Friday, October 18, 2013

Will health insurance expansion cut ER use? U-M study in teens & young adults may help predict

Will health insurance expansion cut ER use? U-M study in teens & young adults may help predict


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17-Oct-2013



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Contact: Kara Gavin
kegavin@umich.edu
734-764-2220
University of Michigan Health System



Outpatient visits rose, ER visits remained same after CHIP insurance expansion -- while ER visits rose in a comparison group of young adults with less insurance coverage



ANN ARBOR, Mich. As the nation's health care system prepares for uninsured Americans to gain health insurance coverage under the Affordable Care Act, a question hangs over crowded hospital emergency departments: Will the newly insured make fewer ER visits than they do today?


According to the results of a new University of Michigan Medical School study in teens and young adults, the answer likely reflects a balance of ER care versus clinic visits. While the number of ER visits will likely stay about the same, clinic visits will likely go up.


The results, from the first national study of its kind, are published in Academic Emergency Medicine by a team led by U-M emergency physician Adrianne Haggins, M.D., M.S. The work was funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Clinical Scholars Program at U-M, and used data from the National Center for Health Statistics at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.


The researchers looked at patterns of emergency and non-emergency outpatient visits made by adolescents between the ages of 11 and 18 in the years before and after a major expansion of public health insurance coverage for this group. They were especially interested in ER care, given that it is unclear how the demand for both types of ambulatory care will change nationally when insurance is provided.


The results show the impact of CHIP, or Children's Health Insurance Program, a federal/state program signed into law in 1997 that made it possible for near-poor children to receive state-sponsored insurance. More than 7 million children now have CHIP insurance, and it remains an option under the Affordable Care Act.


By comparing the national trends in adolescents' ER and outpatient visit numbers with those for young adults (ages 19-29) in the 1992-1996 pre-CHIP era, versus post-CHIP years 1999-2009, the team could gauge the impact of CHIP as a national source of new insurance coverage. Most states didn't allow such young adults to enroll in CHIP, making them a good comparison group in the pre-ACA era.


The researchers found:

  • Outpatient visits rose significantly among adolescents after CHIP went into effect, while young adults' outpatient visits were flat.
  • ER visits by adolescents stayed flat after CHIP went into effect, while ER visits by young adults rose.
  • The ratio of outpatient-to-ER visits rose among adolescents, but fell among young adults. A ratio such as this, which shows the balance between the types of care settings, could be useful for assessing the impact of insurance reforms.

"Looking at both emergency department visits and outpatient visits together is important," says Haggins, a clinical lecturer in the U-M Department of Emergency Medicine. "When we're thinking about access to health care and insurance reform, insurers and hospitals can not solely focus on limiting the number of emergency visits we have to make sure there's adequate access to alternative outpatient care."


The new results, she says, suggest that CHIP did just that, making it easier for pre-teens and teens to get outpatient care while still keeping emergency care available. The study did not look at the appropriateness of the emergency visits.


Haggins also notes that the findings emphasize the importance of ensuring adequate outpatient capacity in the months and years after an insurance expansion. "If a newly insured patient has a hard time finding a provider who would accept their insurance, or getting appointments with the ones who will, there is a real possibility that we will continue to see them go to the emergency department."


More understanding is needed about the factors that prompt patients to choose emergency care rather than outpatient appointments such as convenience, expectations for care, demand for diagnostic tests, and habit, she says.


Confronting the force of habit may be a big factor in encouraging appropriate emergency room use by newly insured patients, she notes. "Accessing the ER is a cultural learned behavior partly because the public knows that the ER is always open if they have difficulty accessing care," she says. "We have to offer them alternatives once they are there, and better understand what factors drive them there. We need to coordinate with other ambulatory settings to help patients find providers and be aware of alternative settings to change patterns of healthcare seeking."


And, if the goal of reducing emergency visits is a priority, she says, then emergency providers and outpatient providers must work together to coordinate a patient's care after an emergency visit, including access to specialists when needed.


If we want to maintain ER access, we need to be creative in developing alternative ways for patients to get timely outpatient care. That helps us preserve access for patients who really need emergency care," says Haggins.


###

The data for the study came from the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS) and the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS).


In addition to Haggins, the study was performed by Stephen Patrick, MD, MPH, MS, Sonya Demonner, MPH, and Matthew M. Davis, MD, MAPP. Haggins and Davis are members of the U-M Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation.


Reference: Academic Emergency Medicine, doi: 10.1111/acem.12236



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Will health insurance expansion cut ER use? U-M study in teens & young adults may help predict


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

17-Oct-2013



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Contact: Kara Gavin
kegavin@umich.edu
734-764-2220
University of Michigan Health System



Outpatient visits rose, ER visits remained same after CHIP insurance expansion -- while ER visits rose in a comparison group of young adults with less insurance coverage



ANN ARBOR, Mich. As the nation's health care system prepares for uninsured Americans to gain health insurance coverage under the Affordable Care Act, a question hangs over crowded hospital emergency departments: Will the newly insured make fewer ER visits than they do today?


According to the results of a new University of Michigan Medical School study in teens and young adults, the answer likely reflects a balance of ER care versus clinic visits. While the number of ER visits will likely stay about the same, clinic visits will likely go up.


The results, from the first national study of its kind, are published in Academic Emergency Medicine by a team led by U-M emergency physician Adrianne Haggins, M.D., M.S. The work was funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Clinical Scholars Program at U-M, and used data from the National Center for Health Statistics at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.


The researchers looked at patterns of emergency and non-emergency outpatient visits made by adolescents between the ages of 11 and 18 in the years before and after a major expansion of public health insurance coverage for this group. They were especially interested in ER care, given that it is unclear how the demand for both types of ambulatory care will change nationally when insurance is provided.


The results show the impact of CHIP, or Children's Health Insurance Program, a federal/state program signed into law in 1997 that made it possible for near-poor children to receive state-sponsored insurance. More than 7 million children now have CHIP insurance, and it remains an option under the Affordable Care Act.


By comparing the national trends in adolescents' ER and outpatient visit numbers with those for young adults (ages 19-29) in the 1992-1996 pre-CHIP era, versus post-CHIP years 1999-2009, the team could gauge the impact of CHIP as a national source of new insurance coverage. Most states didn't allow such young adults to enroll in CHIP, making them a good comparison group in the pre-ACA era.


The researchers found:

  • Outpatient visits rose significantly among adolescents after CHIP went into effect, while young adults' outpatient visits were flat.
  • ER visits by adolescents stayed flat after CHIP went into effect, while ER visits by young adults rose.
  • The ratio of outpatient-to-ER visits rose among adolescents, but fell among young adults. A ratio such as this, which shows the balance between the types of care settings, could be useful for assessing the impact of insurance reforms.

"Looking at both emergency department visits and outpatient visits together is important," says Haggins, a clinical lecturer in the U-M Department of Emergency Medicine. "When we're thinking about access to health care and insurance reform, insurers and hospitals can not solely focus on limiting the number of emergency visits we have to make sure there's adequate access to alternative outpatient care."


The new results, she says, suggest that CHIP did just that, making it easier for pre-teens and teens to get outpatient care while still keeping emergency care available. The study did not look at the appropriateness of the emergency visits.


Haggins also notes that the findings emphasize the importance of ensuring adequate outpatient capacity in the months and years after an insurance expansion. "If a newly insured patient has a hard time finding a provider who would accept their insurance, or getting appointments with the ones who will, there is a real possibility that we will continue to see them go to the emergency department."


More understanding is needed about the factors that prompt patients to choose emergency care rather than outpatient appointments such as convenience, expectations for care, demand for diagnostic tests, and habit, she says.


Confronting the force of habit may be a big factor in encouraging appropriate emergency room use by newly insured patients, she notes. "Accessing the ER is a cultural learned behavior partly because the public knows that the ER is always open if they have difficulty accessing care," she says. "We have to offer them alternatives once they are there, and better understand what factors drive them there. We need to coordinate with other ambulatory settings to help patients find providers and be aware of alternative settings to change patterns of healthcare seeking."


And, if the goal of reducing emergency visits is a priority, she says, then emergency providers and outpatient providers must work together to coordinate a patient's care after an emergency visit, including access to specialists when needed.


If we want to maintain ER access, we need to be creative in developing alternative ways for patients to get timely outpatient care. That helps us preserve access for patients who really need emergency care," says Haggins.


###

The data for the study came from the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS) and the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS).


In addition to Haggins, the study was performed by Stephen Patrick, MD, MPH, MS, Sonya Demonner, MPH, and Matthew M. Davis, MD, MAPP. Haggins and Davis are members of the U-M Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation.


Reference: Academic Emergency Medicine, doi: 10.1111/acem.12236



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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/uomh-whi101713.php
Category: Ian Somerhalder   grand theft auto 5   Nfl Fantasy   Romain Dauriac   regions  

2nd SF Bay area transit strike in 4 months begins

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Commuters in the San Francisco Bay Area got up before dawn on Friday and endured heavy traffic on roadways, as workers for the region's largest transit system walked off the job for the second time in four months.


People were lined up well before 5 a.m. Friday at a Bay Area Rapid Transit train station in Walnut Creek for one of the charter buses BART was running into San Francisco. And traffic at the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge toll plaza into San Francisco and the roads leading to it was backed up for miles.


At the West Oakland BART station, a frazzled Tatiana Marriott raced to board a free charter bus to San Francisco shortly after 6 a.m. She had to be at work by 7 a.m.


"I probably should've gotten up a half-hour earlier," Marriott, 21, a seamstress, said, conceding that she would be late for work. "I just want BART and the unions to figure it out. I just want to get to work."


Other alternatives to BART include ferries and Alameda-Contra Costa Transit District buses.


The walkout began at midnight Thursday, the culmination of six months of on-again, off-again talks that fell apart. BART and the unions came "extremely close" to agreement on economic, health care and pension issues, but the parties were far apart on work rule issues, said Roxanne Sanchez, president of Service Employees International Union Local 1021.


The impasse came after a marathon negotiating session with the participation of federal mediators.


About 400,000 riders take BART every weekday on the nation's fifth-largest commuter rail system. The system carries passengers from the farthest reaches of the densely populated eastern suburbs to San Francisco International Airport across the bay.


SEIU said it was fighting to prevent BART from changing employees' fixed work schedules. Some employees work four-day, 10-hour shifts while others work five-day, eight-hour shifts. Union officials said BART wanted to schedule people as they saw fit.


BART officials say work rules refer to past practices that require approval from unions and management to change. The rules make it difficult to implement technological changes or add extra service on holidays because of a special event, the agency says.


Sanchez said SEIU and the Amalgamated Transit Union suggested taking the remaining issues to arbitration but management refused.


BART General Manager Grace Crunican countered that the agency needed to alter some of those rules to run the system efficiently. She said BART also needed to control costs to help pay for new rail cars and other improvements.


"We are not going to agree to something we can't afford. We have to protect the aging system for our workers and the public," Crunican said.


She urged the union leaders to let their members vote on management's offer by Oct. 27.


A four-day strike in July saw commuters lining up early in the morning for BART's charter buses and ferries across the bay, and enduring heavy rush-hour traffic.


The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency said it has developed plans to help people to get around, including providing two expanded carpool locations.


The key issues during most of the talks had been salaries and worker contributions to their health and pension plans.


Talks began in April, three months before the June 30 contract expirations. The unions initially asked for 23.2 percent in raises over three years. BART countered with a four-year contract with 1 percent raises contingent on the agency meeting economic goals.


The unions contended that members made $100 million in concessions when they agreed to a deal in 2009 as BART faced a $310 million deficit. And they said they wanted their members to get their share of a $125 million operating surplus produced through increased ridership.


On Sunday, BART negotiators presented a final offer that includes an annual 3 percent raise over four years and requires workers to contribute 4 percent toward their pension and 9.5 percent toward medical benefits.


The value of BART's proposal is $57 million, BART spokeswoman Alicia Trost said.


Workers represented by the two unions, including more than 2,300 mechanics, custodians, station agents, train operators and clerical staff, now average about $71,000 in base salary and $11,000 in overtime annually, the transit agency said. BART workers currently pay $92 a month for health care and contribute nothing toward their pensions.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/2nd-sf-bay-area-transit-strike-4-months-075119031--finance.html
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Miley Cyrus to Perform at MTV EMAs



Rick Diamond/Getty Images


Cyrus' performance with Robin Thicke at the VMAs shocked many.



COLOGNE, Germany – MTV has confirmed that Miley Cyrus will be bringing her twerk to Amsterdam.



The popstar, whose explicit dancing at this year's VMAs caused a sensation, will perform live at MTV's European Music Awards in Amsterdam on Nov. 10.


VIDEO: MTV EMAs: Miley Cyrus Smuggled into Amsterdam in Redfoo's Suitcase


MTV already let the cat out of the bag, so to speak, with its promo video for the show, which featured host, Redfoo of dance music act LMFAO, trying to smuggle a scantily-clad Cyrus through customs at Amsterdam airport.


Other confirmed performers at this year's EMAs include Katy Perry and The Killers.


Ariana Grande will be the backstage host for the show, which will be broadcast live at 9 p.m. local time. Will Ferrell will be among the celebrity presenters at the awards, in character as his Anchorman 2 newsman Ron Burgundy.


The European Music Awards is one of MTV's largest live events and will air across more than 60 channels and reach 700 million households worldwide. Bruce Gillmer and Richard Godfrey will executive produce the 2013 show from the Ziggo Dome in Amsterdam.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/television/~3/0fsCnj41zvk/story01.htm
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A Lost Generation of young scientists? U-M grad student voices concern about research funding crunch

A Lost Generation of young scientists? U-M grad student voices concern about research funding crunch


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Public release date: 17-Oct-2013
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Contact: Kara Gavin
kegavin@umich.edu
734-764-2220
University of Michigan Health System



Amid federal research cutbacks and sequestration, U-M Medical School offers programs that aim to help young scientists prepare for varied careers




ANN ARBOR, Mich. Alexis Carulli wants to make a difference in fighting human disease. So do the thousands of bright graduate students like her, and recent Ph.D. graduates, working in medical research laboratories around the country.


But with federal scientific research funding flat, eroded by inflation and cut by budget sequestration, Carulli worries for her generation of aspiring biomedical scientists.


In a new article published in the American Journal of Physiology: Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology, she speaks up about it, to make sure the voice of the young scientist is heard. She describes the potential effect of ongoing instability in research funding -- and highlights the very real impact that today's science funding climate is having on the daily lives and career plans of young researchers-in-training.


"This is an issue that's pervasive, across the country," she says, based on conversations with peers at U-M and at conferences. "The decreased funding levels for science aren't just affecting research right now. If this situation lasts longer, it will have very long-term consequences, because the scientists won't be there."


More of them may head for careers in industry that will use their scientific skills, but won't necessarily focus on discovering entirely new knowledge, she says. Those born overseas and trained here may leave the U.S. to go back to home countries that are pouring money into science funding a sort of reverse "brain drain." And some may decide that the long road of training for a scientific career isn't worth the investment of time and effort, due to uncertainty about funding.


Carulli herself plans to be both a doctor and a scientist a long journey of earning both a medical degree and a Ph.D. through U-M's Medical Scientist Training Program, plus advanced training in a medical residency and fellowship after that.


She's six years in, and hoping that her chosen path -- and full funding for her graduate studies -- will help her weather the storm in science funding. But she can't know for sure.


She also notes that what she heard from her peers is not all doom and gloom. "It was uplifting to see that not everyone had given up," she says. "But the fact that the path to academia is filled with so many obstacles is troubling." As she writes in the paper, "Our success truly is the future of biomedical science."


Supporting students and recent Ph.D.s


Victor DiRita, Ph.D., the associate dean for graduate and postdoctoral studies at the U-M Medical School, says Carulli's concerns resonate with him and his team.


That's why they have created new programs to help graduate students and recent Ph.D.s (called postdoctoral fellows or postdocs) understand the many career paths that biomedical graduates can go down, and the marketable skills that earning a Ph.D. gives them. They work with the Office of Student Success in U-M's Rackham Graduate School, through which Ph.D.'s are awarded.


The U-M Medical School has more than 570 graduate students pursuing masters and Ph.D. degrees, and more than 550 postdocs, training and performing research in its labs. About 30 percent of U-M Medical School Ph.D. graduates go on to academic research careers, while the rest choose to go to teach at small colleges, to industry, or to government and the nonprofit sector.


"Academic positions that are dependent on government funding are limited, so we need to help students understand that their training as a scientist gives them enormous transferrable skills," says DiRita -- first and foremost, their ability to do a "deep dive" on a scientific problem and come up with answers through research. It is essential for each student to develop a "career agility plan" to guide themselves, he says.


"Students need to come in with their eyes wide open," he notes. "Students who are focused on becoming academics really have to work their tails off, because those positions are hard to get. But that level of effort and the expertise that develops from it will contribute to success in many other career paths."


U-M and other schools have increasingly found themselves having to offer "bridge" funding, to help research faculty whose grants are running out and who haven't yet gotten more funding even though their latest grant applications were judged highly worthy. As federal science funds shrink due to cuts and inflation, a smaller percentage of grant applications are getting funded.


Daily impact of funding cuts


With such a high level of uncertainty, Carulli notes in her article, graduate students and postdocs may find themselves unable to pursue a certain experiment right away because their advisor doesn't want to spend their remaining money on expensive supplies that they don't have on hand.


Those who are finishing their initial graduate coursework and looking for a faculty member's laboratory to work in may find that many aren't able to take on new students, due to lack of funding, she says. And those who are finishing Ph.D.s are finding fewer labs can take them on as postdocs.


Carulli studies adult stem cells in the digestive tract as a student in the lab of Linda Samuelson, Ph.D., who is the John A. Williams Professor of Gastrointestinal Physiology in the Department of Molecular and Integrative Physiology, and Associate Director of U-M's Center for Organogenesis.


Samuelson says she's proud of Carulli for gathering and reflecting the concerns that students have, and shares those concerns given the current funding climate. While U-M has weathered the current funding crunch better than other schools, it isn't immune.


"We bring in the brightest young people interested in science, help them define research problems, and support them through the process of discovery and training," she says. "That support depends on our funding for our labs. We make a 4 to 6 year commitment to these students, and we want them to have state-of-the-art technology and important research problems to address. To support that we need sustained funding. It would be a tragedy to lose them."

###


Reference: Am. J. of Physiology: Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology, DOI: 10.1152/ajpgi.00297.2013 http://ajpgi.physiology.org/content/early/2013/09/27/ajpgi.00297.2013


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A Lost Generation of young scientists? U-M grad student voices concern about research funding crunch


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]
Public release date: 17-Oct-2013
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Contact: Kara Gavin
kegavin@umich.edu
734-764-2220
University of Michigan Health System



Amid federal research cutbacks and sequestration, U-M Medical School offers programs that aim to help young scientists prepare for varied careers




ANN ARBOR, Mich. Alexis Carulli wants to make a difference in fighting human disease. So do the thousands of bright graduate students like her, and recent Ph.D. graduates, working in medical research laboratories around the country.


But with federal scientific research funding flat, eroded by inflation and cut by budget sequestration, Carulli worries for her generation of aspiring biomedical scientists.


In a new article published in the American Journal of Physiology: Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology, she speaks up about it, to make sure the voice of the young scientist is heard. She describes the potential effect of ongoing instability in research funding -- and highlights the very real impact that today's science funding climate is having on the daily lives and career plans of young researchers-in-training.


"This is an issue that's pervasive, across the country," she says, based on conversations with peers at U-M and at conferences. "The decreased funding levels for science aren't just affecting research right now. If this situation lasts longer, it will have very long-term consequences, because the scientists won't be there."


More of them may head for careers in industry that will use their scientific skills, but won't necessarily focus on discovering entirely new knowledge, she says. Those born overseas and trained here may leave the U.S. to go back to home countries that are pouring money into science funding a sort of reverse "brain drain." And some may decide that the long road of training for a scientific career isn't worth the investment of time and effort, due to uncertainty about funding.


Carulli herself plans to be both a doctor and a scientist a long journey of earning both a medical degree and a Ph.D. through U-M's Medical Scientist Training Program, plus advanced training in a medical residency and fellowship after that.


She's six years in, and hoping that her chosen path -- and full funding for her graduate studies -- will help her weather the storm in science funding. But she can't know for sure.


She also notes that what she heard from her peers is not all doom and gloom. "It was uplifting to see that not everyone had given up," she says. "But the fact that the path to academia is filled with so many obstacles is troubling." As she writes in the paper, "Our success truly is the future of biomedical science."


Supporting students and recent Ph.D.s


Victor DiRita, Ph.D., the associate dean for graduate and postdoctoral studies at the U-M Medical School, says Carulli's concerns resonate with him and his team.


That's why they have created new programs to help graduate students and recent Ph.D.s (called postdoctoral fellows or postdocs) understand the many career paths that biomedical graduates can go down, and the marketable skills that earning a Ph.D. gives them. They work with the Office of Student Success in U-M's Rackham Graduate School, through which Ph.D.'s are awarded.


The U-M Medical School has more than 570 graduate students pursuing masters and Ph.D. degrees, and more than 550 postdocs, training and performing research in its labs. About 30 percent of U-M Medical School Ph.D. graduates go on to academic research careers, while the rest choose to go to teach at small colleges, to industry, or to government and the nonprofit sector.


"Academic positions that are dependent on government funding are limited, so we need to help students understand that their training as a scientist gives them enormous transferrable skills," says DiRita -- first and foremost, their ability to do a "deep dive" on a scientific problem and come up with answers through research. It is essential for each student to develop a "career agility plan" to guide themselves, he says.


"Students need to come in with their eyes wide open," he notes. "Students who are focused on becoming academics really have to work their tails off, because those positions are hard to get. But that level of effort and the expertise that develops from it will contribute to success in many other career paths."


U-M and other schools have increasingly found themselves having to offer "bridge" funding, to help research faculty whose grants are running out and who haven't yet gotten more funding even though their latest grant applications were judged highly worthy. As federal science funds shrink due to cuts and inflation, a smaller percentage of grant applications are getting funded.


Daily impact of funding cuts


With such a high level of uncertainty, Carulli notes in her article, graduate students and postdocs may find themselves unable to pursue a certain experiment right away because their advisor doesn't want to spend their remaining money on expensive supplies that they don't have on hand.


Those who are finishing their initial graduate coursework and looking for a faculty member's laboratory to work in may find that many aren't able to take on new students, due to lack of funding, she says. And those who are finishing Ph.D.s are finding fewer labs can take them on as postdocs.


Carulli studies adult stem cells in the digestive tract as a student in the lab of Linda Samuelson, Ph.D., who is the John A. Williams Professor of Gastrointestinal Physiology in the Department of Molecular and Integrative Physiology, and Associate Director of U-M's Center for Organogenesis.


Samuelson says she's proud of Carulli for gathering and reflecting the concerns that students have, and shares those concerns given the current funding climate. While U-M has weathered the current funding crunch better than other schools, it isn't immune.


"We bring in the brightest young people interested in science, help them define research problems, and support them through the process of discovery and training," she says. "That support depends on our funding for our labs. We make a 4 to 6 year commitment to these students, and we want them to have state-of-the-art technology and important research problems to address. To support that we need sustained funding. It would be a tragedy to lose them."

###


Reference: Am. J. of Physiology: Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology, DOI: 10.1152/ajpgi.00297.2013 http://ajpgi.physiology.org/content/early/2013/09/27/ajpgi.00297.2013


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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/uomh-alg101713.php
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Fans Freak Out After Jonas Brothers Quit Twitter

Uh-oh, this doesn't look very good for JoBro fans!

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/jonas-brothers-delete-twitter-account-fans-freak-out/1-a-549991?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Ajonas-brothers-delete-twitter-account-fans-freak-out-549991
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Thursday, October 17, 2013

It's Official: Hulu Names Mike Hopkins CEO


Hulu said Thursday that, effective immediately, Mike Hopkins is officially the new chief executive and that acting CEO Andy Forssell will be leaving the company



A Hulu board member since 2011, Hopkins was most recently president of distribution for Fox Networks Group, a division of 21st Century Fox, which owns Hulu along with Disney and Comcast.


STORY: Hulu's Arrival at TCA: Another Reminder That Times Are Changing


Hopkins beat out not only Forssell for the permanent CEO job but also former NBCUniversal executive Lauren Zalaznick, Intel executive Erik Huggers and ABC executive Albert Cheng, all of whom were reportedly on Hulu's short list.


Word leaked last week, though, that Hopkins had been offered the role.


Forssell had been active CEO since March, when Jason Kilar exited the company with a $40 million payout.


"After an extensive search, Mike was simply the best candidate for the job," said Anne Sweeney, co-chairman of Disney Media Networks and president of Disney/ABC Television Group. "He has a strong understanding of programming, digital distribution and consumer behavior and a great vision for Hulu's next chapter."


Hopkins takes over Hulu at an interesting time in its six-year history, having recently ending unsuccessful negotiations with a slew of potential acquirers and also having twice scrapped plans for an initial public offering.


Once derided as ClownCo by skeptics who thought the company's business model of streaming shows for free over the Internet was a nonstarter, the company has proved resilient. In 2012 it posted $695 million in revenue, up 65 percent from a year earlier, with advertising coming from advertising and its Hulu Plus subscription service.


Q&A: Hulu CEO Talks New Shows, Netflix and the Big Sale That Wasn't


When Kilar announced in January he was leaving Hulu, he had a history of disagreements with the bosses at Disney and Fox whereby he argued for a larger budget to acquire more content while others wanted to rein in costs and pursue steady profits. A month after leaving Hulu, Kilar joined the board of directors at DreamWorks Animation.


At Fox, Hopkins oversaw distribution, sales and marketing for 45 U.S. channels and he oversaw a team that developed digital products like  BTN2Go, a digital-video college sports offering, and Fox Now, which supplies TV shows on-demand over the Internet.


"The team at Hulu has created a beloved user experience that feeds the undeniable need for quality, convenience and ease of use," Hopkins said Thursday. "I am honored to have the opportunity to work with this dynamic, innovative team."


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheHollywoodReporter-Technology/~3/8dLNcO5Eu0Q/story01.htm
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Anki Drive "real world video game" all set to arrive in stores October 23rd

Back during WWDC 2013, the world was introduced to Anki Drive and although their on stage demo got off to a rough start, I've been patiently waiting for the product to arrive on store shelves.

Anki Drive if you're not familiar, is pretty much a modernized version a slot car game. Rather than chunky plastic controllers in your hand, you can use your iOS devices to remotely control your cars on the track over Bluetooth low power connectivity. Honestly, that's the simple explanation but how Anki Drive works goes much deeper than that.


    






Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/PuuQB1ZWYXw/story01.htm
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Economists: Shutdown Will Shave Half-Percent From Quarterly GDP


The government shutdown has taken a toll on the nation's economy and despite a deal that sidesteps a debt default and restarts the government (at least for a few months), growth forecasts for the last quarter of the year are being scaled back.


Economist Mark Zandi, of Moody's Analytics, has shaved his gross domestic product forecast from 2.6 percent to 2.1 percent for the last three months of the calendar year.


"If the treasury fails to make payments to Social Security recipients and Medicare providers, to bondholders, whoever that may be, it would clearly undermine (investor) confidence and would lay the foundation for the economy going back into recession," Zandi says. "And if this would extend for any length of time, into November, I think the recession we would see would be severe, on par with the Great Recession, the downturn we just went through."


Standard & Poor's says the 16-day partial shutdown cost U.S. taxpayers $24 billion. It reduced its projected fourth quarter growth from 3 percent to 2.4 percent.


The New York Times says:




"Even with the shutdown of the United States government and the threat of a default coming to an end, the cost of Congress's gridlock has already run well into the billions, economists estimate. And the total will continue to grow even after the shutdown ends, partly because of uncertainty about whether lawmakers might reach another deadlock early next year.


A complete accounting will take months once the government reopens and the Treasury resumes adding to the country's debt. But economists said that the intransigence of House Republicans would take a bite out of fourth-quarter growth, which will affect employment, business earnings and borrowing costs. The ripple from Washington will be felt around the globe."




And The Washington Post writes:




"[The] the biggest failure of the agreement, analysts say, is that it keeps the government operating for only a few months, with a new need to fund agencies and raise the debt ceiling coming in the first five weeks of 2014.


As a result, economists say, consumers and businesses are likely to hold back on spending and investment during the important holiday season, knowing that a similarly economy-shaking political showdown might be right around the corner.


'If people are afraid that the government policy brinkmanship will resurface again, and with it the risk of another shutdown or worse, they'll remain afraid to open up their checkbooks,' Standard & Poor's U.S. chief economist Beth Ann Bovino said in an analysis. 'That points to another Humbug holiday season.'"




In the Federal Reserve's monthly Beige Book report, released on Wednesday, the central bank cited fears that the shutdown would have an impact on consumer and business confidence.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/17/236211286/economists-shutdown-will-shave-half-percent-from-quarterly-gdp?ft=1&f=1001
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IBM 3Q net income rises 6 pct, beats predictions

NEW YORK (AP) — IBM said Wednesday that its third-quarter net income rose 6 percent, but its revenue fell and missed Wall Street expectations. The company's stock fell in extended trading.


The Armonk, N.Y., computing company earned $4.04 billion, or $3.68 per share, up from $3.82 billion, or $3.33 per share, in the same quarter last year. Excluding one-time charges, the company earned $3.99 per share, above Wall Street's expectation of $3.96.


Revenue dropped 4 percent to $23.7 billion from $24.7 billion. That fell short of the $24.8 billion expected by analysts surveyed by FactSet.


In after-market trading, IBM shares fell $11.23, or 6 percent, to $175.50. They finished the regular session up $2.07 at $186.73.


IBM said results for the July-September period were helped by lower expenses, including the absence of $408 million in charges related to job cuts that it logged in the year-ago period.


International Business Machines Corp. said it still expects to post an adjusted 2013 profit of at least $16.90 per share. Analysts expect earnings of $16.87 per share.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ibm-3q-net-income-rises-6-pct-beats-203027658--finance.html
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Automotive Logos - Simplified.

Automotive Logos - Simplified.


You know H&R Block? Their logo is just a green...block. Very simple. Almost too simple. You may also remember how clothing chain Gap tried to simplify their logo in October 2010...and failed miserably, lasting less than a week.

Read more...

Source: http://oppositelock.jalopnik.com/automotive-logos-simplified-1446395923/@barrett
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Decoding Zack Snyder's Two-Minute History of Superman (Video)



The collaboration between Zack Snyder and Bruce Timm celebrating this year's 75th birthday of Superman has finally made its way online, offering up two minutes filled with Easter Eggs, homages and celebrations of the career of the Last Son of Krypton. In case you couldn't decode everything on show, here's a guide to what you might have missed.



(Spoilers: A working knowledge of DC Comics' continuity isn't a must, but will definitely be a plus for those trying to keep track of everything that follows. Also, Tom Welling fans, prepare to be disappointed.)


STORY: Warner Bros., DC Unveil Superman Anniversary Logo, Promise Zack Snyder Short (Exclusive)


0:00: John Williams' classic theme for Superman the Movie, of course.


0:09: The cover for Action Comics Vol. 1, #1 (The series was relaunched in September 2011, along with the rest of DC Comics' superhero line), from 1938, by Joe Shuster -- the first public appearance of the Man of Steel.


0:12: Superman runs through the crowd and traffic before eventually leaping into the air (over the Daily Planet building, of course), mirroring his power upgrade in the early comic books -- remember that, according to the 1940s Superman cartoons, he was "able to leap tall buildings in a single bound," as opposed to actually flying (He didn't actually start flying until 1941). It's barely noticeable, but Superman becomes more simplistic in look as he runs, again in parallel to the character's visual evolution as other artists began to assist Shuster on the strip.


0:23: The character (and animation style) now resembles the 1940s cartoons from Max Fleischer's Fleischer Studios (and, latterly, the successor Famous Studios). The first of these cartoons was released in 1941, the same year Superman started to fly -- and the year that the U.S. declared war on Germany. Now you see why he attacks those planes.


0:29: That's Lex Luthor getting hit through a wall on the cover of Action Comics #47 by artist Fred Ray -- the first time that the character appeared on a comic book cover (He made his first appearance in Action Comics #23). Whether intentional or not -- and judging by the rest of this video, let's go with "intentional" -- Superman looks less like the Shuster original and more like Wayne Boring's version of the character when he flies off the page.


0:31: The change to black and white comes as Superman changes into someone that very closely resembles George Reeves, who played the Man of Steel in Adventures of Superman, which ran from 1952 through 1958. The shot of Superman standing atop a rotating globe echoes that show's opening titles.


0:38: Yes, Jimmy Olsen has become "The Giant Turtle Man" on the cover of 1961's Superman's Pal Jimmy Olsen #53, thanks to artist Curt Swan. We're officially into the Silver Age era of comics by this point -- when this comic was published, Barry Allen had become the Flash, Hal Jordan had taken over as Green Lantern and the Justice League of America had come together. As superhero comics were beginning a renaissance, Superman was still stuck dealing with goofy transformations and unlikely plot contrivances to stop Lois Lane from figuring out his secret identity.


0:41: Brainiac and the Bottle City of Kandor make an appearance, in a scene homaging (in a somewhat out-of-sequence manner) the cover of Action Comics #242 from 1958, again by Swan.


0:44: Brainiac is replaced by Bizarro, the imperfect clone of Superman, who first appeared in Superboy #68 (1958), fighting above the classic Fortress of Solitude, which also appeared in 1958 (this time in Action Comics #241). That square Earth in the background? That's Bizarro Earth, as built by Bizarro. He am so goofy.


0:50: Blink and you'll miss them, but that's Superman's extended Silver Age family right there -- Supergirl, Beppo the Super-Monkey, Streaky the Super-Cat and Krypto the Superdog. Missing for some reason is Comet, Supergirl's half-human, half-horse lover. The Silver Age Superman stories are kind of weird, you guys. They're flying over the Kent Farm in Metropolis, for what it's worth.


0:51: Even more blink and you'll miss him, but that's Mister Mxyzptlk for an instant, the fifth-dimensional imp who liked to show up and cause trouble until he was tricked into saying his name backwards and banished back to where he came from. Because, yes, "Kltpzyxm" is even harder to say than "Mxyzptlk" (For the record, it's "mix-yez-pittle-ick").


0:55: See? Comic books are art -- why else would Clark Kent and a brunette who's probably Lois Lane (but could be the depowered Wonder Woman of the late 1960s) be hanging out with Andy Warhol to gaze at panels from Superman comics, all Roy Lichtenstein-like? Worth looking at in particular is the panel all the way on the left -- that's from the infamous "I Am Curious (Black)!" (Superman's Girlfriend, Lois Lane #106, from 1970), in which Lois Lane temporarily became a black woman to live the black experience for herself. Look, everyone involved meant well, OK…?


0:57: Just in time to wash away the awkward taste in everyone's mouth, it's the Super Friends! This image in particular is based on the Alex Toth-illustrated cover to DC's DC Limited Collectors' Edition presents SUPER FRIENDS from 1976.


0:59: Barely seen as he flies offscreen, but Superman turns into a Neal Adams-illustrated version of himself, just in time for a scene that evokes the 1978 special edition Superman vs. Muhammad Ali, co-written and illustrated by Adams. In a weird moment, though, the style of Superman as he's getting punches is less Adams and more Dick Dillin, the artist who drew the character for more than a decade as part of his run as artist on Justice League of America.


1:03: This is, of course, the Christopher Reeve version of the character from the 1970s/'80s Superman movies, as evidenced by…


1:09: …Superman as a computer game! This could be a reference to the various actual video games that started with 1979's Superman, but I'm going to call it as an explicit Superman III movie reference, instead.


1:12: As anyone who read the 1992 "Death of Superman" storyline will recognize, that's Doomsday attacking the Man of Steel right there -- with the nice touch of a smashed Daily Planet globe in the style of Dan Jurgens and Brett Breeding, who drew the actual death issue, in the foreground.


1:16: The cover of Superman Vol. 2 #75 (1992, by the aforementioned Jurgens and Breeding) is smashed through by the four "replacement" Supermen of the "Reign of the Superman" storyline that followed the "Death" storyline -- clockwise, starting from the top, that's Superboy (A clone mixing the DNA of Superman and Lex Luthor), the Eradicator (Kryptonian artifact that gained awareness and made itself a body; don't ask), John Henry Irons, aka Steel (A hero inspired by the original Superman) and Hank Heywood, aka Cyborg Superman, who eventually became a Green Lantern villain, unexpectedly enough. For those with sensitive ears, you will have noticed that the music has now become part of Hans Zimmer's score to Man of Steel.


1:19: The mullet and the black costume were part of Superman's resurrection. The costume only lasted until the end of the storyline; the hairstyle, sadly, lasted three years (Again, this art style echoes Jurgens/Breeding).


1:20: Superman splits in two, in a reference to the 1998 storyline that saw Superman firstly develop new powers and then find himself split into two different beings -- one who preferred to think his way out of trouble, and the other more action oriented. The visual here is in the style of Ron Frenz, one of the artists who worked on the storyline.


1:22: Back to the classic look, thanks to this return for animator Timm to the Superman: The Animated Series world. Strange but true -- when we see the crowd staring up at Superman in this scene, it's the only definite appearance of Lois Lane in the entire short. Also present: Perry White, Jimmy Olsen, Ma and Pa Kent, Maggie Sawyer, Bibbo and Terrible Turpin, amongst many others.


1:27: The Smallville logo appears on the Warner Bros. water tower that appeared in Animaniacs for years -- a surprisingly short mention for the longest-running version of the character in live-action -- while Alex Ross's Superman from the much-loved 1996 miniseries Kingdom Come floats past, glaring down at the viewer, a villain in each hand.


1:32: From out of a Boom Tube comes today's comic book Superman, who made his debut in 2011's Justice League Vol. 2 #1. He's being pursued by the contemporary version of Jack Kirby's Darkseid, who was the villain of that first Justice League storyline. The visual style here isn't directly lifted from any one artist who's drawn the new version of the character, but contains elements of Cully Hamner, Rags Morales and Jose Luis Garcia-Lopez to my eye.


1:37: By the time Superman hits the safe, he's firmly evoking Henry Cavill's Superman from this summer's Man of Steel. In particular, the first publicity still from the movie from two years ago.


1:40: The new Superman flies into the sky in a scene similar to one in Man of Steel, before landing atop the 75 Years logo and standing in a pose that evokes the George Reeves version of the character.


1:52: The official Superman at 75 logo, which is based on early promotional art for DC's "The New 52" relaunch in 2011 by artist (and DC Comics co-publisher) Jim Lee.


Although the short is packed, it's surprising what didn't show up at any point -- no mention of John Byrne's 1986 reboot of the entire Superman comic book mythos is, perhaps, understandable considering the number of lives pushed into the short running time of the animation. I can even forgive a lack of Legion of Super-Heroes appearance for that same reason. But, come on, people -- no appearance by Jor-El, Lara or any version of Krypton at all? What's that all about? Beppo the Super-Monkey gets screen time but Superman's parents don't?!?




Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/film/~3/4lESSuXNA30/story01.htm
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Wednesday, October 16, 2013

VMware reverses decision on ThinApp licensing, readies new version


October 16, 2013




By Mikael Ricknäs | IDG News Service




ThinApp users have scored a victory as VMware has decided to keep offering it as a separate product and said a new version will arrive soon.


ThinApp uses virtualization to encapsulate applications and isolate them from the underlying operating system. Doing that helps eliminate version conflicts and simplify application delivery and management, according to VMware.


[ Doing thin client provisioning right is not so simple. InfoWorld's expert contributor shows you how to get it right in the "Thin Client Deep Dive" PDF guide. | Track the latest trends in virtualization in InfoWorld's Virtualization Report newsletter. ]


The company said in March that it planned to consolidate ThinApp licensing into the Horizon Suite. That news didn't sit well with customers, whose complaints led VMware to change its mind. A stand-alone ThinApp will continue to be available until further notice and also be part of the Horizon Suite, the company said in a blog post on Wednesday.


The company is also putting the finishing touches on ThinApp version 5.0. The update "is coming very, very soon," VMware said.


For version 5.0, VMware has redone the platform's underlying architecture, so that, for example, it will allow ThinApp to handle 64-bit applications. Other improvements include the ability to encapsulate Office 2013 and Internet Explorer 10, and add more personalization using AppSense Environment Manager.


Environment Manager virtualizes personalized settings from ThinApp applications and enables them to be shared seamlessly between physically installed native applications and applications delivered virtually, according to AppSense.


While AppSense already had support for managing the personalization of ThinApp delivered applications, it didn't have "full out-of-the-box support to share settings made within a ThinApp application with other application delivery technologies or vice versa," the company said.


VMware is this week hosting VMworld Europe in Barcelona, and desktop virtualization is one of the big themes. In addition to introducing the new version of ThinApp, VMware also announced the acquisition of desktop-as-a service company Desktone at the event.


Send news tips and comments to mikael_ricknas@idg.com.



Source: http://www.infoworld.com/d/virtualization/vmware-reverses-decision-thinapp-licensing-readies-new-version-228906
Tags: how i met your mother   remembering 9/11   Electric Zoo   Chelsea Manning   Amanda Dufner  

Fey and Poehler will host Globes for next 2 years

Celebs











12 hours ago

Image: Tina Fey and Amy Poehler

Paul Drinkwater / AP

Tina Fey and Amy Poehler will take the Golden Globes stage again for the 2014 and 2015 awards shows.

They wowed the Golden Globes crowd at the 2013 awards show, and in news that sure to please viewers, Tina Fey and Amy Poehler will have the opportunity to do so again — and again.

The pair has signed on to host NBC's coverage of the Golden Globe Awards on Jan. 12, 2014, and as it that weren't enough, they've also made a deal to return for the following year.

“Tina and Amy are two of the most talented comedic writer/performers in our business and they were a major reason the Golden Globes was the most entertaining awards show of last season,” Paul Telegdy, president of alternative and late night programming for NBC, said in a statement. “We’re elated they wanted to host together again and that they committed for the next two years.”

Theo Kingma, president of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association — the organization behind the Globes — said that the return of Fey and Poehler "ensures that the Golden Globes will once again be the biggest, best and most entertaining awards celebration of the year.”

It's no wonder the deal with the comedy duo is getting such raves from those involved. The 2013 show proved to be the highest-rated Golden Globes in six years.








Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/tina-fey-amy-poehler-host-golden-globes-next-two-years-8C11396354
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N.J. Goes To Polls To Fill Vacant U.S. Senate Seat





U.S. Senate candidates Democrat Cory Booker, left, and Republican Steve Lonegan, right, shake hands at the start of their second and final debate of the campaign at Rowan University in Glassboro, N.J. last week.



Mel Evans/AP


U.S. Senate candidates Democrat Cory Booker, left, and Republican Steve Lonegan, right, shake hands at the start of their second and final debate of the campaign at Rowan University in Glassboro, N.J. last week.


Mel Evans/AP


New Jersey voters go to the polls on Wednesday to elect a new member of the U.S. Senate in a special election pitting Newark Mayor Cory Booker against Steve Lonegan.


Democrat Booker is favored in the polls to win the vote to fill the vacancy left by the death of Frank Lautenberg in June. However, his Republican opponent, the former mayor of the northern New Jersey town of Bogota, has managed to close the gap a bit in the run-up to election day.


ABC7 reports:




"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?'"




Despite Lonegan's backing from the billionaire Koch brothers, Booker holds a substantial advantage in fundraising, with $11.5 million compared to his rival's $1.4 million, according to The Wall Street Journal.


The winner of the seat on Wednesday will succeed Gov. Chris Christie's interim appointee, Republican Jeff Chiesa, but will have to run again in 2014 to win a fresh six-year term.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/16/235312517/n-j-goes-to-polls-to-fill-vacant-u-s-senate-seat?ft=1&f=1001
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Social Shopping Startup Shopcade Bags $4M To Fuel Mobile Growth & A Big Data Play

shopcadeSocial shopping and deals-focused startup Shopcade, which launched out of the U.K. in November 2011, has raised £2.5 million (circa $4 million) to accelerate its growth on mobile. Investors in the funding round include Pascal Cagni, formerly head of Apple's European business from 2000 to 2012, and Michel Combes, CEO of telecommunications company Alcatel-Lucent and ex-CEO of Vodafone Europe.Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/WTSrAvYaEOg/
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NSA Helps Itself to Americans' Online Address Books

Many Americans are outraged about the NSA's sticky fingers, but there may be a double standard at play here. "If the Snowden data is accurate, the NSA is trying to reverse-engineer a social network from the data side rather than the user side," said tech analyst Charles King. "That's the kind of thing companies like Facebook do on a day-to-day basis with the acquiescence of their users."


The latest revelations by former United States intelligence contractor Edward Snowden show the National Security Agency is spying on Americans, despite repeated statements by the agency and presidential assurances that it does not do so.


The agency reportedly is collecting hundreds of millions of electronic address books and contact lists from people worldwide.


Though it is collecting the data overseas, some of it comes from Americans. The agency has argued that it is not legally required or technically able to restrict its intake to contact lists belonging to foreign intelligence targets.


When information passes through overseas collection points, the NSA assumes people whose email is being spied upon are not U.S. people, an unnamed official told The Washington Post.


"The NSA's mass collection of address book information is a significant intrusion on associational rights, and it will chill free expression all over the world," Gregory Nojeim, senior counsel at the Center for Democracy & Technology, told TechNewsWorld.


"These are not merely threshold intrusions on privacy -- they are thorough intrusions," remarked Katherine Stern, senior counsel at The Constitution Project.


The Latest Shenanigans


The NSA is collecting online contact lists in bulk from at least 18 Internet access points controlled by foreign telecommunications companies and allied intelligence services, according to the Post.


One day's take was almost 445,000 email address books from Yahoo; about 105,000 from Hotmail; nearly 83,000 from Facebook; about 34,000 from Gmail; and almost 23,000 from other online service providers, a document Snowden supplied to the paper shows.


The data is collected abroad, but online service providers have data centers overseas, so communications between Americans living in the U.S. could flow overseas.


Communications of Americans who live or travel abroad also cross the NSA's access points.


Security? What Security?


Some webmail providers, notably Google, have rolled out HTTPS encryption for their subscribers. Yahoo doesn't, but plans to in 2014.


However, the NSA is reported to have suborned security protocols. Furthermore, some data may be transmitted in the clear between encrypted applications.


Knowledge Is Power


The NSA maps the social graph -- associations between individuals whether or not they are currently active -- from the address books it has collected.


"If the Snowden data is accurate, the NSA is trying to reverse-engineer a social network from the data side rather than the user side," Charles King, principal analyst at Pund-IT, told TechNewsWorld.


"That's the kind of thing companies like Facebook do on a day-to-day basis with the acquiescence of their users," he noted.


Contact data and address books "are typically held in a common spreadsheet, so the NSA might not require unstructured Big Data tools like Hadoop," King suggested. "They might simply be able to incorporate it into a regular relational database."


For the Good of the Nation


The NSA's home page lists its mission as collecting, processing and storing U.S. citizen data for the good of the nation. Its targets are U.S. citizens and permanent residents.


Whether or not this activity is legal remains open to question, but in a related issue, NSA director Keith Alexander admitted earlier this week that he had lied to Congress in June when he stated that bulk phone surveillance had helped thwart 54 terror plots.


"The Constitution Project has been urging Congress to clarify the statutory requirements for foreign intelligence gathering so as to limit NSA's incidental collection of Americans' data more effectively," the project's Stern told TechNewsWorld.


"We also need more strict limits on how and where Americans' data can be used once it's collected," she continued.


The NSA maintains that it has checks and balances in place to prevent abuse, but "disclosures show that the NSA is unable to police itself," the CDT's Nojeim contended, "and it has misled those who are charged with oversight."


Source: http://www.technewsworld.com/rsstory/79198.html
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Angela Ahrendts, Apple's next retail chief, talks energy and intuition

In a TEDx Hollywood talk earlier this year, the company's incoming retail chief talks about the power of feeling over thinking.


Angela Ahrendts

Angela Ahrendts, speaking at a TEDx conference in Los Angeles on March 28, 2013.


(Credit: TEDx video/Screenshot by CNET)

Late Monday, Apple announcedthat it has tapped Burberry CEO Angela Ahrendts to lead its retail efforts in a newly created position reporting to CEO Tim Cook, starting next spring.


Apple has a reputation for going with intuition. Steve Jobs famously hated focus groups, and instead followed an internal compass. It would appear Apple's new hire has the same sensibilities. In a TEDx Hollywood presentation she gave in March of this year, Ahrendts delved into the power of "human energy."


Ahrendts, who was raised by a "spiritual mother and philosopher father," says she believes in the motivational power of energy: "Think of energy almost like emotional electricity. It has a powerful way of uniting ordinary people, their connected spirit, to do extraordinary things," she said.


Watch all rest of Ahrendts' talk below:



Source: http://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-57607564-37/angela-ahrendts-apples-next-retail-chief-talks-energy-and-intuition/?part=rss&tag=feed&subj=News-Apple
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Tuesday, October 15, 2013

'The Walking Dead' rules ratings in strong return

NEW YORK (AP) — The zombies on AMC's "The Walking Dead" are relentless. The series returned for its fourth season Sunday with its biggest audience ever and is easily the most popular drama on television among young viewers this season.


The 16.1 million people who watched the AMC series Sunday shattered the show's previous record of 12.4 million, which was set for April's final episode of the third season, the Nielsen company said.


An estimated 10.4 million of those viewers were ages 18 to 49, which is the demographic sweet spot for those who sell television advertising. No broadcast network drama came close. NBC's "Blacklist," with 3.9 million viewers in that demographic last week, came in second. The most popular broadcast drama so far this season was the Sept. 24 showing of "Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D." on ABC, with just under 6 million young viewers.


The discussion series that followed the premiere, "The Talking Dead," had 5.1 million viewers with 3.3 million in the young demographic, Nielsen said.


AMC President Charlie Collier credited series creator Robert Kirkman and his deputies for the strong showing. "Thanks to them, the dead have never been more alive," Collier said.


"NCIS" on CBS, with 18.3 million viewers, was the week's most popular drama. Only 3.6 million of those viewers were in the young demographic, making the show less valuable to many advertisers.


Fox News Channel's Megyn Kelly made a strong debut in the network's prime-time lineup last week. "The Kelly File" averaged 2.3 million viewers, or 38 percent more than Sean Hannity had been averaging in the 9 p.m. Eastern time slot since the beginning of July. Kelly was second only to Fox's Bill O'Reilly in popularity on cable news last week.


Despite all the new fall programming, last week's ratings indicated what truly rules in the season: five of the 13 most popular programs were either football games, football highlights shows or a football pregame show.


CBS won the week in prime time, averaging 9.2 million viewers. NBC had 8.4 million, Fox had 7.5 million, ABC had 7 million, Univision had 3.2 million, the CW had 1.7 million, Telemundo had 1.14 million and ION Television had 1.05 million.


TBS was the week's most popular cable network, averaging 4.2 million viewers in prime time. ESPN had 2.7 million, AMC had 2.2 million, The Disney Channel had 2 million and Fox News Channel had 1.8 million.


NBC's "Nightly News" topped the evening newscasts with an average of 8.2 million viewers. ABC's "World News" was second with 7.3 million and the "CBS Evening News" had 6.4 million viewers.


For the week of Oct. 7-13, the top 10 shows, their networks and viewerships: NFL Football: Washington vs. Dallas, NBC, 22.07 million; "NCIS," CBS, 18.33 million; "The Big Bang Theory," CBS, 17.64 million; "The Walking Dead," AMC, 16.11 million; "Sunday Night NFL Pre-Kick," NBC, 16.02 million; "NCIS: Los Angeles," CBS, 14.84 million; "The Voice" (Monday), NBC, 14.64 million; "The OT," Fox, 14.11 million; "Dancing With the Stars," ABC, 13 million; "Football Night in America," NBC, 11.78 million.


___


ABC is owned by The Walt Disney Co. CBS is owned by CBS Corp. CW is a joint venture of Warner Bros. Entertainment and CBS Corp. Fox is owned by 21st Century Fox. NBC and Telemundo are owned by Comcast Corp. ION Television is owned by ION Media Networks.


___


Online:


Nielsen Co.: http://www.nielsen.com


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/walking-dead-rules-ratings-strong-return-191122690.html
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