Thursday, January 31, 2013

Reconcilable differences: Study uncovers the common ground of scientific opposites

Jan. 30, 2013 ? Searching for common elements in seemingly incompatible scientific theories may lead to the discovery of new ones that revolutionize our understanding of the world.

Such is the idea behind a mathematical framework Princeton University researchers developed that strips away the differences between scientific laws and theories to reveal how the ideas are compatible. In a recent report in the journal Physical Review Letters, the authors explain how the mathematical model finds common ground between the famously at-odds physics equations that govern classical and quantum mechanics.

In their paper, the researchers attempt to reconcile classical and quantum mechanics. Simply put, classical mechanics -- based on the ideas of English scientist Isaac Newton -- describes the ordered laws of motion for large objects and systems. Quantum mechanics relates more to the chaotic motion and activity of microscopic particles.

Lead author Denys Bondar, a postdoctoral research associate in Princeton's Department of Chemistry, explained that the Princeton framework -- called operational dynamic modeling -- is intended to streamline the development of novel theories, a typically painstaking process that can be for naught if the end result does not agree with experimental data. The framework unpacks and mathematically tests the basic algebra of a theory against that of observed data. If they reconcile, the newborn theory might be valid, Bondar said.

"We have a new theoretical tool that we can use to look at old problems and try to solve new problems," Bondar said. He worked with second author Renan Cabrera, a Princeton postdoctoral research associate in chemistry; senior researcher Herschel Rabitz, Princeton's Charles Phelps Smyth '16 *17 Professor of Chemistry; Robert Lompay, a physics graduate student at Uzhgorod National University in Ukraine; and Misha Ivanov, a physics professor at Imperial College London.

The Princeton model builds on theorems that Austrian physicist Paul Ehrenfest developed in the 20th century to illustrate the similarities between classical and quantum mechanics. Putting these theorems into action, Bondar and his colleagues pared the differences between these branches of physics down to a single mathematical consideration: to commute or not to commute. This Shakespearean-sounding crossroads relates to whether the result relies on the order of the experimental measurements.

If the same conclusion can be drawn regardless of how the measurements are arranged, the theory is commutative. If the result depends on a specific sequence, it is non-commutative. At this point, any novel theory can be characterized as classical or quantum, Bondar said. If the theory is commutative it is classical; if not, it has quantum elements.

"Scientists are taught from the time they are students that classical and quantum mechanics can never be reconciled," Bondar said. "But now we have one equation for classical and quantum mechanics. We can make the transition from classical to quantum mechanics in a smooth and straightforward way."

The benefit of the model, Cabrera said, is that experimental systems can be constructed more in accordance with particular mechanics as they are being developed. In addition, it can reveal if and how a novel theory relates to classical or quantum mechanics in a way that might not have been considered initially, he said.

"This model allows us to experience mathematically classical or quantum theories in a more similar way than before and find common ground only differentiated by the ability to commute or not commute," Cabrera said.

Robert Gilmore, a physics professor at Drexel University, said that the Princeton framework is a unique and well-designed initial step toward bringing classical and quantum mechanics under the same theoretical roof. Gilmore is familiar with the work, but had no role in it.

The researchers "provide the smoothest possible transition from quantum mechanics to classical mechanics," Gilmore said. "Their vision is that it is possible to formulate physical theory in such a way that both classical mechanics and quantum mechanics play by the same rules. In order to do this, they upend one of the classical early results of quantum mechanics: the Ehrenfest theorems."

Though the model is simple -- its experimental basis is the position and velocity of a single electron -- it could be matured to describe more complicated physical phenomena, Gilmore said.

"In order to deepen our understanding of quantum mechanics, this theory must be extended in several directions," he said. "This paper seems to provide one footing for a larger foundation that will be needed to build a more comprehensive theory including both classical and quantum mechanics."

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

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

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Denys Bondar, Renan Cabrera, Robert Lompay, Misha Ivanov, Herschel Rabitz. Operational Dynamic Modeling Transcending Quantum and Classical Mechanics. Physical Review Letters, 2012; 109 (19) DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.109.190403

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/most_popular/~3/fPgylwUPCNA/130130132447.htm

charlton heston moses tulsa shooting doug fister rick warren the perfect storm hard boiled eggs

Angels' Pujols hopes to join Dominicans for WBC

SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (AP) ? Los Angeles Angels slugger Albert Pujols says he hopes to play for the Dominican Republic after the second round of the World Baseball Classic.

The first baseman and three-time NL MVP had arthroscopic surgery on his right knee in October. He would need special permission from the Angels to take part in the Classic.

Pujols told a Dominican radio show that the Angels support him in his goal to play for his Caribbean homeland during the international competition.

He said Tuesday: "That's why I had the operation in October, to be ready for the Classic."

Pujols says he's working to strengthen his right leg and expects to be in good condition for the start of spring training.

Pujols hit .285 with 30 homers in his first season with the Angels.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-01-29-Dominican-Pujols/id-c3eb5fbc5f8341fd92af1754708b33d8

Frys tryptophan BestBuy.com Kohls Black Friday www.walmart.com Macho Camacho Rise of the Guardians

BlackBerry Won't Win Back Business Users - Business Insider

Kevin Smith/Business Insider

?

In addition to new smartphones, BlackBerry (formerly known as Research In Motion) also released new software to help businesses manage fleets of smartphones.

But the new software could be too little, too late, writes IT consultant? Michael Davis, president of External IT and a columnist for InformationWeek

First, the good news. BlackBerry Enterprise Server 10 has two new features that enterprises should love.

One feature makes BlackBerry devices super secure. BES 10 now has military-grade encryption. Even if the BlackBerry is on a public WiFi connection, hackers can't snoop on emails or Web apps.

The second feature is even better and something that other tech companies, like VMware, have been working on for years. It's called BlackBerry Balance.?

Balance allows the phone to be divided into two separate phones: personal and work. You can have, for instance, two Box apps, one for work documents the other for personal and the two never mix. Your company can dictate security restrictions on your work email, but not for your private Gmail, etc.

That's good stuff, but maybe not good enough.

These features only work with the new BlackBerry phones.

Plus "RIM didn't do anything to reduce the costs and complexity" of BES, contends Davis. RIM is charging about $99 per phone for the BES license, plus other potential monthly fees, reports the Wall Street Journal's Clint Boulton.

That's a problem because there are a ton of alternatives to BES that work better for a company that needs to manage iPhones and Android devices too. It's an entire industry known as Mobile Device Management.

And ultimately, users want to choose their own devices. So unless most employees want the new BlackBerry phones, a company has little reason to buy the new BES 10 software, Davis notes.

Don't miss: 8 Enterprise Startups Creating A Brand-New, $4 Billion Market

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/blackberry-wont-win-back-business-users-2013-1

richard threlkeld moonrise kingdom coachella lineup joran van der sloot coachella 2012 lineup school delays critics choice awards 2012

House prices rise more than forecast in January - Nationwide

LONDON (Reuters)- British house prices rose more than expected this month compared with December and stopped their annual decline, helped by the central bank's scheme to boost lending, mortgage lender Nationwide said on Thursday.

Nationwide data showed that house prices ticked up 0.5 percent on the month after a slightly upwardly revised flat reading in December.

Compared with January 2012, prices were unchanged, avoiding a decline for the first time since last February.

Both the monthly and the annual figures were better than forecast by analysts.

"While activity in the housing market remains muted by historic standards, there have been tentative signs of a pick-up in activity in recent months," said Nationwide's chief economist Robert Gardner.

"The Funding for Lending Scheme has achieved some success in bringing down mortgage rates, with some signs of a pick-up in lending activity," he added.

The scheme, which came into effect in August, allows banks and building societies to access more than 80 billion pounds in cheap finance if they maintain or increase net lending to households and businesses.

"Hopefully, the momentum will continue to build in the months ahead, though much will depend on whether the wider economic environment improves," Gardner said.

Bank of England data for last month showed the highest number of mortgages approved since January 2012, and the biggest increase in net mortgage lending since April - a rare sign of confidence in an otherwise flagging economy.

Britain's economy shrank more than expected at the end of 2012, with a slump in oil production, lower factory output and a hangover from the London Olympics pushing it to the brink of its third recession since 2008.

(Reporting by Olesya Dmitracova; Editing by Ruth Pitchford)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/house-prices-rise-more-forecast-january-nationwide-070254083--business.html

powerball numbers freddie mercury Horshack Beady Eye Eric Idle rory mcilroy Fatboy Slim

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Apple Pulls Vine From App Store?s Featured Section After Porn Showed Up In Editors? Picks

vinepornWhile Apple hasn't made a peep yet about Vine's slight porn problem, the App Store has removed the video-sharing app from its Featured Section. The app launched on Thursday, and found itself in the Featured section of the App Store by Friday. Since, it's swung to the top of Social in the App Store, and has climbed to the number four free app overall. But this morning, many new Viners woke up to something unexpected in the Editors' Picks section of the app: a hardcore porn clip titled "Dildoplay." In turn, it would appear that the App Store has removed the app from the Featured section of the store. Most apps that get chosen by Apple spend a full week in the user funnel known as "Featured."

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/7NmNG3US1Ps/

Psy fergie minnesota vikings looper New Years Eve new years washington redskins

Jacob Rudolph, LGBT New Jersey Teen, Meets George Takei On 'Anderson Live'

Anderson Cooper had a special surprise for the New Jersey teen whose impassioned coming out speech at a high school ceremony made him a viral video superstar.

Eighteen-year-old Jacob Rudolph, who identified himself as LGBT while accepting an award for class actor in front of his graduating class, told Cooper that "Star Trek" actor George Takei was his idol.

Fortunately for Rudolph, Takei was waiting backstage. Watch the clip to see what happened!

Also on HuffPost:

"; var coords = [-5, -72]; // display fb-bubble FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, 'top', {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: 'clear-overlay'}); });

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/29/jacob-rudolph-new-jersey-teen-george-takei-_n_2575803.html

dallas tornado ncaa basketball oikos kentucky wildcats oakland school shooting nike nfl jerseys katie couric

ANALYSIS: The 50 Fastest Growing Online Job Trends In Q4 2012 ...

English: Freelance artist

Freelance artist

Web hosting rises as Android, IPhone ?app fatigue? and facebook, twitter social media confusion flatter to deceive

By ECM Plus

ECM Plus ? Freelancer.co.uk has just released the Fast 50 report for Q4 2012, tracking trends in the online jobs market.

?The Freelancer Fast 50 report is a fairly unique leading indicator of the online economy?, said Matt Barrie, CEO of Freelancer.co.uk. ?As the largest outsourcing marketplace in the world with almost 7 million users and over 4 million jobs posted to date, the Freelancer Fast 50 report is uniquely placed to provide insights into ups and downs in the demand for skills, technologies, products and performance of companies through analysis of over one hundred thousand jobs per quarter being posted online? he added.

Top trends from Q4 2012:

-? Website Hosting jobs skyrocketed over 3300% (to 4,059 jobs) as more and more businesses move into the cloud, with most of these jobs involving moving established sites to the cloud, or sending new cloud-hosted sites live.

The standout performer was Amazon Web Services, which saw an increase of an incredible 466% this quarter (to 1,895 jobs) as the online retail juggernaut continues to dominate with it?s EC2 platform, expanding rapidly into new regions and deploying faster, new generation servers with improved storage capabilities.

- Microsoft desktop apps take off after the release of Windows 8: Demand for Windows Desktop apps shot up 305% this quarter as Microsoft unveiled its new operating system (to 1,923 jobs), although volumes are still low compared to other architectures. MS Word and Powerpoint saw growth spurts of 211% (to 4578 jobs) and 309% (to 1,253 jobs) respectively.

-?Are we seeing Apple AppFatigue? With a crowded marketplace of over 1 million apps now in the Apple App Store, developers for Apple mobile platforms are showing signs of app-fatigue. In Q4 Apple iOS jobs dropped for the first time since the Fast 50 report started being published; iPhone jobs dropped 3.8% (to 5,298 jobs) and those for the iPad fell 14% (to 2,036 jobs). This was reflected in Apple?s share price, which plummeted 20% over the quarter. Android on the other hand gained 7% (to 4,282 jobs) as shipments for the open platform well overtake those of Apple. ?This is a huge platform change,? Google?s Executive Chairman, Eric Schmidt, says of Android?s widening lead over iOS. ?This is of the scale of 20 years ago ? Microsoft versus Apple. We?re winning that pretty clearly now.?

- Software and Website QA jobs soar as eCommerce sites rushed to fortify themselves for holiday season traffic: Q4 saw a spike in Software and Website Testing jobs as online retail rushed to get their sites ready and bug free for the peak selling season. Software Testing jumped 2500% (to 5,200 jobs) while Website Testing saw an equally astounding 2055% increase (to 3,923 jobs).

-?eBay jobs rise as the online marketplace reinvents itself. After 17 years in the online auction business the company rolled out a number of dramatic changes to its website and mobile application, including new branding. These changes, in combination with a pivot to a mobile-centric and small-business friendly focus, resulted in eBay jobs gaining 22% (to 1,790 jobs) for the quarter as it diversifies its auction house into an eCommerce marketplace and goes head-to-head with tech retail giant Amazon.

-? Social media and Internet Marketing jobs continue to fall out of favour in the wake of constant platform and search index changes: Despite the boom in Internet traffic, continual changes and negative reports have left advertisers confused whether using social networks as an advertising platform will pay off in the end. According to the New York times, only 14% of digital advertising budgets are currently allocated to social networking. That doubt was reflected in the online jobs market, where Social Networking projects declined 5.1% (to 5,820 jobs). Both Facebook (down 8.4% to 7,186 jobs) and Twitter (down 6.4% to 2,240 jobs) also felt the pinch. Internet Marketing in general was flat (down 1.4% to 15,244 jobs), while SEO is still reeling from the after effects of Google?s Panda changes (down 3.3% to 10,159 jobs). Some marketers fell back to Email Marketing (up 186% to 1,003 jobs).

TABLE: Top categories ? Q4 2012

Rank Job Category Q4 Q3 Increase
1 Web Hosting 4059 118 3340%
2 Software Testing 5200 196 2554%
3 Website Testing 3923 182 2055%
4 Website Management 4073 551 639%
5 Engineering 2477 408 507%
6 Amazon Web Services 1895 335 466%
7 Powerpoint 1253 306 309%
8 Windows Desktop 1923 475 305%
9 Word 4578 1474 211%
10 Email Marketing 1003 351 186%
11 Icon Design 1007 429 135%
12 Book Writing 1300 623 109%
13 Software Architecture 12127 5897 106%
14 Copy Typing 12897 6917 86%
15 PDF 2444 1375 78%
16 XML 1479 858 72%
17 Technical Writing 3495 2092 67%
18 Translation 3297 2100 57%
19 Linux 2185 1412 55%
20 Academic Writing 5403 3506 54%
21 SQL 1810 1308 38%
22 Accounting 1035 757 37%
23 Script Install 1947 1450 34%
24 C# Programming 2750 2103 31%
25 User Interface / IA 2777 2155 29%
26 Java 3277 2560 28%
27 MySQL 14024 11002 27%
28 CSS 9015 7098 27%
29 Web Scraping 3189 2511 27%
30 Research 2669 2111 26%
31 ASP 1500 1187 26%
32 HTML5 3827 3038 26%
33 3D Animation 1655 1328 25%
34 3D Modelling 1466 1187 24%
35 eBay 1790 1469 22%
36 Illustration 1555 1290 21%
37 Visual Basic 1630 1372 19%
38 jQuery / Prototype 3527 2972 19%
39 Android 4282 4002 7%
40 Internet Marketing 15244 15458 -1.4%
41 eCommerce 3862 3931 -1.8%
42 Link Building 6844 7066 -3.1%
43 SEO 10159 10505 -3.3%
44 Shopping Carts 2944 3059 -3.8%
45 iPhone 5298 5508 -3.8%
46 Social Networking 5820 6131 -5.1%
47 Twitter 2240 2392 -6.4%
48 Facebook 6581 7186 -8.4%
49 iPad 2036 2376 -14%
50 BPO 2946 4493 -34%

Source:

This data was extracted from 261,003 jobs posted on Freelancer.co.uk in Q3 2012, up from 230,614 in Q2. The Freelancer.co.uk Fast 50 is the leading gauge of online hiring trends.

Like this:

Be the first to like this.

Source: http://ecmplus.wordpress.com/2013/01/29/analysis-the-50-fastest-growing-online-job-trends-in-q4-2012/

gi joe jason wu for target collection nick diaz vs carlos condit the patriot hall of fame occupy dc ufc 143 fight card

City of the Month: Park City, UT ? Travel Smart Blog

Last week, the acclaimed Sundance Film Festival honored the top independent movies and players. Every year, its host, Park City, Utah, takes the best supporting role for the annual celeb-studded event.

Park City is topping all the travel lists (Forbes, Travel + Leisure, Ski Magazine, Conde Nast Traveler) lately surpassing destinations such as Aspen. Why? Accessibility, creativity, and activity!

Park City is a transformed old mining town with three ski resorts surrounding it. The quaintness of Park City?s Main Street is a thin veil for souvenirs and high-end retail. And don?t be deceived by the quaint fa?ade as the price tag for a vacation in and around this city is never bargain-priced. The four block historic strip is perfect for strolling or you can step into Robert Redford?s restaurant, Zoom, which offers some delicious local fare.

Accessibility

Nobody wants to spend the better part of a day traveling into a destination. Park City is more accessible than many of the top ski resort towns ? located only 45 minutes from The Salt Lake City airport. The international airport serves many airlines; Delta Air Lines has nonstop flights from more than 100 cities. Shuttles are a better choice than renting a car.

Hotels in Park City are numerous; from the big brand hotels to the local lodges.

Creativity

It has become a hub of culinary creativity with more than 100 restaurants and some truly inspired eateries.

If dining among celebrities in a beautiful mountain setting sounds appealing, you?ll want to check-in to the Waldorf-Astoria. Get a table at Slopes, a new restaurant deemed America?s hottest hotel restaurant in 2012 by Travel & Leisure.

The Waldorf-Astoria?s renowned bar and lounge, Powder Ice Lounge, features a 14-foot sculpted ice bar (it?s literally made of ice) and is one of the most popular photo-ops in the city.

Activity

Park City features three world-class resorts ? Deer Valley Resort, Canyons Resort and Park City Mountain Resort ? that offer three seasons of fun for everyone. (I say three because spring is a transitional season when the resorts close, the snow melts, and the preparations for the summer season are taking place.)

In the winter, the powder is abundant. Park City is home to the steep mountains where the US Ski Team trains attracting the world?s top snow sport enthusiasts, and a very chic and sophisticated crowd.

The Utah Olympic Park near Park City was the site of the 2002 Bobsled, Luge and Ski Jumping competitions. Today, visitors are treated to a guided tour of the park, athlete training sessions, 70 mile-per-hour bobsled rides, zipline rides, Quicksilver alpine slide rides, Olympic museum, an interactive museum, freestyle aerial and ski jumping shows on Saturdays at noon and a variety of camps for all ages.

In the summer and fall, the resorts convert their lifts and runs into over 400 miles of trails for biking and hiking and endless activities. Deer Valley?s Mountain Biking School offers lessons for those looking to improve their skills or just a guide for some of the areas best trails.

?

?

?

Similar Posts:

Source: http://www.travelsmartblog.com/2013/01/city-of-the-month-park-city-ut/

Tsunami Lil Reese Hurricane Sandy Nyc Saanvi Venna vikings Colin Powell Tyrann Mathieu

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

HP web store leaks 14-inch Chromebook Pavilion, to be unveiled on February 17

HP crafting 14inch Chromebook Pavilion, to be unveiled on February 17

Hewlett-Packard didn't have the best 2012, but that's not stopping the US company from getting on the Chromebook bandwagon. The HP Chromebook Pavilion was spotted by Slashgear on HP's own web store, despite the additional information section noting a February 17 "ad embargo" on the information. The little 14-inch Chromebook runs Google's eponymous OS with an Intel Celeron 847 CPU clocked at 1.1GHz, an Intel HD GPU, 2GB of DDR3 SDRAM (expandable up to 4GB), and 16GB of SSD storage space, put to use on the 14-inch HD BrightView LED-backlit display (1366 x 768 resolution). A trio of old-school USB 2.0 slots an HDMI out, and an ethernet jack make up the lion's share of ports, while an SD card slot adds expandable storage options. The 2.55Ah lithium-ion battery included will last up to (approximately) four hours and 15 minutes, though we'd like to put that to the test ourselves before trusting the specs sheet. Of course, it looks like it won't be too long before we hear more and get our hands on the device, given that Feb. 17th date.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Via: Slashgear

Source: Hewlett-Packard (PDF)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/28/hp-pavilion-chromebook-leak/

National Hurricane Center Zeek Rewards vanessa bryant vanessa bryant Prince Harry naked Prince Harry Vegas Melky Cabrera

F-16 fighter jet missing over Adriatic Sea

An F-16 fighter jet went missing Monday after losing connection with its base in Italy around 8 p.m. local time, the U.S. Air Force said in a statement.

Pentagon officials confirm the plane, out on night operations training, is down in the Adriatic Sea, the body of water that separates the Italian peninsula from Croatia and Albania.?

The pilot is missing, according to Pentagon officials.

Search efforts are underway, the Air Force said.

--Reporting by Jim Miklaszewski and Isolde Raftery of NBC News.

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/28/16741965-f-16-fighter-jet-missing-over-adriatic-sea?lite

costa rica kevin hart living social Earthquake Costa Rica Clinton speech Michael Strahan Griselda Blanco

It?s a Wrap! Heidi Klum and Leni?s Chic Scarves

Check out Heidi Klum and daughter Leni wearing Theodora & Callum printed scarves.

Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/zKabiZkqcEE/

live free or die hard carlos pena amanda bynes arrested f 18 jet crash in virginia beach john tortorella nicki minaj beez in the trap video

Stanford researchers break million-core supercomputer barrier

Stanford researchers break million-core supercomputer barrier [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Jan-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Andrew Myers
admyers@stanford.edu
650-736-2245
Stanford School of Engineering

A new record in supercomputing harnessed a million computing cores to model supersonic jet noise

Stanford Engineering's Center for Turbulence Research (CTR) has set a new record in computational science by successfully using a supercomputer with more than one million computing cores to solve a complex fluid dynamics problemthe prediction of noise generated by a supersonic jet engine.

Joseph Nichols, a research associate in the center, worked on the newly installed Sequoia IBM Bluegene/Q system at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories (LLNL) funded by the Advanced Simulation and Computing (ASC) Program of the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA). Sequoia once topped list of the world's most powerful supercomputers, boasting 1,572,864 compute cores (processors) and 1.6 petabytes of memory connected by a high-speed five-dimensional torus interconnect.

Because of Sequoia's impressive numbers of cores, Nichols was able to show for the first time that million-core fluid dynamics simulations are possibleand also to contribute to research aimed at designing quieter aircraft engines.

THE PHYSICS OF NOISE

The exhausts of high-performance aircraft at takeoff and landing are among the most powerful human-made sources of noise. For ground crews, even for those wearing the most advanced hearing protection available, this creates an acoustically hazardous environment. To the communities surrounding airports, such noise is a major annoyance and a drag on property values.

Understandably, engineers are keen to design new and better aircraft engines that are quieter than their predecessors. New nozzle shapes, for instance, can reduce jet noise at its source, resulting in quieter aircraft.

Predictive simulationsadvanced computer modelsaid in such designs. These complex simulations allow scientists to peer inside and measure processes occurring within the harsh exhaust environment that is otherwise inaccessible to experimental equipment. The data gleaned from these simulations are driving computation-based scientific discovery as researchers uncover the physics of noise.

MORE CORES, MORE CHALLENGES

"Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations, like the one Nichols solved, are incredibly complex. Only recently, with the advent of massive supercomputers boasting hundreds of thousands of computing cores, have engineers been able to model jet engines and the noise they produce with accuracy and speed," said Parviz Moin, the Franklin M. and Caroline P. Johnson Professor in the School of Engineering and Director of CTR.

CFD simulations test all aspects of a supercomputer. The waves propagating throughout the simulation require a carefully orchestrated balance between computation, memory and communication. Supercomputers like Sequoia divvy up the complex math into smaller parts so they can be computed simultaneously. The more cores you have, the faster and more complex the calculations can be.

And yet, despite the additional computing horsepower, the difficulty of the calculations only becomes more challenging with more cores. At the one-million-core level, previously innocuous parts of the computer code can suddenly become bottlenecks.

IRONING OUT THE WRINKLES

Over the past few weeks, Stanford researchers and LLNL computing staff have been working closely to iron out these last few wrinkles. This week, they were glued to their terminals during the first "full-system scaling" to see whether initial runs would achieve stable run-time performance. They watched eagerly as the first CFD simulation passed through initialization then thrilled as the code performance continued to scale up to and beyond the all-important one-million-core threshold, and as the time-to-solution declined dramatically.

"These runs represent at least an order-of-magnitude increase in computational power over the largest simulations performed at the Center for Turbulence Research previously," said Nichols "The implications for predictive science are mind-boggling."

A HOMECOMING

The current simulations were a homecoming of sorts for Nichols. He was inspired to pursue a career in supercomputing as a high-school student when he attended a two-week summer program at Lawrence Livermore computing facility in 1994 sponsored by the Department of Energy. Back then he worked on the Cray Y-MP, one of the fastest supercomputers of its time.

"Sequoia is approximately 10 million times more powerful than that machine," Nichols noted.

The Stanford ties go deeper still. The computer code used in this study is named CharLES and was developed by former Stanford senior research associate, Frank Ham. This code utilizes unstructured meshes to simulate turbulent flow in the presence of complicated geometry.

In addition to jet noise simulations, Stanford researchers in the Predictive Science Academic Alliance Program (PSAAP), sponsored by the Department of Energy, are using the CharLES code to investigate advanced-concept scramjet propulsion systems used in hypersonic flight (with video)flight at many times the speed of soundand to simulate the turbulent flow over an entire airplane wing.

###

This article was written by Andrew Myers, associate director of communications for the Stanford University School of Engineering.



[ 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.


Stanford researchers break million-core supercomputer barrier [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Jan-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Andrew Myers
admyers@stanford.edu
650-736-2245
Stanford School of Engineering

A new record in supercomputing harnessed a million computing cores to model supersonic jet noise

Stanford Engineering's Center for Turbulence Research (CTR) has set a new record in computational science by successfully using a supercomputer with more than one million computing cores to solve a complex fluid dynamics problemthe prediction of noise generated by a supersonic jet engine.

Joseph Nichols, a research associate in the center, worked on the newly installed Sequoia IBM Bluegene/Q system at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories (LLNL) funded by the Advanced Simulation and Computing (ASC) Program of the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA). Sequoia once topped list of the world's most powerful supercomputers, boasting 1,572,864 compute cores (processors) and 1.6 petabytes of memory connected by a high-speed five-dimensional torus interconnect.

Because of Sequoia's impressive numbers of cores, Nichols was able to show for the first time that million-core fluid dynamics simulations are possibleand also to contribute to research aimed at designing quieter aircraft engines.

THE PHYSICS OF NOISE

The exhausts of high-performance aircraft at takeoff and landing are among the most powerful human-made sources of noise. For ground crews, even for those wearing the most advanced hearing protection available, this creates an acoustically hazardous environment. To the communities surrounding airports, such noise is a major annoyance and a drag on property values.

Understandably, engineers are keen to design new and better aircraft engines that are quieter than their predecessors. New nozzle shapes, for instance, can reduce jet noise at its source, resulting in quieter aircraft.

Predictive simulationsadvanced computer modelsaid in such designs. These complex simulations allow scientists to peer inside and measure processes occurring within the harsh exhaust environment that is otherwise inaccessible to experimental equipment. The data gleaned from these simulations are driving computation-based scientific discovery as researchers uncover the physics of noise.

MORE CORES, MORE CHALLENGES

"Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations, like the one Nichols solved, are incredibly complex. Only recently, with the advent of massive supercomputers boasting hundreds of thousands of computing cores, have engineers been able to model jet engines and the noise they produce with accuracy and speed," said Parviz Moin, the Franklin M. and Caroline P. Johnson Professor in the School of Engineering and Director of CTR.

CFD simulations test all aspects of a supercomputer. The waves propagating throughout the simulation require a carefully orchestrated balance between computation, memory and communication. Supercomputers like Sequoia divvy up the complex math into smaller parts so they can be computed simultaneously. The more cores you have, the faster and more complex the calculations can be.

And yet, despite the additional computing horsepower, the difficulty of the calculations only becomes more challenging with more cores. At the one-million-core level, previously innocuous parts of the computer code can suddenly become bottlenecks.

IRONING OUT THE WRINKLES

Over the past few weeks, Stanford researchers and LLNL computing staff have been working closely to iron out these last few wrinkles. This week, they were glued to their terminals during the first "full-system scaling" to see whether initial runs would achieve stable run-time performance. They watched eagerly as the first CFD simulation passed through initialization then thrilled as the code performance continued to scale up to and beyond the all-important one-million-core threshold, and as the time-to-solution declined dramatically.

"These runs represent at least an order-of-magnitude increase in computational power over the largest simulations performed at the Center for Turbulence Research previously," said Nichols "The implications for predictive science are mind-boggling."

A HOMECOMING

The current simulations were a homecoming of sorts for Nichols. He was inspired to pursue a career in supercomputing as a high-school student when he attended a two-week summer program at Lawrence Livermore computing facility in 1994 sponsored by the Department of Energy. Back then he worked on the Cray Y-MP, one of the fastest supercomputers of its time.

"Sequoia is approximately 10 million times more powerful than that machine," Nichols noted.

The Stanford ties go deeper still. The computer code used in this study is named CharLES and was developed by former Stanford senior research associate, Frank Ham. This code utilizes unstructured meshes to simulate turbulent flow in the presence of complicated geometry.

In addition to jet noise simulations, Stanford researchers in the Predictive Science Academic Alliance Program (PSAAP), sponsored by the Department of Energy, are using the CharLES code to investigate advanced-concept scramjet propulsion systems used in hypersonic flight (with video)flight at many times the speed of soundand to simulate the turbulent flow over an entire airplane wing.

###

This article was written by Andrew Myers, associate director of communications for the Stanford University School of Engineering.



[ 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/2013-01/ssoe-srb012813.php

Rise of the Guardians Pumpkin Pie Jack Taylor Apple Pie Recipe black friday How long to cook a turkey green bean casserole

Monday, January 28, 2013

Federal website hijacked to avenge activist

21 hrs.

WASHINGTON???The hacker-activist group Anonymous says it hijacked the website of the U.S. Sentencing Commission to avenge the death of Aaron Swartz, an Internet activist who committed suicide. The FBI is investigating.

The website of the commission, an independent agency of the judicial branch (http://www.ussc.gov), was taken over early Saturday and replaced with a message warning that when Swartz killed himself two weeks ago "a line was crossed."

The hackers say they've infiltrated several government computer systems and copied secret information that they now threaten to make public.

Family and friends of Swartz, who helped create Reddit and RSS, say he killed himself after he was hounded by federal prosecutors. Officials say he helped post millions of court documents for free online, and that he illegally downloaded millions of academic articles from an online clearinghouse.

The FBI's Richard McFeely, executive assistant director of the agency's?Criminal, Cyber, Response, and Services Branch, said in a statement that "we were aware as soon as it happened and are handling it as a criminal investigation. We are always concerned when someone illegally accesses another person's or government agency's network."

Hours after the hijacking, pages on the USSC.gov website were available only sporadically.

This report was updated by NBC News.

? 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/anonymous-hijacks-federal-website-protest-activist-aaron-swartzs-death-1C8125283

Sloane Stephens Beyonce Lip Sync Star Wars citizens bank Hansel and Gretel LGBT Giovanna Plowman

High doses of folic acid don't raise cancer risk: study

(Reuters) - People taking high doses of the B vitamin folic acid are not at an increased risk of cancer, according to an international analysis - easing some concern about the possible side effects of national programs aimed to raise intake of the vitamin.

The United States and Canada have required flour to be fortified with folic acid since 1998, after deficiencies of it in pregnant women were tied to brain and spinal cord birth defects in their babies.

But fortification isn't required in Western Europe, for example, partly out of concern that the extra folic acid might slightly increase people's risk of cancer due to its role in cell growth. Cells, including cancer cells, need folate - the natural form of folic acid - to grow and divide.

"Folic acid supplementation does not substantially increase or decrease incident of site-specific cancer during the first 5 years of treatment," researchers wrote in The Lancet.

"Fortification of flour and other cereal products involves doses of folic acid that are, on average, an order of magnitude smaller than the doses used in these trials.

For the analysis, the researchers combined data from 13 separate trials that randomly assigned participants to daily folic acid or a vitamin-free placebo and recorded who went on to develop cancer.

The studies included a total of close to 50,000 volunteers who were followed for just over five years, on average.

During that time, 7.7 percent of people in the folic acid groups, and 7.3 percent in the placebo groups, were diagnosed with any kind of cancer, a difference that could have been due to chance, researchers said.

Likewise, there was no increased risk of individual cancers - including colon, prostate, lung or breast cancer - attributed to folic acid.

Most trials used daily doses of folic acid between 0.5 and 5 milligrams. In the one study that used a much larger dose, 40 mg daily, there was still no difference in cancer diagnoses.

The total daily amount of folic acid through flour fortification is less than 0.5 mg a day for most in the United States. Folic acid is also naturally found in spinach, asparagus, lettuce and other greens, with a recommended daily upper limit of 1.0 mg.

"The conclusion you can make from this is that over a relatively short period of time, there was no significant benefit or harm," said John Baron from the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth in Lebanon, new Hampshire, who worked on the review.

Most cancers take 10 to 20 years to develop, so it's hard to tell from shorter studies like this one if there really is no link or if the researchers didn't follow people for long enough to see an association, whether positive or negative, he added.

The researchers agreed that the study shouldn't be the last work on the potential side effects of folic acid.

For now, said nutrition researcher Joshua Miller of Rutgers University in New Jersey, people might want to avoid piling supplements on top of multivitamins and fortified food.

"People should realize if they're eating breakfast cereals and bread and pastas, they're getting a good amount of folic acid in food," he said. "I think they should try not to exceed the upper limit."

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/Wz5GxC

(Reporting from New York by Genevra Pittman at Reuters Health; editing by Elaine Lies)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/high-doses-folic-acid-dont-raise-cancer-risk-020342989.html

titanic ii babe ruth new jersey nets nba playoff schedule rondo morris claiborne mothers day gifts

Research Corner: Ethical Principles for Youth Mentoring : The ...

By Jean Rhodes, Renee Spencer, & Belle Liang

Screen Shot 2013-01-26 at 12.47.55 PMThe research panel at the National Mentoring Summit in Washington DC was enriched by the 30 minute Q & A session with the more than 100 practitioners in the audience. Several of the questions touched on core ethical issues that sometimes arise in youth mentoring. Ethics have been a somewhat overlooked topic in the field of youth mentoring. Yet, because a personal relationship is at the heart of mentoring interventions, inconsistencies, misunderstandings and terminations can touch on youth?s vulnerabilities in ways that other interventions do not. In this post, we present a set of ethical principles to guide volunteer mentors and the program staff who advise them as they strive to build meaningful and growth-promoting relationships with their mentees. This information originally appeared in an?article I co-authored with Professors Renee Spencer, Belle Liang), based on the American Psychological Association?s (APA) Ethical Principles of Psychologists and Code of Conduct (2002) (http://www.apa.org/ethics/code/index.aspx) established for practicing psychologists.

?Ethical Principles for Youth Mentoring Relationships

Below, we delineate five guiding principles for ethical behavior in youth mentoring relationships. The general principle from the APA Code of Ethics (2002) on which each is based is provided in parentheses.

1.? Promote the Welfare and Safety of the Young Person (Beneficence and Nonmaleficience)

Mentors should work to benefit their mentees. Although this may seem straightforward, there are often competing ideas about what might be good for the young person ? ideas that are rooted in differing values, culture and worldview. Promoting the welfare of a young person will, in many cases, require that mentors build rapport not only with their mentees, but also with the mentees? primary caregivers so that they may develop an understanding of the family?s belief systems and expectations for the child.

A mentor also has the ethical obligation to do no harm. This encompasses the more extreme forms of harmful behavior, such as sexual harassment, abuse and exploitation. Most programs have careful background checks and screening procedures in place, such as SafetyNET, and the incidence of such occurrences is minimal. For the most part, all but a small fraction of volunteers do not intend to deliberately harm their young charges. Nonetheless, if volunteers lack skills, knowledge or caution, difficulties can and often do arise. Training and supervision can help volunteers recognize the boundaries and limits of their expertise and seek assistance from program staff when needed.

  • Misuse of Power. Given the different roles and ages of the participants, a power differential is inherent in adult-youth mentoring relationships. The gulf can widen when there are also differences in class and racial backgrounds. Mentors may not even be aware of the social inequities driving these differentials or how these can play out in interpersonal relationships (Fisher, 1997). Mentors may unwittingly put forth beliefs or opinions that conflict with the experiences and values of their mentee, creating conflict or tension for the young person. They should thus strive to refrain from religious or political proselytizing, raise their own awareness of power dynamics in cross-age and cross-cultural relationships, and seek consultation from mentoring programs to effectively negotiate these differentials.
  • Despite power inequities in the relationship, mentors? relative advantages can be used for good. That is, a mentor?s and a program?s power (i.e., position, knowledge, experience, interpersonal connections and other material and human resources, etc.) is a form of social capital that can be deployed to the advantage of mentees.
  • Physical contact: Mentors fill a niche that lies somewhere between professional and kinship and are thus afforded greater latitude in what constitutes appropriate boundaries. For example, although there is nothing inappropriate in a mentor holding hands with his 6-year-old mentee as they cross the street, other instances of physical contact or seemingly benign gestures or comments can be interpreted differently. It is best to err on the side of caution, as there are many ways to show affection and closeness that do not involve physical contact or even benignly-crossed boundaries.
  • Multiple roles: Mentors should avoid entering into a personal, professional, financial or other relationship with their mentees (and family members) if such a relationship might interfere with their objectivity or ability to work effectively as a mentor, or might harm or exploit the mentee. For example, although parents might naturally gravitate to their child?s college-aged mentor when looking for a paid math tutor, the volunteer may better serve the parents by connecting them with other resources. Other potentially compromising situations include mentors providing employment for mentees or offering advice to the child or family based on their professional expertise (e.g., medical, legal, psychological).
  • Conflicting roles: In other instances, mentors may find themselves encroaching on the territory of professionals in the child?s life (e.g., with tutors, therapists, juvenile probation officers). Maintaining clarity about the boundaries of the mentor?s role is not always easy. Mentors should be mindful of situations in which mentees make disclosures that would be better handled by one of those professionals and should suggest that the child take his or her concerns to them.

2.? Be Trustworthy and Responsible (Fidelity and Responsibility)

For volunteer mentors, this involves being aware of one?s responsibilities for meeting frequency and match duration, as stipulated by the program. This type of consistency and reliability, which has been associated with more positive outcomes for youth participants (Rhodes & DuBois, 2006), serves as a cornerstone for trust in the relationship. Trust, in turn, is considered a key component of effective mentoring relationships (Sipe, 1996). Mentees have reported that honesty, keeping promises and relationship longevity underlie trust (Liang, Spencer, Brogan, & Corral, 2008).

  • Unfortunately, as many as half of volunteer mentoring relationships end prematurely, most often at the request of the volunteer (Rhodes, 2002). Some premature endings are unavoidable but, all too often, relationships come to a heartbreaking end when the mentor drops the ball and contacts neither the mentee nor the mentoring program to provide an explanation. This is especially concerning in light of evidence that early terminations can lead to decrements in youth functioning (Grossman & Rhodes, 2002; Herrera et al., 2007). Pre-match training on this topic is especially critical, as mentors may not be aware of the influence they have had or how the termination will be interpreted.
  • Programs are obliged to inform mentors of common and predictable challenges and phases in mentoring relationships and to provide sufficient case management to prevent small lapses from becoming insurmountable obstacles.

3.? Act with Integrity (Integrity)

This related principle highlights the obligation of mentors to be thoughtful and forthright about the commitments (i.e., time, financial) to the relationship and to avoid setting up false expectations. Mentors should be reminded about the importance of their obligations to their mentees, as well as the meaning that is placed on plans and events such that even minor disappointments and tardiness can accumulate in ways that erode trust and closeness. Mentors are expected to bear the greater responsibility for finding ways to effectively and consistently communicate with their mentees, to honor plans and commitments and to seek guidance and consultation from mentoring program staff should they find that they are unable to do so. Mentors also should conduct themselves with integrity in their mentees? schools, homes and communities by being respectful of customs and regularities and by not acting in ways that leave programs having to run interference.

Finally, although there are always exceptions, mentors should be wary of entering into financial arrangements with mentees or their families. Although it might seem harmless for a mentor to cover one month?s electricity bill, particularly when rationalized in terms of helping the mentee, this may have the unintended effect of establishing expectations of further (and perhaps greater) assistance.

4.? Promote Justice for Young People (Justice)

This principle calls for mentors to exercise good judgment and to take precautions to ensure that the potential biases inherent in their own backgrounds do not lead to prejudicial treatment of their mentee. The standards of the APA Ethics Code (2002) stipulate that psychologists do not ?engage in unfair discrimination based on age, gender, gender identity, race, ethnicity, culture, national origin, religion, sexual orientation, disability, socioeconomic status, or any basis proscribed by law? (p. 5), and the same holds true for mentors. Mentors may not intentionally, or even consciously, engage in unfair treatment. However, the reality is that the largest proportion of volunteer mentors are white, middle class students and professionals whereas the youth mentees tend to be more economically and ethnically diverse (MENTOR, 2006).

  • Differences in cultural backgrounds and values may lead volunteers to hold or unwittingly act on cultural biases. Instead, volunteers should consistently engage in self-examination and supervision/consultation to avoid making assumptions about mentees that are based on, or insensitive to, the latter?s social class, gender or disabilities.

For example, mentors volunteering for one of the many new programs serving children with incarcerated parents often hold assumptions and biases about the prison population that may manifest in the mentor?s internal struggles ? wanting to be respectful of their mentee?s relationship with the incarcerated parent while experiencing anger or even fear toward this parent. When unchecked and unresolved, these internal conflicts and biases are likely to stand in the way of a mentor?s judgment and ability to treat a mentee, as well as the mentee?s family and community, with fairness and respect.

Mentoring programs have an obligation to provide training in cultural and gender sensitivity to raise volunteers? awareness of their own biases and blind spots. Unfortunately, programs often assume that once a mentoring relationship has been formed, the strength of the bond will mitigate against potential misunderstandings and miscommunications that may arise as a result of differences in cultural values and backgrounds.

The sparse research does lend some provisional support for the assumption that a strong bond can offset cultural differences. A national study of mentoring relationships formed through Big Brothers Big Sisters (Grossman & Rhodes, 2002) found that although cross-race matches terminated slightly more often than did same-race matches, this was not the case among those pairs who were matched primarily on the basis of similar interests. Nevertheless, unacknowledged prejudices can subtly affect interpersonal relationships (Cohen & Steele, 2002).

Promoting justice can also extend beyond the one-to-one relationship with a mentee. By bringing more privileged adults into the lives of less privileged young people, mentoring has the potential to promote widespread social change. Mentors? close personal connections with vulnerable youth affords them the opportunity to develop a first-hand understanding of the challenges faced by young people today, which can inspire them to redress social ills and advocate for social change that could improve the health and well- being of all youth living in these kinds of circumstances.

5.? Respect the Young Person?s Rights and Dignity (Respect for People?s Rights and Dignity)

Except in extreme situations (e.g., abuse, neglect, and endangerment), volunteers should seek to understand and respect the decisions and lifestyle of a young person and his or her family. Respect for self-determination involves behaving in ways that enable rather than interfere with mentees? and their families? ability to exercise their own reasoning and judgment. Mentors should seek to understand the youth?s personal goals, desires and values and not undermine the young person?s capacity to make his or her own decisions.

Issues of confidentiality, which abound in youth mentoring relationships, have been? given insufficient attention. Youth and parents often disclose deeply personal information to volunteers, sometimes with specific injunctions against sharing it with the other. And, having a place to share private thoughts and feelings is an aspect of mentor? relationships that youth have identified as being particularly meaningful to them (Spencer, Jordan, & Sazama, 2004). These adults can serve as important sounding boards for youth, particularly in adolescence when youth are exploring their identities? and may experience new forms of conflicts in their relationships with their parents (Allen, Moore, & Kuperminc, 1998). Training around issues of confidentiality should be? provided, and decisions regarding such matters should be made in consultation with mentoring program staff.

?Conclusions

The ethical principles delineated here are purposely broad. A more detailed set of guidelines would be difficult to apply to the many different types of mentoring relationships in which youth and adults engage (e.g., traditional face-to-face mentoring programs, online programs, group mentoring, informal ties). Further, more prescriptive guidelines would likely limit mentoring relationships in ways that could inhibit the open and natural qualities that make them special relationships in the lives of youth. The principles are intended to raise ethical awareness and to encourage reflection on the complex situations that inevitably arise when caring adults enter the lives of unrelated youth.

?

Source: http://chronicle.umbmentoring.org/research-corner-ethical-principles-for-youth-mentoring/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=research-corner-ethical-principles-for-youth-mentoring

patrice oneal shamrock slainte the quiet man yellow cab dropkick murphys guernsey

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Health care vs. disease care | Atlanta Forward

Moderated by Tom Sabulis

Commenting is open below.

By Kenneth Brigham and Michael. M.E. Johns

The current trajectory of Medicare costs cannot be sustained. Politicians propose a variety of solutions, all of which intend to cut the cost of care for people who have a disease. While some of those solutions are creative and might work in the short run, there is a major flaw in the rationale: The cost of disease care will continue to increase. We cannot afford disease care for all who will need it unless we can decrease their numbers. Halving the incidence of chronic disease would save over a trillion disease-care dollars.

To accomplish that, we must change the paradigm. The concept of ?predictive health? ? health rather than disease and prediction of health status rather than diagnosis as the focus ? is a radical shift that can decrease the burden of disease. Much of the knowledge, science and technology that make this possible exists, and more is on the way. The barriers are the professional, social, economic and political stakes in disease care.

The relationship between education and health makes the point that, more than a biologic fact, health is a consequence of the entire human experience. Although we spend more on ?health? care than many other countries, we spend about the same as most of them on the combination of health care and social programs. Health is clearly influenced by broader social factors. Education, social infrastructure and safety nets for the less fortunate, as well as access to care, are integral to a people?s health.

Waiting for disease to happen is missing the opportunity. Predictive health defines health in the context of biology, behavior and environment. It evaluates that integrated experience and designs personally tailored changes in behaviors that can forestall or prevent diseases that compromise quality of life, and cost an arm and a leg (often literally) to take care of. In the long run, this could decrease the numbers of people who need disease care.

At the Emory Georgia Tech Predictive Health Institute?s Center for Health Discovery and Well Being?, healthy people have their health profile defined, personal action plans developed and goals facilitated by a ?health partner.? The early results indicate improvements in biologic heath (BMI, blood pressure, blood lipids, etc.), well-being (decreased depression and stress), and even some evidence of improved brain function. People They are healthier, and their risks for developing chronic disease are decreased.

Changing paradigms is difficult, but if we are to avert an economic cataclysm, we have to do it. There may be short-term efficiencies, but the iceberg is out there awaiting its encounter with this disease care Titanic. The costs of complex disease care will continue to increase; decreasing the demand for such care is the only long-term solution. Predictive health can do it, if there is enough foresight and fortitude to invest some dollars in keeping people healthy.

We may have the best disease care system in the world, but we do not have the best health care system ? yet.

Kenneth Brigham is professor of medicine emeritus at Emory University. Michael M.E. Johns is professor in the Schools of Medicine and Public Health at Emory.

Source: http://blogs.ajc.com/atlanta-forward/2013/01/25/health-care-vs-disease-care/?cxntfid=blogs_atlanta_forward

humber raffi torres michael mcdonald jon jones vs rashad evans earth day 2012 jon jones rashad evans ufc jones vs evans

Video: Hips don?t lie! Hoda, Meredith try hula-hooping



l'oreal creates caresse wet shine stain: to get healthy and fit this year, we have fun ways to get you started started. snoo here with the essential equipment to turn your resolution into reality is the fitness editor of "prevention" magazine jenna bergman.

>> it's great to be here.

>> have you some great gadgets that we need to get our hands on, huh? take to the gym.

>> the first item is the gym bot interval timer. interval training is great because you're going to get more results in less time because you will -- you have rev up your metabolism and burn more calories. it makes it easy. you can program up to 99 different intervals. it will beep when you change your pace. it's sort of like having your personal trainer .

>> they spribt and then they walk, sprint and walk.

>> okay.

>> these are resistance bands.

>> more trainer resistance bands. they're cool for people who are bezy on the go. they're super light weight . you would wrap them around your thigh area so between your hip and knee, and you are going to add resistance to, you know, moves like leg lifts, squats.

>> oh, you know like the thigh.

>> oh, okay.

>> i thought one leg. what about the other?

>> it's going to really help you tone and firm up a lot faster.

>> is yellow the easiest up to red.

>> different resistance levels.

>> these are the rage.

>> i called that a kettle something. kettle drum .

>> kettle bells . this is a three in one kettle bell . you can use it at different weights. that would be five pounds. if you keep two on it would be eight and then 12 pounds.

>> what do you do with them?

>> you can do all kinds of -- the kettle swing, squats. you're going to burn up to 400 calories in 20 minutes .

>> you're kidding.

>> i don't believe that.

>> seriously?

>> you'll be sweating in no time.

>> really?

>> very great.

>> careful of your back.

>> these are microspikes. they're awesome for anyone who loves to be outside.

>> oh, i have snow shoes . those are even better.

>> they're super cool . pull them over any boot or sneaker, and, you know, these little spikes on the bottom give you traction when it's icy and snowy out so you can get your walk in. you don't have to worry about slip and falling or injuring yourself.

>> that's clever. very clever.

>> super cool .

>> $60.

>> $60. that's a good thing to have. if you are a walker, these are the weight fit cups. they're cool. you're going to fit them over your wrist. they have about two pounds of weight. it's just going to add a little more burn, a little bit more sculpting to your walk for your arms.

>> why are you putting more on there?

>> they're really great. you're not going to even notice that they're there. they really help.

>> is this how they're supposed to look?

>> you would actually pull this down. be a little more -- like that.

>> do you have these for your legs too? just for the arms?

>> just for the arms. swing back and forth.

>> sports bras. sthoo those are important.

>> if it's really cold and icy out --

>> don't put on a lot of thermals then.

>> these are a type of thermal that are ice breaker sprite leggings and racing back bra. the leggings are over here. they're really thin. they're made with a merino wool blend that will wick sweat away from your body. the last thing you want is to have cotton on and get cold and clammy. if you will cut your workout short if you are uncomfortable in the cold.

>> they're for exercise.

>> get one. i can't either.

>> they're weighted.

>> this is weighted. it's three pounds. it's the cardio core and more.

>> get out here where you can get some room.

>> i can't do it.

>> i can't either. we're doing it.

>> what are we doing?

>> you're going to get a really great core.

>> careful of your back.

>> because it's weighted --

>> don't throw it out. don't.

>> try to keep it up a little bit.

>> okay.

>> these are dangerous. tloo this is dangerous.

>> you definitely want to do it where you have a wide open space . maybe a little bit more space. it's great. the thing is you can take it apart.

>> you can travel with this thing.

>> that's great.

>> in your luggage.

>> that's a great thing.

>> it's really cool. you can actually rebuild it so that when there's different -- depending where the weight is.

>> thank you. thank you.

>> that's interesting.

Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/50587775/

hippocrates andrew breitbart red wings penguins the band colton dixon houston weather

The Early History Of The Ear Piercing Gun | BME: Tattoo, Piercing ...

This morning I was reading old patents (yes, this is what I do for entertainment) and came across an interesting one from way back the last time piercing was ?berpopular over 130 years ago ? filed May 10 and patented July 13, 1880 by Edward Seyfarth in Illinois (US Patent #240,073). As you can see, the design is not that much different from the piercing guns used by disease spreading hacks ^H^H^H^H nostril mutilating morons ^H^H^H^H I mean beauty salon ?piercers? even to this day. The patent application reads in part,

?Be it known that I, Edward Seyfarth, of Lanark, in the county of Carroll and State of Illinois, have invented a new and useful Improvement in Ear-Piercers ? The object of this invention is to furnish ear-piercers so constructed that the puncture can be made in exactly the desired spot and so quickly as to be painless ? The invention consists in constructing an ear-piercer of a pair of bars hinged to each other at one end and provided at their other ends with sockets to receive blocks to be pressed against the ear, the tube having a cap upon its outer end, the needle having a disk and a notch, the spiral spring, and the catch for holding the needle when drawn out, so that the ear may be pierced while being compressed.?

?In using the piercer the blocks (D) are placed upon the opposite sides of the lobe of the ear in such a position that the hole through the blocks (D) will be directly over the spot where it is desired to puncture the ear. The arms (A and B) are then pressed together to numb the part of the ear between the blocks (D). The catch (K) is then drawn back to release the needle (G), which is forced forward to make the puncture by the elasticity of the spring (H), thus making the puncture without causing pain. The needle (G) is then drawn back, the instrument is removed from the ear, and a wire or thread passed through the puncture in the usual way.?

patent-230073

I?ve often heard the urban myth that the ear piercing gun is directly based on or evolved from the tool that places tags in animal ears ? it wouldn?t surprise me if I?ve even written that at times. Even the extremely qualified and knowledgeable Elayne Angel says this in her recent book on the subject ?The Piercing Bible? (which reminds me, check out her excellent piercing blog at that link), writing ?these gadgets were originally invented for tagging cattle and other animals, and later adapted for use on humans?. But it seems this is a misleading statement, arguably false ? at best the two tools co-evolved. More likely when we?re talking about piercing tools of the ?gun? type that?s most common, one should more accurately argue the evolutionary process is actually the other way around, with a number of patents for animal tagging tools going to far as to explicitly refer back to this very ear-piercing gun patent by Edward Seyfarth! On the whole though I think it?s more realistic to say that the vast majority of animal tagging tools come from the same design family as modified pliers like riveting tools and leather punches, without that much overlap with the design of piercing guns (with a number of notable exceptions). But I?m beginning to digress.

Speaking of ear piercing guns that look more like animal tagging tools, there?s Francis X. Xavbet?s ?ear piercing pliers? filed December 3rd, 1880 (US Patent #250,121 issued November 29, 1881), a simple clamp-like device. Xavbet?s design, unlike Seyfarth?s which only creates the hole, uses sharpened jewelry to accomplish the process in a single step as the tool places the ring. His patent reads in part,

?The object I have in view is to produce simple and convenient means for piercing ears, in which the ear-ring itself can be used as the piercing-point, and will be released by the instrument when the hole is formed, so as to remain in the ear till healed.?

?The ear-ring (F) ? has a sharp-pointed wire (g). It is grasped by the clamp (A), in the position shown in Fig. 1, the plate (E) is then pushed toward the socket (D), and the lobe of the ear is introduced between such plate and the point of the ear-ring. The pliers are then forced together and the ear pierced, when the chain (B) draws back the dog (B) and the clamp is released. The instrument can now be removed from the ear and leave the ear-ring in position. The sharp point of the ear-ring can then be cut off; but this is not necessary, if the ear-ring is provided with a closed keeper, such as is used on safety pins.?

?When it is desired to place in the ears earrings not provided with sharpened points the removable cutting-points (h), Fig. 6, are used. These can be detached from the wires of the ear-rings after the holes are formed.?

patent-250121

I want to mention one other piercing tool that I dug up, filed just after the Seyfarth design by James McAlpine, on May 20, 1880 with the patent issued November 30th (US Patent #234,881). It deserves mention because it?s by far the simplest ? not much more than a holder to help shove a short needle through the lobe with your thumb ? he even suggests piercing both ears at once, as the tool is designed to be one-handed. The patent reads,

?The invention consists, mainly, in certain peculiarities of construction ? [a] means of which the instrument is adapted for use with one hand, in consequence of which it is possible, by applying an instrument to each ear and operating them simultaneously, to pierce both ears at the same time.?

?The operation is substantially as follows: The jaws having been opened, the set-screw being loose, the bearing-faces may be adjusted to the lobe of the ear, and then be held in the proper position simply by tightening the set-screw. By means of the stop projection and pin the jaws are prevented from being brought together too closely. An instrument being thus attached to each ear, as indicated in Fig. 7, and the piercers being inserted in the tubes, the operator, by means of his thumb and finger, simply presses the piercer toward the button, in consequence of which the lobe is pierced. The hands being used simultaneously, both ears are pierced at once.?

?Some of the advantages are as follows: The use of two instruments at once for simultaneous action is desirable, because, first, a saving of time is effected, and, second, the pain and difficulty resulting from two distinct operations are avoided.?

patent-234881

The above designs are some of the earliest piercing tools of their respective families that I have been able to find to date ? although I?m still searching and I strongly believe there are earlier ones in the patent archives that are still to be dug up. I don?t know for certain whether the first one is the earliest patent on a ?true piercing gun? and whether Mr. Seyfarth can be credited as the concept?s overall inventor (I doubt it), but it?s certainly very early and you can still see its influence in ear piercing guns in use around the world.

As you may have noticed from these three Victorian patents, at this point there wasn?t a standardized design for the initial jewelry such as the ubiquitous butterfly-back that is still common today. However, browsing other early patents you start to see hints of this line of thinking, and definite precursors of designs that are still in use. From left to right below are US patents 216,954 (filed May 1, 1879 by Lois Heckman), 269,383 (May 8, 1882 by John Caldwell), and 320,991 (May 1, 1885 by Charles Westcott) ? what is it with piercing inspiration and the month of May by the way?

patent-216954-269383-320991

All three of these designs use some variation on the backing lightly clamping into place on the bar, the first two being aesthetically closest to modern salon-style jewelry. The third one caught my eye though, because although it is functionally similar to the first two, visually it is identical to the barbell jewelry popularized in the body piercing world by Jim Ward in the 1970s?

When I have more time I will do additional patent research on this subject, both on the early history of body modification, and on some of the more recent patents, which have the advantage of being far more hilarious. For example, I was just reading a silly patent on a line of tongue piercing jewelry that contains a receptacle to release ?a substance such as a chemical, breath freshener, pleasant flavor, or medication into the mouth of a wearer? (US Patents 6,675,613 and 8,006,516). The concept works just as you?d expect ? a hollow bar to hold the substance, which is then released through holes in the beads. Anyone who has ever brushed plaque off of a tongue barbell can imagine just how disgusting this jewelry has the potential of becoming!!!

Source: http://news.bme.com/2013/01/26/the-early-history-of-the-ear-piercing-gun/

burger king mary j blige google project glass google goggles one tree hill projectglass stock act new york auto show