Monday, January 28, 2013

What to do when you lose a big client | TechRepublic

January 28, 2013, 4:54 AM PST

Takeaway: If you have one or two big consulting contracts, here are five things to keep in mind when you eventually lose their business.

If you?re in the consulting business for any length of time, you?ll experience the vicissitudes of the feast or famine phenomenon. As you go through its ups and downs, sooner or later one of those downs will take you by surprise. When a large contract suddenly goes away or gets drastically reduced, you might find it hard to pay the bills. You could even begin to wonder whether you can make it as a consultant after all. Here are some things to remember.

Don?t panic

If you don?t have other prospects already lined up, you could find this situation rather frightening. You might want to jump at the first thing that comes along, or even leave consulting for the supposed security of a salaried position. You might think about drastically slashing your rates in order to quickly attract new business. Keep your head cool and think about what?s best for your business. You don?t want to find yourself a year from now slaving on low-paying projects that keep you too busy to find anything better. The skills that got you the client you just lost will help you find others.

Don?t blame yourself

This event can easily become the entrance theme for a magnum performance by the Impostor Syndrome. Some of his best lines include:

  • If you were for real, you would have kept that client.
  • They dropped you because they finally saw through you.
  • You allowed your skills to stagnate, so now you won?t be able to find new work.
  • It?s time you quit pretending to know what you?re doing.

Those are all BS. The truth is that nobody knows everything about their job, especially in IT. We?re all learning all the time, just to do our jobs. We can?t keep up with everything in the field, so there will always be some domain of knowledge about which we think, ?I should have already learned about that.? Even though that may be true, beating yourself up about it isn?t going to help. It will only paralyze you.

Analyze your mistakes

Without blaming yourself, think about whether there were things you might have done differently to keep the client. Then ask yourself whether that is likely to apply to other clients as well. We can all stand to improve ourselves in one way or another. We may need to learn new skills, or work on our interpersonal communications. Did you fail to remove some false dilemma that made the client think that they either had to let you go or suffer some worse consequence? Did you miss or ignore any warning signs that this was about to happen? It?s always good to examine ourselves for the cause of our difficulties, but don?t forget that sometimes circumstances have nothing to do with anything we did or could have done.

Find new work

Even though you may feel compelled to work extra hard for your remaining clients, you probably need to set aside some time to deliberately seek new business. If you try to make up your losses on your existing clients, you may overburden their budgets and create problems in those relationships. When looking for new work, keep a cool head. Desperation doesn?t sell. Stick to your proven methods of finding work, or innovate thoughtfully ? but don?t grasp at straws.

Prepare for the next time

These downtimes are never fun. Wouldn?t it be nice if you could ride through them more comfortably? There are at least two things that you should do. First, set aside some money on a regular basis in a fund specifically designated for getting through these rainy days. Second, keep your client base diverse. If each client is only a small fraction of your business, then losing one or even two at the same time becomes a speed bump instead of a ?bridge out ahead!?

Conclusion

A dozen years ago I lost a client who had been with me for ten years, and who at the time accounted for almost 50% of my business. I didn?t recover quickly. It took years to build my revenue again by piecing together smaller contracts. I had become too comfortable with that regular chunk of income every month.

How about you? Do you have one or two big contracts that are making you complacent? What could you do to soften the blow when they eventually go away?

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Source: http://www.techrepublic.com/blog/project-management/what-to-do-when-you-lose-a-big-client/5481

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Refugees again, Palestinians flee Syria's war

In this Tuesday, Jan. 15, 2013 photo, Palestinian children who fled their houses in the Yarmouk camp for Palestinian refugees in south Damascus, sitting inside a children library, at the Ein el-Hilweh refugee camp, in the southern port city of Sidon, Lebanon. The Palestinian exodus from Syria has also revived decades-old debate over the Palestine refugees' 'right of return' to their homes that are now in Israel, adding to the complexity the conflict whose sectarian and ethnic overtones have spilled over into neighboring countries raising fears of a regional war. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)

In this Tuesday, Jan. 15, 2013 photo, Palestinian children who fled their houses in the Yarmouk camp for Palestinian refugees in south Damascus, sitting inside a children library, at the Ein el-Hilweh refugee camp, in the southern port city of Sidon, Lebanon. The Palestinian exodus from Syria has also revived decades-old debate over the Palestine refugees' 'right of return' to their homes that are now in Israel, adding to the complexity the conflict whose sectarian and ethnic overtones have spilled over into neighboring countries raising fears of a regional war. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)

In this Tuesday, Jan. 15, 2013 photo, a Palestinian family who fled thier home in the Yarmouk camp for Palestinian refugees in south Damascus, look out through the window, at the Ein el-Hilweh refugee camp, in the southern port city of Sidon, Lebanon. The Palestinian exodus from Syria has also revived decades-old debate over the Palestine refugees' 'right of return' to their homes that are now in Israel, adding to the complexity the conflict whose sectarian and ethnic overtones have spilled over into neighboring countries raising fears of a regional war. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)

In this Tuesday, Jan. 15, 2013 photo, Palestinian children who fled their houses in the Yarmouk camp for Palestinian refugees in south Damascus, sitting inside a children library, at the Ein el-Hilweh refugee camp, in the southern port city of Sidon, Lebanon. The Palestinian exodus from Syria has also revived decades-old debate over the Palestine refugees' 'right of return' to their homes that are now in Israel, adding to the complexity the conflict whose sectarian and ethnic overtones have spilled over into neighboring countries raising fears of a regional war. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)

In this Tuesday, Jan. 15, 2013 photo, a Palestinian woman who fled her home in the Yarmouk camp for Palestinian refugees in south Damascus, carries her children inside a school, at the Ein el-Hilweh refugee camp, in the southern port city of Sidon, Lebanon. The Palestinian exodus from Syria has also revived decades-old debate over the Palestine refugees' 'right of return' to their homes that are now in Israel, adding to the complexity the conflict whose sectarian and ethnic overtones have spilled over into neighboring countries raising fears of a regional war. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)

In this Tuesday, Jan. 15, 2013 photo, a Palestinian woman who fled her home in the Yarmouk camp for Palestinian refugees in south Damascus, feeds her baby inside a school, at the Ein el-Hilweh refugee camp, in the southern port city of Sidon, Lebanon. The Palestinian exodus from Syria has also revived decades-old debate over the Palestine refugees' 'right of return' to their homes that are now in Israel, adding to the complexity the conflict whose sectarian and ethnic overtones have spilled over into neighboring countries raising fears of a regional war. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)

(AP) ? When Syrian warplanes bombed a Palestinian refugee camp in Damascus last December, Umm Sami rounded up her three sons, shut the windows and locked the doors so they could neither hear nor heed the call to arms by rebels and pro-government gunmen fighting in the streets.

Then she told her sons they were leaving their home in the Yarmouk refugee camp in the Syrian capital for neighboring Lebanon, where they would wait out Syria's civil war.

"There will be no more martyrs for Palestine in my family," Umm Sami said, who only gave her nickname for fear of reprisals. "This war is a Syrian problem."

Now safe in Lebanon, the 45-year-old widow and her family have joined thousands of other Palestinian refugees who have found shelter in the country since the uprising against Syrian President Bashar Assad erupted nearly two years ago. The conflict has left more than 2 million people internally displaced, and pushed 650,000 more to seek refuge abroad.

Umm Sami's resolve to keep her sons out of the fight in Syria ties into a deep-rooted sentiment among a generation of Palestinian refugees who say they are fed up with being dragged into the region's conflicts on a promise of getting their own state.

The Palestinian exodus from Syria has also revived a decades-old debate over the refugees' right of return to their homes that are now in Israel. That has added another layer of complexity to a conflict already loaded with sectarian and ethnic overtones that have spilled over into neighboring countries, raising fears of a regional war.

Palestinians living in Arab countries ? including the half-million refugees in Syria ? are descendants of the hundreds of thousands who fled or were driven from their homes in the war that followed Israel's creation in 1948. Having scattered across the Middle East since then, Palestinians consistently have found themselves in the middle of the region's conflicts.

After the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq toppled Saddam Hussein, hundreds of Palestinians were killed as the Sunni and Shiite militias fought for dominance of the country. Iraq's Shiite majority saw Saddam, who like most Palestinians was a Sunni Muslim, as a patron of the stateless Palestinians, granting them rights the dictator denied his own citizens because they were of the rival sect.

About 1,000 Palestinians fled the 2004-07 sectarian bloodshed in Baghdad, living in a refugee camp near the Syrian border before being resettled in third countries.

During Lebanon's 1975-1990 civil war, Palestinians played a major role, fighting alongside Muslim militiamen against Christian forces.

Umm Sami, who was born in a refugee camp in Lebanon before the war, was twice forced to flee the fighting, most notably in 1982 when her family escaped the Sabra and Chatilla camps during the notorious massacre of Palestinians there by Christian militias.

She would eventually bury her father, two brothers and her husband ? all fallen fighters ? before leaving for Syria and settling with her four sons in Yarmouk, one of nine Palestinian camps in Syria.

Her youngest son died in a traffic accident while serving in the Palestinian unit of the Syrian army just weeks before the anti-Assad revolt started in March 2011. None of her other sons joined the revolution, she said, because "they don't want to die."

Unlike in Lebanon, where Palestinians are cramped into notoriously lawless camps, banned from all but the most menial professions and barred from owning property, Palestinians in Syria are well integrated and enjoy full citizenship rights, except for the right to vote.

But when the uprising against Assad erupted in the southern province of Daraa in March 2011, some Palestinians living in a camp there joined in the peaceful protests. When the fighting spread to the northern city of Aleppo in last summer, some took up arms against the regime.

In Damascus, most stayed on the sidelines, but as the civil war reached Yarmouk late last year, a densely populated residential area just 8 kilometers (5 miles) from the heart of the capital, most residents backed the rebels. Some groups, however, such as the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command, opted to fight alongside Assad's troops.

Palestinian officials say more than 700 Palestinians have been killed in the Yarmouk fighting. Most of the camp's 150,000 inhabitants have fled, according to the U.N. agency for Palestinian refugees. Some of them have found safe haven in areas of Damascus and other Syrian cities, but most have escaped to camps in Lebanon.

"We go from catastrophe to catastrophe, from refugee camp to refugee camp, but at least we are alive," Umm Sami said in Ein el-Hilweh, Lebanon's largest Palestinian refugee camp, near the southern port city of Sidon. She and her sons, who are all in their 20s and university graduates, fled Yarmouk with only the clothes on their backs, leaving behind a two-bedroom apartment and jobs that paid the bills.

Now, they are jobless in Lebanon, officially barred from legal employment, and left to live off help from relatives and handouts from the camp's mosques.

Ein en-Hilweh normally houses 65,000 people, but since mid-December, when a flood of refugees from Yarmouk started arriving, the population has steadily grown by several hundred a day, putting a further strain on resources.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said he asked U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon last month to seek Israeli permission to bring Palestinians caught in Syria's civil war to their homeland. Last week, he said that Israel agreed to allow 150,000 Palestinians refugees from Syrian into the West Bank and Gaza ? as long as they relinquished the right of return to what is now Israel. Abbas said he refused.

With no end to the Syria conflict in sight, residents of Ein el-Hilweh have started building a camp within a refugee camp for their compatriots escaping the violence across the border.

They've converted the camp's children's library into housing for dozens of families. Reading rooms, offices, hallways and even bathrooms have been partitioned with makeshift walls, boards and even blankets as families try to carve out space to cook, eat and sleep.

In the library's front yard, a new structure is being built to house at least 10 more families.

"We do what we can to help and find them a home, because they are not going back to Syria soon," said Sheik Jamal Khatab, who oversees the registration of refugees and distribution of aid.

The biggest challenge facing the Palestinian refugees, Khatab said, is not to be dragged into the Syrian civil war ? on either side. He also warned that the hardship awaiting Palestinians after the war ends will be tougher than the one they have been living as stateless people.

"It's in our interest not to interfere in this conflict, even though the Syrian regime is a tyrannical regime," he said. "We are not Syrians, and any side that will win this war will consider us enemies."

___

Associated Press writers Mohammed Daraghmeh in Ramallah, West Bank, and Sameer N. Yacoub in Baghdad contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-01-28-ML-Syria-Palestinian-Exodus/id-dfc93e477d4d4d48aaa47b9fe586064c

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Nooly: Get the Most Accurate Forecast Possible

There are few things more annoying than bringing an umbrella with you when you don't need it. Never make that mistake again—Nooly will give you accurate, super-local forecasts for your exact neighborhood. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/pqEQ2hUN2PY/nooly-get-the-most-accurate-forecast-possible

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Sunday, January 27, 2013

'Hansel & Gretel' hunts down a box office win

By Reuters

A grown-up "Hansel & Gretel" grabbed the weekend box office title, pulling in $19 million in U.S. and Canadian ticket sales with its reinvention of the classic fairy tale characters as fierce bounty hunters.

"Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters" knocked last weekend's winner, low-budget horror flick "Mama," into second place. "Mama" earned $12.8 million from Friday through Sunday, according to studio estimates, followed by "Silver Linings Playbook" with $10 million.

CIA drama "Zero Dark Thirty" came in fourth with $9.8 million.

Jeremy Renner and Gemma Arterton star in "Hansel & Gretel" as crossbow-wielding adult siblings who travel the world to take out evil witches. MGM and Viacom Inc's Paramount Pictures produced the action comedy for about $50 million. Paramount had predicted opening weekend sales in the high-teens or low $20 million range.

Don Harris, Paramount's president of distribution, said the film performed well despite the very cold temperatures and snow that hit the eastern United States.

"We are pleased that we were on our number on a worldwide basis. It looks like we are on or exceeding our numbers, but we did get dinged with the weather on Friday," he said in an interview.

"The impact of the weather was certainly more than I had predicted."

"Mama" features Jessica Chastain as a woman forced to take care of two orphaned nieces who have been living in the woods. The $15 million production has now earned $48.6 million at U.S. and Canadian theaters through two weekends.

Chastain also stars in "Zero Dark Thirty" in an Oscar-nominated role as a dogged CIA agent searching for al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden. The best picture nominee, which has sparked debate over depictions of torture, has grossed $69.9 million since its release in late December.

"Silver Linings Playbook," another Oscar contender, stars Bradley Cooper as a former mental patient trying to rebuild his life with the help of a young widow played by Jennifer Lawrence. Total sales for "Silver Linings" reached $69.46 million.

New crime thriller "Parker" finished in fifth place, taking in $7 million at domestic theaters. The film is based on a series of novels by Donald E. Westlake and stars Jason Statham as a thief seeking revenge against a crew that double-crossed him. Jennifer Lopez plays a woman who helps with his mission.

"Movie 43," a raunchy new comedy with an ensemble of Hollywood directors and stars, settled for seventh place. The film is a series of related short films about three kids scouring the Internet to find the world's most-banned movie. Stars making appearances include Huge Jackman, Seth MacFarlane, Kate Winslet and Dennis Quaid. Privately held Relativity Media produced the film for about $6 million.

"Mama" was distributed by Universal Studios, a division of Comcast Corp. Sony Corp's movie studio released "Zero Dark Thirty." "Parker" was released by independent studio FilmDistrict. The Weinstein Co distributed "Silver Linings Playbook."

Related content:

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://entertainment.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/27/16724757-hansel-gretel-hunts-down-top-spot-at-box-office?lite

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Entry Level - Marketing, Advertising, Sales, Management - Buffalo ...

THE MANAGEMENT TEAM

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Source: http://jobs.careers.org/job/JHS0WS77VX4D3B0FSMT/Entry-Level---Marketing-Advertising-Sales-Management

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Spam hits five-year low (but it's still two thirds of all email)

21 hrs.

A new report from Kaspersky Lab indicates that the amount of spam in the world continues to decline, although it's nowhere near disappearing. It's also being replaced with other, more substantial threats.

Spam levels dropped throughout 2012, and by the end of the year it was steadily below 70 percent of all email detected. In the heyday of spam, it consistently made up around 85 percent, according to Kaspersky's numbers.

A number of factors have contributed to this. People and email providers have instituted more effective spam filters, for one thing, and a major security hole that allowed people to spoof an email's sender was closed this year.

The reduced effectiveness of spam emails means spammers have to send more to get any hits. Kaspersky calculates that it cost spammers $150 for every million emails sent ? cheap indeed, but the success rate is so low that legal, normal advertising on Google and Facebook actually end up beinga better deal.

Of course, not every spammer is just aiming for cheap advertising. There are plenty?selling illegal services or products, or looking to hijack your computer with malicious attachments or phishing attempts. Since legal advertisement isn't an option, they're doubling down on spam. For that reason, Kaspersky suggests spam reduction in 2013 will be "negligible at best."

The full, detailed report, with many more details about the origins and types of 2012's spam, can be read here.

Devin Coldewey is a contributing writer for NBCNews Digital. His personal website is?coldewey.cc.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/spam-hits-five-year-low-its-still-two-thirds-all-1C8125282

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Saturday, January 26, 2013

Energy Return on Investment (EROI) for U.S. Oil ... - Peak Oil News

Energy Return on Investment (EROI) for U.S. Oil and Gas Discovery and Production thumbnail

Oil production in the US peaked in 1970. The easy ?sweeter? stuff has been extracted. What remains is deeper in the ground or farther off-shore, requires much more energy to extract, and is more toxic to produce. It takes energy to make energy. Energy Return on Investment (EROI) also known as?ERoEI?(Energy Returned on Energy Invested), is a common way of expressing the efficiency of the energy production process. The EROI for oil and gas, as well as other fossil fuels,?has been falling for decades (see chart below). If it was a financial stock, you would have sold it years ago.

The Ouroboros

It is important to track EROI. Producing a barrel of oil consumes more and more energy, thus exponentially?accelerating the consumption of the oil. It is like the mythic Ouroboros?-?a snake eating its own tail. A high EROI is better than low EROI. As we approach an EROI of 1:1 (e.g.?consuming 1 barrel of oil to produce 1 barrel of oil), it?s game over ? why bother. Prudent nations would want to have a comprehensive plan for transitioning to alternative fuels and renewable energy, well before we hit peak oil. Oh well? More on that in a minute (see The Hirsch Report, below).

This week, a team of researchers published a detailed analysis of the EROI for oil and gas industry. The report,?A New Long Term Assessment of Energy Return on Investment (EROI) for U.S. Oil and Gas Discovery and Production, is authored by researchers at?State University of New York and Boston University.

From the abstract:

Oil and gas are the main sources of energy in the United States. Part of their appeal is the high Energy Return on Energy Investment (EROI) when procuring them. We assessed data from the United States Bureau of the Census of Mineral Industries, the Energy Information Administration (EIA), the Oil and Gas Journal for the years 1919?2007 and from oil analyst Jean Laherrere to derive EROI for both finding and producing oil and gas. We found two general patterns in the relation of energy gains compared to energy costs: a gradual secular decrease in EROI and an inverse relation to drilling effort. EROI for finding oil and gas decreased exponentially from 1200:1 in 1919 to 5:1 in 2007. The EROI for production of the oil and gas industry was about 20:1 from 1919 to 1972, declined to about 8:1 in 1982 when peak drilling occurred, recovered to about 17:1 from 1986?2002 and declined sharply to about 11:1 in the mid to late 2000s. The slowly declining secular trend has been partly masked by changing effort: the lower the intensity of drilling, the higher the EROI compared to the secular trend. Fuel consumption within the oil and gas industry grew continuously from 1919 through the early 1980s, declined in the mid-1990s, and has increased recently, not surprisingly linked to the increased cost of finding and extracting oil.

As we deplete the earths global oil reserves, we need to dig deeper and deeper ? typically drilling over 100 million feet of well per year. It takes enormous amounts of energy and resources to do that, not to mention the energy consumed just to figure out where to drill. The next two charts show the EROI for oil and gas discovery and production.

eroi eroei discovery for US oil and gas

(source: Guilford, Hall, Connor, Cleveland ?A New Long Term Assessment of Energy Return on Investment (EROI) for U.S. Oil and Gas Discovery and Production.? Sustainability 2011, 3, 1866-1887)

For the Discovery chart above, note that in the early days of oil exploration, the stuff was practically bubbling out of the ground, so it was much easier to figure out where to drill ? hence the EROI over 1,200 in 1920. As the US industrial age found its legs, oil consumption accelerated. Demand for more and more oil quickly consumed the easy stuff, and the EROI fell rapidly. As we hit peak oil production in 1970, the EROI fell below 10:1. I inset a blowup of the chart, from 1950 to 2010, so that we can see how EROI has since remained firmly in the single digits.

eroi eroei production for US oil and gas

(source: Guilford, Hall, Connor, Cleveland ?A New Long Term Assessment of Energy Return on Investment (EROI) for U.S. Oil and Gas Discovery and Production.? Sustainability 2011, 3, 1866-1887)

The EROI for Production is trending lower too. Variations in any given year are largely dependent on how much drilling it takes to produce the oil. ?Typically about 2 barrels of oil equivalent are consumed per foot of well drilled. In years where there was a lot of drilling, the EROI would be lower.

A more intuitive way to look at this trend is as dollars per barrel of oil. The chart below is from the Energy Information Administration (EIA) Annual Energy Review for 2011. It shows the cost to add each additional barrel of oil to US reserves.

expenditures per barrel of reserve additions, 1975 to 2008, cost per barrel of oil, chart

COE (crude oil equivalent) measures the cost of adding 5.8 million BTUs regardless of whether the resource is oil, natural gas, or natural gas liquids. (source: EIA, 2011 Annual Energy Review)

As I mentioned above, the easy oil has been extracted. What remains is increasingly difficult to get to and refine (ultra-deep, off-shore, tar sands, shale-rock fracking, etc). ?We should expect these prices to continue their trend higher.

The Hirsch Report

In 2005, the US Department of Energy published?Peaking of World Oil Production: Impacts, Mitigation, and Risk Management, which came to be known as the Hirsch Report, named for the reports lead author, Robert Hirsch.?It examined the time frame for the occurrence of peak oil, the necessary mitigating actions, and the likely impacts based on the timeliness of those actions. From the report:

The peaking of world oil production presents the U.S. and the world with an unprecedented risk management problem. As peaking is approached, liquid fuel prices and price volatility will increase dramatically, and, without timely mitigation, the economic, social, and political costs will be unprecedented. Viable mitigation options exist on both the supply and demand sides, but to have substantial impact, they must be initiated more than a decade in advance of peaking.

The report estimated that oil production would peak in about 2015. It laid out three possible scenarios:

A scenario analysis was performed, based on crash program implementation worldwide ? the fastest humanly possible. Three starting dates were considered:
1. When peaking occurs;
2. Ten years before peaking occurs; and
3. Twenty years before peaking.

The timing of oil peaking was left open because of the considerable differences of opinion among experts. Consideration of a number of implementation scenarios provided some fundamental insights, as follows:

  • Waiting until world oil production peaks before taking crash program action leaves the world with a significant liquid fuel deficit for more than two decades.
  • Initiating a mitigation crash program 10 years before world oil peaking helps considerably but still leaves a liquid fuels shortfall roughly a decade after the time that oil would have peaked.
  • Initiating a mitigation crash program 20 years before peaking offers the possibility of avoiding a world liquid fuels shortfall for the forecast period.

The reason why such long lead times are required is that the worldwide scale of oil consumption is enormous ? a fact often lost in a world where oil abundance has been taken for granted for so long. If mitigation is too little, too late, world supply/demand balance will have to be achieved through massive demand destruction (shortages), which would translate to extreme economic hardship. On the other hand, with timely mitigation, economic damage can be minimized.

We are on a short fuse. As we ride along the top of peak oil production, spikes in demand, or disruptions in supply, will cause rapid fluctuations in the price of oil. With no ability to provide alternatives, the economy will stutter, usually in the form of a recession, which has the side effect of reducing demand. Until we transition to alternative forms of energy, we will repeat the cycle of growth, followed by hitting the peak oil wall, followed by recession.

Small is Beautiful

And as the legendary economist E.F. Schumacher points out in his seminal book Small is Beautiful, to understand the true cost of an product or initiative, we must tally both the direct costs as well as the indirect costs. When we talk about oil and gas, what is the cost of CO2 spewing into our atmosphere? What is the cost of toxic chemicals leaking into our water systems? What is the cost to public health? What is the cost of each oil war? What is the cost of funding petro-dictatorships? What is the cost to the common wealth?

What is the cost?

Fires burn around the site of the BP Deepwater Horizon rig site in the Gulf of Mexico, June 19, 2010. (source: LA Times)

Carpe Diem

While the EROI of fossil fuels such as oil, gas, and coal plummet, the EROI for renewables such as wind and solar are trending strongly up, with EROIs five to twenty times higher than their fossil fuel counterparts.

eroei for oil, gas, coal, wind power, solar energy

Can the nation that pioneered the computer, telecommunications, the internet, medical technology, oil exploration, landed on the moon, etc. muster the will to do it again with alternative energy? Carpe Diem!

8020Vision

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Source: http://peakoil.com/production/energy-return-on-investment-eroi-for-u-s-oil-and-gas-discovery-and-production/

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Turning Girl Scout Cookies Into Graphene

Researchers at Rice University in Houston have discovered a cheap source of the wonder material graphene: baked goods. Marc Abrahams, editor and co-founder of The Annals of Improbable Research, talks about how to transform a box of Girl Scout cookies into $15 billion worth of graphene?in theory, at least.

Copyright ? 2013 NPR. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

IRA FLATOW, HOST:

How much did you pay for that last box of Girl Scout cookies you bought? Five bucks, six maybe, maybe more? How about $15 billion? That's the price of a single box if - if it were turned into graphine. Researchers at Rice University in Houston have discovered a way to turn anything with carbon into graphine, the super-strong wonder material that can be worth over two million times the price of gold. You heard that right, two million times.

Forget alchemy, that's for chumps. This is graphene, worth a lot more in its weight of gold. Marc Abrahams, editor and founder of the Annals of Improbable Research is here to tell us why graphene is so pricey and what this invention could mean for nanotechnology. Welcome back to SCIENCE FRIDAY.

MARC ABRAHAMS: Thanks, Ira, nice to be back.

FLATOW: So what is this thing about turning Girl Scout cookies into graphene?

ABRAHAMS: All right, we'll start with a little reminder about graphene. Graphene is just a form of carbon. It's a form of carbon people knew existed, but just about eight or so years ago, for the first time, people were able to get enough of it to actually look at it. It's the two-dimensional form. It's like a big sheet of chicken wire, that's the shape, and it's really hard to get.

The guys who figured it out did it in a goofy way, using pencil and scotch tape. When you write with a pencil, that stuff that comes off, that graphite, that's really sheets, and sheets and sheets of this thin stuff. But separating those, that was expensive.

The numbers you've tossed around show you how expensive. People have been able to do experiments. They've found all kinds of really interesting possibly valuable properties, but nothing, no industry is really going to start until they can make enough of this stuff cheaply to use it.

Until now, most of the ways of making it started with this first step: Get some really pure, really expensive chemicals that you're going to mix in and do the next stuff. Huge expense. What Jim Tour down in Houston discovered and showed is that anything that's got carbon in it you can turn into graphene.

And to demonstrate that he meant anything, he did it with Girl Scout cookies. He turned those into graphene. He did it with chocolate. He got some chocolate half-dollar coins. He did it with dog feces from a miniature Dachshund, and he did it with a cockroach leg. And essentially he just got a really big oven, heated it up to about 1,000 degrees C and filled that oven with a little bit of this stuff, the cockroach or the dog feces, whatever, and a sheet of pure copper and a little bit of gas, left it for about 20 minutes, and viola, he'd made little bits of really high-quality graphene.

FLATOW: Wow.

ABRAHAMS: He was making still little, tiny amounts. It's still really expensive. But if you just do out the little numbers from it, from the amount he made, if you could convert all of the cookies in a standard box of Girl Scout cookies, if you could convert all the carbon in them into graphene - when he did this a year and a half ago, that would be worth about $15 billion.

FLATOW: Are those...?

ABRAHAMS: (Unintelligible) today, now it's - the technique have gotten better. So now it would only be worth about $12 billion.

FLATOW: Are those the thin mints?

ABRAHAMS: No, these were the shortbread. But you could do it with thin mints.

FLATOW: What a waste of those thin mints - they wouldn't last long in my kitchen.

(LAUGHTER)

ABRAHAMS: Well yeah, so you're just throwing away money when you do that, Ira.

FLATOW: Can anybody do this? And this being adopted and adapted by commercial industry?

ABRAHAMS: Well, anybody with a little equipment could do it. The thing is, it's still not easy, and it's still really expensive because you can only make - right now they only know how to make really, really, really tiny amounts. But the big thing he was trying to show is you don't have to start with really expensive feed stocks, is the chemical term.

You can make this stuff from anything. So once people figure out their techniques a little bit better, the prospects for a huge drop in price are great. Now of course there are other problems with this stuff. There's not enough of it that people have figured a lot of the technical problems. Like if you make electronics from graphene, it has all these beautiful properties. But if you make them, you've got to connect them to wires.

And the connector problem, you know, just in a way it's a version of when you plug something into your computer, how do you connect it. How do you connect something to a sheet of carbon that's one atom thick so that it's reliable and does what you want it to? People are working on that. That's still a mystery.

FLATOW: Yeah, that's why they work there, and I work here.

ABRAHAMS: But someday.

FLATOW: Someday. Thank you, Mark, fascinating...

does what you want it to? People are working on that.

Yeah.

ABRAHAMS: That's still a mystery.

FLATOW: Yeah. That's why they work there and I work here. Thank...

ABRAHAMS: Yup. Someday.

FLATOW: Yeah, someday. Thank you, Marc. Fascinating as always.

ABRAHAMS: OK. We'll see you.

FLATOW: Marc Abrahams, editor and founder of the Annals of Improbable Research. He's also the founder and master of ceremonies - excuse me - at the Ig Nobel Prize ceremonies that you hear every year the Friday after Thanksgiving right here.

Copyright ? 2013 NPR. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to NPR. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/01/25/170267857/turning-girl-scout-cookies-into-graphene?ft=1&f=1007

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Ed. Dept.: Disabled students must be given sports

Chris Gardner / ASSOCIATED PRESS

Wheelchair athlete Tatyana McFadden, 16, races along side other runners in her first track meet along side able-bodied high school runners in Rockville, Md.

By Tracy Connor, Sr. Staff Writer, NBC News

The feds are ordering schools across the country to make ?reasonable? changes to sports programs so that disabled students can play ? or else create separate teams for them.

The new guidance from the Education Department issued Friday was hailed by advocates for the disabled but denounced by a conservative think-tank that said it could cost big bucks for cash-strapped schools.

?We think it?s huge and historic. In my opinion it could have the same effect, if properly implemented, as Title IX did for women,? said Kirk Bauer, executive director of Disabled Sports USA.

Title IX required schools to offer girls and boys the same athletic opportunities and resulted in a huge uptick in female participation in school sports after it took effect 40 years ago.

The new order from the Education Department says athletics is also a civil right for the disabled and schools that don?t protect it could lose federal funding.

Under the latest rules, schools must tweak traditional programs to give qualified disabled students a shot at playing as long as they can do it without fundamentally changing the sport or giving anyone an advantage.

For instance, a visual aid instead of a starter pistol for the deaf runner would be easy to implement, while adding a fifth base to a baseball field to shorten running distances would be considered too big a change.

If alterations to a traditional team?aren't?feasible, schools must create a sports program that is open to disabled students, the order says. If there?aren't?enough students, schools should seek to create district-wide, regional or mixed-gender programs.

That part of the directive could be a huge financial burden, said Mike Petrilli, executive vice president of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, a right-leaning educational research nonprofit.

?I?m sympathetic to the idea that kids with disabilities should be able to play sports, but this is an incredible example of executive overreach and a huge unfunded mandate,? Petrilli said.

?It?s not clear how far schools have to go. Is wheelchair basketball enough or do they need to have wheelchair tennis and other sports, too??

Bauer said such concerns are off-base, ?that schools will not be asked to have a disabled counterpart for every sport.

?It?s not going to be across the board,? he said. ?Maybe football is not the sport that is going to be integrated.?

The letter from the feds gives some examples of ways schools can be creative but it does not spell out everything.

Casey Followay, 15, of Wooster, Ohio, who races in a wheelchair alone on his track team, hopes the policy will allow him to go up against runners. ?It?s going to give me the chance to compete against kids at my level,? he told the Associated Press.

Lindsay Jones of the Council for Exceptional Children said that since disabilities are so individualized, the response to them needs to be, as well.

?I do thing you?re going to see some case-by-case lawsuits,? she said.

Ron Ingram, a spokesman for the Alabama High School Athletic Association, said he did not expect enormous changes at the school level in his state.

?We already have gone to great lengths to include students with disabilities in a way that it is not detrimental to the fundamental concept of the contest,? he said, pointing to a wrestler with no legs who racked up a 36-14 record in his senior year competing on a traditional team.

He said a wheelchair division at the state track-and-field championships has been a ?disappointment,? with not much interest. ?A majority of our special-needs students would prefer to compete in the Special Olympics,? he said.

?I think, based on what I?ve read so far, the biggest impact will just remind us all that we do need to go to great lengths to make sure all our students athletes are not discriminated against,? Ingram said.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

?

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/25/16696160-disabled-students-must-be-given-sports-says-education-dept?lite

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Friday, January 25, 2013

5 Simple Small Business Marketing Tips - FamousWSIResults, New ...

Last updated 11 hours ago

Interested In Some Affordable Small Business Marketing? Tips?

If you are a small business on a limited marketing budget, there are ways to get your product or service noticed that cost little to no money.

Make 2013 the year you step up your efforts to engage your customers. Marketing trends are changing rapidly and customers expect business to keep up.

Simple strategies, such as interacting with customers via facebook, twitter or online directories cost nothing, yet can help your business gain a following of loyal customers.

Think outside the box and deliver fresh content that will get your business noticed. Have a little fun with social media and engage with your customers so that they'll continue to like your business!

Check Out These 5 Simple Small Business Marketing Tips Below that cost little to no money.

Need a little Help?

?Give Famous WSI Results a call today.

?

Source: http://famouswsiresults.wsicast.com/633145/2013/01/25/5-simple-small-business-marketing-tips.html

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3-D fireworks of a star: Astronomers reconstruct journey of emitted gas

Jan. 24, 2013 ? In 1901 the star GK Persei gave off a powerful explosion that has not stopped growing and astonishing ever since. Now a team of Spanish and Estonian astronomers has reconstructed the journey of the emitted gas in 3D which, contrary to predictions, has hardly slowed down its speed of up to 1,000 km/s after all this time.

Thanks to the images captured from the Isaac Newton Telescope and the Nordic Optical Telescope in La Palma (Canary Islands, Spain), a European team of astronomers has constructed a three dimensional map of the remnant of a nova, or in other words, what was left of the star after its explosion. The results have just been published in the Astrophysical Journal.

The protagonist of this story is the star GK Persei situated at 'just' 1,300 light years away from Earth. It is also known as Nova Persei 1901 because a strong thermonuclear eruption occurred on its surface on the 21st February 1901. On that day astronomers observed how its brightness suddenly increased to such an extent that it became one of the brightest stars in the skies.

The surprising thing is that the explosion created remaining material made up of gaseous knots, which become visible in 1916. "From then the visual spectacle has been similar to that of a firework display seen in slow motion," claims Miguel Santander, researcher at Spanish National Observatory and coauthor of the study.

After patient work to gather images, the team was able to measure the movements of more than 200 knots as well as the radial velocity using the Doppler effect, which allows to determine if they are getting closer or moving further away from us. In this way the 3D map of the nova was created and its dynamic was analysed.

"Such data are rarely available in astrophysics because as a general rule apparent expansion or, in other words, in the layout of the sky, the majority of objects cannot be seen," outlines another of the authors, Romano Corradi, from the Astrophysics Institute of the Canary Islands.

An unexpected result

In any case, the main result of this work "is that the gas seems to be moving further away in a ballistic or free manner and is hardly slowing down, contrary to what was thought in previous studies," comments the lead author of the investigation, Tiina Liimets of the Tartu Observatory in Estonia.

Until now it was thought that the gas from the explosion would slow down "significantly" due to the large quantity of matter in its path that the star has expelled previously. However, its speed has remained between a range of 600 and 1000 kilometres per second.

Long before the explosion in 1901, more than one hundred thousand years ago, GK Persei had already undergone a massive transformation from a red giant to a white dwarf. This process expelled its external layers forming a planetary nebula, which is a giant gas cloud within which the nova is now growing in 3D.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Plataforma SINC, via AlphaGalileo.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. T. Liimets, R.L.M. Corradi, M. Santander-Garc?a, E. Villaver, P. Rodr?guez-Gil, K. Verro, I. Kolka. A three-dimensional view of the remnant of Nova Persei 1901 (GK Per). Astrophysical Journal, December 2012

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/SLhdjgIXI-s/130124123442.htm

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Polycom's Videoconferencing Business Unfazed by Ambitious ...

Okay, so we don?t have flying cars yet. But, we do have video conferencing. And, in growing numbers businesses are adopting video conferencing into their overall Unified Communications strategy. But, I?m not so bullish on the video conferencing market as most people might be. Why? Well one word??Cloud?.

Yes, Video is here to stay and will continue to be deployed more and more. But, what company in their right mind today would want to invest in a video conference or ?Telepresence? system that costs $100k +? I know, people will argue that ?you can set-up a conference room with intelligent cameras that follow the discussion, that produce high-quality HD video, that can see the entire room, etc., etc.

However, with the rapid adoption of Cloud services and the ?as a Service? model, I think you?re going to see video sold more as an add-on to Hosted PBX offerings. In fact, Polycom already recognizes this because many enterprise Hosted VoIP companies are already using their bridging equipment in their cloud environments making video bridges an ?as a Service? offer.

More and more people are becoming road warriors or work from home employees. With the advent of cloud based video bridges it makes location a moot point. That?s the beauty of the Cloud.

The discussion of image quality and intelligent cameras doesn?t outweigh the benefit of mobility. Most people would prefer to be untethered and unrestricted as opposed to sitting in a stuffy conference room.

The large players like Polycom, Cisco and LifeSize will continue to sell their equipment. I just think the face of their customer is going to change and the sales numbers will be coming more and more from the many enterprise hosted VoIP companies that are growing exponentially.

Source: http://www.vocalpointcg.com/polycoms-videoconferencing-business-unfazed-by-ambitious-startups-ceo-says/

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Wednesday, January 23, 2013

First lady starts 2nd term style in Thom Browne

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The first family headed out to Monday's inaugural festivities with Michelle Obama leading a very coordinated fashion parade in a navy-silk, checkered-patterned coat and dress by Thom Browne that were inspired by a menswear necktie.

The rest of her Inauguration Day outfit included a belt from J. Crew, necklace by Cathy Waterman and a cardigan by Reed Krakoff, whose ensemble she also wore to yesterday's intimate, indoor swearing-in ceremony.

President Barack Obama wore a blue tie with his white shirt, dark suit and overcoat. Malia Obama had on a plum-colored J. Crew coat with the hemline of an electric-blue dress peeking out and a burgundy-colored scarf, and her younger sister Sasha had on a Kate Spade coat and dress in a similar purple shade.

"It is an honor that Sasha Obama chose to wear Kate Spade New York," said the company's creative director, Deborah Lloyd, in an email to the Associated Press. "She epitomizes the youthful optimism and colorful spirit of the brand. We are so proud to have been a part of this historic moment."

Jenna Lyons, creative director of J. Crew, said it was "a huge point of pride for all of us" to be a part of the day ? as the brand was back in 2009 when the girls wore outfits by CrewCuts, its children's label.

"It's amazing to see the evolution of the family. I love the way Michelle looks. She looks beautiful in something so clean and tailored. It's such an elegant choice," Lyons said, "and they all look so sophisticated! You can see how the girls have grown up in the four years, and they're still so alive and vibrant, but more sophisticated."

Mrs. Obama has worn Browne's designs for other occasions, including a gray dress with black lace overlay to one of the presidential debates last fall, and she honored him last summer at the Smithsonian's Cooper-Hewitt National Design Awards for his contribution to fashion.

Browne made his name in modern ? very modern ? menswear, but he launched womenswear in 2011. He was in Paris on Monday, having just finished up previews of his fall men's collection, and wasn't immediately available for comment.

Simon Collins, dean of the school of fashion at Parsons The New School for Design in New York, said the Obamas dressed in their typical fashion: one that shows pride in their appearance.

"They are a stylish couple and their children look fabulous. Too many people get dressed in the dark," he said. "They show it's good to dress up, take pride in how you look. ... It's a wonderful example for America and the rest of the world."

He also noted that the Obamas seem to understand that the fashion industry is a driving force in the U.S. economy and that its lobby is a powerful one. They don't treat fashion frivolously, he observed.

But Collins said he was a bit surprised the public doesn't pay much attention to the president's wardrobe. He joked that Obama should perhaps try one of Browne's signature shrunken suits ? the ones that show a man's ankles.

At the end of the Inaugural festivities, Mrs. Obama's outfit and accompanying accessories will go to the National Archives.

___

Samantha Critchell tweets fashion at (at)AP_Fashion, and can be reached on Twitter at (at)Sam_Critchell.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/first-lady-starts-2nd-term-style-thom-browne-171648159.html

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Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Bridging finance can help capitalise on profitable ... - Bridging Loans

Posted on | January 21, 2013 | No Comments

A popular and often very lucrative opportunity is gaining planning permission for one or more additional properties on a portion of the land that makes up an existing property?s garden. Once the planning permission has been obtained the owner can either sell the plot, or plots, for development or build on the land for themselves. Deciding to build will often mean that finance is required to fund the project and this can be raised through the use of property development loans or bridging finance.

Even if the building plots are to be sold then there may still be a requirement for some finance. This would typically occur if there is already a mortgage facility on the property, likely to date back to when the property was originally purchased or a time when the property was remortgaged. An existing mortgage facility will most likely be secured on the original property and land, so to split the building plots so that they are on their own set of deeds will require the permission of the existing mortgage provider.

Mortgage providers are not always that cooperative and may refuse any request to give up some of their security, or may indeed agree to do so, provided some of the outstanding balance is repaid to compensate them for effectively agreeing to take less security for their loan. However, sometimes the ways in which the mortgage providers want to achieve this isn?t always convenient. Indeed it may be that once the plots are sold, or have been developed and sold, it is the intention of the owner to clear the existing mortgage completely from the proceeds received from the sales. Alternatively the owner may want to rent the properties out, so intends to raise buy to let mortgages in order to repay any development or bridging finance.

When it is impossible to move forwards with this sort of development due to awkward mortgage providers, a possible option can be bridging finance. The funds raised from bridging finance can be used to clear any existing mortgages and can also fund any other work that needs to be carried out, for example putting in the services, in order to enable the sale of the plot or plots. If looking to develop the sites for them self, a bridging loan can also provide the funds required to pay for the development. At the end of the development the properties would be sold or refinanced in order to repay the bridging loan. Alternatively development loans can be used to fund such projects.

Comments

Source: http://www.kisbridgingloans.co.uk/blog/474/bridging-finance-can-help-capitalise-on-profitable-opportunities-when-planning-is-obtained-for-additional-properties-in-your-garden/

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JHS AP Biology: Big Idea 1

?Adaptation of an Animal: Opposable thumbs are an adaptation in humans which allow them to grip objects, as demonstrated here.
?Adaptation of a Plant: ?The apple tree has adapted to produce fruit, namely apples. ?By producing apples, animals will eat its seed an help it to reproduce.
?Amniotic Egg: ?This egg is an excellent example of...an egg! ?Amniotic eggs allow animals to live and reproduce on land, while previously they had to be in the water.
?Angiosperm: ?An angiosperm is characterized by its production of flowers. ?Angiosperms also produce endosperm in their seeds, and their seeds are contained in fruits.
?Arachnid: ?A spider (an arachnid) made the web seen in this picture. ?All arachnids have eight legs and they include spiders, scorpions, and ticks.
?Arthropod: ?This pillbug/isopod/roly-poly is an arthropod. ?Arthropods are the phylum containing animals with exoskeletons, jointed appendages, and segmented bodies. ?Insects, arachnids, and crustaceans are some of the arthropods.
?Bilateral Symmetry: ?When both halves of something look identical. ?In nature this would occur with organisms, rather than clocks, but you get the point.
?Artificial Selection: ?This grapefruit was selected because of its large size. ?Therefore, humans have selected the trait for big grapefruits, and perhaps pass it along to future generations.
?Deuterostome: ?There is actually a bird in this tree, but if I told you were it is, that would be too easy. ?A deuterostome is an animal whose first body cavity in embryonic development becomes its anus. ?Sea urchins, sea stars, and all vertebrates are some examples of deuterostomes.
?Fungi: ?Fungi are in a seperate kingdom from plants and animals. ?One characteristic of fungi is that their cell walls contain chitin, rather than cellulose, as in plants. ?Some examples of fungi are yeast, molds, and mushrooms, as in the picture.
?Gymnosperm leaf: ?Gymnosperms are seed producing plants that differ from angiosperms in that rather than producing flowers and fruit, they simply produce seeds and cones. ?Conifers and cycads are gymnosperms.
?Lichen: ?Lichen usually consists of a fungus and an algae living together in a symbiotic relationship. ?Lichens can be found in some of the most extreme environments on Earth.
?Mycorrhizal fungi: ?Mycorrhiza is a symbiotic relationship between a fungus and a terrestrial plant. ?The majority of plants are in such a relationship, and therefore I am guessing that this tree is in a mycorrhizal relationship with a mycorrhizal fungus.



?Organisms in different plant divisions: 1) fern ?Pteridophyta?2) moss Bryophyta 3) palm Cycadophyta 4) flowering plant Anthophyta. ?Plant divisions are the phyla of plants, which is the next level of organization below kingdom.
?Seedless vascular plant: ?A seedless vascular plants is alike to any other vascular plant except that it does not produce seeds (shocking). ?Instead it reproduces via spores.
?Tetrapod: ?These tracks were made by a dog, which is a tetrapod. ?A tetrapod is any four-limbed animal, such as a frog, lizard, dog, mouse, or eagle.
Unicellular organism: ?This bread was made in part by yeast, which is a unicellular organism, meaning it consists of a single cell.

Source: http://laiapbiology.blogspot.com/2013/01/big-idea-1_22.html

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Saturday, January 19, 2013

Album Review: The Broderick LP - Musical Family Tree

The Broderick's MFT Page

(Listen while you read!)

Stream / Purchase via Bandcamp

The first time I saw?The Broderick perform live, the band played an opening set at She Does Is Magic's album release party for My Height in Heels. I was taken aback by the polished nature the band's set. They didn't come across as your average college rock band, grinding out three-chord grunge in the garage. The Broderick's lead singer, Max Mullen, displayed a confidence that seemed to contradict his appearance. Mullen doesn't look like your average rock star. Clean cut, diminutive, and reserved are all words that come readily to mind were you to observe him off-stage. However, throw a microphone in front of him and Mullen transforms into a cocksure firecracker.

While writing this review, I was reminded of music industry insider?Bob Lefsetz's post on The Alabama Shakes last year, where he bemoaned the act for its insertion into the spotlight prior to the proper vetting: "Used to be all the development was done off screen. Bands woodshedded in their own little backwaters. And when fully developed, they signed to labels. The labels didn?t build bands, didn?t teach them how to play, they took them from working class status to stardom, in the best of cases." Lefsetz may have come across as a disgruntled codger, but there is certainly some merit to his argument.

The Broderick serves as an example of an Indiana band that has managed to achieve that "working class status" on their own terms, without the assistance or support of a label. Their self-titled LP was produced by Jason Wilber, who has made a career as a journeyman guitarist for artists like John Prine and Todd Snider. Under Wilber's tutelage, The Broderick has cut a record that feels label-ready. Their debut is concise, coherent and devoid of the rugged sloppiness that has become the calling card of indie rock. Much of this is likely due to the fact that Mullen and founding members Quinten Schulze (drums) and John Codespoti (guitar) have been writing together since high school.

This sterile sound can serve as a double-edged sword in the current internet music climate. There is a tendency in the indie blogosphere to dismiss any release that is not on the cutting edge. The "accessible" tag is often viewed as an avoid-at-all-costs descriptor. The Broderick is certainly working within the "indie rock" archetype defined by bands like The Hives, The Kooks and Caesars - just to name a few. Mullen's songwriting is earnest and vivid, and effectively serves as a narrative of early-20s college life: fleeting romance, late night drives, and the occasional booze-fueled debauchery.

For me, The Broderick are at their best when Mullen sounds a touch pissed off, particularly the scorned love of "Wild and Crazy" and retrospective contempt of "Expecting a Curse." The latter is the album's longest and most expansive track. Mullen eases in, before settling on a broken wail that underscores his rage over an event that never gets concretely defined. For the song's final two minutes Mullen takes a back seat, allowing the the band to delve into the depths of darkness for an outro driven by drums and guitars. It's powerful stuff, that's wrought with emotion. ?

If there is a criticism to be found, it's that the LP is lacking in substantial risks. That isn't to say the music is dull - not by a long shot. The Broderick is an energetic release that features a broad breadth of emotion, but over repeated listens I kept wondering what it might sound like when the band falls on its face. Maybe my desire for the misstep is driven by daily exposure to artists who simply aren't yet ready for a full-length release. Home recordings, sloppy production, and misguided or lazy songwriting are all too common. To its credit, The Broderick avoids all of those pitfalls. It's one helluva first effort with the professionalism of a seasoned veteran, but the band might need to miss the mark a few times before it carves out a distinctive voice. That being said, if a band's biggest drawback is that it "sounds too good" they're miles ahead of the curve.

Source: http://www.musicalfamilytree.net/xn/detail/2000984%3ABlogPost%3A205910?xg_source=activity

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Record 73 early entries for NFL draft

(AP) ? A record 73 underclassmen, including six first-team All-Americans, were approved for the NFL draft on Saturday.

That number was eight more than last year.

The six All-Americans were safety Matt Elam of Florida, tight end Zach Ertz of Stanford, tackle Luke Joeckel of Texas A&M, defensive end Bjoern Werner of Florida State, linebacker Jarvis Jones of Georgia and cornerback Dee Milliner of national champion Alabama.

Only Elam is not projected as a high first-round pick, but all six easily could go in the opening round on April 25.

Several scouts and NFL personnel directors believe Joeckel, Werner, Jones and Milliner could go in the top 10.

NFL draft consultant Gil Brandt, the former general manager of the Cowboys, has Joeckel and Werner as his top two prospects.

Also approved was former LSU cornerback-kick returner Tyrann Mathieu, a 2011 All-American. Mathieu, a one-time Heisman Trophy finalist, was dismissed from the team in August after reportedly failing a drug test.

Louisiana State lost a whopping 11 players, including Mathieu. Next were Florida State, Tennessee and Florida, each with four. Michigan State, Stanford, Georgia and Oklahoma each lost three players.

Alabama saw Milliner and running back Eddie Lacy enter the draft.

In all, 38 schools lost players early.

Also leaving school and projected to go high in the draft: LSU DEs Barkevious Mingo and Sam Montgomery; Texas A&M DE Damontre Moore; Georgia LB Alec Ogletree; California WR Keenan Allen; Florida State CB Xavier Rhodes; Ohio State DT Johnathan Hankins; and LSU linebacker Kevin Minter.

Other All-Americans entering early were second-teamers Moore, Hankins, Minter, WR Stedman Bailey of West Virginia, safeties Tony Jefferson of Oklahoma and Eric Reid of LSU. Third-teamers were Montgomery, RBs Giovani Bernard of North Carolina and Stefphon Jefferson of Nevada, WR DeAndre Hopkins of Clemson, and DT Sharif Floyd of Florida.

Only one quarterback, Tyler Bray of Tennessee, applied early for the NFL.

In the last 10 years, the number of early entrants has risen from 43 to 73.

A player must have been eligible to play in college for three years before he can enter the draft. He must petition the NFL in writing and renounce his college eligibility.

___

Online: http://pro32.ap.org/poll and http://twitter.com/AP_NFL

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-01-19-Draft-Early%20Entries/id-986822531deb4273b1017a3e257ed9f7

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HBT: Hart to miss 3-4 months with knee surgery

Bad news: the Brewers just announced that?Corey Hart will have right knee surgery next Tuesday. The recovery time: three to four months.

Hart missed time last year with?plantar fasciitis in his left foot. It was his first season as the Brewers? first baseman, where he took over for Prince Fielder. ?Mat Gamel will likely cover for him at first while he recovers.

Bad timing for Hart, who is in the last year of his contract and was looking for an extension for the Brewers. ?He?s going to have to prove his health and effectiveness first, however.

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/01/18/corey-hart-to-have-knee-surgery-miss-3-4-months/

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Thursday, January 17, 2013

Hillary Clinton leaving world stage, but for how long?

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - In a matter of days, Hillary Clinton will leave the State Department behind and become a private citizen for the first time in 34 years. But her next big decision will be a very public one: whether to run for U.S. president in 2016.

Many factors would weigh in her favor should she decide to run. She leaves her Secretary of State job as the most popular member of Obama's Cabinet and the country's most admired woman - rated far ahead of even first lady Michelle Obama, according to a Gallup poll of Americans.

Plus, her party wants her. A Public Policy Polling survey found that 57 percent of Democrats would like her to run, compared to just 16 percent for another potential candidate, Vice President Joe Biden.

Her husband, former President Bill Clinton, has made no secret that he would love for her to seek the White House.

And yet Secretary Clinton seems to harbor doubts. She is recovering from a blood clot near her brain that befell her at the end of 2012. She will be 69 years old in 2016, a fairly advanced age for a president.

She would have to weigh whether she thinks Americans want four more years of Democratic rule in the White House, after President Barack Obama's eight years conclude in 2017.

And she seems to relish the idea of taking some time off, exiting the political stage, at least for a while. Running again would not only expose Clinton to the slings and arrows of political life once more, but also put at risk the reputation she has built as a loyal, hard-working, hard-nosed secretary of state. If she were to fail, part of her legacy would be as a two-time loser, after getting bested in the 2008 Democratic presidential race.

Clinton has been a public figure since entering the Arkansas governor's mansion in 1979 as first lady to Governor Bill Clinton. Since then, she's been America's first lady, a U.S. senator from New York, a presidential candidate who lost to Obama, and since 2009, the globetrotting top U.S. diplomat.

She's offered only a few clues as to what could lie in her future, none of them definitive.

"I think after 20 years -- and it will be 20 years -- of being on the high wire of American politics and all of the challenges that come with that, it would be probably a good idea to just find out how tired I am," she told a town hall event last year.

Will she be going into retirement?

"I don't know that that's the word I would use, but certainly stepping off the very fast track for a little while," Clinton told reporters last week when she returned to work after recovering from the blood clot.

'NEVER SAY NEVER'

Associates of Clinton say her position now is that she is not going to run. But they are not sure if this decision is final or whether she will try again to become America's first woman president.

"I don't think she wants to run," said a former aide. "But I think after taking a break, after doing something else, I think that could change. You never say never."

Another former staffer, having watched how hard Clinton campaigned in 2008, has doubts about whether she would expose herself to another brutal campaign. Clinton had been the clear front-runner, but her staff and organizational woes helped the relatively unknown Obama to beat her.

"There's a time and place for things in life and that last campaign was brutal and she gave it her best shot and she really is exhausted. She may be coming to the recognition that there are other ways to do public service. You can sometimes get more done out of government than in government," the staffer said on condition of anonymity.

As Secretary of State, Clinton has kept a punishing schedule, breaking travel records and visiting 112 countries.

After a period of rest, Clinton is likely to start doing some foundation work on behalf of women and children, a priority of hers since her days in Arkansas. Whether this initiative would be part of her husband's Clinton Foundation or a separate Hillary Clinton foundation is unclear.

While some candidates spend four years running for president, a Clinton decision to seek the presidency could come fairly late in the process, given her popularity within the party and her husband's lengthy list of potential donors who could help her mount a campaign quickly, Democrats say.

But a late announcement of her candidacy could also freeze the 2016 Democratic nomination battle, dissuading other Democrats from jumping in until Clinton's plans were clear.

Bob Shrum, who was campaign manager for Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry in 2004, said Clinton would have no trouble assembling an A-list campaign staff.

"I don't think the question for her would be who," said Shrum. "The question would be which of the many people she wants to move with. There's a whole plethora of really talented people who want to move with her."

Bill Clinton remains enormously popular, but whether Americans would want the former president, who was impeached over an affair with an intern, back in the White House in 2017 remains to be seen.

ONCE SCORNED, NOW FEARED

Clinton's time in the public eye as secretary of state has allowed her to shed an image as a politically polarizing figure, one who as U.S. first lady railed against a "vast right-wing conspiracy" out to get her husband and who was responsible for a health care policy debacle.

Some conservative Republicans have gone from scorning her to fearing her. If Clinton runs in 2015, "The Republican Party is incapable of competing at that level," former House of Representatives Speaker Newt Gingrich said last month.

Clinton has earned plaudits from Democrats and Republicans alike for her handling of U.S. foreign policy.

And yet her last months at the State Department have not been without controversy and some issues could return to haunt her during a presidential campaign.

The deaths of four Americans killed by Islamic militants last September 11 at the U.S. mission in Benghazi, Libya, occurred under her watch, amid questions about whether they had been provided with adequate security. Among the dead was Ambassador Chris Stevens, the first U.S. ambassador to die in office since 1988.

An internal probe absolved Clinton of any responsibility. She is due to testify on January 23 before the House Foreign Affairs Committee, after postponing her testimony due to illness.

The secretary of state's concussion has raised some questions about her health that would have to be resolved, along with her tendency toward secrecy.

Clinton returned from a European tour on December 7 suffering from a stomach virus, forcing her to postpone a Middle East trip. On December 15, the State Department announced she had become dehydrated, fainted and suffered a concussion.

But the initial State Department statement did not say exactly what day she sustained the concussion or exactly where she was when it happened. By contrast, when President George W. Bush had a choking episode involving a pretzel in 2002, reporters knew within hours the exact circumstances.

Experts believe Clinton, should she run, will have to put out a detailed medical report as proof that she is fit to be commander in chief.

"Any candidate of a certain age is going to have lots of questions about their health," said David Yepsen, director of the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute at the University of Southern Illinois. "That's going to be a hurdle for her to overcome if she's going to run."

(Additional reporting by Arshad Mohammed. Editing by Warren Strobel and Doina Chiacu)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hillary-clinton-leaving-world-stage-long-060611073.html

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