Thursday, January 19, 2012

GOP field leaves SC's religious right uninspired (AP)

GREENVILLE, S.C. ? The Greenville-Spartanburg area, home to many of South Carolina's evangelical voters, should be prime political ground for Rick Santorum, a longtime anti-abortion crusader who was embraced by a group of Christian leaders meeting last weekend in Texas.

Or perhaps for Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who led more than 30,000 people in prayer in Houston last August. Or maybe for former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who talks forcefully of his conversion to Catholicism and his hope for redemption for past sins, including infidelity.

Yet none of these candidates seems to have captivated this area's religious conservatives ahead of Saturday's Republican presidential primary. That may help explain why former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, a Mormon and former abortion-rights supporter, appears to be doing reasonably well, although politicians warn that the game isn't over.

South Carolina's religious conservatives are deeply worried about the country, and thoroughly convinced that President Barack Obama must go. But in interviews this week at several religious and political events, nearly all GOP voters expressed greater interest in God and the Christian community than in politicians and government. They exhibited only the vaguest hopes that this year's elections will make a real difference.

"I'm concerned that we don't have anyone that can fix this problem," said Charlie Davis of Anderson, who carried a Bible into a prayer gathering that drew about 400 people to Greenville Tuesday night.

Like virtually everyone interviewed in the region, Davis, a 30-year-old elementary school physical education teacher, said he will vote Saturday. And like virtually all the others, he said he was undecided, and he showed little enthusiasm for anyone.

"I am standing back, watching," said Dan Benham, 67, who also attended the prayer gathering, called "The Response."

"I'm concerned about life in America," he said, especially what he sees as an epidemic of abortions.

All the GOP candidates oppose legalized abortion, and Santorum is especially forceful on the issue. So it would seem that Benham, who owns a small auto parts assembly company, has a wealth of choices.

But when nudged on how democracy might improve the nation, Benham said: "I'm here to pray. I'm looking to ask the Lord."

Even Perry, the only candidate to address the prayer group, suggested that elections are not the answer. The nation's hope, he said, "is not in government. That hope is in a loving God."

God's agenda, Perry told the crowd of 400, "is not a political agenda. He's smarter than that."

Organizers of "The Response" also seemed ambivalent about the proper role of religion and politics. They invited all the candidates to speak, and encouraged political reporters to attend.

But David Sliker of the International House of Prayer in Kansas City told the audience: "America's solution isn't coming through a politically brilliant idea. It's going to come through the righteousness of its people."

He said people should tell God "you're the leader we want."

Interviews with two dozen GOP voters over two days in no way constitute a scientific survey. But they give a flavor of political conversations in the campaign's final days here in the home of the fundamental Christian Bob Jones University.

Time after time, religious conservatives expressed alarm and sadness at what they see as the country's drift from righteousness and from taking responsibility for one's self and one's neighbors. Yet almost no one was able to point to a presidential candidate with enthusiasm.

"I'm hoping that whoever is in power will be the one that Jesus wants," said Andrew Ratchford, 23, who studied political science in college and knows the campaign issues well.

Tian Ware, 45, of Prosperity, S.C., went to see Santorum on Wednesday at the Beacon Drive-In restaurant, a Spartanburg landmark.

She might vote for him, she said. Or maybe Gingrich. Ware said she would make her decision "on just a feeling. I get feelings about people."

She likes Perry, she said, but feels he cannot win. If Ware, who has three grandchildren, is lukewarm about the candidates, she is passionate about the issues.

"I'm offended that my children couldn't pray in public schools if they wanted to," she said. "If I say `Oh my God' in front of the wrong person, I'll get arrested."

Standing nearby was Jim McCabe, who recently retired as chief information officer for Milliken, a major textile and chemical company. "I just came to see," he said of Santorum. "I'm not really pleased with any of them."

McCabe said he wants "an alternative to Mitt Romney," and probably will vote for Gingrich or Santorum. He sounded underwhelmed.

McCabe and Ware are the type of socially conservative voters that one of Romney's rivals needs to inspire, excite, set on fire. In exit polls from the 2008 South Carolina GOP primary, 60 percent of voters said they were evangelical.

Rep. Ron Paul doesn't play well with these voters, largely because they see him as unwilling to defend Israel, a land that holds special meaning to many devout Christians. That leaves Santorum, Gingrich and Perry, all of whom can make legitimate arguments to the Christian right.

And they have tried. All three, for example, attended an anti-abortion forum Wednesday in Greenville, declaring their conviction that human life begins at conception.

Santorum, who endeared himself to many Christian activists in Iowa, seemed to catch a big break last week. A loose-knit group of prominent social conservatives voted in Texas to back him as the best alternative to Romney.

In this week's interviews with Greenville-Spartanburg Republicans, however, no one mentioned the event.

Gingrich, meanwhile, seemed to get a bump from Monday's debate in Myrtle Beach, according to polls and anecdotal evidence. But if there was a rising tide for Gingrich in the Spartanburg-Greenville region, it wasn't obvious.

"I'm very concerned about this country," said Blaine Nuckolls, 71, a retired police officer who lives in Greenville. "We need leadership, starting at the top," he said.

He said he's trying to decide between Perry and Santorum. Nuckolls said he likes Gingrich, "but I don't think he's got enough backing to get elected."

Bill Campbell, a retired minister from Greenville, said he fears for the nation's future. Americans are crushing future generations with federal debt, he said.

"Most candidates seem not to have a grasp on how serious it is," Campbell said. Paul comes closest, he said, although he hasn't ruled out Santorum or Perry.

"Gingrich is interesting, but too insiderish," Campbell said, and Romney is far too establishment.

"We need someone to make big waves in Washington," Campbell said. He stared solemnly. He didn't look optimistic.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120119/ap_on_el_pr/us_south_carolina_conservatives

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Windows Phone: Skype app 'coming soon'

Windows Phones will feature a Skype app "soon," according to a Skype executive. But Windows Phone owners may have to wait several months for the feature.

Microsoft?s acquisition of Skype promised to be a marriage made in an integration heaven ? especially for Windows Phones owners ? but so far it?s been all talk and no action.

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A Skype for Windows Phone application, however, will soon make its debut, Skype vice president of products Rick Osterloh asserted in a recent interview taped at the Consumer Electronics Show in Vegas.

?We?re ? working on a Windows Phone product that will be coming out soon,? he said.

When Microsoft purchased the video-conferencing company for $8.5 billion in June 2011 (the deal closed in October), it talked up an unrivaled Windows Phone Skype offering that would include deep integration between the voice over IP service and its mobile operating system. But the merger still has Windows Phone owners waiting for platform integration, let alone a basic application on par with what?s already offered on iPhone, Android and BlackBerry.

That wait is likely to continue. The first Windows Phone product, according to The Verge, could be released as soon as the Mobile World Congress in February, but it won?t be the much-ballyhooed operating system-wide offering originally touted by the companies. Windows Phone owners may have to wait for this rich Skype integration until the Apollo software release, which, according to a leaked roadmap, won?t happen until the fourth quarter of 2012.

?We understand, from our own sources, that the initial release of Skype will not feature deep Windows Phone integration, and that Microsoft is planning this for ?Apollo? and beyond,? The Verge is reporting. ?Microsoft?s first Windows Phone Skype application will largely be seen as an interim release until Windows Phone ?Apollo? is made available.?

But Microsoft and Skype would like you to know that integrations are coming ? eventually. ?We?re working with a lot of different Microsoft product groups to create direct integrations,? Osterloh said. ?Right now, we?re working on Windows Phone, we?ll be working on Windows 8, Xbox, Lync. So a whole range of different Microsoft users will get access to Skype and have a great experience.?

Skype, Osterloh said, now has more than 200 million monthly users.

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Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/n3w6wJv8ntE/Windows-Phone-Skype-app-coming-soon

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Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Editorial: Everybody always is working on better battery life

Android batteries

In the news business, it's what we call a "no shit" headline.

  • Samsung aims for better smartphone battery life in 2012
  • Samsung promises better battery life in 2012
  • Samsung aiming for extended battery life in 2012
  • Samsung pledges a full day of life on single charge for 2012
  • Samsung aims for all-day smartphone batteries in 2012
  • Samsung looks to beef up batteries and tweak radios in 2012 for extended life
  • Samsung joins the fight against short battery life, promises 2012 phone will be all-day strong for most users
  • Samsung promises full day of battery life for 2012 smartphones
  • Samsung commits to increasing smartphone battery life in 2012, hopes for all-day use

Every one of those headlines comes today from rereporting a CNET story  -- a story from Jan. 12 at that -- with a single direct quote from Samsung VP of product innovation, Kevin Packingham. (Note to self: Maybe pare down your Google Reader feeds a tad. Things are looking a wee bit similar.) Packingham said "When you wake up to when you go to bed, we don't want you feeling anxiety about your battery life." The transition to the quote says Samsung's goal for smartphones coming out this year is all-day use under average to moderately heavy use. It's a great line. And it's hardly new. And I still have no idea what average to moderately heavy use is. It's different for all of us.

From the beginning of smartphone time, manufacturers have sought better battery life. Carriers have sought better battery life. Customers have sought better battery life. Hell, from the first moment humans harnessed fire and started carrying it around with torches (early experiments with fire in a cup ended pretty horribly), we've wanted more bang for our buck. So what, exactly, in that one line quote from Samsung has changed in the 17 days since 2011?

We suppose it could be argued that nobody cared about battery life last year. Just look at the initial crop of 4G LTE phones for that statement to be relatively true. Except it's not true. Not in the least. We're not engineers (as anyone who managed to pass high-school algebra will tell you). But we're willing to bet that power consumption is among the top three factors that go into smartphone design. And while battery life certainly was traded for data speeds (more accurately, radio power consumption, we reckon) of the early 4G LTE devices, to suggest that the likes of Samsung, Motorola, LG and HTC didn't care about battery life for the entire year and will just now pay attention to it is ridiculous. Besides, think back to all of the updates your phone's gotten. How many of them included lines about "Improved battery life" in the changelog?

That's not to say that some sort of paradigm shift in mobile battery technology isn't sorely needed. It's great that manufacturers are cramming more cells into smaller spaces -- like what Motorola's doing with the Droid RAZR MAXX, and what we presume we'll see the other manufacturers do as well. But that's just moving the wall a little farther away, not finding away up and over it, which is what really needs to be done. Some of that will be done on the software side, with improvements to the operating systems and well-coded applications. But most of the innovation will be done on the hardware side. If Intel can do what it's promising with its Atom processor in phones, we might finally see some movement. Dual- and quad-core processors are steps in the right direction. But what we really need is some sort of Mr. Fusion for smartphones. Something to really change the way we power our phones.  

Anyhoo, yes. Samsung's working on better battery life in 2012. So is Motorola. So is HTC. So is LG. So is Lenovo. So is ASUS. So is Toshiba. So is NVIDIA. So is Qualcomm. So is Intel. Everybody is working on better battery life, every day of the week. Right we just have to be content with baby steps. 



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/ne1GQ_u3ax8/story01.htm

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Tuesday, January 17, 2012

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Source: http://www.rssmicro.com/rss.web?q=Baseball

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Cloned Pets - Bioethics @ TIU

TLC aired a special called ?I Cloned My Pet? that traces the journey of three former pet owners through the process of cloning their beloved pet who had died (see here and here). Watching the interviews with the pet owners, particularly Danielle, the owners sought cloning in order to bring their beloved pets back rather than deal with closure and the loss of their pet. However, my interest is less in the psychological factors and more in the technology and appropriate use of technology. I understand that there is a psychological factor here, but I think it is important to look at how technology is being used and if it is ethical.

?

Our society finds solace, comfort, and sometimes salvation in technological progress. It is the cultural air that we breathe. When having to deal with some of the most devastating things in life, we turn to technology to help us: reconstructive surgery after a severe accident, IVF for infertility, cosmetic surgery for the effects of old age, arthroscopic surgery for joints, and a myriad of other technologies that are used every day in hospitals. Thankfully, we live in a world where many of these technologies are available, and people who have had to deal with trauma or sickness can benefit from them. However, our technological capabilities also raise questions, such as distinguishing the difference between therapeutic and enhancement technologies. Now let us add that technology can help a former pet owner deal with the loss of a beloved pet by cloning.

?

Distinguishing between therapeutic and enhancement technologies is an area that many bioethicists are working on. There is most certainly a gray area here; not all of the above technologies are strictly therapeutic, however some may argue that they have psychologically therapeutic effects. However, there are similarities between certain technologies listed above. IVF and cosmetic surgery seem to be marketed differently than the other technologies. Infertility and the effects of old age are very emotional topics, and it seems that the reproductive industry and the cosmetic industry banks off of people?s fragile emotional state. That is where I see a similarity between those industries and cloning a pet. I believe all three of these industries sell happiness (or solace or security) to people.

?

The way the former pet owners talked in their interviews, it is as if they believed cloning would bring their pet back to them. And they evidently believe this strongly enough that they are willing to pay $100,000 price tag for it ($50,000 for the people on TLC per an agreement with the South Korean cloning company). Let?s examine the technology:

?

  1. Cloning is a very inefficient process, so much so that Ian Wilmut, the scientist whose team cloned Dolly the sheep, has abandoned the notion of human cloning (he moved on to ESC research). For every one successful clone, there were hundreds of botched clones. Many were botched at the embryonic or gestational stage. Some had severe abnormalities at birth. Less than 1% of clones are successful (this is a very generous estimate), so for everyone 1 successful clone 99 (or more) had to die.
  2. Cloning does not make a copy of the original. One of the pet owners was hoping that his cloned dog would recognize him. This is not possible. A clone is analogous to an identical twin that is displaced in time.* Anyone who knows identical twins knows that you end up with two completely different individuals. It is unclear to me if the cloning company is up-front about this, or if it allows people to believe whatever they want to believe, including the idea that the clone has some of the memories of the original. This is visually seen when we look at other cloned animals. The coat color does not always match the original animal because environmental factors play a role.
  3. Dolly the sheep, famous for being not only the first cloned mammal, but also the first healthy cloned mammal that could reproduce, died an early death from age-related issues. Dolly started developing problems with arthritis and other age-related issues when she was only six years old (normal life span is about eleven years old). Very little has been reported on the longevity of a cloned mammals, but the idea is that cells have a shelf life. They cannot go on replicating indefinitely. Again, it is unclear to me whether the South Korean cloning company has been able to fix this ?little? problem of old DNA and shorten life-spans or not. The former pet owners were obviously very upset over the loss of their pet the first time, and rather than move on, they have opted to clone their pet. If the clone?s lifespan is expected to be much shorter than normal, comparable mammals, this sets them up for further disappointment, let alone reliving the loss of their pet. Cynically, this does set the cloning company up for repeat business

*Technically, once the DNA starts replicating, identical twins do not have identical genomes.

Finally, aside from assessing the technology, there is a stewardship issue here. I have always had pets. Growing up we had a variety of cats, dogs, birds, hamsters, lizards, and even a chinchilla. I loved all of our pets, and each one seemed to have its own little personality. I currently have an incredibly sweet cat and a rather clumsy aquatic turtle. I had adopted my current cat when she was about a year old from an animal shelter, and she truly has been one of the friendliest, most docile cats I?ve ever had. ?For people that have a soft spot for caring for domesticated animals, there are a lot of animals that need homes. Here in Texas, we receive quite a few displaced animals from natural disasters. Given the inefficient and expensive cloning procedures, it seems that the best way to care for animals is not to clone them, but rather to consider caring for another animal. Animals are not people, and while I would not necessarily be so bold as to recommend adopting a child because that is a big decision for a couple to make, animals are always adopted. So, if these owners would like to have a pet, why not adopt one of the thousands of animals that are too domesticated to survive in the wild? The answer is likely that these pet owners want their old pet back. Unfortunately, no matter what the cloning company promises them, they are still adopting a completely different pet than their original.

Source: http://blogs.tiu.edu/bioethics/2012/01/16/cloned-pets/

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Monday, January 16, 2012

Nigeria fuel strike ends with soldiers in streets (AP)

LAGOS, Nigeria ? Labor unions ended a crippling nationwide strike Monday in Nigeria after the country's president partially restored subsidies that keep gasoline prices low, though it took soldiers deployed in the streets to stop demonstrations in Africa's most populous nation.

Union leaders claimed a victory for labor, saying this would allow its leaders to guide the country's policy on fuel subsidies in the future. But the newly agreed price of about $2.27 a gallon (60 cents a liter) is still more expensive than the previous price of $1.70 per gallon (45 cents per liter), putting additional economic strain on those living in a nation where most earn less than $2 a day and few see the rewards of being a major oil exporter.

And to force the compromise and stop popular protests, President Goodluck Jonathan ordered soldiers to take over security in the country's major cities, something unseen since the nation abandoned military rule for an uneasy democracy in 1999. The move raises new questions about freedom of speech in a nation where government power still appears absolute.

"This is a clear case of intolerance and shutting of the democratic space against the people of Nigeria which must be condemned by all democracy-loving people around the world," read a statement from the Save Nigeria Group, which has organized massive demonstrations in Lagos.

The six-day strike began after fuel prices more than doubled to at least $3.50 per gallon (94 cents per liter) following a Jan. 1 decision by Jonathan's administration to end the government-sponsored subsidies. Low gasoline prices, something Nigeria has been accustomed to since 1973, remain one of the only benefits the average Nigerian sees from the nation producing 2.4 million barrels of crude oil a day. Gasoline also powers the small generators that provide shops and homes electricity in a nation with a failed national power grid.

Many protesters also joined the growing demonstrations to speak out against a culture of government corruption in a nation where lawmakers earn pay packages of $1 million a year and states have budgets larger than neighboring countries. Under the hash-tagged slogan of "Occupy Nigeria," many used social media to criticize the nation's poor roads and failing hospitals amid the excesses of the country's elite.

The government tried to persuade the nation to its side, promising the estimated $8 billion saved a year by ending the subsidies would go toward needed public work projects. That failed to win popular support as tens of thousands joined in protests across the country.

In the last two days, government authorities began warning that provocateurs wanted to exploit the rallies to cause unrest in a nation with a long history of coups.

"It has become clear to government and all well-meaning Nigerians that other interests beyond the implementation of the deregulation policy have hijacked the protest. ... These same interests seek to promote discord, anarchy and insecurity to the detriment of public peace," President Jonathan said in a speech aired Monday morning on the state-run Nigerian Television Authority.

Jonathan gave no further explanation to his remarks. Opposition politicians did sometimes lead demonstrations, but they were not connected to the violence that killed at least 10 people and wounded more than 600 others during strikes.

The Nigeria Labor Congress and the Trade Union Congress told journalists on Monday they chose to abandon the strike "in order to save lives and in the interest of national survival." They previously met with Jonathan late Sunday night, who made the same claims about security concerns.

"We are sure that no government or institution will take Nigerians for granted again," said Abdulwaheed Omar, the president of the Nigeria Labor Congress.

That did not appear the case as soldiers and armored personnel carriers moved in overnight to occupy a park in Lagos where tens of thousands had gathered to protest. Soldiers also took over major highways and road junctions throughout Lagos, home to 15 million people, and in Kano, Nigeria's second-largest city.

Labor organizers had urged workers to stay home on Monday after Jonathan's appeal Sunday night. At the Lagos headquarters of the Nigeria Labor Congress, some 50 protesters gathered anyway. Lawyer Bamidele Aturu led the crowd in chants and cheers, comparing the president to military rulers of the past who used soldiers to suppress dissent.

"It's very clear the revolution has begun!" Aturu shouted. However, those gathered looked warily at passing pickup trucks filled with soldiers.

The protesters began to march, passing soldiers who slung their assault rifles over their shoulders, allowing them to walk on. But as they drew closer to the surrounded Lagos park, around 20 soldiers arrived in two pickup trucks to cut them off, with bayonets affixed to their assault rifles. They told the protesters to go back and some of them began to turn around.

Soldiers fired into the air and tear gassed the crowd to disperse it, leaving protesters running through a stinging white cloud as gunshots echoed down the highway.

Meanwhile, authorities also targeted some foreign media outlets in Lagos. Officers of the State Security Service, Nigeria's secret police, raided an office compound Monday used by the BBC and CNN, witnesses said. Marilyn Ogar, a secret police spokeswoman, said she had no information about the raid.

Though an oil workers association threatened to cut Nigeria's crude oil production, they held off. Such a shutdown could have shaken oil futures, as Nigeria is the fifth-largest crude supplier to the U.S.

Meanwhile, an offshore rig being run for a Chevron Corp. subsidiary near Nigeria's oil-rich southern delta caught fire and officials tried to account for all the workers there, the oil company said. Chevron spokesman Scott Walker said the fire started early Monday morning. Government officials blamed the fire on an industrial accident.

___

Associated Press writers Bashir Adigun and Lekan Oyekanmi in Abuja, Nigeria; Ibrahim Garba in Kano, Nigeria; and Yinka Ibukun in Lagos contributed to this report.

___

Jon Gambrell can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/jongambrellAP.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120116/ap_on_bi_ge/af_nigeria_fuel_subsidy

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Thursday, January 12, 2012

Movie Explorer Compiles Details for All Those Movies on Your Hard Drive [Windows Downloads]

Movie Explorer Compiles Details for All Those Movies on Your Hard DriveWindows: If you have lots of movies ripped or downloaded to your hard drive it can be difficult to keep track of the details. Movie Explorer is a self-executable program for Windows 2000 and up that will scan your hard drive and pull movie posters and details from iMDB. You can use Movie explorer to browse your movies and when you've made a selection you can launch the file directly from the program.

The movie file will then open in your default player for that file format. Once Movie Explorer quickly scans your collection you can search your collection within the program by title, year, director, and genre. The app is in the beta stage right now, the only quirk I've seen is that a couple of my movies were misidentified at first, but it was fairly easy to correct that problem.

If you have a lot of movies on your computer and sometimes can't keep track of them all, give the free beta of Movie Explorer a whirl.

Movie Explorer | via GHacks

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/kSqhvxZ_Dzg/movie-explorer-compiles-details-for-all-those-movies-on-your-hard-drive

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Insight: New DNA reader to bring promise (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) - After years of predictions that the "$1,000 genome" ? a read-out of a person's complete genetic information for about the cost of a dental crown - was just around the corner, a U.S. company is announcing Tuesday that it has achieved that milestone and taken the technology several steps ahead.

The new genome-sequencing machine from Ion Torrent, a division of Life Technologies Corp., in Guilford, Connecticut, is 1,000 times more powerful than existing technology, says CEO and chairman Jonathan Rothberg.

Taking up about as much space as an office printer, it can sequence an entire genome in a single day rather than six to eight weeks required only a few years ago. The new sequencer, says cardiologist Eric Topol, chief academic officer of private California hospital and doctor network Scripps Health, "represents an exceptional advance and can change medicine."

Ion Torrent will sell the tabletop machine, called the Ion Proton Sequencer, for $99,000 to $149,000, making it affordable for large medical practices or clinics; existing sequencers cost up to $750,000. The computer chip and biochemicals to sequence a genome will cost $1,000, compared to, for example, $3,000 to test for mutations just in the BRCA genes that raise the risk of breast and ovarian cancer and $5,000 for a complete genome sequencing by Ion Torrent competitor Illumina Inc.

For a graphic on the shrinking cost of genome sequencing, see: http://link.reuters.com/xys85s

For now, Rothberg expects research labs to be his main customers, using Proton to obtain the complete genome sequence of people with cancer or autism, for instance, and thereby elucidate a disease's underlying genetic causes as well as possible ways to treat it. The company has signed on Baylor College of Medicine, Yale School of Medicine and the Broad Institute as its first customers.

Other scientists and physicians, however, say the long-awaited arrival of the $1,000 genome opens the door to widespread whole-genome sequencing even of people who are not ill. And that raises ethical, legal, and medical issues that experts are only beginning to grapple with.

"I'm a big proponent of bringing genetics into the clinic," says Thomas Quertermous, chief of the division of cardiovascular medicine at Stanford University and an expert in the genetics of heart disease. "But it has to be done in a timely way, and not before its time."

Babies might be first in line for whole-genome sequencing. Every state requires newborns to be screened for at least 29 genetic diseases.

"If the cost of whole-genome sequencing gets sufficiently low, you could sequence all the genes in a newborn" for less than the individual tests and follow-ups required when one comes back positive, says Richard Lifton, chairman of the genetics department at Yale University. "I'm increasingly confident that's going to happen. But we need to be careful how we utilize this information. Do you tell a newborn's parents his apoE status" -- that is, whether he has the form of a gene that raises the risk of Alzheimer's disease?

The cost of whole-genome sequencing will continue to plummet. Lifton foresees a "zero-dollar genome," making it likely that "we will just do it as part of routine clinical care" for children and adults. A Yale team led by Murat Gunel has already used partial genome sequencing of the 1.5 percent of the genome, called the exome, that codes for proteins to determine the cause of a mysterious and still unnamed genetic disease that results in severe brain malformations.

Because no genes had been identified as causing the malformation, it was not possible to do a standard genetic test, which reveals whether a particular gene is normal or mutated. But exome sequencing showed that a previously unknown gene on chromosome 19 is responsible, he and colleagues reported in 2010. "The new Proton instrument is a big step up," says Lifton. "It promises to markedly increase the speed and reduce the cost of genome-level sequencing."

TSUNAMI OF DATA

The discovery of the mutation behind the mysterious genetic disorder demonstrated the advantage of whole-genome sequencing compared to single-gene tests, as scientists can't test for a gene they don't know exists. Beyond such uses, say experts, whole-genome sequencing might not be the medical miracle that proponents forecast.

One problem is that the costs only start with the actual sequencing. "The cost of understanding the sequence will be much, much higher," says bioethicist Hank Greely of Stanford University. He participated in a 2010 project that sequenced the full genome of Stanford bioengineer Stephen Quake. The sequencing cost $48,000.

But because it found 2.6 million DNA misspellings and 752 other genetic glitches, says Greely, "it took a few hundred thousand dollars worth of labor from Ph.D. students and faculty working 4,000 to 5,000 hours to understand what the sequence meant" -- that Quake had a higher-than-average risk of sudden cardiac death, a lower risk of Alzheimer's, and a higher risk of prostate cancer.

Another challenge is that whole-genome sequencing generates a tsunami of data. It would take a genetic counselor some five hours to explain what a typical genome means, further adding to the true cost. The United States has about 2,500 genetic counselors, not nearly enough to meet the need if whole-genome sequencing becomes widespread. Might doctors take up the slack? "Surveys show that 90 percent of patients trust their physician to explain genomics data to them," says Scripps' Topol. "And 90 percent of physicians say they don't feel comfortable with genomics data."

Although many bioethicists focus on the psychological harm patients might suffer when DNA tests show an elevated risk of cancer, diabetes, Parkinson's, and other diseases, genomics information could also threaten patients' physical health if it is misconstrued. A woman whose DNA sequencing shows she does not carry BRCA mutations that raise her risk of breast cancer "might say, great, I don't need mammograms," says Stanford's Greely. "But a negative BRCA test reduces her risk of breast cancer from 12 percent to 11.96 percent. My dread is less that patients will be damaged psychologically and more that they will misunderstand (genome sequence data) and do stupid things."

Unlike tests that detect glitches in genes that a patient or physician asks to have checked (those that raise the risk of, say, colon cancer if that disease runs in the family), and unlike the dozens of genes that "personal genetics" companies test for, whole-genome sequencing reveals every bit of information the genome contains about diseases or traits.

Given the ubiquity of mutations, everyone carries genes that predispose them to more than one serious or lethal disease. Bioethicists are only beginning to study how that knowledge might affect someone's decisions, from marrying or having children to saving for retirement.

Another challenge is that although a person's genome doesn't change, its meaning will. As scientists uncover more DNA variants that protect against disease and variants that make it more likely, a genome sequence that meant one thing in 2012 will have a different meaning in 2013, not to mention 2020.

A DNA variant that was once thought to be dangerous "might turn out to be benign if countered by another," says Greely. "Whose responsibility will it be to tell you that, years later?" Today's DNA testing companies offer subscriptions that give customers regular updates like that.

Geneticists are also still struggling with the fact that most of the risk genes raise the likelihood that the person will develop the disease only slightly. "The bottom line is, the effect size is so small it's virtually insignificant clinically," says Quertermous. "So how should doctors incorporate that knowledge into their armamentarium? They won't be able to look at 6 billion data bits" - the amount in a whole-genome scan - "and evaluate what it means for patients."

Knowing a patient's whole-genome sequence, even if it raises the risk of diseases by only a few percent, might lead malpractice-wary doctors to order follow-up tests. If someone's genome suggests an elevated risk of heart disease, for instance, a physician might feel compelled to order regular cardiac CT angiograms, which cost $1,500 or more.

That would not only raise health-care costs, but might put patients through a physically and psychologically onerous ordeal unnecessarily. "There is no evidence that 'positive' (DNA) tests, based only on the screening for common genetic variations, will justify a specific medical follow-up and procure a medical benefit to individuals," argues geneticist Thierry Frebourg of University Hospital in Rouen, France in a commentary in an upcoming issue of the European Journal of Human Genetics. Instead, whole-genome sequencing might join the ranks of diagnostics, such as PSA tests for prostate cancer, that cost tens of millions of dollars a year but do not benefit patients, let alone save lives.

INEFFECTIVE DRUGS

Full-genome sequencing could provide real benefits in determining which patients will benefit from a drug. For instance, only half the hepatitis C patients who take Pegasys, a $50,000-a-year drug from Roche Holding AG's Genentech, and half the rheumatoid arthritis patients who take $26,000-a-year Enbrel from Amgen Inc and Pfizer Inc, benefit from them, notes Scripps' Topol, who analyzes the potential benefits of genomic medicine in his upcoming book, The Creative Destruction of Medicine.

Using genomic data to identify which patients will and will not benefit could save patients and insurers tens of billions of dollars a year now spent on ineffective drugs.

If genetic information causes patients to take better care of themselves - eating more healthfully if they carry genes that raise the risk of diabetes or heart disease, for instance - they can improve health. One 2010 study found that of people who bought direct-to-consumer genetic testing by companies such as 23andme, 34 percent said the results made them more careful about their diet and 14 percent exercised more.

Others incorrectly see DNA as destiny, and interpret an increased genetic risk of, say, obesity as a license to overeat, thinking they are fated to be fat. "Good" genes might lead to equally dangerous behavior. "A patient with hypertension might be told by his doctor, 'I've looked at your DNA and you're clean!'," says Stanford's Quertermous. "He might think, great, I don't need to check my blood pressure anymore or even take my medication."

As the science advances, however, the value of whole-genome sequencing to patients will grow. The common DNA variants that have been identified "account for only a small part of the heritability of disease," says Kari Stefansson, founder, chairman, and CEO of deCode Genetics of Reykjavik, Iceland.

"The expectation is that a significant part of the missing heritability lies in rare variants, and to find those you have to do whole-genome sequencing." deCode is sequencing the complete genomes of 3,750 Icelanders, and has so far identified rare variants with large effects on the risk of ovarian cancer, glioma, gout, and heart conditions that require a pacemaker. Those discoveries would have been difficult or impossible without whole-genome sequencing.

Whole-genome sequencing also promises to address one of the most troubling problems with current DNA tests, which probe some of the 1,500 or so genes that have been associated with disease out of a total of 22,000 human genes. But scientists do not know how disease risk is raised or lowered by "moderator genes," which affect other genes. "Do we know how combinations of genes affect risk?" Stanford's Quertermous asks. "The answer is completely no." As a result, the disease risk that is calculated from current genetic tests might be inaccurate. With millions of whole-genome sequences, biologists believe, they can begin to work out those crucial combined effects.

One upcoming study shows how important gene combinations can be. In research scheduled for publication in the journal Human Molecular Genetics, scientists led by Charis Eng of the Cleveland Clinic examined the incidence of breast, thyroid, and other cancers in patients carrying a mutation in a gene called PTEN. Such mutations are typically interpreted as raising the risk of cancer. But Eng found that the presence or absence of mutations in another gene, called SDHx, can alter that risk.

"Current genetic testing, which looks at only a few genes, is like trying to forecast the stock market by looking at just 26 stocks," says Eng of the Cleveland Clinic. Such limited genetic data can be misleading.

In a separate study of 44 patients, scheduled for publication in the European Journal of Human Genetics, Eng and colleagues find that family medical history assessed the risk of breast, colon and prostate cancer more accurately than DNA sequencing. For instance, family history correctly classified eight women as being at high risk for breast cancer. But only one of the eight was so classified by DNA. "For now, family health history is a better predictor of cancer risk than genomic testing, which looks at too few genes," Eng says.

Because whole-genome sequencing is not yet being marketed to consumers, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has not taken a position on it. But it is concerned by existing tests that are sold directly to the public by Navigenics, Pathway Genomics and 23andme, and has invited companies that sell them to meet with agency officials to work out ways "to provide consumers with accurate, reliable kits," says FDA spokeswoman Erica Jefferson.

Until then, the companies are prohibited from marketing the tests to the public. "Manufacturers have not provided scientific evidence about the accuracy and reliability of their tests, which can lead to incorrect treatment decisions with serious health consequences," says Jefferson. "The risk of getting a disease depends on a set of complex interactions," so "even people with the same genetic make-up may have different risks of disease."

Gene-sequencing companies understand the challenges.

"Each genome has probably 24,000 mutations that we can understand," says Ion Torrent's Rothberg. "But there are probably 400 that have never been seen before" and whose significance for health is an enigma. Ion Torrent is working on algorithms to determine the medical significance of the millions of DNA glitches that will be found in every genome. Companies such as Personalis, of Palo Alto, California, have sprung up to determine the medical significance of whole-genome sequences. That will take years.

"We recognize this is just the beginning," Rothberg says.

(Editing by Michele Gershberg and Cynthia Osterman)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/biotech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120110/hl_nm/us_dna_reader

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Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Project Fiona raises the stakes for gaming tablets, packs Ivy Bridge, Windows 8 and integrated controllers


We weren't exactly looking for the "Switchblade of CES 2012," but Razer's latest concept, nicknamed "Project Fiona," may take the title anyway. This concept gaming tablet flanks a 10.1-inch multitouch screen with a pair of nunchuk-like four-button controllers, lending the slab a bit of flightstick flair. Its dual-stick wings won't help you fly through ShadowGun however -- this slate is a Windows machine. An Intel Core i7 Ivy Bridge processor hopes to keep Fiona fragging with the desktop kiddies, Razer CEO Min-Liang Tan told us, giving it the chops to run modern PC games right out of the box.

The Prototype was built specifically with mobile PC gamers in mind, said Min-Liang, and will feature a hybrid user interface (a hub activated via a upcoming Windows 8 app) designed to help gamers immediately jump into local multiplayer matches. He described a group of friends seamlessly jumping into a round of Hawx 2, and "dogfighting face to face." It sounds like he wants Fiona to revitalize the Lan party. Although most PC games should be fully playable without any special tweaks or modificaitons, Min-Liang said developers would have the option of adding Fiona specific controls to a game, such as a touch control scheme, or accelerometer joystick emulation. Optimization isn't necessary but exclusive control schemes will be possible.

In addition to its Ivy Bridge chops, the concept gaming slate features enhanced audio with Dolby Home Theater v4 and built-in force feedback. Razer wasn't ready to talk battery life, but said that they hope to launch the slab in Q3 or Q4, after Windows 8 launches, for under $1000. How's it play? We'll let you know as soon as we get our hands on it. Until then, feel free to read on for Fiona's official press release.

Update: Check out our hands-on!

Gallery: Project Fiona

Continue reading Project Fiona raises the stakes for gaming tablets, packs Ivy Bridge, Windows 8 and integrated controllers

Project Fiona raises the stakes for gaming tablets, packs Ivy Bridge, Windows 8 and integrated controllers originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 Jan 2012 15:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/01/10/project-fiona-raises-the-stakes-for-gaming-tablets-packs-ivy-br/

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Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Daniel Radcliffe Covers ?Parade?

Daniel Radcliffe takes over the cover of this weekend?s Parade magazine.
The 22-year-old actor, who just finished up his run in How To Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, chats love, marriage and fear. Check it:
On girlfriend, Rosie: ?When Rosie?s here, every day seems better?.I?m not an easy person to love. There are lots of times [...]

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Source: http://myfreemeals.com/inthenews/daniel-radcliffe-covers-parade/

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Monday, January 9, 2012

Google Ingin Holo Jadi Antarmuka "Default" Android

KOMPAS.com - Google menginginkan semua perangkat Android, dimulai dari perangkat yang menggunakan Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) untuk menggunakan user interface default Holo. Ini merupakan langkah awal Google dalam mengurangi fragmentasi (keragaman) perangkat lunak dari perangkat Android yang beredar di pasaran.

Holo adalah tema atau antarmuka yang harus diimplementasikan ke dalam perangkat Android untuk mempermudah pengembang dan vendor mengintegrasikan widget, tombol aplikasi, dan menu di layar.

Apa yang dilakukan Google ini bisa disebut sebagai sebuah pedoman dasar untuk desain dan elemen tema di Android, agar pengembang aplikasi dan vendor dapat menjaga konsistensi tampilan. Langkah ini juga memperketat kontrol ekosistem Android di masa depan.

"Kami akan membuat tema Holo yang dimodifikasi sebagai syarat kompatibilitas untuk menjalankan perangkat Android 4.0 dan versi-versi yang lebih tinggi di kemudian hari," jelas Adam Powell, teknisi Framework Android.

Meski Google mewajibkan hal tersebut, namun bukan berarti para pengembang dan vendor jadi terikat aturan. Para vendor masih bisa mengembangkan tema yang dikostumisasi versi mereka sendiri.

"Kami tidak membatasi vendor Android untuk membuat tema hasil pengalaman mereka sendiri," tambah Powell, pernyataan ini mengacu pada HTC Sense dan Samsung TouchWiz.

HTC Sense dan Samsung TouchWiz adalah user interface yang dibuat khusus untuk perangkat smartphone/tablet buatan HTC dan Samsung.

Sedangkan untuk pengembang aplikasi, bisa memilih Holo atau tema yang lain buatan vendor Android.

Sementara itu, Holo juga diharapkan mampu menstandarisasi tampilan aplikasi di berbagai ukuran layar pada perangkat Android.

Pasalnya, banyak aplikasi Android yang tidak kompatibel pada ukuran layar tertentu, terutama pada smartphone Android berlayar kecil atau yang dilengkapi dengan keyboard QWERTY .

?

Source: http://tekno.kompas.com/read/2012/01/09/11242640/Google.Ingin.Holo.Jadi.Antarmuka.Default.Android

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Sunday, January 8, 2012

[OOC] Beasts

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Ohio Dems call for creation of insurance exchange (AP)

COLUMBUS, Ohio ? Democratic state lawmakers are pushing a proposal that requires Ohio to set up the insurance exchange laid out in President Barack Obama's health care law.

Millions of uninsured Americans will be able to buy private coverage through these online supermarkets starting in 2014, with taxpayer-provided assistance to cover the cost of premiums.

The health care law requires the federal government to set up exchanges if states fail to do so.

Minority Democrats have criticized the pace in which the Republican governor's administration has worked to establish an exchange. They've introduced bills to create an agency to set up the market and oversee it.

Lt. Gov. Mary Taylor, who is also Ohio's insurance director, says it's premature to plan for an exchange without further clarification from the federal government.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120106/ap_on_bi_ge/us_health_exchanges_ohio

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Wednesday, January 4, 2012

SmartMetersCom: Smart Energy Outsourcing Expected to Increase: A new study by HfS Research and ValueNotes found that there is a ... http://t.co/PBxmLVIP

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