Monday, March 11, 2013

Mutated gene causes nerve cell death

Mar. 10, 2013 ? The British astrophysicist Stephen Hawking is likely to be the world's most famous person living with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig's disease. ALS is a progressive disease affecting motor neurons, nerve cells that control muscle function, and nearly always leads to death. Researchers at the Institute of Molecular Biotechnology of the Austrian Academy of Sciences (IMBA) in Vienna have now identified a completely new mechanism in the onset of motor neuron diseases. Their findings could be the basis for future treatments for these presently incurable diseases.

A new principle on motor neuron death

The IMBA scientists, working with an international team of researchers under the leadership of Josef Penninger and Javier Martinez, discovered a completely new fundamental mechanism that triggers the death of motor neurons. Motor neurons are nerve cells responsible for stimulating muscles. The loss of these motor neurons in mice with a genetic mutation in a gene named CLP11 leads to severe and progressive muscular paralysis and, in some cases, to death.

"We've been working on resolving the function of the CLP1 gene in a living organism for a long time. To do that, we developed model mice in which the function of CLP1 was genetically inactivated. To our utter surprise we discovered that deactivating CLP1 increases the sensitivity of cell die when exposed to oxidative stress2. That leads to enhanced activity of the p53 protein3 and then to the permanent destruction of motor neurons," says Toshikatsu Hanada, a postdoctoral researcher working in the lab of Josef Penninger and first author of the study along with Stefan Weitzer.

Stephen Hawking -- a most renowned patient

Motor neuron diseases (MNDs), such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), are chronic disorders of the neuromuscular system. These diseases are caused by damage in the motor nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord, and the nerves can no longer stimulate motion in the muscles. The primary symptoms are muscular weakness, muscular dystrophy, and problems swallowing or speaking. Stephen Hawking was diagnosed with ALS 50 years ago. But not all ALS patients live so long with the disease: so far there are no treatments for ALS. Nearly all ALS patients die of paralysis of respiratory muscles within a few years.

Completely new disease mechanism

Javier Martinez, an IMBA team leader and co-author of the study, is a specialist in the field of ribonucleic acid (RNA) research. His research group had discovered the CLP1 gene in an earlier study, published in Nature in 2007. Until now, the exact essential function of CLP1 in RNA biology was unclear. "By deactivating CLP1, we have discovered a previously unknown new species of RNA," says Javier Martinez about the scientific relevance of the work. "The accumulation of this RNA is a consequence of increased oxidative stress in the cell. We see this as one of the triggers for the loss of motor neurons that occurs in ALS and other neuromuscular diseases. Thus our findings describe a completely new mechanism of motor neuron diseases."

Seminal findings

Josef Penninger, scientific director at the IMBA and last-author of the study, is excited about the researchers' findings: "This surprising discovery of a role of CLP1 in the onset of motor neuron diseases is an entirely new principle in how RNA talks to oxidative stress. Nearly all genetic mutations found in ALS patients affect either RNA metabolism or oxidative stress, suggesting a possibly unifying principle for these diseases. Our work may have revealed the 'missing link' in how these two biological systems communicate and trigger incurable diseases like ALS."

Stefan Weitzer sees tremendous potential for these findings: "We've discovered a new mechanism that leads to the death of motor neurons. If this holds true for other neuronal disease, our results could be one day used to drive the development of treatments for previously incurable diseases. In our work we also describe how the p53 protein regulates the loss of motor neurons. Removing p53 saves mice with CLP1 mutations from certain death." If scientists are successful in applying these findings to people, the researchers may have discovered a treatment approach to cure ALS and similar diseases. The authors, however, caution that more studies will be needed to translate their findings to human medicine.

This study was performed in collaboration with research groups from the Medical Universities of Vienna and Innsbruck, the University Medical Center at Hamburg-Eppendorf in Germany, the Harvard Medical School, the Harvard Stem Cell Institute, the Boston Children's and Massachusetts General Hospitals, the Keio University School of Medicine in Tokyo, Oita University in Japan, and the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot in Israel.

Notes:

1) CLP1: = Cleavage and Polyadenylation Factor 1: a kinase (enzyme responsible for transmitting signals in cells) responsible for attaching phosphate residue to RNA.

2) Oxidative stress: causes damage to cells and the genome, and is involved in the ageing process. The normal repair and detoxification function of the cells is overburdened.

3) p53: a protein that is mutated in many types of cancer cells. It plays a role in inhibiting the cell cycle and can trigger cell death.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Institute of Molecular Biotechnology.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Toshikatsu Hanada, Stefan Weitzer, Barbara Mair, Christian Bernreuther, Brian J. Wainger, Justin Ichida, Reiko Hanada, Michael Orthofer, Shane J. Cronin, Vukoslav Komnenovic, Adi Minis, Fuminori Sato, Hiromitsu Mimata, Akihiko Yoshimura, Ido Tamir, Johannes Rainer, Reinhard Kofler, Avraham Yaron, Kevin C. Eggan, Clifford J. Woolf, Markus Glatzel, Ruth Herbst, Javier Martinez, Josef M. Penninger. CLP1 links tRNA metabolism to progressive motor-neuron loss. Nature, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/nature11923

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/oPMO9DA-PFA/130310163827.htm

gmail down tim lincecum ryan oneal file taxes online tupac shakur sledge hammer tax day freebies

Stocks turn higher; Dow extends all-time high?

Stocks turned higher Monday, with the Dow extending its all-time high, as investors seemed to shrug off earlier worries over disappointing economic data from China and weakness in Europe.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average drifted higher following a weak open, led by Boeing and UnitedHealth, extending its gains after closing above 14,400 for the first time last week.

The blue-chip index is up more than 10 percent for the year and on track for its biggest quarterly gain since the fourth quarter of 2011.

The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq also poked into positive territory. The CBOE Volatility Index (VIX), widely considered the best gauge of fear in the market, dipped below 12 for the first time since April 2007.

(Read More: The Big Bet That the S&P Will Soon Make an All-Time High)

Among key S& sectors, financials traded higher, while telecoms held modest losses.

General Electric chief Jeff Immelt said the conglomerate plans to return $18 billion to investors through dividends and buybacks, adding that dividend growth is a top priority for the company. Meanwhile, Nomura downgraded its rating on GE to "neutral" from "buy."

Citigroup edged higher after RBS upgraded the bank to "buy" from "neutral."

Dell gained after Icahn Enterprises said it had entered into a confidentiality agreement with the computer hardware maker and looked forward to commencing a review of the company.

BlackBerry soared following news the company's highly anticipated BlackBerry Z10 will be sold through AT&T by March 22. The U.S. launch of the company's newest smartphone was delayed due to a longer carrier-testing phase.

Genworth rallied to lead the S&P 500 gainers after a Barron's article over the weekend said the mortgage insurer's stock could almost double in the next year, thanks to gains in mortgage and health-care pricing.

(Read More: Why Italy Could Be the Next 'Bad Boy of Europe')

"We're in unchartered territory, but the higher this market goes without a pullback, the more investors have to be concerned that underneath the surface, risk begets risk," said Quincy Krosby, market strategist with Prudential Financial. "Last week was impressive and investors want to see the S&P 500 similarly make new highs. But the market's resting right now and it's waiting for further confirmation to move higher."

Among earnings, Dick's Sporting Goods tumbled after the sporting goods retailer missed quarterly expectations. The company said lower-than-expected sales of outerwear and cold weather accessories offset some positive trends in areas such as athletic footwear and apparel.

Apparel retailer Urban Outfitters is scheduled to post earnings after the closing bell.

China's Shanghai Composite declined after data showing industrial production and retail sales in China for the January and February period missed expectations. In addition, inflation rose in February, igniting worries of potential monetary tightening. Meanwhile, Japan's Nikkei hit a new four-and-a-half year high, fueled by weakness in the yen.

European shares traded lower, pulling back from four-year highs, dragged by banks on the heels of Italy's credit downgrade from Fitch to BBB-positive last Friday. The downgrade follows a week of political haggling after no party gained sufficient votes in a national election to form a government.

?By CNBC's JeeYeon Park (Follow JeeYeon on Twitter: @JeeYeonParkCNBC)

? 2013 CNBC LLC. All Rights Reserved

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/stocks-turn-higher-dow-extends-all-time-high-1C8780233

etta james songs east west shrine game underworld awakening haywire dog the bounty hunter tacoma narrows bridge open marriage

The search for ET is a detective story without a body

Nigel Henbest, contributor

p2380243.jpg

(Image: Plainpicture)

Paul Murdin investigates the possibilities of nearby alien life in Are We Being Watched?, but neglects to cover more thrilling aspects of the quest

OVER lunch at Los Alamos National Laboratory in 1950, a group of leading physicists turned their minds to flying saucers, and the possibility of interstellar travel. "Where is everybody?" Enrico Fermi exclaimed. As his colleagues laughed, Fermi performed a legendary back-of-an-envelope calculation showing that aliens - if they exist - should have visited Earth many times over.

If they've been here, then perhaps they are watching us - hence the provocative title of Paul Murdin's new book. As one of the team that discovered the first black hole in our galaxy, Murdin is an astrophysicist of impeccable credentials. But in weighing up the evidence for alien life, Murdin has to confront one insuperable obstacle: there is no evidence for even microbial life beyond Earth. So the Herculean task of writing a book on alien life is the ultimate detective story without a body.

Are_watched_jacket.jpg

Murdin seems to draw his inspiration from the poet Alexander Pope's famous quote that the "proper study of mankind is man". His discussions centre mainly on Earth's indigenous life, with the premise that alien life follows much the same pattern: evolution and survival of disasters to culminate - after much the same lapse of time - in intelligent creatures pretty similar to us.

He also investigates the possibility of microbial life on our neighbouring worlds, including the frozen deserts of Mars and the icy depths of Saturn's moon Enceladus, along with its peer Titan, which is coated with a sorbet of chemicals with the potential for creating life. There is even a chance that alien fish swim in the deep oceans of Europa, the icy moon circling Jupiter.

If that is what you are looking for, then Murdin is an excellent and thoughtful guide. But when it comes to a deeper discussion of the search for life beyond our solar system - and especially intelligent aliens - we are frustratingly short-changed. There is only a cursory discussion of the fascinating zoo of planets now being discovered around other stars. Many of these new worlds are so hot or cold, water-covered or parched, that our best clues to life there come from Earth's most hardy life forms. Yet these amazing extremophiles are dismissed in a single page.

Alien life is a subject that sparks off-the-wall ideas and excitement that are largely lacking here. Take the physical appearance of aliens. Admittedly, this is a pretty nebulous subject, but some evolutionary biologists such as Jack Cohen have taken a hard look at what might be possible. And communications researchers like Laurance Doyle have derived algorithms that can tease out meaning from apparently random patterns of sound, providing hints about how aliens might communicate.

The global Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence project (SETI) is the key to finding intelligent life out there. Murdin gives a full account of SETI up to 1977, but squeezes its subsequent history into a page. There is nothing on the searches that have targeted individual stars, including those with newly discovered planets, nor on the world's most sensitive eavesdropping radio ear on the cosmos, the Allen Telescope Array. Murdin is silent on recent searches for laser signals from alien intelligence, and on attempts to track down tell-tale infrared emissions from advanced civilisations. And we also learn nothing of efforts to detect alien artefacts in the solar system. That's not as daft as it may sound: if Fermi was right, and aliens have visited, then where's the rubbish they left behind?

For the science of the solidly known - with references and footnotes - Murdin has written a thorough survey. But he stops short of providing the thrill that would come from answering the provocative question in the title.

Book information
Are We Being Watched? The search for life in the cosmos by Paul Murdin
Thames & Hudson
?16.95

Follow @CultureLabNS on Twitter

Like us on Facebook

Source: http://feeds.newscientist.com/c/749/f/10897/s/296f8ea8/l/0L0Snewscientist0N0Cblogs0Cculturelab0C20A130C0A30Care0Ewe0Ebeing0Ewatched0Bhtml0Dcmpid0FRSS0QNSNS0Q20A120EGLOBAL0Qonline0Enews/story01.htm

jim rome ufc on fox 2 weigh ins convulsions john tyler chuck fran drescher scarlett o hara

I Love to Shop for Beauty Products (Beauty Haul) | Jackie's Women's ...

Related eBooks

Earn Cash Back When You Shop Online through Ebates: bit.ly Before you shop any website, be sure to click ?shop now? and it will create a tracking ticket. The tracking ticket will track your purchase and cash back. Most Recent Blog Post: bit.ly Thank You for Watching! Here is more information: Official Facebook Page for Beauty Channel: on.fb.me Instagram Username: erikawyatt Check out my vlog channel: bit.ly My newly redesigned blog: www.erikawyatt.com Purchase my favorite makeup brushes here! (Use code SAVE2013 for 10% off your purchase) www.sigmabeauty.com __________________________________________ PRODUCTS AND LINKS MENTIONED: Nairobi Wrapp it Shine Foaming Lotion ? amzn.to Organic Root Stimulator Olive Oil Edge Control Tresemme Thermal Creations Heat Tamer Leave In Spray Tresemme Keratin Smooth Heat Protectant Shine Spray Lancome Bifacial Eye Makeup Remover Beautyblender Pro ? bit.ly theBalm Nude ?Tude Eyeshadow Palette ? swatches here ? bit.ly Flor?s Tumblr ? www.lipstickandstockings.com MUFE Purple 92 Eyeshadow ? bit.ly Flower Lipsticks in Rose Bud, Dahlia Darling and Flamingo Flower Tarte Amazonian Clay Blush in Flush Maybelline Color Whisper in #95 ? Mad for Magenta Perricone MD Nourishing Moisturizer Perricone MD Face Finishing Moisturizer OPI ? A Golden Eye Jen?s Positively Polished ? positivelypolished.com OPI ? Polka.com Essie ? Pilates Hottie Butter London ? Molly Coddled Essie ? Miss Fancy Pants Ingrid?s Instagram ? web.stagram.com Butter London ? Come to Bed ?

Related Reading:

The Green Beauty Guide: Your Essential Resource to Organic and Natural Skin Care, Hair Care, Makeup, and FragrancesThe Green Beauty Guide: Your Essential Resource to Organic and Natural Skin Care, Hair Care, Makeup, and Fragrances

Go green and get gorgeous

The promise of beauty is as close as the drugstore aisle?shampoo that gives your hair more body, lotions that smooth away wrinkles, makeup that makes your skin look flawless, and potions that take it all off again. But while conventional products say they'll make you more beautiful, they contain toxins and preservatives that are both bad for the environment and bad for your body?including synthetic fragrances, petrochemicals, and even formaldehyde. In the end, they damage your natural vitality and good looks.

Fortunately, fashion writer, nutritionist, and beauty maven Julie Gabriel helps you find the true path to natural, healthy, green beauty. She helps you decipher labels on every cosmetic product you pick up and avoid toxic and damaging chemicals with her detailed Toxic Ingredients List. You'll learn valuable tips on what your skin really needs to be healthy, glowing, and youthful.

Julie goes one-step further?and shows you how to make your own beauty products that feed your skin, save your bank account, and are healthy for your body and the environment, such as:

? Cleansing creams and oils ? toners?? facials ? under eye circle remedies?? anti-aging serums ? lip balms ? scrubs ? exfoliators ? clay and cleansing masks
? moisturizers ? acne treatments ? makeup remover ? teeth whiteners ? shampoos, conditioners ? fragrances ? sun protection ? bug repellants ? baby products ? and much more!

With her friendly, thorough, and helpful advice; fabulous beauty recipes; product recommendations and ratings; Toxic Ingredients List; and a complete appendix of online resources, Julie Gabriel gives you all the information you need to go green without going broke and become a more natural, healthy, and beautiful you.
Healthy Beauty: Your Guide to Ingredients to Avoid and Products You Can TrustHealthy Beauty: Your Guide to Ingredients to Avoid and Products You Can TrustAnti-aging products are the fastest growing sector of the cosmetics industry as women and men are becoming rapidly more obsessed with looking and feeling young. Splashy ads and commercials are everywhere we turn, promising to keep our appearances fresh and our partners satisfied.

But do consumers really know what they?re applying to their faces and bodies in their quests for youth and beauty? Do they know the health risks they?re taking by simply applying lipstick, face moisturizer or deodorant? Toxic beauty products clutter the shelves at retail stores everywhere, and consumers don?t know the avoidable risks they?re taking by following a simple beauty regimen.

Written by Dr. Samuel S. Epstein, a founder and chairperson of the Cancer Prevention Coalition, Healthy Beauty gives the lowdown on salon safety, health risks hiding in everyday products, how we put our children in danger and more. Healthy Beauty will also educate you and your family on easily implemented solutions through the use of a variety of positive alternatives.

In Healthy Beauty, you will learn:
? How beauty products can affect your children before they?re born
? The brutal carelessness producers use when creating products for women and children
? The risks taken when you step into a salon
? Toxins in men?s products such as deodorant, cologne and aftershave
? How to protect yourself and your family by reading labels and identifying potentially hazardous ingredients

Through the help of Dr. Epstein and Healthy Beauty, you can protect yourself from the possible long-term effects of a simple beauty product.

Homemade Beauty Treatments and Skin Care Recipes (All Natural Cosmetics)Homemade Beauty Treatments and Skin Care Recipes (All Natural Cosmetics)
Everyday average women in Bulgaria impress with their beauty and are usually described as gorgeous and irresistible. They are often pointed among the most beautiful women in the world.
How do Bulgarian girls do it? Do they use some special make up or expensive cosmetics or is it possible to feel and look great by simply following grandmothers beauty tips and recipes?
Bulgarian women have always taken every effort to look wonderful, even in Communist times when so little was available and they had to rely on home remedies.

What are the easiest homemade face masks that keep your skin looking and feeling young and healthy?
What are the best natural products you can use instead of face creams and moisturizers?
In my "All Natural Cosmetics" series I have collected some of the best skin care recipes, as well as various tips and advice for gorgeous hair. Some of them are well known and yet women still don't dare to try and replace their usual beauty products with simple, natural, homemade and much safer choices.

Source: http://www.jackiesbazaar.com/womensinterests/beauty-products/i-love-to-shop-for-beauty-products-beauty-haul

lenny dykstra jenelle evans jenelle evans mlb 12 the show sabu franchise tag lesotho

Saturday, March 9, 2013

KKR to buy Gardner Denver for $3.74 billion; valuation concerns linger

(Reuters) - Industrial machinery maker Gardner Denver Inc agreed to sell itself to private equity firm KKR & Co LP for $3.74 billion but some on Wall Street questioned the valuation, saying the company was worth much more.

Gardner Denver shares closed at $74.74 on the New York Stock Exchange on Friday, well short of KKR's $76 per share bid, indicating investor skepticism over the deal.

Analysts' have an average price target of $78.50 on the stock as of Thursday. Four of the eight analysts tracking the stock have targets above KKR's offer price. Two do not currently have a price target estimate.

The stock's intrinsic value is $85.47, according to Thomson Reuters StarMine data. The model is a measure of a stock's current value when considering analysts' growth estimates for five years, and then modeling the typical growth trajectory over a longer period of time.

Diversified manufacturer SPX Corp had offered to buy Gardner Denver at $85 per share after it put itself up for sale, sources said. SPX abandoned the plans in December after its shareholders questioned the logic of a merger.

"We believe the deal makes a lot of sense for KKR, but we still fail to see how this is the best possible outcome for Gardner Denver," said BB&T Capital Markets analyst Kevin Maczka.

He also questioned the board's willingness to sell the company at this time, given its strong results and robust earnings power.

Gardner Denver, which makes compressors, pumps and vacuum products for industrial uses, reported better-than-expected quarterly results late last month, helped by a restructuring program at its European operations.

The Wayne, Pennsylvania-based company, however, forecast 2013 earnings below expectations, which analysts termed conservative. They have since raised their price targets, saying the company's business was improving.

Robert W. Baird analyst Michael Halloran said the company was worth more than $80 per share and that the $76 valuation is below Gardner Denver's peer group multiples.

He pegged KKR's valuation at roughly 0.5-1.0 times below Garden Denver's current peer group multiples.

KKR, which had originally offered $75 per share, has been in the pole position to buy Gardner Denver after other private equity bidders who initially took part in the auction abandoned the process, sources told Reuters.

Sources have said Gardner Denver considered leveraged recapitalization as an alternative.

"We understand KKR's reluctance to bid against itself as the last remaining bidder, but if $75 was unacceptable, then $76 hardly seems like a victory," said BB&T analyst Maczka.

Activist investor ValueAct, Garden Denver's third-largest shareholder and who pushed for a sale last July, came out in support of KKR's $75 offer. The investor reported a roughly 5 percent stake in the company in July.

Another top 10 shareholder, who requested anonymity, told Reuters on Friday that it was fine with the current offer.

KKR's offer is 39 percent above what the stock traded at in late October, when the company said it was exploring a sale. It values Gardner Denver at $3.9 billion including debt, the companies said in a statement.

Based on 49.15 million Garden Denver shares outstanding as of January 31, the equity portion of the deal is valued at $3.74 billion.

KKR and Gardner Denver said they expected the deal to close in the third quarter of 2013.

Gardner Denver said in a regulatory filing late Friday that it would be required to pay a break fee of $103.4 million if the deal is terminated. (http://r.reuters.com/nur56t)

The deal will be financed by UBS, Barclays, Citigroup, Deutsche Bank, RBC Capital Markets, Mizuho and KKR Capital Markets.

Goldman Sachs advised Gardner Denver while UBS Securities and Simmons & Co International served as financial advisers to KKR.

(Reporting by A. Ananthalakshmi in Bangalore; Additional reporting by Mridhula Raghavan; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila, Roshni Menon)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kkr-acquire-gardner-denver-3-9-billion-133543165--sector.html

earthquake msnbc meteor shower 121212 Concert Columbine shooting News Ryan Lanza Facebook

Friday, March 8, 2013

Lively, hearty black bean soup with ham hocks

Lots of big flavors? cumin, garlic, celery, red bell pepper, tomatoes, jalape?o pepper, and smoked ham hock? blend into a satisfying soup with a Southwestern kick.?

By Terry Boyd,?Blue Kitchen / March 7, 2013

It's a blustery, wintery March week for many across the country. Warm up with this Southwestern-inspired soup.

Blue Kitchen

Enlarge

This has been a strange winter.?But strange or not, it?s still winter, and that had me thinking soup. This soup started with a remembered ham hock not getting any younger in the freezer. My first thought was black-eyed peas, but there was also a bag of dried black beans in the pantry with similar faded youth issues. So black bean soup it was.

Skip to next paragraph Terry Boyd

Blue Kitchen

Terry Boyd is the author of Blue Kitchen, a Chicago-based food blog for home cooks. His simple, eclectic cooking focuses on fresh ingredients, big flavors and a cheerful willingness to borrow ideas and techniques from all over the world. A frequent contributor to the Chicago Sun-Times, his recipes have also appeared on the Bon App?tit and Saveur websites.

Recent posts

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

The prolific Anonymous once said, ?Success has many fathers, while failure is an orphan.? Black bean soup must be successful indeed. Its origin has been credited to Mexico, Michigan, Puerto Rico, Cuba, Central America, Europe? Lydia over at Soup Chick even makes a delicious sounding?Korean-style black bean soup. Most versions I found when I started thinking about making it took their inspiration from the American Southwest. So did I.

This is a great soup to make a day ahead. It gets better when allowed to rest in the fridge and let the flavors blend. Speaking of flavors, the many potent ingredients? cumin, garlic, celery, bell pepper and even the smoked ham hock? each add their distinctive flavors without taking over the dish. And the jalape?o pepper, while only subtly affecting the taste, brings needed heat. With the volume of soup this recipe produces, the pepper doesn?t make it fiery? it just delivers a tingly kick, giving it another layer of interest.

Black bean soup with ham hocks
Serves 4 or 5 as main course

1 pound dried black beans, soaked (see Kitchen Notes for fast and slow soaking methods)

1 smoked ham hock, 3/4 to 1 pound

8 cups water

2 bay leaves

canola oil

1 medium yellow onion, chopped

1 red bell pepper, chopped

1 large jalape?o pepper, finely chopped (see Kitchen Notes)

2 carrots, peeled and diced

2 ribs celery, peeled and diced

2 large cloves garlic, minced

1 tablespoon ground cumin

1 15-ounce can diced tomatoes, drained

freshly ground black pepper

2 tablespoons fresh lime juice (see Kitchen Notes)

salt

sour cream (optional)

chopped cilantro for garnish

Place soaked beans and ham hock in large, heavy stock pot or Dutch oven. Add water and bay leaves and bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer, covered, for 1-1/2 hours.

Meanwhile, heat 2 tablespoons oil in a large saut? pan or skillet. Add onion, bell pepper, jalape?o pepper, carrots, and celery. Toss to coat with oil and sweat vegetables for four or five minutes, stirring frequently. Clear a space in center of pan, drizzling in extra oil if needed, and add garlic and cumin. Cook until fragrant, about 45 seconds, stirring constantly. Remove pan from heat and toss vegetables to combine. Set aside.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/PuOkOPnHALs/Lively-hearty-black-bean-soup-with-ham-hocks

barista university of kentucky ncaa oakland news alec baldwin alec baldwin college basketball

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Case study: Parade College overhauls network for iPad program

Parade College replaced its network to accommodate tablets in the classroom.

Parade College replaced its network to accommodate tablets in the classroom.

Bringing tablets to the classroom has enhanced education but created networking challenges for Parade College, according to the school?s IT manager, Daniel Caporetto.

Parade College is an all-boys school with two campuses in Victoria, in Bundora and Preston. The school expects to expand from 1800 to 2200 students in the next few years. Caporetto leads an IT team of five and his job includes planning, budgeting and implementing ICT projects at the school.

Parade decided to give students tablets because it saw ICT becoming an increasingly important part of everyday life, Caporetto said. The school also sought a way to better engage its students in learning than ?the traditional method of a teacher just sitting there in front of a class and everyone opening their books.?

?If they?re engaged and more excited by learning, they will have the potential to learn more and be better students,? he said.

Profile IT: Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras
Cricket Australia sends technology in to bat
Profile IT: Yahoo!7's Craig Penfold
How do they do IT? Mater Hospital
How do they do IT? Avatar's special effects
How do they do IT? eHealth?s bleeding edge

That?s especially important at an all-boys school, he said. ?Boys may have shorter attention spans [than girls], so you need to grab their attention a bit more.?

Parade decided to buy Apple iPads and resell them to students. The college chose iPad 2 devices with Wi-Fi and 16GB of storage, but has created a bring your own device (BYOD) policy for students who have an iPad already.

The BYOD students must adhere to the same policies and procedures as the other students, he said.

Caporetto said Parade College chose the iPad over other tablets because it had the most education apps sought by teachers. He left open the possibility of switching to Windows 8 or another platform in the future.

?It all comes down to apps,? he said. ?If the learning material isn?t there, it?s not really worth moving? to another tablet.

Parade began a phase rollout of iPads to teachers in early 2011, about two years ahead of students, to give faculty the time to find useful apps and build lesson plans around the tablets, Caporetto said.

Students in years seven and nine began using iPads at the beginning of this year, and the school now has about 900 iPads on the network, including staff devices, he said.

Those students will continue with the iPads next year, while students currently in years six and eight will start using iPads when they move to the next level in 2014, he said.

Caporetto estimated that in three years, about 2000 students will use iPads in the classroom.

Pressure on the Network

Parade College realised before launching the iPad program that its existing network could not adequately support the added traffic expected from so many active iPads, Caporetto said.

The network was already showing weakness handling increased traffic from desktop PCs and other devices, he said. Besides the iPads, the network supports 1200 desktop PCs, 140 wireless access points, IP telephony and 180 CCTV cameras.

The iPad presented a unique challenge because it?s ?always chitter-chattering through the network,? he said. And the addition of a tablet to the learning experience encouraged teachers to make greater use of Web-based content, he said.

Caporetto said he wanted a new network that was fast, reliable and cost-effective. The school considered several vendors but chose a network from Brocade due to price and Caporetto?s previous positive experience with the company?s products, he said.

The Brocade network has four full-duplex 40GBps stacking ports providing 320 Gbps of bandwidth. That has provided faster access, a unified IT environment and ?peace of mind,? said Caporetto. He said he expects it to ?future proof Parade for many years.?

Installing the new network was ?pretty straightforward? with ?no real show stoppers,? he said. ?We planned out everything ... so we knew what was going where? and ?implemented it in a way that would minimise any downtime.?

Source: http://www.cio.com.au/article/455727/case_study_parade_college_overhauls_network_ipad_program/?utm_medium=rss&utm_source=taxonomyfeed

eagles nfl schedule 2012 Fox News Suicide Google Ryder Cup Standings Dexter Season 7 Ryder Cup 2012

TweetDeck for iOS and AIR for Mac to be discontinued in early May of this year

TweetDeck for iOS and Mac to be discontinued in early May of this year

TweetDeck, who was acquired by Twitter a while back, will be discontinuing a lot of its native and quasi-native apps, including Tweetdeck iOS and Android, and its Air app for Mac. If you use TweetDeck on the web, those tools will still remain, and that's where they'll choose to focus their energies and development going forward. According to the TweetDeck blog:

To that end, we are discontinuing support for our older apps: TweetDeck AIR, TweetDeck for Android and TweetDeck for iPhone. They will be removed from their respective app stores in early May and will stop functioning shortly thereafter. We?ll also discontinue support for our Facebook integration.

Anyone who has ever used AIR for Mac may actually be glad it's finally getting put out of its misery. Unfortunately, Twitter for Mac being kept alive. Torturously.

TweetDeck on the web has always been a better experience and will continue to be developed, including plugins for browsers such as Google Chrome.

The real question is, if you still use TweetDeck for iOS or AIR on your Mac, will the web version be enough for you?

Source: Posterous



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/LFk-e0_yAfs/story01.htm

dr. seuss the temptations rush limbaugh sandra fluke green book some like it hot duke university whale shark

Mexico's "game-changing" telecom reform due in days: party leader

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Mexico's phone and television markets, long dominated by Carlos Slim and his rivals, are facing a game-changing shakeup that could be announced in days, according to one of the political leaders tasked with drafting the reform.

"This (reform) changes the whole board game," Gustavo Madero, chairman of the conservative opposition National Action Party (PAN), told Reuters in an interview.

The leaders of President Enrique Pena Nieto's Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and Mexico's two main opposition parties are currently preparing the telecoms reform, which should be brought to Congress in days, not weeks, Madero said.

Slim, the world's richest man, controls about 70 percent of Mexico's cell phone market and about 80 percent of the fixed lines through his phone giant America Movil .

Televisa, controlled by media tycoon Emilio Azcarraga, has about 60 percent of the broadcasting market, while Ricardo Salinas' TV Azteca has most of the rest.

"There's no other country that I know in the world - perhaps the communist countries - where so few hands have so much control over the broadcasting media," said Madero.

Pena Nieto took office on December 1, pledging to shake up competition in Mexico, particularly the telecommunications industry and the state-run oil monopoly, Pemex.

Shortly afterwards he unveiled a pact in which the leaders of the PRI and the main opposition parties pledged to work together on a broad program of economic reforms.

Madero, who is the spokesman for the alliance known as the 'Pact for Mexico' said the entrenched interests at play, coupled with the three parties' desire to reform the sector from top to bottom, explain why the rule changes are taking time.

"We know this is going to affect interests, that's why we're taking so much care," he said of the reform, which has been expected in Congress at any moment for several weeks.

The reform is more than 90 percent ready, Madero said.

"We are now working on the legal design and the detail of the basic concepts ... on which, in general, we have reached a consensus," he added.

Madero declined to give details of the content of the reform but he said it intends to foster competition and open the sector up to more foreign investment.

Concerns about how the planned reform might affect Televisa and America Movil have weighed on both companies' share prices in recent days.

America Movil, Slim's principal cash cow, has seen its share price decline some 10.5 percent since the start of the year. Disappointing fourth-quarter results have also taken their toll on the company's stock.

Televisa shares have recently touched multi-year highs but on Wednesday fell more than 3 percent after a UBS analyst cut the bank's recommendation for the stock to neutral, citing in part the pending reform.

(Additional reporting by Tomas Sarmiento and Miguel Gutierrez; Editing by Nick Zieminski)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mexicos-game-changing-telecom-reform-due-days-party-203333863--finance.html

powerball winner Zig Ziglar lunar eclipse alabama football florida lotto sean taylor Lisa Robin Kelly