-of-the art phonetic analysis to obtain a 2-D map of the female soprano vowels. Each note of a musical scale on the violin underwent the same analysis, and the results were plotted and mapped against the soprano vowels."

Nagyvary's 25 years of research on the project proved that the sounds of Pulley's voice and the violin's could be located on the same map for identification purposes, and their respective graphic images can be directly compared.

His discoveries are significant for two reasons.

"For 400 years, violin prices have been based almost exclusively on the reputation of the maker -- the label inside of the violin determined the price tag," Nagyvary says. "The sound quality rarely entered into price consideration because it was deemed inaccessible. These findings could change how violins may be valued."

The new graphic images of the violin sound could also become an asset in teaching students to improve the quality of their tone production, he adds.

He says that in recent years, the violins of Guarneri del Ges? have surpassed those made by Stradivari: certain Guarneri violins now sell for something between $10 million to $20 million each.

Nagyvary was the first to prove that Stradivari and Guarneri soaked their instruments in chemicals such as borax and brine to protect them from a worm infestation that was sweeping through Italy in the 1700s. By pure accident, the chemicals used to protect the wood had the unintended result of producing the unique sounds that have been almost impossible to duplicate in the past 400 years, and his findings were supported and verified by the American Chemical Society, the world's largest scientific organization.

The retired Texas A&M professor has himself made violins that included carefully crafted woods soaked in a variety of chemicals.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Texas A&M University.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Joseph Nagyvary. A Comparative Study of Power Spectra and Vowels in Guarneri Violins and Operatic Singing. Savart Journal, Vol 1, No 3 (2013)

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/YODBOwxZoxM/130325135302.htm

joan crawford john goodman kendall marshall whitney houston news sylvia plath whitney houston autopsy results obama trayvon

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Ultra 2013: SpaceGhostPurrp Talks Tattoos and Raider Klan at a ...

SpaceGhostPurrp can be a prickly dude. He's so young, smart, and deep. And all that online attitude. You can't help but envy him his complexity and talent and resent what sometimes comes off as a sense of entitlement.

But when we met up with the Carol City rapper at Ultra Music Festival where he performed a Sunday noon set, we definitely didn't meet a guy who thinks the world owes him something. It's hard to get onstage, at noon at a rave, and take it all very seriously and professionally, but he did.

Purrp seemed shy or hesitant when we started bombarding him with questions about the sexual attractiveness of Scooby-Doo characters, his tattoos, and April Fool's Day, which is his birthday, also known as Purrp Day to those of the Raider Klan.

See also:
-Swedish House Mafia Kicks Off Ultra 2013, "F#$%s Miami in the Pussy"
-Ultra 2013: Snoop Dogg Goes Rasta to Gangsta to Raver, Debuts "No Guns Allowed"
-Ultra 2013: Dog Blood's Boys Noize and Skrillex Debut Two Tracks, Sick New Visuals
-Ultra Music Festival 2013 Weekend Two Day One: The 31-Photo Slideshow

Follow Crossfade on Facebook and Twitter @Crossfade_SFL.

Source: http://blogs.miaminewtimes.com/crossfade/2013/03/spaceghostpurrp_interview_ultra_2013_video.php

rondo

FAA to close 149 control towers to meet budget cuts (reuters)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/293949911?client_source=feed&format=rss

houston weather

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Ride-Sharing Startup SideCar Opens For Business In Washington ...

Residents of our nation?s capital will now get to see what ride-sharing is all about, as San Francisco-based startup SideCar announced today that it is making its service available Washington, D.C. The launch there marks the ninth market that SideCar has launched in, as the company is aggressively expanding across the country. But it also raises questions about how city officials will react to newer transportation services.

As in its other markets, SideCar is launching with a bit of a staggered rollout in D.C. ? the service will initially be available on weekends only, before making rides available more generally during the week. The new city follows a launch in Chicago, Boston, and Brooklyn last week, as SideCar is rolling out around the country. It?s also got drivers in San Francisco, Seattle, Philadelphia, Austin, and Los Angeles.

But the launch in D.C. could prove contentious with local officials, based on their reaction to another transportation service launching there. Previously, Uber had a run-in with the D.C. city council. The city first tried to make the on demand car service prohibitively expensive with a so-called ?Uber amendment? that would have set a minimum rate it could charge. That amendment ended up getting shelved, allowing Uber to continue operating in the nation?s capital.

After months of negotiations, Uber later got the blessing of the D.C. city council for its on-demand mobile apps, with the passage of new rules that legitimized its services there. But while the D.C. e-hail rules will allow Uber to offer its e-hail services in the city?s capital, it?s less clear that they will work for ride-sharing services like SideCar.

That?s because the D.C. rules allow for users to hail rides with mobile apps and allows providers to charge based on distance travelled, but require drivers to be licensed as taxi or limo operators. As a result, SideCar?s community drivers wouldn?t qualify under the same rules.

No doubt SideCar is prepared for a fight. After a run-in with local officials in Austin, the company sued the local department of transportation there for prohibiting its ride-share service from launching around SXSW. It?s also run up against problems in Philadelphia, where three of its drivers had their cars impounded.

Nevertheless, SideCar continues to operate in those markets, and it?s pretty well capitalized to continue fighting legal battles. It raised $10 million in Series A financing from Lightspeed Venture Partners and others, and has hired a head of public policy in order to face these challenges.


SideCar is a real-time ridesharing community that connects drivers with spare seats in their car to passengers who need instant rides across the city, via a user-friendly proprietary smartphone technology. It helps drivers because they use their own car and help cover the costs of maintenance - all while meeting people in the city. Meanwhile for passengers it makes it easy to get a ride, cheaper than alternatives, and gives them a unique personal interaction.

? Learn more

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2013/03/22/sidecar-washington-d-c/

Alexis Wright Zumba binder full of women Microsoft Surface Candy Crowley

Invasive species: Understanding the threat before it's too late

Mar. 22, 2013 ? Catching rides on cargo ships and fishing boats, many invasive species are now covering our shorelines and compromising the existence of our native marine life.

In a study published in Ecology Letters, Northeastern University Prof. David Kimbro and his team examine what factors allow some invasive species to survive in their new environments and others to fail.

Why we should care

Once invasive species arrive in their new location, they begin multiplying, and in some cases, overpowering the local marine life. This can have a very strong impact on our ecosystems and businesses, such as fisheries.

Understanding what makes these invaders thrive or fail in their new environments is not only key to preventing the collapse of local marine life, but also figuring out ways to make some invaders work to benefit their new locations. "Not all invasive species are bad. In fact, we need some of them to succeed. But invasions are certainly a double-edged sword because many invasions cost us a lot in terms of money and natural heritage."

Prof. Kimbro, currently stationed at Northeastern University's Marine Science Center in Nahant, collected synthesized research on marine diversity reports published from 1997-2012 to better understand the specific biological and environmental properties that allow invasive species to succeed or fail.

"For the past 15 years, marine scientists have conducted a lot of experiments that have taught us a lot about specific invasions in many different places. But unlike terrestrial scientists, no one had pieced all of these unique stories together to see if they collectively tell us a general and useful message. And until we see cattle swimming and kudzu growing in the ocean, we can't just recycle the messages from land studies and use them to manage our coastal systems."

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Northeastern University College of Science.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. David L. Kimbro, Brian S. Cheng, Edwin D. Grosholz. Biotic resistance in marine environments. Ecology Letters, 2013; DOI: 10.1111/ele.12106

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/O03dNKVD7tc/130322125354.htm

Joseph Gordon-Levitt space shuttle Torrey Smith Brother fiona apple awkward awkward CJ Spiller

Hard Candy Hard Shell Case for 15-inch MacBook Pro Retina

By Ahmer Kazi If you're anything like me, your first few months of owning a brand new laptop are characterized by an underlying sense of fear that it could be damaged at any moment. If the system in question happens to be as gorgeous (and expensive) as a MacBook Pro with a Retina Display, that uneasiness can be magnified. The Hard Candy Hard Shell Case for 15-inch MacBook Pro Retina ($59.99 list) provides a decent panacea for similarly neurotic folks as well as devil-may-care users that are simply interested in protecting their investment from dings and scratches.

At its most basic level, the Hard Shell Case is a form-fitting shell that can easily be put on and taken off of your MacBook Pro. While it's available in four different colors (black, blue, red, and the lime of our review unit), and each is made out of a transparent material that allows you to show off the very handsome system being protected. As is often the case with protective gear, your system obviously doesn't look as good with the Hard Shell Case on it as it does unadorned. But cases aren't meant to make systems look more attractive. Rather, they're designed to preserve that "new computer" look for as long as possible, presumably to enjoy it during those brief, rare moments when it's being moved from one case to another.

The Hard Shell Case's polycarbonate material is tough enough to withstand the scratches and scuffs that will invariably crop up whenever you toss it into your laptop bag. In other words, its main job is to protect your system and, for the most part, it gets the job done. Still, plenty of folks don't want to see a case each time they use their laptop. If you fall into that camp and your primary concern is protecting your system mainly when it's in transit, you'd be better served with a removable laptop sleeve along the lines of the Speck PixelSleeve for MacBook Air.

The Hard Shell Case consists of two main components: a bottom portion for the MacBook Pro's underside and a corresponding section for the lid. After placing both of the Hard Shell Case's main components onto your system, you secure them with Hard Candy's corner snap mechanism. The corner snap mechanism is a separate plastic strip that clicks into each portion of the Hard Shell Case, locking the case into place while protecting the system's edges. Since corner snap mechanisms can easily be pulled off, removing the Hard Shell Case also requires very little effort. Unlike other cases that simply grip the sides of your system to the point where removing it can damage the chassis, the Hard Shell Case's intuitive design poses no such risks. At the same time, though, the corner snap mechanism adds about 5mm to each side of your MacBook. While these little "bumpers" are hardly noticeable, they still contribute to added bulk.

In use, the Hard Shell Case fit on my MacBook Pro as snugly as a glove. Moreover, the unobtrusive corner snaps don't get in the way of the Retina Display's bezel-free design. More importantly, the Hard Shell Case doesn't block any of your system's ports or its side air vents so users need not worry about overheating or having to toss out their flash drives.

The Hard Candy Hard Shell Case for 15-inch MacBook Pro Retina is a simple and relatively inexpensive way to protect your MacBook Pro from scratches and scuffs. It's not the prettiest outfit to dress your system in, but it gets the job done in preserving that "new laptop look" that we all love.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/yE9ZVS7xSYg/0,2817,2416927,00.asp

bachelor finale courtney robertson ben flajnik hunger games premiere red meat bachelor ben jon hamm kim kardashian