Thursday, October 24, 2013

New Relic Makes A Bet On A Real-Time Service That Processes Billions Of Data Points For Ad Hoc Analysis


Every couple of months, New Relic CEO Lew Cirne has coded on a secret project, away from the family and mostly anyone else. He has been a code monk, cloistered in a cabin, developing a real-time analytics engine code-named Rubicon that uses live application data to do ad hoc analysis.


Cirne says the service he developed is essentially a database that processes billions of data points on a daily basis. With the data, Rubicon does analysis for insights into how people are using the app according to any number of criteria.


rubiconproject


Rubicon, named for Rubicon Peak where he had the initial idea for the project, will be available next year. A beta version will go live later this quarter. The price for the service has not been announced.


The hope here is that Rubicon will help New Relic be a company that lives beyond the lifetime of its core service: application lifecycle management. By focusing on data analytics, Cirne believes the company can serve a budding ecosystem in entirely new dimensions.


Rubicon is built from the ground up, based upon the data from its 70,000 customers. It is now running on 100 million phones. On the backend, the service runs on a Hadoop infrastructure with Map Reduce running in parallel. It primarily leverages  in-memory technology he developed that is tuned to time-stamp events by the billions. It promises sub-second results for the user.


Cine said the company expects the number of customers to double in the next year. With this expanding data foundation, the company will have a service that it can open to third-party application providers who can add additional data and create different types of services.


Every minute, New Relic collects eight to nine million data points. As that number grows, New Relic will have a service that customers can leverage in a way that very few companies have been historically capable of doing.


Rubicon does remind me of data analytics platforms that have emerged in the past year that bypass the need for a data warehouse. Platfora fits into this category as do others that offer real-time analysis. Rubicon’s distinctiveness is in the database Cirne developed. If the company’s ecosystem can be truly leveraged then Rubicon could very well be the foundation for the next phase of the company’s growth and future potentially as a publicly traded company.


Cirne will show Rubicon at FutureStack today the company’s first user conference. The company has other annoncements about its mobile service and general availability for Node.js code monitoring. But you can tell that Cirne’s burning interest is in Rubicon. That does pose its own set of risks as a new effort can take resources from the company. And if it is not a success it could leave the company well-exposed and potentially be a detriment to its efforts to become a publicly traded company.




Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/gskL3ygjclA/
Category: bart   homeland   Million Second Quiz   eminem   Amber Riley  

Kanye West and Kim Kardashian Are Engaged (Report)



Rapper Kanye West and reality TV star Kim Kardashian are engaged, E! News reports.



The two pop culture icons, who are parents to four-month-old daughter North, have been dating since early 2012. According to E!, the network that airs the highly successful Keeping Up With the Kardashians series, West proposed in front of their friends and family at AT&T Park in San Francisco on Monday night, which also happens to be Kardashian's birthday.


PHOTOS: The Kardashian Family's Summer of Bummers


The hip-hop star is in the Bay Area for his current Yeezus Tour, which is scheduled to stop in San Jose, Calif. on Tuesday night. The trek kicked off this past weekend and has already made headlines for its theatrical visuals -- which include a Jesus who shares the stage with West -- and a wardrobe malfunction


Hours before popping the question to his longtime crush, West was a presenter at the Hollywood Film Awards.


The Hollywood Reporter has reached out to reps for West and Kardashian for confirmation.


Twitter: @THR_Earshot



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/television/~3/coWg-FxJH_M/story01.htm
Category: trent richardson   luke bryan   Wentworth Miller   danity kane   Jennifer Rosoff  

Massachusetts teen pleads not guilty to murdering teacher


By Scott Malone


BOSTON (Reuters) - Massachusetts authorities on Wednesday charged a 14-year-old high school student in the murder of a math teacher after finding the teacher's body in woods near the school.


The student, Philip Chism, pleaded not guilty to the murder charge and was ordered held without bail in a brief proceeding at Salem District Court, according to the clerk's office.


Chism has been charged as an adult, which could subject him to a longer prison sentence in an adult facility if he is found guilty of killing Colleen Ritzer, 24.


Massachusetts law allows people as young as 14 to be charged as adults when the crime is murder.


Police in Danvers, Massachusetts, began an investigation late on Tuesday after receiving calls that a student at the school and a teacher had not gone home, Essex County District Attorney Jonathan Blodgett told reporters on Wednesday.


After discovering blood in a second-floor bathroom, police extended their search to the woods behind the school, where they found Ritzer's body.


"It was apparent that she was a homicide victim," Blodgett said. "This is a terrible tragedy."


Prosecutors said in court papers that an interview of Chism and surveillance video from the school showed that Chism murdered Ritzer and dumped her body behind the school.


Chism stood quietly, stooping slightly and dressed in a white shirt as he was charged on Wednesday.


Ritzer is the second U.S. educator this week to die in an incident involving a student after a Nevada middle school teacher was shot dead by a 12-year-old student on Monday.


Investigators from the local medical examiner's office on Wednesday carried a stretcher out of the woods where Ritzer's body was found.


Police on Tuesday had issued a missing-child report for Chism, who had recently moved to the area from Tennessee. A photo posted on the Danvers Police Department's Facebook page at the time of the search showed a tall, lanky, short-haired Chism wearing a red and black soccer uniform.


He was found walking along a highway about 12:30 a.m. EDT on Wednesday (0430 GMT).


Students from the school left bouquets of flowers, a teddy bear and a note reading "Rest in peace, Ms. Ritzer, you will be missed" in front of the school.


SCHOOLS CLOSED


All public schools in Danvers, which is about 20 miles north of Boston, were closed on Wednesday, although police believed there was no continuing threat to public safety.


"We have no reason to believe there were any other suspects involved," Blodgett said. He declined to comment on how Ritzer was killed or if she might have had any type of relationship with the student.


Ritzer's family issued a brief statement to The Salem News asking for privacy.


"At this time we are mourning the tragic death of our amazing daughter and sister," the family said. "Everyone that knew and loved Colleen knew of her passion, her teaching and how she mentored each and every one of her students."


Ritzer described herself as a "Math teacher often too excited about the topics I'm teaching" on her Twitter account, @msritzermath, where she also posted homework assignments and links to math problems.


In the shooting incident in Nevada on Monday, teacher Michael Landsberry, 45, was shot and killed when he tried to stop the 12-year-old student armed with a handgun after he wounded two fellow students, then later turned the gun on himself.


"We will probably never know all the factors that accumulate to unleash this kind of violence, but we must commit to doing all we can to make sure students and educators are safe in our schools," Dennis Van Roekel, president of the National Education Association, a labor union for school teachers, said in reaction to this week's incidents.


(Additional reporting by Daniel Trotta and Brendan O'Brien; Editing by Paul Thomasch, Gunna Dickson and Cynthia Osterman)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/massachusetts-teen-pleads-not-guilty-murdering-teacher-061454309.html
Category: apple store   peyton hillis   Lane Kiffin   courtney stodden   Humble Bundle  

10 Things to Know for Today

In this combo of photos, Boston Red Sox players, top row from left, Jonny Gomes, Ryan Dempster, Mike Napoli and David Ortiz, and bottom row from left, Jarrod Saltalamacchia, Dustin Pedroia, David Ross and Mike Carp sports beards during a workout at Fenway Park Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2013, in Boston. The Red Sox are scheduled to host the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 1 of baseball's World Series on Wednesday. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)







In this combo of photos, Boston Red Sox players, top row from left, Jonny Gomes, Ryan Dempster, Mike Napoli and David Ortiz, and bottom row from left, Jarrod Saltalamacchia, Dustin Pedroia, David Ross and Mike Carp sports beards during a workout at Fenway Park Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2013, in Boston. The Red Sox are scheduled to host the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 1 of baseball's World Series on Wednesday. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)







FILE - In this March 18, 2004 file picture the leader of Poland’s Catholic church, Archbishop Jozef Michalik, addresses a news conference at the building of Poland’s Episcopate in Warsaw, Poland, after being elected the head of the Polish Episcopal Conference, succeeding the retiring Cardinal Jozef Glemp. Michalik recently came under fierce criticism for appearing to suggest that children are partly to blame for being sexually abused by priests. ( AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)







Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about today:

1. MORE TROUBLE IN THE U.S. NUCLEAR ARSENAL

Air Force officials tell The AP that twice this year, officers entrusted missile launch keys left a blast door intended to help stop intruders open.

2. AP REVIEW FINDS HEALTH WEBSITE DEVELOPERS RAISED RED FLAGS

Meanwhile, the White House says President Obama's longtime adviser will provide management advice to help fix the system.

3. DEAD MARATHON SUSPECT TIED TO 2011 KILLINGS

Tamerlan Tsarnaev was named as a participant in an earlier triple homicide by a man who was subsequently shot to death while being questioned, according to a court filing.

4. POLISH ARCHBISHOP'S SEX ABUSE REMARKS CRITICIZED

The church leader appeared to suggest that children are partly to blame for being molested by priests.

5. APPLE UNVEILS THINNER, LIGHTER IPAD

The company's market chief says the Air model is eight times faster than the original and weighs just 1 pound.

6. NEVADA BOY SAYS HE CAME FACE TO FACE WITH SHOOTER

"When he pulled a gun, we knew what happened," Angelo Ferro tells The Associated Press.

7. HOW LONDON HEALTH OFFICIALS FIND TB PATIENTS

A van equipped with an X-ray machine drives around London, the tuberculosis capital of Western Europe, offering free checkups.

8. WHY YOUR NEXT CAR WILL PROBABLY BE WHITE

The variety of flat shades to creamy pearls is helping to make it the world's favorite automotive color.

9. WHAT COULD BE NEXT FOR SPACE TOURISM

An Arizona-based company announces plans to send people up 19 miles in a capsule, lifted by a high-altitude balloon.

10. MEET 'THE SALTINE,' 'THE CANUCK,' 'THE WOLF'

The beards of the Boston Red Sox have taken on lives — and names — of their own.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-10-23-10%20Things%20to%20Know-Today/id-9b14d135432f4ab2985cad2d6d869bcc
Related Topics: Mike Wayans   Blacklist   Matt Harvey   miley cyrus   Darren Young  

Health care sign-up snags, fix-it efforts detailed

From left, Aetna CEO Mark Bertolini, Humana CEO Bruce Broussard, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Florida CEO Patrick Geraghty, and other health care chief executive officers arrive at the White House in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2013, to meet with White House officials regarding President Barack Obama's health care law. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)







From left, Aetna CEO Mark Bertolini, Humana CEO Bruce Broussard, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Florida CEO Patrick Geraghty, and other health care chief executive officers arrive at the White House in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2013, to meet with White House officials regarding President Barack Obama's health care law. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)







House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio speaks during a new conference following a meeting at the Republican National Committee offices on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2013. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)







House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of Calif. gestures as she speaks to reporters during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2013. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)







House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, left, and House Majority Leader Eric Canton of Va., right, walk away from the microphones following a news conference after a meeting at the Republican National Committee offices on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2013. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)







From left, Tufts Health Plan President and CEO James Roosevelt, Aetna CEO Mark Bertolini, Humana CEO Bruce Broussard, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Florida CEO Patrick Geraghty, Kaiser Permanente CEO Bernard Tyson, and other health care chief executive officers arrive at the White House in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2013, to meet with White House officials regarding President Barack Obama's health care law. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)







(AP) — On the defensive, the Obama administration acknowledged Wednesday its problem-plagued health insurance website didn't get enough testing before going live. It said technicians were deep into the job of fixing major computer snags but provided no timetable.

Democratic unhappiness with the situation began growing louder — including one call for President Barack Obama to "man up" and fire someone — as the president's allies began to fret about the political fallout. Democrats had hoped to run for re-election touting the benefits of the health care law for millions of uninsured Americans, but the computer problems are keeping many people from signing up.

The White House also signaled a change underway in the timeline for signing up for coverage. Consumers have until Dec. 15 to apply for coverage that's effective Jan. 1. Even though open enrollment lasts until March 31, people would face a penalty if they postpone buying coverage beyond mid-February. Calling that a "disconnect," the White House said officials will soon issue policy guidance so that if consumers sign up by the end of March they will not face a penalty. No action from Congress is needed to make that happen, the White House said.

Republican sniping about the website's flaws continued unabated, with House Speaker John Boehner declaring, "We've got the whole threat of Obamacare continuing to hang over our economy like a wet blanket."

Obama himself, though strongly defending the health care overhaul, has been increasingly willing to acknowledge extensive problems with the sign-up through online markets. Amid all that, the Health and Human Services Department on Wednesday provided its most specific accounting yet of the troubles with HealthCare.gov — an issue that is also about to get a lengthy, even-less-forgiving airing on Capitol Hill.

The first of several hearings is set for Thursday in the Republican-led House, with lawmakers ready to pounce on the contractors who built the balky online enrollment system.

Acknowledging what's been obvious to many outside experts, the administration said Wednesday that the system didn't get enough testing, especially at a high user volume. It blamed a compressed time frame for meeting the Oct. 1 deadline to open the insurance markets. Basic "alpha and user testing" are now completed, but that's supposed to happen before a launch, not after.

The Health and Human Services explanation identified some bugs that have gotten little outside attention.

For example, technical problems have surfaced that are making it hard for people to complete the application and plan-shopping functions. That's a big concern because those stages are further along in the signup process than the initial registration, where many consumers have been getting tripped up. The problems are being analyzed and fixes are planned, the department said.

The explanation, posted online in a department blog and accompanying graphic, identified other broad areas of problems and outlined fixes underway but in most cases incomplete:

— Unexpectedly high consumer interest that overwhelmed the system in its initial days. Equipment has been added to handle the load and system design has been improved. More fixes are in progress.

— Lack of a way for consumers to browse their health plan options without first having to set up a user account. A partial fix is in place.

— Incorrect or duplicate information in enrollments is being delivered to insurance companies. Some software fixes that should help address the issue have been completed, others are underway.

— Difficulties for consumers trying to create user accounts, including drop-down menus that didn't work. Design changes and software fixes should address the situation.

The new markets are supposed to be the portal to coverage for people who don't get health insurance on the job. Middle-class people are to pick from subsidized private insurance plans, while low-income people are steered to Medicaid in states that agreed to expand that safety-net program.

The federal government is running the online markets in 36 states, and its website has had more than its share of problems. As a result, even Obama has urged consumers to revert to low-tech approaches, by applying through the mail, telephoning federal call centers, or seeking in-person assistance.

On Thursday, the House Energy and Commerce Committee will line up contractors, including CGI Federal, the lead developer of the website, and QSSI, which designed a back-room operation known as the federal data services hub. The hub is integral to verifying applicants' personal information and income details, and the administration says it is working as designed.

Rep. Joe Pitts, R-Pa., chairman of the panel's health subcommittee, said he wants to focus on the administration's decision not to allow browsing, or window shopping. That's a standard feature of e-commerce sites, including Medicare.gov for seniors. Lack of a browsing capability forced all users to first go through the laborious process of creating accounts, overloading that part of the site.

"Who made that decision? When was it made? Why was it made?" said Pitts.

In prepared testimony, an executive of QSSI's parent company said the decision was made late in the game. It could have contributed to overloading the system, said the executive, Andy Slavitt.

CGI vice president Cheryl Campbell said the administration was the "quarterback" of the entire effort.

Meanwhile, Democrats are worrying aloud about persistent problems with the rollout. Rep. Richard Nolan of Minnesota emerged from a Wednesday morning meeting with administration health care officials on Capitol Hill and told The Associated Press the computer fiasco has "damaged the brand" of the health care law.

"The president needs to man up, find out who was responsible, and fire them," Nolan said. He did not name anyone.

Likewise in the Senate, Florida Democrat Bill Nelson said somebody should be fired over the computer problems. "That's the problem in government today," Nelson told ABC's Miami affiliate. "People are not held to account."

Obama says he's as frustrated as anyone and has promised a "tech surge" to fix the balky website. White House spokesman Jay Carney also said the administration will be more open about the problems. After more than 20 days without briefing the media, HHS will start regular sessions on Thursday, he said.

In light of the computer problems, some Democrats are saying Obama should consider extending open enrollment season beyond next March 31, and revisit the penalties for individuals who don't sign up and remain uninsured. Under the law virtually all Americans must carry health insurance starting next year or face fines.

House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi advised against the change.

"I think we should try to fix what we have, move forward with the deadline we have," the California Democrat told reporters. "What we want to do is fix it and go forward with it, not make policies that are predicated on its not working."

Even if the computer problems get ironed out, the Republicans are unlikely to end their criticism. Said Boehner on Wednesday: "When you look at the problems with Obamacare, all the focus here lately has been on the website. ... I would argue the problems go much further than that."

____

Associated Press writers Josh Lederman, Laurie Kellman and Julie Pace contributed to this report.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-10-23-Health%20Overhaul-Problems/id-80d55e134e81402cac6ea237a8a863bb
Category: apple   cleveland browns   britney spears   new orleans saints   9/11 Memorial  

Japan scaling down 2020 Tokyo Olympic stadium


TOKYO (AP) — Japan is scaling down the planned main stadium for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, following an uproar from some prominent architects who think it's too big and expensive.

Hakubun Shimomura, the minister in charge of education, sports and science, told Parliament Wednesday the stadium designed by award-winning British-Iraqi architect Zaha Hadid would cost 300 billion yen ($3 billion), and that was "too massive a budget."

The 80,000-seat futuristic-looking stadium has been billed as costing 130 billion yen ($1.3 billion). The minister's updated estimate includes surrounding construction and infrastructure costs.

"We need to rethink this to scale it down," he said in response to a question from a ruling party lawmaker. "Urban planning must meet people's needs."

The plans for the stadium were approved earlier this year by the city and central governments. Shimomura's remarks signal a policy change.

He did not give specifics on how construction will be trimmed, but he stressed that the design concept will be kept.

He also said the new stadium will still have all the basic features needed to host the Olympics. It is replacing the smaller 54,000-seat main stadium that was used for the opening and closing ceremonies of the 1964 Tokyo Olympics.

Japanese architect Fumihiko Maki, a recipient of the prestigious Pritzker Architecture Prize, recently criticized the new stadium's size and urged that it be reworked to "a more sustainable stadium."

About 100 experts, including other architects, supported his view, questioning whether the new stadium is ecological and practical.

The site sits in the middle of a downtown Tokyo park within walking distance of shopping malls, high-rise buildings, a Shinto shrine and a famous venue designed by Kenzo Tange for the 1964 Olympics.

Zaha Hadid Architects office has said the venue is flexible and can be used for events beyond the Olympics, such as concerts. But it has expressed willingness to talk about design changes.

Construction is scheduled to begin next year.

__

Follow Yuri Kageyama on Twitter at twitter.com/yurikageyama

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/japan-scaling-down-2020-tokyo-olympic-stadium-054016768--finance.html
Tags: redskins   nfl scores   joe flacco   Linda Ronstadt   Tropical Storm Flossie  

Activist investor Icahn reconnects with Apple CEO

(AP) — Activist investor Carl Icahn may be putting more pressure on Apple CEO Tim Cook to get more aggressive about boosting the iPhone maker's stock price.

Icahn posted on his Twitter account Wednesday that he had sent Cook a letter in the afternoon. He said he would share the letter Thursday on a new website called "Shareholders' Square Table."

The missive follows up on a Sept. 30 dinner with Cook that Icahn hosted at his New York apartment. During that get-together, Icahn said he lobbied Cook to spend $150 billion buying back Apple Inc.'s own stock. That's more than double the amount that the Cupertino, Calif., company has committed to spend.

Icahn, whose wealth is estimated at $20 billion by Forbes magazine, has said his fund has invested about $2 billion in Apple. At that amount, Icahn would own less than a 1 percent stake in Apple.

Icahn, 77, has a long history of buying significant stakes in companies with a slumping stock price and then pressing the corporate leaders to pursue plans that he thinks would make the shares more valuable.

While Apple's market value of about $477 billion is more than any other publicly traded company, its stock prices has fallen about 25 percent from a peak 13 months ago. Investors have been worried about tougher competition facing Apple in the smartphone and table market, as well as the lack of a breakthrough product since the death of its chief visionary, Steve Jobs, two years ago. Those worries didn't dissipate with unveiling of Apple's latest iPads on Tuesday.

Apple's stock rose $5.09 Wednesday to close at $524.96.

Icahn believes Apple could lift its stock by taking advantage of low interest rates to borrow money to finance its proposed stock buybacks. The buybacks would fuel demand for Apple's stock and increase the company's earnings per share by reducing the amount of stock. Higher earnings per share usually lift a company's stock price.

Neither Apple nor Icahn responded to requests for comment on Wednesday.

In some instances, Icahn has threatened to try to oust corporate boards that don't follow his wishes. Icahn hasn't yet said whether he might pursue a shake-up at Apple if the company rebuffs him.

Icahn sent his letter to Cook the day after disclosing he had sold more than half his stake in one of his biggest successes, an investment in Internet movie service Netflix Inc.

In that instance, Icahn did little but give Netflix CEO Reed Hastings a vote of confidence at a time when the company had fallen out of favor. After accumulating a nearly 10 percent stake in Netflix while the stock was trading below $60 last year, Icahn reaped a pre-tax gain of nearly $800 million by selling 3 million shares at prices ranging from $304.23 to $341.44 earlier this month.

Icahn still owns nearly 2.7 million Netflix shares, leaving him with a 4.5 percent stake in the Los Gatos, Calif., company.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-10-23-Apple-Icahn/id-76cb5c5d38fe47988331c20c4c0a8876
Similar Articles: Battlefield 4 beta   cher   Cameron Douglas   september 11   Placenta  

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

10 Secrets About L.A.'s Disney Hall on Its 10th Anniversary

10 Secrets About L.A.'s Disney Hall on Its 10th Anniversary

Happy birthday, you old crumpled wave of steel, you! L.A.'s signature building opened to the public 10 years ago today, giving the city's downtown a much-needed civic boost and cementing architect Frank Gehry's status as a metal god. I wrote a story for this month's Los Angeles Magazine about the building's anniversary, and, in the process, dug up a few more interesting facts that you can read while you wrap Disney Hall's birthday presents in aluminum foil.

Read more...


    






Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/OjZMHoYmfhw/10-things-you-didnt-know-about-l-a-s-disney-hall-on-i-1450746175
Related Topics: Revolt TV   sam bradford   aaliyah   Kendrick Lamar Control   Kendrick Lamar diss  

Two Blond Children Taken From Roma Families In Ireland Are Returned





A newspaper vendor wears a vest displaying front page of The Herald on Wednesday in Dublin. Irish authorities were waiting for DNA test results in relation to a girl removed by Gardai from a Roma family in Dublin, days after a similar case in Greece. The test showed the girl was the biological daughter of the Roma family.



Dan Kitwood/Getty Images


A newspaper vendor wears a vest displaying front page of The Herald on Wednesday in Dublin. Irish authorities were waiting for DNA test results in relation to a girl removed by Gardai from a Roma family in Dublin, days after a similar case in Greece. The test showed the girl was the biological daughter of the Roma family.


Dan Kitwood/Getty Images


Over the past week, two children have been taken from Roma families in Ireland. Authorities said they suspected the blonde-haired and blue-eyed children may have been abducted because they did not look like their parents.


Today, we get news that after a DNA test and other proof was presented to authorities, the boy and the girl are back with their biological parents.


Meanwhile, the Justice Minister Alan Shatter called for a report about how this happened.


"We must all be particularly conscious of the regrettable distress that arose for the two families and their children," Shatter said, according to the Irish Times. "Quite clearly no fault of any nature attaches to the two families concerned for the events which took place."


Shatter, however, said authorities acted "in good faith."


Ireland's Independent reports that girl's family's lawyer told reporters that they were "absolutely delighted" to have their child back.


"Our clients would like those who hear this statement, and particularly those who are parents themselves, to consider how they would feel if one of their children was taken away in similar circumstances for similar reasons," Waheed Mudah said. "They hope that no other family has to go through the experience that they have just suffered."


Of course, this comes after a highly publicized case in Greece, in which a Roma couple was charged with abducting a blond girl. The media pounced on the story, making it of international importance. The two adults, Christos Salis, 39, and his wife, Eleftheria Dimopoulou, 41, said they adopted the girl from a Roma woman in Bulgaria.


As Britain's Independent reports, the case surfaced old attitudes about the nomadic people. Romas in the camp where the Greek girl lived told the paper that on TV, they are called Romas, but on the street, they are called gypsies, as people spit and walk away.


Human Rights groups in Europe have said that the case in Greece could be used by racists to exploit the Romas. The Guardian reports:




"Dezideriu Gergely told RTÉ's Morning Ireland programme: 'The concern related to these cases is that if these cases are not discussed from all angles possible, there's this, if I can say, trap to fall into, basically labelling the whole community for being responsible for something which needs to be looked at from an individual point of view and responsibility point of view.'


Aisling Twomey, a spokeswoman for the Dublin-based Roma and Irish Traveller rights group, said: 'This specific case could be used as a means to target the Roma community when the reality is that they are one of the most marginalised communities, not just in Ireland, but worldwide."




According to the BBC, Gergely went on to say something that should perhaps be obvious, but these two cases prove it isn't: Not all Romas have a dark complexion.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/23/240288419/two-blond-children-taken-from-roma-families-in-ireland-are-returned?ft=1&f=
Similar Articles: Nexus 5   college football scores   Angel Dust   Jeff Tuel   Miley Cyrus Vma 2013  

Grambling Football Strike: Do College Athletes Have Rights?


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


MICHEL MARTIN, HOST:


This is TELL ME MORE from NPR News. I'm Michel Martin. Later, if you want to find out what actress Alfre Woodard likes to listen to relax or get inspired, we will tell you. But first, we want to talk football. This is the time when a number of schools are celebrating homecoming, but there was no homecoming football game at Jackson State University in Mississippi this past weekend. That's because a majority of players on the visiting team, Grambling State University, refused to play.


The players said they wanted to call attention to unhealthy and unsafe conditions in their football facilities and unhappiness over turmoil in their coaching staff, including the firing of Super Bowl-winning quarterback Doug Williams. Now the strike is now over. Grambling players say that they will return to practice and to the field this weekend, but their move has sparked headlines around the country. And we wanted to talk more about why, and what it all means. So we've called on Corey Dade. He's a contributing editor to The Root. He also played football at Grambling under legendary coach Eddie Robinson. Also with us once again, Dave Zirin. He writes about the politics of sports for The Nation. He's also a regular in our Barbershop segments, as is Corey Dade. Welcome back to you both. Thank you both so much for joining us.


DAVE ZIRIN: Great to be here.


COREY DADE: Thanks, Michel.


MARTIN: So, Corey, for people who are not familiar with the Grambling tradition - you know, Eddie Robinson, for example, recognized now as the coach with the most all-time wins in NCAA Division I football. But, you know, tell us more about the Grambling legacy and why it's such a big deal.


DADE: Right, for historically black colleges and universities, Grambling State is the Notre Dame, as far as its football tradition. At one point, depending - and still, if you're depending on how you read the record books - Coach Rob, as he's known, was the winningest college football coach in Division I history. There was a time before integration into college athletics that Grambling put out more college-drafted - more NFL-drafted players from college than any other school, black or white in certain years. So...


MARTIN: In fact, the first black NFL quarterback to start in an NFL game went to Grambling.


DADE: James Harris. That's correct.


MARTIN: James Harris.


DADE: James Harris. And, of course, everyone knows Doug Williams who was the first black quarterback to win a Super Bowl. He came from Grambling State, one of our cherished graduates.


MARTIN: So what were the conditions that led to the players to take this step?


DADE: Well, there's a list of them. We're talking just facilities that were under disrepair. We're talking about a weight room where there was mold and mildew, locker rooms that had mold and mildew, improper washing of jerseys and uniforms, which led to staph infections, which, as we know, can be deadly. The floor in the weight room was in disrepair. It was an accident waiting to happen in the locker room. And I will say, from my time there, you know, at Grambling, as storied as the program is, you know, it has always been challenged with finances. It has always been challenged with providing, you know, adequate accommodations. And, you know, in this season, it cut costs.


The university actually stopped sending their players on trips to games by plane. So they're taking 17-hour bus rides one way to play a game over the weekend and coming back another 17 hours. No wonder they're winless this year.


MARTIN: Dave, talk a little bit more about who you - you've written about this. Talk a little bit more about why you think this story is important beyond just this particular institution. And I do - I would like to ask you to pick up on a little bit of the question of budget cuts because some people might say, you know, football programs - this is one of the reasons people criticize football programs, that they say they suck up enormous resources. So how is it possible that a D-I program doesn't have the facilities it needs?


ZIRIN: This is a huge story for several different reasons, a story that extends well beyond the sports page. One reason is that what it's done is it's amplified for the country, because, as you've said, this has been a national Sports Illustrated-style story, is that it has amplified the very difficult position that historically black colleges and universities are in right now. What's happening in the locker room at Grambling State reflects what's happening the classroom, what's happening in the quad, what's happening in the student center. And this is happening at all HBCUs. And there's a reason for that. It's estimated that since 2009, under the Obama administration's education department, roughly $300 million has been cut from historically black colleges and universities.


And on top of that, Governor Bobby Jindal, from the state of Louisiana, he refused stimulus funds from the Obama administration while also cutting over $200 million in funds from higher education in the state of Louisiana. Now what has that meant at Grambling? It's meant $5 million that would have been in the budget, not in the budget in 2009. One million dollars last year that would've been in the budget, not in the budget. And when you're talking about players doing things like rationing among themselves weightlifting supplements to make sure that the players who lift the most get supplements afterwards so their bodies can be replenished because there's not enough to go around, then each of those dollars actually counts for something. So what you're talking about is a reflection in the athletic department of what's happening on the campus.


MARTIN: If you're just joining us, we're talking about the player boycott by the football team at Grambling State University in Louisiana. The players at the storied program, a majority of them refused to play at a homecoming game last weekend, Jackson State University. It sparked national attention. So, Corey, I also want to mention that you're national secretary of the National Association of Black Journalists. And I understand that your organization got involved when the student paper at Grambling tried to cover the issue. Could you tell us about that side of the story?


DADE: Yeah, the student paper, The Gramblinite - which I actually wrote for when I was in college there - two of the staffers there were disciplined by the university for their reporting, principally, posting photos of the conditions, the deplorable conditions of the athletic facilities, on Twitter. And one was fired, one was suspended. Now those measures have since been reversed over the past day or so, but the National Association of Black Journalists was asked to weigh in, and we did. We condemned that decision for a variety of reasons, not the least of which is this amounts to censorship. If we are supposed to be training our student journalists to be free and independent of the power structure that they cover, then to censor them for their coverage is just unethical.


MARTIN: Are the football players being punished for their stance?


DADE: No, and that's an interesting point. So the student - the student journalists are punished for their coverage. But the football players - the university has been very clear in saying, you know, this is sort of a family matter, and we're not going to - we respect their points of view. We may disagree about the extent of the circumstances, but they're not going to be disciplined at all for their boycott.


MARTIN: I understand that a local businessman has also stepped in saying that he is going to help to see that these facilities get upgraded. But, Dave, again, I want to ask you about what you think the larger...


ZIRIN: Oh, yeah.


MARTIN: ...Meaning of this story might be.


ZIRIN: Well, there's another reason why this story has become a national sensation because right now, as we speak, there is a lightning rod issue in college sports, which is about how many rights do these college athletes actually have. And there have been players who've been writing the phrase APU on their uniforms at some of the biggest schools in the country. APU stands for All Players United. And players are organized - it's so different from Grambling State, though, because these are players at the big-money schools, who see millions of dollars flowing into their program. They see their coaches making millions of dollars.


And they're asking questions like, why don't I have workers' compensation? Why don't I get full health benefits? Why isn't my education guaranteed for four years? Why is my scholarship renewed on an annual basis? Where is the money going? Which is very different from Grambling, which is asking the question, where is the money, period? You know, why is my weight room in disrepair? Why is my locker room an accident waiting to happen? But because these things dovetail together, even though Grambling State is distinct from the APU movement, it turned it into the kind of story where, for example, on ESPN they were doing round-the-clock updates about what was happening on Grambling 'cause it touches a much more sensitive nerve. If, in politics, timing is everything, the timing of the Grambling State players could not have been better.


MARTIN: Corey, I have to ask you - another highly regarded historically black college or university, Spelman College, recently made news in a different way. This is an historically black college for women.


DADE: Right.


MARTIN: Recently made news in a different way, in their university president decided to terminate all intercollegiate sports and convert the entire athletic budget to fitness for everybody - that she hoped everybody would participate in, including faculty and staff. And her argument was we spend a huge amount of money on a very small number of students. And that, you know - so clearly Spelman is not known for its producing kind of athletic stars as is Grambling, as we mentioned, you know, a number of, you know, hundreds of pro-football players have come out of Grambling. But is there any talk about the fact that perhaps the university just cannot afford the program anymore?


DADE: Not at all. For - just not at all. For Grambling, football is its image. Next to the band, the marching band, football is what has given Grambling a national image, a national brand. Just to give you an idea of how powerful that brand is, Eddie Robinson, because of his winning tradition, because of the brand at Grambling, was able to take his school to other parts of the country, long outside of the South, outside of Louisiana, and have these major games in major NFL arenas - stadiums - with other - against other HBCUs. And Grambling was the drawn nationwide. It becomes a big revenue generator for the opposing school and for Grambling. So the idea that this is somehow going to necessitate talks about cutting the program - not going to happen.


MARTIN: What have you been hearing from - 'cause I know that you're in touch with former players like yourself, as well as current players. And, you know, what are they saying about this? How do they feel about the coverage that this issue is receiving?


DADE: You know, I think many of them - well, first of all, a lot of us are embarrassed. A lot of us are embarrassed about it because it's just - it's a black mark. It's a stain on the heritage of what it's like to play for Grambling. But beyond that, several of the players are actually thankful that this is getting air because today's point - part of this is about the empowerment of the student athlete.


Many players at Grambling have long labored under lack of resources, subpar facilities and, you know, they accept it as a trade-off for playing at Grambling, at a Division I football program. But none of us liked those conditions. So the fact that it's gotten so bad and the fact that they stand up, I can't find a former teammate of mine who's not behind them.


MARTIN: Are you surprised that they did? I mean...


DADE: I am surprised that they did, in part because when you come to Grambling, you do - it's like going to Notre Dame. You buy into the mystique. You buy into sort of the hierarchy of what it means to be at Grambling. And so, you know, to actually step outside of the university and criticize it or criticize the football program usually does not happen at Grambling.


MARTIN: I confess, I've seen the facilities at Notre Dame, and they are very different from the ones at Grambling.


DADE: Yeah.


MARTIN: A final thought from you, Dave Zirin, about where you think this goes. I mean, in recent years there's been a lot of talk about improving conditions for players or just rethinking our whole relationship with these so-called student athletes. I mean, the whole question about whether student athletes should be paid, whether they should have course credit, things of that sort. Those conversations kind of bubble up, but nothing ever seems to happen. I mean, do you see a tipping point in some ways...


ZIRIN: Yes.


MARTIN: ...Around this issue?


ZIRIN: Well, I think we've passed the tipping point. I think we're at the point where there are open discussions in the NCAA offices, where they're saying to each other we need to change or we will die. We will not exist. And we will, in the future of college athletes and revenue-producing sports, will be treated like campus employees instead of like student athletes. And so they are discussing how to change themselves to meet the 21st century.


And the 21st century is a place where college football programs sign $6 billion contracts with major networks, where coaches make literally 100 times what they made 30 years ago. And you cannot have a status quo in terms of the position of the athletes and their rights like it was in the past because the financial situation is so dramatically different.


MARTIN: Dave Zirin is a regular in our Barbershop roundtable. He's sports editor for The Nation. That's a progressive magazine. Corey Dade is contributing editor for The Root. He's also secretary of the National Association of Black Journalists. And an alumnus of - and played some football at - Grambling State University in Louisiana. They were both enough to join us in our Washington, D.C. studios. Thank you both so much for speaking with us.


ZIRIN: Thank you.


DADE: Thank you.


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


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


Source: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=240245908&ft=1&f=1055
Similar Articles: Jenna Jameson   ABC Family   Texas A&m Football   Mayweather   Al Jazeera America  

South Africa cuts growth forecast, sees tighter budget gap


By Stella Mapenzauswa


CAPE TOWN (Reuters) - South Africa's government said the economy would grow less than hoped this year due to strikes and power shortages but promised to keep state finances in check, also cutting its budget deficit forecast.


Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan urged ratings agencies that have downgraded Pretoria's credit over the past year to take note of its fiscal prudence.


"We are running a sustainable fiscal ship," he told reporters before his interim budget speech to parliament in which he sought to allay fears of increased populist spending ahead of elections next year.


"Hopefully the ratings agencies will do their homework and recognise that in a very turbulent environment, and one in which we've got huge historical legacies to overcome, we actually are keeping a fairly good 19-year record of good fiscal management."


The Treasury slashed 2013 growth expectations to 2.1 percent of GDP from 2.7 percent forecast in February, suggesting prospects of a near-term cut in the country's stubbornly high unemployment rate are slim.


Widespread labour strikes and power supply constraints have this year hit the continent's largest economy, which languished in recession in 2009.


But it also lowered the budget deficit forecast for the year to March 2014 to 4.2 percent of GDP from the 4.6 percent seen in February due to lower spending and technical effects from changes to how it calculates the fiscal balance.


Spending for the period was predicted at 1.14 trillion rand against revenue of 999 billion rand, resulting in a much lower deficit than the 4.9 percent that economists polled by Reuters had expected.


Spending is set to rise to 1.24 trillion rand in 2014/15 and 1.44 trillion by 2016/17.


The Treasury said it would strike a balance between keeping the deficit in check while supporting growth along the lines of the National Development Plan, pouring money into health, education, infrastructure, and social assistance to the poor.


MISSING THE BIG IDEA


"The level of expenditure remains well contained, while the fiscal stance avoids a premature consolidation that could jeopardise higher economic growth, which is required to create jobs," it said.


The rand gained against the dollar to 9.7700 from 9.8135 before Gordhan started his speech to parliament, while bonds recovered from session lows on news of the lower deficit forecast.


Analysts also reacted positively to the deficit headlines, but weak growth and a high wage bill remain a concern for ratings agencies, and the budget was devoid of big ideas to move the economy up a gear.


"While some effort is made to commit to an overall spending ceiling, and some re-prioritisation of expenditure is planned, these are piecemeal efforts," said Standard Chartered economist Razia Khan.


"Anyone hoping for a bolder effort to arrest medium-term deterioration will be disappointed."


Weak growth in Europe, a major trading partner, has dampened demand for South African exports and made it difficult for the private sector to create much-needed jobs.


"Labour disputes, electricity shortages and other supply-side disruptions have weighed down business and consumer confidence, and lowered demand for goods and services," the Treasury said.


Economic recovery over the next three years could increase employment by 1.7 percent a year, but this is too little to make a major dent in joblessness that affects a quarter of the labour force.


Both the private and public sectors have been under pressure from frequent labour unrest, which has resulted in above-inflation wage settlements of 7.9 percent in the first half of this year from 7.6 percent in 2012.


The Treasury anticipates inflation to remain below its 6 percent upper-limit target in the next three years, but weakness in the rand, which has fallen nearly 16 percent to the dollar this year, posed a risk to that forecast.


The current account deficit, long a source of vulnerability for the currency during spates of global risk aversion, was projected to remain above 6 percent of GDP over the medium term as savings lag investments.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/south-africa-slashes-2013-gdp-growth-forecast-2-120523532--business.html
Related Topics: Jim Leyland   Heartbreaker Justin Bieber   new orleans saints   Ozil   Jake Peavy  

Microsoft keeps the Azure hits coming



While most everyone this week has been yawning at the release of new Surface Pro tablets, over in another corner Microsoft has been hard at work on getting new Windows Azure features out the door.


The list of this week's updates to Azure is wide-ranging, although some of it will be familiar to anyone who's followed the news of what Redmond's been planning for Azure.


The general availability of Windows Azure Backup
As the name implies, this uses Azure's blob storage to provide cloud-based backup and restore for Windows Server or for System Center Data Protection Manager. In a nod to those uneasy about cloud storage, Microsoft has affirmed that not only is data encrypted before transmission, but the user -- not Microsoft -- keeps the encryption key.


Active Directory
Microsoft's plans for Active Directory in Azure have been getting more ambitious of late, with its most recent big add being single sign-on for all the SaaS offerings integrated into Azure, as well as a single place to access those apps if you're an end-user. Among the less-publicized additions this time around: auditing reports that include things like automatically flagging suspicious log-in behaviors (such as logging in from multiple locations at once) and sign-in integration within Visual Studio.


Windows Azure SDK 2.2
Speaking of Visual Studio, the 2013 version just got support for the new revision of the Windows Azure SDK, version 2.2. Also among the features in 2.2 is Remote Debugging Cloud Services, which lets you plug Visual Studio into a debugger running in Azure as if you were debugging an application locally. Many of the other additions to Azure's development features -- for example, the PowerShell cmdlets -- have been in roughly the same vein, that of closing the gap between what's done in the cloud and what's done locally.


The public preview of Hyper-V Recovery Manager
This new feature allows System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2012 SP1 and R2 private clouds to be replicated to and recovered from a secondary location. Again, in another nod to those paranoid about the cloud, application data is kept local and everything to, from, and in Azure is encrypted.


From the outside these may seem like little pieces, but they're adding up. InfoWorld's Eric Knorr has described Microsoft as "the sleeping giant of the cloud," with "the resources to crush it." Microsoft is in the middle of a difficult but fruitful transition away from the low-hanging fruit of commodity computing and toward the high-margin, far-reaching innovations possible as a services company.


Actually, Microsoft has had a decently large slice of its pie coming from most everything but the Windows division for some time now. Back in 2012, ZDNet's Ed Bott noted how large chunks of Microsoft's revenue were not from Windows at all, but from the company's business division, the entertainment and devices division (read: Xbox), and the server division. It wouldn't be surprising at all if from now on the biggest news out of Redmond had nothing to do with Windows per se, and everything to do with Azure.


This story, "Microsoft keeps the Azure hits coming," was originally published at InfoWorld.com. Get the first word on what the important tech news really means with the InfoWorld Tech Watch blog. For the latest developments in business technology news, follow InfoWorld.com on Twitter.


Source: http://www.infoworld.com/t/cloud-computing/microsoft-keeps-the-azure-hits-coming-229342?source=rss_infoworld_blogs
Category: sofia vergara   Ozymandias   USA VS Mexico   nadal   will smith  

In Cost-Cutting Move, NOAA To Stop Printing Nautical Charts





This undated photo made available by NOAA shows a computer displaying an electronic nautical chart aboard a ship.



AP


This undated photo made available by NOAA shows a computer displaying an electronic nautical chart aboard a ship.


AP


The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the federal agency charged with surveying the nation's navigable waters to help keep mariners off the rocks and out of the shallows will cease printing paper charts after mid-April.


Partly as a cost-saving measure, the NOAA's Office of Coast Survey will offer charts only via on-demand printing, as PDFs or electronic charts.


In a statement, NOAA says:




"Since 1862, those lithographic nautical charts — available in marine shops and other stores — have been printed by the U.S. government and sold to the public by commercial vendors. The decision to stop production is based on several factors: the declining demand for lithographic charts, the increasing use of digital and electronic charts, and federal budget realities."




"With the end of traditional paper charts, our primary concern continues to be making sure that boaters, fishing vessels and commercial mariners have access to the most accurate, up-to-date nautical chart in a format that works well for them," says Coast Survey chief Capt. Shep Smith. "Fortunately, advancements in computing and mobile technologies give us many more options than was possible years ago."


In recent years, electronic charts accessed on tablet computers and GPS chartplotters have become a popular option for pleasure boats and larger vessels, but many people still insist on using paper charts, at least as a backup, says Bill Griffin, general manager of Fawcett Boat Supply in Annapolis, Md.


"Any prudent mariner is going to have paper charts," he says. "I don't see paper going away anytime soon."


All of the charts that Fawcett sells are on-demand, and the store sells "hundreds" each year, Griffin tells NPR.


"We used to stock lots of paper charts, but we couldn't keep everything," he says. "With on-demand printing, we can get any chart for U.S. waters at the drop of a hat — and the beauty is it's always updated."


The Associated Press says:




"NOAA sells about 60,000 of the old 4-by-3-foot lithographic maps each year for about $20 apiece, the same amount it costs to print them.


"The Federal Aviation Administration, which took over federal chart-making in 1999, wants to save some money and informed NOAA earlier this month that it is going to stop the presses, according to the ocean agency.


"It costs NOAA about $100 million a year to survey and chart the nation's waters. The agency will still spend the same money, but provide the information in the less traditional way."




NOAA says it will officially stop supplying printed charts on April 13.


So far, there's been mixed reaction to the move, at least from mariners who tweet:




Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/22/239846362/in-cost-cutting-move-noaa-to-stop-printing-nautical-charts?ft=1&f=1019
Similar Articles: cher   rosh hashanah   elvis presley  

Samsung acquires 7.4 percent of Gorilla Glass maker Corning, signs long-term supply deal


Samsung acquires 74 percent of Gorilla Glass maker Corning, signs longterm supply deal


In a move that could raise eyebrows in the LCD business, Corning has taken full control of Samsung Corning Precision Materials Co. Ltd., a joint venture 43 percent owned by Samsung. In exchange, the Korean company will get $1.9 billion worth of preferred shares in Corning, which if converted, would give it a 7.4 percent stake. The pair have also agreed to a deal that will see Samsung Display supplied by Corning through 2023. That company's Gorilla Glass is used in most high-end smartphones and tablets, including those made by Samsung, Apple, HTC and Motorola. Since the Korean giant already supplies most of its competitors with LCD displays and other components, we can imagine some of them casting a wary eye on such a deal.


Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/10/23/samsung-acquires-7-4-percent-of-gorilla-glass-maker-corning/?ncid=rss_truncated
Tags: Cristy Nicole Deweese   fiona apple   brandon jacobs   megyn kelly   gold cup  

Australians evacuate homes as hot winds fan Sydney fire threat


By Maggie Lu Yueyang


SYDNEY (Reuters) - Thousands of Australians were urged to evacuate their homes on Wednesday as dry winds threatened to fan a firestorm in mountainous bushland around Sydney, where firefighters battled to control blazes which have been raging for a week.


More than 200 homes have been destroyed in New South Wales (NSW) state since last Thursday, when bushfires tore through Sydney's outskirts, razing entire streets. One man died from a heart attack while trying to save his home.


Wednesday's fire conditions were shaping up as the worst so far, prompting authorities to warn of more property losses and advise residents of the Blue Mountains west of Sydney to abandon their homes.


"If you don't have a plan, let me give you one," NSW Emergency Minister Michael Gallacher said. "Get into the car, drive down to the city metropolitan area and let the firefighters do what they can do to protect the community, should this turn for the worse."


Temperatures in the Blue Mountains, a popular weekend getaway for Sydneysiders, are expected to reach up to 30 degrees Celsius (86 degrees Fahrenheit). In Sydney itself they could hit 35 degrees Celsius (95 Fahrenheit).


There were 59 fires burning across the state on Wednesday, with 19 out of control, according to the RFS. Over 2,000 firefighters were battling the blazes across a vast area, backed by 95 helicopters and reinforcements from other states.


Hot, dry winds gusting up to 80 kmph (48 mph) forced water bombing helicopters to suspend operations just as the danger reached its peak on Wednesday afternoon. Light rain overnight had hampered efforts to backburn and create fire-breaks.


"We are entering what is typically the hottest and driest period of any given day," Rural Fire Service (RFS) Commissioner Shane Fitzsimmons said.


"The temperatures are climbing and are expected to climb and maintain their peak throughout the coming hours. The worse of the weather is still to come."


Authorities ordered all schools in the Blue Mountains to be closed, evacuated nursing homes and advised people living in the area to leave before conditions deteriorated.


"It's very quiet up here. A lot of people we know have already left to stay with families down in western Sydney," Blue Mountains resident Rebecca Southern told Reuters by telephone.


The Blue Mountains, whose foothills extend down to western Sydney suburbs like Penrith, are populated with a mix of farmers, small business owners and white-collar commuters who make the trip into the city every day. Their spectacular escarpments, dense eucalyptus forests and scattered towns are popular with tourists but a nightmare for firefighters.


The NSW government has declared a state of emergency enabling it to order evacuations, hoping to avoid a repeat of the 2009 "Black Saturday" fires in Victoria state that killed 173 people and caused $4.4 billion worth of damage.


The insurance council of Australia said claims of more than A$93 million ($90 million) were expected to grow as wildfires - stretching across 1,600 kilometers (1,000 miles) of Australia's most populous state - ran their course.


Police have arrested several children suspected of starting a number of different fires. Other fires were sparked by power lines arcing in strong winds, according to the fire service.


CLIMATE CHANGE


Record hot and dry weather across the continent and an early start to the fire season in the Southern Hemisphere spring have revived arguments about mankind's impact on climate change.


Climate scientists say Australia is one of the countries most at risk from global warming, with fires, floods and droughts that are already a feature of the continent likely to get worse.


But Prime Minister Tony Abbott has rejected any link between the Sydney fires and rising carbon emissions from the burning of fossil fuels such as coal, a major Australian export.


"Climate change is real and we should take strong action against it," Abbott told local radio.


"But these fires are certainly not a function of climate change, they are just a function of life in Australia."


Elected in September, Abbott plans to repeal the carbon tax installed by former prime minister Julia Gillard and replace it with a "Direct Action" scheme involving things like reforestation and financial incentives to business to cut pollution.


UN Framework Convention on Climate Change Executive Secretary Christiana Figueres this week accused Abbott's government of abandoning Australia's commitment to emissions reductions.


(Additional reporting by Lincoln Feast; Editing by Stephen Coates)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/australians-told-flee-homes-hot-winds-fan-sydney-004114707--sector.html
Tags: st louis cardinals   alice eve   iPhone 5S   brandon jacobs   Charlie Manuel  

Apple Mac Pro Due in December, With 4K Firepower Under the Hood

Apple Mac Pro Due in December, With 4K Firepower Under the Hood
The new redesigned Mac Pro sports an anodized-aluminum chassis and will be available in December, according to Apple. Prices will start at $3,000 for the lowest-end configuration.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GearFactor/~3/9ryPALkgyJU/
Tags: Lara Flynn Boyle   steelers   Monika Jakisic   Marion Bartoli   UPS plane crash  

Want Your Daughter To Be A Science Whiz? Soccer Might Help





Very few girls get the recommended 60 minutes of exercise daily. But physical activity could help with school, a study says.



evoo73/Flickr


Very few girls get the recommended 60 minutes of exercise daily. But physical activity could help with school, a study says.


evoo73/Flickr


Girls who were more physically active at age 11 did better at school as teenagers, a study finds. And the most active girls really aced science.


It's become pretty much a given that children do better academically when they get regular exercise, even though schools continue to cut or even eliminate recess time. But there's surprisingly little hard evidence to back that up.


This investigation used data from a British study that has been following the health of a large group of parents and children since 1991. They measured almost 5,000 children's physical activity at age 11 by having them wear an acclerometer for a week.


Few of the children were getting the recommended 60 minutes a day of moderate to vigorous exercise. Boys clocked 29 minutes a day on average, while girls managed just 18 minutes.


The more active the 11-year-olds were, the better they did on standardized school tests of English, math and science.



The surprise was that physically active girls were much better at science than their peers. That held true for five years, when the children took other standardized tests at age 13 and 16.


"We're not sure why that would be," Josie Booth, a lecturer in developmental psychology at the University of Dundee and lead author of the study, told Shots. It could be important, given that both Europe and the United States are trying hard to get more girls involved in science. "It could obviously be a chance finding," Booth adds. "We'd like to have a chance to look further into it."


The researchers did adjust the results to account for factors that could affect school performance, including including birth weight, current weight, a mother's smoking while pregnant and the family's socioeconomic situation. The results were published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.


This study doesn't prove that the increased exercise was what improved the children's test scores, but parents aren't off base in thinking that it could help. Randomized controlled trials have shown that exercise improves brain function in older people, and a few studies have shown that in children, too.


Until Booth or other scientists can manage a randomized trial on girls, exercise and science, we'll have to just hope that bicycling or running will help our daughters become future Nobelists. (I'll hold off on booking my ticket to Stockholm for the awards ceremony.)


"There's certainly an association between more physical activity and better academic achievement," Booth says. "If parents can get their children to meet that goal of 60 minutes a day, it's going to be beneficial for a range of factors."


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2013/10/22/239692851/want-your-daughter-to-be-a-science-whiz-soccer-might-help?ft=1&f=1003
Similar Articles: Jonas Brothers   jimmy kimmel   Mayweather   djokovic   Dufnering