Saturday, February 13, 2016
Picasa being shuttered in shift to Google Photos
Google on Friday said it will be shuttering Picasa to shift its focus to the new Google Photos service launched less than a year ago.
"We believe we can create a much better experience by focusing on one service that provides more functionality and works across mobile and desktop, rather than divide our efforts across two different products," Google Photos chief Anil Sabharwal said in a blog post.
Pictures or videos in Picasa online albums will be automatically available in people's Google Photos accounts, according to Sabharwal.
Those wishing not to shift to the new service will still be able to view, download or delete photos in Picasa albums, but the software won't be updated and adding images won't be an option.
"We apologize for any inconvenience this transition causes, but we want to assure you that we are doing this with the aim of providing the best photos experience possible," Sabharwal said.
"Google Photos is a new and smarter product."
Source: dailymail.co
NC lacks ability to track mosquitoes
North Carolina's chief epidemiologist says the state lacks the ability to track and combat the spread of mosquitoes as concerns about the Zika virus spread.
Megan Davies told WRAL-TV in Raleigh that mosquito surveillance and control is very limited, and she told a legislative panel on Thursday that funding for local mosquito control is no longer available.
Two different programs aimed at controlling mosquitoes and other pests were pared back, and then finally eliminated, under Democratic Gov. Bev Perdue and Republican Gov. Pat McCrory.
The Zika virus has been blamed for brain-damaged babies in Brazil.
The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said no local mosquito-borne Zika virus cases have been reported in the U.S., but there have been travel-associated cases.
Source: wxii12.com
Russian Church Settles Debt With Prayers
A Russian Orthodox Church diocese has settled a debt dispute by promising to pray for the health of the claimants, it's reported.
The local diocese in the city of Nizhny Novgorod ran up a 916,000 rouble ($11,500; £8,000) debt with construction company Era, which designed a heating system for one of its buildings, the Znak news website reports. But when the church only coughed up half the cash for the work, the company took legal action.
Luckily for the church, the company's owners are believers, and the two parties agreed on a pre-trial settlement which saw more than 300,000 roubles of debt and fines written off in exchange for prayers. It's the first time such a settlement has been made, according to the St Petersburg legal portal.
The diocese's legal department tells Gazeta.ru that the novel idea came from the claimants. "We ourselves were surprised... They even drew up the wording themselves," a church representative said.
Era's sales manager, Andrei Lepustin, says the company's owners do not plan to check how the prayer agreement is implemented. "We all respect the diocese and we are all Orthodox believers," he tells the site. "It'll be on their conscience if they don't, but we trust them and have already felt the fruits of their prayers, as prosperity indicators for both the company and its employees are growing."
Source: bbc.com
Monday, February 8, 2016
StubHub Says Lowest Price For Super Bowl 50 Ticket Is $3,000
For a mere $3,000, you can attend the Super Bowl.
That’s the lowest price of a ticket to the big game on Sunday, according to an executive from the online ticket marketplace StubHub.
Prices are holding steady, said Jason Deppen, StubHub’s director of field operations.
“We’re seeing prices as low as $3,000 to get in, so we are talking upper corner, upper end zone. Those prices are hovering around $3,000. The average price we’re seeing — $4,500, $4,700 — and prices get up to into the tens of thousands depending on suite levels, and lower sidelines of course,” Deppen said.
StubHub has already sold nearly 5,000 tickets, and it expects sales to reach 6,000 before kickoff, Deppen said.
“We have not seen a lot of downward trend movement, which we have seen in the past at other Super Bowls. I don’t know if I expect it to go too much down on how much inventory is left on game day,” Deppen said.
To sweeten the pot, StubHub is offering Fan Fair for buyers shelling out the big bucks. The company rented out the Great America amusement park before the game.
“This is actually a free experience for any StubHub customer, so if you buy your ticket on StubHub for the Super Bowl, this is a gift to you back from us. It’s a little surprise and delight, and something we like to do for all of our fans,” said Justin Finn, the company’s head of event marketing.
Source: sanfrancisco
The Chinese New Year
If capital outflow is any indication of confidence in the economy, The Year of the Monkey will indeed be difficult for China—and the world will have spillover effects to manage.
On Monday, the Chinese will celebrate their new lunar year—The Year of the Monkey. Based on its traits, astrologers are predicting that the year will be a difficult one for investors, and that financial markets are likely to remain volatile.
That is perhaps not a very difficult call to make. Economic indicators and market movement in the recent past suggest that things are not going to be easy in the world’s second largest economy.
There are multiple challenges that markets and policymakers will have deal with during the year.
For instance, the latest news shows that foreign exchange reserves once again declined by about $100 billion in January to reach their lowest level since 2012.
This is after the Chinese central bank burnt a similar amount to defend the renminbi in December.
If capital outflow is any indication of confidence in the economy, The Year of the Monkey will indeed be difficult for China—and the world will have spillover effects to manage.
Source: livemint.com
Sunday, February 7, 2016
Tory declares Feb. 6 'Bob Marley Day' in Toronto
Following in the footsteps of previous Toronto mayors, John Tory has officially declared Feb. 6 “Bob Marley Day” in honour of the influential reggae icon.
Each Feb. 6, which is Marley’s birthday, fans around the world commemorate his music and legacy.
Marley, who died in 1981, was most famous for promoting peace and tolerance through his music and lyrics.
In a statement released by his office on Saturday, Tory said the celebration deserves official recognition from the city.
“Bob Marley sang of tolerance and love. With close friends, known world-wide as Bob Marley and the Wailers, he encouraged us to live our own destiny, to stand up for what is right and to build a more harmonious world,” Tory said in the statement.
The Jamaican-born singer-songwriter was responsible for numerous worldwide hits including “Buffalo Soldier,” “Could You Be Loved,” and “Redemption Song.”
Source: toronto.ctvnews.ca
Ex-Survivor contestant charged with possessing child abuse images
Michigan authorities have charged a former Survivor contestant with possessing child abuse images and running a Ponzi scheme.
Michael Skupin was arraigned on Friday in Oakland County on a dozen felony charges, including child porn possession, larceny by conversion and racketeering. His bond was set at $350,000.
It wasn’t clear if Skupin has an attorney. The Associated Press left messages Saturday with county and state government representatives.
State attorney general Bill Schuette says investigators found the child abuse images on Skupin’s laptop while looking into the alleged Ponzi scheme.
Authorities say Skupin persuaded people to make $10,000 investments in his scheme and used new investors’ money to pay older ones.
Skupin was rescued by helicopter after falling into a campfire and burning his hands in 2001 on Survivor II: The Australian Outback.
Source: theguardian.com
Saturday, February 6, 2016
Obama taunts GOP in touting lower unemployment rate
President Obama said Friday the unemployment rate dropping below 5 percent is proof that his economic recovery is working, and blasted Republican presidential candidates for “running down the economy.”
“We should be proud of the progress we’ve made,” Mr. Obama said during an appearance in the White House press room.
He chastised Republican presidential candidates for ignoring good economic news.
“The United States of America right now has the strongest, most durable economy in the world,” Mr. Obama said. “I know that’s still inconvenient for Republican stump speeches as their doom and despair tour plays in New Hampshire. I guess you cannot please everybody.”
The president even trumpeted the fact that gasoline prices are down, just a day after he announced his plan to charge a new fee on oil that could raise the price of gas by 25 cents per gallon.
Referring to the proposal to charge a $10-per-barrel fee on oil, Mr. Obama said, “It’s right to do it now when gas prices are really low. And they will be low for quite some time to come. So, it’s not going to be a disruptive factor in terms of the economy.”
Mr. Obama said the fee would be imposed on both imported and exported oil, although his chief economic adviser, Jeffrey Zients, told reporters Thursday that the fee would apply only to oil that is imported into the U.S.
Mr. Zients said oil drilled in the U.S. that is exported would not be taxed, ensuring a “level playing field” for American producers.
White House press secretary Josh Earnest said he would check to see whether the president erred in his remarks.
Speaker Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin and other Republican lawmakers have vowed that the proposal will not become law. The speaker’s office on Friday called the fee a “radical” tax and said Mr. Obama “wants to cement his legacy as the most anti-energy president.”
The chairmen of the House and Senate budget committees are so dismayed with the proposed oil fee and other spending proposals from the White House that they have rejected the traditional meeting with the president’s budget chief next week after the budget is formally presented to Congress on Tuesday.
The government reported Friday that the unemployment rate in January fell to 4.9 percent, its lowest level in eight years. The president said the report shows “Americans are working.”
But asked about polls that show roughly two-thirds of Americans feel the country is on the wrong track, and that the labor force participation rate remains low, Mr. Obama acknowledged “there’s still anxiety and concern about the general direction of the economy.”
He blamed it on lingering effects from the recession that began before he took office.
“There’s still a pretty big carryover from the devastation that took place in 2007-2008,” Mr. Obama said. “A lot of people still feel that.”
Source: washingtontimes.com
Canonical Launches BQ Aquaris M10 Ubuntu Edition Tablet
As the world embraces the power of two-in-one computers, Canonical is also not sitting behind. On Thursday, the company, best known for providing commercial support to the open-source Ubuntu Linux distribution, unveiled the BQ Aquaris M10 Ubuntu Edition tablet that can also serve as a full-fledged desktop computer when connected to a keyboard and mouse.
Made by Spanish manufacturer BQ, the BQ Aquaris M10 Ubuntu Edition's hybrid nature isn't its only highlight. The computing device also packs in impressive processing muscle. The BQ Aquaris M10 Ubuntu Edition sports a 10-inch multi-touch full-HD (1920x1080 pixel) display. It is powered by a 64-bit MediaTek MT8163A quad-core ARM processor that clocks up to 1.5GHz, paired with 2GB of RAM, and 16GB of inbuilt storage. The storage can be expanded up to 64GB using a microSD card.
Other features of the BQ Aquaris M10 Ubuntu Edition include an 8-megapixel rear camera with autofocus and dual flash, a 3-megapixel front-facing camera, front-facing speakers, a Micro-HDMI port (allows users to connect to a monitor as well), and a 7280mAH Li-Pro battery.
On the software front, the BQ Aquaris M10 Ubuntu Edition runs Ubuntu OS - the touch-friendly version of the operating system. It comes with a number of interesting features. There's a "side stage" feature, for instance, that allows users to view two different applications on the same screen. Canonical says that users can utilise the hundreds of apps and scopes that are available from the Ubuntu App Store.
"We're bringing you everything you've come to expect from your Ubuntu PC, now on the tablet with BQ, soon on smartphones. This isn't a phone interface stretched to desktop size - it's the right user experience and interaction model for the given situation," Jane Silber, Canonical CEO wrote in a blog post. "Also, in terms of applications, we have something no other OS can provide: a single, visual framework and set of tools for applications to run on any type of Ubuntu smart device."
The BQ Aquaris M10 Ubuntu Edition tablet will go on sale in Q2 2016 via BQ's online store. The company hasn't revealed the price just yet, but it is speculated to be around EUR 250 (roughly Rs. 19,000).
Source: gadgets.ndtv.com
Intel's diversity report shows change is slow, but important
Intel has made a big deal about its commitment to fostering a more inclusive workplace and now wants us all to see how well it did in 2015. The firm is celebrating the fact that it was just about able to exceed its goal of hiring 40 percent of new employees from diverse backgrounds and plans to push that to 45 percent this year. Overall, women now comprise 24.8 percent of Intel's workforce, up from 19 percent in 2014, with the number of African American, Hispanic and Native American hires generally trending upward. That's not even mentioning the chipmaker's outside projects like teaming up with Lady Gaga to tackle online harassment.
One common problem with creating a welcoming environment for women in male-dominated workplaces is in the benefits packages that are offered. Intel has pledged to increase fertility benefits, support for adoption and push the duration of its maternity leave package to eight weeks of paid leave following a birth. That's not just open to women, either, as male employees can apply for a similar period of bonding time with their new kids. The company is also shouting from the rooftops that, in its internal audits for 2015, it found that it had a 100 percent record of paying men and women equal pay for equal work.
So, all good, right?
Intel's biggest problem in 2015 was that it's struggled to retain diverse employees that it's spent so much energy trying to woo. For instance, the number of African American employees leaving the company was noticeably higher, causing the firm to fall short on its targets. In addition, the chipmaker has alluded to "challenges affecting retention" of minority employees in the early stages of their careers. Something is making these people wash out and Intel is hoping to amend any culture issues that it finds.
These numbers are positive, but it could be argued that Intel is playing the game with a loaded set of dice. For instance, there's a rough 50-50 split between men and women in the workplace, but that's not a metric Intel uses to define diversity. Instead, it's using the "market availability" of skilled employees, for instance, the amount of STEM-educated women capable of taking on a technical job at Intel. That figure, however, is just 22.7 percent, meaning that Intel can say that a workforce where less than a quarter of women is diverse.
It should be said that Intel is a company with more than 100,000 employees, and it would be impossible to remedy decades of unbalanced hiring in just 12 months. Intel should, and does, admit that it's certainly not able to parade itself as a paradigm of a diverse workplace just yet. The firm is also pushing money towards education programs and partnering with colleges to help bring through talented candidates of the future. It takes time to turn an ocean liner around, but at least Intel's leadership are starting to turn the wheel.
Source: engadget.com
Friday, February 5, 2016
Crystal to refurbish historic SS United States to its former glory
An historic ship that still holds the title for the world’s fastest luxury liner may soon set sail again after being destined for the scrap heap.
The S.S. United States, built in 1952 by United States Lines to capture the world’s trans-Atlantic speed record, has just been tossed a life preserver by Crystal Cruises, which signed a purchase option for the ship.
In a press conference Thursday Crystal's chief executive, Edie Rodriguez, outlined the terms of the deal, which first requires a nine-month feasibility study while paying about $60,000 a month to care for the ship.
The nonprofit, Washington-based S.S. United States Conservancy currently owns the ship, which has been docked in South Philadelphia since 1996.
“It is our goal that the S.S. United States re-emerge as a modern luxury vessel,” said Rodriguez.
Rodriguez said once the feasibility study is complete, plans are to refurbish the 20,000 passenger ship –nicknamed the Big U--to its former glory when it once carried passengers such as Princess Grace of Monaco, The Duke and Duchess of Windsor, Cary Grant and Coco Channel.
She said features would include gold-leaf embellishments, sculptures and top-of-the-line services and culinary experiences. Also due to get a makeover is the Navajo Lounge, which originally boasted a series of sand art paintings depicting Navajo rituals by artist Peter Ostuni.
Late last year the S.S. United States Conservancy almost had to scrap the ship --which is larger than the Titanic--due to dwindling funds.
During her heyday, the ship was reported to have been capable of speeds of over 44.7 knots, or about 50 mph --(a tightly held secret throughout the Cold War) and her steam turbine propulsion system was only slightly slower than the engines on today’s nuclear-powered aircraft carriers. In 1952, the ship’s maiden voyage, from New York to Southampton, England, was accomplished in only three days, 10 hours and 40 minutes and it still holds the “Blue Riband" record for the fastest transatlantic crossing.
Taken out of service in 1969, the S.S. United States was stripped of its interior in 1984 when items, including the china, silverware, furniture –even nautical fixtures --were auctioned off.
Estimates to rebuild the ship could be as much as $800 million and Crystal said it would be rebuilt extensively to meet current safety and EPA standards. It is expected to carry 800 guests and have the same 1.6 passenger-to-crew ratio as the 1,070-passenger Crystal Serenity –which cost $350 million to build.
Rodriguez is hopeful that the ship could be taking passengers as soon as 2018.
“We will be remiss as an industry if we didn’t revitalize this wonderful vessel,” she said.
Source: foxnews.com
UK cancer death rates after diagnosis drop 10% in ten years
Death rates from cancer in the UK have dropped by 10% over the last decade, thanks to progress in diagnosing and treating the disease, but the number of deaths keeps rising because more people are falling ill.
The figures, released by Cancer Research UK, show the four major killers – breast, bowel, lung and prostate cancer – have become less deadly relatively speaking. In 2013, the latest year for which full figures are available, 284 out of every 100,000 people in the UK died from the disease – around 162,000 people. A decade ago the death rate was 312 in every 100,000.
But the growing numbers of people being diagnosed with cancer as the population ages and obesity, a sedentary lifestyle, smoking and drinking take their toll, has climbed, which means the actual number of deaths each year has risen over the last decade. Some cancers continue to pose a major problem: the death rates from liver and pancreatic cancer are rising, not falling.
“It’s important to remember that even though the death rates are falling, the overall number of people dying from cancer is expected to increase,” said Sir Harpal Kumar, chief executive of CRUK. “This is because the population is growing and more of us are living longer. Too many people are still being diagnosed with and dying from cancer, not just here in the UK but around the world.”
There are troubling variations in the outcomes for patients around the country. Cally Palmer, the new national cancer director appointed by NHS England, told the Guardian in her first interview in the job that she wants all patients to have equal outcomes and a good experience at the hands of the NHS, wherever they live. “I want to be able to say we have the best cancer care available anywhere in the world,” she said. “We’ve made huge improvement but there’s still a place to go in eradicating variation and keeping up to speed with changes in cancer treatment.”
She will oversee a big shakeup in the way cancer treatment is organised. Palmer, who has been appointed to implement the national cancer plan published last July, wants to bring GPs, public health experts and hospital staff working on cancer together, so that they look at the cancer issues in their area and address them as a team. All would have access to a dashboard of results, which will show them what is going well and what is going badly.
Cancer survival rates in Britain still lag behind other comparable countries in Europe, in part because all countries are improving. But the regional variations are sometimes shocking. In some areas, people diagnosed with lung cancer are four times more likely to die than in others. That is partly because in some less affluent places, lung cancer caused by smoking is more common and people have more advanced disease when they finally see the GP. But there are also variations in standards of care.
Source: theguardian.com
Junior doctors can work longer flex hours safely: study
CHICAGO -- Surgery patients fared just as well when junior doctors worked longer than mandated hours in the first major rigorous test of regulations many physicians say hurt medical education.
Nationwide limits on work hours were established more than a decade ago because of concerns that sleep-deprived medical residents were a threat to themselves and their patients. To test that, researchers randomly assigned more than 4,000 surgery residents to regulation hours or a more flexible schedule that allowed them to continue with a case after their shifts ended. That sometimes meant working for more than 28 hours at a time.
The study looked at how many patients died or had serious complications in the month after surgery and found the same low rate -- about 9 per cent -- in both groups. Residents' self-rated dissatisfaction with their education and with their well-being were similarly low -- 11 per cent and roughly 13 per cent respectively in each group.
It's a landmark study, testing "a hot button, controversial issue in health care," said lead author Dr. Karl Bilimoria, director of surgical outcomes and quality improvement at Northwestern University's Feinberg medical school. Without flexibility, rookie doctors often have to end their shifts in the middle of caring for patients, handing them off to another medical resident. That can happen at critical times, disrupting the doctor-patient relationship, Bilimoria said.
"Our hope would be that the evidence would be used ... to change policies fairly soon and allow flexibility back into surgical residency," he said.
Residents' work limits were first set in 2003 by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, and revised in 2011. The rules include 80-hour maximum work weeks.
The group said it will consider the results as part of an ongoing review of residents' work hour standards. The council, the American College of Surgeons and the American Board of Surgery paid for the study, which was published Tuesday by the New England Journal of Medicine.
The study involved almost 139,000 patients treated at 151 hospitals nationwide.
A Mayo Clinic neurosurgery resident, Dr. Maya Babu, said the study results were not at all surprising. She's head of an American College of Surgeons' residents group.
Under the limits, Babu said she has sometimes had to clock out at inopportune times, even in the middle of brain tumour operations, missing important learning opportunities.
She said if allowed flexible hours, most residents would know when to speak up and say they're too tired to continue working.
The rules affect medical school graduates involved in residency training programs in hospitals. The rules include shift limits of 16 hours for junior residents and 28 hours for senior residents; 8 to 10 hours off between shifts, but 14 hours off after a 24-hour shift.
Half the residents worked under those limits in the study. The flex-hour group could work longer hours with less time off between shifts, but both groups worked under the 80-hour-per week limit, averaged over four weeks.
Dr. John Birkmeyer, a surgeon and health outcomes policy expert at the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, said in a journal editorial that the study "effectively debunks concerns that patients will suffer as a result of increased handoffs and breaks in the continuity of care." But Birkmeyer opposes easing work limits and advocates medical training that doesn't "depend on overworked resident physicians."
Many would love to hear "'we can take care of this case without you. Go home, see your family, and come in fresh tomorrow,"' Birkmeyer said.
Source: ctvnews.ca
Thursday, February 4, 2016
Google OnHub routers are finally getting guest WiFi
As clever as Google's OnHub routers are, they've had a few glaring omissions... like, say, a guest mode to accommodate your friends. However, the company is making amends for at least one of its rookie mistakes. It's readying an update that enables guest WiFi, which lets visitors hop online without giving them access to absolutely everything on your local network. You also have fine-grained control over the devices you do want them to see. You can open up your Chromecast, for example, while keeping your networked storage off-limits.
The update doesn't appear to be available yet, so don't be worried if you're still stuck with an all-or-nothing setup for a little while. When it does hit, however, it'll help make a more convincing case for the OnHub if you're sitting on the fence -- you don't have to take a step backwards in software features just to embrace Google's simpler, prettier vision of home networking.
Update: The upgrade went live not long after this post.
Source: engadget.com
Corpse flower in Adelaide expected to open soon attracting thousands of people
The Adelaide Botanic Garden has decided to open its conservatory until midnight on the first day its rare corpse flower opens.
But do not go rushing for the door just yet, while gardens staff say while they can smell something like a dead possum in the conservatory, they will not know until later on Sunday if the flower is about to open.
Horticultural curator Matt Coulter told 891 ABC there were a few signs suggesting the Amorphophallus titanum was about to flower but it was a waiting game.
"One of the staff members told me this morning that they could actually start to smell something which is a sure sign that it is going to open. So fingers crossed it is going to be today but if not today it will definitely will be tomorrow."
Mr Coulter said the flower looked and smelt its strongest on the first day and would wither by the second afternoon.
At 2:00pm on Sunday, a post on the Adelaide Botanic Garden's Facebook page said the flower was taking its time for a "big reveal".
Staff thought they would have known by then if the flower would open, but according to the post they needed more time to be certain.
"Waiting, waiting! Sorry I'm taking my time for the big reveal, but we'll get there soon!" the post read.
"Will know in a couple of hours whether I'm on for today/tonight, but I'm a better chance to flower tomorrow."
More than 5,000 people visited the Mount Lofty Gardens last month to see the city's first ever corpse flower plant bloom.
He described the plant as fascinating and said most of its growth had occurred in the past eight weeks.
"It's quite an interesting smell," Mr Coulter said.
"It's not just one smell that stagnates. What the plant does is pulses the smell out, so every 10 or 20 seconds it actually pushes a smell out in a pulse ... it has a strong ammonia, rotting sort of fish sort of smell."
The gardens will provide the public an update on its Facebook page when the flower opens.
Source: abc.net.au
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