Friday, May 24, 2013

James, Bryant voted to All-NBA first team

NEW YORK (AP) ? LeBron James was a unanimous pick for the All-NBA team and Kobe Bryant earned his record-tying 11th first-team selection.

James received all 119 votes for the first team from a panel of sportswriters and broadcasters throughout the U.S. and Canada. Joining the league's MVP and Bryant on the first team Thursday were Oklahoma City's Kevin Durant, San Antonio center Tim Duncan and Clippers guard Chris Paul.

Bryant tied Utah Hall of Famer Karl Malone with his 11th first-team nod.

NBA scoring leader Carmelo Anthony led the second team, joined by guards Russell Westbrook and Tony Parker, center Marc Gasol and forward Blake Griffin.

The third team was Houston's James Harden, Miami's Dwyane Wade, Lakers center Dwight Howard and forwards Paul George of Indiana and David Lee of Golden State.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/james-bryant-voted-nba-first-team-175827912.html

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Frances Bean Cobain Slams Kendall Jenner On Twitter ? Did She Go Too Far?

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Kurt Cobain and Courtney Love?s kid, Frances Bean Cobain, is 20 years-old now (!!!!!!!87328!W276e###!2/mind exploding). She?s very outspoken and she took the time to slam Kendall Jenner, Miss. Non-Kardashian. Miss Jenner tweeted,

Just wish things could be easier sometimes mann

To which Miss Cobain responded on twitter,

oh shh. There are kids on earth abandoned&homeless who forcibly drink contaminated water because clean water isn?t accessible

and then,

oh ya, not to mention, CANCER, famine, poverty, draught, disease, natural disasters, Death. Fuck, Humans are so self involved

See, I was with Miss Frances Bean Cobain right up until her second response, because saying ?humans are so self involved? in a twitter attack on Kendall Jenner seems kind of self involved to me. It?s the ?high and mightiness? of it all, even if her point is a good one. But yeah, everyone hates a Kardashian, even one who isn?t, and seriously, Kendall Jenner has never had to want for anything. I just really wished Angry Beans stopped before she added that she?d,

rather be a scumbag than a f-cking idiot. Praise high IQ?s, good taste & awareness about the state of the world

and,

I?d like to thank my parents for providing me with a high IQ & I?d like to thank my grams for encouraging me not to be a self absorbed idiot.

Like, come on, you?re 20. Sit down, chill out, and don?t humblebrag about your ?high IQ? and your parents.

But if forced to choose a side, I?ll go with Angry Beans.

?

Thanks to Huffington Post for chronicling this.

May 22, 2013 at 4:30 pm by Catherine St. Ives

Source: http://www.evilbeetgossip.com/2013/05/22/frances-bean-cobain-slams-kendall-jenner-on-twitter-did-she-go-too-far/

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The School of Internet Marketing Launches Weekly Podcast Series ...

Weekly Podcasts to Deliver Content on Marketing Small Business on the Internet Effectively

Vancouver, British Columbia (PRWEB) May 23, 2013

Podcast use is on the rise and is projected to continue to grow. According to The Podcast Consumer 2012, a study of podcast use in America from Edison Research and Arbitron, 29% of all Americans have listened to an audio podcast. One in four podcast consumers plug their MP3 players or smartphones into their car audio system ?nearly every day.? One of the reasons that podcasts have become so popular is because of the increased use of mobile and smartphones. They all have a built in MP3 players, which allows the users to listen to the podcast wherever they may be.

The School of Internet Marketing, a virtual business school that empowers small business owners to take back control of their Internet presence, has launched a weekly podcast series on Spreaker web radio. The podcasts, all under 20 minutes in length, can be listened to from any device that will play MP3s. The podcasts are hosted by James Martell, VP of Business Development for The School of Internet Marketing. Martell is an Internet pioneer who discovered the lucrative world of the Internet in 1999. He is a leading expert in affiliate marketing, SEO & outsourcing.

A new podcast is added each week and the topics include:

?YouTube for Small Business

?Attract New Customers Using Facebook

?Affiliate Marketing for Merchants

?A Window Into Affiliate Marketing

?Negotiating for Web Traffic

?Taking Control of Your Web Presence

?How to Expand Into New Markets

?Attract Customers on Facebook for $5

?And many more

?We are excited to be able to offer this extremely useful content in podcast form,? said James Martell, VP of Business Development for the Internet School of Marketing. ?The busy small business owner can learn how to market their business online while in their car, at the gym, during a walk - anywhere they may be.?

To learn more about The School of Internet Marketing?s Weekly Podcast, please visit http://www.spreaker.com/show/the_school_of_internet_marketing.

About The School of Internet Marketing

The School of Internet Marketing allows business owners to take control of their web presence in order to develop new leads and customers. The School works to empower business owners with the understanding that a little education can go a long way. It offers a variety of 100% web-based courses for small business owners wanting to learn how to market their business online. Please visit http://www.theschoolofinternetmarketing.com for more information.

About Spreaker Web Radio

Spreaker is a web and mobile application that brings together audio creators and their fans with broadcasting tools and functioning social network. Spreaker allows hosts to broadcast their shows, tracks, and playlists to listeners all over the world. The application also streamlines the distribution process, allowing for easy sharing across all the major social networks as well as providing attractive embeddable players onto any website. Visit http://www.spreaker.com/ to learn more.

###

Contacts:

James Martell, VP Business Development

Clearbrook Web Services, Inc./ The School of Internet Marketing

Phone: (604) 535-6352

Email: james(at)theschoolofinternetmarketing(dot)com

For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/prweb2013/5/prweb10763027.htm

Source: http://www.virtual-strategy.com/2013/05/23/school-internet-marketing-launches-weekly-podcast-series-spreaker-web-radio

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Thursday, May 23, 2013

HTC One Rumors: Verizon Version Running Android 4.2.2 Spotted As Network Prepares For CITA Conference

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Source: www.ibtimes.com --- Wednesday, May 22, 2013
Recent HTC One rumors suggest the smartphone was spotted in the wild as a Verizon variant running Android 4. ...

Source: http://www.ibtimes.comhttp:0//www.ibtimes.co.in/articles/470196/20130522/htc-htc-one-verizon-htc-one-verzion-andriod-4-2-2-verizon-android-4-2-2-htc-one-verizon-android-4-2-.htm

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Minus environment, patterns still emerge: Computational study tracks E. coli cells' regulatory mechanisms

May 21, 2013 ? Environment is not the only factor in shaping regulatory patterns -- and it might not even be the primary factor, according to a new Rice University study that looks at how cells' protein networks relate to a bacteria's genome.

The Rice lab of computer scientist Luay Nakhleh reported in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that when environmental factors are eliminated from an evolutionary model, mutations and genetic drift can give rise to the patterns that appear. They studied changes that show up in regulatory networks that determine the organism's characteristics.

Nakhleh and lead author Troy Ruths, a Rice graduate student, said their work is an important step toward understanding Cis-regulatory networks (CRNs), which play a dominant role in cells' information processing systems. Cis -- a Latin word for "on the same side as" -- regulators are regions of DNA (or RNA) that regulate the expression of genes located on the same DNA molecule.

The researchers generated 1,000 computer models of random Escherichia coli regulatory networks and watched them evolve through millions of generations. However, they did not program into the models environmental factors that might have prompted change through natural selection. Their results supported other studies that suggested networks might evolve spontaneously through mutation, recombination, gene duplication and genetic drift.

Their "neutral evolutionary" approach sidestepped one taken by other researchers who, Nakhleh said, have tried to understand cellular protein networks by looking at motifs. These motifs are short sequences called subgraphs in the network that appear more frequently than is expected by chance alone. "Biological networks are complex systems, and the community has responded by developing lots of mathematical and sophisticated computational analysis tools to understand these networks," he said. Those researchers argued the emergence and conservation of these regulatory motifs were largely due to adaptation to environment; the Rice researchers argued that isn't necessarily so.

Nakhleh said he and Ruths decided to tie what scientists now know about the genome -- the entire collection of an organism's DNA -- to the evolution of such networks.

"Instead of jumping directly to the network, where we don't understand much, we decided to look back at our broad knowledge about the genome and link it to these networks," he said. "In this paper, we zoomed in on the issue of how much of what we see in the network is a result of neutral evolution, where there's no selection involved. How much of what we are seeing is a side effect, so to speak, of random mutations and genetic drift?"

The wealth of genomic data available for E. coli encouraged the Rice researchers to build a sophisticated model that matched Cis-regulatory networks to their related DNA. "If there is any model in the prokaryotic world that has been studied well and has data, it's E. coli," Nakhleh said.

Their conclusion, put simply by the paper, is that "neutral evolution acting on genomic properties" can indeed explain bacterial regulatory patterns.

"There are two sides to the paper," Nakhleh said. "One is that many of these motifs have nothing adaptive in their origin. They emerge because mutation is a random process.

"The second and, I think, more powerful part of the story is that for the first time, the extent of neutrality in a network has been quantified. ? Our model will never be able to tell you, 'I can rule out adaptation from this.' What we are saying is that you do not need to invoke adaptation to explain what you are seeing.

"Now we can start to understand how changes at the genome level can result in how these networks form, what some researchers are calling the 'design principles' behind these networks," Nakhleh said. "I don't think there is anything being designed here, so to speak. Patterns emerge in response to mutations; genetic drift and selection then affect the frequencies of these patterns. We showed that genetic drift can explain much of these frequencies."

The National Science Foundation, Department of Energy, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and Guggenheim Foundation supported the research. Nakhleh is an associate professor of computer science and ecology and evolutionary biology.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/hKSyMWSyBTE/130521194153.htm

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Tech News Headlines - Yahoo! News

Study: Stress Isn't Hot

Stress makes its mark on the female face, according to a new study that finds men judge women with high levels of a stress hormone less attractive. More??

LiveScience.com - 4 hrs ago

NASA Funds 3D Pizza Printer

NASA has doled out a research grant to develop a prototype 3D printer for food, so astronauts may one day enjoy 3D-printed pizza on Mars. More??

SPACE.com - 5 hrs ago

Source: http://rss.news.yahoo.com/rss/techblog

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Future Proof ? Protecting our digital future ? To analyse business ...

http://www.flickr.com/photos/liquidindian/427162166/

http://www.flickr.com/photos/liquidindian/427162166/

Last week the members of the EDRMS Implementers Discussion Group met to talk about establishing business rules as part of an EDRMS implementation. Members shared the different approaches taken by their organisations to determine when records will be captured to the EDRMS (e.g. when initially drafted? when approved or finalised?), how they will be captured (e.g. manually by creators? as part of a workflow?) and by whom (e.g. creators? reviewers? approvers?)

The discussion raised a very interesting issue: successful EDRMS implementations are linked to having a good understanding of an organisation?s business needs for information. Detailed business process analysis can determine where records are created or received in a specific business process and when, how and by whom these records should be captured. However in the ?real world?, especially for large organisations subject to frequent change and re-organisation, this type of analysis isn?t always possible. These organisations may only be able to develop generic business rules for when records should be captured and leave it up to individual business units to interpret and adjust these with regard to their own business processes.

Basing business rules on detailed business process analysis

State Records? FAQs about EDRMS note that well articulated requirements are key to the successful implementation of an EDRMS:

? you will need to articulate your organisation?s own business needs and technical requirements and constraints. This involves an analysis of your organisation?s specific business. Stakeholders and users should be involved in this analysis, particularly if it involves changes to their current business processes. This understanding will help you in configuring the system to meet your needs.

Undertaking detailed business process analysis can assist in achieving improved business efficiency and productivity: business processes can be streamlined and automated; version control and revision management can be implemented; the speed of responding to customers can be improved with better access to information; and duplication can be reduced by only capturing information once.

One of the members of the Group explained that his organisation is undertaking this type of detailed business analysis as part of its EDRMS implementation. The organisation is running a pilot project focussed on a particular business unit, and the project team is mapping the unit?s business processes and workflows and identifying where records need to be captured and where the EDRMS can be used to simplify processes. As an example, this work has identified that records documenting complaints are currently maintained in five different databases ? the project team is looking to streamline the complaints handling and management process, and to reduce the number of locations in which employees must look for information related to complaints.

This member advised that the hardest part of this project so far has involved getting consensus on business processes and workflows.

Establishing generic business rules that can be adapted to suit specific business units

For large organisations responsible for a range of functions and activities, and for organisations subject to frequent administrative change and re-organisation, this type of detailed, business unit-by-business unit process analysis is not always possible. Instead, these organisations may develop a series of generic business rules that can be adapted by specific business units to suit their own particular operating environment.

A number of the members explained the approaches taken by their organisations to determining when, how and by whom documents will be captured to an EDRMS. Interestingly there was significant agreement between the approaches, with only one key difference:

  • Some organisations provide a shared space outside of the EDRMS (e.g. shared network drives, SharePoint sites etc.) for employees to ?unofficially? collaborate on documents. Working drafts and research are saved in these locations. When a document is formally circulated for consultation/comment, or submitted for approval, it is captured to the EDRMS.
  • Other organisations expect that all work-related documents will be created in the EDRMS or captured to the EDRMS on creation. Working drafts and research, as well as drafts circulated for consultation/comment or submitted for approval, are all captured to the EDRMS.

Versions and revisions

The members also shared their approaches to managing versions and revisions, and it was in this area that key differences emerged:

  • One organisation is yet to turn on the functionality to allow users to manage versions and revisions in the EDRMS. Currently, users are advised to capture email messages with attachments to the EDRMS. The email message provides the business context for understanding the status and development of the attached document.
  • Other organisations use versions or revisions, or both, in their EDRMS. Some organisations use the notes fields to document contextual information about the status of versions/revisions.

Gaining support for business process analysis and change management

State Records? FAQs about EDRMS include a quote from a CIO which highlights the importance of business process analysis and change management to a successful EDRMS implementation:

I?ve been involved in planning a couple of successful EDRMS projects and the cost breakup ended up being 30% technical implementation, 40% process change/re-engineering and 30% cultural change management (this includes training and general communications).

I?ve also had peripheral involvement in another (more recent) EDRMS implementation where the breakup was 90% technical implementation, 5% process change/re-engineering and 5% change management and it all it went horribly, horribly wrong. The system was implanted but never got it into broad operational use.

One of the members of the EDRMS Implementers Discussion Group explained that a previous project to implement an EDRMS in his organisation had identified and analysed the various business processes performed across the organisation. When the funding for this project was removed, the organisation was unable to use this analysis to integrate an EDRMS into business processes. Although the organisation subsequently tried to maintain the analysis, this was difficult due to resourcing constraints and frequent administrative change and restructure. As a result, the analysis became out of date and no longer provides an accurate representation of the organisation?s business processes.

This organisation is currently bidding for funding for an EDRMS implementation. However, resources for detailed process analysis and change management do not form part of the business case. The members agreed that change management is key to a successful EDRMS implementation, but acknowledged that it is often difficult to secure funding and organisational support for this. The Group plans to discuss the key ingredients to a successful business case for an EDRMS implementation at a future meeting.

The EDRMS Implementers Discussion Group meets every six months, and membership of this group is open to anyone in the NSW public sector who is keen to share their organisation?s experiences of transitioning to digital recordkeeping. If you would like to join this group, please contact us at govrec@records.nsw.gov.au.

Please also let us know about your own organisation?s approach to determining when, how and by whom records will be captured to an EDRMS by leaving a comment below.

Source: http://futureproof.records.nsw.gov.au/to-analyse-business-processes-or-not-to-analyse-business-processes-that-is-the-question/

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Wind Energy Tax Measure Headed to Final Neb. Vote

A bill designed to attract large wind-energy farms to Nebraska is headed to a final vote in the Legislature.

Lawmakers gave second-round approval Tuesday to the bill, which would extend sales tax exemptions to wind-energy companies. One firm, TradeWind Energy, has expressed interest in developing a wind farm in Dixon County, on the Iowa and South Dakota border.

Nebraska ranks as one of the nation's biggest wind-producing states, but 26th in the energy it could produce with equipment currently installed.

Sen. Steve Lathrop of Omaha says the bill is designed to keep Nebraska competitive with other high-wind states in the Plains. Some lawmakers questioned whether Nebraskan residents would receive enough of the direct benefits.

Source: http://www.1011now.com/news/headlines/Wind-Energy-Tax-Measure-Headed-to-Final-Neb-Vote-208419411.html

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Zalora, Rocket Internet's SE Asian Zappos Clone, Raises $100M More From Summit, Kinnevik And More

Zalora logoZalora, a Zappos-style fashion e-commerce site in South East Asia backed by the Samwer brothers' Rocket Internet incubator, is today announcing its latest investment -- $100 million, led by Rocket Internet itself, along with regular Samwer investing partners Summit Partners, Investment AB Kinnevik, Verlinvest and Tengelmann Group. The is the largest investment in Zalora to date, and one of the largest in an e-commerce startup in the region. Zalora has operations in Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, Brunei, the Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam, Taiwan and Hong Kong, and comes amid a new flush of money for fashion e-commerce companies: just yesterday it was reported that Fab is raising $250 million at a $1 billion valuation (a deal that only one month ago appeared to be for a $100 million raise).

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/UJN7PJUyHjw/

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TiVo adds MLB.tv in the US today, nears IPTV launch in Sweden

TiVo adds MLBtv in the US today, nears IPTV launch in Sweden

TiVo announced its quarterly earnings yesterday, revealing a net loss for the quarter of $10.8 million. Despite that, its push to partner with cable companies seems to be going well: it recorded its largest growth in MSO customers in seven years, adding 277,000 subscriptions that way. More interesting to most users however, will be news that the MLB.tv app Zatz Not Funny mentioned in January launches today. Additionally, Scandinavian operator Com Hem is about to start offering an IPTV service built on TiVo's devices, and is accepter preregistrations to be an early tester. The Com Hem project will combine an internet TV service with the usual TiVo features -- including TiVoToGo -- and DVR capable of recording up to three HD channels at once. What we can see of the box looks very similar to the one offered by Virgin in the UK, we'll wait and see if any other operators look the company's way when/if they make the transition to IPTV service in the future.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: TiVo, Com Hem.se

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/nApNB8RbvuM/

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Wednesday, May 22, 2013

?5k grant for community football club in Sleaford http://ow.ly/lh6nu

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.facebook.com/ThisisLincolnshire/posts/571054426258154

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Vodafone says comfortable with Verizon Wireless status quo

LONDON (Reuters) - Vodafone said on Tuesday that it was very comfortable with its successful U.S. joint venture Verizon Wireless, but if an offer materialized that would benefit it more than the status quo, it would consider it.

Vodafone's partner Verizon Communications has made little secret of its desire to buy out Vodafone in a multi-billion dollar deal that would be one of the largest of all time.

Vodafone chief executive Vittorio Colao told journalists at a briefing that if an offer came in that was more advantageous than the current joint venture situation, the company would consider it.

He was speaking after the company reported its biggest ever fall in key quarterly organic service revenue.

(Reporting by Kate Holton, writing by Paul Sandle, editing by Sarah Young)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/vodafone-posts-biggest-fall-revenue-061431897.html

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'All you could hear were screams?

Two men stand in front of Plaza Towers Elementary after a tornado destroyed the school on Monday. (Bryan Terry/AP/The??

[Updated at 8:30 a.m. CT]

MOORE, Okla. ? The hell he saw was harrowing, but it?s the sounds at Plaza Towers Elementary that Stuart Earnest Jr. says will haunt him forever.

?All you could hear were screams,? Earnest said. ?The people screaming for help. And the people trying to help were also screaming.?

Plaza Towers, a pre-kindergarten through sixth-grade school, took a direct hit when a titanic tornado chewed a deadly and destructive 20-mile path through Newcastle, Moore and parts of southern Oklahoma City for 40 minutes Monday afternoon.

State officials have adjusted the number of casualties a few times since the tragedy. Tuesday morning, Reuters quoted Amy Elliott, chief administrative officer at the Oklahoma City Medical Examiner's Office, as saying the death toll had been reduced to 24.

"There was a lot of chaos," Elliott said.

Officials said some of the dead are children. Classes were still in session at Plaza Towers when the twister, estimated to be packing winds of 200 mph or greater, crushed nearly every corner of the school. Teachers? cars were thrown into the building, and the playground no longer exists.

?I can only hope those little kids killed didn't suffer,? said Earnest, one of many who rushed to the school to help survivors.

[In tornado's wake, worried parents seek out kids]

With several students still unaccounted for, rescuers worked overnight digging through the rubble.

?I just hope they find her,? Shannon Galarneau said of her 10-year-old niece, a Plaza Towers student who was missing as of early Tuesday morning. ?You just feel helpless.?

The girl's younger sister, also a student at the school, suffered cuts to her head and bruises on her back. The 8-year-old was still wearing her hospital bracelet while asleep on her grandmother's shoulder in the front seat of a pickup truck just after midnight.

?She said it was probably the scariest day of her life,? Galarneau said.

The child was among more than 150 reportedly injured by the tornado, which some estimated to be greater than a mile wide at times.

Galarneau and her husband could see the twister a mile and a half from their front porch and scrambled to hide.

?It barreled down fast,? said Galarneau, who found refuge in a utility closet.

[How to Help: Oklahoma storms]

President Barack Obama declared several Oklahoma counties disaster areas and pledged to support the area's rescue and recovery. The funnel?s fury crumbled homes for several blocks around the school and in other parts of Moore. Missing street signs and other landmarks made some neighborhoods unrecognizable even to locals.

?It is a barren wasteland,? Galarneau said. ?Everything is leveled.?

Allen and JoAnn Anderson huddled under quilts and pillows in their bathtub with their Yorkie, Magand, and cat, Meow, when the tornado came down their street.

?It was like standing in the middle of a train track and having the train go right over you,? said Allen, 63.

They emerged from the tub 15 minutes later to find their brick house gone and cars badly damaged.

?There?s no house. It?s just a pile of rubble,? Allen said.

The couple checked into a motel with their pets late Monday. Chunks of attic insulation were still stuck in JoAnn?s sandy-blond hair, and her legs were partially caked in dried mud.

?It could be worse,? JoAnn said. ?We're alive.?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/witnesses-describle-deadly-oklahoma-tornado-demolished-school-111345116.html

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Golf adopts rule to ban anchored putting stroke

Adam Scott of Australia putts on the 15th green during the first round of The Players championship golf tournament at TPC Sawgrass, Thursday, May 9, 2013 in Ponte Vedra Beach, FL (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)

Adam Scott of Australia putts on the 15th green during the first round of The Players championship golf tournament at TPC Sawgrass, Thursday, May 9, 2013 in Ponte Vedra Beach, FL (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)

Golf's governing bodies approved a rule Tuesday that outlaws the putting stroke used by four of the last six major champions, a move opposed by two major golf organizations that contend long putters are not hurting the game.

The Royal & Ancient Golf Club and U.S. Golf Association said Rule 14-1b will take effect in 2016.

"We recognize this has been a divisive issue, but after thorough consideration, we remain convinced that this is the right decision for golf," R&A chief executive Peter Dawson said.

The new rule does not ban the long putters, only the way they commonly are used. Golfers no longer will be able to anchor the club against their bodies to create the effect of a hinge. Masters champion Adam Scott used a long putter he pressed against his chest. British Open champion Ernie Els and U.S. Open champion Webb Simpson used a belly putter, as did Keegan Bradley in the 2011 PGA Championship.

"We strongly believe that this rule is for the betterment of the game," USGA President Glen Nager said. "Rule 14-1b protects one of the important challenges in the game ? the free swing of the entire club."

The announcement followed six months of contentious debate, and it might not be over.

The next step is for the PGA Tour to follow the new rule or decide to establish its own condition of competition that would allow players to anchor the long putters. PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem said in February the USGA and R&A would be "making a mistake" to adopt the rule, though he also has stressed the importance of golf playing under one set of rules.

"I think it's really important that the PGA Tour ? and all the professional tours ? continue to follow one set of rules," USGA executive director Mike Davis said. "We have gotten very positive feedback from the tours around the world saying that they like one set of rules, they like the R&A and USGA governing those. So if there was some type of schism, we don't think that would be good for golf.

"And we are doing what we think is right for the long-term benefit of the game for all golfers, and we just can't write them for one group of elite players."

The tour said in a statement it would consult with its Player Advisory Council and policy board to determine "whether various provisions of Rule 14-1b will be implemented in our competitions, and if so, examine the process for implementation."

PGA of America President Ted Bishop, who had some of the sharpest comments over the last few months, also said his group would discuss the new rule ? and confer with the PGA Tour ? before deciding how to proceed.

"We are disappointed with this outcome," Bishop said. "As we have said publicly and repeatedly during the comment period, we do not believe 14-1b is in the best interest of recreational golfers and we are concerned about the negative impact it may have on both the enjoyment and growth of the game."

Some forms of anchoring have been around at least 40 years, and old photographs suggest it has been used even longer. It wasn't until after Bradley became the first major champion to use a belly putter that the USGA and R&A said it would take a new look at the putting style.

"It can never be too late to do the right thing," Nager said.

Those in favor of anchored putting argued that none of the top 20 players in the PGA Tour's most reliable putting statistic used a long putter, and if it was such an advantage, why wasn't everyone using it?

"Intentionally securing one end of the club against the body, and creating a point of physical attachment around which the club is swung, is a substantial departure from that traditional free swing," Nager said. "Anchoring creates potential advantages, such as making the stroke simpler and more repeatable, restricting the movement and rotation of the hands, arms and clubface, creating a fixed pivot point, and creating extra support and stability that may diminish the effects of nerves and pressure."

The governing bodies announced the proposed rule on Nov. 28, even though they had no data to show an advantage. What concerned them more was a spike in usage on the PGA Tour, more junior golfers using the long putters and comments from instructors that it was a better way to putt. There was concern the conventional putter would become obsolete over time.

The purpose of the new rule was simply to define what a putting stroke should be.

"The playing rules are not based on statistical studies," Nager said. "They are based on judgments that define the game and its intended challenge. One of those challenges is to control the entire club, and anchoring alters that challenge."

The topic was so sensitive that the USGA and R&A allowed for a 90-day comment period, an unprecedented move for the groups that set the rules of golf. The USGA said about 2,200 people offered feedback through its website, while the R&A said it had about 450 people from 17 countries go through its website.

Among those who spoke in favor of the ban were Tiger Woods, Brandt Snedeker and Steve Stricker.

"I've always felt that in golf you should have to swing the club, control your nerves and swing all 14 clubs, not just 13," Woods said Monday.

Tim Clark and Carl Pettersson have used the long putter as long as they have been on the PGA Tour. Scott switched to the broom-handle putter only in 2011, and he began contending in majors for the first time ? tied for third in 2011 Masters, runner-up at the 2012 British Open, his first major victory in the Masters last month.

"It was inevitable that big tournaments would be won with this equipment because these are the best players in the world, and they practice thousands of hours," Scott said after winning the Masters. "They are going to get good with whatever they are using."

It was Clark's dignified speech to a players-only meeting ? with Davis from the USGA in the room ? that helped sway the tour's opinion to oppose the ban.

Davis and Dawson said their research indicated the opposition to the new rule was mainly in America. The European Tour and other tours around the world all backed the ban.

Players can still use the putter, but it would have to be held away from the body to allow free swing. Mark Newell, head of the USGA's rules committee, said the rule would be enforced like so many others in golf ? players would have to call the penalty on themselves.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-05-21-GLF-Long-Putters/id-b740c2a792c64737a15cce9982249697

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Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Samsung has announced it's got a new 13.3-inch display with a staggering 3200 x 1800 resolution read

Samsung has announced it's got a new 13.3-inch display with a staggering 3200 x 1800 resolution ready to plop into new Ultrabooks. Take that, MacBook Retina and Chromebook Pixel.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/zDa6LT_3JWM/samsung-has-announced-its-got-a-new-13-3-inch-display-w-508842362

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Video: Tornado Rips Through Oklahoma City Area

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Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/51946217/

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LG to demo 5-inch unbreakable and flexible plastic OLED panel at SID

LG to demo 5inch flexible and unbreakable plastic OLED panel at SID 2013

LG's got quite a bit in store for us this week at SID's annual display exhibition in Vancouver. In addition to that 55-inch curved OLED TV we first heard about last month, the company will be demonstrating a very nifty 5-inch OLED panel. Created for mobile devices, the display is constructed of plastic, making it both flexible and unbreakable -- certainly a welcome quality when it comes to smartphone design.

Also on display will be 5- and 7-inch HD Oxide TFT panels. That first size features a bezel that's just 1mm wide, enabling a borderless frame when installed in smartphones. Both displays are lightweight and consume less power than their traditional equivalents. Finally, LG will have a 14-inch 2560x1440-pixel laptop panel on hand, along with LCDs designed for use in refrigerators and automotive dashboards. We'll be live from the SID show floor later this week -- check back for our hands-ons with all of these new LG panels, and quite a bit more.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/2hMmBw2nwrM/

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Monday, May 20, 2013

Videos of tornado that tore through Oklahoma

If you watched the London Olympics last summer, you saw a parade of top athletes touting the nutritional qualities of their favorite eatery: Subway. Watching Apolo Ohno or Robert Griffin III bite into a veggie footlong with avocado or hearing that Subway is ?the official training restaurant of athletes everywhere,? you might get the idea that the food served at the chain isn?t that bad for you?that it?s even?healthy.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/videos-massive-tornado-rips-oklahoma-215949606.html

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Warming extremes 'not as likely'

Scientists say the recent downturn in the rate of global warming will lead to lower temperature rises in the short-term.

Since 1998, there has been an unexplained "standstill" in the heating of the Earth's atmosphere.

Writing in Nature Geoscience, the researchers say this will reduce predicted warming in the coming decades.

But long-term, the expected temperature rises will not alter significantly.

Continue reading the main story

?Start Quote

The most extreme projections are looking less likely than before?

End Quote Dr Alexander Otto University of Oxford

The slowdown in the expected rate of global warming has been studied for several years now. Earlier this year, the UK Met Office lowered their five-year temperature forecast.

But this new paper gives the clearest picture yet of how any slowdown is likely to affect temperatures in both the short-term and long-term.

An international team of researchers looked at how the last decade would impact long-term, equilibrium climate sensitivity and the shorter term climate response.

Transient nature

Climate sensitivity looks to see what would happen if we doubled concentrations of CO2 in the atmosphere and let the Earth's oceans and ice sheets respond to it over several thousand years.

Transient climate response is much shorter term calculation again based on a doubling of CO2.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reported in 2007 that the short-term temperature rise would most likely be 1-3C (1.8-5.4F).

But in this new analysis, by only including the temperatures from the last decade, the projected range would be 0.9-2.0C.

"The hottest of the models in the medium-term, they are actually looking less likely or inconsistent with the data from the last decade alone," said Dr Alexander Otto from the University of Oxford.

"The most extreme projections are looking less likely than before."

The authors calculate that over the coming decades global average temperatures will warm about 20% more slowly than expected.

But when it comes to the longer term picture, the authors say their work is consistent with previous estimates. The IPCC said that climate sensitivity was in the range of 2.0-4.5C.

Ocean storage

This latest research, including the decade of stalled temperature rises, produces a range of 0.9-5.0C.

"It is a bigger range of uncertainty," said Dr Otto.

"But it still includes the old range. We would all like climate sensitivity to be lower but it isn't."

The researchers say the difference between the lower short-term estimate and the more consistent long-term picture can be explained by the fact that the heat from the last decade has been absorbed into and is being stored by the world's oceans.

Not everyone agrees with this perspective.

Prof Steven Sherwood, from the University of New South Wales, says the conclusion about the oceans needs to be taken with a grain of salt for now.

"There is other research out there pointing out that this storage may be part of a natural cycle that will eventually reverse, either due to El Nino or the so-called Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation, and therefore may not imply what the authors are suggesting," he said.

The authors say there are ongoing uncertainties surrounding the role of aerosols in the atmosphere and around the issue of clouds.

"We would expect a single decade to jump around a bit but the overall trend is independent of it, and people should be exactly as concerned as before about what climate change is doing," said Dr Otto.

Is there any succour in these findings for climate sceptics who say the slowdown over the past 14 years means the global warming is not real?

"None. No comfort whatsoever," he said.

Follow Matt on Twitter.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-22567023#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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92% Jurassic Park: An IMAX 3D Experience

All Critics (100) | Top Critics (24) | Fresh (101) | Rotten (8) | DVD (39)

The enthralling man-vs.-nature parable based on the late Michael Crichton's best-selling novel hasn't aged one bit.

The 3-D process adds not just dimension but depth - a technological extension of cinematographer Gregg Toland's deep-focus innovations in The Grapes of Wrath and Citizen Kane. The change in perspective creates greater intensity.

I'm a fan of this movie. It is thrilling, and the 3-D treatment is a nice enhancement.

This movie doesn't just stand the test of time, it transcends it.

"Jurassic Park" remains an absolute thrill from a Spielberg in top form: Funny, scary, fast-moving and full of just-right details.

"Jurassic Park" was impressive in 1993. Twenty years later, it's flawless.

Some things have dated - Sam Jackson wouldn't be allowed to smoke in the office; everyone would have mobiles; Google Earth would have kept the island from being kept a secret - but the power of the film's pioneering CGI remain strangely undiminished.

Steven Spielberg's summer adventure is still one of the ultimate movie roller coaster rides.

Jurassic Park is a how-to guide for structuring a multi-character disaster film.

Still proves as thrilling as ever.

A classic gets even better.

Steven Spielbeg's 1993 tale of an island plagued dinosaurs running amok holds up surprisingly well in the special effects category.

The film is a classic and the chance to see it on the big screen again (or for the first time) should not be missed

Sentiment is explained by science as the family impulse that motivates so many Steven Spielberg stories is revealed to be an evolutionary imperative in this near-perfect action-adventure.

[Looks] better not only than effects-driven movies of the same period, but better, frankly, than half of what gets released nowadays.

Kids who love dinosaurs will love it. And who doesn't?

confirms both Spielberg's mastery of cinematic thrills and the comparatively empty bombast of today's summer tentpole movies, even the better ones.

Jurassic Park shows us a director in transition, and the film captures his transformation in its own kind of cinematic amber.

[The] 3D [conversion] provides the definitive version of this classic film. Jurassic Park has been transformed with with artistry, nuance and sophistication, and it's an absolute must-see during this brief run.

The 3D effects had me nearly jumping out of my seat. Some say Hollywood is converting too many old films to 3D. But, "Jurassic Park" was the perfect choice. There's nothing more fun than sharing a seat with a snapping dinosaur.

Spielberg treats us as he does his characters, leading us into a strange land and expecting us to make it out with all our faculties intact; it's a tall order, given the heart-stopping, bloodcurdling, limbs-numbing excitement packed into the second hour.

It is as if time has passed the movie by. "Jurassic Park" remains solid entertainment, but the awe and wonder have faded.

The thrill of seeing live dinosaurs on screen is not as acute today as it was 20 years ago admittedly, but there is still some 3D awe left in the creations that roared 65 billion years ago...

The 3D isn't pushed on the audience, but it does reveal the amount of depth that Spielberg actually put into the film 20 years ago.

While it's not the most profound of Spielberg's works or the most entertaining from a popcorn perspective, it's one of the most technically flawless movies he's ever produced.

Jurassic Park 3D is like being reunited with an old friend; an old friend that wants to eat you and maul you to death, but still. A classic is reborn in glorious IMAX with a vibrantly stunning use of 3D.

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/jurassic_park_an_imax_3d_experience_1993/

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Saturday, May 18, 2013

South Florida Insurance Fraud: Feds Charge 92 Over $20 Million In ...

The vehicle collisions looked like typical South Florida accidents with motorists and passengers reporting they needed treatment from chiropractors and massage therapists.

But investigators said the crashes were carefully staged by willing participants who were trained how to defraud the insurance system to make money for themselves and a highly organized group of medical professionals, clinic owners and recruiters.

Investigators announced charges Thursday against 33 people they said were involved in staging accidents for insurance fraud -- the latest hit in a three-year investigation that identified about $20 million in fraudulently obtained payouts from insurers.

"If you get upset about your car insurance premiums going up, this crime is one of the reasons why," said William J. Maddalena, the assistant special agent in charge of FBI Miami. "Every time an insurance payout is made for a staged accident in Florida, we all feel the pain in the pocketbook."

Operation Sledgehammer, a state and federal investigation, has led to charges being filed against a total of 92 defendants from Palm Beach, Broward and Miami-Dade counties. Those already convicted have been ordered to pay more than $5 million in restitution to insurance companies so far, prosecutors said.

The operation got its code name when undercover investigators saw suspects using a sledgehammer to make vehicles look like they'd been in an accident.

The fraud involved a "massive," complicated, highly organized scheme that investigators said included everyone from clinic owners and medical staff who provided fraudulent diagnoses and prescribed fake treatment, to office workers who billed for the services, and recruiters who found accident "victims" and trained them to stage collisions on the streets and highways of South Florida.

The criminal charges filed this week targeted 33 people from West Palm Beach, Lake Worth, Weston, Parkland, Davie, Hollywood, Boynton Beach, Greenacres, Doral, Miami and Hialeah with a slew of charges including mail fraud and money-laundering conspiracies, structuring financial transactions and participating in staged-accident fraud.

The scheme dated from about October 2006 to December 2012 and the defendants staged accidents and submitted false insurance claims through 21 chiropractic clinics in Palm Beach and Miami-Dade counties that they controlled, authorities said.

Of the 33 charged, 26 have been arrested or agreed to surrender, federal and state law enforcement officials said at a Thursday afternoon news conference in the U.S. Attorney's Office in West Palm Beach.

The ringleaders recruited chiropractors Lazaro Rodriguez, 58, of Doral, and Kenneth Karow, 53, of Boynton Beach, and others to serve as the named owners of some of the clinics, investigators said.

Five of the defendants, including alleged ringleaders Vladimir Lopez, 38, and Lazaro Vigoa Mauri, 45, both formerly of West Palm Beach, have fled to Cuba and they and the other defendants who have not yet been caught are considered fugitives, authorities said.

Maddalena said the investigation was kicked off by a tip from a member of the public and urged anyone with information to call their local police department.

The participants in the fraud were trained by recruiters on how to make the accidents look realistic, how to file police reports and insurance claims, how to fake injuries and where to go for treatment, Maddalena said. The ringleaders made sure that insurance checks were deposited into accounts they controlled so they could pay the participants, he said.

Of the 92 people charged to date in the fraud scheme, the U.S. Attorney's Office filed federal charges against 56 of them and the Palm Beach State Attorney's Office filed state charges against 36 of them.

Lawrence Schechtman, 45, a chiropractor from Parkland, Olinda Rodriguez, 39, a massage therapist from West Palm Beach, and Iris Roca, 41, a massage therapist from Davie, were charged separately with participating in staged accident fraud schemes and are expected to surrender in the next few days.

pmcmahon@tribune.com, 954-356-4533 or Twitter @SentinelPaula ___

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/17/south-florida-insurance-fraud_n_3289964.html

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Political storm over IRS scandal shifts to Congress

By John Whitesides

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S. House of Representatives panel on Friday opens the first in a series of investigative hearings in Congress on the Internal Revenue Service's targeting of conservative groups for extra tax scrutiny, as the political storm over the scandal shifts to Capitol Hill.

Lawmakers from both parties are expected to grill the outgoing acting head of the agency, Steven Miller, and the Treasury Department inspector general for tax administration, J. Russell George, about the growing scandal that threatens to eclipse President Barack Obama's second-term agenda.

Miller was forced to resign on Wednesday, and Obama has since appeared in public twice to condemn the IRS's actions and promise full cooperation with three congressional investigations and a Justice Department probe.

Members of the House Ways and Means Committee are expected to press Miller at the hearing about why he did not disclose the practice of targeting conservative groups after learning about it in 2012, even when he was questioned about it by members of Congress.

Republicans, who have demanded more answers and angrily accused the administration of using government powers to target political foes, also are likely to question whether other groups or donors were singled out because of their political views, and whether the White House knew of the practice.

The hearing is scheduled to start at 9 a.m. EDT (1300 GMT).

"There are still far too many unanswered questions and until we know what truly happened, we cannot fully fix what is wrong," said Committee Chairman Dave Camp, a Republican from Michigan.

"The IRS has demonstrated a culture of cover up and has failed time and time again to be completely open and honest with the American people," Camp said.

George, who investigated the complaints against the IRS, issued a public report earlier this week that blamed ineffective management and bureaucratic confusion at the IRS for the agency's inappropriate targeting of conservative political groups for extra scrutiny when considering applications for tax-exempt status.

But George also could face vigorous questioning from Republicans about why he did not issue warnings about the practice earlier.

The political storm over the scandal has put Obama on the defensive at a time when he is negotiating with Republicans on a budget deal and trying to push a comprehensive immigration reform bill through Congress.

Two other committees, the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee and the Senate Finance Committee, also will hold IRS hearings next week.

"COMMON SENSE"

Representative Devin Nunes of California, a Republican member of the Ways and Means panel, said Friday's hearing will kick off a months-long investigative process. Nunes said he was suspicious of the tax agency's motives in targeting groups with names that included "Tea Party" or "Patriot."

"Common sense tells me it probably just wasn't two low-level employees in Cincinnati sitting around strategizing about how to go after the Tea Party," Nunes told reporters on Thursday.

Representative Sander Levin of Michigan, the top Democrat on the panel, said he was concerned that Republicans could turn the probe into a partisan witchhunt.

"There is a tendency to politicize. That would be a terrible mistake," Levin told reporters. "There are people who conjecture, who are trying to make connections. If there is no basis for it, that is also a mistake."

Camp and Levin sent the IRS a letter on Tuesday outlining the information they were seeking in the probe, including all documents relating to the targeting and any information on who knew about the practice and when they became aware of it.

The letter also asked for any other organizations singled out for their political views and the search terms used to find them, as well as all documents related to possible special reviews of groups whose missions involved Israel and all communication with the White House on the process.

Given the three congressional investigations and the Justice probe, Obama said, there was no need for a special prosecutor to look into the allegations.

"Between those investigations I think we're going to be able to figure out exactly what happened, who was involved, what went wrong, and we're going to be able to implement steps to fix it," Obama said at a Rose Garden news conference on Thursday.

(Additional reporting by Kim Dixon; Editing by Karey Van Hall and Lisa Shumaker)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-picks-temporary-irs-head-tea-party-decries-003205741.html

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Swiss Cheese and Dust Devils: 7 High-Resolution Shots of Surface Activity on Mars [Slide Show]

Cover Image: May 2013 Scientific American MagazineSee Inside

The Red Planet is frigid and possibly sterile, but its surface still sees plenty of action


/slideshow.cfm?id=mars-swiss-cheese-dust-devils-7-high-resolution-shots-surface-activity

Image: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona

The arrival of NASA?s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) at the Red Planet in 2006 ushered in a whole new era of Mars observation. With its ultrapowerful HiRISE camera, the orbiter has spied on the Martian surface to study curious features, some of them possibly linked to the presence of water, in unprecedented detail. And along the way HiRISE has also uncovered a few new phenomena.

At the top of that list are recurring slope lineae (RSL), which HiRISE scientists discovered in 2011. RSL are dark lines that appear during the warm season on southern slopes, spread gradually downward and then fade as the weather turns cold again. The behavior of RSL suggests that they are caused by flows of briny liquid water, which, if confirmed, would stir new hopes for current life on Mars.

Click here for a slide show of some of Mars?s most interesting surface features, including animated gifs of recurring slope lineae growing and fading from one season to the next, as documented from orbit by the HiRISE camera.

?View the Slide Show

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=43f348a18c44e41ee0ab9d3545492b22

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Editor's Letter: When it rains, it pours

In each issue of Distro, editor-in-chief Tim Stevens publishes a wrap-up of the week in news.

DNP Editor's Letter When it rains, it pours

It's been a slow couple of weeks here through the beginning of May. Everyone, it seems, was saving up to pile all of their announcements at once, leaving us scrambling and our RSS feed spinning. Over the past few days, new phones were announced by BlackBerry, Nokia, Sony and Samsung while Google has been dropping all sorts of stuff in our laps at I/O and even Microsoft got in on the game by confirming Windows 8.1 will be shown next month. Surely someone could have made a few phone calls and maybe pushed their bit of news up or back a week or two.

As I write this, late at night in a hotel in San Francisco, it's Google I/O that's dominating the headlines. New Android boss Sundar Pichai promised a very dev-focused event, moving away from the consumer-heavy fireworks of years past, and that's exactly what we got, with Google spending far more time talking APIs and IDEs than tablets and smartphones.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/17/editors-letter-when-it-rains-it-pours/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Friday, May 17, 2013

Carver Bank CEO Debbie Wright Interview - Business Insider

OneWire, a leading career site for finance professionals, has another installment of its Open Door video interview series out. This time, OneWire CEO Skiddy von Stade sits down with Deborah Wright, the President and CEO of Carver Bancorp.

Wright discusses her fascinating life story, from becoming one of the first African American children to integrate the Bennetsville, South Carolina school system, to running the largest publicly traded African American bank in the United States.

Wright recalls of her childhood,

?I think for me it was first or second grade when all of the big court decisions came down striking down ?Separate But Equal.? And so one Sunday morning, my father volunteered us to be one of the families that would be the first to integrate the Bennetsville elementary school system.?

After earning an AB, JD, and MBA from Harvard University, Wright went on to pursue an incredibly successful career that has spanned both the private and public sectors. Deborah began her career as an Associate at First Boston.

From there, she joined the business advocacy group, New York City Partnership, and was soon named to the New York City Housing Authority Board by Mayor David N. Dinkins. She went on to serve in the Giuliani administration and then headed the Upper Manhattan Empowerment Zone Development Corporation in 1996.

In 1999, Mayor Dinkins asked Wright to join Carver Bancorp as President and CEO. Wright says of Carver, ?The black banking industry?really comes out of an era of segregation? But that was then, and now is now...?

Watch Skiddy?s interview with Deborah Wright below or visit OneWire to watch more videos from the Open Door series, including interviews with executives such as Tony James, President and COO of Blackstone, and Bill Comfort, Former Chairman of Citigroup Venture Capital.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/carver-bank-ceo-debbie-wright-interview-2013-5

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Why Your Brain Thinks These Dots Are a Dog

Look at the adorable GIF above. What you're seeing is nothing more than a blob of disconnected, alternating smaller blobs. So why do our brains tell us that we're looking at a trotting dalmation? It's all because of a little trick our brains are playing on us known as the Law of Closure.

Closure, a subcomponent of the overarching concept Gestalt psychology, tells us that when we see something, our immediate inclination is to take the information and turn it into something we're familiar and comfortable with. When we look at a cluster of lines, we're far more likely to remember them as one big line than as many individual lines. More specifically, the Law of Closure explains our tendency to form imagined connections between things that are, otherwise, entirely separate.

For example, in the above image, we'll see alternating columns of squares and circles far more easily than rows of single, alternating shapes. The stronger the connections we can make between items (circles with circles and squares with squares) the less chaotic it seems.

Chaos is, of course, highly discomforting, so to find any sort of relief, we'll deploy closure to fill in the blanks and bring order to our world?whether it be in design or even in more subjective parts of our lives.

Interestingly enough, we're usually totally unaware of our inclination to bridge these gaps, because all of this is taking place subconsciously as a remnant of a (once highly necessary) primal survival instinct. Prehistoric humans who could identify predatorial patterns more quickly and with fewer clues would have had a significant advantage as far as not becoming someone's next meal goes. It makes sense, then, why even the slightest lack of closure can make us so uncomfortable.

Plus, the idea of closure-for-the-sake-of-survival illuminates the cause behind another key aspect of the process: The fact that, when we do make these connections, our brain's reward system is triggered, releasing endorphins. And this happens every single time you complete the process; fill in a missing space in a stamp collection, finish a book, identify the peacock in NBC's logo, and your body will actually give you a pleasant little boost for doing something it thinks is keeping you alive. And it's these endorphins that make us crave a sense of closure as often as we can and in nearly every aspect of our lives.

Now, consider how frustrating it can feel when a pattern has one element skewed and out of place, when a song on a beloved CD skips ahead, or when an otherwise familiar storyline ends in a cliffhanger. In the latter particularly, it's our anticipation of completion that drives our anxiety and urges us to tune in next time. Ultimately, we know the resolution will relieve tension, close the circle, and allow us to enjoy the pleasurable reward that comes when that unknown gap is finally filled.

So given our ability for closure's likely more far-reaching origins, it only makes sense that this handy little trick would manifest itself in areas other than simply visual design. For instance, in the video below, Bobby McFerrin offers a perfect example of how humans can?even en masse?bridge the gaps of information by relying on familiar patterns:

But there is a more troubling side to the process: rarely do we ever actually have total knowledge of a situation before making any sort of decision. Because we're almost always lacking information, the closure principal becomes the basis for nearly every decision, action, and conclusion we will ever make. But when we inevitably try to close the gap using insufficient information, the closure principle can end up working against us.

As designer Andy Rutledge puts it:

Closure is dangerous, volatile, seductive, hypnotic, and even playful. It works to show us an image that does not actually exist before our eyes; it reaches into our experience and into our psyche to create a fiction and compels us to believe it. From these results we construct our opinions, assumption, understanding ?our reality.

Still, as long as there is enough information to allow for the "efficient function of closure," or the ability to draw conclusions using minimal effort (such as with the easily identifiable panda above), we will more often than not come to the right conclusions?and be able to enjoy our just reward. [Andy Rutledge, Changing Minds, Wikispaces, Jeremy Bolton]

Arrows image: Shutterstock/Anson0618

Source: http://gizmodo.com/why-your-brain-thinks-these-dots-are-a-dog-506703504

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