Thursday, January 31, 2013

New research will help shed light on role of Amazon forests in global carbon cycle

New research will help shed light on role of Amazon forests in global carbon cycle

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

The Earth's forests perform a well-known service to the planet, absorbing a great deal of the carbon dioxide pollution emitted into the atmosphere from human activities. But when trees are killed by natural disturbances, such as fire, drought or wind, their decay also releases carbon back into the atmosphere, making it critical to quantify tree mortality in order to understand the role of forests in the global climate system. Tropical old-growth forests may play a large role in this absorption service, yet tree mortality patterns for these forests are not well understood.

Now scientist Jeffrey Chambers and colleagues at the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) have devised an analytical method that combines satellite images, simulation modeling and painstaking fieldwork to help researchers detect forest mortality patterns and trends. This new tool will enhance understanding of the role of forests in carbon sequestration and the impact of climate change on such disturbances.

"One quarter of CO2 emissions are going to terrestrial ecosystems, but the details of those processes and how they will respond to a changing climate are inadequately understood, particularly for tropical forests," Chambers said. "It's important we get a better understanding of the terrestrial sink because if it weakens, more of our emissions will end up in the atmosphere, increasing the rate of climate warming. To develop a better estimate of the contribution of forests, we need to have a better understanding of forest tree mortality."

Chambers, in close collaboration with Robinson Negron-Juarez at Tulane University, Brazil's National Institute for Amazon Research (Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amaz?nia [INPA]) and other colleagues, studied a section of the Central Amazon spanning over a thousand square miles near Manaus, Brazil. By linking data from Landsat satellite images over a 20-year period with observations on the ground, they found that 9.1 to 16.9 percent of tree mortality was missing from more conventional plot-based analyses of forests. That equates to more than half a million dead trees each year that had previously been unaccounted for in studies of this region, and which need to be included in forest carbon budgets.

Their findings were published online this week in a paper titled, "The steady-state mosaic of disturbance and succession across an old-growth Central Amazon forest landscape," in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

"If these results hold for most tropical forests, then it would indicate that because we missed some of the mortality, then the contribution of these forests to the net sink might be less than previous studies have suggested," Chambers said. "An old-growth forest has a mosaic of patches all doing different things. So if you want to understand the average behavior of that system you need to sample at a much larger spatial scale over larger time intervals than was previously appreciated. You don't see this mosaic if you walk through the forest or study only one patch. You really need to look at the forest at the landscape scale."

Trees and other living organisms are key players in the global carbon cycle, a complex biogeochemical process in which carbon is exchanged among the atmosphere, the ocean, the biosphere and Earth's crust. Fewer trees mean not only a weakening of the forest's ability to absorb carbon, but the decay of dead trees will also release carbon dioxide back into the atmosphere. Large-scale tree mortality in tropical ecosystems could thus act as a positive feedback mechanism, accelerating the global warming effect.

The Amazon forest is hit periodically by fierce thunderstorms that may bring violent winds with concentrated bursts believed to be as high as 170 miles per hour. The storms can blow down many acres of the forest; however, Chambers and his team were able to paint a much more nuanced picture of how storms affected the forest.

By looking at satellite images before and after a storm, the scientists discerned changes in the reflectivity of the forest, which they assumed was due to damage to the canopy and thus tree loss. Researchers were then sent into the field at some of the blowdown areas to count the number of trees felled by the storm. Looking at the satellite images pixel by pixel (with each pixel representing 900 square meters, or about one-tenth of a football field) and matching them with on-the-ground observations, they were able to draw a detailed mortality map for the entire landscape, which had never been done before.

Essentially they found that tree mortality is clustered in both time and space. "It's not blowdown or no blowdown?it's a gradient, with everything in between," he said. "Some areas have 80 percent of trees down, some have 15 percent."

In one particularly violent storm in 2005, a squall line more than 1,000 miles long and 150 miles wide crossed the entire Amazon basin. The researchers estimated that hundreds of millions trees were potentially destroyed, equivalent to a significant fraction of the estimated mean annual carbon accumulation for the Amazon forest. This finding was published in 2010 in Geophysical Research Letters. Intense 100-year droughts also caused widespread tree mortality in the Amazon basin in 2005 and 2010.

As climatic warming is expected to bring more intense droughts and stronger storms, understanding their effect on tropical and forest ecosystems becomes ever more important. "We need to establish a baseline so we can say how these forests functioned before we changed the climate," Chambers said.

This new tool can be used to assess tree mortality in other types of forests as well. Chambers and colleagues reported in the journal Science in 2007 that Hurricane Katrina killed or severely damaged about 320 million trees. The carbon in those trees, which would eventually be released into the atmosphere as CO2 as the trees decompose, was about equal to the net amount of carbon absorbed by all U.S. forests in a year.

Disturbances such as Superstorm Sandy and Hurricane Katrina cause large impacts to the terrestrial carbon cycle, forest tree mortality and CO2 emissions from decomposition, in addition to significant economic impacts. However, these processes are currently not well represented in global climate models. "A better understanding of tree mortality provides a path forward towards improving coupled earth system models," Chambers said.

Besides understanding how forests affect carbon cycling, the new technique could also play a vital role in understanding how climate change will affect forests. Although the atmospheric CO2 concentration has been rising for decades, we are now only just starting to feel the effects of a warming climate, such as melting glaciers, stronger heat waves and more violent storms.

"But these climate change signals will start popping out of the noise faster and faster as the years go on," Chambers said. "So, what's going to happen to old-growth tropical forests? On one hand they are being fertilized by some unknown extent by the rising CO2 concentration, and on the other hand a warming climate will likely accelerate tree mortality. So which of these processes will win out in the long-term: growth or death? Our study provides the tools to continue to make these critical observations and answer this question as climate change processes fully kicks in over the coming years."

###

DOE/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory: http://www.lbl.gov

Thanks to DOE/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/126510/New_research_will_help_shed_light_on_role_of_Amazon_forests_in_global_carbon_cycle

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Jason London?s Craptacular Weekend Arrest

ade5e celebrity Jason London Mugshot 500x333 Jason London?s Craptacular Weekend Arrest

Jason London had a crappy weekend in the desert.

Quite literally, we mean.

London, who played Randall ?Pink? Floyd in ?90s teen comedy Dazed and Confused, was arrested on Sunday morning after allegedly punching a bouncer and soiling his pants in the back of a police car.

How charming

Drahmah reportedly ensued after an inebriated Jason sneezed on a bar bouncer and refused to apologize. According to a police report obtained by TMZ, Jason threw a punch at the bouncer?s face and was subsequently beaten up in and ensuing brawl.

Ejected from the bar, Jason was later found bloodied and ranted on the street When paramedics and cops arrived on the scene, the irate actor had to be physically subdued.

He bellowed:

?Guess what, fag*ot? I f***ing love this. I f**king own you guys so hard. I?m rich and I?m a motherf**king famous actor! F**king look me up, b***h. It smells like sh*t in your car and your breath smells like diarrhea. I told you I?m happy as sh*t.?

Jason, 40, continued to be verbally abusive on the way to the station, and at one point, defecated in his pants, police sources say. On Monday, cops spoke with Jason?s wife, Sofia, about the weekend incident.

?I know he?s an a**hole when he drinks,? was her reply. But she insisted that her husband has no recollection of his rumored walk on the wild side.

Jason took to Twitter yesterday to refute the allegations:

?Guys, the TMZ report is a total f**king lie. I got jumped by three 250-pound bouncers. They knocked me out and beat me for several minutes. I would never say or do the crap they are reporting. Have faith in me. The truth will come out and you will see. Some guy thought I was hitting on his girl and had me jumped. My wife was in the next room, had no idea what even happened. I hate Arizona. Wait till you see the real pictures. I have a right orbital fracture and sinus fracture. The truth will win.?

Those London boys sure know how to give the blogosphere a good chuckle. In 2010, Jason?s identical twin brother, actor Jeremy London, became an Internet laughing stock when he told police in California that he was ?kidnapped? by a carful of armed men and forced to smoke meth for 12 hours.

Pop Crunch

Source: http://www.celebritygossipinfo.net/3137/jason-londons-craptacular-weekend-arrest/

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Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Boeing forecast assumes little impact from 787 problems

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Boeing Co said on Wednesday it was sticking with the troubled lithium-ion battery technology that this month grounded its high-tech 787 Dreamliner, and that the grounding had no significant financial impact on its 2013 forecast.

Boeing said it will speed up production of the new plane as planned, responding to revelations that the battery has had more problems than previously disclosed.

CEO Jim McNerney said it was "business as usual" and that the company also had not advised suppliers to slow down their shipments of pieces of the 787, the most widely outsourced jet in the company's 97-year history.

"Nothing that we have learned has told us that we have made the wrong choice on the battery technology," McNerney said on a conference call with analysts and journalists.

"We feel good about the battery technology and its fit for the airplane. We have just got to get to the root cause of these incidents and we will take a look at the data as it evolves, but there is nothing that we have learned that causes us to question it at this stage."

The probe into the cause of two burnt batteries this month involves hundreds of experts from Boeing and outside the company but is "highly compartmentalized" and "it's not drawing any critical resources from any other growth programs we've got," McNerney added.

"Our plan is to continue production of the 787 and to continue the development of the wide-body airplanes," McNerney said.

The statements came as Boeing posted higher-than-expected profit.

Its shares were up 1.2 percent at $74.52.

Aviation safety agencies in the United States and Japan are investigating what caused lithium-ion batteries to burn on two 787 passenger jets earlier this month, prompting the worldwide grounding.

Boeing has since halted 787 deliveries, and analysts have raised concerns about the cost of the grounding and fixing the battery problem on about 125 jets that Boeing has built so far.

But Boeing released a forecast for 2013 that included no significant impact from the 787.

The company said it expects to deliver at least 60 Dreamliners in 2013 -- fewer than the 80 jets or more that some analysts expected -- but a figure that implies a four-month delay in delivery, since Boeing is making five 787s a month.

McNerney said Boeing still plans to increase 787 production to seven a month by mid-year and 10 a month by year-end.

The new production forecast raised some eyebrows. Russell Solomon at Moody's Investors Service was forecasting 100 787 deliveries, and said Boeing's forecast of more than 60 was "significantly weaker than we had expected."

Concern about the battery rose on Wednesday after Japan's two biggest airlines said they had repeatedly replaced sub-par lithium-ion batteries on their Dreamliners in the months before the two incidents that led to the 787 groundings.

The comments from All Nippon Airways Co Ltd, the biggest 787 customer to date, and Japan Airlines Co Ltd indicated problems with the battery system reliability long before one caught fire on a JAL 787 at Boston's Logan Airport on January 7. A second was badly charred and melted on an ANA domestic flight a few days later, prompting the pilot to make an emergency landing and evacuation.

The two airlines operate 24 of the 50 787s in service. United Airlines is the only U.S. carrier currently flying the 787.

McNerney said the earlier battery replacements were not made because of safety concerns.

"There's been no incidents that we're aware of where a battery has been replaced for any sort of safety concerns," he said. "It's a replaceable unit designed to be replaced and a matter of routine maintenance."

He said the replacement rate had been "slightly higher" than predicted.

McNerney declined to give any cost estimates for the 787 problems or discuss the investigation in any detail. The NTSB, which is leading the investigation in the U.S. has not yet established a cause for either of the two battery incidents.

NET FALLS, STILL BEATS

Meanwhile, Boeing said net income fell to $978 million, or $1.28 per share, in the fourth quarter, from $1.39 billion, or $1.84, in the year-ago period, when it posted a special tax gain.

Analysts expected earnings of $1.19 a share.

Ken Herbert, an analyst at Imperial Capital, said wider profit margins from Boeing's commercial airplanes unit helped the company beat estimates, even as defense revenue declined slightly.

But he was disappointed by the 2013 profit outlook of $5.00 to $5.20 a share, compared with his target of $5.60. The figures include pension charges.

The consensus Wall Street estimate was $5.13 a share for 2013, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Total revenue for the quarter rose 14 percent to $22.3 billion.

The company said it booked 394 net aircraft orders in the quarter, adding that its total order book was nearly 4,400 planes valued at $319 billion, a record tally. In the third quarter, it recorded 369 net orders and had an order book of about 4,100 airplanes valued at $307 billion.

For the first time, Boeing released so-called core results, which exclude most pension expenses that are part of standard accounting measures. Boeing said core earnings rose 9 percent to $1.84 billion in the quarter from $1.69 billion a year ago.

Core earnings per share fell 24 percent to $1.46 from $1.92, but the year-earlier figure included a one-time tax benefit of about 52 cents a share.

Boeing said the new measures better reflected its operating performance by factoring out market fluctuations and interest rate assumptions that can make pension expenses change significantly from quarter to quarter.

(Reporting by Alwyn Scott; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe and Marguerita Choy)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/boeing-profit-drops-sees-no-significant-impact-787-125728755--finance.html

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Balloon Juice ? Blog Archive ? Two Americas in Technology

By mistermix January 29th, 2013

The tech press is a little bit taken aback by the fact that 5-10% of the units sold by Acer, a PC maker, were Chromebooks. Acer makes the Chromebook C7, a laptop that runs Google?s ChromeOS, an operating system that is more-or-less a browser that can save things to cloud storage. If you read the tech site reviews, this thing is hard to distinguish from excrement: the screen isn?t so great, the keyboard and trackpad aren?t elegant, it?s a little slow, and it?s make from cheap and kind of ugly plastic.

Yet Acer sold a bunch of them, in my view mainly because the thing costs $199. If you want to get your kid, or your grandparents, a laptop that that won?t get polluted with viruses, updates automatically, and won?t lose any data if you drop it in the toilet (since it?s all stored in Google?s cloud), the Acer C7 is a solid choice. You kid can update Tumblr, Twitter and Pinterest and write papers for school. Your grandparents can update Facebook and send and receive email with pictures of the grandkids. Everyone?s happy, even if the device they?re using isn?t carved out of a single piece of solid aluminum, and the display isn?t retina quality.

A few years ago, the PC industry sold a bunch of netbooks, which were cheap little computers that ran a stripped-down version of Windows (or, in some cases, Linux). If you read the tech press, these were also too slow, and they all had crummy screens and crappy keyboards. Yet millions were sold because they were cheap and useful. Supposedly netbooks died out because the market switched to buying iPads or other tablets, but there?s still a market for a cheap computing device with a built-in full-size keyboard, and Chromebooks are filling the niche. They?re for the other America of computing: those who want something useful and affordable, no matter what the tech press thinks about it.

Also, too: the reason .04% of Daring Fireball?s traffic is from Chromebooks is because the kids and grandparents don?t give a shit about the resolution of the next iPad or whether Tim Cook can fill Steve Job?s shoes.

Source: http://www.balloon-juice.com/2013/01/29/two-americas-in-technology/

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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Kroft: Obama-Clinton interview request a surprise

NEW YORK (AP) -- With limited time and the unusual nature of a dual appearance with President Obama and outgoing Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, CBS' Steve Kroft said Monday said he thought it important to focus on their professional relationship instead of specific questions about world events.

Kroft said CBS was surprised when the White House suggested the appearance a little more than a week ago. The interview was conducted Friday and aired Sunday on "60 Minutes."

He judged that Obama wanting to do the interview alongside the woman who was once his fierce political rival before joining his administration was news in itself.

"I would have liked very much to delve into some areas of foreign policy and what is going on in the world, but it was not anything we could take on in 30 minutes," Kroft said, noting the time offered by the White House.

Besides, he said, there are opportunities to ask those questions in presidential or state department briefings.

"What was not ever likely to present itself was the opportunity to sit down and talk to them about their professional relationship," he said. "We thought that was the most important thing to do. You can watch their body language. You can judge what their relationship is."

A dual interview with a president and outgoing secretary of state in most cases wouldn't be particularly appealing. Not in this case, Kroft said.

Obama praised Clinton's work in the interview. He said that he had made the surprising decision to tap his rival for the 2008 Democratic presidential nomination because he wanted someone who was known on the world stage. After initially resisting, Clinton said she accepted the job because she realized she'd want Obama in her cabinet if she had been elected president.

Kroft said he sensed a warmth and respect between the two that might not have been publicly evident prior to the interview.

CBS received some criticism on Fox News Channel for not seeking news more aggressively. On "Fox & Friends," for example, co-host Brian Kilmeade said Kroft should have asked more questions about Clinton's recent fall and concussion.

"Why, exactly, did they sit down?" Fox's Steve Doocy said. "The interview was awkward. They were giddy saying goodbye and right at the top Steve Kroft said they only gave us 30 minutes which, of course, means there's not going to be any real news. And there wasn't."

Kroft said of the criticism: "This is something that has not been on my radar screen." The interview was the subject of many television and text news reports.

The "60 Minutes" veteran has been a regular interviewer of Obama, going back to the early days of the president's first campaign. He said he had a standing request for another interview around the start of the second term, when the Obama-Clinton sit-down was suggested.

Kroft said he felt an obligation to ask about the 2016 presidential race, even though he didn't expect, or receive, much of an answer.

"He's not interested in endorsing somebody for president and she's not, right now, interested in running, so the whole thing is kind of silly," he said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kroft-obama-clinton-interview-request-213710295.html

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Ronda Rousey stopped by an adorable opponent (VIDEO)

Ronda Rousey has finally met her match. Rousey, who has won every one of her fights with an armbar in the first round. And yet, when she meets up with an adorable four-year-old, what does Rousey do? She submits to an armbar!

Rousey's actual next opponent is Liz Carmouche at UFC 157. Will we see another armbar from the UFC bantamweight women's champ? Speak up in the comments, on Facebook or Twitter.

Thanks, MMA Fighting.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/ronda-rousey-stopped-adorable-opponent-video-151105286--mma.html

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Monday, January 28, 2013

Dick Van Dyke is honored with lifetime achievement award at SAG ceremony

Van Dyke is best known for movies such as 'Mary Poppins' and 'Bye Bye Birdie' and his TV show 'The Dick Van Dyke Show.' Van Dyke called his TV show 'the most fun I ever had and the most creative period of my life.'

By Beth Harris,?Associated Press / January 28, 2013

Dick Van Dyke holds up his lifetime achievement award, which he received at the 19th annual Screen Actors Guild Awards.

Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP

Enlarge

He's acted, danced and sang his way through movies, television and the stage, making Dick?Van?Dyke an entertainment triple-threat long before Hollywood used such hyphenates.

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The 87-year-old actor, best known for the 1960s hit comedy "The Dick?Van?Dyke Show" and Disney's big-screen musical "Mary Poppins," can now add lifetime achievement honoree. He picked up that honor at Sunday night's 19th annual Screen Actors Guild Awards.

"I've knocked around in this business for 70 years and I still haven't quite figured out exactly what it is I do," Van?Dyke said after accepting his trophy from presenter Alec Baldwin.

"The years have been full of surprises for me and a lot of fun. Aren't we lucky to have found a line of work that doesn't require growing up?"

Van?Dyke's career has spanned eight decades, starting with work as a disc jockey and a standup comic in the late '40s. He even worked as a national television morning-show host, with no less than Walter Cronkite serving as his news anchor.

But perhaps Van?Dyke's most critical career break came in 1960, when director Gower Champion hired him as the male lead opposite Chita Rivera in the new Broadway-bound stage musical "Bye Bye Birdie."

Van?Dyke had no professional dance experience, and out-of-town tryouts did not go well. Nevertheless, Champion refused to fire the actor, who would go on to New York with Rivera and win a Tony award for his performance.

About a year later, Van?Dyke was starring in his own sitcom, in the role of TV comedy writer Rob Petrie on "The Dick?Van?Dyke Show." Three prime-time Emmys for Van?Dyke and more than 50 years later, the series remains revered by many critics as one of the earliest models of great workplace comedy.

"'The 'Dick?Van?Dyke Show' was the most fun I ever had and the most creative period of my life," he said on the red carpet.

During the series' run, Van?Dyke also enjoyed big-screen hits, including the 1963 "Birdie" movie and the 1964 all-star comedy, "What a Way to Go!" But biggest of all was "Mary Poppins," in which he introduced the Oscar-winning song "Chim Chim Cher-ee."

"I'm world-famous for my Cockney accent," Van?Dyke kidded in his acceptance speech. He has said his British-born co-star, Julie Andrews, told him he never got the accent right.

Van?Dyke also saluted the room full of actors who gave him a standing ovation.

"I'm looking at the greatest generation of actors in the history of acting. You've all lifted the art to another place now," he said. "Besides that you're everywhere. You're in Darfur, Somalia, Haiti. You're all over the place trying to do what's right.

"This very heavy object here means that I can refer to you as my peers. I'm a happy man, God bless."

Last year, Van?Dyke presented the same lifetime achievement honor to his former TV co-star, Mary Tyler Moore.

These days, Van?Dyke sings with his vocal group, The Vantasix, and enjoys life with his wife of one year, makeup artist Arlene Silver. The couple met seven years ago at the SAG Awards.

"They tell me you never work again once you get this award," Van?Dyke said on the red carpet. "I'll have to let them know I'm available."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/QRE0IoJwne0/Dick-Van-Dyke-is-honored-with-lifetime-achievement-award-at-SAG-ceremony

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Ocala Veterinarian Partners With PETS for Emergency Veterinary Care

OCALA, Fla., Jan. 27, 2013 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- An Ocala pet wellness veterinarian wishes to spread the word about his hospital's partnership with an after-hours emergency facility. Town & Country Animal Hospital refers emergency cases that occur outside of its normal operating hours to PETS (Pet Emergency Treatment Services). "We are proud to be associated with this advanced after-hours emergency care center," says Kelly Culbertson, DVM. "We want our patients to receive a high standard of emergency veterinary care as quickly as they can possibly get it. Our referral relationship with PETS helps to ensure that this will happen."

PETS is an organization of local veterinarians in cooperation with the University of Florida College of Veterinary Medicine. The centrally-located clinic offers emergency care from 5pm to 8am on weekdays, and around the clock on weekends, to meet the needs of pets that require immediate attention when most veterinary centers are closed.

"Unfortunately, an emergency doesn't always happen during business hours," observes Dr. Culbertson. "A crisis situation such as choking, toxin ingestion or a traumatic accident can occur any time of day or night. PETS is our answer to this need for after-hours emergency care."

Other typical pet emergency scenarios include vomiting, diarrhea, respiratory or heart problems, neurological crises, bloat, abdominal pain, and complications from a chronic illness. Town & Country Animal Hospital will automatically forward after-hours emergency calls to the PETS clinic. A full staff of assistants and technicians stand by to help the emergency vets deal with incoming cases.

While Town & Country Animal Hospital provides comprehensive emergency and critical care services, including blood transfusions, it closes at 6pm on weekdays and at 12pm on Saturdays (remaining closed on Sundays). Town & Country Animal Hospital is one of 19 area veterinary hospitals involved with the organizations since its founding in 2012. Dr. Culbertson himself helped bring the organization to fruition, and he continues to sit on its board.

His central message, however, is that pet owners realize that they have a place to turn for round-the-clock emergency care. "If your pet suffers an emergency at 2 in the morning or on a Sunday, don't panic," Dr. Culbertson says. "Contact PETS to get the immediate treatment your pet might need."

Town & Country Animal Hospital provides emergency and critical care, dental care, boarding, grooming, surgery, general wellness care and other services for pets in Ocala, Silver Springs, Marion County, Williston and Morriston.

Town & Country Animal Hospital 888-667-5235

Source: http://globenewswire.com/news-release/2013/01/27/518723/10019328/en/Ocala-Veterinarian-Partners-With-PETS-for-Emergency-Veterinary-Care.html

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What's Next? Better Engagement and a Marketplace Without ...

Image2012 has seen social media continue to gather pace, with even more social channels hitting the market. Even with all this buzz, there is still a level of scepticism and uncertainty amoung businesses who still fail to understand the power and the enormous opportunities that social media presents. This situation is somewhat similar to the late 1990s when a large number of businesses believed they didn?t need a webpage, which resulted in many missed opportunities.

Within this world of change in how we communicate, connect, and engage what does 2013 have in store for us? There are a number of technology driven shifts underway, and these will continue to have a major impact on how we work and how we engage using social media. Here are some of the trends that will impact us in 2013.

ENGAGE ME

A lot of businesses have a presence on social media, but very few have taken this opportunity seriously. There are even a greater number of businesses that still see Social Media as a fad, or are unable to grasp the opportunity due to either a lack of understanding or fear about someone posting a complaint on their social channel site.

2013 will be a defining year as we see the social channels continue to grow and evolve. For businesses, governments, charities and educators, 2013 is the year of engagement. The consumer is now front and centre and controls what information he/she wants to receive from their brand communities. They are the ones that give you and your brand permission to interact with them. It?s no longer a one way street in terms of communication, where traditional marketing has been used over the years. 2013 is the year of engagement; it?s the time for brands to interact with their community / tribe members, understand more about your brand from them and get them talking about your brand. The organisations that get this will see their brands outpace their competitors, especially the ones that still don?t see social media as a channel to participate in.

A MARKETPLACE WITH NO BOUNDARIES?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????

2013 will see companies beginning to realise that they are no longer servicing a local community, or geographic location. With the internet, mobile phones and social media, business is now truly global and can service anyone that they engage with via social media.

Smart Brands will begin to realise that they need to rethink their strategy, realign their marketing mix and product offerings to effectively compete in a global marketplace.

With this shift in thinking comes an understanding that social media is an important part of your marketing mix. If you have a product to sell or a service to market, social media can play a major part in getting your brand global. Today you don?t need to rely on an ?intermediary ?such as distributors, licensors or ?retailers. You can get online set up a presence on social channels and sell your product or service 24/7.

POWER TO THE PEOPLE

Social media has given every person a voice. For the first time ever the power is now rests in the hands of the individual. ?2013 will see this power shift, continue to grow and influence every aspect of society.

The consumer now holds the power, they now decide which brands they want to interact with and receive information from.

This shift will continue to reverberate across society as brands, companies, associations, and governments come to terms with this shift in power.

As we have seen recently, social media controls the noise, spreads the word, allows individuals to gather together and become one voice. People now congregate both on and offline to support a cause or injustice.

In 2013 social media will continue to drive the news, views and opinions of the individual which in turn aggregates to the masses.? ?Power to the people? can now bring down Governments. It can now impact elections, damage or destroy brands, change legislation, and create change itself; it provides the silent majority with a voice. ?

Governments, Businesses and Brands as well as social media providers now have to come to terms with how they operate, ?market, communicate and engage in this new economy. As we have recently seen with Instagram (who wanted to change their terms of operation to give them the right to use other peoples images for advertising purposes) people will spread the message and people will disengage in protest.

BATTLE OF THE NET TITANS

In 2013 we will see the battle of the ?net titans?. These are the major players on the internet, once dominated by computer hardware companies, the new age titans are the likes of Google, Amazon, Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, and Apple.

These companies dominate a marketplace like no other before them, and they hold the biggest asset of all, information; on what we like dislike, think and do.

We will see these big companies butting heads with each other as they try to grab an advantage and more power.? Some may decide to stop allowing their information being shared via search engines, others may stop third party providers of services, (such as the plethora of? twitter third party services providers from being able to access the twitter streams) in an attempt to control the information and data they are gathering.

Will this battle create separate webs with their own search engines where you never need to leave the social channels you engage in?? This will certainly start to play out over the coming years and dramatically change the nature of? the internet and destroy the original philosophy of the internet, which was open shared content.

COMPANY SOCIAL MEDIA

2013 will be defined as the year that social media started to be? ?integrated? into business. This trend will be all about businesses using social media channels as a vehicle to communicate and collaborate and engage with other employees online through social media channels.

We have seen education facilities start to integrate social media into their operations, and we will start to see savvy smart businesses and governments do the same. Using social media as vehicles to communicate internal announcements, to create collaborative cross functional working groups, to seek out new employees or internal job opportunities.... social media for business will provide endless opportunities and will hopefully put an end to those dreaded emails that have become the biggest time consuming and some may say most unproductive activity in business today.

Source: http://socialmediatoday.com/social-tonic/1188846/2013-social-media-trends-where-next

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Wonderful Colin Kaepernick Jersey And Simple Suggestions For ...

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Source: http://naalokam.com/archives/6385

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Sunday, January 27, 2013

UN group OKs new video format to save bandwidth

GENEVA (AP) ? The U.N. telecommunications agency says its members have agreed upon a new compression format that could dramatically cut the amount of Internet bandwidth currently used by video files.

The International Telecommunication Union says the format, or codec, known as H.265 would require just half the amount of data needed by its predecessor, H.264.

The Geneva-based agency says videos encoded using the H.264 format ? which is favored by devices such as Apple's iPad ? currently account for two-fifths of web traffic.

ITU said in a statement late Friday the new H.265 codec could pave the way for "the next wave of innovation," such as faster movie downloads and higher-quality video streaming.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-01-26-UN-Video%20Compression/id-92db567a12da4b0fbdf9a9ad34fecb8c

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Saturday, January 26, 2013

NIH should retire most chimpanzees from medical research, panel says (+video)

Hundreds of chimpanzees at NIH facilities should no longer be used as test subjects, the panel said, but 50 should be kept as a contingency, adding that all the chimps should be housed more comfortably.

By Pete Spotts,?Staff writer / January 23, 2013

Ron, featured in the film 'Chimpanzees: An Unnatural History', was born in a research lab and spent most of his life in isolation. Subsequently, he went to live at the Save the Chimps sanctuary in Ft. Pierce, Florida.

Courtesy of Save the Chimps /PBS

Enlarge

A senior scientific advisory panel at the National Institutes of Health, in a step toward phasing out the use of chimpanzees in federally funded medical research,?has found "no compelling evidence" to support keeping hundreds of chimpanzees at NIH facilities and recommends that all but about 50 chimps be retired.

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This small group would remain available as a contingency should some unforeseen disease emerge for which chimps would be the best stand-ins for humans. But they, along with the retirees, would be housed in facilities designed to more adequately accommodate the full range of normal chimp physical and social activities ? from climbing, foraging, and daily nest-building to hanging out in sizable groups on branches high off the ground, according to the panel.

The panel also recommends ending 16 of 30 research projects involving chimpanzees that the NIH currently is funding. The largest proportional hit falls on biomedical research, one of three categories of projects. Six out of nine current biomedical projects would end.

The ultimate driver behind the recommendations: concerns about the value and ethics of using chimpanzees, biologically the nearest relative to humans, for physically painful and intrusive infectious-disease research.

If the 28 recommendations are implemented, the effort would represent "an historic step forward" in moving chimps out of the lab and into sanctuaries, says Kathleen Conlee, vice-president for animal-research issues at the Humane Society of the United States, based in Washington.

Even foes of federal legislation to greatly restrict the use of chimps and other "great apes" in biomedical research see merit in the new recommendations.

As a stand-in for humans, "the chimpanzee has played a very important role in the evolution of biomedical research," notes Frankie Trull, president of the National Association for Biomedical Research (NABR) in Washington, which fought against the Great Apes Protection and Cost Reduction Act of 2011, which died in December with the end of the 113th Congress.

But biomedical science has advanced, Ms. Trull continues. And keeping chimpanzees is expensive; chimps are not euthanized but must be cared for until they die naturally. Researchers have found alternative animal models for some of the kinds of studies that once centered on chimps.

Although NABR opposed the Great Ape Protection and Cost Reduction Act, the group is comfortable with the recommendations the NIH is now considering, Trull says.

The case for change and the steps to take came from the scientific community, she observes, adding, "scientists should determine what animal models should be used, not Congress."

Chimpanzees represent a tiny proportion of animals used in biomedical research. The overwhelming majority of animals used are either rodents or zebra fish.

The recommendations represent the outcome of a process that began at the end of 2010, when three US senators asked the US National Academies to examine the issue, as did the NIH. A year later, the National Academies' Institute of Medicine released its report.

The 86-page report released for comment on Jan. 22 was pulled together by a senior working group that the NIH gathered to turn the Institute of Medicine's report into specific recommendations.

If adopted, the recommendations would apply only to NIH-owned chimps and those used in the course of NIH-funded research. Of 670 chimps the NIH owns or supports, 219 have been retired. Some 282 are research-ready. Another 169 have been labeled "research inactive," a kind of bridge category between the first two.

By some estimates, another 350 chimps would fall outside the purview of these recommendations because they are owned either by private pharmaceutical companies or by universities.

Indeed, the Human Society's Ms. Conlee suggests the Great Ape Protection Act is likely to be reintroduced this year to broaden restrictions to chimps not covered by the new recommendations.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/17RvnU6kQnY/NIH-should-retire-most-chimpanzees-from-medical-research-panel-says-video

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Newtown residents join gun control march on Washington

On Saturday about 100 residents from Newtown, Conn., along with thousands of protesters, will rally in support of gun control legislation on the National Mall.?

By Brett Zongker,?Associated Press / January 26, 2013

Gun rights and gun control advocates demonstrate in the Pennsylvania Capital building Wednesday, Jan. 23, in Harrisburg, Pa. Residents of Newtown, Conn. are expected to march in support of gun control in Washington on Saturday.

Matt Rourke/AP

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Residents from Newtown, Conn., are joining a march on Washington for gun control on Saturday with parents, pastors, survivors of gun violence and Education Secretary Arne Duncan.

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Organizers said they are expecting thousands of participants for the rally on the National Mall, including about 100 from Newtown and buses from New Jersey, New York and Philadelphia. Others are flying in from Seattle, San Francisco and even Alaska. They will gather Saturday at the Capitol Reflecting Pool at 10 a.m. and will begin marching down Constitution Avenue toward the Washington Monument at 11 a.m. A rally is planned on the monument grounds at noon.

Molly Smith, the artistic director of Washington's Arena Stage, and her partner organized the march, inspired by the December massacre that killed 20 first graders and six teachers at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, she said. The gunman also fatally shot his mother and committed suicide.

"With the drum roll, the consistency of the mass murders and the shock of it, it is always something that is moving and devastating to me. And then, it's as if I move on," Smith said. "And In this moment, I can't move on. I can't move on.

"I think it's because it was children, babies," she said. "I was horrified by it."

While she's never organized a political march before, Smith said she was compelled to press for a change in the law. The march organizers support President Barack Obama's call for a ban on military-style assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition magazines as well as for universal background checks for gun sales. They also want lawmakers to require gun safety training for all buyers of firearms.

As a theater person, Smith said murdering a child is something you can never show in theater. Even in the Greek tragedy, "Medea," the main character kills her children, but that happens off stage, Smith said.

After the Connecticut shootings, Smith posted something on Facebook and drew more support to do something. The group One Million Moms for Gun Control, the Washington National Cathedral and two other churches eventually signed on to co-sponsor the march. Organizers have raised more than $46,000 online to pay for equipment and fees to stage the rally.

Lawmakers from the District of Columbia and Maryland are scheduled to speak. Actress Kathleen Turner is expected to appear, along with Marian Wright Edelman of the Children's Defense Fund and Colin Goddard, a survivor from the Virginia Tech massacre.

Smith said she supports a comprehensive look at mental health and violence in video games and films. But she said the mass killings at Virginia Tech and Aurora, Colo., and Newtown, Conn., all start with guns.

"The issue is guns. The Second Amendment gives us the right to own guns, but it's not the right to own any gun," she said. "These are assault weapons, made for killing people."

March on Washington for Gun Control: http://www.guncontrolmarch.com/

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/gfbskPMJDiU/Newtown-residents-join-gun-control-march-on-Washington

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Afghan bombing helped shape Panetta's views on women in war

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Three years before he lifted the U.S. military's ban on females in front-line combat, Leon Panetta grew acutely aware that women in senior positions were already risking - and losing - their lives when a would-be informant blew himself up at a CIA base in Afghanistan.

Panetta was CIA director at the time of the December 2009 attack in Khost, Afghanistan, and two women -- including one who headed the CIA base -- were among the seven Americans killed.

A senior aide cited it among the experiences that helped shaped Panetta's thinking about women in war even before he took over the Pentagon in 2011, and inherited the difficult job of writing condolence notes to the families of fallen troops - men and women.

More than 150 women have died in the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq since 2001, and nearly 1,000 have been wounded.

"Every time I visited the war zone ... I've been impressed with the fact that everyone -- everyone, men and women alike -- everyone is committed to doing the job," Panetta told reporters on Thursday.

"They're fighting and they're dying together. And the time has come for our policies to recognize that reality."

So, with perhaps just weeks before he steps down as defense secretary and retires to private life, Panetta on Thursday was able to seal his legacy as the man who lifted the 1994 ban on women in front-line combat roles. It came after he helped finish the job of integrating openly serving gay and lesbian service members in 2011, with the elimination of the "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy.

Panetta took an important step toward making more opportunities available to women last year, with an initial move to open around 14,000 additional jobs to women but leaving more than 230,000 off-limits. At the time, the aide recalled Panetta being unsatisfied, asking privately "why can't we do more?"

Panetta on Thursday credited the military's top brass for putting forward the proposal this month to lift the ban on women in front-line combat roles. An OK from the generals and admirals was crucial buy-in that would be necessary for the proposal to work. The integration will be gradual, through 2016, and it's unclear which roles may remain off-limits.

"I was very pleased when I got that recommendation, because it was a fulfillment of what we had talked about and what we wanted to achieve," Panetta said.

OBAMA STAYED OUT OF PENTAGON DELIBERATIONS

Aides described regular meetings over the past year with service chiefs on the issue, sometimes in the ultra-secure Pentagon briefing room known as "The Tank."

Panetta said he also regularly spoke with President Barack Obama on his efforts to provide more opportunities to women.

A senior administration official said Obama had privately encouraged Panetta to take the step but had stayed out of internal Pentagon deliberations.

Panetta also had an ally in General Martin Dempsey, the top U.S. military officer, who, as commander of the 1st Armored Division in Iraq in 2003 came to learn how the role of women in the military had changed over the years.

On his first foray out of the forward operating base, Dempsey jumped into an armored vehicle and slapped the soldier manning the turret gunner around the leg, and said, "Who are you?"

"And she leaned down and said, 'I'm Amanda,'" Dempsey recalled. "So, female turret-gunner protecting (me, the) division commander. And it's from that point on that I realized something had changed, and it was time to do something about it."

Panetta described a similar experience when he came face-to-face with a military that had changed tremendously in the near half-century since he joined the Army as an intelligence officer in 1964.

"It's been almost 50 years since I served in the military and to go out now and to see women performing the roles that they are performing and doing a great job at it, I think it ... encouraged me," Panetta told reporters.

He noted that he had six grandchildren, half of them women and the other half men.

"I want each of them to have the same chance to succeed at whatever they want to do," he said.

"In life, as we all know, there are no guarantees of success. Not everyone is going to be able to be a combat soldier. But everyone is entitled to a chance."

(Additional reporting by Steve Holland and David Alexander; Editing by Warren Strobel and Doina Chiacu)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/afghan-bombing-helped-shape-panettas-views-women-war-002155367.html

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Friday, January 25, 2013

What if I am the One Not Communicating? | Blog | Mager ...

On the other hand, you have the right to expect healthy communication only when you have honestly addressed the situation, making sure you can answer certain questions for yourself. Questions to Ask Yourself?.

  1. Have you attempted to understand what the real issue is in the situation?
  2. Have you taken their needs into account?
  3. ?Have you made reasonable efforts to understand why there is a communication problem?
  4. Do you believe that your requests are reasonable?
  5. Have you offered realistic alternatives or compromises that you can truly accept?

And what if you?re the person who?s not communicating? It might be helpful to stand in the shoes of the other person and answer the questions in the previous section. In a great relationship, communication is the foundation for real happiness. Why do you think that no communication is the better alternative? Why do you think either you or the other benefits by a situation that makes one or both of you more uncomfortable?

Communication (or the lack of it) tells you so much about the relationship and where you stand. Whatever the situation, your honest and responsive communication will enable solutions that are best for both of you. You owe it to yourself?and to the other. Regardless of the outcome, the resolution will give everyone a chance to be happier. That is being honest. That is being fair. That is doing the right thing.

Source: http://www.magerempowerment.com/v2/blog/?p=1544

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Vine Is Already Broken

Vine, Twitter's new micro-video sharing... thing, is temporarily down, buckled beneath the weight of desk recordings. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/4Nmd8HuxuPA/vine-is-already-broken

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The importance of app icons

The importance of app icons

Renowned icon and app designer Louie Mantia -- who's been a guest on our design show, Iterate, not once but twice -- has shared his thoughts on app icons and their importance in an article on mantia.com:

[While] you can focus on marketing needs, that is a one-time scenario for each person. Any individual will only buy your app once. One time. It?s important to recognize that optimizing for this one situation may hinder the needs of your everyday user.

I believe good app icons are most valuable for your customers, your everyday users, not first-time shoppers.

Mantia shows a lot of examples, and even some brilliantly redesign suggestions for industry titans. Check it out.

Site: mantia.com



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/OQADAMU08V8/story01.htm

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Thursday, January 24, 2013

Nokia returns to profit but sales keep dropping

FILE - In this April 12, 2012, file photo, the window of Nokia's flagship store displays an advertisement of the new Nokia Lumia mobile phone in Helsinki on Thursday, April, 19, 2012 . Nokia Corp. reported a fourth-quarter net profit of ?202 million ($270 million) Thursday Jan. 23, 2013 compared to a net loss of more than $1 billion a year earlier but revenue in the period fell 20 percent to ?8 billion from a year earlier. (AP Photo/LEHTIKUVA / Markku Ulander, File) FINLAND OUT

FILE - In this April 12, 2012, file photo, the window of Nokia's flagship store displays an advertisement of the new Nokia Lumia mobile phone in Helsinki on Thursday, April, 19, 2012 . Nokia Corp. reported a fourth-quarter net profit of ?202 million ($270 million) Thursday Jan. 23, 2013 compared to a net loss of more than $1 billion a year earlier but revenue in the period fell 20 percent to ?8 billion from a year earlier. (AP Photo/LEHTIKUVA / Markku Ulander, File) FINLAND OUT

(AP) ? Struggling Nokia Corp. turned a net profit of ?202 million ($270 million) in the fourth quarter, compared with a loss of $1 billion a year earlier, but revenue fell 20 percent as it failed to make gains in the fiercely competitive smartphone market.

The Finnish company said Thursday that revenue dropped to ?8 billion ($10.6 billion) from ?10 billion as smartphone sales plunged 55 percent, and it gave a grim outlook, saying it would not pay a dividend for 2012 to save money.

The company's shares plunged more than 4 percent to ?3.33 in Helsinki.

Nokia expects operating margins in the first quarter to be "approximately negative 2 percent, plus or minus four percentage points," citing increased competition and lower-than-expected demand for its flagship Lumia phones and cheaper Asha models, which have been popular in emerging markets.

Nokia said it sold 15.9 million smartphones in the quarter, down from 19.6 million a year earlier, including 4.4 million Lumia phones. In comparison, rival Apple Inc. sold almost 48 million iPhones.

Neil Mawston, a technology expert from Strategy Analytics in Boston, said Nokia's share of the global smartphone market had fallen to a record low of about 3 percent.

"Nokia is on a recovery curve at the moment," Mawston said. "In terms of volumes, they really need to improve. They regained profit, the next step is to regain market share."

The company sold only 4.6 million handsets in China, a fall of 69 percent from the previous year, with sales revenue there plunging 79 percent to ?213 million from the previous quarter.

"That's a whopping decline in the world's biggest phone market and smartphone market. China really was the one that jumped out the most in the report," Mawston said. "North American recovery was also less than expected."

Nokia, formerly the world's top cellphone maker, had hoped to stem the decline in smartphones through a partnership with Microsoft Corp. but North America ? the frontline of the smartphone market ? continued to be a disappointment. Shipments there grew 40 percent on the year, but to a mere 700,000 million devices.

In all, Nokia sold 45 million cellphones in the fourth quarter, 15 percent less than in 2011.

CEO Stephen Elop said he was encouraged that the company had reached "underlying profitability" and strengthened its financial position but cautioned that more cutbacks could be expected.

"We remain focused on moving through our transition, which includes continuing to improve our product competitiveness, accelerate the way we operate and manage our costs effectively," Elop said.

The company said it is not proposing any dividend for 2012 while in 2011 it paid a dividend of ?0.20 per share.

Not only has Nokia lost out in the fierce top-end race, it is now also losing ground to Asian makers in the market for cheaper devices and phones using Google's popular Android platform.

Nokia had led the cellphone market for 14 years, with its global market share peaking at 40 percent in 2008, but Samsung overtook it as the world's No. 1 cellphone maker a year ago.

Nokia Siemens Networks ? a joint-venture with Germany's Siemens AG that has been loss-making for years ? showed signs of improvement, mainly because of restructuring measures including substantial job cuts.

Elop said the division "drove record profitability" during the quarter, with operating profit surging to ?251 million from ?67 million the previous year as revenue grew 5 percent to ?4 billion.

Nokia, which has been struggling to cut costs by ?1.6 billion by the end of this year, announced 10,000 job cuts in June and closed down research and development facilities globally as well as its main manufacturing plant in Salo, Finland.

At the end of 2012, it employed a total of 98,000 people ? down from 130,000 a year earlier.

Last month, it sold its head office near the Finnish capital ? a glass and steel structure that has been the company's main base since 1997 ? for ?170 million and is leasing it back to save costs.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-01-24-Finland-Nokia-Earns/id-d0d7d964315a4ce5bffd474e02ef6891

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S&P 500 closes higher but just below 1,500

5 hrs.

The S&P 500 closed higher for the seventh-consecutive session Thursday after crossing above the 1,500 level for the first time since December 2007, but Apple ended near session lows, putting a damper on the tech-heavy Nasdaq.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 46.00 points, or 0.33 percent, to end at 13,825.33, led by Cisco and Boeing. Alcoa led the blue-chip laggards.

The Dow is up more than 5 percent so far this month, on pace for the best January performance since 1997 when the index rose 5.7 percent. The index is also within 3 percent of its all-time closing high of 14,164.53 points hit on October 9, 2007.?

The S&P 500 squeezed out a gain of 0.01 points to finish at 1,494.82, logging its first seven-day win streak since October 2006. Earlier, the index crossed above 1,500 for the first time since December 2007.?

Related: S&P Tops 1,500: Where the Market Goes From Here

Meanwhile, the Nasdaq declined 23.29 points, or 0.74 percent, to close at 3,130.38, mainly dragged by Apple. The CBOE Volatility Index (VIX), widely considered the best gauge of fear in the market, ended above 12.

Most key S&P sectors finished in positive territory, led by consumer discretionary and health care, while techs slumped.

"Even Apple can't affect this market rally," said Yu-Dee Chang, chief trader at ACE Investment Strategists. "We're at the psychological 1,500 level so we may spend some time?maybe even days?going back and forth around here. And if we don't fall off, the market has another leg up."

Chang noted that since the market lows of March 2009, the index on average has cycled between gains of 13.5 percent and declines of 7.7 percent.

"So take the low in November?a 13 percent gain would put us near 1,520 on the S&P," explained Chang. "And then people will look for reasons to pull back. And when we get to that level, we would want to be a little bit cautious."

Among earnings, Apple plunged nearly 10 percent after the world's most valuable company by market cap posted revenue that fell short of estimates and iPhone sales that missed quarterly expectations. The tech giant's stock has plunged nearly 33 percent from its all-time high of $705 last September. At least 13 brokerages slashed their price target on the company.?

Major Apple suppliers including Broadcom, Skyworks and Qualcomm also declined.?

Meanwhile, Netflix skyrocketed after the movie-streaming site posted a profit of 13 cents a share, blowing past expectations for a loss. In addition, the company handed in current-quarter guidance that topped estimates.

On the economic front, weekly jobless claims fell 5,000 to a seasonally adjusted 330,000, dropping to its lowest level in nearly five years, according to the Labor Department . Analysts polled by Reuters had expected claims to rise to 355,000 last week.

"The Fed Chairman [Ben Bernanke] said he wants to see substantial gains in the labor market before they're going to take the foot off the pedal?so this isn't enough to bring us there yet, but this is not a bad number," said Jim Iuorio, director at TJM Institutional Services.?In December, the central bank pledged to keep interest rates low until employment falls below 6.5 percent and inflation tops 2.5 percent.

"We have stock market tailwinds in Asia with the fact that they're devaluing the yen and China is providing stimulus in addition to a decent PMI?so this is not bad," continued Iuorio. "The chart is not giving us a reason to sell the stock market yet either, except for the fact that it may be a little long in the tooth."

Leading indicators gained 0.5 percent in December, according to the Conference Board. Economists polled by Reuters forecast an increase of 0.3 percent.

Also among earnings, Dow component 3M rose after the conglomerate reported earnings that met Street expectations, driven by strong performance in its consumer, graphics and health care segments.

? 2013 CNBC LLC. All Rights Reserved

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/sp-500-closes-higher-just-below-1-500-1C8103620

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Farm double payments clear hurdle

Farmers could be paid twice for measures to protect the environment under a European Parliament deal.

The Agriculture Committee agreed that EU rules forbidding double payments should be waived to help farmers.

Green campaigners say the vote is a scandal and must be over-turned by the full Parliament and member states.

The motion was passed because many MEPs want to shield farmers? incomes from the Commision's planned reform of the costly Common Agricultural Policy.

At the moment farmers get paid on average 200 euros a hectare in direct payments from taxpayers for doing little more than owning land.

If they want to be paid more they can opt for an extra green payment to help wildlife. It is under a different section of the budget and gains a further 80 euros.

With critics of the EU clamouring to end farm hand-outs, the Commission says farmers should earn a third of their direct payments by farming in a way that benefits the environment.

The committee agrees to that reform of direct payments. It means that all farmers will have to ?green? their activities to get full direct payment.

But the MEPs insisted that farmers who are already gaining extra payments for green activities should be entitled to keep them ? on top of the money they will get from the direct payment - but without doing any more to earn the cash.

In other words, to be paid twice for the same thing.

Faustine Defossez, Agriculture Policy Officer at the European Environmental Bureau, said: "In times of austerity, when governments and citizens across Europe are tightening their purse strings, it is scandalous - not to mention illegal - to expect taxpayers to pay farmers twice."

She urged the full Parliament to over-turn the vote to prove they were representing people, not just farmers. She said a previous planned reform of the farm budget was much more fair.

Campaign group WWF said the committee?s vote was outrageous and would bring the EU into disrepute.

A source close to the negotiations told BBC News that over-turning the committee vote might prove difficult.

The UK government says the double-payment plan must be blocked. It is likely to face extreme pressure on the issue from Conservative back-benchers already angry with the Brussels budget.

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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-21171472#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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Wednesday, January 23, 2013

The Citizen Science of Climate Change: We are not bystanders

Superstorm Sandy prior to the 2012 Presidential election put climate change on the mind of many voters. Earlier this month, a Federal Advisory Committee of 13 collaborating agencies released a Draft Climate Assessment Report for public review. The data show the climate is already changing: rising sea-level, ocean acidification, damage to infrastructure, and impacts on human health, water resources, and agriculture. Because the data make it hard to remain optimistic, many were thankful to hear Obama say at his inauguration, "We'll respond to the threat of climate change, knowing that the failure to do so would betray our children and future generations."

One overlooked aspect of the data, however, can also give us reason for optimism. Although credit for the report is given to 240+ scientists and engineers who compiled the evidence about global climate change, the backbone of the knowledge presented arises from efforts of unsung (and unwitting) heroes: people who collect weather data. The coordinated, cross-generational, collective nature of the public data-collection efforts reveals an unexploited strength in our society that should give us hope.

It's often unclear where climate change data come from; like many others, I had assumed it's all generated by satellites circling the earth and buoys floating in the ocean. While those technologies play a role, data on the key variables of temperature and precipitation have been, and still are, collected by otherwise ordinary people. Thus, evidence for climate change is not because "scientists say so", but rather because the collective observations of people show we have shorter, warmer winters, and longer, hotter summers, periods of extreme heat lasting longer than any living American can recall, and rain in extremes: either heavier downpours or droughts. Separately, people across the country have noted these observations in their backyards. Scientists have pooled the observations to reveal widespread patterns.

The new assessment is an impressive synthesis of the most up-to-date studies in the peer-reviewed literature about climate change. It details negative impacts in a wide array of economic sectors, from maple syrup in Vermont to oysters in Washington. Each study that involved rain, snow, and temperature measurements drew those data from the U.S. Cooperative Weather Observer Program: a citizen science network.

The Program is not often referred to as citizen science, probably in part because it started generations before the term was coined, but that's what it is.

Public contributions of weather measurements date as far back as the availability of instruments to measure weather. When founding our nation, Thomas Jefferson wanted to deputize one person in every county in Virginia to collect temperature and wind data twice a day. The Revolutionary War pre-empted these plans.

The concept kept recurring. In the late 1840s, Matthew Maury wanted farmers to collect weather data and share them via the telegraph so that his naval office could aggregate reports and make forecasts. He adapted the idea from a maritime system he coordinated, whereby weather information crowdsourced from merchant ships was turned into wind and current maps that quickened ocean travel. The Civil War pre-empted his land-based weather plans.

In 1870, President Grant formed an agency to coordinate a volunteer weather observer program. The program eventually became the U.S. Cooperative Weather Observer Program of the National Weather Service. Since then, gathering standardized weather data has been a tradition in many families at 12,000 sites in the U.S. Take a look at the National Weather Service newsletters honoring long-term service and you'll see Terrell Phillips of Douglas, Georgia, who took over observations after his father passed away so that their weather station has operated for a continuous 50 years. You'll see Sara Waddell of Woodruff, South Carolina, who received a 25-year length of service award, following in her parents' footsteps. Her mother had observed since 1956 and her father since 1987. And we can thank Robert Hoppe of Broadwater County, Montana, for 40 years of service; he comes from a farming family that has recorded since 1939. Together, people contribute about one million volunteer hours annually. A core of about 1,200 of these sites has continuous history ideal for climate change research.

It would be nearly impossible for me to accept the burden of the report's conclusions - climate change is not only real, but accelerating - if it weren't for the one glimmer of hope that I see in all knowledge coproduced via citizen science: the power of the coordinated, collective efforts of curious, dedicated people. The discovery and understanding of global climate change, which has been so hotly debated, was possible because we are not a country of bystanders. We are participators. When the weather service asked for help, people helped. Because of participation, we have an inkling of the threats that we face.

I don't know the solutions to global climate change. You probably don't either. But any solutions will certainly involve collective action. It was our uncoordinated collective action, in the form of burning fossil fuels, that has made the climate change problem. And it was our coordinated collected action that informed us of the problem. We all will be forced to deal with climate change, so the question is: which type of collective action do we prefer? The coordinated, dedicated, collective efforts embedded in family traditions and daily practices as seen in citizen science illustrate the attributes and possibilities we need to find the best path forward. As President Obama said, we won't let down our children or future generations--indeed, we'll teach them to participate.

Images: NOAA Photo Library. Follow Scientific American on Twitter @SciAm and @SciamBlogs. Visit ScientificAmerican.com for the latest in science, health and technology news.
? 2013 ScientificAmerican.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/citizen-science-climate-change-not-bystanders-223200343.html

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