Sunday, April 28, 2013

Google Drive


What started as a free online alternative to Microsoft Office has quickly become one of the most impressive services for creating, editing, saving, syncing, and collaborating on documents. Google Drive (freemium) has long impressed me in just how far it goes toward helping groups of people work together on files simultaneously. Some new features rolling out in a recent update add even more support for teamwork.

It hasn't been long since Google Docs rebranded itself as Google Drive, so allow me to briefly recap: Google Docs took on the new name after it added local file syncing to its service. In other words, Google Docs?ahem, Drive?now works more like Dropbox , SugarSync, or any other file-syncing service you care to name, while still retaining the core office productivity apps. In that sense, its closest competitor may well be Microsoft SkyDrive, which also has online document creation tools.

With Google Drive, you can upload files to your Google account, convert them to Google's file format to edit them online, create new docs in the Web interface, collaborate with other users in real time, and export the finished products to more standard file formats, such as .doc, .rtf, .pdf, and so on. The latest round of changes makes working with others in real time even more intuitive, because you can see their profile pictures on the screen, where formerly you only saw a line of text at the top and a color code indicating who else was looking at or editing the file.

Because of these wide-ranging capabilities and its dedication to collaborative document editing, Google Drive remains a PCMag Editors' Choice. We have no hesitation recommending Google Drive?although it is important to understand how one of the new features works. The feature in question could potentially reveal your identity to others, but managing it is simple when you know how it works. And as much as Google Drive is an excellent platform and service, that doesn't mean it's the only file-syncing service you should use either.

What's New in Drive?
The newest change in Google Drive, which will roll out to users slowly, is that Google+ profile pictures of collaborators now appear at the top of the file when they're viewing or editing a document. Formerly, when collaborators opened a document, you would see a line of text reading "2 other viewers" at the top right, which opened to reveal their names or email addresses and a color code for each person. For example, if I invited Maria to edit a spreadsheet with me, I would see her name appear next to a pink square at the top of the spreadsheet any time she opened it. As she moved through cells, they would appear highlighted in pink.

The new feature adds Maria's profile picture at the top of the document and would let me add her to my Google+ circles. There's also now an integrated group chat feature that lets multiple collaborators hold discussions via text while they're working.

Another fairly big addition is offline access to all your Drive materials if you're using Google Chrome OS. To enable this setting, go to your Google Drive page and look under the "More" button the left for the offline access setting. Turning on this feature lets you read and edit your files offline; changes will sync to the cloud the next time you connect.

Privacy
The toughest criticism Google Drive has faced amount to concerns over privacy and IP ownership. The new collaboration features could put your face in front of strangers if you're not careful, but it's very easy to manage this potential problem with an ounce of care.

Some Google Drive owners keep their documents open to the public, and if you're signed into your Google account when you view these files, other users will be able to see your picture and name. When looking at public files, it's a better idea to log out of Google, or use a different browser, and maybe also turn on incognito features if your browser has them to keep yourself anonymous. Anonymous users are assigned random profile pictures of animals instead, such as a dolphin, dinosaur, or beaver.

My feeling on the matter of privacy in Google Drive is this: If you are comfortable using Gmail, you should be comfortable with Drive. If you are skeptical of Google's user agreements, don't use Google products. For more in-depth analysis, see "Google Drive's Terms of Use: Lazy People Should Worry."

Main Features of Drive
The gist of Google Drive, and the main attraction to it, is it can store your files in the cloud where they are accessible to you and your collaborators, and become highly searchable.

One feature related to "search" stands out: Google's ability to scan a photo and "read" it using optical character recognition, or identify it using its own technology. The only other app of this kind that uses built-in OCR nearly as well is Evernote , although you have to have a paid Premium account to use it.

Google also claims Drive allows videos to be uploaded, but we encountered some issues with that part of the service.

Like many other general file-syncing services, Google Drive works better for document files than multimedia. It's not ideally meant to be a music and video streaming service?for that kind of product, you'll likely need a paid service and device, such as the Verbatim Mediashare Mini, although SugarSync does offer some neat capabilities and support for streaming iTunes music. Amazon Cloud also offers some special support for music and movies. However, within the Google universe you can use Google Play in tandem with Drive (more on that in a bit).

Carryover Features from Google Docs
The core services and functionality that were in Google Docs, namely, a free online office suite where files are also hosted, remain intact in Drive. Google Docs is one of the best known free alternative to Microsoft Office, although it's entirely Web-based?there's no software to install to use it (the only downloadable part is the app for local syncing with Drive).

As with Microsoft Office, Google Drive lets you create word processing documents, spreadsheets, presentation documents, forms, vector drawings, and now in beta, tables. Google hosts your files, too, so when you log in, all your files are there. You can sort them into customizable folders, which appear along a left pane, or just search for what you need, using a standard search bar in the Web app.

When you create a document in Google Drive, the file format used is Google's own. However, the system couldn't be more flexible. You can export Google documents to more standardized files formats, like .doc, .rtf, .ppt, .pdf, and more; and you can import practically any document with the option of keeping it in its native format (which may limit your ability to edit it) or translating it into a Google doc file, which makes it editable in the online service. I've certainly had my share of moments when I was stuck on a computer that didn't have Microsoft Office at the very moment someone emailed me an important file that required my feedback pronto. Google Drive saved the day. I could open the file in GoogleDrive, edit it, and export the revised file back out to its original form. Occasionally some formatting will go haywire during this process, but it gets the job done.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/hpQ0vAJfEIY/0,2817,2403546,00.asp

north korea news giuliana and bill giuliana and bill bill rancic

Saturday, April 27, 2013

Boeing ready to build seven Dreamliners a month by mid-year

WARSAW, April 25 (Reuters) - Borussia Dortmund striker Robert Lewandowski played down his stunning one-man demolition of Real Madrid, saying he had played better than Wednesday's four-goal masterclass. The Poland international scored all his team's goals in a 4-1 win over the nine-times champions in their Champions League semi-final first leg. "In the second half Real Madrid did not know how they should play, at some moments they were helpless," Lewandowski told the Polish pay-TV platform nc+. "We took the first step (towards the final). "I felt confident, but there were even better matches. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/boeing-ready-build-seven-dreamliners-month-mid-034043974.html

courtney mercury retrograde bath salts heart shaped box

Eva Longoria Talks About Life After Divorce | Video - PopSugar

Eva Longoria chatted with Dr. Oz recently, and in the interview that airs today, the actress reflected on her painful 2011 divorce from NBA player Tony Parker. Eva admitted that while she might have looked great from the outside, she was really struggling on the inside. Hear Eva explain why depression surprised her, plus Nicki Minaj's silver-screen debut, Tribeca Film Festival winners, and a Scream TV show on the way!

View Transcript??

Source: http://www.popsugar.com/Eva-Longoria-Talks-About-Life-After-Divorce-Video-29911971

earth day 2012 jon jones rashad evans ufc jones vs evans watergate

Lumia 521 for T-Mobile arrives early at HSN on April 27th for $149.95, general availability on May 22nd

Lumia 521 for TMobile arrives at HSN on April 27th, Microsoft Store on May 11th

Wanting to get first dibs on the Lumia 521 for T-Mobile? If so, it looks that you may need to tune into HSN on April 27th, because -- strange as it sounds -- the television network is offering the earliest access that we know of. Here, you'll be able to score T-Mobile's variant of the Lumia 520 for $149.95 off-contract, which includes a bonus car charger and screen protector. Following its arrival at HSN, the Lumia 521 will then hit Microsoft retail stores and Walmart on May 11th, with the same off-contract pricing. As you may recall, a previous leak from TmoNews suggested the smartphone would hit T-Mobile stores yesterday, but this date has come and gone without official availability (or even an announcement) from the carrier. Fret not, though, because we've done a bit of digging, and our sources tell us that the Lumia 521 is currently set to hit general availability on May 22nd, which by all measures should include all T-Mobile stores. Naturally, you now have some options to weigh, even if one of them might cost an ounce of your pride.

Filed under: , , ,

Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/25/lumia-521-for-t-mobile-availability-dates/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

percy harvin percy harvin mike wallace mike wallace

Renault hopes to have approval for Chinese plant by summer: CEO

PARIS (Reuters) - Renault-Nissan hopes to receive final approval from Beijing by the summer to build its first Renault plant in China, Chief Executive Carlos Ghosn said on Saturday.

Ghosn had said last month he expected final government approval for the plant by the end of the year.

"Renault already has a plan for China, which is ready, and currently being negotiated with the Chinese government, and I hope we will have all agreements before the summer," Ghosn told French radio Europe 1.

He added that French President Francois Hollande's visit to China this week would help the carmaker over the administrative hurdles.

(Reporting by Gilles Guillaume; Writing Sybille de La Hamaide; Editing by Greg Mahlich)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/renault-hopes-approval-chinese-plant-summer-ceo-091801999.html

Sweetest Day optimal Samantha Steele Espn goog

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Court: Can human genes be patented?

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The Supreme Court seemed worried Monday about the idea of companies patenting genes that can be found inside the human body, as it heard arguments in a case that could profoundly reshape U.S. medical research and the fight against diseases like breast and ovarian cancer.

The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has been awarding patents on human genes for almost 30 years, but opponents of Myriad Genetics Inc.'s patents on two genes linked to increased risk of breast and ovarian cancer say patent protection should not be given to something that can be found inside the human body.

"Finding a new use for a product of nature, if you don't change the product of nature, is not patentable. If I find a new way of taking gold and making earrings out of it, that doesn't entitle me to a patent on gold. If I find a new way of using lead, it doesn't entitle me to a patent on lead," lawyer Christopher Hansen said.

Allowing companies like Myriad to patent human genes or parts of human genes will slow down or cripple lifesaving medical research like in the battle against breast cancer, he said.

But companies have billions of dollars of investment and years of research on the line, with Myriad arguing that without the ability to recoup their investment through the profits that patents bring, breakthrough scientific discoveries needed to combat all kind of medical maladies wouldn't happen.

That concerned several justices. "Why shouldn't we worry that Myriad or companies like it will just say, 'Well, you know, we're not going to do this work anymore?'" Justice Elena Kagan said.

Hansen said that a company could get recognition for its work and that money for research would always be available, a statement that Justice Anthony Kennedy said wasn't sufficient. "I don't think we can decide the case on, 'Don't worry about investment. It'll come,'" Kennedy said.

The Supreme Court has already said that abstract ideas, natural phenomena and laws of nature cannot be given a patent, which gives an inventor the right to prevent others from making, using or selling a novel device, process or application.

Myriad has used its patents to develop its BRACAnalysis test looks for mutations on the breast cancer predisposition gene, or BRCA. Those mutations are associated with much greater risks of breast and ovarian cancer.

Women with a faulty gene have a three to seven times greater risk of developing breast cancer and a higher risk of ovarian cancer. Men can also carry a BRCA mutation, raising their risk of prostate, pancreatic and other types of cancer. The mutations are most common in people of eastern European Jewish descent.

Myriad sells the only BRCA gene test.

The American Civil Liberties Union and other groups challenged Myriad's patents, arguing that genes couldn't be patented, and in March 2010 a New York district court agreed. But the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has now twice ruled that genes can be patented. In Myriad's case, it's because the isolated DNA has a "markedly different chemical structure" from DNA within the body.

But the ACLU is arguing that isolating the DNA molecules doesn't stop them from being DNA molecules, which they say aren't patentable.

Justices attempted to break the argument down to an everyday level by discussing things like chocolate chip cookies, baseball bats and Amazonian jungle plants in attempts to understand the complicated issues. For example, Justice Sonia Sotomayor said if a new way was found to extract the ingredients of a cookie, a company still wouldn't be able to patent flour, eggs or salt.

"I can't imagine getting a patent simply on the basic items of salt, flour and eggs, simply because I've created a new use or a new product from those ingredients," she said.

Myriad lawyer Gregory A. Castanias argued that justices could think about their invention like a baseball bat. "A baseball bat doesn't exist until it's isolated from a tree. But that's still the product of human invention to decide where to begin the bat and where to end the bat," he said.

But that didn't work for Chief Justice John Roberts.

"The baseball bat is quite different. You don't look at a tree and say, well, I've cut the branch here and cut it here and all of a sudden I've got a baseball bat. You have to invent it, if you will," Roberts said. "You don't have to invent the particular segment of the strand. You just have to cut it off."

The court will rule before the end of the summer.

The case is 12-398, Association for Molecular Pathology v. Myriad Genetics, Inc.

.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/court-human-genes-patented-073805381--finance.html

amber rose nba trade deadline diane lane drew peterson

PFT: Favre hopes for Green Bay return 'one day'

imagesGetty Images

As more and more teams become aware of the risks associated with the potent painkiller Toradol, more and more team doctors are shying away from giving it to players.

As part of a thorough look at the use of medication by NFL teams to allow players to suit up on Sundays, Sally Jenkins and Rick Maese of the Washington Post explain that some teams have decided to use it less frequently, or not at all.

Rams physician Matt Matava decided after taking a closer look at Toradol?s side effects and balancing the risks with the benefits to ?essentially eliminate[]? it from the team?s locker room.

?We had two players come up to me at the very first game and said, ?I?m here for my Toradol shot,?? Dr. Matava said. ?I said, ?We?re not using it anymore.?? ?Okay, can I have something else??? I never heard one more word about it the rest of the season.?

Other teams now avoid it ?whenever possible,? including the Packers, Falcons, and Redskins.

The drug first gained wide notice in January 2012, via a segment from HBO?s Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel.? Players like Brian Urlacher told Andrea Kremer that he hadn?t been told about potential kidney damage or gastrointestinal bleeding.? Once aware of the potential risks, Urlacher said he?d still take it.

Players balked at efforts to restrict the use of Toradol in 2012, and then a grievance was filed after at least one team required players receiving it to sign a waiver of legal claims that among other things referred players to Wikipedia for more information about the drug.

For the men who play the game, it?s a delicate balance.? They want to be able to perform without pain, but they also need to be fully aware of the risks.

The problem is that, because the drug wasn?t designed to help football players feel invincible on game days, the full range of risks isn?t completely known.? At some point, the doctors entrusted with player care must be willing to say that it?s better to not be able to play than to artificially mask pain with a drug that can do more harm that good over the long haul.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/04/13/favre-wants-to-make-a-green-bay-appearance-one-day/related/

rondo morris claiborne mothers day gifts clippers

ongoing education - master v etc - Cruisers & Sailing Forums

Hi
Im interested in continuing qualifications and wondering about appropriate courses. I currently hold my coxswains certificate (Master on a fishing or trading vessel less than 12 m in length for inshore operations (within 15 n miles) )Coxswain Courses - 17 days and include all course requirements:
Nautical Knowledge
Engineering Knowledge
Onboard Tuition
Elements of Shipboard Safety (Level 2 First Aid, Liferafting & Firefighting)
Marine Radio Operators Certificate of Proficiency
What would follow this? Master V certificate or is there another internationally recognised licence? Is the yachtmaster offshore of any additional value to what I have already done?
Also I would be interested in completing a course while sailing the Med with my girlfriend. Are there any instructors that could come aboard with us to complete a course?
Thanks for any info
Monte.

'; } } '' } if (google_ads[0].bidtype == "CPC") { /* insert this snippet for each ad call */ google_adnum = google_adnum + google_ads.length; } document.write(s); return; } google_ad_client = 'ca-pub-7757781251671730'; google_ad_channel = '1963435248'; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '6'; google_ad_type = 'text'; google_feedback = 'on'; // -->

__________________
wanted..witty signature..

Source: http://www.cruisersforum.com/forums/f90/ongoing-education-master-v-etc-101843.html

madonna super bowl halftime kelly clarkson super bowl giants super bowl 2012 half time show

Monday, April 15, 2013

Majuli Journal: Indian Island Shrinks as Brahmaputra Swells and Sways

[unable to retrieve full-text content]The Brahmaputra River, a critical laboratory in climate studies, is fast eroding an island in Assam that it has encircled and sustained for ages.
    


Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/15/world/asia/indian-island-shrinks-as-brahmaputra-swells-and-sways.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Snoop Lion London 2012 Table Tennis badminton Dominique Dawes

Founder of Wienerschnitzel chain John Galardi dies

John Galardi, founder of the hot dog chain Wienerschnitzel, poses for a portrait in Lakewood, Calif., on Aug. 10, 2012. He is holding a chili dog. (AP Photo/Francine Orr, Los Angeles Times)

John Galardi, founder of the hot dog chain Wienerschnitzel, poses for a portrait in Lakewood, Calif., on Aug. 10, 2012. He is holding a chili dog. (AP Photo/Francine Orr, Los Angeles Times)

(AP) ? John Galardi, who opened a Wienerschnitzel hot dog stand in Los Angeles in 1961 and expanded it into a chain with more than 300 outlets in 10 U.S. states, has died, his company said Sunday.

Irvine, Calif.-based Galardi Group, parent company of Wienerschnitzel, Tastee Freez and The Original Hamburger Stand, said in a statement that Galardi died of pancreatic cancer on Saturday. He was 75.

A native of Kansas City, Galardi began working for Taco Bell founder Glen Bell at the restaurant Taco Tia in Pasadena in 1961, according to his company biography.

At age 23, looking to carve out a niche amid a fast-food landscape glutted with hamburger, chicken and taco restaurants, he opened his first restaurant, known as Der Wienerschnitzel, specializing in hot dogs and chili.

The stand in the Wilmington section of Los Angeles was the first of what would become a chain of some 350 restaurants selling more than 120 million hot dogs annually, the company statement said.

Most outlets are in California but they are found throughout the U.S. Southwest and as far east as Louisiana.

Galardi expanded the company to include The Original Hamburger Stand and ice-cream chain Tastee Freez.

He remained chairman of the Galardi Group until his death but handed over day-to-day operations to Chief Operating Officer Dennis Tase in 1993.

"Galardi built a brand representative of a time when life was simpler, a brand that holds a special place in the hearts of so many families in America," Tase said in a statement. "He will be deeply missed."

Galardi is survived by his wife Judane Galardi and four children.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-04-15-Obit-Wienerschnitzel%20Founder/id-c881746b81984b4b9311870e6bd04ff6

hcg drops reason rally mad hatter azerbaijan

Plant protein puzzle solved

Plant protein puzzle solved [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 15-Apr-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Mick Kulikowski
mick_kulikowski@ncsu.edu
919-515-8387
North Carolina State University

3-D model provides structure of material that provides plant structure

Researchers from North Carolina State University believe they have solved a puzzle that has vexed science since plants first appeared on Earth.

In a groundbreaking paper published online this week in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the researchers provide the first three-dimensional model of an enzyme that links a simple sugar, glucose, into long-chain cellulose, the basic building block within plant cell walls that gives plants structure. Cellulose is nature's most abundant renewable biomaterial and an important resource for production of biofuels that represent alternatives to fossil fuels.

New understanding of the structure of the modeled plant enzyme, a cellulose synthase, may allow researchers to genetically engineer plants and trees for better cotton fibers or stronger wood, for example. From a materials engineering perspective, the findings can also be used to create beneficial nanocrystals with desired properties and functions.

"This structural model gives us insight into how cellulose synthesis works," said Dr. Yaroslava Yingling, an NC State materials science and engineering professor who is the corresponding author on the study. "In the long term, it could result in new genetically modified plants that can be tweaked to induce specific engineered properties of cellulose."

The study examined the structure of one cellulose synthase found in cotton fibers. The researchers compared their model with the structure of a similar enzyme in bacteria and found that the proteins were similarly folded in key regions required for cellulose synthesis. In the lab rat of the plant family Arabidopsis thaliana, or mustard weed the researchers identified potential causes for defective cellulose synthesis in mutant plants by making analogies to the modeled cotton cellulose synthase.

"Without the enzyme structure, you can't make strategically designed, rational projections about how to make beneficial changes to the proteins but now you can," said Dr. Candace Haigler, an NC State crop scientist and plant biologist who co-authored the study. "In the future we could make cellulose easier to break down into biofuels while ensuring that the plants themselves are able to grow well."

Latsavongsakda Sethaphong, an NC State doctoral student, co-authored the study, as did researchers from Penn State University, the University of Virginia, the University of Ontario Institute of Technology and the University of Kentucky. The computational research was supported as part of The Center for LignoCellulose Structure and Formation, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science.

###

Note to editors: An abstract of the paper follows.

Tertiary Model of a Plant Cellulose Synthase
Authors: Latsavongsakda Sethaphong, Candace H. Haigler and Yaroslava G. Yingling, North Carolina State University; James D. Kubicki, Penn State University; Jochen Zimmer, University of Virginia; Dario Bonetta, University of Ontario Institute of Technology; Seth DeBolt, University of Kentucky
Published: Online April 15, 2013, in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Abstract: A three-dimensional atomistic model of a plant cellulose synthase (CESA) has remained elusive despite over forty years of experimental effort. Here we report a computationally predicted three dimensional structure of 506 amino acids of cotton CESA within the cytosolic region. Comparison of the predicted plant CESA structure with the solved structure of a bacterial cellulose-synthesizing protein validates the overall fold of the modeled glycosyltransferase (GT) domain. The co-aligned plant and bacterial GT domains share a six-stranded -sheet, five ?-helices, and conserved motifs similar to those required for catalysis in other GT-2 glycosyltransferases. Extending beyond the cross-kingdom similarities related to cellulose polymerization, the predicted structure of cotton CESA reveals that plant specific modules ('plant conserved region', P-CR, and 'class specific region', CSR) fold into distinct subdomains on the periphery of the catalytic region. Computational results support the importance of the P-CR and/or CSR in CESA oligomerization to form the multimeric cellulose-synthesis complexes that are characteristic of plants. Relatively high sequence conservation between plant CESAs allowed mapping of known mutations and two novel mutations that perturb cellulose synthesis in Arabidopsis thaliana to their analogous positions in the modeled structure. Most of these mutations sites are near the predicted catalytic region, and the confluence of other mutation sites supports the existence of previously undefined functional nodes within the catalytic core of CESA. Overall, the predicted tertiary structure provides a platform for the biochemical engineering of plant CESAs.


[ 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.


Plant protein puzzle solved [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 15-Apr-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Mick Kulikowski
mick_kulikowski@ncsu.edu
919-515-8387
North Carolina State University

3-D model provides structure of material that provides plant structure

Researchers from North Carolina State University believe they have solved a puzzle that has vexed science since plants first appeared on Earth.

In a groundbreaking paper published online this week in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the researchers provide the first three-dimensional model of an enzyme that links a simple sugar, glucose, into long-chain cellulose, the basic building block within plant cell walls that gives plants structure. Cellulose is nature's most abundant renewable biomaterial and an important resource for production of biofuels that represent alternatives to fossil fuels.

New understanding of the structure of the modeled plant enzyme, a cellulose synthase, may allow researchers to genetically engineer plants and trees for better cotton fibers or stronger wood, for example. From a materials engineering perspective, the findings can also be used to create beneficial nanocrystals with desired properties and functions.

"This structural model gives us insight into how cellulose synthesis works," said Dr. Yaroslava Yingling, an NC State materials science and engineering professor who is the corresponding author on the study. "In the long term, it could result in new genetically modified plants that can be tweaked to induce specific engineered properties of cellulose."

The study examined the structure of one cellulose synthase found in cotton fibers. The researchers compared their model with the structure of a similar enzyme in bacteria and found that the proteins were similarly folded in key regions required for cellulose synthesis. In the lab rat of the plant family Arabidopsis thaliana, or mustard weed the researchers identified potential causes for defective cellulose synthesis in mutant plants by making analogies to the modeled cotton cellulose synthase.

"Without the enzyme structure, you can't make strategically designed, rational projections about how to make beneficial changes to the proteins but now you can," said Dr. Candace Haigler, an NC State crop scientist and plant biologist who co-authored the study. "In the future we could make cellulose easier to break down into biofuels while ensuring that the plants themselves are able to grow well."

Latsavongsakda Sethaphong, an NC State doctoral student, co-authored the study, as did researchers from Penn State University, the University of Virginia, the University of Ontario Institute of Technology and the University of Kentucky. The computational research was supported as part of The Center for LignoCellulose Structure and Formation, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science.

###

Note to editors: An abstract of the paper follows.

Tertiary Model of a Plant Cellulose Synthase
Authors: Latsavongsakda Sethaphong, Candace H. Haigler and Yaroslava G. Yingling, North Carolina State University; James D. Kubicki, Penn State University; Jochen Zimmer, University of Virginia; Dario Bonetta, University of Ontario Institute of Technology; Seth DeBolt, University of Kentucky
Published: Online April 15, 2013, in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Abstract: A three-dimensional atomistic model of a plant cellulose synthase (CESA) has remained elusive despite over forty years of experimental effort. Here we report a computationally predicted three dimensional structure of 506 amino acids of cotton CESA within the cytosolic region. Comparison of the predicted plant CESA structure with the solved structure of a bacterial cellulose-synthesizing protein validates the overall fold of the modeled glycosyltransferase (GT) domain. The co-aligned plant and bacterial GT domains share a six-stranded -sheet, five ?-helices, and conserved motifs similar to those required for catalysis in other GT-2 glycosyltransferases. Extending beyond the cross-kingdom similarities related to cellulose polymerization, the predicted structure of cotton CESA reveals that plant specific modules ('plant conserved region', P-CR, and 'class specific region', CSR) fold into distinct subdomains on the periphery of the catalytic region. Computational results support the importance of the P-CR and/or CSR in CESA oligomerization to form the multimeric cellulose-synthesis complexes that are characteristic of plants. Relatively high sequence conservation between plant CESAs allowed mapping of known mutations and two novel mutations that perturb cellulose synthesis in Arabidopsis thaliana to their analogous positions in the modeled structure. Most of these mutations sites are near the predicted catalytic region, and the confluence of other mutation sites supports the existence of previously undefined functional nodes within the catalytic core of CESA. Overall, the predicted tertiary structure provides a platform for the biochemical engineering of plant CESAs.


[ 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/2013-04/ncsu-ppp041513.php

dr oz sag awards rajon rondo brazil

Memory effect now also found in lithium-ion batteries

Apr. 12, 2013 ? Due to their high energy density, lithium-ion batteries are used in many commercial electronic appliances. They are also believed to exhibit no memory effect. That's how experts call a deviation in the voltage of the battery that can limit the usability of the stored energy as well as the ability to determine the state of charge of the battery reliably. Scientists at the Paul Scherrer Institute PSI, and the Toyota Central R&D Labs, Inc. in Japan have now however discovered a memory effect in a lithium-ion battery. This finding is particularly relevant for the use of lithium-ion batteries in the electric vehicle market.

The work was published today in the scientific journal Nature Materials.

Many of our everyday devices that get their energy supply from a battery, whilst not always being as "smart" as they are described in the adverts, often come equipped with a kind of memory. For example, a battery powered shaver or electric toothbrush that is recharged before the battery runs out, can later take revenge on the prudent user. The battery appears to remember that you have only taken part of its storage capacity -- and eventually no longer supplies its full energy. Experts refer to this as a "memory effect," which comes about because the working voltage of the battery drops over time because of incomplete charging-discharging cycles. This means that despite the battery still being discharged, the voltage it supplies is sometimes too low to drive the device in question. The memory effect therefore has two negative consequences: firstly, the usable capacity of the battery is reduced, and secondly the correlation between the voltage and the charge status is shifted, so the latter cannot be determined reliably on the basis of voltage.

The memory effect has long been known to exist in Nickel-Cadmium- and Nickel-metal hydride batteries. Ever since lithium-ion batteries started to be successfully marketed in the 1990s, the existence of the memory effect in this type of battery had been ruled out. Incorrectly, as this new study indicates.

Consequences of the Memory Effect for Electric and Hybrid Vehicles

The memory effect and its associated abnormal working voltage deviation have now been confirmed for one of the most common materials used as the positive electrode in lithium-ion batteries, lithium-iron phosphate (LiFePO4). With lithium-iron phosphate, the voltage remains practically unchanged over a large range of the state of charge. This means that even a small anomaly in the operating voltage could be misinterpreted as a major change in the state of charge. Or, to put it another way: when the state of charge is determined from the voltage a large error can be caused by a small deviation in the voltage.

The existence of a memory effect is particularly relevant in the context of the anticipated steps towards using lithium-ion batteries in the electric mobility sector. In hybrid cars in particular, the effect can arise during the many cycles of charging/discharging that occur during their normal operation. In such vehicles, the battery is partially recharged during each braking operation by the engine running in a generator mode. It is in turn discharged, and usually only partially, to assist the engine during acceleration phases. The numerous successive cycles of partial charging and discharging lead to individual small memory effects adding up to a large memory effect, as this new study demonstrates. This leads to an error in the estimate of the current state of charge of the battery, in cases where the state of charge is calculated by software on the basis of the current value of the voltage.

A microscopic explanation

The researchers also examined the causes of the memory effect at a microscopic level. The electrode material -- in this case lithium-iron phosphate (LiFePO4) -- consists of a large number of small, micrometer-sized particles which are charged and discharged individually one after the other. Researchers refer to this model of charging and discharging as the "many particles model." Charging proceeds particle by particle, and involves the release of lithium ions. A fully charged particle is therefore lithium-free and comprises only iron phosphate (FePO4). Discharge in turn involves the re-incorporation of lithium atoms into the electrode particles, so that iron phosphate (FePO4) becomes lithium-iron phosphate (LiFePO4) once more. The changes in the amount of lithium associated with charging and discharging induce a change in the chemical potential of the individual particles, which in turn changes the voltage of the battery. However, charging and discharging are not linear processes. During charging, chemical potential initially increases, with the progressive release of lithium ions. But then, the particles reach a critical lithium-content value (and chemical potential). At this point, there is an abrupt transition: the particles give up their remaining lithium ions very rapidly, but are not allowed to change their chemical potential. This is the transition that explains why battery voltage remains practically unchanged over a wide region (voltage plateau).

The Barrier between "Rich" and "Poor"

The existence of this potential barrier is vital for the memory effect to become manifest. Once the first particles have overcome the potential barrier, and have become lithium-free, the electrode particle population gets split up into two groups. In other words: there is now a clear distinction between lithium-rich and lithium-poor particles (see graphic). If the battery is not fully charged, a certain number of lithium-rich particles that have not made it over the barrier will remain. These particles do not remain on the edge of the barrier for long, because this state is unstable, and they will "slide down the slope," that is, their chemical potential will decrease. Even when the battery is discharged again and all of the particles will come to rest in front of the barrier, this division into two groups will be maintained. And here is the crucial point: during the next charging process, the first group (lithium-poor particles) will overcome the barrier first, whilst the second group (lithium-rich) will "lag behind." In order for the "delayed" group to get over the barrier, their chemical potential must be increased, and this is what causes the overvoltage (the "bump" in the graphic) that characterises the memory effect. The memory effect is thus a consequence of the particle population being divided into two groups, with very different concentrations of lithium, which is followed by the particles "jumping" over the potential barrier one after the other. This overvoltage, through which the effect is noticeable, is equal to the additional work that needs to be done to carry the particles that lagged behind after a partial charge, over the potential barrier.

Wait Until the Memory Fades The time that elapses between charging and discharging a battery plays an important role in determining the state of the battery at the end of these processes. Charging and discharging are processes that alter the thermodynamic equilibrium of the battery, and this equilibrium can be achieved after some time. Scientists have found that idling a sufficiently long period of time can be used to erase the memory effect. However, in accordance with the many particles model, this only happens under certain conditions. The memory effect only vanished if one waited a sufficiently long time after a cycle of partial charging followed by full discharge. In such cases, the two particle groups were still separated after the full discharge, but were found on the same side of the potential barrier. Thus, the separation disappeared, because particles attained an equilibrium state, in which they all had the same lithium-content. The memory effect remained however providing you waited after the partial charging and before the incomplete discharge. Here, the particles were on opposite sides of the potential barrier, and this prevented a reverse of their division into "lithium-rich" and "lithium-poor."

According to Professor Petr Novak, Head of the Electrochemical Energy Storage Section at the PSI and co-author of the publication, the study disproves a long cherished misconception: "Ours is the first study that has specifically looked for a memory effect in lithium-ion batteries. It had simply been assumed that no such effect would arise." To acquire knowledge via research is often a fruitful mix of speculation and diligence: "Our finding results from a combination of critical investigation and careful observation. The effect is in fact tiny: the relative deviation in voltage is just a few parts per thousand. But the key was the idea of looking for it at all. Normal battery tests usually run deep, and not partial charging/discharging cycles. It thus took a flash of inspiration in order to ask what might happen during partial charging in the first place.

For the future use of lithium-ion batteries in vehicles however, this recent discovery is not the final word. It is indeed absolutely possible that the effect could be detected and taken into account through clever adaptation of the software in battery management systems, Novak pointed out. Should that prove successful, the memory effect would not stand in the way of a reliable use of lithium-ion batteries in electric vehicles. So now, engineers face the challenge of finding the correct way of handling the peculiar memory of batteries.

Box According to the many particles model described here, charging and discharging the battery is considered to take place particle by particle. In this context, by particles, we mean a kind of "grains." This means that the material (LiFePO4) does not come "as one piece," but rather as a collection of grains, in each of which the crystal structure is nominally the same, but in which the granules have minute differences, either in size, shape or orientation. This is the typical structure of powders. In technical terms, these are called "crystallites." One can imagine these as roughly equally sized cubes lying side by side. Each cube would be slightly rotated relative to its neighbours, that is, the cubes are not strictly aligned, but the crystal structure (the cuboidal shape) is the same for all.

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 Paul Scherrer Institut (PSI).

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Tsuyoshi Sasaki, Yoshio Ukyo, Petr Nov?k. Memory effect in a lithium-ion battery. Nature Materials, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/NMAT3623

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/matter_energy/electricity/~3/hUTkC0CpNG4/130414193213.htm

red wings penguins the band colton dixon

Colin Davis dies, leaves London Symphony Orchestra legacy

Colin Davis dies: The former conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra, Colin Davis was considered a giant of Britain's classical music scene.

By Jill Lawless,?Associated Press / April 15, 2013

British conductor Sir Colin Davis, president of the London Symphony Orchestra, holds a Classical BRIT award. The London Symphony Orchestra says Monday that Colin Davis, has died aged 85. One of the best-known figures in British classical music, Davis worked with the symphony for more than half a century.

(AP Photo/`PA, Matt Crossick, File)

Enlarge

Colin?Davis, the former principal conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra and one of Britain's elder statesmen of classical music, has died at 85.

Skip to next paragraph

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

The orchestra said Davis died Sunday after a short illness.

One of the best-known figures in British music, Davis worked with the London symphony for more than half a century.

He first conducted for the LSO in 1959 and took the principal conductor post in 1995, serving until 2006 before becoming president.

The orchestra said Davis had been "at the head of the LSO family for many years."

"His musicianship and his humanity have been cherished by musicians and audiences alike," it said in a statement, adding that "music lovers across the world have been inspired by his performances and recordings."

Associated in particular with the works of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Jean Sibelius and Hector Berlioz, Davis won three Grammy awards ? two in 2002 for the LSO's recording of "Les Troyens" by Berlioz, and one for Giuseppe Verdi's "Falstaff" four years later ? and a host of other trophies.

Colin Rex Davis was born in the southern England town of Weybridge on Sept. 25, 1927, one of seven children of a bank clerk.

Thanks to a generous relative, he studied at the private school Christ's Hospital, then at the Royal College of Music, before spending his compulsory military service as a clarinetist with the band of the Household Cavalry.

Because he did not play piano he was denied a place in the music college's conducting class, and initially he struggled to find conducting work. His entry in "Who's Who" listed the years 1949-57 as "freelance wilderness."

But after filling in to acclaim for Otto Klemperer at the Royal Festival Hall in 1959, his career took off.

Apart from his long association with the LSO, Davis spent periods as chief conductor of the BBC Symphony and music director of the Royal Opera House, and worked with ensembles around the world, including the New York Philharmonic, the Boston Symphony Orchestra and the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra.

He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 1980.

Antonio Pappano, music director of the Royal Opera House, said Davis' death was a blow to the company, which had planned to work with him again. Pappano said it "represents an end of an era, where grit, toil, vision and energy were the defining elements of a leading international opera house."

"The warmth and excitement of his music-making will be terribly missed. He was a giant," Pappano said.

In his early career Davis was, by his own admission, "a raw young man," known for abrasiveness and fits of temper. He mellowed with age, becoming an enthusiastic pipe-smoker and knitter as well as musical leader.

In 2007, he told the BBC that music helped stave off thoughts of death.

"Every time you give a concert, time is suspended: You're mastering it; time is not the enemy," he said. "It doesn't put off death, unfortunately, but it gives you a very good time while you're still alive."

?Davis had two children with his first wife, April Cantelo, and five with his second, Ashraf Naini. His children survive him.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/-dz8e1n2R5o/Colin-Davis-dies-leaves-London-Symphony-Orchestra-legacy

foot locker champs champs calvin johnson

Supreme Court gene patent decision could affect every patient

By Brian Alexander, NBC News Contributor

The legal question at the heart of the US Supreme Court?s debate over the patenting of human genes has practical ramifications that could ripple into the lives of every American -- not just women at risk for rare breast cancer.

Dorothy Warburton, Ph.D./Newscom

BRCA 2 (breast cancer) gene on chromosome 13.

What the high court decides could affect who will conduct your medical tests, how those tests are interpreted, how and how fast drugs can be developed -- and what your doctor can tell you about your health, experts say.

That?s because all of those issues are entangled in the case involving a Utah company, Myriad Genetics, which controls the patents on variations of two human genes, known as BRCA1 and BRCA2. Women with mutations in those genes are at much higher risk for getting breast and ovarian cancer.

?This is important,? says patent expert Arti Rai, the Elvin R. Latty professor of law at Duke University School of Law, and an affiliate of Duke?s Institute for Genome Sciences and Policy. If the court rules against Myriad, ?this may make it easier for you to get second opinions,? about diagnostic tests, she said.

Myriad owns the patents to the genetic sequences, as well as any mutations along those genes. The American Civil Liberties Union, which has brought the case on behalf of a coalition of patients, researchers and doctors, argues that that means that if genes from a particular person are analyzed or separated from other biological material, regardless of how or for what reason, that would constitute patent infringement.

The industry has countered for years -- and won on this argument -- that they don't patent the genes, but the man-made molecules based on those genes.

Myriad?s current exclusive right to the testing means all BRCA tests are conducted by Myriad. There?s no second opinion or confirmation by an independent second source and Myriad can set its own price free of competition.?

If the court rules in favor of Myriad, that won?t change. ?They have had a monopoly over all genetic testing for breast cancer for nearly two decades,? says bioethicist Arthur Caplan, an NBC News contributor and director of medical ethics at New York University?s Langone Medical Center. ?Doctors and patients have complained bitterly that Myriad?s high-priced tests have limited access for many women.? The tests can cost up to $3,500, although a statement on Myriad's website says the company offers a financial assistance program for low-income or uninsured women.

Moreover, since only Myriad can perform the tests, it can, and does, keep any data it gleans from tests results, such as geographic and demographic patterns, or new genetic variants? it may find. It has stopped sharing this data publicly, keeping it as its own trade secret so nobody else can use it to conduct research or develop therapies or tests.

?Now [Myriad] controls this database, including gene variants that may have unknown clinical significance,? says Michael S. Watson, executive director of the American College of Medical Genetics. So even though they don?t have patents on such data, ?they control the marketplace.?

Such control could keep costs high for patients and insurers, and strangle competing research. For example, when new BRCA-related variants were uncovered,? Myriad didn?t include them in its standard BRCA testing. Rather, it created a supplemental test, called BART, available at an extra charge of $700, to cover these mutations.? So if a woman wants to cover all the BRCA bases, her doctor would have to order both tests.

The ACLU argues that genes are simply part of nature and therefore not patentable in the first place.

A ruling in favor of Myriad could also hamper the promise of ?personalized medicine? based on our individual genetic makeups. Soon, some scientists say, it will be practical for doctors to order the sequence of each person?s genome to look for disease-related gene variations. But if big parts of the genome have been locked under patent protection, what would a doctor be able to do with that information?

Take, for example, the case of muscular dystrophy, a genetic disorder that weakens the body?s muscles. A number of patents related to mutations in the dystrophin gene have been issued. If a parent were to have a young child?s genome sequenced,? the doctor may not able to communicate any important results relating to the dystrophin gene because the right to do that belongs to the companies or individuals who control the intellectual property. The doctor, or the genome sequencing company, could be sued.??

?That has enormous implications for a family,? says Watson. ?They could have another child who's affected. Care could be approached differently if they knew they had [genetic] features of muscular dystrophy."

Many academic research scientists say that so-called ?gene patents? hamper their ability to share information, slowing the pace of invention for new therapies for dreaded diseases, or making that research too expensive.

?Myriad?s early patent arguably hindered the willingness of others to aggressively explore better tests for a terrible disease,? Caplan said. ?Other patents on other gene sequences could have the same effect.?

Anybody trying to develop a drug related to a patented gene sequence would have to deal with the patent holder, adding costs, time, and legal complications, possibly delaying or even preventing innovation.

Supporters of such patenting argue that striking down Myriad?s intellectual property claims could actually hinder the development of life-saving therapies because companies wouldn?t take the financial risk to pursue them. Medical science could stall. A ruling for Myriad by the Supreme Court, could help spark, or at least protect, the innovation engine, ultimately saving patient lives, its backers claim.??

Besides, they say, there is no such thing as a patent on a human gene. No one's patenting nature; they're patenting man-made molecules derived from human genetic information that are used to test for increased risk of breast cancer and ovarian cancer, argued Karen Dow, a San Diego partner in the law firm Sughrue Mion PLLC, who has long experience in the biotechnology industry, but is not involved in the current case.

In the BRCA case, an appeals court has agreed with this argument and upheld the patents.

But major medical societies fear what impact a ruling in favor of Myriad could have. ?

?The care available to patients should not be restricted because the naturally occurring building blocks of human biology have been inappropriately patented,? Dr. Jeremy A. Lazarus, president of the American Medical Association, said in a statement to NBC News. ?Opportunities for scientific research and medical care based on human genes must remain available to all and exclusive to none.?

Brian Alexander?is?co-author, with Larry Young, of "The Chemistry Between Us: Love, Sex and the Science of Attraction."

Related stories:

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653381/s/2aba0fed/l/0Lvitals0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A40C150C177343230Esupreme0Ecourt0Egene0Epatent0Edecision0Ecould0Eaffect0Eevery0Epatient0Dlite/story01.htm

Sage Stallone Mermaid Body Found Celeste Holm Stephen Covey

Opinion: N. Korea already won (CNN)

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, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/299099925?client_source=feed&format=rss

multiple sclerosis falling skies rodney king Webb Simpson

Woods story, predictably, dominates CBS broadcast

Spectators walk past a leader board displaying Tiger Woods' two first two rounds scores before the third round of the Masters golf tournament Saturday, April 13, 2013, in Augusta, Ga. The score board reflects the 2-stroke penalty assessed to Woods for a drop in 2nd round of the Masters. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

Spectators walk past a leader board displaying Tiger Woods' two first two rounds scores before the third round of the Masters golf tournament Saturday, April 13, 2013, in Augusta, Ga. The score board reflects the 2-stroke penalty assessed to Woods for a drop in 2nd round of the Masters. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

CBS announcer Jim Nantz led off the network's Masters coverage Saturday by describing what Tiger Woods did the day before on the 15th hole as an "innocent" and "absent-minded" mistake.

CBS devoted the first 12 minutes of its broadcast from the Masters entirely to Woods, who was given a two-stroke penalty earlier in the day for a bad drop that led to his signing an incorrect scorecard after his second round.

Woods' shot on the 15th hole of the second round hit the flag stick and bounced back into the water. He took his penalty drop 2 yards behind where he hit the original shot, a rules violation.

Woods was tied for 17th when the third-round broadcast started at 3 p.m. EDT, five shots off the lead. His story dominated the early coverage, and CBS didn't mention another player until 3:12 p.m., when it showed the leaderboard for the first time.

"A day of high drama at Augusta National Golf Club before a single shot was struck." was how Nantz described the scene.

The broadcast started with a live shot of Woods at the sixth hole and being applauded by the gallery.

From there, the network displayed the ruling that cost Woods two strokes but allowed him to remain in the tournament. It broke down what his three options were after his shot on the 15th hole on Friday ended up in the water, then aired a lengthy interview by Nantz of Fred Ridley, chairman of the Masters' competition committees.

Augusta National said it was Nantz who alerted Masters officials Friday that Woods' post-rounds comments were causing some doubts, leading to another review.

Woods had said after his round, "I went back to where I played it from, but went two yards further back and I tried to take two yards off the shot of what I felt I hit. And that should land me short of the flag and not have it either hit the flag or skip over the back. I felt that was going to be the right decision to take off four (yards) right there. And I did. It worked out perfectly."

"It was an innocent mistake," Nantz said, referring to Woods' actions.

Once CBS got through the initial wave of Woods coverage, it was largely business-as-usual, with cameras trained on an array of players over roughly the next 35 minutes. Then CBS again revisited the Woods matter, with analyst Nick Faldo ? a three-time Masters champion ? saying the way Friday's events transpired ultimately saved Woods.

Augusta National reviewed the matter Friday even before Woods' second round was complete and found no breach of rules. But when Woods said after the round that he chose to play his drop slightly farther back from where he played his original shot, Augusta National decided to review the matter once again.

"If this had all happened later at night, if somebody had called in late at night and then had gone back and reviewed everything, then in fact Tiger would be disqualified," Faldo said. "He would have signed for the wrong score. In a way, that helped him. They reviewed the situation, they decided from what they saw there was no infringement, but it was only after Tiger then said, 'Hey, I intentionally came back a couple of yards.'"

Faldo said he was surprised Woods did not know the rule, but added that he gave the world's No. 1 player "the benefit of doubt."

Earlier in the day, the Golf Channel's Brandel Chamblee said:

"The integrity of this sport is bigger than the desire to see Tiger Woods play golf today," Chamblee said. "I want to see Tiger Woods play golf. I have never seen anybody play golf like him. I want to see him make a run at Jack Nicklaus' majors record. I want to see that. But I don't want to see it this week; I don't want to see it under these circumstances. The right thing to do here, for Tiger and for the game, is for Tiger to disqualify himself."

Faldo agreed with Chamblee and didn't back down during the CBS broadcast.

"There was absolutely no intention to try to drop that as close to the divot, absolutely none at all," Faldo said. "So, in black and white, and that is the greatest thing about our game, our rules are very much black and white. You know, that's a breach of the rules. Simple as that."

Later in the telecast, Faldo's tone seemed more conciliatory.

Faldo reiterated that in his era, he thought most players ? when presented with a situation like the one Woods was in ? would either be disqualified or withdraw. But he stopped short of calling again for that to happen.

"We're in a new era now under new rules and even if they bring some controversy, Tiger is playing rightly under the new rules," Faldo said. "And myself and some of my old pros, we have to accept that now."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-04-13-GLF-Masters-Woods-CBS/id-8a8e4e77bcb14af6b722ad1b301c5d2d

oakland shooting mega millions winning numbers autism speaks ubaldo jimenez

Obama budget boosts funding, tax credit for electric cars

President Obama would like to boost the Department of Energy's research budget to develop more efficient cars, as well as increase the maximum tax credit for electric car buyers. Will it help more drivers make the switch??

By Antony Ingram,?Guest blogger / April 14, 2013

A 2012 Chevrolet Volt electric vehicle is parked at the solar-powered electric charging station at the General Motors assembly plant in Hamtramck, Michigan.President Obama's proposed budget includes a boost in funding for the DOE to research more fuel efficient cars, and a boost to the tax credit for electric vehicles.

Rebecca Cook/Reuters/File

Enlarge

President Barack Obama has said he wants to boost the Department of Energy's vehicle research budget 75 percent to help develop more efficient cars.

Skip to next paragraph GreenCarReports

The website focuses on the auto industry?s future, the evolution of cars beyond fossil fuels, and the green movement's relevance to car shoppers today. For more stories on green cars, click here.

Recent posts

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

In his 2014 budget proposal to Congress on Wednesday, Obama proposes $575 million extra for research, and a further $2 billion trust fund to help research into getting off foreign oil in the next ten years.

According to The Detroit News, it's partly aimed at boosting the slow uptake of electric vehicles, and the budget speech included a call to hike the Federal income tax credit for electric vehicles to $10,000.

Back in 2008, Obama called for 1 million plug-in electric vehicles on the roads by 2015--a target that now looks a few years from reality.

While electric vehicle sales are steadily rising, they aren't increasing at quite enough of a rate to meet that target--and many automakers have scaled back their own predictions.

Currently, a maximum tax credit of $7,500 is available to eligible buyers, and some individual states also offer their own rebate programs for electric cars. An increased tax credit could help boost sales a little further, though it faces strict opposition from Republicans and the House.

But Obama also proposes to change the tax-credit rules slightly so that dealers can claim the credit. That would allow them to apply it directly to the price of the car, making it effectively a rebate at the time of purchase--rather than requiring buyers to wait up to 15 months, when they file their taxes, to realize the reduction.

Electric-car advocates have long urged that the credit be made a rebate to increase its attractiveness.

Potential tax credits for fuel-cell powered medium- and heavy-duty vehicles to be even higher--up to $40,000, as a way of incentivising the currently-expensive technology.

Despite political opposition, the carmakers themselves are keen on any move that helps increase sales.

The Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, representing Detroit's Big Three, the Toyota Motor Corp., Volkswagen AG and others, said "We generally support incentives that can help move our models from dealer lots to people's driveways, but we defer to policymakers in setting the precise dollar amount needed to increase sales."

Money from the research budget would be used to speed up the development of battery technology and improved manufacturing processes, as well as the development of cellulosic ethanol and other biofuels.

The Christian Science Monitor has assembled a diverse group of the best auto bloggers out there. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger,?click here.?To add or view a comment on a guest blog, please go to the blogger's own site by clicking on the link in the blog description box above.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/bKpEYRuFStQ/Obama-budget-boosts-funding-tax-credit-for-electric-cars

Mockingbird Lane peyton manning sf giants gold rush

To supporters, "Saint Chavez" watches over Venezuela vote

By Andrew Cawthorne

CARACAS (Reuters) - Fresh flowers were placed and new candles burning on Sunday at the "Saint Hugo Chavez" shrine in Caracas where devotees of the late socialist leader prayed for his last wishes to be fulfilled in the presidential vote.

Before succumbing to cancer last month, Chavez urged his millions of followers to vote for then-Vice President Nicolas Maduro as the flag bearer of socialism should he die.

For many, that became an almost sacred command.

"I came here to ask for my commander's blessing, so that the one he chose, Maduro, can take forward his legacy," said housewife Carmen Figueroa, 57, pressing her hand on a poster of Chavez in the makeshift altar on the side of a busy road.

The shrine sprang up spontaneously in the populous January 23 neighborhood near a military building that was turned into a museum and chapel where Chavez's remains are housed in a marble sarcophagus.

"They didn't accept flowers and candles there, but people wanted to leave things for the commander, so the community decided to make something here outside," said Elizabeth Torres, 48, who owns a kiosk next door and looks after the shrine.

A large banner juxtaposing Chavez's face with a picture of Jesus Christ carrying his crucifix dominates the middle of the hut turned into what some have dubbed "the people's shrine."

On the floor are numerous images of the late leader and Christian saints. Offerings include a glass of water and a cup of coffee - Chavez used to down black coffee all day before starting cancer treatment.

The "Saint Hugo Chavez" altar is one of numerous religious expressions all over Venezuela since he died on March 5.

CONTROVERSIAL LEGACY

His death, at 58, cemented his already cult-like status among supporters who adored his down-to-earth style, humble beginnings, aggressive "anti-imperialist" rhetoric, and channeling of oil revenue into social welfare projects.

To detractors, however, in a nation split broadly down the middle by his polarizing 14-year rule, Chavez should also be remembered for what they see as his bullying of opponents, autocratic style and squandering of an unprecedented bonanza of oil income through corruption and inefficient management.

Supporters of opposition candidate Henrique Capriles, who was running behind Maduro in polls before Sunday's vote, say the government's top brass has been cynically exploiting Chavez's memory to perpetuate their own hold on power.

Illustrating how the hatred of Chavez equaled the love in intensity, some Venezuelans cracked open champagne when he died.

Figueroa said those people had underestimated his impact.

"They'll never understand. Before Chavez, we were ignorant and humiliated. He brought dignity to the poor," she said, sticking a smaller picture of Maduro under a Chavez poster.

Though his legacy and image have dominated the campaign, with some in the opposition claiming they were forced to fight the "ghost of Chavez" instead of Maduro, many Venezuelans found it strange to be voting without him around on Sunday.

Nowhere was that truer than in the streets around the Manuel Palacios Fajardo school where Chavez cast his ballot over-and-over again during the multiple elections and referendums since his first presidential victory in 1998.

The garrulous Chavez would usually stop to greet crowds and give lengthy speeches about democracy after voting.

"You could feel the happiness and hope around him," said local resident Pedro Blanco, a 63-year-old lawyer, queuing to vote at the school.

"It's him I'm voting for again today, he's the one in my mind. Of course it's sad he's no longer here, but the world hasn't finished, has it? His spirit is with us. And his representative on earth is Maduro."

(Editing by Todd Benson and Jackie Frank)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/supporters-saint-chavez-watches-over-venezuela-vote-124250437.html

amelia earhart Sally Ride Ichiro minka kelly

Sunday, April 14, 2013

Lehman Europe creditors may be repaid in full

DUBLIN (Reuters) - Creditors of the European arm of U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers, which collapsed in September 2008, may be repaid in full, administrators said on Monday.

The settlement of rival claims over assets has freed up billion of dollars that can now be distributed to former clients of the bank's European arm, PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) said in its ninth progress report to creditors.

"To be able to advise ordinary unsecured creditors that we now have a reasonable chance of eventually repaying their claims in full, marks a significant milestone," said Tony Lomas, lead administrator and partner at PwC.

"There is still a lot to do before finalizing the wind-down but we do expect to pay a second, significant dividend to creditors in the near future, taking us another step towards this new target."

Some 13.6 billion pounds worth of assets, including securities and cash, have been returned to former clients of the European unit of Lehman Brothers since the start of the wind down.

PwC said one recent settlement would free up $9.1 billion of assets, which could be returned to creditors later this year.

In November 2012, a first interim dividend of 25.2 percent was paid to unsecured creditors, usually one of the last to be paid in any wind down.

(Reporting by Carmel Crimmins; Editing by Maureen Bavdek)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lehman-europe-creditors-may-repaid-full-230830998--sector.html

lou dobbs rock salt david letterman march of dimes