Saturday, February 2, 2013

Suicide Bombing Rocks U.S. Embassy in Turkey

A suicide bomber killed himself and a Turkish security guard on Friday at the United States Embassy in Ankara, Turkey, the Associated Press reported. American citizens have been warned to avoid diplomatic facilities in Turkey and be careful in large crowds.

The U.S. quickly defined the attack as a "terrorist attack" through White House spokesman Jay Carney, saying that "a suicide bombing on the perimeter of an embassy is by definition an act of terror," according to the AP.

Here's the latest news on the embassy attack.

* In a post issued on its Facebook account, U.S. State Department spokesperson Victoria Nuland said "We can confirm a terrorist blast at a check point on the perimeter of our embassy compound in Ankara, Turkey, at 1:13 p.m. local time. We are working closely with the Turkish national police to make a full assessment of the damage and the casualties, and to begin an investigation. We will share more information as it becomes available."

* Britain also advised travelers to "avoid the vicinity" of the embassy through its Foreign and Commonwealth Office Facebook site.

* The Christian Science Monitor noted that the explosion injured several individuals in the vicinity of the blast.

* U.S. Ambassador Francis Ricciardone emphasized that the U.S. and Turkey were fighting terrorism together and thanked the country for its "its solidarity and outrage over the incident," according to the AP.

* In his statement, Ricciardone added that "from today's event, it is clear that we both suffer from this terrible, terrible problem of today's world. We are determined after events like this even more to cooperate together until we defeat this problem together."

* Another report from the Associated Press indicates that the suicide bomber may be member of the outlawed Revolutionary People's Liberation Party-Front, a left-wing militant organization. The group has been designated a terrorist group by the United States and has kept a low profile for the past few years.

* However, the Christian Science Monitor reported that the attack could have come from religious extremists, Kurdish separatists, or regional rivals such as Iran or Syria.

* Another report from the Christian Science Monitor noted that the attack follows the arrest in Ankara of Osama bin Laden's son-in-law "Suleyman M." The man was recently arrested at his hotel following intelligence-sharing from the U.S. with Turkey.

Shawn Humphrey is a former contributor to The Flint Journal and an amateur Africanist, focusing his personal studies on human rights and political issues on the continent.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/suicide-bombing-rocks-u-embassy-turkey-195600710.html

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Developers shift focus to Bangkok's suburbs | Property Report | The ...

The completion of a new mass transit route is encouraging developers to shift their attention to Bangkok?s suburbs

Property firms are shifting their focus to the suburbs of Bangkok, particularly to areas in the vicinity of the Purple Line mass-transit route from Bang Sue to Bang Yai, reported The Nation. Developers are currently awaiting the new Bangkok city plan that is scheduled to take effect on May 15.

?We have to wait and see what changes there will be when the new Bangkok city plan becomes effective, because some locations may no longer be available for the development of high-rise residences,? said Anuphong Assavabhokin, CEO of Asian Property Development.

?However, we have continued to buy land and launch residential projects, for both condominiums and detached housing, in the suburbs, especially on Rattanathibet Road, located close to the Purple Line mass-transit rail route,? he said.

Opas Sripayak, managing director of LPN Development, stated that his company had put off purchasing land in Bangkok?s central business district since December.

?We have to protect our business by launching new projects in suburban areas and upcountry until the new Bangkok city plan becomes effective,? Sripayak said.

Nonthaburi province is becoming an increasingly popular destination with property developers.

Residential developments on Ngarmwongwan and Rattanathibet roads in Nonthaburi?s Bang Yai district comprise over 20 projects, with a combined total of approximately 10,000 units, according to a recent survey by The Nation.

One bedroom condominium units with a starting price of THB1 million (US$33,400) are the most popular, according to the survey.

Townhouses starting at THB2.5 million (US$83,753) are in high demand, as well as detached properties starting at THB5 million (US$167,500).

Over the last two years property prices in the area have increased between 20 and 30 percent.

LPN Development launched the Lumpini Park Rattanathibet-Ngarmwongwan project worth THB1.5 billion (US$50.2 million) last year.

Sansiri launched the THB1.3 billion (US$43.5 million) D Condo Rattanathibet in 2012, in addition to townhouses and detached houses in the same area.

Supalai developed 10 condominium projects in Nonthaburi province last year.

Narai Property, SC Asset and Property Perfect have also launched several developments in the area within the last year.

Due to the demand for development in the Nonthaburi area, land prices in the vicinity have surged dramatically from THB30,000 (US$1000) per square wah in 2008 to THB100,000-200,000 (US$3,350-6,700) this year.

Atip Bichanond, managing director of Supalai, said that while land prices on Rattanathibet Road had risen by more than 50 percent in the last three years, the prices in the area remain lower than in some other parts of Bangkok.

This provides an opportunity to develop projects that offer lower prices than other areas of the city, as well as easy access to the city centre once the Purple Line route is completed.

At the end of 2012, there were 181 residential projects in Nonthaburi province, with a combined total of 45,822 available units, according to a survey by a Real Estate Information Centre (REIC).

The REIC estimates it would take 20-30 months to sell all of the available units if no further projects were launched in the area this year.

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Source: http://www.property-report.com/developers-shift-focus-to-bangkoks-suburbs-27819

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Friday, February 1, 2013

New device traps particulates, kills airborne pathogens

Jan. 31, 2013 ? A new device called a soft X-ray electrostatic precipitator protected immunocompromised mice from airborne pathogenic bacteria, viruses, ultrafine particles, and allergens, according to a paper published online ahead of print in the journal Applied and Environmental Microbiology. This device, known for short as a SXC ESP, is highly versatile, with multiple potential uses, and Washington University is working on licensing the technology.

"Small particles are difficult to remove, and our device overcomes that barrier," says Pratim Biswas of Washington University, St. Louis. The device not only captures particles with a high level of efficiency that has never before been achieved; it also inactivates them. Even bioterror agents are blocked and completely inactivated, says Biswas.

The range of potential uses includes indoor protection of susceptible populations, such as people with respiratory illness or inhalation-induced allergies, and young children; protection of buildings from bio-terror attack; protection of individuals in hospital surgical theaters, for example, during open organ surgery; protection in clean rooms for semiconductor fabrication; removal of ultrafine particles in power plants; and capture of diesel exhaust particulates, says Biswas.

The device could be used in homes, with a cost similar to that of high efficiency air cleaners, says Biswas. "But it would be much easier to operate, and much more effective," he adds. It could be added into stand-alone indoor air cleaners, or incorporated into HVAC systems in homes, offices, and even in aircraft cabins. In the study, the device exceeded standards for high efficiency articulate air filters, which must be capable of removing particles larger than 0.3 micrometers with 99.97 percent efficiency.

The SXC ESP works by placing a charge on the particles -- "which it does very effectively," says Biswas -- and then using an electrical field to trap the particles. The SXC unit then also completely inactivates biological particles, by irradiating them, and photoionizing them -- as UV light does, only more energetically.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Society for Microbiology.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. E. M. Kettleson, J. M. Schriewer, R. M. L. Buller, P. Biswas. Soft X-ray Enhanced Electrostatic Precipitation for Protection against Inhalable Allergens, Ultrafine Particles, and Microbial Infections. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 2012; DOI: 10.1128/AEM.02897-12

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/NhdIUec9Yf8/130131154414.htm

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Study rebuts hypothesis that comet attacks ended 9,000-year-old Clovis culture

Jan. 30, 2013 ? Rebutting a speculative hypothesis that comet explosions changed Earth's climate sufficiently to end the Clovis culture in North America about 13,000 years ago, Sandia lead author Mark Boslough and researchers from 14 academic institutions assert that other explanations must be found for the apparent disappearance.

"There's no plausible mechanism to get airbursts over an entire continent," said Boslough, a physicist. "For this and other reasons, we conclude that the impact hypothesis is, unfortunately, bogus."

In a December 2012 American Geophysical Union monograph, first available in January, the researchers point out that no appropriately sized impact craters from that time period have been discovered, nor have any unambiguously "shocked" materials been found.

In addition, proposed fragmentation and explosion mechanisms "do not conserve energy or momentum," a basic law of physics that must be satisfied for impact-caused climate change to have validity, the authors write.

Also absent are physics-based models that support the impact hypothesis. Models that do exist, write the authors, contradict the asteroid-impact hypothesizers.

The authors also charge that "several independent researchers have been unable to reproduce reported results" and that samples presented in support of the asteroid impact hypothesis were later discovered by carbon dating to be contaminated with modern material.

The Boslough trail

Boslough has a decades-long history of successfully interpreting the effects of comet and asteroid collisions.

His credibility was on the line on in July 1994 when Eos, the widely read newsletter of the American Geophysical Union, ran a front-page prediction by a Sandia National Laboratories team, led by Boslough, that under certain conditions plumes from the collision of comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 with the planet Jupiter would be visible from Earth.

The Sandia team -- Boslough, Dave Crawford, Allen Robinson and Tim Trucano -- were alone among the world's scientists in offering that possibility.

"It was a gamble and could have been embarrassing if we were wrong," said Boslough. "But I had been watching while Shoemaker-Levy 9 made its way across the heavens and realized it would be close enough to the horizon of Jupiter that the plumes would show." His reasoning was backed by simulations from the world's first massively parallel processing supercomputer, Sandia's Intel Paragon.

On the one hand, it was a chance to check the new Paragon's logic against real events, a shakedown run for the defense-oriented machine. On the other, it was a hold-your-breath prediction, a kind of Babe Ruth moment when the Babe is reputed to have pointed to the spot in the center field bleachers he intended to hit the next ball. No other scientists were willing to point the same way, partly due to previous failures in predicting the behavior of comets Kohoutek and Halley, and partly because most astronomers believed the plumes would be hidden behind Jupiter's bulk.

That the plumes indeed proved visible started Boslough on his own trajectory as a media touchstone for things asteroidal and meteoritic.

It didn't hurt that, when he stands before television cameras to discuss celestial impacts, his earnest manner, expressive gestures and extraterrestrial subject matter make him seem a combination of Carl Sagan and Luke Skywalker, or perhaps Tom Sawyer and Indiana Jones.

Standing in jeans, work shirt and hiking boots for the Discovery Channel at the site in Siberia where a mysterious explosion occurred 105 years ago, or discussing it at Sandia with his supercomputer simulations in bold colors on a big screen behind him, the rangy, 6-foot-3 Sandia researcher vividly and accurately explained why the mysterious explosion at Tunguska that decimated hundreds of square miles of trees and whose ejected debris was seen as far away as London most probably was caused neither by flying saucers drunkenly ramming a hillside (a proposed hypothesis) nor by an asteroid striking the Earth's surface, but rather by the fireball of an asteroid airburst -- an asteroid exploding high above ground, like a nuclear bomb, compressed to implosion as it plunged deeper into Earth's thickening, increasingly resistive atmosphere. The governing physics, he said, was precisely the same as for the airburst on Jupiter.

Among later triumphs, Boslough was the Sandia component of a National Geographic team flown to the Libyan Desert to make sense of strange yellow-green glass worn as jewelry by pharaohs in days past. Boslough's take: It was the result of heat on desert sands from a hypervelocity impact caused by an even bigger asteroid burst.

In the present case

In the Clovis case, Boslough felt that his ideas were taken further than he could accept when other researchers claimed that the purported demise of Clovis civilization in North America was the result of climate change produced by a cluster of comet fragments striking Earth.

In a widely reported press conference announcing the Clovis comet hypothesis in 2007, proponents showed a National Geographic animation based on one of Boslough's simulations as inspiration for their idea.

Indiana Jones-style, Boslough responded. Confronted by apparently hard asteroid evidence, as well as a Nova documentary and an article in the journal Science, all purportedly showing his error in rebutting the comet hypothesis, Boslough ordered carbon dating of the major evidence provided by the opposition: nanodiamond-bearing carbon spherules associated with the shock of an asteroid's impact. The tests found the alleged 13,000-year-old carbon to be of very recent formation.

While this raised red flags to those already critical of the impact hypothesis, "I never said the samples were salted," Boslough said carefully. "I said they were contaminated."

That find, along with irregularities reported in the background of one member of the opposing team, was enough for Nova to remove the entire episode from its list of science shows available for streaming, Boslough said.

"Just because a culture changed from Clovis to Folsom spear points didn't mean their civilization collapsed," he said. "They probably just used another technology. It's like saying the phonograph culture collapsed and was replaced by the iPod culture."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by DOE/Sandia National Laboratories.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. M. Boslough, K. Nicoll, V. Holliday, T. L. Daulton, D. Meltzer, N. Pinter, A. C. Scott, T. Surovell, P. Claeys, J. Gill, F. Paquay, J. Marlon, P. Bartlein, C. Whitlock, D. Grayson, and A. J. T. Jull. Arguments and Evidence Against a Younger Dryas Impact Event. Climates, Landscapes, and Civilizations, Geophysical Monograph Series, 2012; 198: 13-26 DOI: 10.1029/2012GM001209

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/top_news/top_environment/~3/xtIJFODsKWY/130131095314.htm

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Fiat Industrial 4Q profits soar 20 pct

MILAN (AP) ? Italian heavy-duty vehicles maker Fiat Industrial said Thursday that solid sales of tractors and combine harvesters offset lower performance of its truck business to push fourth-quarter earnings up 20 percent.

Based in the northern city of Turin, Fiat Industrial SpA reported net profit in the period of ?148 million ($200 million), up from ?123 million a year earlier. Revenues were ?7 billion.

Sales of farm equipment were up 20 percent, which offset a more difficult business conditions for the construction business everywhere but North America and eastern Europe. The Iveco truck business, however, saw a 7 percent decline in revenues due to the economic crisis in Europe and falling demand in Latin America.

For the full year, net profit grew 30 percent to ?810 million on revenues of ?25.8 billion.

Fiat Industrial, which is in the process of a full merger with its U.S.-based CNH farm and construction subsidiary, forecast a 5 percent increase in revenues this year, and recommended a total dividend payment of ?275 million, or ?0.225 a share.

The merger deal will create the world's third-largest capital goods company by sales, after Caterpillar and Volvo.

Fiat Industrial had aggressively pursued the full merger of the 12 percent of CNH that it didn't already own, making a pitch in the spring and then raising the value of the offer by more than 25 percent after CNH advisers refused to endorse the deal. The new company, which has yet to be named, will be based in the Netherlands and listed on the New York Stock Exchange. The merger is expected to close in the second quarter of next year.

Besides CNH, Fiat Industrial, based in the northern Italian city of Turin, comprises Iveco truck and heavy vehicle company and FPT Industrial powertrains. CNH, which is based in the Chicago suburb of Burr Ridge, Illinois, sells farm and construction equipment under the Case and New Holland brands in 170 countries.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fiat-industrial-4q-profits-soar-20-pct-111826333--finance.html

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Mobile Banking And Payment Startup mFoundry Sold To FIS For $120M

mfoundrySome consolidation in the world of mobile payments and mobile banking: mFoundry is getting acquired by FIS?for $120 million. FIS -- a banking and payment provider that works with some 14,000 banks worldwide -- already had a 22% stake in the company; today's deal will see it paying for the remaining 78% in cash. mFoundry provides mobile banking and mobile payment solutions to some 850 banks and retailers, including Bank of America and Starbucks, which uses some of mFoundry's technology to enable mobile payments, which complements the partnership that Starbucks has with Square.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/m2DaPem9H7M/

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