Friday, March 29, 2013

Pain-Topics.org News/Research UPDATES: CAM Exercises Aid ...

FibromyalgiaWithin the scope of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM), a number of exercise modalities ? such as tai chi, qigong, yoga, and lesser-known movement therapies ? have been studied as aiding persons with fibromyalgia. A meta-analysis of the current research literature found some evidence for the beneficial effects of these exercise types, with tai chi appearing to be most favorable.

Fibromyalgia affects an estimated 15 million persons in the United States alone, a majority are female, and diminished aerobic fitness and poor physical function in afflicted patients have been well documented. Exercise has been strongly recommended as an adjunct to medication therapy for fibromyalgia, but traditional forms of strenuous aerobic, stretching, and strength-building exercise often appear to have limited benefits for reducing pain while improving function, and patient discontinuation rates are sometimes unacceptably high.

In view of these concerns, Scott Mist and colleagues at the Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, conducted a systematic research review and meta-analysis of land-based CAM exercise therapies that have been increasing adopted by patients with fibromyalgia, including: qigong, tai chi, yoga, and several less familiar movement therapies [Mist et al. 2013]. For purposes of their review, the following definitions were used:

  1. Exercise was defined as ?planned, structured physical activity whose goal is to improve one or more of the major components of fitness ? aerobic capacity, strength, flexibility, or balance.? (Studies of exercise therapies conducted in water were excluded in this review.)
  2. CAM was defined as ?a group of diverse medical and health care systems, practices, and products that are not generally considered to be part of conventional medicine.? (CAM approaches involving low levels of exertion, such as brief yoga with an emphasis on mindfulness or breathing, were excluded.)

Their search discovered 16 qualifying studies; 10 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and 6 of a more observational nature in design. In total, 832 patients with fibromyalgia participated, with 490 allocated to CAM exercise interventions. The mean sample size in the studies was 52 (range 6?128 participants), and the median retention rate in all studies was 81%. The researchers noted that the studies were largely conducted in middle-aged women, but demographics summary data were not provided in the report. Overall, the strength of the included studies was rated as moderate-to-low.

The primary outcome endpoint of interest was FIQ total scores or FIQ pain scores, converted to standardized mean differences (ie, Cohen?s d) as measures of effect size [interpreting effect sizes was discussed in an UPDATE here]. The FIQ (Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire) is a widely used, self-administered, 20-question tool for assessing the current health (ie, physical function, pain, other symptoms) of patients with fibromyalgia in clinical and research settings [more info on FIQ here].

Writing in the March 2013 online edition of the Journal of Pain Research, Mist et al. report the following results [data adapted from tables in the report]:

  • Six studies of tai chi demonstrated a pooled, large-sized effect = 1.14 (95% Confidence Interval, 0.88?1.39; P<0.001). Only 1 of the 6 studies did not achieve statistical significance and the remaining 5 were of good size with narrow confidence intervals, all of which suggest a reasonably strong level of evidence.
  • There were 3 studies of yoga, with a pooled, moderate-sized effect = 0.45 (95% CI, 0.12?0.76; P=0.005). Only 2 of the 3 studies were statistically significant.
  • Qigong was examined in 6 studies and there was a pooled, moderate-sized effect = 0.47 (95% CI, 0.25?0.69; P<0.001). However, only half of the individual studies achieved statistical significance and the outcomes overall varied extensively from each other, with wide confidence intervals (ie, the studies were highly heterogenous).
  • Individual trials also were reported for the following modalities (with effect size, 95% CI, P-value): Pilates (0.77, 0.19?1.35, P=0.009); BMP, or Body Movement and Perception therapy (2.25, 1.67?2.84, P<0.001); Biodanza (3.92, 3.05?4.80, P<0.001). All 3 modalities exhibited large, statistically significant effect sizes, with relatively narrow confidence intervals; however, these were single trials of each modality needing replication for further confirmation.

    NOTE: The individual trials itemized above add up to more than 16 in total because some studies examined more than one modality. Pilates involves nonimpact strength, flexibility, and breathing exercises. Body Movement and Perception (or, Ress?guier) is based on selected low-impact gymnastic movements integrated with postural exercises. Biodanza, or ?life dance,? most often uses dance and related movements to optimize self-development and deepen self-awareness.

According to the researchers, only 2 participants reported any adverse effects (increased shoulder pain and plantar fasciitis), and none of the studies found any serious adverse events. Therefore, given the lack of negative effects, and the medium-to-high effects sizes for pain reduction and other benefits, Mist and colleagues state, ?there is little risk in recommending these modalities as a critical component in a multimodal treatment plan, which is often required for fibromyalgia management.?

COMMENTARY: Systematic reviews and meta-analyses can be robust methods for establishing the quality and strength of evidence for pain management therapies. An understanding of these statistical methods was discussed in an UPDATE article [here].

In this meta-analysis by Mist et al., the modality with the best data profile and largest effect size ? suggesting a higher level of strongly favorable evidence ? was tai chi. Second choice would be qigong (albeit the data were somewhat inconsistent), and yoga would be third. The other 3 modalities appear to have promise, but they were solitary trials, so the reliability and strength of evidence cannot be determined. [Note: the Mist et al. article is open access, allowing interested readers to download and examine the forest plots and other data for themselves. See link in the reference below.]

The generally small sample sizes in the included studies (mean n=52) and predominance of middle-aged female subjects limits the statistical power and generalizability of study outcomes to other clinical populations. Another limitation, noted by the researchers, was that only a single interventionist (ie, exercise instructor) was involved in each of the trials. It is possible that a skilled, caring, and/or charismatic instructor in some trials, but not others, might have influenced beneficial outcomes.

The researchers write that all but 2 studies report positive outcomes; however, the study outcomes data indicate that only 1 of the studies was negative (ie, effect size = ?0.42 in a study of qigong). Furthermore, while the rest of the data point-estimates were indeed positive (ie, point effect size estimates >0.0) a third of them (5/15) were statistically non-significant, which might temper enthusiasm regarding the strength of the evidence overall.

Prior Pain-Topics UPDATES have discussed exercise modalities ? including tai chi and, most commonly, yoga ? as benefitting various acute and chronic pain conditions [series here]. More specifically, a study by Wang et al. reported in 2010 [UPDATE here] found that tai chi afforded significant relief from muscle pain, better sleep, and a higher quality of life with less depression in persons with fibromyalgia (this study also was included in the meta-analysis by Mist et al.).

It is of some concern that most of the trials in the meta-analysis by Mist and colleagues, no matter how small the number of subjects, used multiple assessment instruments for detecting numerous endpoints. This increases the chances that at least some positive statistically significant results might be produced; however, it also increases the risk of Type I error, or finding significant results due to random chance alone (ie, false positives). Mist et al. were wise to focus only on one measure ? FIQ scores ? even though this might have limited the scope of potentially beneficial therapeutic effects that could be assessed and discussed in their report.

Meta-analyses in most areas of pain research also highlight the problem of studies examining the same topic using different patient-selection criteria, disparate outcome measures, and other methodological variations. This sort of inconsistency challenges the validity of combing data from the different studies in aggregated, or pooled, estimates of effect size. In fact, Mist et al. noted that there ?was a significant amount of heterogeneity? across the studies they examined [particularly evident in the analysis of qigong] and, while they did not report calculating tests of heterogeneity, they did appropriately use random-effects modeling in their pooling of data.

As often is the case, Mist and colleagues advise that there is a need for large, meticulously designed and rigorously executed trials with active parallel arms ? such as comparing traditional aerobic exercise with a CAM-oriented approach ? to extend this body of evidence. However, it could be a many years before such studies are conducted and, then, it is questionable whether they will use methodologies that are statistically comparable to earlier trials. Clinical research is sometimes a very ?messy business.?

REFERENCE: Mist SD, Firestone KA, Jones KD. Complementary and alternative exercise for fibromyalgia: a meta-analysis. J Pain Res. 2013;6:247-260 [available here].

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Source: http://updates.pain-topics.org/2013/03/cam-exercises-aid-fibromyalgia-meta.html

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German migrant program offers cautions for US

BERLIN (AP) ? In gritty backstreets of Berlin and other major German cities, housewives wearing head scarves shop for lamb and grape leaves. Old men pass the time in cafes sipping coffee, chatting in Turkish and reading Turkish newspapers.

More than 3 million people of Turkish origin live in Germany ? the legacy of West Germany's Cold War-era program to recruit temporary foreign labor during the boom years of the 1950s and 1960s when the country rebuilt after World War II.

What started as a temporary program has changed the fabric of German urban life ? from mosques on street corners to countless shops selling widely popular Doener kebab fast food sandwiches.

Germany's experience with "guest workers" offers lessons for the U.S. as it debates immigration reform, including whether to provide a path to citizenship for unskilled foreign laborers, or whether there should be additional temporary-only visas for such workers. President Barack Obama has urged Congress to begin debate in April after lawmakers return from a two-week recess.

Decades after Germany's formal guest worker program ended in the early 1970s, the country is still wrestling with ways to integrate Turks ? the second biggest group among the estimated 15 million-strong immigrant community after ethnic Germans who moved from the former Soviet Union and for Soviet bloc countries ? into German society.

"When you bring people to work, it's quite hard to tell them to go back one day," said Goecken Demiragli, a social worker whose grandmother came to Berlin from Turkey in 1968. "That was the biggest mistake: to think that if you don't need them, they will go."

Initially, the Germans felt they didn't need an integration path.

They foresaw a temporary program of rotating labor, where workers from Turkey, the Balkans and southern Europe would spend a couple of years on an assembly line and then go home to be replaced by others if industry still needed them.

But factory managers grew tired of retraining new workers every couple of years and convinced authorities to allow contract extensions.

Many immigrants, especially young Turkish men who faced grinding unemployment at home, opted to stay in Germany, bringing their families and building lives here despite discrimination in education, housing and employment.

Although immigrants could stay legally with government-issued residence permits, they could not apply for citizenship for 15 years, although the period has been shortened in recent years. Without fluent German, and state-supported language programs, many were unable to pursue good educations and well-paying jobs.

As a result, the Turkish community remains the least integrated immigrant group in Germany, according to the private Berlin Institute for Population and Development.

Immigration critics blame the Turks for refusing to abandon traditions of rural Turkey, failing to learn German and take advantage of educational opportunities. Critics note that more than 90 percent of marriages by ethnic Turks are to other Turks ? in part because of cultural restrictions against marrying outside the Muslim faith.

Over the years, the existence of a parallel society of marginalized people speaking a different language and following different religious and social customs has triggered a backlash in a country which only recently has considered itself a nation that welcomes immigrants.

Neo-Nazis have focused on the Turks in their campaign against immigration. Next month, the surviving member of a small neo-Nazi cell goes on trial in Munich for allegedly killing 10 people ? eight of them Turkish immigrants ? over seven years. The cell allegedly got away with the killings for years because police assumed they were the work of Turkish immigrant gangs.

Thilo Sarrazin, once a top official of Germany's central bank, wrote in a 2010 best-seller that immigrants were dumbing down German society and that Turkish and Arab immigrants were reluctant to integrate. The firestorm that followed forced Sarrazin out of his bank post, but his book sold over 1.5 million copies.

Others fault successive German governments for being slow to recognize the immigration problem and moving only in recent years to put in place programs to combat discrimination, provide German language training and offer a speedier path to full citizenship.

"The West German government should have devised comprehensive integration measures as part of family reunification policies but did not," a 2009 study for the Washington-based Migration Policy Institute. "Consequently, integration problems began to take root in West Germany."

In the meantime, an entire generation grew up feeling estranged, living in urban ghettoes apart from the mainstream and unable to take part in political life. Even well-educated Turks who have assimilated believe that stigma remains alive today.

"There's this categorization ... that you are not the same as the others," said Demiragli, the social worker, who was born in Germany but did not get citizenship until she was 16. "That is a feeling that grows in you if you do not have strong parents who can support you and give you the feeling that you are still special."

Overt discrimination has abated since the 1970s and 1980s when real estate ads in German newspapers contained phrases like "Only for Germans" or "No Foreigners." But Turkish residents say subtle barriers remain.

"Now it's more hidden," said Bekir Yilmaz, head of a Turkish community organization in Berlin. "You look for housing, you make a telephone call, you can speak German well but when you stand in front of the landlord, they say, 'Oh, the apartment is taken.'"

Yilmaz believes the problem has worsened since the 9/11 attacks in the U.S. and the war on terror smeared the image of Muslims.

"The West had its enemy in communism but communism is gone. Now it's the Muslims," Yilmaz said. "The Turks here are no enemy. They have lived here for years, and their children born here. This has nothing to do with reality."

German attitudes toward immigration and citizenship also proved an obstacle to full and rapid integration. Although attitudes are changing, Germany never perceived itself as an immigrant society like the United States. German society values conformity.

Unlike the United States, Germany does not automatically grant citizenship to anyone born on German soil. Even though the naturalization process has been shortened, it still takes years and requires knowledge of the German language and history.

In 2000, a new law granted German citizenship to German-born children of longtime legal residents. By age 23, those children must decide whether to keep German citizenship or their parents' nationality.

Chancellor Angela Merkel's government has refused calls from Turkish and other immigrant communities to allow dual citizenship. Many immigrants are reluctant to apply for German citizenship because they want to hold on to their original nationality.

"I think we should have a dual citizenship here in Germany," said Ayvaz Harra, a German citizen of Turkish origin who sells bread in a Berlin market. "My family has property in Turkey and I would like to inherit it. Right now it's not possible."

But others believe the core problem was the government's failure to foresee the long-term effects of the temporary labor program.

"The problem here is that there is a picture of how Germans should live and if somebody is living differently, it doesn't fit," Demiragli said. "I think that in 20 to 30 years it will be a totally mixed community, especially here in Berlin. If we get over that 20 years, I think it will be a totally different situation."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/german-migrant-program-offers-cautions-us-073113485.html

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Greenwich resident Grainger wins squash title at Chelsea Piers ...

Greenwich resident and Chelsea Piers squash director Natalie Grainger receives her trophy for winning the United States Squash National Championship on her home court.

Greenwich resident and Chelsea Piers squash director Natalie Grainger receives her trophy for winning the United States Squash National Championship on her home court.

For Greenwich resident Natalie Grainger, the timing couldn?t be more perfect for her return to competitive squash.

Grainger, who is the Chelsea Piers Connecticut Racquets Director, got a unique opportunity and made the most of it.

It turns out that Chelsea Piers hosted the United States Squash National Championships and Grainger jumped at the idea of competing once again on her home turf. Not only did Grainger get to play the game she loves, but she won the national championship and reclaimed the No. 1 ranking in the country.

?It was fantastic,? Grainger said. ?To see so many friends and family come to the club to watch and support made it that much more special. There were little kids there watching and being able to produce a good outcome on the day in front of those people that wanted me to win was great.?

During the U.S. Championships Women?s Open Singles event, Grainger was the No. 2 seed and was able to take care of her first round opponent, Niki Clement of Bryn Mawr, Pa. (6,2,5). The semis had Grainger up against Wilton?s Olivia Blatchford, but again it was Grainger with the 4,4,3 victory.

In the championship match, Grainger was up against a familiar foe, top-seed, Amanda Sobhy from Sea Cliff, N.Y. and Grainger won the championship with a score of (8), 3, 3, (5), 7.

?I knew it was going to be a very tough match against Amanda,? Grainger said. ?It meant that in order to win that title, I would have to play a phenomenal opponent, who is on the rise of her own career and she?s someone that I?ve coached and mentored in the past as well. It was a great match and it was clean. Amanda is a champion, so it meant a lot to actually have a tough and accomplished opponent.?

The victory against Sobhy gave Grainger the sixth national championship of her career. However, this title was more rewarding.

During her previous five championship runs, Grainger was an active member on the squash tour and was also ranked one of the top players in the world.

Now things are different. Grainger has been retired from the tour for a few years now and is currently teaching and directing squash full-time at The Squash Club at Chelsea Piers Connecticut, a 12 International court state-of-the-art facility in Stamford.

?I could have showed up with the expectations of really having to play well, but I felt like there wasn?t as much pressure because of being retired,? Grainger said. ?It meant a lot to me to win the event.?

In order to get ready for the championship, Grainger had to change things up a bit. With the success of The Squash Club at Chelsea Piers Connecticut, Grainger has been coaching quite a bit, but didn?t really have the time to play some competitive squash.

Leading up to the national championships, Grainger did her best to prepare. In the weeks before the championship, Grainger got in a couple of matches a week with some of her fellow pros that work at Chelsea Piers and from other pros from around the area.

While lightening her coaching in the days before the tournament, Grainger also entered a tournament in New York and played in the men?s division so she could get a little bit of match practice under her belt.

?We just finished with the height of the season and I just finished coaching in the junior championships, so my focus had to be on them,? Grainger said. ?I was able to get a couple of matches a week with some pros and I entered a tournament in New York and played in the men?s division there, so I could get a little bit of match practice. That was really helpful and that gave me a wake-up call to remind me not to do too much coaching in the lead-up to competing because it makes your legs so heavy. I lightened my coaching mode a day or two leading up to the event.?

While winning the championship in front of all the local supporters was an amazing feeling for Grainger, seeing the Squash Club at Chelsea Piers roar to life was equally exciting.

?The club was able to hold a great championship,? Grainger said. ?Everybody that I talked to had such a phenomenal time at the tournament. The masters players really enjoyed the club and seeing people enjoy the facility and having it spring to life with such a major championship was really exciting.?

Although competing at a high level, as well as winning championships, never gets old, don?t expect to see Grainger giving up coaching the sport she loves any time soon.

?The interesting thing about Chelsea Piers is that we have a lot of kids in our program that have never been exposed to the sport of squash,? Grainger said. ?It?s great to have this facility Chelsea Piers and the ability to take squash outside of some of the private clubs and have kind of an all-access facility. To build a program where kids can enjoy the sport is phenomenal because it?s such a fun sport for young kids to try.?

Source: http://www.greenwich-post.com/12050/greenwich-resident-grainger-wins-national-title-on-home-turf-at-chelsea-piers/

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Microsoft's next Office update is codenamed 'Gemini,' could ship this fall

Blue is to Windows as Gemini is to Office. Any questions? Well, that's unfortunate -- we don't have a ton of answers. What we do know, courtesy of some top-notch ZDNet reporting, is that Microsoft's next Office release is codenamed "Gemini," and that it could be making its way to your desktop by the end of this year. The site quotes a potential fall ship date, at least for the first release, which is set to include new versions of Excel, OneNote, PowerPoint and Word. Rumor has it that the next version will be somewhat platform-independent, and will rely heavily on the Office 365 subscription concept. Beyond that, there isn't really much to share, but you're welcome to hit up our source link for a few more (minor) details.

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Source: ZDNet

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/27/microsoft-office-gemini/

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Thursday, March 28, 2013

New Restaurant Reviews: Share the Spreads at El Omda; Red ...


This week, our professional eaters sought out plates that reminded them of home -- if not theirs, then someone else's. In Astoria, Robert Sietsema enjoyed an Egyptian feast at El Omda, while Tejal Rao sopped up the sauce at Red Gravy in Brooklyn Heights.

How did our critics rate their Middle Eastern and Italian feasts? Find out after the break.

El Omda's food is "just so damn good," writes Sietsema. More specifically, he's a fan of the faithfully elegant renditions of recognizable Middle Eastern dishes, along with some of the restaurant's more "working-class Egyptian" cooking.

Sietsema writes:

This cuisine features a fascinating mixture of familiar Middle Eastern stewed beans, bread dips, lemony composed salads, and charcoal-grilled kebabs, plus recipes borrowed from Sicily, Greece, North Africa, and even France.
Unless you're a fervid carnivore, you're better off skipping the shish (lamb), kufta (ground beef with onions), and chicken kebabs in favor of the more interesting seafood preparations. The one exception is the quartet of long-boned lamb chops, which are flavorsome and cheap ($18). They're so tender, you almost don't need to chew.

Our conscientious critic notes that even vegetarians can string together an excellent meal.

El Omda's baba ghanouj possesses a nice smoky flavor, but is strangely devoid of the usual tahini. Instead, like the foul, it conceals a megaton of garlic. Another favorite of mine in the same your-Egyptian-mama-might-have-made-this-at-home vein is stuffed grape leaves ($8). Swaddled in deep green, a dozen cylinders that have never seen the inside of a can bulge with red rice faintly flavored with dill. These three dishes would make a spectacular vegan feast.

Meanwhile, Tejal Rao relished Italian food and a packed house at Red Gravy, Saul Bolton's latest restaurant on Atlantic Avenue. The upmarket spot draws huge neighborhood crowds into its cozy surroundings, plying them with dreamy pasta dishes and other hearty fare. Rao did note a few slip-ups with staff but, for the most part, finds her meal strong enough to ignore some minor mistakes.

Thick ruffles of reginetti ($19), made with semolina and chestnut flour, are layered in a nuanced sauce of braised rabbit meat. A bowl of bucatini, served with melting dollops of sea urchin and slices of pickled cherry-bomb peppers ($29), looks very small and plain for its price tag, but taste it and you'll find it's an undeniably gorgeous dish, swimming in salty butter and white wine, delicately sweet with basil.
The kitchen does especially well with the chiles, seafood, and breadcrumb-paved dishes of the south, and when it celebrates Italian-American favorites such as spaghetti and meatballs, or Sunday gravy.

Those seeking more than a hefty plate of noodles have options:

But it's not all pasta: Rabbit appears again--the bones replaced with a dark, delicious mousse of the animal's offal in a pretty roulade, roasted maybe a minute or two too long--on a bed of fine lentils and chard ($26). A recent salad special of fried smelts and arugula was lovely, the fish cooked whole, their bones as soft as their flesh, and their tiny eyes just visible through a veil of crisp batter. Branzino ($27), on a bright smear of beet puree, hid little smoked beets and their garlicky greens.

Over at the Times, Pete Wells declares the The Dining Room at The Modern is an oldie but goodie. "The restaurant itself is full of unexpected delights," writes Wells, and "unpacking them one by one is the pleasant work of a meal." He awards the MOMA restaurant three stars.

NY Mag's Adam Platt files a twofer in lower midtown. At Hanjan, he most enjoys "the barbecue skewers threaded with chicken hearts or sizzling strips of gizzard, sticky ddukbokki (rice cakes) tossed in pork fat, vats of viscous, spicy cod-roe stew," small snacks which should be consumed at the bar with gusto. Just a block away, Maysville is "another stealthily good new restaurant built around the pleasures of a stiff drink." Platt enjoys the "elegantly restrained" pleasures of the South at this hopping new spot.

"Manzanilla may be the first modernist import with a real shot at success," writes Jay Cheshes of the new the new Spanish restaurant in Gramercy. Time Out's critic writes that the new spot offers an "approachable introduction" to Spanish cooking in a city that needed one.

The NY Post's Steve Cuozzo also reviews Manzanilla. He feels that "while it might not be the best Spanish restaurant in Manhattan," it's the largest good one, and worth a visit.

Farther uptown, Stan Sanger also seeks out Spanish cuisine -- Andanada 141 on the Upper West Side. The Daily News critic writes that "New Yorkers are blessed to have Spanish food this good."

Source: http://blogs.villagevoice.com/forkintheroad/2013/03/el_omda_red_gravy_reviews.php

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Dwolla Is Latest Victim Of DDoS Attacks ? Site & API Down For Second Day

Dwolla_logoWhile the media continues to debate the severity of the denial-of-service attacks taking place across the web this month, they appear to have claimed another victim: payments startup Dwolla announced today that it, too, is now?experiencing?a distributed denial-of-service event (DDoS attack). The attack, which is still underway, began yesterday, resulting in either limited or no availability to the company's website, Dwolla.com.

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

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Minn. train derailment causes oil spill

PARKERS PRAIRIE, Minn. (AP) -- Thousands of gallons of oil leaked onto frozen ground after a train carrying crude from Canada derailed Wednesday in western Minnesota.

The 94-car Canadian Pacific train was headed south near Parkers Prairie when it lost air pressure and went into an emergency braking mode, the Otter Tail County sheriff's office said. Fourteen tankers derailed. Three either leaked or spilled oil. No one was hurt, and a spokesman for the state's pollution control agency said crews were able to control the spill.

An estimated 20,000 to 30,000 gallons leaked onto the ground, Minnesota Pollution Control Agency spokesman Dan Olson said. The spill was contained in a field and ditch in a rural area, and the cold weather helped keep the spill contained and prevented oil from moving down the ditch or into the ground, Olson said.

One heavily damaged car spilled much of its 26,000-gallon load, Olson said. He said the oil was "just oozing out" in the cold.

Because the ground is frozen, there's no threat to water, Olson said. Initial recovery efforts likely will take a day or two, and excavations then will be done to determine if any oil leaked into the soil, he said.

The railroad was cleaning up the spill, Canadian Pacific spokesman Ed Greenberg said.

While the spill appeared to be under control from an ecological standpoint, it could play a role in the politics surrounding the Keystone XL pipeline, which would transport oil from tar sands in Canada to refineries in Texas. Environmentalists have criticized the proposal, saying that a pipeline could be prone to spills and would ensure that the carbon-laden tar sands are fully developed. A recent analysis from the State Department seemed to knock down one of their arguments, by saying that when it comes to global warming, shipping the oil by pipeline would release less pollution than using rail.

Greenberg said he did not know if the oil that spilled was tar sands oil. The train, carrying a mix of cargo, originated in western Canada and was bound for Chicago, he said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/train-cars-derail-minnesota-spill-202111375.html

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Wednesday, March 13, 2013

See what friends watch on Netflix through Facebook

A new Netflix feature allows users to share viewing habits and monitor what their Facebook friends are watching.?

By Matthew Shaer / March 13, 2013

A new Netflix feature (see left rail) will allow you to monitor what your friends are watching?? and share your viewing habits with the world.

Netflix

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Earlier this year, Congress amended the?Video Privacy Protection Act to allow video rental companies to share information about their customers' viewing habits ? provided, of course, that the customers gave their consent.

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Among the first to take advantage of the amendment will be Netflix, which announced today that it would partner with Facebook on a new social sharing feature.?

The whole thing is pretty simple: If you're a Facebook user and a Netflix user, you can announce to the world the kinds of content you're watching on Netflix, or keep tabs on what your friends are watching.?

But in a blog post, Cameron Johnson, the director of product innovation at Netflix, stressed that the feature will be strictly optional.?

"By default, sharing will only happen on Netflix," Johnson wrote. "You'll see what titles your friends have watched in a new 'Watched by your friends' row and what they have rated four or five stars in a new 'Friends? Favorites' row. Your friends will also be able to see what you watch and rate highly."

If you don't want to share any of your recent views, you can toggle a switch in the account settings, and your movie-watching habits will not be shared with the world.?Alternatively, by clicking the "Don't Share This" button in the player, you can choose not to broadcast a specific title. "You are in control of what gets shared," Johnson explained.?

In other words, you can flip the switches so it appears to the outside world that the only thing you've watched in recent weeks are high-minded documentaries such as "5 Broken Cameras." As for your four-day long binge on old episodes of "Cheers" and "Doctor Who" ? well, you can keep that stuff to yourself.?

It's worth noting here that the whole partnership is very good news for Facebook, which now has an additional way to build profiles of its users ? profiles that can be handed over to advertisers. (See our report on a new academic study on what Facebook "likes" say about us.)?

In related news, Netflix stock jumped?4 percent in trading early Wednesday morning.?

For?more tech news, follow us on?Twitter @venturenaut.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/cLWC0RQ-Q0A/See-what-friends-watch-on-Netflix-through-Facebook

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Political strife undermines HIV treatment

Mar. 12, 2013 ? Among other tragedies in countries with HIV epidemics, political violence can have the additional long-term consequence of an increase in viral resistance to treatment and HIV treatment failure, say the authors of a new paper in AIDS Reviews. The researchers, who have studied post-strife treatment failure and resistance in Kenya, argue that officials and health care providers need to study and prepare for how violence disrupts antiretroviral treatment and complicates the epidemic.

As Kenyan citizens negotiated the tensions following the March 4 nationwide elections, memories of the violence that followed the December 2007 vote weighed heavily for many reasons. Among those in any nation with an HIV epidemic, argue authors of a new paper in AIDS Reviews, should be the long-term damage that political conflict can do to public health by disrupting treatment and thereby promoting resistance to antiretroviral drugs and treatment failure.

"It's the long-term consequences that make this a bigger issue," said lead author Marita Mann, who began studying the rise of drug resistant HIV in the wake of Kenya's 2007 strife when she was a Brown University Master of Public Health student. She is now a doctoral student at the University of Washington. "First there are the patients who are affected themselves during the conflict and may be resistant to treatment later on, but this also may lead to transmitted resistance that will be a bigger problem in the epidemic."

This time around in advance of the elections, Mann said, some Kenya health workers gave their patients extra supplies of medicine and papers that would help them transfer to another clinic in case they were displaced by new violence. In 2007, more than 1,000 Kenyans died and about 300,000 were displaced.

But many policymakers and health officials in HIV- and strife-ridden nations have not recognized the link between disrupted treatment and the potential for increased treatment failure and viral resistance, said senior author Dr. Rami Kantor, associate professor of medicine at Brown University and an infectious diseases physician at The Miriam Hospital in Providence.

The paper seeks to make that link clear by explaining how an unplanned treatment interruption can lead to increased viral drug resistance and treatment failure and by describing the research needed to mitigate the effects of treatment interruption in future conflicts.

The paper provides an overview, but the underlying concern is neither prospective nor hypothetical. In data they have presented at an international HIV conference but not yet published, Mann, Kantor, and colleagues from the AMPATH academic medical collaboration in Kenya found that after the 2007 violence, treatment in subjects whose drug regimens were interrupted by the conflict failed significantly more often than treatment in subjects who did not suffer a conflict-related disruption.

How conflict breeds resistance

HIV mutates often and research shows that as little as a single amino acid change can lead to drug resistance, the authors write. Modern "highly active" antiretroviral therapy (HAART) fights HIV with a potent mix of several drugs that attack the virus in multiple ways, successfully suppressing its replication in most patients.

When violence erupts, staying on those delicately balanced medications can become impossible. Drugs may no longer get to the clinic, patients and health care workers can become displaced, travel to the clinic can become unsafe, and patients can become profoundly depressed by the horror and tragedy around them.

After an unplanned treatment interruption takes place, the multipronged attack of HAART falls apart in an insidious fashion. Some drugs stay in the patient's system longer than others, leaving only a partial therapy in place. That partial therapy fails to stop the virus, instead encouraging the evolution of resistant strains. When full HAART resumes, the virus is better prepared to resist it.

Different variants of the virus will show differences in their likelihood of evolving resistance after an unplanned treatment interruption, the researchers predict.

What can be done

Mann said the steps her colleagues in Kenya took in advance of this year's elections -- providing extra medicine and clinic transfer papers -- were good ones to take at the level of an individual clinic, assuming they have extra doses of medicine on hand.

Similarly, Kantor said, "In the 2007 conflict AMPATH did a great job to do as much as possible to address the potential issues that we're raising and made great efforts to reach patients to resume care as soon they could, despite the post-conflict displacement and chaos. AMPATH has undertaken similar efforts and preparations for this month's Kenyan elections, including managing treatment stocks, on-call staff, logistical support, and participating in regional and national coordination."

But in the paper, the authors point out that neither health care providers nor officials have much of a rigorous knowledge base to refer to in managing unplanned treatment interruptions. And many officials do not consider or plan for the problem at all.

To better inform and prepare providers and officials, not only in Kenya but in other strife-prone nations with high rates of HIV infection, authors call for further research and attention to planning.

"Research is therefore needed to determine optimal ART stopping and restarting strategies for patients who find themselves in situations of unplanned interruptions," the authors write. "An additional strategy should encompass implementation of contingency treatment plans in developing countries addressing factors like consistent drug supplies, improved patient follow-up, education for healthcare providers, implementation of viral load monitoring and resistance testing and availability of multiple treatment regimens."

And if political leaders and their opponents happen to need one more reason to forgo violence, they can consider how it appears to worsen the HIV pandemic among their constituents.

In addition to Mann and Kantor, the paper's other authors are Mark Lurie, assistant professor of epidemiology at Brown, and Dr. Sylvester Kimaiyo at Moi University School of Medicine in Eldoret, Kenya, and program manager of AMPATH.

Kantor, who is research director of the Brown-Kenya program led by Dr. Jane Carter, was supported for this research by a grant from the National Institutes of Health International Epidemiological Databases to Evaluate AIDS program (U01-AI069911); grant R01-AI66922; and the Brown/Lifespan/Tufts Center for AIDS Research (P30-AI042853).

Mann was also supported by the Brown University Framework in Global Health Program. Additional collaborators on this research include Dr. Lameck Diero, Dr. Nathan Buziba, Dr. Wilfred Emonyi, Emmanuel Kemboi, Fidelis Mambo, and Mary Rono from Eldoret, Kenya; Dr. Kara Wools Kaloustian and Dr. John Sidle from Indiana University; Allison DeLong from Brown; and Leeann Schreier, in Kantor's lab.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Brown University.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Marita Mann, Mark N. Lurie, Sylvester Kimaiyo and Rami Kantor. Effects of Political Conflict-Induced Treatment Interruptions on HIV Drug Resistance. AIDS Reviews, 2013 [link]

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/Z2Ge6zZqppw/130312152053.htm

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Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Mayo Clinic and Sanford-Burnham extend research agreement

Mayo Clinic and Sanford-Burnham extend research agreement [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 11-Mar-2013
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Contact: Bob Nellis
newsbureau@mayo.edu
507-284-5005
Mayo Clinic

ROCHESTER, Minn.-- To expand and speed the development of new drugs for its patients, Mayo Clinic has entered a formal collaboration with Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute. Under the agreement, Mayo's discoveries of potential drug targets will be the basis for the development of new drug screening platforms. This will allow future work that focuses on high-throughput screening and medicinal chemistry at Sanford-Burnham facilities.

"The collaboration provides an avenue for Mayo scientists to rapidly translate basic science discoveries into screening platforms that will enable new drug discovery and a new paradigm in drug development," says Andrew Badley, M.D., Mayo Clinic's associate dean for research resources.

The agreement extends and expands aspects of a preliminary pilot program involving six projects in 2012, ranging from cancer to immunology to neurology studies. That effort was supported by Mayo Clinic's Center for Translational Science Activities, the Mayo Clinic Cancer Center, the Mayo Center for Individualized Medicine, and the Mayo Center for Regenerative Medicine. The coming year will see an even broader scope of projects.

"We look forward to further engaging with our Mayo Clinic colleagues as we develop innovative screens to identify chemical compounds that modulate the activity of clinically relevant targets," says Michael Jackson, Ph.D., vice president of drug discovery and development at Sanford-Burnham. "If successful, these compounds will form the basis of completely novel 'first in class' therapies."

###

About Mayo Clinic

Mayo Clinic is a nonprofit worldwide leader in medical care, research and education for people from all walks of life. For more information, visit http://www.mayoclinic.org.

About Sanford-Burnham

Sanford-Burnham is a nonprofit independent medical research institute with operations in San Diego (La Jolla), Calif., and Orlando (Lake Nona), Fla. For more information, visit http://www.sanfordburnham.org.

http://www.mayoclinic.org/news2013-rst/7364.html.



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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Mayo Clinic and Sanford-Burnham extend research agreement [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 11-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Bob Nellis
newsbureau@mayo.edu
507-284-5005
Mayo Clinic

ROCHESTER, Minn.-- To expand and speed the development of new drugs for its patients, Mayo Clinic has entered a formal collaboration with Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute. Under the agreement, Mayo's discoveries of potential drug targets will be the basis for the development of new drug screening platforms. This will allow future work that focuses on high-throughput screening and medicinal chemistry at Sanford-Burnham facilities.

"The collaboration provides an avenue for Mayo scientists to rapidly translate basic science discoveries into screening platforms that will enable new drug discovery and a new paradigm in drug development," says Andrew Badley, M.D., Mayo Clinic's associate dean for research resources.

The agreement extends and expands aspects of a preliminary pilot program involving six projects in 2012, ranging from cancer to immunology to neurology studies. That effort was supported by Mayo Clinic's Center for Translational Science Activities, the Mayo Clinic Cancer Center, the Mayo Center for Individualized Medicine, and the Mayo Center for Regenerative Medicine. The coming year will see an even broader scope of projects.

"We look forward to further engaging with our Mayo Clinic colleagues as we develop innovative screens to identify chemical compounds that modulate the activity of clinically relevant targets," says Michael Jackson, Ph.D., vice president of drug discovery and development at Sanford-Burnham. "If successful, these compounds will form the basis of completely novel 'first in class' therapies."

###

About Mayo Clinic

Mayo Clinic is a nonprofit worldwide leader in medical care, research and education for people from all walks of life. For more information, visit http://www.mayoclinic.org.

About Sanford-Burnham

Sanford-Burnham is a nonprofit independent medical research institute with operations in San Diego (La Jolla), Calif., and Orlando (Lake Nona), Fla. For more information, visit http://www.sanfordburnham.org.

http://www.mayoclinic.org/news2013-rst/7364.html.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-03/mc-mca031113.php

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Monday, March 11, 2013

Real Estate Is Back ? 2013 U.S. Real Estate Market

After five long years of bad news, the prognosis for the health of the U.S. real estate market in 2013 is surprisingly strong. The largest real estate social network in the world, ActiveRain, recently surveyed 2,430 real estate professionals and found that there is great optimism regarding the future of the U.S. real estate market and economy. Since U.S. economic recoveries often come on the back of the real estate market, a rebound in real estate is a great sign for the economy as well.

The future is bright for the U.S. real estate market in 2013

In February 2012, another survey on ActiveRain found that the bottom of the U.S. real estate market crash had been reached. Agents believed that 2012 would see an increase in real estate transactions plus a slight increase in real estate values. The results of this survey were used to create the??Recovery or Not?? real estate report and infographic.

A New Dawn in Real Estate

The future is bright for American real estate. A recent National Association of Realtors? (NAR) article[i] claims that existing home sales jumped more than 9 percent in 2012 (the largest increase in five years) and home inventory levels hit a five-year low in December 2012. CoreLogic?s Home Price Index shows an 8.3 percent increase in home prices from December 2011 to December 2012, which is the single largest percent increase since May 2006. This was also the 10th consecutive month of national home price increases.

The results of the aforementioned ActiveRain survey shows that agents predict robust growth in the U.S. real estate market and the U.S. economy as a whole in the upcoming year:

  • 84 percent of agents believe that real estate values and the number of real estate transactions will increase in 2013.
  • 77 percent believe that new construction starts will continue to increase.
  • 74 percent believe that their local economy will improve in 2013 compared to 2012.
  • No market?is expected to see a decline in home values or real estate transactions in 2013. Contrast this with 2012 when?one-third?of the markets expected to see house values decline.

The 2013 increase in industry confidence is particularly dramatic when compared to the 2012 survey. Last year, industry insiders believed real estate values and new construction starts would be flat, but the number of real estate transactions would increase slightly.

2012 vs. 2013 Real Estate Confidence

Comparing real estate values, real estate transactions, new construction starts, local economy(On a scale of 1 to 5, 1 represents a significant decline, 3 represents no change, and 5 represents a significant increase.)

Investment Opportunities in Real Estate

In 2012, ActiveRain?s ?Recovery or Not? infographic predicted 2012 would be a ?GREAT? time to invest in rental property. ??The 2012 real estate boom was driven by investors looking for greater yield when compared to the low interest rates offered by Treasuries, savings accounts, CDs and bonds.

The opportunities available in the real estate market were not lost on hedge fund managers. In 2012, New York-based hedge fund The Blackstone Group L.P. spent $2.5 billion buying 16,000 homes and is expected to add another 2,500 homes to its portfolio every month in 2013. JPMorgan Chase estimates that $10 billion in institutional money will go toward some 80,000 single-family rental homes in 2013.[ii]

But the opportunity to invest in single-family rentals has peaked, at least in the major markets. The 2013 ActiveRain real estate survey looks comparable to the one conducted in 2012 in terms of high-level investment opportunities for real estate. The survey found top investment opportunities for 2013 to be single-family homes as primary residences, rental properties, and multifamily rentals, in that order.

The data shows that there is a very slight reduction in confidence when it comes to real estate being a good investment. The only categories seeing a jump in confidence are new construction single-family homes and newly constructed condominiums. Though agents are largely bullish on real estate as a go-forward investment, this slight reduction in confidence could indicate that 2012 was the best year to get into real estate, as inventory has fallen and prices have increased ? and will continue to increase ? in 2013.

Investors also seem to be reacting to overheated rental markets. USA Today says that investors like The Blackstone Group are cycling out of 2012?s hot real estate markets, like Phoenix, and are now moving into Atlanta, Tampa, Orlando, Chicago, Las Vegas, Charlotte and many Californian cities.

New Construction is Hot Again

New home construction became dormant in the wake of the 2007 financial crash but has recently picked up speed. NAR reports that December 2012 saw a 54-month high for new construction starts. The nation?s largest homebuilder, D.R. Horton Inc., reported that net home orders were up 38.6 percent in the fourth quarter of 2012 when compared to 2011.

Correspondingly, the 2013 ActiveRain survey shows that new construction single-family homes and condominiums are the only housing categories to increase from 2012 to 2013. That being said, real estate agents and brokers on ActiveRain largely view new construction opportunities as less attractive compared to resale single-family and multifamily homes.

Banks Held Back a Real Estate Recovery

During the financial crisis, shadow inventory was a major impediment to the real estate market?s recovery. Four million units of inventory were short sales, bank-owned properties and foreclosures in 2009. In 2010 and 2011, 33 percent of real estate inventory was held by a bank in some way. Shadow inventory accounted for 25 percent of the market in 2012. The decline in shadow inventory is expected to continue; NAR expects it to drop to a single-digit percentage of the market by 2014.[iii]

Now that inventory is tight, the market has shifted from a buyer?s market to a seller?s market. Today, managing the gap between unrealistic buyers and unrealistic sellers has returned to the forefront of real estate industry insiders? minds as the U.S. transitions into a more ?normal? real estate market.

The 2013 real estate market will be a seller's market; short sales, foreclosures, and unemployment will no longer be the issues faced by realtors

The Real Estate Roller Coaster

In October 2012, RealEstate.com completed an exhaustive analysis of U.S. home prices from 2007 to 2012, showing a loss of $9 trillion from March 2007 to November 2011, and a subsequent and very promising gain in house prices of $3 trillion from November 2011 to June of 2012.

Real estate agents and brokers are optimistic that 2013 will be even better for real estate.The markets where agents are most optimistic about real estate values are also the markets that had some of the greatest price declines during the real estate crisis. When ActiveRain polled real estate agents in 2012, California was home to some of the most challenged real estate markets and economies ? like San Diego, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. In 2013, the technology market, fueled by IPO?s like those of Facebook, LinkedIn and Qualcomm Inc., is driving new wealth creation and rapid real estate price appreciation in cities like San Francisco and San Diego.

Many of the markets that suffered the steepest price declines and worst issues with foreclosures and short sales are now rebounding strongly. Los Angeles, Fort Meyers, Phoenix, and West Palm Beach are working through their issues with shadow inventory; this process is helped by appreciating home prices and low interest rates. Oddly enough, many of the markets where agents are predicting the largest increases in home values are also markets with high costs of living; these include San Diego, San Francisco, Honolulu, and Los Angeles. This reversal may be another indicator of a strengthening economy as a whole, particularly in California.

The real estate markets where real estate values are set to appreciate the most in 2013

Reasons For the Real Estate Recovery

The Midwest, South and Mountain States and experiencing population and economic growth in the midst of America?s economic doldrums. Because of the financial crisis and continuing economic woes throughout the U.S., Americans are moving from high-tax, high cost of living markets to lower cost regions. Corporate America is also relocating away from the expensive metropolises to states with low taxes and costs of living. The best overall real estate markets average a cost of living index score of 95 versus the national average score of 100. As highlighted last year, Texas? low costs of living and great long-term economic prospects make it a popular destination for migrating Americans.

America is currently experiencing an energy renaissance.? The United States will become a net energy exporter by 2017, according to the International Energy Agency, thanks to new oil extraction technologies. Shale and natural gas extraction in Texas, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Michigan will drive the production of low cost, plentiful electricity. The associated boost to the economies of these regions will provide a boon to their local real estate markets.

Inexpensive labor and electricity, combined with the United States? strong patent protection and infrastructure, is expected to bring manufacturing back to the U.S. As The Economist and Barron?s magazine have discussed, many large multinational corporations are looking to build new manufacturing plants in the Midwest instead of offshoring manufacturing to China, Vietnam, or other low cost countries.

Other common trends among the top real estate markets are a good balance between large corporations and their small business bases, large and growing Hispanic populations, university and military populations, and high quality of life.

Detroit may be an outlier in this analysis. Population due to suburbanization and deindustrialization has made Detroit a shadow of its former self, but it has recently benefited from the renaissance of the American automobile industry. In any national discussion about real estate and job creation, Detroit is used as an example of how a city can turn itself around.

The best real estate markets in the U.S. are cities in the southern and eastern portions of the country.

Cracks in the Canadian Real Estate Market

Since 2000, the Canadian real estate market has been on a tear. Based on data from the Canadian Real Estate Association, its real estate market accelerated from 2000 to 2007, suffered a mild setback in 2008 due to the financial crisis, but rebounded so that 450,000 units have been sold per year since 2009.[vii]? 2012 was an average year for Canadian real estate with 453,372 units sold.

Despite these indications of strength, there are signs of a potential decline in the Canadian real estate market. According to the MLS Home Price Index, single-family home prices have risen since 2005 from $325,700 to $517,100, an increase of almost 60 percent.[viii] Rising consumer debt due to high real estate prices has caused Moody?s to downgrade six of the largest Canadian banks. Construction continues to be on a tear in Canada, causing concerns about overbuilding, particularly in large real estate markets like Toronto.

Four charts looking at changes in the Canadian real estate marketActiveRain?s 2013 survey of real estate agents shows less optimism for Canadian real estate compared to what was expressed in 2012 and what is currently found in the United States.?

Canadian real estate agents' confidence in their country's real estate market is down in 2013 when compared to 2012

The largest challenges for the Canadian real estate market are that buyers lack the ability to save large enough down payments and are unable to obtain mortgages because of strict qualification requirements of the banks and government. Other areas of concern include the country?s already overheated real estate market, government staff reductions, and changes in mortgage rules that make it harder to finance a home.

Canadian real estate agents view condominiums in general as poor investment opportunities. This could be driven by overbuilding in the largest Canadian cities. Conversely, agents have increased their confidence in land as an investment opportunity when compared to 2012.

Canadian real estate agents find new and existing condos to be unattractive real estate investment opportunities but find land to be a good investment opportunity

Source: http://www.realestate.com/advice/real-estate-market-is-back-45772/

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City Council speaker launches NYC mayoral bid

Surrounded by family and supporters, New York City Council speaker and mayoral hopeful Christine Quinn, center, speaks to the media as she announces her mayoral run in New York, Sunday, March 10, 2013. The New York City Council speaker has formally launched what she hopes will be a history-making mayoral bid this fall. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

Surrounded by family and supporters, New York City Council speaker and mayoral hopeful Christine Quinn, center, speaks to the media as she announces her mayoral run in New York, Sunday, March 10, 2013. The New York City Council speaker has formally launched what she hopes will be a history-making mayoral bid this fall. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

New York City Council speaker and mayoral hopeful Christine Quinn, center, walks with friends and family during a "walk and talk" tour as part of her announcement to run for mayor in New York, Sunday, March 10, 2013. The New York City Council speaker has formally launched what she hopes will be a history-making mayoral bid this fall. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

Surrounded by family and supporters, New York City Council speaker and mayoral hopeful Christine Quinn, center, speaks to the media as she announces her mayoral run in New York, Sunday, March 10, 2013. The New York City Council speaker has formally launched what she hopes will be a history-making mayoral bid this fall. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

Surrounded by family and supporters, New York City Council speaker and mayoral hopeful Christine Quinn, center, speaks to the media as she announces her mayoral run in New York, Sunday, March 10, 2013. The New York City Council speaker has formally launched what she hopes will be a history-making mayoral bid this fall. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

New York City Council speaker and mayoral hopeful Christine Quinn, center, walks with supporters and family as part of her announcement to run for mayor in New York, Sunday, March 10, 2013. The New York City Council speaker has formally launched what she hopes will be a history-making mayoral bid this fall. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

(AP) ? Long seen as a leading contender, City Council Speaker Christine Quinn formally launched Sunday what she hopes will be a history-making mayoral bid.

A veteran of city politics, Quinn would be a groundbreaking mayor across two personal dimensions: She would be the first female and first openly gay mayor to lead the nation's largest city.

Announcing on Twitter that she's in the race, Quinn said she wanted to give middle- and working-class New Yorkers the same opportunities generations of her family got when they came here.

"I'm running for mayor because I love this city. It's the greatest place in the world," she said in a video linked to her post, before starting what she called a walk-and-talk tour intended to take her to every neighborhood in the city before the Democratic primary in September.

Her first stop was the upper Manhattan neighborhood of Inwood, where she was surrounded by supporters carrying signs that read "Christine Quinn for Mayor" and wearing baseball caps with her initials on them.

Before the walk, Quinn told reporters, "I'm running today and I'll stack my record against anybody else's in this field. ... I balance budgets on time, and I had the wisdom in the first three years I was speaker, when there were surpluses, to not spend that money."

Her attempts to meet the people led to a classic New York City moment.

She shook hands with everyone ? people on the street, workers in a diner and even a bedraggled-looking man sitting on a sidewalk bench.

"Hi, I'm Christine Quinn and I'm running for mayor," she told the man, who looked up at her, seemingly puzzled.

"I need some change," he replied as she searched her pockets, saying, "I don't have any."

A former tenant organizer and director of a gay and lesbian advocacy group, Quinn, 46, has been on the City Council since 1999 and its leader since 2006. The position has afforded her considerable exposure going into the crowded field of candidates vying to succeed term-limited Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

She's enjoyed a considerable edge over other Democratic contenders in polls. A Quinnipiac University poll late last month gave her 37 percent of the Democratic vote, while her opponents each got less than 15 percent. Registered Democrats outnumber Republicans more than 6 to 1 in the city, though that hasn't translated into Democratic success in a mayor's race since 1989.

Quinn has generally been perceived as likely to get the backing of Republican-turned-independent Bloomberg, and with it support from business leaders.

Some of her Democratic opponents have tried to use that against her, suggesting Quinn is too close to a mayor they say has sometimes turned a cold shoulder to the concerns of middle-class and working-class New Yorkers. Opponents have faulted her, for example, for joining Bloomberg in opposing a plan to require businesses with at least five employees to provide paid sick leave. Quinn has said it's a worthy goal, but now is not the economic time to do it.

She also has taken heat for helping Bloomberg get the council to agree to extend term limits so he could run for a third time in 2008, without asking the voters who had approved a two-term limit twice in the 1990s.

In office, Quinn leads 50 other council members and largely controls what proposals come to a vote. Under her leadership, the council has taken on matters including requiring electronics manufacturers to collect their products for recycling, making it tougher for immigration officials to deport people being released from city jails or police custody and barring employers from discriminating against unemployed job applicants ? the last of which Bloomberg vetoed. Quinn has vowed the council will override his veto.

Quinn and her longtime partner, products liability lawyer Kim Catullo, married last year after more than a decade together. Their wedding guest list was a who's-who of New York politics, with Gov. Andrew Cuomo, Bloomberg and many other officeholders in attendance.

The year before, Quinn had invoked her personal story in lobbying state lawmakers to legalize gay marriage, a cause Cuomo championed. She called it "one of the best feelings I have ever had in my life" when the measure passed in June 2011.

Her announced and likely Democratic opponents include former City Councilman Sal Albanese; Public Advocate Bill de Blasio; Comptroller John Liu; and former Comptroller Bill Thompson.

Republican contenders include former Metropolitan Transportation Authority Chairman Joseph Lhota; Tom Allon, a publisher; billionaire businessman John Catsimatidis; and George McDonald, the head of a nonprofit that helps the homeless.

Former Bronx borough president and federal housing official Adolfo Carrion, a former Democrat who is now unaffiliated, is running on the Independence Party line and seeking Republican backing.

___

Associated Press writer Verena Dobnik contributed to this report. Follow Jennifer Peltz at http://twitter.com/jennpeltz

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-03-10-NYC%20Mayor's%20Race/id-49c7d237a8e646e3bf00e18dd8db19ea

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Friday, March 8, 2013

Microsoft & ADB Co-Host Philippines NGO Connection Day

On 1 March, Microsoft Philippines?partnered with the Asian Development Bank to host the ADB?s Staff Community Fund NGO partners at an NGO Connection Day in Manila.?The event is one of many activities offered through Microsoft?s Tech4Good program for the nonprofit sector, which helps organisations better understand, use and implement technology.

The Asian Development Bank?s Staff Community Fund NGO participants at Microsoft?s NGO Connection Day in Manila

The NGO Connection Day featured Microsoft speakers who delivered?presentations on government and civil society, trends in technology, social media, Microsoft resources for the NGO sector as well as training on Windows 8 and the new Office.?

The NGOs in attendance were happy to learn about new technology available to them through Microsoft?s software donation programme offered by TechSoup Asia?as well as to network with each other.??It?s good to go out and meet other NGOs that share the same advocacy as us,? said Haydee Sofranes, Finance and Administrative Officer, DCHFI ? Stepping Stone.?

Abegail Canis, Administrative Officer from Kaibigan Ermita Outreach Foundation, added: ?Very good event; topics are relevant and speakers are very knowledgeable.?

Participants receiving training on the new Office

Microsoft?s Citizenship team and the ADB?s NGO & Civil Society Center have worked together since 2010 to support NGO capacity building across Asia Pacific, including programmes in the Philippines, Sri Lanka and Vietnam, and have co-presented on the Microsoft/ADB partnership at external events like the CIVICUS World
Assembly.?Microsoft?s NGO partners have featured prominently at the ADB?s Annual Meeting since 2011.?

To find out about upcoming NGO Connection Days in your market, subscribe to our Tech4Good e-newsletter here.

Source: http://blogs.technet.com/b/microsoft_citizenship_asia_pacific/archive/2013/03/08/microsoft-amp-adb-co-host-philippines-ngo-connection-day.aspx

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Thursday, March 7, 2013

EU fines Microsoft $733 million for breaking browser pact

AMSTERDAM (AP) ? The European Union Commission fines Microsoft $733 million for breaking the terms of an earlier agreement to offer users a choice of internet browser.

Microsoft thought it had put its regulatory woes behind it with the 2009 settlement in which it paid (euro) 860 million and promised to give Windows users the option of choosing another browser rather than having Internet Explorer automatically installed.

But Microsoft failed to stick to the deal for some 15 million installations of Windows 7 in Europe from May 2011 until July 2012. The company acknowledged the failure and said it was a mistake.

The commission?s top regulator, Joaquin Almunia, said negotiated settlements are vital for enforcement, and this was the first time a company had failed to keep its word.

Source: http://www.bigredtoday.com/article/20130306/AP09/130309768

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Nikon 1 J3


The J3 ($599.95 direct with 10-30mm lens) represents the third generation of Nikon's compact interchangeable lens camera system. It's a bit more mature in design than the J1, but no longer occupies the entry-level slot in the family. The smaller, less-expensive S1 is now the low-end body, ringing up at $100 less. The 14-megapixel J3 burst shoots at up to 60 frames per second, can capture slow-motion video, and has a couple of innovative shooting modes like Motion Snapshot and Slow View. It doesn't beat our current Editors' Choice Panasonic Lumix DMC-G5, which includes enthusiast-level features like a hot shoe and a built-in EVF, but casual shooters who are interested in a compact camera with some interesting features should give it some consideration.

Design and Features
Like its predecessor, the J3 is available in a number of colors. Out test camera was white, but it can also be had in black, silver, red, or beige. Regardless of the color you choose, the included 10-30mm (27-81mm equivalent) comes with the same finish. The camera measures a mere 2.4 by 4 by 1.1 inches (HWD), although the lens adds a couple of inches of depth when mounted. If you're the type of shooter who is interested in the improved image quality offered by an interchangeable lens camera, but don't think you'll ever buy an additional lens, you should also consider our Editors' Choice high-end point-and-shoot, the Sony Cyber-shot DSC-RX100. Its image sensor is the same physical size, about 1-inch measured diagonally, and the lens is a faster 28-100mm f/1.8-4.9 design?you'll never be able to change lenses, but you can slide the camera into your pocket.

The J3 is designed for automatic operation, but it does give you access to some manual controls. On the top of the camera you'll find the On/Off button, a Movie button, the shutter release, and a mode dial. Instead of the standard PASM modes, the dial has settings for Motion Snapshot, Best Moment Capture, Auto, Creative, and Advanced Movie modes. Auto Mode is just as you would expect?it lets the camera take control of shooting settings, although you will still be able to control the Drive Mode, adjust the Flash output, and control Exposure Compensation (which adjusts the brightness of shots).

Shooters who are less familiar with camera settings can tap the F button on the rear of the camera in Auto mode, it brings up a menu that lets you control Nikon's Active D-Lighting system to adjust highlights and shadows, control background blur via the Background Softening setting, adjust the shutter speed via the Motion Control setting, and control the Exposure Compensation via a setting labeled Brightness Control. Aperture control and Shutter Speed are still available via traditional methods when shooting in one of the camera's Creative modes, but for folks who aren't intimately familiar with photographic terminology it's nice to have these options presented in more basic terms.

Creative Mode opens up Shutter priority, Aperture priority, and full Manual shooting to advanced users, but there are also a number of scene modes contained within. These include preset modes for shooting in low light and when working against a strong backlight, as well as more interesting modes like in-camera panorama, a simulated miniature effect, and a selective color mode. The miniature effect blurs the areas above and below your subject, making the photo appear to be of a diorama, and the selective color mode lets you shoot photos that are black and white, with only one color of the spectrum present in your images.

The Best Moment Capture setting has two modes from which to choose. Smart Photo Selector debuted with the J1 and is unchanged?it captures a burst of photos at 60fps and chooses the best five.? Slow View starts when you press the shutter halfway down, slowing down the live view feed for about six seconds. This lets you capture an action shot at just the right moment. The Motion Snapshot mode is still there as well?it captures a still as well as a few seconds of surrounding video and combines them into a short slow-motion video and still shot with music.

You're going to rely on the rear display to frame and review photos. At 3 inches in size it occupies most of the rear of the camera, and it's extremely sharp thanks to a 921k-dot resolution. Unlike some other interchangeable lens cameras, like Sony's NEX-F3, the screen is fixed?the NEX has a tilting display. The F3 also supports an external electronic viewfinder add-on, a capability that the J3 is lacking. You'll have to move up to the more expensive Nikon V2 if you want an EVF.

The J3 uses an electronic shutter rather than a traditional mechanical one?again, you'll have to move up to the V2 to get a Nikon 1 camera with a mechanical shutter. On one hand, the camera is silent when you shoot. But you do lose the ability to take flash photos at higher shutter speeds?the J3 tops out at 1/60-second when using the flash, while the V2 will let you snap photos with a flash at 1/250-second. This won't be an issue for the majority of folks who are considering the J3.

There is a built-in pop-up flash, a feature missing from Olympus Micro Four Thirds cameras like the PEN Lite E-PL5. The J1 had a somewhat ridiculous looking flash that popped straight up from the body on a skinny neck. The J3 has a more traditional flash that raises using a dual-action hinge design. The nicest thing about it is its ability to fire from any position?if you want to avoid the harsh look of direct flash you can tilt it back and bounce it off of a ceiling for a softer, more pleasant look. The flash that is built into the Sony NEX-F3 has a similar hinged design.

There's no Wi-Fi built into the camera, but you can add it by purchasing the WU-1b Wireless Mobile Adapter ($59.95). It plugs into the USB port on the side of the J3, so it does add some bulk, but makes it possible to transfer images to your smartphone. If you're looking for a compact interchangeable lens camera with built-in Wi-Fi, take a close look at the Samsung NX1000 and Sony Alpha NEX-5R. Both let you transfer photos to your phone and to social networking sites, without having to plug in an adapter.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/ay2aC7NrXiE/0,2817,2416213,00.asp

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