Wednesday, October 31, 2012

iPad review (late 2012)

DNP iPad review late 2012

Welcome to the new new iPad, same as the old new iPad. Well, mostly, anyway. It was less than eight months ago that Apple grafted a Retina display onto its world-conquering tablet, giving every other slate on the market resolution envy, while enchanting gadget lovers with world-class performance and battery life.

Now, it's obsolete. Put out to pasture just as it was hitting its stride and replaced by this, the fourth-generation iPad -- still just called "new iPad." Other than a Lightning connector on the bottom it's visually indistinguishable from its predecessor. Even its starting MSRP of $499 stays the same. But, on the inside where it counts, is the new, fire-breathing A6X processor. Could this be possibly worth buying a second new iPad in just one year, or could this perhaps be the one you've been waiting for? Hold on to your wallets and click on through to find out.

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iPad review (late 2012) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 30 Oct 2012 21:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/10/30/apple-ipad-review/

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University of Michigan News Service | U-M launches $9 million effort ...

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ANN ARBOR?A new $9 million University of Michigan Great Lakes research and education center will guide efforts to protect and restore the world's largest group of freshwater lakes by reducing toxic contamination, combating invasive species, protecting wildlife habitat and promoting coastal health.

With a $4.5 million, three-year grant from the Fred A. and Barbara M. Erb Family Foundation, the new University of Michigan Water Center will provide a solid scientific framework for more efficient and effective Great Lakes restoration.

U-M scientists and their partners across the region will use research and on-the-ground collaboration to inform Great Lakes restoration projects. The initiative was announced today by U-M President Mary Sue Coleman, who said the university will add an additional $4.5 million to the project over three years.

Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore, Lake Superior. Image credit: Michigan Sea GrantPictured Rocks National Lakeshore, Lake Superior. Image credit: Michigan Sea Grant"As a university, we need to take on ownership and responsibility of regional sustainability challenges that affect us, close to home and where our expertise can have enormous impact.? The U-M Water Center will do that," Coleman said. "I want to thank the Erb Family Foundation for supporting our work and, more important, for continually pushing us to do more."

During its first three years, the center will focus on identifying and filling critical science gaps in the four focus areas of the federal Great Lakes Restoration Initiative (GLRI): removing toxic contamination and restoring regions of environmental degradation known as areas of concern; combating invasive species; protecting and restoring wildlife and their habitats; and ridding nearshore waters of polluted runoff.

U-M researchers examine a load of quagga mussels pulled from the bottom of Lake Michigan during a 2009 voyage. Photo by Jim EricksonU-M researchers examine a load of quagga mussels pulled from the bottom of Lake Michigan during a 2009 voyage. Photo by Jim EricksonNumerous ongoing threats to the health of the lakes were the impetus for the Obama administration's establishment of the GLRI, the largest single source of funding ever focused on the Great Lakes. Administered by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the GLRI has spent an unprecedented $1 billion on Great Lakes restoration projects in its first three years.

The new U-M Water Center will lead region-wide academic efforts to guide development of the next GLRI phase. It will engage with conservationists, policymakers, nonprofit groups and researchers across the Great Lakes states and in Canada.

"Our foundation is very pleased to provide U-M with this grant to identify and fill critical knowledge gaps and help develop a science framework for the restoration of the Great Lakes," said John Erb, president of the Erb Family Foundation. "The lakes are a unique and precious ecosystem that we must steward for the benefit of current and future generations. This regional and international engagement is essential at this critical stage in our stewardship of the Great Lakes."

The Erb Family Foundation envisions that efforts during the first three years of funding to the U-M Water Center will lead to:

  • More effective and powerful integration of scientific input for, and evaluation of, restoration and protection of the Great Lakes.
  • A stronger GLRI that more fully integrates science to support management actions and policy decisions, assesses environmental outcomes, and enhances current and future GLRI efforts.
  • More effective restoration efforts based on a deeper understanding of potential cumulative impacts of currently funded GLRI projects and assessment of remaining science and management gaps.
  • More efficient and effective restoration approaches for the Great Lakes basin and beyond.

University of Michigan researcher David Jude collecting samples on Lake Michigan in 2009, during a study of quagga mussels. Photo by Jim EricksonUniversity of Michigan researcher David Jude collecting samples on Lake Michigan in 2009, during a study of quagga mussels. Photo by Jim EricksonThe U-M Water Center will be administered by the Graham Sustainability Institute and will involve faculty and students from across the university, including the Cooperative Institute for Limnology and Ecological Research (CILER); Michigan Sea Grant; the School of Natural Resources and Environment; the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology; the Department of Atmospheric, Oceanic and Space Sciences; the College of Engineering; the School of Public Health; and the Ford School of Public Policy.

A portion of the initial funding will be used to hire three prominent Great Lakes scientists, adding depth to the U-M's research effort and offering new learning opportunities for students. Two of these scientists, Tom Nalepa and Gary Fahnenstiel, recently joined the U-M faculty from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory in Ann Arbor. Both are considered to be among the top Great Lakes scholars in the world. They will teach a new Great Lakes oceanography field methods course at the U-M Biological Station and a new Great Lakes science and management course at the Ann Arbor campus.

"While their immense size can make them seem indestructible, the Great Lakes are showing severe signs of stress and face unprecedented threats. The integrity of the Great Lakes ecosystem has been compromised in recent years, and many important plant and animal species are in decline or have been lost," said Nalepa, who is perhaps best known for his seminal work on invasive mussels, including zebra and quagga mussels, and their effects on Great Lakes communities.

Barbara and Fred ErbBarbara and Fred Erb"The Great Lakes region is one of unrivaled natural beauty and diverse wildlife habitat that provides drinking water to more than 40 million U.S. and Canadian citizens while supporting 1.5 million U.S. jobs," said U-M Provost Phil Hanlon. "With this support from the Erb Foundation, the University of Michigan Water Center is positioned to make important contributions to improve the health of critically important Great Lakes ecosystems."

The Great Lakes hold 20 percent of the world's surface freshwater. The region includes 10,000 miles of coastline and numerous globally rare plant and animal species. In addition, the Great Lakes support a wide range of recreational and economic activities, including vibrant tourism and a sport fishery industry that contributes $4 billion to the economy.

Donald Scavia, director of U-M?s Graham Sustainability Institute. Photo courtesy of Donald ScaviaDonald Scavia, director of U-M?s Graham Sustainability Institute. "The GLRI recognized the Great Lakes as nationally important both ecologically and economically, as a provider of myriad services upon which society depends," said aquatic ecologist and Graham Sustainability Institute Director Donald Scavia, special counsel to the U-M president on sustainability issues. "It has provided a unique opportunity to build and catalyze efforts leading to major improvements in the health of the Lakes."

While the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative has been widely praised, there is great interest in integrating a stronger science base into the projects and helping to assess their cumulative environmental and economic impacts. That is the primary near-term focus of U-M's new Water Center.

The center will follow a truly collaborative approach, including regularly convening the region's science leaders, policymakers, resource managers, and other stakeholders with the aim of enhancing regional dialogue and collaboration. "This is a much needed effort to engage the broader academic community, and we are excited to be a partner in building a stronger science base for Great Lakes restoration," said Val Klump, the associate dean for research in the School of Freshwater Sciences at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.

As a first step in shaping the new center's mission, the Graham Sustainability Institute recently convened a group of more than 20 directors of U.S. and Canadian academic Great Lakes centers and institutes to discuss and develop science recommendations for the next phase of the GLRI. The group concluded that sound science must be an integral part of restoration projects.

Allen Burton, director of the new University of Michigan Water Center. Photo courtesy of Allen BurtonAllen Burton, director of the new University of Michigan Water Center. "Following the meeting, the group developed and has submitted to the Environmental Protection Agency a science strategy and implementation plan to consider for the next phase of the GLRI," said Professor Allen Burton, who will serve as director of the new center in addition to directing CILER. "Our science plan stresses that we need to determine which regions are under the greatest threat, identify factors most responsible for negatively impacting ecosystem health, and assess the effectiveness of restoration efforts over time."

To ensure broad-based input and information sharing across the Great Lakes community, the center will form an advisory group composed of science, policy and practitioner communities representing public (federal, state, tribal, local governments), private (relevant industries and/or industry associations), academic, environmental, non-governmental, and other citizen stakeholder organizations. The advisory group will provide input that helps guide future research projects undertaken by the U-M Water Center and will ensure broader communications across the Great Lakes basin.

The Fred A. and Barbara M. Erb Family Foundation was established in 2007 to institutionalize and perpetuate the family's philanthropy. The foundation's mission is to nurture environmentally healthy and culturally vibrant communities in metropolitan Detroit and to support initiatives to restore the Great Lakes basin. The foundation is particularly focused on improving water quality, especially in the watersheds impacting metropolitan Detroit and Bayfield, Ontario; promoting environmental health and justice; and supporting the arts as a means to revitalize the metropolitan Detroit region.

The U-M Water Center grant is the third grant from the Erb Foundation to the University of Michigan. In 2009, the foundation awarded $500,000 to a U-M-led research team for a project, known as the Great Lakes Environmental Assessment and Mapping project, or GLEAM, to comprehensively analyze and map various threats to the Great Lakes. Last year, the foundation provided a $200,000 challenge grant to fund third-year students at U-M Erb Institute for Global Sustainable Enterprise.

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M planet blue: the sustainable differenceU-M Sustainability fosters a more sustainable world through collaborations across campus and beyond aimed at educating students, generating new knowledge, and minimizing our environmental footprint. Learn more at sustainability.umich.edu.

Source: http://www.ns.umich.edu/new/releases/20930-u-m-launches-9-million-effort-to-strengthen-great-lakes-restoration-while-advancing-research-and-education

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Curiosity on Mars sits on rocks similar to those found in marshes in Mexico

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Millions of years ago fire and water forged the gypsum rocks locked in at Cuatro Ci?negas, a Mexican valley similar to the Martian crater where NASA's Rover Curiosity roams. A team of researchers have now analysed the bacterial communities that have survived in these inhospitable springs since the beginning of life on Earth.

"Cuatro Ci?negas is extraordinarily similar to Mars. As well as the Gale crater where Curiosity is currently located on its exploration of the red planet, this landscape is the home to gypsum formed by fire beneath the seabed," as explained to SINC by Valeria Souza, evolutionary ecologist at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM).

The researcher states that sulphur components from magma and minerals from the sea (carbonates and molecules with magnesium) are required to form gypsum. In the case of the Cuatro Ci?negas Basin, the magma under the seabed was very active. In fact, it allowed for the continent displacement during the Jurassic Period: "Here was where the supercontinent Pangea opened up some 200 million years ago, pushing the hemisphere north from the equator where it is now."

In the case of Mars, the scientists have not been able to confirm tectonic movement in its crust at any point, but they believe that a large meteorite crashed into its primitive sea. The fact that probing has detected gypsum in the Gale crater indicates that mineral-rich water was present and that sulphur was able to form due to the impact of the meteorite causing the crater.

It is no easy task to find a place on Earth similar to this Martian environment, except in Cuatro Ci?negas. For this reason astrobiologists toil in their work to understand how its bacterial communities work. "This oasis in the middle of the Chihuahua desert is a time machine for organisms that, together as a community, have transformed our blue planet yet have survived all extinctions. How they have managed to do this can be revealed by their genes," says Souza.

The team have analysed the 'metagenomes', the genome of the different bacterial communities that proliferate in these marshes by adapting parallel strategies to overcome survival challenges in a place with so little nutrients.

Green, red and blue springs

The results published in the journal 'Astrobiology' journal reflect the existence of two communities in different pits for example. One is 'green' and is formed by cyanobacteria and proteobacteria that have adapted to the lack of nitrogen. Another is 'red' and is made of Pseudomonas and other micro-organisms that live without hardly any phosphorous. There are also blue springs which are generally deeper and lacking in nutrients.

"Understanding the usage and exploitation strategies of phosphorous is necessary in understanding what could happen in extreme scenarios like on other planets where there is a possibly serious limitation to this and other nutrients," explains Luis David Alcaraz, Mexican researcher participating in the study from the Higher Public Health Research centre of Valencia, Spain.

This project has enjoyed the support of Mexico's Carlos Slim Foundation and the Technological Innovation Research Project Support Programme of UNAM. It has also received the support of the National Science Foundation (NSF) of the USA and NASA, which has been studying Cuatro Ci?negas for more than a decade.

The Cuatroci?negas Flora and Fauna Protection Area is a protected area but the scientists and conservation groups are worried that its water is being over exhausted. "The bacterial communities have survived all types of cataclysms here such as the extinction of the dinosaurs or the majority of marine creatures. But, the only thing they are not adapted for is the lack of water," warns Souza.

###

FECYT - Spanish Foundation for Science and Technology: http://www.fecyt.es/fecyt/home.do

Thanks to FECYT - Spanish Foundation for Science and Technology for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/124902/Curiosity_on_Mars_sits_on_rocks_similar_to_those_found_in_marshes_in_Mexico

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US stock markets to reopen Wednesday after storm

REUTERS - Major U.S. stock exchanges expect to reopen on Wednesday after Sandy, the worst storm to hit New York in nearly 75 years, closed trading for two days.

NYSE Euronext said the New York Stock Exchange would open as usual, although it was prepared to switch to fully electronic trading if necessary. Nasdaq OMX's Nasdaq Stock Market was also to be operating on Wednesday, as were BATS and Direct Edge Exchanges.

"We have a green light," the chief operating officer of NYSE Euronext, Larry Leibowitz, said in an interview.

All of the U.S. stock market operators took part in coordinated testing on Tuesday for trading on NYSE's backup system, should it need to be used. The exercise was also aimed at allowing member trading firms, many of which are operating on backup systems themselves due to complications from the storm, an opportunity to make sure they are ready for Wednesday.

At least 30 people were killed and millions have been left without power after Sandy slammed into the East Coast on Monday. The storm shut down most businesses in Manhattan and caused a rare flooding of the subway tunnels, which is expected to keep the system closed for several days.

U.S. exchanges originally had planned to open markets on Monday, but they eventually responded to pressure from firms worried about employee safety, as well as the inability to see markets function effectively at light staffing. It was the first time in 27 years that exchanges closed because of bad weather.

Banks, brokers and others conferred for hours on Tuesday about the feasibility of resuming trade. The storm was expected to result in tens of millions of dollars a day in lost revenue for exchanges and banks, analysts said.

After two days of closure that occurred during the busy corporate earnings season and at the end of the fiscal year for certain funds, trading is likely to be volatile.

"At least in the early trade I expect an overreaction regardless of the direction. I expect to see a lot of volume at least in the first hour," said Art Hogan, managing director of Lazard Capital Markets in New York.

The NYSE, which accounts for about a quarter of U.S. stock market trading volume, tested the possibility of routing trades through its electronic platform, Leibowitz said. Under normal conditions it handles about half its volume through its trading floor at 11 Wall Street, where traders and specialists buy and sell stocks in person.

Many of NYSE's member trading firms including the top 25, which make up more than 90 percent of volume on the exchange, took part in the tests, Leibowitz said.

"Tomorrow will not be without hiccups, but will be good enough that the market will be fine," he said.

The NYSE had said on Sunday afternoon it planned to close its trading floor and to move all trading to its electronic market. It backtracked on that idea after traders and regulators expressed concern - given the difficulties and low staffing levels due to the storm - about moving everything to the all-electronic venue, a plan tested on March 31 but never used live.

An industrywide testing session was held in the morning. Rival exchange Nasdaq also conducted its own tests, as did BATS, the No. 3 U.S. equities exchange.

There were some issues at the beginning of the BATS tests, mostly related to members having trouble getting into Manhattan due to flooding and transportation problems, but those issues were resolved by midday, said Chris Isaacson, BATS' COO.

"The majority of our members connected today," he said.

The industry also tested things like volatility trading pauses to handle any abnormal volatility in securities, including NYSE-listed securities, he said.

"I expect normal trading tomorrow," said Isaacson.

Bond markets were also closed on Tuesday. Financial industry trade group SIFMA said it is recommending the market reopen on Wednesday.

September 2001 was the last extended period of time that exchanges closed. The New York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq closed on September 11, a Tuesday, after the World Trade Center attacks and did not reopen until six days later, on September 17, the following Monday.

"It would be unprecedented to have three days of closure from a weather-related emergency, and the greater point is that American markets do not want to be perceived as anything other than reliable," said Mike Shea, managing partner and trader at Direct Access Partners LLC in New York.

"That's really the issue. An emergency like September 11 was different."

Kenneth Polcari, long-time floor trader at the NYSE, said he was still waiting to hear how the exchange would get the direct market-makers - the specialists who facilitate buy and sell orders - to the floor.

"If they aren't there and they still trade, then there is no reason for them to have those guys at all," he said.

Leibowitz said there was no plan to end floor trading at NYSE. "We think there is a role for people and judgment and responsibility. Just because you can run with technology alone doesn't mean it's the best way to run."

Recent high-profile technical snafus like the glitch that prevented BATS' market debut on its own exchange, Facebook's botched IPO on Nasdaq, and Knight Capital Group's near-fatal trading glitch have increased scrutiny of electronic trading. Nasdaq, BATS and Direct Edge are fully electronic.

MANY BANKS OPENING, SLOWLY

Plans to resume trading will be complicated by the lingering effect of the storm on New York. Sandy brought a record storm surge that flooded subway tunnels, and subway service is not likely to resume for four to five days, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said on Tuesday.

JPMorgan Chase & Co , the largest U.S. bank, expects many employees will be able to return to buildings starting on Wednesday, according to an internal memo obtained by Reuters.

One of Citigroup's main investment banking buildings, at 388 Greenwich Street in Manhattan near the Hudson River, had minor flooding, and was without power, an internal memo said. A smaller Citigroup building also by the Hudson River was running on a generator. The bank expects both to be accessible within two days.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc's offices in Lower Manhattan and Jersey City, New Jersey, on opposite sides of the Hudson River, were not open on Tuesday, and by early afternoon the bank was still not sure whether they would open on Wednesday, after sustaining minor amounts of flooding.

Morgan Stanley , whose headquarters is in the less-affected Times Square area, said it expects to be open for business and functioning when U.S. markets open.

Both banks had other offices open for employees to work from outside New York City through the hurricane, as well as remote access for many of their staff.

POTENTIAL FOR VOLATILITY

When markets do open Wednesday, it could come with a burst of volatility after a two-day shutdown in the middle of earnings season and just days before the November 6 U.S. presidential election. Undoubtedly, some investors will try to game out what sectors and stocks will be helped or hindered by the storm, but the broader economic effect should be limited.

"You have earnings, a heavy economic data calendar, the election cycle, it's a catalyst-rich market sitting idle for a few days and there could be an unusual reaction. We have to get through the first hour and see where the chips fall after that," said Hogan at Lazard Capital.

Some companies, including Pfizer Inc , the largest U.S. drug maker, delayed the release of results until the storm passed, but others released theirs on schedule.

Tim Ralph, a money manager at Biltmore Capital in Princeton, New Jersey, said utilities and casino companies will take financial hits from the storm, noting in particular the level of overtime that the utilities will be paying out as they deal with downed lines and power outages.

He expects shares of Verizon , Comcast and Consolidated Edison to fall sharply once trading resumes.

Brian Gendreau, market strategist with Cetera Financial Group, said markets tend to rebound to their previous levels within five days after natural disasters.

"The U.S. is a very big economy, and while the magnitude of this storm could be in the billions it's actually very small in relation to GDP," he said.

Because Wednesday is also the end of the fiscal year for some mutual funds, there could be some volatility in markets as mutual funds sell underperformers by the end of trading on that day in order to avoid taxes on some of their portfolio gains.

Eric Marshall, who co-manages five mutual funds at Hodges Capital in Dallas, said his firm is moving all of the selling it had planned to do Monday and Tuesday to Wednesday.

"This is going to drive volatility on top of what we're already expecting from the aftermath of the storm," he said. (Reporting by John McCrank in New York and Sakthi Prasad in Bangalore; Additional reporting by Ryan Vlastelica, Jed Horowitz, Chuck Mikolajczak, Rodrigo Campos, Linda Stern, David K. Randall and Lauren Tara LaCapra in New York; Writing by Dan Wilchins and David Gaffen; Editing by Dale Hudson, Andrew Hay, Leslie Adler and Gary Hill)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-stock-markets-reopen-wednesday-storm-010048440--finance.html

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Smoke-free laws led quickly to fewer hospitalizations

ScienceDaily (Oct. 29, 2012) ? Smoke-free legislation was associated with substantially fewer hospitalizations and deaths from heart and respiratory diseases, according to research in the American Heart Association journal Circulation.

Researchers reviewed 45 studies covering 33 smoke-free laws at the local and state levels around the United States and from countries as varied as Uruguay, New Zealand and Germany and found:

  • Comprehensive smoke-free laws were associated with a rapid 15 percent decrease in heart attack hospitalizations and 16 percent decrease in stroke hospitalizations.
  • Smoke-free laws were also rapidly followed by a 24 percent decrease in hospitalizations for respiratory diseases, including asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
  • The most comprehensive laws -- those covering workplaces, restaurants and bars -- resulted in the highest health benefits.

"The public, health professionals and policy makers need to understand that including exemptions and loopholes in legislation -- such as exempting casinos -- condemns more people to end up in emergency rooms," said Stanton Glantz, Ph.D., senior study author and director of the Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education at the University of California, San Francisco. "These unnecessary hospitalizations are the real cost of failing to enact comprehensive smoke-free legislation."

The findings support the American Heart Association's position that smoke-free laws should be comprehensive and apply to all workplaces and public environments, including restaurants, bars and casinos. The analysis also is consistent with other studies that have found smoke-free laws were followed by significant decreases in acute heart attack and other cardiac-related hospital admissions.

"Stronger legislation means immediate reductions in secondhand smoke-related health problems as a byproduct of reductions in secondhand smoke exposure and increases in smoking cessation that accompany these laws," Glantz said. "Passage of these laws formalize and accelerate social change and the associated immediate health benefits."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Heart Association.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Crystal E. Tan and Stanton A. Glantz. Association Between Smoke-Free Legislation and Hospitalizations for Cardiac, Cerebrovascular, and Respiratory Diseases: A Meta-Analysis. Circulation, 2012;126:2177-2183 DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.112.121301

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/_1Fj5zSVG8s/121029170936.htm

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Is flat universe same thing as infinite universe?


The observable part of the universe is, within the limits of our current ability to determine it, flat. This could imply several possibilities for the topology of the whole universe.

- The universe is infinite and flat.
- The universe is infinite and our bit is flat.
- The universe is some sort of, very large, hypertorus, which is locally everywhere flat.
- The universe is some sort of, very large, hypersphere, so big that we cannot detect curvature in our bit.
- The universe has some unknown topology, and our bit is apparently flat.

I doubt this exhausts the possibilities, or expresses them very well. I'd guess that evidence, if any, for or against any of them will not come from local observation, but some sort of implication derived from topological physical theory.

Source: http://cosmoquest.org/forum/showthread.php/139117-Is-flat-universe-same-thing-as-infinite-universe

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Tuesday, October 30, 2012

YouTube Is Testing Out A New Design For Pages With More Navigation Options

4481461680_4273d06822_zMost companies tend to test new features and product designs in the wild with a small subset of people. The great thing about that is on the Internet, the world is a tiny place. A few tipsters have sent in some screenshots and a video of a new design that YouTube is testing out, and we've confirmed that it's legitimate.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/AlkBHiRaWjg/

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Disney acquires Lucasfilm for $4.05 billion, plans more Star Wars movies

Disney acquires Lucasfilm for $405 billion, plans more Star Wars movies

Disney is already one of the biggest media companies around, and it's now set to become even bigger. The company announced late today that it's acquiring Lucasfilm Ltd., currently 100 percent owned by founder George Lucas, for $4.05 billion in a cash and stock deal. That of course includes the rights to both the Star Wars and Indiana Jones film franchises, as well as Lucasfilm properties like Industrial Light & Magic and Skywalker Sound. What's more, the press release announcing the deal also confirmed that Disney is now targeting 2015 for a release of Star Wars: Episode 7, and that its "long term plan is to release a new Star Wars feature film every two to three years." No word yet on a proper release of the original, original trilogy.

Continue reading Disney acquires Lucasfilm for $4.05 billion, plans more Star Wars movies

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Disney acquires Lucasfilm for $4.05 billion, plans more Star Wars movies originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 30 Oct 2012 16:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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A Fascist Party in Full Cry. Black-Shirts Smashing Migrants' Homes ...

Dressed in black shirts with faces hidden by helmets, ten men on motorbikes came to find him on a Saturday, after darkness fell.

Finding the door bolted at his home in a pot-holed Athens side street, they smashed the windows, broke in and trashed the place. Then, their dirty work done, the neo-Nazi gang roared away into the hot evening. It had taken less than a minute for them to sound an ugly warning that foreigners were not welcome in Greece.

Their target was Imam Shahbaz Siddiqi, a 42-year-old spiritual leader of the Greek capital?s 500,000 Muslims. ?I was at the mosque praying when they searched for me the other night,? he told me yesterday. ?I thank God for that, or else I might now be dead.

?During the night I went three times to the police station to report the break-in. At the desk I was told that the officers did not have time to investigate my complaint. They were too busy. There is one law for the Greek people and another for us immigrants.?

The attack on Imam Siddiqi is the latest racist outrage by neo-Nazis in a country riddled with xenophobia. In an era of crushing debt and poverty, the immigrant is blamed for almost every Greek ill.

On the same weekend, a young Pakistani immigrant, Hussein Abbas, was viciously attacked outside his home in Elefsina on the outskirts of Athens by the men in dark shirts. He ended up in hospital, his face smashed to a bloody pulp.

So dangerous are the streets for foreigners that the U.S. State Department has sent out a warning to dark-skinned American visitors that they must be careful of their safety when they leave their hotels.

A shocking internet video shows leaders of the anti-immigrant Far-Right Golden Dawn party ? which has 18 MPs ? marching into an ethnic street market at Rafina, an hour?s drive from Athens, destroying the stalls with wooden clubs and scattering the merchandise to the ground.

?We found a few illegal immigrants selling their wares without permits,? says Giorgos Germenis, one of the party?s MPs. ?We did what our party has to do and then went to church to pay respects to the Madonna.?

Of course, it is not just immigrants who are subject to the fury of the Greek masses. Last week German Chancellor Angela Merkel visited Athens to taunts from 50,000 protesters, many waving swastikas and dressed in Nazi uniforms.

There were banners proclaiming ?From Hitler to Merkel?, which harked back to the hated Nazi occupation of Greece during World War II ? and which surely made a mockery of the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to the EU last week.

The German Chancellor, too, is blamed for the social turmoil crippling this country, which faces further austerity cutbacks on her orders and those of eurozone finance ministers.

The descent of Greece into chaos could not be more different from the halcyon days after the country joined the European Union 31 years ago, and then milked the system for all its worth.

Early retirement, generous state-paid pensions, countless millions on the public payroll and institutionalised tax fraud were a way of life. Hairdressers, for example, were listed among the 600 ?professions? allowed to retire at 50 with a state pension of 95 per cent of their final year?s earnings on account of the ?arduous and perilous? nature of their work.

Now the big, fat EU gravy train has hit the buffers, drastic austerity measures mean pay rates and pensions have been slashed and taxes are going sky high in a frantic bid to balance the books. The retirement age is to be raised to 67.

Greece is in its fifth consecutive year of recession, something that no European country has endured in the past 65 years, except in wartime. Half of the young are jobless and a third of stores in Athens have closed.

And yet the EU is demanding a further ?12 billion of spending cuts before they will hand over another emergency bailout of ?35?billion to stop the country going bankrupt.

Soup kitchens are feeding once well-to-do Athenians and homeless hostels are full of the middle class who have been forced to sell their homes and are struggling to take in what has befallen them so fast. Little wonder there is such anger on the streets.

Some speculate that civil breakdown and the unravelling of democracy in Greece may be just around the corner.

Last week as Chancellor Merkel visited, protests were outlawed in Athens. No one took the slightest notice of the rules, as Molotov cocktails were hurled by rioters at police guarding parliament and ordinary people cheered them on.

It is from this cauldron of bewilderment and fury that the neo- Nazis and their triumphant party, Golden Dawn, have emerged with such sudden popularity.

As 71-year-old Doukas Thanassis, queuing for lentils in a smart grey suit at a church-run soup kitchen in central Athens, told me defiantly: ?I voted for the party. They are the only ones who help us in this time of trouble.

?Every Wednesday you can buy the party?s newspaper at the local street kiosk. It prints a list of places where Golden Dawn hand out food and even medicines to the Greek people. They pay for ambulances to take us to hospital if we are ill.?

Mr Thanassis, the former head chef on a Greek cruise line who lives in a homeless hostel, adds: ?These free gifts are only for us Greeks, not for foreigners. The meat in the sandwiches they give us is pork so the Muslim migrants don?t come and scrounge it. These foreigners shouldn?t be here anyway.?

Beside him, others in the queue nod approvingly.

Even Prime Minister Antonis Samaras, leader of the New Democracy party (Centre Right) running an unruly coalition with Left-wingers, blames Greece?s woes on ?waves of illegal immigrants? from Pakistan, Bangladesh, India and north and sub-Saharan Africa, who smuggle themselves over the Turkish border for a new life.

Mr Samaras says that with 1.5 million recent arrivals in a country of 11 million Greeks, the immigrants are ?creating extremism? and feeding the extraordinary popularity of Golden Dawn.

When I visited Greece in May, Golden Dawn was a name that was barely whispered. Today the party has a foothold in parliament ? with 18 of the 300 seats ? and talk of the neo-Nazi party?s popularity is on everyone?s lips.

In cafes, taxis and bars, Greeks of all ages and social backgrounds discuss the latest official poll prediction that Golden Dawn would claim 22 per cent of the vote ? rather than the 6.9 per cent it garnered in June?s national poll ? if a general election were called tomorrow. Almost a quarter of those under 25 support the party.

If the same political swing was happening in Britain, it would mean that 60 Parliamentary seats would be in the hands of extreme Right-wingers.

?And don?t compare these people to the British National Party or the English Defence League,? a Greek professor warned recently. ?They make the BNP look like Julie Andrews.?

It is an open secret that a Greek who thinks he has a problem with migrants can call a special number at Golden Dawn to get their brutal style of help.

I was told the disturbing story of an Athenian lady of 60 whose central city apartment with wood floors and fine drapes was taken over by Pakistani and Bangladeshi squatters while she visited her family in Crete.

She returned to find the door barred and graffiti at the entrance to the block telling the owner to stay away.

She called the special number. A man on the line told her to stay with friends for a week and everything would be all right, so she took the advice.

Seven days on, she went back to her apartment. The place was empty of the interlopers. The curtains had been cleaned, the floor polished, and she moved back in. Urban myth, ethnic cleansing or proof that Golden Dawn gets things done? Many Greeks prefer to believe the last of these.

As 54-year-old Agnes Bakas, sitting in the sun at a coffee bar in Attika Square, Athens, said: ?Every Athenian knows Golden Dawn will send their people to help a Greek.?

On the white wall behind her, a Nazi swastika is painted and the kiosk selling newspapers under the trees is a known meeting place for young Golden Dawn supporters who gather menacingly with their motorbikes and black shirts.

But this does not bother Agnes. She says: ?This square was full of immigrants, but Golden Dawn cleared them out. I was robbed seven times before that near my home down the road. Even my necklace was pulled from me by an African. I could not have sat here safely, even in the day, a year ago.?

Whatever the accuracy of her story, Golden Dawn has taken full advantage of claims of immigrant crime. The party has widespread support among the rank-and-file Greek police (the Golden Dawn vote soared at the polling booths near police stations in Athens) and peddles the line that 37 Greeks have been killed by immigrants in the past few years.

A vicious attack and rape of a 15-year-old Greek girl by a Pakistani illegal migrant aged 23 on the island of Paros this summer played into the party?s hands. The Pakistani admitted the crime and the girl, battered over the head with a rock, is still in intensive care in a hospital near her home in Athens.

Academics in Greece warn of disturbing parallels between the rise of the Right today in an economically crippled country indebted to the EU and the rise of the Nazis in the Thirties after hyper-inflation in Germany?s Weimar Republic led to economic collapse.

Between the wars, you may recall, an indebted Germany was forced to make huge reparation payments to the victorious Allies of the Great War as a punishment for starting the conflict. The German people felt humiliated, just as the Greeks feel hostile to their eurozone masters and Mrs Merkel today.

The Nazis claimed their first parliamentary seats even as they were garnering the local support of Germans by sending out gangs of ?storm troopers? to terrorise Jewish and immigrant communities and blame them for the troubles of the time. It sounds horribly familiar.

As Nickos Dermetzis, a professor of political science at the Athens University, explains: ?We have a major socio-economic crisis in which native Greeks are losing ground. You also have a rising number of immigrants, many illegal.

?This is a volcanic situation where all the classic parameters for the flourishing of a Far-Right force such as Gold Dawn are present.?

Of course, it does not help that police are struggling to cope with the huge numbers of illegal immigrants arriving daily in Greece. Their sweeps of immigrants happen regularly in Athens and the port of Patras, a three-hour drive away, where a thousand immigrants doss down in disused factory buildings near the promenade. They wait, hoping to smuggle themselves on to freight and passenger ferries going to Italy.

Ten days ago, 350 Afghanis, Pakistanis and Bangladeshis were picked up in Patras and put in holding centres. As one disgruntled resident, a man in his 50s living near the promenade, said: ?They only took a few and so many are here. I am no racist, but this town used to be paradise. The police sweeps are a merry-go-round. The ones they took today will be back next week, wait and see.?

It is a viewpoint supported by Andreas Nicolacopoulos. The 59-year-old architect is a leading light in the Patras Golden Dawn party.

?The Greek people don?t want illegal immigrants,? he says. ?They have to be deported to their own countries. We have to stop them coming in, too. We will lay landmines at the Turkish-Greek border to blow them up so they do not enter our country. We have promised our voters this.?

Golden Dawn also wants to make immigrant criminals serve double the prison terms of their Greek counterparts and introduce capital punishment for foreign murderers.

Back in Athens, I meet Golden Dawn?s spokesman, MP Iliopoulos Panagiotis, at the Greek Parliament building.

The face of this 34-year-old former internet marketing executive can be seen clearly on the video of immigrants being attacked at the market by Golden Dawn?s louts.

Mr Panagiotis is in bullish form. He boasts that the party is so popular that at the next election it will be the second biggest in Greece. ?In a few years, we expect to be the biggest of them all,? he says.

The party?s MPs arrogantly puff on? cigarettes even though smoking is banned inside the parliament building. They wear black shirts with the word ?Hooligans? emblazoned in orange on the sleeve. They have tattoos on their arms.

And on the walls are the blue flags stamped with the party?s swastika-style logo, an ancient Greek symbol.

The official Golden Dawn line is that they are not Nazis, even neo-Nazis, but nationalists wanting to save Greece for the Greek.

So what does Mr Panagiotis plan for illegal immigrants? ?We will fly every one of them home,? he says.

?Even Pakistan would not dare shoot our planes down when their own people are on board and would be killed.?

And what does he think of the racist Golden Dawn gangs that systematically beat up those who were not born Greek?

?We have a million supporters, some of them wilder elements. We cannot control them all,? he says with a smirk.

It is hard to believe that his words are those of an elected MP in the Parliament of a modern democracy. Yet anything is possible now in Greece, as the unpalatable face of fascism makes an unwelcome return to Europe.

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Source: http://www.amren.com/news/2012/10/a-fascist-party-in-full-cry-black-shirts-smashing-migrants-homes-swastikas-on-the-streets-no-not-germany-in-the-thirties-greece-2012/

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Full Moon 'Fright Night': Watch the Hunter's Moon Live Online Tonight

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Monday, October 29, 2012

Exchange Board Poised To OK Sale of Certain Vision Plans ...

On Tuesday, the California Health Benefit Exchange board is expected to approve proposed policy changes that would allow the sale of stand-alone vision plans to individual customers in the exchange, the Sacramento Bee reports (Kasler, Sacramento Bee, 10/27).

About the Exchange

The federal health reform law requires states to launch online insurance marketplaces by 2014. The California Health Benefit Exchange primarily will serve individuals and small businesses.

About 4.4 million Californians are expected to use the exchange by the end of 2016. Officials plan to open registration for the exchange in October 2013.

Background on Sale of Vision Plans

In August, the exchange board voted to allow stand-alone vision plans to be sold to small businesses. However, it decided not to allow the plans to be sold to individual customers because permitting an individual to purchase eye care insurance from a separate company would necessitate splitting subsidies between the individual's main insurance and vision coverage.

Exchange staffers said that the agency decided that the task of splitting subsidies was too difficult to manage in the first year of operating the exchange.

After the board made its decision, Vision Service Plan of Rancho Cordova announced it might relocate its headquarters to another state if it does not have access to individual customers in the exchange.

Last month, the exchange board said it would revisit the decision.

VSP said it would delay hiring 150 workers until the board comes to a final decision.

Meanwhile, another eye care insurer, Superior Vision Services, filed a protest this month against the exchange board's original decision.

In a letter to the exchange board, Rick Corbett -- CEO of Superior Vision Services -- wrote that it is a mistake not to allow the plans to be sold to individual customers. He wrote, "Nearly 60 million people are covered by stand-alone plans throughout the country" (California Healthline, 10/5).

Details of Proposed Changes

In a memo sent to the board on Friday, exchange staffers proposed allowing the sale of stand-alone vision plans to adults.

They also recommended allowing the sale of such plans for children, but they said that the agency first needs to clarify how certain provisions in the health reform law would affect the process.

Reactions to Proposed Changes

Pat McNeil -- corporate communications director for VSP Global -- said the group is "pleased" with the recommendation and "hopeful for a positive vote"

In a statement, Senate President Pro Tempore Darrell Steinberg (D-Sacramento) said, "Offering stand-alone vision in the individual market not only makes sense, it provides the better option for California consumers," adding, "It also enhances the market for California vision care providers by allowing more participation in the exchange" (Robertson, Sacramento Business Journal, 10/26).

Source: http://www.californiahealthline.org/articles/2012/10/29/exchange-board-expected-to-ok-sale-of-certain-vision-plans.aspx

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@SeventhGen Cleaning Products Review + How to Make a Tissue ...

When you have kids, sometimes it seems like all you do is clean. While we love our little tornadoes of destruction dearly, most of them during their younger years do truly leave a mess behind faster than we can pick it up. That combined with normal household cleaning, and everything else a parent does, means a mom?s work is never done.
Not only do I clean a lot more since having kids, I also have become more conscious about what we use for cleaning. Some of the store bought products out there have some pretty scary ingredients that are not only bad for my family, but bad for the environment as well. I?ve been watching labels on what we use and making some switches and one of the new brands we?ve recently been trying out is Seventh Generation.

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A leading brand of household and personal care products that help protect human health and the environment, Seventh Generation was established in 1988 in Burlington, Vermont. Today it remains an independent, privately-held business distributing products to natural food stores, supermarkets, mass merchants, and online retailers across the United States and Canada.
Offering a full line of paper products, cleaning products, health and beauty products, baby care and laundry care, Seventh Generation offers a full line of environmentally friendly options for families on a budget. While I had purchased and used Seventh Generation products in the past, I didn?t realize how many different product options that they had available for the whole family from laundry soap, to cleaning supplies, to diapers and more.

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We were recently sent a selection of Seventh Generation products, hand soaps and tissues to try out and it was a great reminder on why I really like this line up for my family. With natural ingredients, it makes me feel better using these products in my home where my kids play. I also love supporting a company that has such strong missions that they support.
With cold and flu season here, I?ve been really trying to keep everything very clean and germ free to keep sickness at bay, and while I loved all the Seventh Generation products we tried out, our favorites were the hand soaps. Easy on the skin with a nice gentle scent, we?ve been using them often lately as my little man is potty training and we have to go to the bathroom and wash our hands what feels like hundreds of times a day.
For more information on Seventh Generation product visit?www.seventhgeneration.com?and look for them at retailers everywhere. Watch for our Seventh Generation Giveaway coming soon and be sure to check out this video of how to make a super cute tissue box monster!

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Source: http://twokidsandacoupon.com/2012/10/seventhgen-cleaning-products-review-tissue-box-monster-craft.html?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=seventhgen-cleaning-products-review-tissue-box-monster-craft

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R&B singer Natina Reed hit and killed by car in Georgia

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First Bites: Brooklyn Sandwich Society, Dishing Unique 'Wiches in ...

Even though the name Brooklyn Sandwich Society invokes the idea of an exclusive club for members-only hoagies, there is nothing secret, stuffy, or exclusive about chef Andres Valbuena?s Fort Greene restaurant. Located in what used to be a German coffee-shop-cum-diner called Catherine?s Caffe that closed in December 2011, the Brooklyn Sandwich Society aims to bring farm-to-table eats to the neighborhood using the most user-friendly vessel possible: a sandwich.

?We thought sandwiches were a great way to get people to try different things,? said co-owner Melissa Gorman. ?If there is something weird we want to cook with, people are more willing to try it in sandwich form.?

Hence, they offer six seasonal sandwiches stuffed with all sorts of interesting things including pan-fried squid, shiso, kimchi aioli and roasted leeks. All of this gets pressed between local fresh bread and you can get a gluten-free version for an extra $3. Each creation gets a local name, like The Grand: a squid sandwich, which comes with baby bok choy, cilantro, and hot and sour glaze on ciabatta. The Myrtle, named after the avenue nearby that used to be referred to as ?Murder Avenue,? gets filled with aged Bloomsday cheese, sauerkraut, horseradish aioli and slow-braised beef brisket. For you non-meat eaters out there, they give you the St. Edwards, a miso-glazed tofu with shitake mushroom, cilantro and sambal aioli.


Sandwiches aren?t this joint's only game. They also have a whole menu of small plates including steamed wild mussels with fava bean tendrils, young leeks, and fried bread; roasted sunchokes with a tarragon and Meyer lemon cr?me fraiche; a juicy duck meatball with green endive and the strange, but good, Long Island squid stuffed with braised oxtail in a saffron broth.

For drinks the eatery offers an array of beer and wine - the beer runs local(ish) with brews from Sixpoint Brewery, Brooklyn Brewery, and Sly Fox Brewing Co. On the inexpensive wine list they have choices including a $36 bottle of Damilano 2010 Nebbiolo D?Alba, Leth 2011 Gruner Veltliner Reserve for $38, and a decent house red and white for $25 a bottle or $7 a glass.

Before Valbuena and Gorman were serving Fort Greene, the couple hosted Brooklyn Edible Social Club for three years out of their apartment. As the supper club grew in popularity, they decided it was time open an actual shop. At first, they looked near their Bedford-Stuyvesant home, but found nothing really spoke to them until they stumbled on the space in Fort Greene.

?We definitely weren?t thinking about this neighborhood because it?s expensive,? said Gorman. ?But, the space is perfect.?

Aside from keeping the basic structure of the shop, they refurbished the rest of the eatery to give the space the look of an apartment. This means the lights are low and intimate, the service laidback, the furniture worn yet sturdy, and the walls are decorated in den-like objects including animal heads, vintage prints and antique mirrors. They have also added a rustic wainscoting made from old doors, painted the pressed-tin ceiling white, and covered some of the walls in subway tiles. They turned what used to be the coffee counter into a bar, and raised it up slightly to make it appear separate from the dining area.

So far, the restaurant is open every day save Monday, and soon, they said, they will start serving brunch and lunch. They also have a roomy backyard that will be up and going next spring.

Brooklyn Sandwich Society: 184 DeKalb Ave., Brooklyn, New York; 718-596-4147

Source: http://blog.zagat.com/2012/10/first-bites-brooklyn-sandwich-society.html

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High Techpectations: Leadership for Mobile Learning Resources ...

  • Tags: iPad, iPads, guide, blog

  • Tags: mobile, development

  • Tags: iPad, iPads, news, problems, AUP

  • Tags: amazon, kindle, whispercast

  • Tags: Amazon, kindle, Whispercast

  • Tags: Intel, international, news, Lebanon

  • Tags: iPad, iPads, news, 1:1, ME, independent, school

  • Tags: news, TX, Kuno, tablet, Android

  • Tags: BYOD, BYOT, news, WI, iPads, iPad

  • Tags: news, NH, Dell, 1:1, laptop

  • Tags: news, WA, iPad, iPads, 1:1

  • Tags: news, OH, iPad, iPads

  • Tags: iPad, iPads, news, problems, OH

  • Tags: amazon, whispercast, kindle

  • Tags: news, ID, laptops

  • Tags: PencilsofPromise, build, schools, project, global_education

  • Tags: Apple, iPad, iPads

  • But as we?ve said before, experience is what matters most on a mobile device, not whiz-bang specs. And in that regard, Apple certainly shines.

    Tags: Wired, Apple, iPad, comparison, devices, charts

  • Tim Cook said there are 2,500 classrooms using iBooks textbooks right now, which Madan says is still a relatively small number. He does expect, however, for that to increase in the coming years. As schools allocate money to set up computer labs with limited funds, many find they can do it for less with iPads. The ?computer lab? has become the ?iPad lab? and the lower price of the iPad mini helps even more.

    Tags: apple, tablets, iPad, iPads

  • The next wave of that impact won't come from iBooks 3 or the new version of iBooks Author, which are both nice, but relatively minor updates. If anything from Tuesday's event will help push digital textbook adoption forward, it's the hardware. Specifically, the iPad Mini. By offering a $329 tablet, Apple suddenly made iPad adoption notably more affordable for cash-strapped school districts. Apple also released the fourth generation 10-inch iPad, which should help drive down the price of the company's older devices as well.?

    Tags: apple, iPad, iPads

  • Tags: mobile learning, apps, edutopia

  • Tags: mobile learning, learning, apps

  • Tags: mobile learning, learning, apps, edutopia

  • Tags: mobile learning, social, networks, mobile, devices, CoSN, Keith_Krueger

  • Tags: mobile, tablets, early, childhood, news, IL, CPS, Hatch, iStartSmart

  • Tags: samsung, khan, academy, pilot, CA, Galaxy, Android

  • Tags: news, NY, tablets, Pearson, admin, concerns

  • Tags: New, OH, BYOD, BYOT

  • "Paulding County high school students can now use cell phones and tablets in class to enhance lessons."

    Tags: BYOD, BYOT, TX, news

  • Hawaii?s proposed budget for the next biennium, which the Ed Board approved last week, calls for spending more than $14 million next fiscal year and about $22 million the following year to buy laptops and tablets for students.

    Tags: HI, news, iPad, iPads

  • Tags: iPad, iPads, pilot, international, school, blog

  • "Follow us as Ms Sebesan's 8th grade Algebra 1 and Physical Science classes at the American International School of Chennai explore the wonders of IPads!"

    Tags: iPad, iPads, pilot, international, school, blog

  • Tags: Idaho, ID, news, HP

  • Tags: tablet, devices

  • According to a mobile learning report released today from Blackboard Inc. and Project Tomorrow?, nearly 50 percent of high schoolers and 40 percent of middle schoolers now own or have access to a smartphone or tablet, marking a 400 percent increase since 2007. The report, which compares key opportunities and challenges in mobile device usage among K-12 students, finds that with this widespread adoption, more schools and school districts are considering the incorporation of mobile devices into instruction

    Tags: mobile, learning, research, mobile learning, Project, Tomorrow

  • Tags: Project, Tomorrow, stats, research, report

  • Tags: Thailand, tablets, international

  • "It?s that last part that intrigues me, however. I know that many, many families and schools will be hard-pressed to digest even the 16 GB Wi-Fi model at $329 in K-12 -- ?educational discounts notwithstanding. As we know, Mr. Cook likes to brag about how well the iPads are doing in schools, but two factors remain missing: a really affordable price and strong corporate initiatives in the K-12 marketplace. Is Apple missing an opportunity?"

    Tags: news, iPad, pricing, device, comparison

  • Sixty-two percent of parents surveyed said they would buy their child a mobile device if it would be used for academic purposes.

    "Many parents, teachers and administrators are now mobile device users themselves, which has increased their appreciation and understanding for how these devices can support and enhance learning," said Julie Evans, chief executive officer of Project Tomorrow.

    Tags: Project, Tomorrow

  • The report, titled Learning in the 21st Century: Mobile Devices + Social Media = Personalized Learning, was released at the recent iNACOL Virtual School Symposium in New Orleans.

    Tags: Project, Tomorrow

  • Tags: ipad, blog, specialed, Special Education

  • Tags: iPad, iPads, news, MA, pilot

  • Tags: ipad, pilot, program, video, YouTube

  • Bookmark

    Tags: iPad, iPads, news

  • Tags: news, IN, netbooks

  • Tags: news, netbooks, IL

  • Tags: iPad, iPads, pilot, MA, documentation, guide

  • Tags: ipad, pilot, international, Canada, blog, blogger

  • . The rest of

    are here.

    Source: http://www.lucygray.org/weblog/2012/10/leadership-for-mobile-learning-resources-weekly-3.html

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