Tuesday, January 29, 2013

What's Happening with Home Sales in Menlo Park? : Luxury Real ...

Courtesy of Dawn Thomas

The Dawn Thomas Team is experts in Luxury Real Estate in Silicon Valley and one of our specialty areas is Menlo Park. We have written about the Real Estate market and the decline in inventory and the drop in the days that homes stay on the market. Last year we wrote imploring people thinking about selling their homes to do so; luckily in the beginning of 2013 the Real Estate Market here in the Silicon Valley and Menlo Park, particularly, has stayed the same (on the incline). If you?re thinking about selling your home contact the Dawn Thomas Team and look at these statistics of what?s been going on in the Menlo Park Real Estate Market in terms of Sold home price averages and days they?ve stayed on the market!

When analyzing the statistics for Menlo Park we chose to break down the average home sale price between 2011-2012 and compared that to the same parameters in 2010. We also did the same thing with the Days on Market.

Average Sold home prices in Menlo Park 2011-2012 rose 5% while Days on Market went down 31%.

So what do the numbers above mean? During and soon after the housing calamity that started in 2007, but culminated in 2010, home prices were higher and the days that the homes were offered on the market? until they sold. In the last 2 years the days on market has gone down 31% which is great for Sellers as the longer a home stays on a market the harder it gets to sell. We?ve also seen that this low inventory has been hard on buyers, especially first time buyers, as the competition for these homes are very fierce. The low inventory, struggles for buyers and home values coming back up combined with the location?Menlo Park?makes it a great climate for Sellers.

While a 5% average sold home price increase doesn?t seem like much, it is a step in the right direction considering where we were at the complete bottom of the housing crisis in 2010. But shouldn?t the average sale of homes going up be a bad thing? Not for Sellers or Buyers actually; when the home prices bottomed out those that owed a significant amount of money on their homes found that while they hadn?t lost their homes (foreclosure) they were underwater on their loans (owed more than it was worth). With the average sales prices going up Sellers did/do get closer to the real value for their homes. It also makes it easier for Buyers to borrow; if the home was appraised and it came in?for example? at $5,000,000 yet a Buyer had offered $5,750,000 the Buyer would have to come up with the difference.

The numbers before the housing crisis were greatly bloated and while it hit many hard, even in Menlo Park, there has been quite a recovery in California but especially the Silicon Valley. Just recently we wrote about how San Francisco and the Bay Area is #2 out of the Top 10 healthiest housing markets in the country!

This blog is courtesy of The Dawn Thomas Team who is an award-winning Real Estate Agent team at Intero Real Estate Services in Los Altos 650-701-7822. We help nice people with selling and buying homes from Palo Alto to West San Jose!

Source: http://blog.luxuryrealestate.com/articles/2013/01/28/what%E2%80%99s-happening-with-home-sales-in-menlo-park

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Study: Domestic Cats Kill Billions Of Birds And Mammals Each Year

A new study in Nature Communications reports that free-roaming domestic cats kill billions of birds and mammals every year in the United States. Feral, farm, and stray cats are responsible for most of the deaths. Researchers say cats may be having a bigger impact on wildlife mortality than previously expected.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/01/29/170588511/study-domestic-cats-kill-billions-of-birds-and-mammals-each-year?ft=1&f=1007

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Diet Trap | Diary of a Pole Dancer

So it?s January, and almost everyone makes a New Year?s resolution to get in shape/lose weight.? Most of us gain a little fluff over the holidays from overindulging in treats.? I know I have, and I know a friend has because she, until last week, was obsessing over her ?winter weight.?? But she got her diet back to normal and started exercising again, and is getting back to her normal size.? I?m getting the lines back on the sides of my abs, too, which I lost a little last month.? But getting back to a regular diet and exercise is what?s done it.? The resolution to ?get in shape? is extremely popular, and gyms know this.? They run specials, and ads on the radio for diet pills, shakes, and supplements are out of control.? But how do you know which ones work?? I?ll give you a hint: there is no magic pill or shake.? There is no quick fix.? If you haven?t read my posts on nutrition, read them now.

So here?s a breakdown of popular diets:

Ornish (High Carb, Low Fat): The basic principle of Dr. Dean Ornish?s approach is that by strictly limiting fat, whether animal or vegetable) by eating high-fiber, low-fat foods, you eat fewer calories without eating less food. The Promise: Weight loss plus significant health benefits, including lower blood pressure and cholesterol.? Pitfalls: Many people find low-fat diets so unsatisfying that they cannot stay on them.? The diet limites the healthy fats in fish, nuts, and olive oil.? With so little fat, people may not get adequate amounts of essential fatty acids (which affects nutrient and vitamin absorption!)

Atkins ( Low Carb, High Protien): The late Dr. Robert Atkins theorized that eating too many carbohydrates could create a metabolic imbalance that leads to being overweight or obese.? Restricting carbohydrates corrects these imbalances so people can lose weight without having to eat fewer calories. Promise: Quick, short term weight loss without hunger. Pitfalls: Sever restriction of carbohydrates can induce ketosis, which is cause by an incomplete breakdown of fats that can lead to nausea, fatigue, and light-headedness and can worsen kidney disease and other medical problems.? The plan is so rigid, restrictive and complicated, that many find it hard to follow.? There is no sound scientific basis for the diet?s health claims.

South Beach (Carbohydrate Modified): This diet encourages eating ?good carbohydrates? such as vegetables, whole wheat pasta and brown rice in order to feel full and resist cravings for ?bad carbs? such as potatoes and white rice. Promise: Enhanced health due to emphasis on nutritious foods such as fish, lean meats, vegetables and unsaturated oils and restriction on fatty meats, cheeses, and sweets.? Pitfalls: The complete exclusion of starchy carbohydrates and all fruits during the first two weeks is difficult for many people. (I did a ?sugar cleanse? like this once, and it was HORRIBLE.)

Weight Watchers (Low Calorie): Nothing is forbidden on this diet.? Instead, a point system assigns a value to portions of all sorts of foods, and dieters track the number of points taken in every day.? Promise: Steady weight loss with portion control and moderation. Pitfalls: Hunger makes the diet hard to maintain. (I have a friend on facebook that tried this, and the program had her eating only 1,000 calories a day!!? NEVER EVER drop your intake below 1200 at the minimum, and if you?re working out, you need to eat MORE.? Also, I read an article on their website that called ?starvation mode? {eating so few calories that your metabolism slows and hinders weight loss} a myth.? A MYTH!!? Even though they did admit that dropping calorie intake below 1200 {at which point you were expected to lose 1.5-2 lbs a week} WOULD slow the metabolism and you would only lose maybe another quarter of a pound for the week.? Ridiculous.)

Zone (Low Carbohydrate: The premise of this approach is that eating the correct proportions of carbohydrates, fat, and protein leads to hormonal balance, weight loss, greater vitality, and less risk of disease.? Promise: Quick weight loss because of low calorie intake.? Pitfalls: Hunger makes the diet hard to maintain.

Special K Diet (Low Calorie): This plan promises weight loss due to decreased calorie intake, and convenient foods for those who don?t cook.? It?s easy ? Special K cereal and fruit for breakfast, a meal bar for lunch (or more cereal and fruit), protein shakes or veggies as morning and afternoon snacks, and a regular dinner.? Promise: Quick weight loss because of low calorie intake.? Pitfalls: Hunger makes the diet hard to maintain.? No education about healthy eating, so when you stop? the plan, the weight comes back.? No guidelines on what to eat for dinner, which can negate the effects of lower calorie intake for the rest of the day.? (For a run-down on this diet, Check out this article by Web MD.)

Let me lay this out for you.? YOU NEED TO EAT CARBS.? YOU NEED TO EAT FATS.? YOU NEED TO EAT PROTEIN.? YOU NEED TO EAT MORE THAN 1200 CALORIES A DAY.? ?Quick fixes,? pills, liquid diets and fad diets DO NOT WORK in the long run, and they can severely affect your nutrition! Don?t look for a DIET.? Look to change your LIFESTYLE.? Instead of eating that cookie, eat the apple you put in your lunch bag.? Don?t be afraid to eat fats or carbs, just make sure you eat HEALTHY ones!? Peanut butter is high in fat, but it?s the ?good? kind, and it?s also packed with protein!? If you eat too many starchy, high-glycemic carbs, you?re going to feel sluggish, but your body still needs starch!? A whole wheat english muffin with your breakfast is a good thing!

Here are some tips on designing a diet that actually works:
Avoid ?bad? fats.? This includes things like trans-fats and partially hydrogenated oils (a fancy term for trans-fats).? Be sure to read food labels!
Consume ?good? fats. Eat things like omega-3 fatty acids every day.? These can be found in fish, walnuts, and Flax.
Eat fewer ?bad? carbs like white flour and refined sugar.
Eat more ?good? carbs?
including fruits, vegetables, legumes and whole grains, like whole-wheat flour and brown rice.
Opt for quality over quantity. Eating a smaller amount of something delicious and nutritious can be far more satisfying than larger portions of junk foods.
Stop drinking soft drinks. You heard me, no more soda.? Not even caffiene-free, sugar-free, zero calorie crap.? Have you ever read the label on one of those things?? They contain ASPARTAME which is POISON.? If you want something sweet, drink 100% No Sugar Added fruit juice.? Other than that, DRINK WATER.
Avoid foods with labels like ?light? ?reduced fat? and ?low fat?. Studies have shown that people equate this as a free pass to eat as much of the product as they like, because it?s ?light? and they usually end up eating MORE calories than if they had stuck with the original!? Also, these products also tend to contain more chemicals, so again, read your food labels.? It is better to eat one small scoop of your favorite full-fat ice cream and slowly savor every bite of it than to eat two or three scoops of a ?lite? ice cream, with its added chemicals.
Consume foods from all food groups in nutrient-dense forms and recommended portion sizes.? Remember the rule about Moderation?
Reduce sodium intake. Sodium is hidden in all kinds of packaged and canned foods, so opt for low-sodium options, and, again, read your food labels
Limit alcohol consumption.? I didn?t talk about this in previous posts, but allow me to touch on it briefly here.? Alcohol is poison.? That?s what makes you drunk ? a build up of the toxin alcohol in your system.? It?s also mostly sugar (carbs).? If you drink alcohol, moderate it.? I have an average of one alcoholic drink a week.? Alcohol consumption can severely hinder any weight-loss or body building program.
Eat small meals every 3-4 hours. This may sound like a lot, but a 150 calorie ?snack? actually constitutes a meal in this line of thinking.? Eating more often throughout the day ramps up your metabolism and keeps it running and burning off what you eat rather than storing it, because your body knows that the food (energy) supply is constant.

I know there are diets I didn?t touch on, but let?s face it: fad diets don?t work.? Even things like Jenny Craig and Nutrisystem ? meals are pre-packaged, and they teach you NOTHING about nutrition, so if you stop eating their foods, you gain the weight back because they didn?t teach you healthy eating.? This is a GREAT article about calorie displacement, and how most people think about eating.

Eat healthy, whole foods.? You know what they are.? You know a turkey sandwich with spinach on whole wheat is better for you than a Big Mac.? Don?t starve yourself.? Eat until you?re satisfied!? If you serve yourself recommended portions of balanced foods, eat all of it and are still hungry, drink some water, and when you go for seconds, reach for the veggies first!!? This will provide you with more volume (to help you feel full) for less calories (avoiding overeating) and more nutritionally dense food.

Getting Healthy is like ?The Tortoise and the Hare.?? Slow and steady wins the race.? There are no shortcuts, no quick fixes.? Do it right, and in the end, you?ll look better, feel better, AND feel better about yourself.

Source: Hales, Dianne.? An Invitation to Health: Build Your Future. Wadsworth Cengage Learning, 2013.

Source: http://poledancediary.wordpress.com/2013/01/28/diet-trap/

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Pilots Save Rescue Pets by Air Service

(Joe Karl/The Herald) Pilot Jim Carney and Rescued Dog

(Archived Photo/The Herald) Pilot Jim Carney and Rescued Dog

By Jamie Stewart Storey, Staff Reporter jamie@seymourherald.com

Paws N Pilots is a volunteer and networking program that provides air transport of rescue dogs to their new homes.

Downtown Island Home airport located in South Knox participates in the program. Retired Northwest Airlines pilot Jim Carney volunteers his time and flying skills as a captain flying his personal airplane of newly adopted pets that may have been otherwise euthanized.

?Paws N Pilots is a wonderful program because we are helping save the lives of these animals by flying them to their new families. As volunteer pilots we retain complete authority of planning the rescued pets flights and we really enjoy helping,? explained Captain Carney.

To continue reading, and not miss anything subscribe now!

Source: http://www.seymourherald.com/blog/2013/01/28/knoxville-pilots-save-rescue-pets-by-air-service/

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Report: Japan to air ultra-high-def TV in 2014

7 hrs.

TOKYO???The Japanese government is set to launch the world's first 4K TV broadcast in July 2014, roughly two years ahead of schedule, to help stir demand for ultra high-definition televisions, the Asahi newspaper reported on Sunday without citing sources.

The service will begin from communications satellites, followed by satellite broadcasting and ground digital broadcasting, the report said.

The 4K TVs, which boast four times the resolution of current high-definition TVs, are now on sale by Japanese makers including Sony, Panasonic and Sharp. Other manufacturers include South Korea's LG Electronics.

Japan's Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications had aimed to kick-start the 4K TV service in 2016. That has been brought forward to July 2014, when the final match of the 2014 football World Cup is set to take place in Brazil, the Asahi report said.

In Japan, the development of super high-definition 8K TVs is in progress, and the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications plans to launch the test 8K TV broadcast in 2016, two years ahead of schedule, it said.

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/gadgetbox/japan-reportedly-targets-2014-worlds-first-ultra-high-def-4k-1C8135106

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Monday, January 28, 2013

First guidelines for brain amyloid imaging in Alzheimer's released

First guidelines for brain amyloid imaging in Alzheimer's released [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Jan-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Susan Martonik
smartonik@snmmi.org
703-652-6773
Society of Nuclear Medicine

CHICAGO, January 28, 2013 Only recently has it become possible to create high-quality images of the brain plaques characteristic of Alzheimer's disease in living people through positron emission tomography (PET). Even so, questions remain about what can be learned from these PET images and which people should have this test.

To provide guidance for physicians, individuals and families affected by Alzheimer's, and the public, the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging (SNMMI) and the Alzheimer's Association have jointly published the first criteria for the appropriate use of this imaging technology to aid in the diagnosis of people with suspected Alzheimer's disease. The criteria were published online today as an article "in press" by Alzheimer's & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer's Association and "ahead of print" in The Journal of Nuclear Medicine.

"Our primary goal is to provide healthcare practitioners with the information and options available to provide patients with the best possible diagnosis and care in a cost effective manner," said Maria Carrillo, Ph.D., Alzheimer's Association vice president of Medical and Scientific Relations.

Appropriate Use Criteria (AUC) for Brain Amyloid Imaging with PET in Alzheimer's

While elevated beta amyloid plaques are one of the defining pathologic features of Alzheimer's, many elderly people with normal cognition also have elevated levels of these plaques, as do people with conditions other than Alzheimer's dementia. Therefore, the potential clinical use of amyloid PET requires careful consideration so that its proper role may be identified.

To develop the new criteria, the Alzheimer's Association and SNMMI assembled an Amyloid Imaging Taskforce (AIT) consisting of dementia and imaging experts to review the scientific literature and develop consensus recommendations for the clinical use of this promising new technology.

The AIT concluded that amyloid imaging could potentially be helpful in the diagnosis of people with cognitive impairment when considered along with other clinical information, and when performed according to standardized protocols by trained staff. In addition, they emphasized that the decision whether or not to order amyloid imaging should be made only after a comprehensive evaluation by a physician experienced in the assessment and diagnosis of cognitive impairment and dementia, and only if the presence or absence of amyloid would increase certainty in the diagnosis and alter the treatment plan.

According to the AIT, appropriate candidates for amyloid PET imaging include:

  • Those who complain of persistent or progressive unexplained memory problems or confusion and who demonstrate impairments using standard tests of cognition and memory.
  • Individuals meeting tests for possible Alzheimer's, but who are unusual in their clinical presentation.
  • Individuals with progressive dementia and atypically early age of onset (before age 65).

Inappropriate candidates for amyloid PET imaging include:

  • Those who are age 65 or older and meet standard definitions and tests for Alzheimer's, since a positive PET scan would provide little added value.
  • Asymptomatic people or those with a cognitive complaint but no clinical confirmation of impairment.

Amyloid PET imaging is also inappropriate:

  • As a means of determining the severity of dementia.
  • When requested solely based on a family history of dementia or presence of other risk factors for Alzheimer's, such as the ApoE-e4 gene.
  • As a substitute for genetic testing for mutations that cause Alzheimer's.
  • For non-medical reasons, such as insurance, legal or employment decisions.

"As amyloid imaging becomes more prevalent in clinical settings, medical professionals must understand how to appropriately utilize the test," said Frederic H. Fahey, D.Sc., SNMMI president. "Neurology and dementia experts should order the test only when appropriately indicated, and nuclear medicine and molecular imaging professionals must ensure they have been adequately trained to interpret the results of the scan. Working together, we hope that the information garnered from amyloid PET imaging will aid in diagnosis and play a pivotal role in the development of new treatments for Alzheimer's."

The taskforce acknowledged that the healthcare provider makes the ultimate judgment regarding the care of each patient. The AIT sought to assist this process and identified the following general sequence of events for the use of amyloid PET according to the new criteria:

  1. Evaluation by a dementia expert to assess the need for diagnostic testing, possibly to include amyloid PET if the AUC are met.
  2. Referral to a qualified provider of amyloid PET services.
  3. Performance, interpretation and reporting of the amyloid PET scan according to established standards.
  4. Incorporation of the PET result into the clinical assessment process.
  5. Disclosure of the PET result by the clinician to the patient and caregivers, along with discussion of the result and its management consequences.

Although identifying potential benefits, the AIT concluded that amyloid PET results will not constitute and is not equivalent to a clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease dementia. They said that imaging is only one tool among many that clinicians should use judiciously to manage patients, and that amyloid PET imaging does not substitute for a careful history and examination.

"Because both dementia care and amyloid PET technology are in active development, these new appropriate use criteria will require periodic reassessment and updating," Carrillo said.

PET Amyloid Imaging in Alzheimer's An Overview

PET uses radiopharmaceuticals (radioactive drugs) to produce three-dimensional functional images of the brain or other body part. In amyloid PET imaging, the radiopharmaceutical is introduced into the body by injection into a vein and binds specifically to the amyloid protein, enabling visualization of areas in the brain where amyloid has clumped together into plaques. One of the new PET compounds was approved for general use by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in April 2012.

  • If a person with dementia does not have amyloid buildup in their brain, then the cause of the dementia is very likely to be something other than Alzheimer's disease. Other causes of dementia include: strokes, thyroid problems, drug interactions, chronic alcoholism, and vitamin deficiencies.
  • If an amyloid imaging PET scan shows that a person with memory impairment has amyloid buildup in their brain, this increases the likelihood that the memory impairment is caused by Alzheimer's disease, but it remains a likelihood, not a certainty.
  • If a person without memory complaints or impairment has amyloid buildup, it does not necessarily mean that they will develop Alzheimer's. Many people have amyloid in their brains but are cognitively normal. More research is needed to understand the significance of amyloid plaques in this population.

Amyloid imaging is not covered by insurance at this time, and costs for the scan are "out of pocket." While costs of amyloid PET are not yet established, and PET costs in general can vary depending upon location, other PET scans are known to cost between $1,000 and $3,000, or more. Nonetheless, the AIT concluded that the proven sensitivity and specificity of the new radiopharmaceuticals for brain amyloid and the known association between brain beta amyloid deposition and Alzheimer's suggest these new radiopharmaceuticals could potentially be helpful in the workup and diagnosis of patients with cognitive impairment.

###


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?


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


First guidelines for brain amyloid imaging in Alzheimer's released [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Jan-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Susan Martonik
smartonik@snmmi.org
703-652-6773
Society of Nuclear Medicine

CHICAGO, January 28, 2013 Only recently has it become possible to create high-quality images of the brain plaques characteristic of Alzheimer's disease in living people through positron emission tomography (PET). Even so, questions remain about what can be learned from these PET images and which people should have this test.

To provide guidance for physicians, individuals and families affected by Alzheimer's, and the public, the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging (SNMMI) and the Alzheimer's Association have jointly published the first criteria for the appropriate use of this imaging technology to aid in the diagnosis of people with suspected Alzheimer's disease. The criteria were published online today as an article "in press" by Alzheimer's & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer's Association and "ahead of print" in The Journal of Nuclear Medicine.

"Our primary goal is to provide healthcare practitioners with the information and options available to provide patients with the best possible diagnosis and care in a cost effective manner," said Maria Carrillo, Ph.D., Alzheimer's Association vice president of Medical and Scientific Relations.

Appropriate Use Criteria (AUC) for Brain Amyloid Imaging with PET in Alzheimer's

While elevated beta amyloid plaques are one of the defining pathologic features of Alzheimer's, many elderly people with normal cognition also have elevated levels of these plaques, as do people with conditions other than Alzheimer's dementia. Therefore, the potential clinical use of amyloid PET requires careful consideration so that its proper role may be identified.

To develop the new criteria, the Alzheimer's Association and SNMMI assembled an Amyloid Imaging Taskforce (AIT) consisting of dementia and imaging experts to review the scientific literature and develop consensus recommendations for the clinical use of this promising new technology.

The AIT concluded that amyloid imaging could potentially be helpful in the diagnosis of people with cognitive impairment when considered along with other clinical information, and when performed according to standardized protocols by trained staff. In addition, they emphasized that the decision whether or not to order amyloid imaging should be made only after a comprehensive evaluation by a physician experienced in the assessment and diagnosis of cognitive impairment and dementia, and only if the presence or absence of amyloid would increase certainty in the diagnosis and alter the treatment plan.

According to the AIT, appropriate candidates for amyloid PET imaging include:

  • Those who complain of persistent or progressive unexplained memory problems or confusion and who demonstrate impairments using standard tests of cognition and memory.
  • Individuals meeting tests for possible Alzheimer's, but who are unusual in their clinical presentation.
  • Individuals with progressive dementia and atypically early age of onset (before age 65).

Inappropriate candidates for amyloid PET imaging include:

  • Those who are age 65 or older and meet standard definitions and tests for Alzheimer's, since a positive PET scan would provide little added value.
  • Asymptomatic people or those with a cognitive complaint but no clinical confirmation of impairment.

Amyloid PET imaging is also inappropriate:

  • As a means of determining the severity of dementia.
  • When requested solely based on a family history of dementia or presence of other risk factors for Alzheimer's, such as the ApoE-e4 gene.
  • As a substitute for genetic testing for mutations that cause Alzheimer's.
  • For non-medical reasons, such as insurance, legal or employment decisions.

"As amyloid imaging becomes more prevalent in clinical settings, medical professionals must understand how to appropriately utilize the test," said Frederic H. Fahey, D.Sc., SNMMI president. "Neurology and dementia experts should order the test only when appropriately indicated, and nuclear medicine and molecular imaging professionals must ensure they have been adequately trained to interpret the results of the scan. Working together, we hope that the information garnered from amyloid PET imaging will aid in diagnosis and play a pivotal role in the development of new treatments for Alzheimer's."

The taskforce acknowledged that the healthcare provider makes the ultimate judgment regarding the care of each patient. The AIT sought to assist this process and identified the following general sequence of events for the use of amyloid PET according to the new criteria:

  1. Evaluation by a dementia expert to assess the need for diagnostic testing, possibly to include amyloid PET if the AUC are met.
  2. Referral to a qualified provider of amyloid PET services.
  3. Performance, interpretation and reporting of the amyloid PET scan according to established standards.
  4. Incorporation of the PET result into the clinical assessment process.
  5. Disclosure of the PET result by the clinician to the patient and caregivers, along with discussion of the result and its management consequences.

Although identifying potential benefits, the AIT concluded that amyloid PET results will not constitute and is not equivalent to a clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease dementia. They said that imaging is only one tool among many that clinicians should use judiciously to manage patients, and that amyloid PET imaging does not substitute for a careful history and examination.

"Because both dementia care and amyloid PET technology are in active development, these new appropriate use criteria will require periodic reassessment and updating," Carrillo said.

PET Amyloid Imaging in Alzheimer's An Overview

PET uses radiopharmaceuticals (radioactive drugs) to produce three-dimensional functional images of the brain or other body part. In amyloid PET imaging, the radiopharmaceutical is introduced into the body by injection into a vein and binds specifically to the amyloid protein, enabling visualization of areas in the brain where amyloid has clumped together into plaques. One of the new PET compounds was approved for general use by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in April 2012.

  • If a person with dementia does not have amyloid buildup in their brain, then the cause of the dementia is very likely to be something other than Alzheimer's disease. Other causes of dementia include: strokes, thyroid problems, drug interactions, chronic alcoholism, and vitamin deficiencies.
  • If an amyloid imaging PET scan shows that a person with memory impairment has amyloid buildup in their brain, this increases the likelihood that the memory impairment is caused by Alzheimer's disease, but it remains a likelihood, not a certainty.
  • If a person without memory complaints or impairment has amyloid buildup, it does not necessarily mean that they will develop Alzheimer's. Many people have amyloid in their brains but are cognitively normal. More research is needed to understand the significance of amyloid plaques in this population.

Amyloid imaging is not covered by insurance at this time, and costs for the scan are "out of pocket." While costs of amyloid PET are not yet established, and PET costs in general can vary depending upon location, other PET scans are known to cost between $1,000 and $3,000, or more. Nonetheless, the AIT concluded that the proven sensitivity and specificity of the new radiopharmaceuticals for brain amyloid and the known association between brain beta amyloid deposition and Alzheimer's suggest these new radiopharmaceuticals could potentially be helpful in the workup and diagnosis of patients with cognitive impairment.

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


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


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-01/sonm-fgf012513.php

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History of the Eagles Part 1: Sundance Review - The Hollywood ...

The Bottom Line

The first half of a two-part Eagles doc surely contains 90% of the worthy material.

Venue:

SUNDANCE FILM FESTIVAL, DOCUMENTARY PREMIERES (Showtime TV)

Director:

Alison Ellwood

PARK CITY ? A solid, safe biography of one of the world's most successful bands, Alison Ellwood's History of the Eagles Part 1 will remind non-fanatics how many omnipresent singles this group released in under a decade; for those who don't need that reminder, it offers the chance to see bandmates past and present (along with a fair number of peers) reminiscing on a record-by-record basis. TV viewership should be strong, though one has to ask -- as Part 1 covers everything through the 1980 breakup, who wants to see Part 2, which covers the reunion? It's one thing to sell millions of copies of a mediocre record to old fans who haven't bought new music in a decade, and to convince them to pay record-high ticket prices for reunion gigs; another thing entirely to get them to watch a film about that exploit.

VIDEO: THR?s Sundance Video Diaries

Ellwood interviews both the band's current members and those who fell by the wayside, but doesn't pretend there aren't two who are substantially more important: Glenn Frey and Don Henley are the only members whose childhoods are covered here -- Frey's Detroit youth exposing him to Motown hits, Henley's Texas upbringing offering Hank Williams and tantalizing radio broadcasts from neighboring Louisiana.

After early musical efforts, both made their way to Los Angeles (Kenny Rogers drops in here to explain his role), where for a time Frey lived in Echo Park with Jackson Browne illegally renting the basement below him. Frey recalls that hearing Browne get up every morning and play the same verse dozens of times convinced him songwriting was all about "elbow grease."

Browne shows up for some scene-setting here, as do David Geffen and the band's producers and manager. Notably absent is Linda Ronstadt, who gave Henley and Frey an early opportunity to break out of the Troubadour scene and make some money on the road. Ronstadt does show up in good vintage interviews, though, alongside plenty of period footage of the Eagles on and off stage.

Little if anything in this chronological rundown will surprise fans, unless the surprise is in how little emphasis is given to bad behavior. Yes, there was that time with Joe Walsh and John Belushi, wreaking havoc in Chicago; yeah, there was some cocaine. The latter topic amounts to something like a minute of screen time; the former, at least, is a great story. (Walsh, the band's designated prankster and hotel-room-wrecker, recalls that "one of the most terrifying things ever was when Keith Moon decided he liked me.")

PHOTOS: Sundance 2013: The Scene in Park City??????

If the film acknowledges Frey and Henley's prominence, it does make room for their colleagues: Anecdotes about the births of "Hotel California" and "Life in the Fast Lane" make it clear those songs wouldn't exist without guitarists Don Felder and Joe Walsh. But not all the musical illustrations are that valuable: Not to pick on Randy Meisner, who comes off as a decent fellow, but do we really need to hear an explanation of the lyrics to "Take It To The Limit"?

Production Company: Mohegan Pictures

Director: Alison Ellwood

Producer: Alex Gibney

Executive producer: Blair Foster

Directors of photography: Maryse Alberti, Sam Painter

Editor: Alison Ellwood, Ben Sozanksi

No rating, 120 minutes

Source: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/review/history-eagles-part-1-sundance-415671

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Sunday, January 27, 2013

Penguin Colony's First Contact With Humans In Antarctica Captured On Camera (VIDEO)

A group of explorers recently became the first humans to ever make contact with a previously unknown colony of more than 9,000 Emperor penguins in the Antarctic. It was a meeting that the expedition leader called "unforgettable."

According to the International Polar Foundation, the group made contact with the Emperor penguin colony, said to be one of Antarctica's largest, in early December after evidence of the birds' existence was discovered using satellite imagery. In a 2009 paper, researchers from the British Antarctic Survey said they located the colony after images taken from space revealed evidence of "penguin poo."

Still, until the recent expedition, there hadn't been unequivocal proof of the colony's existence.

Expedition leader Alain Hubert, who has been in Antarctica for seven seasons and is in the region with the International Polar Foundation research team, told National Geographic that the satellite images gave him and his crew a "rough idea of where to start looking."

Last month, Hubert, along with two other men, hopped on snowmobiles and took a treacherous journey to where they believed the penguins to be. To their amazement, they struck gold. "We were lucky to find it," Hubert told National Geographic.

On Dec. 3, Hubert and his team stumbled upon the 9,000 Emperor penguins, basking in the Antarctic summer sun. They say they were the first humans that the penguins had ever seen.

According to CNN, about 3/4 of the colony were chicks. "Despite global warming, this colony? is growing," said Hubert.

Though Emperor penguins, a species endemic to Antarctica, once lived abundantly in the wild and were considered animals of "least concern" from a conservation standpoint, the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) recently changed the status of the species to "near threatened." The animals are "projected to undergo a moderately rapid population decline over the next three generations owing to the effects of projected climate change," the IUCN explains.

As the Antarctic and Southern Ocean Coalition website notes, Emperor penguins are "highly vulnerable" to changes in climate and are "predicted to suffer" if the world's average temperature should increase by 2 degrees Celsius (about 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit), a change experts say will come by the year 2052.

According to a 2011 report by the National Research Council, the average temperature of the Earth?s surface has increased by about 1.4 degrees Fahrenheit over the past century; however, a whopping 1 degree Fahrenheit of this warming is said to have occurred over the past three decades.

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/26/penguin-colony-first-contact-humans-antarctica_n_2553470.html

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Egyptian mummy's hairstyle revealed in 3-D

Nearly 2,000 years ago, at a time when Egypt was under the control of the Roman Empire, a young woman with an elaborate hairstyle was laid to rest only yards away from a king's pyramid, researchers report.

She was 5 feet 2 inches in height, around age 20 when she died, and was buried in a decorated coffin whose face is gilded with gold. A nearby pyramid, at a site called Hawara, was built about 2 millennia before her lifetime. The location of her burial is known from archival notes. ?

High-resolution CT scans reveal that, before she was buried, her hair was dressed in an elaborate hairstyle.

"The mummy's hair is readily appreciable, with longer strands at the middle of the scalp drawn back into twists or plaits that were then wound into a tutulus, or chignon at the vertex (crown) of the head," writes a research team in a paper published recently in the journal RSNA RadioGraphics. They note that it was a popular hairstyle at the time, which may have been inspired by a Roman empress, Faustina I, who lived in the second century. [ See Photos of Egyptian Mummy's Reconstruction ]

Today, thanks to research and reconstruction work that includes high-resolution CT scans, anthropological analysis, 3-D printing and facial reconstruction drawing, this woman, along with two other mummies, are being brought back to life. Their three-dimensional faces and hair, carefully reconstructed by professional forensic artist Victoria Lywood, of John Abbott College, are set to be revealed tomorrow (Jan. 25) at the Redpath Museum at McGill University in Montreal, Canada.

In pictures sent to LiveScience the reconstructions appear vividly real in every aspect, from the tone of their muscles to the color and style of their hair. It looks like they could be people living today.

"They are three human Egyptian mummies that have been trapped in the manner they held when laid to rest nearly 2,000 years ago. And now we can reveal what they might have looked like," the team writes in a press release.? All three mummies were donated to the Redpath Museum in the 19th century.

  1. Science news from NBCNews.com

    1. Egyptian mummy's elaborate hairstyle revealed in 3-D

      Nearly 2,000 years ago, at a time when Egypt was under the control of the Roman Empire, a young woman with an elaborate hairstyle was laid to rest only yards away from a king's pyramid, researchers report.

    2. Elusive giant squid is still a deep mystery
    3. Goggle-wearing rats learn predictive skills
    4. Climate change views swayed by weather

While two scientific papers have recently been published on them, and their reconstructed faces are set to be unveiled, there are still plenty of mysteries for Egyptologists to tackle. For instance, when researchers scanned the woman they found three puncture marks, each about an eighth of an inch (3-4 millimeters) across, on the right side of her abdominal wall, wounds that may have killed her, leading to the question ? how did she get them???

"These wounds were believed to have occurred either before or shortly after death," the researchers write in their RadioGraphics paper, "although these CT findings are far from conclusive, it is possible that the punctures are related to the cause of death."

The 'matron'
Another mummy, dubbed the "white-haired matron," is of a woman who lived long enough to see her hair go gray, likely passing away sometime between the ages of 30 and 50. Radiocarbon dating indicates that she lived late in the time of Roman rule (A.D. 230-380), when Christianity was growing in Egypt and mummification was soon to go out of style. At 5 foot 3 inches, she was relatively tall for her time, and museum records indicate that she was found somewhere in the ancient Egyptian city of Thebes (modern-day Luxor).

She suffered from a problem quite common in ancient Egypt ? bad, and rather painful, teeth. "Thecondition of the teeth of (the mummy) was poor," the team writes in the RadioGraphics paper, noting that she was missing several of them and that a large cavity, between two teeth, was visible along with several abscesses.

Theban male
The third reconstructed mummy lived a few centuries earlier than the other two, at a time when a dynasty of Greek kings ruled Egypt. If he and the matron could talk, they could sympathize with each other?s dental problems. [ Mummy Melodrama: 9 Secrets of Otzi the Iceman ]

The 5-foot-4-inch male mummy had numerous cavities, including one that caused a sinus infection, possibly killing him. His condition was so bad that in his final days he had a form of linen "packing," dipped in medicine, inserted into one of his cavities. According to records he also was found in Thebes, with CT scans showing that he died relatively young, likely in his 20s or early 30s.

Western University researcher Andrew Wade, a leading member of the team, said at a recent Egyptology symposium in Toronto that the development of high-resolution CT scans has played a key role in advancing the study of Egyptian mummies, including these three individuals, unveiling tiny details that help bring their past to life.?

"The high spatial and contrast resolution of the last decade of CT studies of mummies has allowed us to examine the paleo-anatomic minutiae (of mummies)," he said.

Follow LiveScience on Twitter@livescience. We're also onFacebook &Google+.

? 2012 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/50588867/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Sunday, January 20, 2013

Analysis: Apple earnings need to overcome technical malaise

NEW YORK/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - To those who study technical stock charts, Apple Inc looks broken.

Even though it is widely viewed to be undervalued after hitting an 11-month low this week and nine out of 10 brokerages recommend that investors buy or hold the stock, Apple shareholders could still be in for more rough times if technical strategists are right.

They note that trading charts show few price points where investors can expect clusters of buying to support Apple's shares. For example, the stock's medium-term momentum, based on its 50-day rate of acceleration, has been on a downward slope since March, but has not hit over-sold levels.

Ryan Detrick, senior technical strategist at Schaeffer's Investment Research, said it is hard to find an entry point at current levels, calling the stock "broken."

"There's been a lot of technical damage, but at the same time it still looks like it's in a downtrend," Detrick said. "This could still be a name you want to avoid and could very well still underperform in our opinion."

Apple has a chance to turn things around when it reports results for the December quarter on January 23. Investors are unusually nervous because of reports that Apple might be curtailing purchases of screens for its iPhone and iPad, which together account for over 70 percent of revenue.

If Apple can substantially beat Wall Street's subdued expectations, that would go a long way towards restoring confidence in the near term. It is not enough for Apple to just meet targets - that could cause shares to fall further in the short term, some analysts say. Apple has only missed analysts' profit forecasts four times in the last 10 years, two of those in the most recent reporting periods.

"If you have a 10 percent to 15 percent beat on estimates, it will be enough to have people say, 'Oh my gosh, Apple has its game back,'" said Chris Bertelsen, chief investment officer of Global Financial Private Capital, a Sarasota-based wealth manager with $1.7 billion assets under management.

The fund had cut back its holdings in Apple to less than 1 percent of its portfolio from about 5 to 6 percent last fall, but Bertelsen said it is now adding again. He likes Apple's longer-term prospects as the global smartphone market grows, particularly in developing countries such as India and Brazil.

Analysts on average estimate Apple's fiscal first-quarter earnings per share at $13.41, down slightly from $13.87 in the year-earlier quarter. Revenue is seen up 18 percent at $54.7 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

The December quarter is typically the strongest one of the year for consumer electronics sales and Apple had a new product, the iPad mini, in its holiday season line-up.

Wall Street estimates Apple sold between 47.5 million and 53 million iPhones, up considerably from the 26.9 million sold in the previous quarter, when the iPhone 5 had not made it to all markets. IPad sales are expected at 23 million to 25 million.

BULLS OUTNUMBER BEARS

Apple shares have fallen nearly 30 percent after hitting a record high in September, in part on worries that its mobile devices are no longer as popular as they were. As competition intensifies from Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and others using Google Inc's Android software, investors are wondering if Apple's days of hyper growth are over.

There are still plenty of Apple bulls on Wall Street. Forty-eight out of 58 equity analysts who cover the stock rate it a "buy" or "strong buy" and another seven say it is a "hold," according to Thomson Reuters data. Only three recommend that investors sell the stock.

The median price target is $745, which is roughly 50 percent above Apple's Friday close of $500.

The company is expected to continue to post double-digit revenue growth into at least 2015 and a StarMine analysis of its expected growth over the next decade puts the stock's intrinsic value at about $708 a share.

"We still expect iPhone growth. They are still pointing to a strong December quarter and, if you think there's any momentum left, that they can grow on the high end (of the smart phone market) or find growth in other sectors, this is a buying opportunity," said Morningstar analyst Brian Colello, who has a fair value call on Apple at $770.

Investors also expect Apple to follow through on a promised $10 billion stock buy-back program.

"If the company is not buying back at this level, I think it's absurd and suggests that something is seriously wrong with the company," said Mark Mulholland, manager of the Matthew 25 fund, which has about 17 percent of its holdings in Apple.

Last year, the fund posted a considerable 29 percent gain, although it lost 2.8 percent in the last quarter as Apple slumped. (Apple shares gained 31 percent over 2012)

Mulholland values Apple at more than $1,000 per share, based on its growth prospects and cash level. Apple had cash and securities of $121.25 billion at the end of September, or about $129 per share.

Still, he agrees with technical analysts who say there is little momentum behind the stock. Some point to support near $425 per share, which means there is room for the stock to fall another 15 percent from current levels.

"Three things influence a stock price: growth, value and momentum. The growth and value are there, but you've completely lost your momentum," said Mulholland.

Apple shares are trading at 15.4 times projected 12-month earnings, a level that analysts say is unusually inexpensive for a company with its growth profile.

Samsung trades at a forward P/E of 7.6, while Nokia trades at 92.3 times.

Sandy Villere, portfolio manager of the $356 million Villere Balanced Fund, said the fund has been scooping up more shares as the price fell, but notes it is more fashionable to be down on the iPhone, iPad and Mac computer maker these days.

"It's becoming almost a contrarian thing to want to buy Apple shares," Villere added. It's "a great buying opportunity."

(Additional reporting by David Randall and Angela Moon; Editing by Tiffany Wu and Andre Grenon)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/analysis-apple-earnings-overcome-technical-malaise-131102279--sector.html

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You get all of this from your new business without spending most of your profits on overhead.The most important reason that you would want to sell information online using an Ezine, is because you get to start your own media, and get your information out to a massive number of subscribers.

Source: http://foamposites4.blogspot.com/2013/01/using-ezines-to-sell-information-lebron.html

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What You Need to Know About Today's Home Buyers | Zillow Blog

Many parts of the country are seeing an uptick in real estate activity. We?ve been hearing for months now that buyers have returned; that it has become cheaper to own than to rent in many markets; and that sellers are realizing their once unsaleable homes may have a market.

If you?re a seller, it?s helpful to understand the mindset of today?s buyer, to understand what they?ve been through and what they?re willing to do ? or not do ? to get the home they want.

The ?Crash? Had a Big Impact on Today?s Home Buyers

Many home buyers on the open house circuit today may have been out there a few years back. They?re experienced buyers who were searching for a home before the credit crisis and market crash and quickly jumped ship, not wanting to make it into the history books as yet another homeowner whose property was under water. After the crash, prices seemed like such a good deal. But there was still the fear prices would fall further. Buyers couldn?t bear the thought of signing the papers, only to see the market go down another 10 percent. So they sat on the sidelines for years and are beginning to return now.

New-to-Market Buyers are Savvy

Of course, there are buyers entering the market now for the first time, too. They may be recently married, have a stable job or have committed to living in a certain area for the next five years. These folks have been casually observing real estate from the sidelines recently. They watch the local news, see real estate stories online, and probably have the perception that the market has been doom and gloom, though they feel it just may be the right time for them.

Their Confidence is Back

No matter where today?s home buyers come from, they have one thing in common. They all have a sense of confidence about the real estate market.? Maybe they?ve been renting the past five years and have come across online calculators or research that helped them realize rents have risen too much, that they can actually afford to buy and pay less per month. It?s possible they met with their CPA recently, who suggested they could benefit from the tax savings of owning real estate. It could have been that, at the Christmas table this year, they found out Grandma Lorraine left them a small amount of cash when she died last year.

They?re on a Mission

Whatever their background or recent experience, today?s home buyers are coming to the real estate market in a bit of a ?herd? mentality. They see reports of markets rising and interest rates still at 20-year-lows. They recognize rents are rising. These buyers, working with a local real estate agent, have already been pre-approved by their lender. They?re on a mission. They want to get into the market early. They don?t want to miss the boat.

They?ll Pay a Little More to Get in the Door

Today?s buyers are forgiving of small flaws in a property and aren?t afraid to pay a little more to get in the door. In essence, they?re the ideal buyers. Their attitudes, coupled with low interest rates and inventory, are the recipe for the beginning of a seller?s market.

Their Blinders are Off

But some things have changed. Unlike the buyers of 2004 or 2005, today?s buyers have lived through our countries? economic crisis and market meltdown.? They may be back and they may be serious about buying, but they aren?t going in with blinders anymore.

Advice to Sellers

Getting ready to sell your home and your agent tells you it?s a ?seller?s market?? Yes, its true the market is shifting back in favor of sellers. But it?s not as easy as throwing it on the market and waiting for offers to come, as it often was during the boom years.

Buyers, though ready and able, will demand a little more, may negotiate more, or may simply not want to feel they?re being taken for a ride. The littlest feeling of a not-so-good deal or something going sideways can still scare a buyer away. When this happens, you?re left with a property that goes ?back on market,? and that could leave a stain on the listing.

While things are in your favor, be open to a little negotiation and be ready to treat the buyer fairly and honestly. Don?t assume you have complete control of the negotiations or the sales process. Be mindful that, while you may not have been one of them, many sellers have been desperate to sell or get out of their current homes in the past. Many of them would be grateful just to have a buyer today?and they, for better or worse, may be your competition.

Related:

Brendon DeSimone is a Realtor, a regular HGTV contributor and one of the nation?s leading?real estate experts. He has collaborated on multiple real estate books and his expert advice is regularly sought out by print, online and television media outlets like FOX News, CNBC and Forbes. An avid investor, Brendon owns real estate around the US and abroad and is licensed to sell in both California and New York. You can find Brendon?online?or follow him on?Twitter.

Note: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the opinion or position of Zillow.

Source: http://www.zillow.com/blog/2013-01-18/what-you-need-to-know-about-todays-home-buyers/

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Saturday, January 19, 2013

Press Conference By Taro Aso, Japan?s Deputy Prime Minister, Minister Of Finance And Minister For Financial Services

(Excerpt)

(Friday, January 11, 2013, from 11:52 a.m. to 12:15 p.m.)

[Questions and Answers]

Q.

The other day, a media report said that the calculation method of the standard yield rate will be revised so that life insurance companies can lower their insurance premium rates. I suppose that this will create problems such as the possibility that life insurance companies? business risks may increase. Is the media report accurate?

A.

At least, it is not true that the standard yield rate will be revised.

Q.

Regarding the expiry of the SME (Small and Medium-size Enterprises) Financing Facilitation Act, Enterprise Turnaround Initiative Corporation of Japan will be reorganized as a ?regional economy revitalization support organization? under the latest emergency economic package. Could you explain the purpose of the reorganization? I have one more question related to the SME Financing Facilitation Act. The New Komeito is calling for another extension of this law, and although you have denied the possibility of another extension, I suppose that you cannot ignore the coalition partner?s opinion. Could you tell me how you will deal with this matter?

A.

We will not extend the law again, as I have repeatedly stated. However, there are some companies which are close to attaining turnaround, so we will consider using various services such as consulting and various people such as certified SME advisors so that we can deal with those companies on a case by-case basis. Regarding regional revitalization, there is no doubt that the situation varies widely from region to region. In that sense, we must properly grasp the situation region by region. There is no doubt that there are significant differences between regions where the economic condition is good and regions where it is not good and between regions where jobs are increasing and regions where they are not increasing, as Japan is geographically long from north to south, and we do not desire further concentration of population in cities. In that sense, unless we look at the situation region by region, we can?t find out what should be done to revitalize regional economies, so we worked out the reorganization plan.

Source: http://www.mondovisione.com/media-and-resources/news/press-conference-by-taro-aso-japans-deputy-prime-minister-minister-of-finance-2/

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Amateur Australian prospector finds massive gold nugget

SYDNEY (Reuters) - An amateur Australian prospector who hadn't had much luck searching for gold has struck it rich, unearthing a nugget heavier than a newborn baby and worth more than $300,000.

The anonymous prospector discovered the 5.5 kg (177 ounce) nugget near the country town of Ballarat and in an area known as the "Golden Triangle" due to its rich veins which sparked a gold rush in the 1850s.

The find came to light on Wednesday when the man walked into the Ballarat Mining Exchange Gold Shop and told owner Cordell Kent: "Mate, I found a good one". He then revealed the nugget, adding that he had weighed it on the bathroom scales at home.

"It's a substantial nugget," Kent told Reuters.

The Y-shaped nugget, 22 centimetres (8.7 inches) long and 14 centimetres (5.5 inches) wide, was found by the prospector using an Australian-made gold detector.

"The intrinsic gold value is about A$286,000 ($301,100), but because it's a natural raw specimen and they're extremely rare it's got a value far in excess of that," Kent said.

The southern state of Victoria's "Golden Triangle" is known for large nuggets, such as the massive 27.21 kg (60 lb) "The Hand of Fate" nugget, which is now housed in a Las Vegas casino.

Kent said the find was likely to create a new, mini gold rush. "It's given a lot of prospectors great hope that there still are great pieces out there," said Kent.

(Reporting by Pauline Askin, editing by Elaine Lies)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/amateur-australian-prospector-finds-massive-gold-nugget-064151366.html

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Insight: Algerians suspect inside help in hostage raid

LONDON/ALGIERS (Reuters) - The In Amenas gas plant felt impregnable to many who worked there - walled in, hundreds of miles from anywhere and with the Algerian army constantly patrolling its desert approaches.

That was a mirage. Libya, an ex-police state turned arms bazaar and now open for jihad, lies just 50 empty miles away. And in any case, the enemy was probably already inside the gates.

At least some of up to 70 Islamist guerrillas who stormed in before dawn on Wednesday launched their operation hours earlier, barreling over smugglers tracks across the Libyan border just after midnight, an Algerian security official told Reuters, citing evidence from mobile phones traced to the militants.

The ease with which they entered the fortified housing compound and nearby natural gas plant also left Algerians in little doubt the gunmen had allies among people at the site.

"They had local cooperation, I'm sure, maybe from drivers or security guards, who helped the terrorists get into the base," said Anis Rahmani, editor of Algeria's Ennahar newspaper and a writer on security issues who said he was briefed by officials.

Officials in this secretive country said they had discovered cases before when Islamist rebels succeeded in having fellow militants employed by international energy companies. One told Reuters it was possible insiders had cooperated at In Amenas.

Locally hired workers who escaped told Reuters of seeing the gunmen moving around the sprawling facility with confidence, apparently familiar with its layout and well prepared.

The militants said they launched the raid to halt French military intervention in neighboring Mali, which began a week ago, however the link is not yet clear. Several European and U.S. officials said the assault seems too elaborate to have been planned in such a short time.

It is possible the attack would have happened anyway, or that the French military operation provided a trigger to carry out an attack based on preparations done earlier.

Much may never become clear. The raid was carried out in a region closed to outsiders within a country whose government is unused to sharing sensitive information with the public.

First word of trouble came crackling over a walkie-talkie to the communications room at In Amenas, where a 27-year-old radio operator called Azedine logged a contact with a bus driver who, at 5:45 a.m. (0445 GMT), left to take some foreigners to the airstrip at the town of In Amenas, some 50 km (30 miles) away.

"Moments after the bus left, I heard shooting, a lot of shooting, and then nothing," Azedine told Reuters on Friday.

Two people, one British, one Algerian were killed on two buses heading for the airport. It is not clear whether that incident was part of the plan that secured the militants access to the compound. Almost immediately after the bus skirmish, they were inside, in at least three vehicles.

People who have worked at the site, which sits with its back to cliffs in the dunes, say there was normally an overnight curfew on movement in the area, leaving it unclear how the gunmen were able to get so close before being challenged. Their initial approach may have been well off the main roads.

Freed hostages spoke of an alarm being raised, of frightened people staying in their offices or accommodation.

Azedine saw a gunman put on the ID badge of a French supervisor who had been shot dead.

Rapidly the area was surrounded by heavily armed Algerian troops, with tanks, armored vehicles and helicopter gunships from a nearby military base. The government in Algiers vowed never to negotiate.

SMUGGLERS' TRAILS

People familiar with the site, operated by Britain's BP and Statoil of Norway along with Algeria's state energy company, said a barracks housing several hundred soldiers lies along the three km (two miles) of road separating the many buildings of the accommodation compound from the industrial plant.

A former senior Algerian government official said guards appeared to have been caught napping: "They have all kinds of equipment, detailed surveillance, cameras," he said. "They were caught maybe at the right time, at five in the morning."

But he also acknowledged the militants may have had help among the local workforce: "Out of 700 Algerians, I am sure they will find a couple who will cooperate. It always happens."

Militant leaders like Taher Ben Cheneb, said by officials to have led the operation and to have been killed on Thursday, have stoked resentment among southerners at the way foreigners and northerners dominate the better paid jobs in the oil fields.

Ben Cheneb, described as a high school maths teacher in his 50s, led the Movement of the Islamic Youth in the South. Security expert Rahmani said he joined forces for this operation with followers of Mokhtar Belmokhtar, a veteran of Afghan wars and a leading figure in Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) who recently formed a new group named Mulathameen.

The two men had cooperated before, Rahmani said, notably in damaging an airliner in 2007 at Djanet, further to the south.

While Ben Cheneb's group appeared to have moved on In Amenas from a base inside Algeria, Rahmani said, Belmokhtar's men, led by Abu El Bara, appeared to have come in from Libya.

Noting the one-eyed Belmokhtar's reputation as a cigarette smuggler as well as a holy warrior - locals call him the "Mister Marlboro" - he added: "They use the same backroads as the smugglers. You need a perfect knowledge of the Sahara to do it.

"They can use the same wells as the smugglers, the same fuel dumps hidden in the desert."

More than a decade after Algeria's civil war killed some 200,000 people, Islamist fighters roam the sandy wastes of Africa's biggest country, mixing smuggling and kidnapping for ransom with opposition to the political establishment that has ruled in Algiers since French colonists left half a century ago.

These groups have been energized by the return of heavily armed ethnic Tuaregs and others from Libya, where they fought as mercenaries for Muammar Gaddafi until his overthrow in 2011. The new Libyan authorities are struggling to control their own deep south and it provides a launchpad for raids across the frontier.

Images from Libya's civil war, of men in desert robes powering across the dunes in pick-up trucks mounted with heavy weapons ranging from machineguns to missile-launchers, have been transferred, along with arms and men, to conflict in the Sahara.

Mali's army melted away last year, ceding control of northern towns like Timbuktu as fighters came back from Libya.

ARMY ASSAULT

While security forces seek to control their frontiers, the tracts of sand are vast, borders among the half dozen countries around the desert are unmarked, and the big money that can be made from illicit trade or kidnapping tourists and Western engineers can be used to buy favors from ill-paid officials.

Al Qaeda says it is fighting for a Muslim caliphate that transcends artificial borders in the Maghreb set by colonial powers.

Once inside the facility, militants, including bearded, ragged fighters and others in more urban dress, herded groups of Westerners together. Hundreds of Algerians were guarded more loosely. One Algerian worker told Reuters the gunmen said they were only interested in killing "Christians and infidels".

Several former hostages described the attackers, from their accents, as appearing to be Libyan or Egyptian as well as Algerian. Officials said many of 18 dead gunmen were foreign.

Algeria told Western governments, which voiced dismay at the storming of the facility on Thursday, that troops moved in only because guerrillas were trying to leave with hostages, possibly hoping to reach the Malian border.

The captors loaded hostages into a convoy. Special forces backed by helicopters moved in around noon, some 30 hours after the plant was seized.

In what appears to have been the deadliest part of the siege, as described by the family of Irish survivor Stephen McFaul, government forces bombed the convoy, blasting apart four vehicles full of hostages. McFaul was in a fifth truck which crashed. He dashed for his life and escaped, and believes all those in the other vehicles were killed.

During Thursday, most of the hundreds of people at the site were able to flee.

By Friday night, it remained unclear how many of the gunmen and their hostages were still in the facility - though both groups might number in the dozens. Norway's prime minister said the operation at the larger, residential compound seemed to be over and troops were now surrounding the industrial site.

But this left Western governments and intelligence officials, long used to difficult relations with Algeria which is proud of its sovereignty, desperate for hard facts about the fate of their nationals.

(Additional reporting by Alex Lawler and Jessica Donati in London; Editing by Peter Millership and Peter Graff)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/insight-algerians-suspect-inside-help-hostage-raid-231257416--finance.html

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Friday, January 18, 2013

How to manage alerts for individual Calendar events on your iPhone and iPad

How to manage alerts for individual Calendar events on your iPhone and iPad

The Calendar app on your iPhone and iPad are great tools for reminding you when you have events and appointments coming up. Not only does it help you stay organized and on track, the Calendar app can also double as somewhat of a personal assistant. Part of that job is to alert you when you have events coming up. We've already taken a look at how to set and change default alerts but what if a particular appointment or event should have a different alert time? Perhaps even repeating?

It just so happens your iPhone and iPad can handle both scenarios. Follow along and we'll show you how.

How to change the alert time for an event on your iPhone and iPad

  1. Launch the Calendar app from the Home screen of your iPhone or iPad.
  2. Tap on the name of the event you'd like to change the default alert for (or add an alert if you have default alerts disabled).
  3. Tap on the Edit button in the upper right hand corner.
  4. Tap on Alert.
  5. Choose the alert time you'd like the Calendar to remind you at and then tap on Done in the upper right hand corner.

How to set a repeating alert for an event on your iPhone and iPad

  1. Launch the Calendar app from the Home screen of your iPhone or iPad.
  2. Tap on the name of the event you'd like to change the default alert for (or add an alert if you have default alerts disabled).
  3. Tap on the Edit button in the upper right hand corner.
  4. Tap on Second Alert.
  5. Choose the alert time you'd like the Calendar to remind you for a second time and then tap on Done in the upper right hand corner.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/4ty4pK5j93s/story01.htm

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GOP Challenges, Chides President on Spending

On the eve of their return to power, House Republicans challenged President Barack Obama on Tuesday to join them in a drive to cut federal spending, ban earmarks for favored projects and overhaul the nation's tax code.

At the same time, incoming House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., conceded the new GOP majority intends to bypass its own new rules when it votes next week to wipe out the health care law approved by Congress last year, according to AP.

"We just need to repeal it," Cantor said of the effort to fulfill one of the party's main campaign promises from last fall.

The AP notes that Republicans, their ranks expanded by Tea Party-backed freshmen, take control of the House when the 112th Congress convenes at noon on Wednesday. One of the first orders of business will be the election of Ohio Republican John Boehner as speaker, replacing Democrat Nancy Pelosi of California.

Earlier in the day, Cantor released a statement detailing a self-imposed operating budget cut for the new Congress.

?Federal spending is out of control, and that?s why we will begin the new Republican Majority by cutting our own Congressional operating budgets,? the statement read. ?For too long, families and small businesses across America tightened their belts while the federal government continued its spending spree. That federal spending spree will stop with the new Republican Majority. This self-imposed cut to our own operating budgets in the House will save American taxpayers more than $35 million right away and I hope that federal agencies across the spectrum will follow suit and find ways to cut their own budgets. If not, we?re happy to do it for them.?

Cantor challenged and chided Obama by turn in a news conference in which he said the GOP envisions a "cut and grow majority" to reduce government spending and regulations and benefit the economy.

According to AP, Republicans have pledged to vote on bills that cut spending at least once a week.

Obama is expected to deliver his State of the Union Address on Jan. 25, and Cantor said he was "looking to see some significant spending cuts proposed by the president that we can work on together."

Source: http://meeglo.blogspot.com/2013/01/gop-challenges-chides-president-on.html

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