Tuesday, April 30, 2013

6 Amazing Social Media Statistics For Brands And Businesses ...

Did you know that almost three-quarters (71 percent) of internet users are more likely to purchase from a brand that they are following on a social networking site such as Twitter or Facebook?

Indeed, social media now accounts for almost one-quarter (22.5 percent) of all time that U.S. citizens spend online, and this weight of activity transcends down to all levels ? an incredible 91 percent of searchers say that they use Facebook to find local businesses online.

These, and other amazing social media statistics, can be seen in the infographic below.

(Source: Balihoo.)

Source: http://www.mediabistro.com/alltwitter/social-media-facts_b40978

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Plants moderate climate warming

Monday, April 29, 2013

As temperatures warm, plants release gases that help form clouds and cool the atmosphere, according to research from IIASA and the University of Helsinki.

The new study, published in Nature Geoscience, identified a negative feedback loop in which higher temperatures lead to an increase in concentrations of natural aerosols that have a cooling effect on the atmosphere.

"Plants, by reacting to changes in temperature, also moderate these changes," says IIASA and University of Helsinki researcher Pauli Paasonen, who led the study.

Scientists had known that some aerosols ? particles that float in the atmosphere ? cool the climate as they reflect sunlight and form cloud droplets, which reflect sunlight efficiently. Aerosol particles come from many sources, including human emissions. But the effect of so-called biogenic aerosol ? particulate matter that originates from plants ? had been less well understood. Plants release gases that, after atmospheric oxidation, tend to stick to aerosol particles, growing them into the larger-sized particles that reflect sunlight and also serve as the basis for cloud droplets. The new study showed that as temperatures warm and plants consequently release more of these gases, the concentrations of particles active in cloud formation increase.

"Everyone knows the scent of the forest," says Ari Asmi, University of Helsinki researcher who also worked on the study. "That scent is made up of these gases." While previous research had predicted the feedback effect, until now nobody had been able to prove its existence except for case studies limited to single sites and short time periods. The new study showed that the effect occurs over the long-term in continental size scales.

The effect of enhanced plant gas emissions on climate is small on a global scale ? only countering approximately 1 percent of climate warming, the study suggested. "This does not save us from climate warming," says Paasonen. However, he says, "Aerosol effects on climate are one of the main uncertainties in climate models. Understanding this mechanism could help us reduce those uncertainties and make the models better."

The study also showed that the effect was much larger on a regional scale, counteracting possibly up to 30% of warming in more rural, forested areas where anthropogenic emissions of aerosols were much lower in comparison to the natural aerosols. That means that especially in places like Finland, Siberia, and Canada this feedback loop may reduce warming substantially.

The researchers collected data at 11 different sites around the world, measuring the concentrations of aerosol particles in the atmosphere, along with the concentrations of plant gases, the temperature, and reanalysis estimates for the height of the boundary layer, which turned out to be a key variable. The boundary layer refers to the layer of air closest to the Earth, in which gases and particles mix effectively. The height of that layer changes with weather. Paasonen says, "One of the reasons that this phenomenon was not discovered earlier was because these estimates for boundary layer height are very difficult to do. Only recently have the reanalysis estimates been improved to where they can be taken as representative of reality."

###

International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis: http://www.iiasa.ac.at

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127976/Plants_moderate_climate_warming

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Factbox: Prominent Americans who have come out as gay

(Reuters) - Jason Collins, a veteran player in the National Basketball Association (NBA), announced on Monday that he was gay, breaking one of the final frontiers in U.S. sports amid the shifting mood of American society.

Collins became the first active player from any of the four major U.S. men's professional sports leagues to come out about his homosexuality.

Other prominent Americans in politics, sports and entertainment also have publicly revealed that they were gay. Here are some of them:

* Martina Navratilova, 56, revealed that she was a lesbian in 1981 shortly after becoming a U.S. citizen. Since then the retired Czech-born tennis star has actively promoted gay and lesbian rights, including fighting a 1992 Colorado initiative to deny gays and lesbians legal protection from discrimination.

* Former New Jersey Governor Jim McGreevey, 55, revealed that he was gay in a 2004 news conference in which he also announced that he was stepping down as governor. McGreevey, who was married to his second wife at the time of his announcement, subsequently divorced and published a memoir in which he spoke of the difficulty of coming out as a gay public official.

* Actress Jodie Foster, 50, revealed her homosexuality during the 2013 Golden Globe Awards, when she told the audience that she had done her "coming-out" with friends, family and co-workers long ago. She also thanked her ex-girlfriend Cydney Bernard in the speech, calling her "my heroic co-parent, my ex-partner in love but righteous soul sister in life."

* Former U.S. Representative Barney Frank, 73, came out as gay in 1987, prompted in part by increased media interest in his private life. The Massachusetts Democrat married his longtime male partner, James Ready, in July 2012 and retired from Congress early this year.

* Ken Mehlman, 46, who managed President George W. Bush's 2004 re-election campaign and served for two years as chairman of the Republican National Committee, initially denied that he was gay but came out in a 2010 interview with the New York Times. He later lobbied Republicans in the New York state legislature in support of legalizing same-sex marriage.

* Anderson Cooper, the 45-year-old CNN broadcast journalist, avoided discussing his private life or sexuality for years. But in a 2012 email to writer and journalist Andrew Sullivan, which he agreed to have made public, Cooper said: "The fact is, I'm gay, always have been, always will be, and I couldn't be any more happy, comfortable with myself and proud."

* Actress and comedian Ellen DeGeneres, 55, came out as a lesbian during a 1997 appearance on "The Oprah Winfrey Show," spurring media interest in her private life and criticism from religious conservatives. DeGeneres married her girlfriend Portia de Rossi in 2008.

* Greg Louganis, a 53-year-old diver who won gold medals at the 1984 and 1988 Olympics, came out as an HIV-positive gay man in his 1996 book, "Breaking the Surface." He spoke publicly about his sexuality for the first time in a 1995 interview with Oprah Winfrey. He has actively promoted the civil liberties of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people as well as those with AIDS/HIV.

(Editing by Paul Simao and Eric Beech)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/factbox-prominent-americans-come-gay-002928387.html

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Monday, April 29, 2013

MYO armband to muscle into computer control (w/ video)

(Phys.org) ?"Wave goodbye to camera-based gesture control." That is the confident directive coming from a one-year-old Waterloo, Ontario, startup called Thalmic Labs. The company is prepared to ship its next batch of wearable-computing armbands for device controls early next year. The $149 armbands called MYO do not require cameras in order to track hand or arm movements. The armbands can wirelessly control and interact with computers and other digital consumer products by recognizing the electric impulses in users' muscles.

The MYO is worn around the forearm; its purpose is to control computers, phones, and other devices, sending the data via Bluetooth. Windows and Mac operating systems are supported and APIs will be available for iOS and Android.

Bluetooth 4.0 Low Energy (BLE) is used for the MYO to communicate with the paired devices. (Bluetooth version 4.0 is the most recent version of Bluetooth wireless technology. It includes a low-energy feature promoted as good news for developers and manufacturers of Bluetooth devices and applications?enabling markets for devices that are low-cost and operate with low-power wireless connectivity.)

The MYO specs include on-board, rechargeable lithium-ion batteries and an ARM processor. Also part of the mix are the company's proprietary muscle-activity sensors and a six-axis inertial measurement unit.

A user's gestures and movements are actually detected in two ways: muscle activity and motion sensing. The Thalmic team says that when sensing the muscle movements of the user, the MYO can detect changes down to each individual finger. Also, when tracking arm and hand positions, the MYO picks up subtle movements and rotations in all directions.

Right now, as indicated in their newly released video of the company, Thalmic Labs hopes for greater things for MYO via a developer community. They expect an official developer program to be up and running in the next few months. They pride themselves in groundbreaking technology, as a team with specialties from electrical engineering to embedded system design. Nonetheless, they are looking to developers for innovative ideas in applications.

This video is not supported by your browser at this time.

"We work day and night," said one team member, and their steadfastness is fed by a notion that the MYO could revolutionize the way people interact with technology. Thalmic Labs said they are accepting pre-orders for the second shipment of MYOs shipping early 2014.

Related: The next interface: Electrical fields, MGC3130, and your hand (w/ Video)

More information: getmyo.com/

Source: http://phys.org/news/2013-04-myo-armband-muscle-video.html

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Friday, April 26, 2013

Ecology buys time for evolution: Climate change disrupts songbird's timing without impacting population size (yet)

Apr. 25, 2013 ? Songbird populations can handle far more disrupting climate change than expected. Density-dependent processes are buying them time for their battle. But without (slow) evolutionary rescue it will not save them in the end, says an international team of scientists led by the Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO-KNAW) in Science this week.

Yes, spring started late this year in North-western Europe. But the general trend of the four last decades is still a rapidly advancing spring. The seasonal timing of trees and insects advance too, but songbirds like Parus major, or the great tit, lag behind. Yet without an accompanying decline in population numbers, it seems, as the international research team shows for the great tit population in the Dutch National Park the Hoge Veluwe.

"It's a real paradox," explain Dr Tom Reed and Prof Marcel Visser of the Netherlands Institute of Ecology. "Due to the changing climate of the past decades the egg laying dates of Parus major have become increasingly mismatched with the timing of the main food source for its chicks: caterpillars. The seasonal timing of the food peak has advanced over twice as fast as that of the birds and the reproductive output is reduced. Still, the population numbers do not go down." On the short term, that is, as Reed, Visser and colleagues from Norway, the USA, and France have now calculated using almost 40 years of data from this songbird.

The solution to the paradox is that although fewer offspring now fledge due to food shortage, each of these chicks has a higher chance of survival until the next breeding season. "We call this relaxed competition, as there are fewer fledglings to compete with," first author Reed points out. Out of 10 eggs laid, 9 chicks are born, 7 fledge and on average only one chick survives winter. That last number increases with less competitors around.

This is the first time that density dependence -- a widespread phenomenon in nature -- and ecological mismatch are linked, and it is a real eye-opener. Reed: "It all seems so obvious once you've calculated this, but people were almost sure that mistiming would lead to a direct population decline."

The great tits that lay eggs earlier in spring are more successful nowadays than late birds, which produce relatively few surviving offspring. This leads to increasing selection for birds to reproduce early. But the total number of birds in the new generation stays the same. "That is the second paradox," the researchers state. "Why are population numbers hardly affected, despite the stronger selection on timing caused by the mismatch? The answer is that for selection it matters which birds survive, while for population size it only matters how many survive. Visser: "The mortality in one group can be compensated for by the success in another. But this stretching, this flexibility, is not unlimited."

The mismatch between egg laying period and caterpillar peak in the woods will keep growing, and so will the impact following the temporary rescue, as long as spring temperatures continue to increase. "The density dependence is only buying the birds time, hopefully for evolutionary adaptation to dig in before population numbers are substantially affected," according to Visser. The new findings can help to predict the impact of future environmental change on other wild populations and to identify relevant measures to take. Even rubber bands stretch only so far before they break.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO-KNAW), via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


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

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/uKfjHEgIXbM/130425142348.htm

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NASA video shows 3 years of the Sun?s activity in 3 minutes

* Lewandowski scored four goals against Real Madrid * Poland international refuses contract extension (adds details, background) BERLIN, April 26 (Reuters) - Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund striker Robert Lewandowski have not signed a deal, the newly-crowned champions said on Friday, shooting down widespread speculation of another imminent surprise transfer. "Bayern, as opposed to some reports, has no contract with Robert Lewandowski," the Bavarian Champions League semi-finalists said in a brief statement. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/nasa-video-shows-3-years-sun-activity-3-003654420.html

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Draft bill gives FDA authority over certain pharmacies

By Toni Clarke

(Reuters) - The Food and Drug Administration would gain greater authority over pharmacies that compound sterile drugs for tailored use and ship them across state lines, under proposed legislation announced on Friday.

The proposal from a bipartisan group of senators comes in the wake of a meningitis outbreak linked to a tainted steroid that has killed 53 people and sickened more than 700. The steroid was distributed by the Framingham, Massachusetts-based New England Compounding Center.

The proposal would draw a distinction between traditional compounding pharmacies, which make drugs for individual patients in response to specific prescriptions, and those such as NECC which make and ship products around the country that physicians can keep on their shelves for future use.

Ever since the meningitis outbreak, the FDA has been pilloried by Republicans in Congress who maintain the agency should have been more aggressive in its oversight of NECC.

The FDA concedes as much but argues that a complex legal landscape, combined with resistance from compounding pharmacies, has hampered its ability to regulate an industry that has grown exponentially over the past 10 years and whose function in many cases has changed.

The proposed legislation would essentially create a new class of drug company, to be known as "compounding manufacturers," that would be regulated by the FDA but be exempt from the full raft of regulatory requirements that apply to big pharmaceutical companies.

They would not, for example, be required to submit their products to the FDA for approval before selling them, and they would not have to enter complicated negotiations with the agency about what should and should not be included in the package insert. They will be required to provide more limited information.

It is unclear how many of the roughly 2,800 compounding pharmacies would fall into the new category but initial estimates place the number at fewer than 500. They would be defined not by their sales volume, but by whether they make products that are at high risk for contamination and sell them across state lines.

These newly-defined companies would no longer be licensed as pharmacies. They would be required to register with the FDA, and report to the agency any problems reported by patients or physicians. They would also be required to pay an annual fee to defray the cost of FDA inspections.

Traditional compounding pharmacies would continue to be licensed and regulated by state boards of pharmacy.

(Reporting by Toni Clarke in Washington; Editing by Vicki Allen)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/draft-legislation-gives-fda-authority-over-compounding-pharmacies-141320123.html

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Sunday, April 7, 2013

Battle erupts in California over clothes donation boxes

By Sharon Bernstein

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A political fight over charity collection boxes is brewing in California, where property owners complain that the boxes are sometimes dropped onto their land without permission, becoming magnets for graffiti and shelter for transients.

Goodwill Industries International, the most established of such U.S. charities, has pushed for years for regulation of donation boxes, and a California state senator has taken up the cause with a bill that would make it easier for property owners to have unauthorized boxes towed away.

State and local governments elsewhere in the United States, including Florida, Massachusetts, Michigan, Arizona and North Carolina, have also stepped in to try to regulate the boxes.

Americans plop tens of millions of dollars worth of used clothing into the boxes each year, creating big revenue streams for charities and for-profit companies alike. The regulatory battle over the boxes, now in its fifth year in California, exposes the high stakes in the competitive world of charity fund-raising.

Goodwill executives worry that messy, untended boxes, sometimes owned by companies that are not affiliated with charities at all, give legitimate clothing collectors a bad name. They complain that the big plastic boxes are often blue in color, evoking Goodwill's azure logo.

But opponents of regulation, which include smaller non-profits DARE America and Planet Aid as well as for-profits, say the big reseller is just trying to squash the competition.

This week, frustration on both sides boiled over as media coverage intensified. Accused by opponents of bowing to Goodwill's expensive lobbyists, State Senator Cathleen Galgiani, a Democrat, pulled her bill from consideration moments before it was to be heard in committee on Wednesday. She plans to bring it up again in a few weeks after more preparation.

"There's big money involved," said Ken Berger, president of the watchdog group Charity Navigator. "The players can get very passionate about these large sums of money."

BIG MONEY

Goodwill brought in $53 million in revenue in 2011, according to financial reports, and paid its president $725,000 in salary and benefits. Planet Aid posted revenue of $37 million that year, while DARE America had $3.7 million.

Some charities lend their names to for-profits in return for a small percentage of the money raised - a practice that has been criticized.

But John Lindsay, a vice president of DARE America, said his organization would not be able to survive without the agreements it has with for-profits in California, Texas and Maryland.

West Chicago-based USAgain operates 10,000 for-profit collection boxes in 17 states, many of them bearing the names of charities.

"We think that being profitable is a great way to make sure an activity is sustainable and can thrive in the long term," the company, which does not disclose revenues, says on its website.

The lure of money has brought in questionable players as well.

At least 10 property owners around Stockton, California, have complained to Goodwill that rogue operators have dropped boxes on their land in the middle of the night, said David Miller, president of Goodwill in the state's San Joaquin Valley.

The idea, he said, is to trick consumers into thinking that the box is owned by a legitimate non-profit.

"'There is a blue box on our property, and we were wondering if it was yours,'" a caller to Goodwill told Miller. It took months to reach the owner and get the box towed away, he said.

California State Sen. Galgiani's measure would grant immunity from lawsuits to property owners who have unauthorized boxes towed away. A similar effort was vetoed last year by Democratic Governor Jerry Brown.

Democratic State Senator Lois Wolk, who chairs the Governance and Finance committee, which was scheduled to hear Galgiani's bill on Wednesday, was concerned that she had not shown that local governments had trouble regulating the boxes, said Craig Reynolds, Wolk's chief of staff.

Galgiani plans to go into the next round of hearings better armed, bringing property owners who have had trouble getting rid of the boxes, and city officials who have tried to regulate them.

Galgiani spokesman Thomas Lawson said opponents of regulation are mischaracterizing the battle as one for dominance by Goodwill.

"It's always a sexier story to say if this bill passes, more people are going to be on drugs," he said. "But we're just trying to give property owners the ability to remove a box if they choose to."

(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Richard Chang)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/battle-erupts-california-over-clothes-donation-boxes-151144424.html

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Thursday, April 4, 2013

Nigeria's Zenith Bank full-year pre-tax profit up 51 pct

CAIRO (Reuters) - An Egyptian court barred the extradition of a cousin of late Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi to his home country on Wednesday, saying Ahmed Gaddaf Alddam should be tried in Egypt, officials said. Gaddaf Alddam, who is wanted in Libya for alleged counterfeiting, forgery, fraud and money laundering, is under investigation on suspicion of attacking Egyptian police during his arrest last month. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nigerias-zenith-bank-full-pre-tax-profit-51-060952628--finance.html

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2013 wintertime Arctic sea ice maximum fifth lowest on record

Apr. 3, 2013 ? Last September, at the end of the northern hemisphere summer, the Arctic Ocean's icy cover shrank to its lowest extent on record, continuing a long-term trend and diminishing to about half the size of the average summertime extent from 1979 to 2000.

During the cold and dark of Arctic winter, sea ice refreezes and achieves its maximum extent, usually in late February or early March. According to a NASA analysis, this year the annual maximum extent was reached on Feb. 28 and it was the fifth lowest sea ice winter extent in the past 35 years.

The new maximum -- 5.82 million square miles (15.09 million square kilometers) -- is in line with a continuing trend in declining winter Arctic sea ice extent: nine of the ten smallest recorded maximums have occurred during the last decade. The 2013 winter extent is 144,402 square miles (374,000 square kilometers) below the average annual maximum extent for the last three decades.

"The Arctic region is in darkness during winter and the predominant type of radiation is long-wave or infrared, which is associated with greenhouse warming," said Joey Comiso, senior scientist at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., and a principal investigator of NASA's Cryospheric Sciences Program. "A decline in the sea ice cover in winter is thus a manifestation of the effect of the increasing greenhouse gases on sea ice."

Satellite data retrieved since the late 1970s show that sea ice extent, which includes all areas of the Arctic Ocean where ice covers at least 15 percent of the ocean surface, is diminishing. This decline is occurring at a much faster pace in the summer than in the winter; in fact, some models predict that the Arctic Ocean could be ice-free in the summer in just a few decades.

The behavior of the winter sea ice maximum is not necessarily predictive of the following melt season. The record shows there are times when an unusually large maximum is followed by an unusually low minimum, and vice versa.

"You would think the two should be related, because if you have extensive maximum, that means you had an unusually cold winter and that the ice would have grown thicker than normal. And you would expect thicker ice to be more difficult to melt in the summer," Comiso said. "But it isn't as simple as that. You can have a lot of other forces that affect the ice cover in the summer, like the strong storm we got in August last year, which split a huge segment of ice that then got transported south to warmer waters, where it melted."

The NASA Goddard sea ice record is one of several analyses, along with those produced by the National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) in Boulder, Colo. The two institutions use slightly different methods in their sea ice tally, but overall, their trends show close agreement. NSIDC announced that Arctic sea ice reached its winter maximum on Mar. 15, at an extent of 5.84 million square miles (15.13 million square kilometers) -- a difference of less than half a percent compared to the NASA maximum extent.

Another measurement that allows researchers to analyze the evolution of the sea ice maximum is sea ice "area." The measurement of area, as opposed to extent, discards regions of open water among ice floes and only tallies the parts of the Arctic Ocean that are completely covered by ice. The winter maximum area for 2013 was 5.53 million square miles (14.3 million square kilometers), also the fifth lowest since 1979.

While the extent of winter sea ice has trended downward at a less drastic rate than summer sea ice, the fraction of the sea ice cover that has survived at least two melt seasons remains much smaller than at the beginning of the satellite era. This older, thicker "multi-year ice" -- which buttresses the ice cap against more severe melting in the summer -- grew slightly this past winter and now covers 1.03 million square miles (2.67 million square kilometers), or about 39,000 square miles more than last winter. But its extent is still less than half of what it was in the early 1980s.

"I think the multi-year ice cover will continue to decline in the upcoming years," Comiso said. "There's a little bit of oscillation, so there still might be a small gain in some years, but it continues to go down and before you know it we'll lose the multi-year ice altogether."

This winter, the negative phase of the Arctic Oscillation kept temperatures warmer than average in the northernmost latitudes. A series of storms in February and early March opened large cracks in the ice covering the Beaufort Sea along the northern coasts of Alaska and Canada, in an area of thin seasonal ice. The large cracks quickly froze over, but these new layers of thin ice might melt again now that the sun has re-appeared in the Arctic, which could split the ice pack into smaller ice floes.

"If you put a large chunk of ice in a glass of water, it is going to melt slowly, but if you break up the ice into small pieces, it will melt faster," said Nathan Kurtz, a sea ice scientist at NASA Goddard. "If the ice pack breaks up like that and the melt season begins with smaller-sized floes, that could impact melt."

In the upcoming weeks, Kurtz will analyze data collected over the Beaufort Sea by NASA's Operation IceBridge, an airborne mission that is currently surveying Arctic sea ice and the Greenland ice sheet, to see if the sea ice in the cracked area was abnormally thin.

The sea ice maximum extent analysis produced at NASA Goddard is compiled from passive microwave data from NASA's Nimbus-7 satellite and the U.S. Department of Defense's Defense Meteorological Satellite Program. The record, which began in November 1978, shows an overall downward trend of 2.1 percent per decade in the size of the maximum winter extent, a decline that accelerated after 2004.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/GbvpvYgiv1Y/130403141444.htm

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EMarketer: Facebook US mobile ad revenue soaring

NEW YORK (AP) ? A research firm expects Facebook's mobile ad revenue to soar this year, hitting nearly $1 billion a year after the company started to splice ads into its users' mobile phones and tablets.

The forecast comes a day before Facebook is planning to unveil a new Android product. Speculation has centered on a mobile phone, made by HTC Corp., that deeply integrates Facebook into the Android operating system.

EMarketer said Wednesday that it expects Facebook Inc. to reap $965 million in U.S. mobile ad revenue in 2013. That's about 2.5 times the $391 million in 2012, the first year that Facebook started showing mobile ads.

Facebook is No. 2 behind Google Inc. when it comes to mobile advertisements, and it isn't expected to surpass the online search leader any time soon.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/emarketer-facebook-us-mobile-ad-revenue-soaring-212600589.html

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Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Dell UltraSharp U3014


Once again the Dell monitor team has a winner on its hands. Their latest addition to the UltraSharp line of desktop monitors, the Dell UltraSharp U3014 , picks up where the Dell UltraSharp U3011 left off and brings a few new features to the table, including LED backlighting, USB 3.0, and a slightly faster pixel response. This wide gamut In-Plane Switching (IPS) monitor is a stellar performer, offering accurate color and grayscale reproduction and great off angle viewing. It also features a 14-bit LUT (look up table) and comes pre-calibrated from the factory. Ports are abundant, and the (mostly) ergonomic stand lets you position the massive panel for optimal viewing, although it doesn't rotate the panel. Of course, you'll pay premium dollars for all of this big-screen goodness, but the U3014 delivers the goods, and as such is our new Editors' Choice for big-screen monitors.

Design and Features
Design-wise, the U3014 is similar to the Dell U3011. The 2,560-by-1,600 IPS panel sits inside a matte-black cabinet sporting a brushed silver band around its perimeter. The use of LED backlighting allows for a 2-inch-thick cabinet, whereas the CCFL backlit Dell U3011 measured 3.7 inches thick. The panel is framed by thin (0.80-inch) matte-black bezels with rounded corners, and the bottom bezel is home to a shiny Dell logo.

There are five small touch buttons and a power switch on the right side bezel. As with the Dell U3011, they are proximity sensitive. If you put your finger close without touching anything, the lower button will flash. Touching the flashing button lights up the remaining buttons and launches an on-screen menu labeling scheme for each button. I love this type of navigation system as it makes it very easy to tweak settings without trying to read poorly labeled buttons, and it works great in a darkened room.

The 16.2-pound cabinet can be hung on a wall using the four VESA mounting holes, or it can be attached to its stand (included), which consists of a black rectangular base with a curved back edge and a 14-inch mounting arm. The arm has a sliding hinge that gives you about 3.5 inches of height adjustability and approximately 25 degrees of tilt. It spins at the base to provide easy one handed swivel maneuverability. The only adjustment not available on the U3014 is pivot, or panel rotation, which was also the case with the Dell U3011 and the Dell UltraSharp U2711 models. A panel of this size is bit too large for pivoting anyway. The 27-inch Dell UltraSharp U2713HM, on the other hand, does support panel rotation.

Dell outfitted the U3014 with the latest I/O technology and did away with some of the legacy ports. The VGA port and secondary HDMI and DVI ports found on the Dell U3011 are gone. Instead the U3014 is equipped with a full-size DisplayPort input, a mini DisplayPort input, a DisplayPort output, a single HDMI input, and a single dual-link DVI input. The DisplayPort output is used for Multi-Stream Transport (MST), which allows you to daisy-chain multiple monitors. It also offers five USB 3.0 ports (one upstream, four downstream) in place of the slower USB 2.0 technology. Two of the USB ports are conveniently mounted on the left side of the cabinet, along with a 6-in-1 card reader slot. Rounding out the I/O ports are an audio output and two power jacks, one for the monitor and one for an optional Dell Soundbar attachment.

The U3014 is loaded with picture setting choices. It has eight picture presets optimized for specific applications including Standard, Multimedia, Movie, Game, Paper, Color Temp., Color Space, and Custom Color. Paper mode loads brightness and sharpness settings that are optimized for reading text, while Color Space mode allows users to choose the Adobe RGB or sRGB color space or one of two user calibrated settings (the U3014 comes with calibration software that works with the X-Rite i1Display Pro colorimeter, which must be purchased separately). Custom Color lets you manually adjust RGB values and has individual settings for Gain, Offset, Hue, and Saturation. In addition to brightness and contrast settings you can adjust gamma, sharpness, noise reduction, and aspect ratio (the native aspect ratio is 16:10). There's also a Uniformity Compensation setting that uses the center of the screen as a reference and adjusts brightness and color over different areas of the screen to ensure a uniform picture, if necessary. The U3014 also supports PIP (picture in picture) and PBP (picture by picture) and offers settings to adjust size, position, and contrast level for the window.

Performance
The U3014's IPS panel performed wonderfully on the DisplayMate 64-Step Grayscale test, displaying every swatch of gray cleanly from light to dark. Shadow detail in my test photos was excellent with no trace of crushed blacks, and there was no obvious tinting anywhere in the scale.

Color quality was equally impressive. Full-screen color samples were uniform and well saturated, and color accuracy was outstanding. On the CIE Chromaticity chart below, the closer the red, green, and blue dots are to their corresponding boxes, the better the color accuracy (ideally each dot will be inside the box). As you can see, the U3014 is pretty much spot-on, which is not surprising considering the monitor is calibrated before it ships.

Any IPS panel worth its salt will deliver wide viewing angles, and the U3014 is no exception. Colors remained vibrant and true even when viewed from a far side angle, and the picture remained bright as well. Small text from the DisplayMate Scaled Fonts test was clean and legible even at 5.3 points (the smallest font on the test).

The U3014 doesn't target gaming enthusiasts but that doesn't mean you can't enjoy some after hours fun. The 6-millisecond (gray-to-gray) pixel response did an admirable job of handling fast motion video and game play. Burnout Paradise, a street racing game for the PS3, played smoothly without any noticeable lag, and the action looked awesome on the massive screen. You'll have to supply your own speakers though, as the U3014 does not have any.

The 30-inch IPS panel used 60 watts of power during testing, which is significantly lower than what the U3011 required (97 watts). That's one of the big advantages of using LED backlighting. The Energy Smart feature will help lower that number but it uses dynamic diming, which changes depending on screen content. For example, the monitor measured 60 watts while displaying the PC Mag homepage with Energy Smart disabled; enabling it lowered that number to 48 watts.

Robust accurate colors, solid grayscale performance, and wide viewing angles are critical to designers and content creators, and the Dell UltraSharp U3014 delivers on all fronts, which is why it is the company's flagship monitor. Yes, it is expensive, but 30-inch pro-grade monitors don't come cheap, especially when they are packed with as many features as this big boy offers. With dual DisplayPort inputs as well as HDMI and dual link DVI ports, the U3014 can handle any digital signal you can throw at it, and its built-in four port USB 3.0 hub brings speedy transfer rates to your desktop. There's not much missing from this beauty other than a pivot hinge, but that's a minor gripe and doesn't prevent the U3014 from earning our Editors' Choice award for big-screen monitors.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/uaOEoiGN5KQ/0,2817,2417347,00.asp

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Buy Neil Armstrong's childhood toy plane -- or Buzz Aldrin's toothbrush

Heritage / NASA

Long before Neil Armstrong flew to the moon, he played with this red metal toy plane, which is now up for auction by Heritage Auctions of Dallas.

By Robert Z. Pearlman
Space.com

A toy plane that Neil Armstrong is said to have played with as a child ? years before he became a naval aviator, research pilot and the first astronaut to walk on the moon ? will be auctioned off this month in Dallas.

The red metal toy, which Heritage Auctions expects to sell for as much as $2,500 at its April 18 space-themed auction, was discovered by the family who bought Armstrong's boyhood home in 1964. The model airplane was discovered in the house's attic, along with a red wagon and some homework papers that also belonged to the future Apollo 11 moonwalker.

"In July 1964 my parents purchased the home on 601 W. Benton Street, Wapakoneta, Ohio from Steve and Viola Armstrong," Jacqueline (Miller) Knapke wrote, describing Armstrong's parents in her letter of authenticity. "Mrs. V. Armstrong verified at that time that the wagon and this airplane was Neil's and that he and his brother played with it."

The Millers donated the red toy wagon to the Armstrong Air and Space Museum in Wapakoneta, but held on to the toy plane until now. [Neil Armstrong: An Icon Remembered (Photos)]

Neil Armstrong died on Aug. 25, at age 82 following complications from heart surgery. During his lifetime, he refrained from selling his memorabilia and, in response to what he attributed to the commercialization of the hobby, stopped signing autographs in the 1990s.

Heritage is also offering for sale the homework papers and a handmade booklet that were also left behind in the attic. Each of the documents' lots is expected to sell for $1,500 to $2,500.

Collector's legacy
Like Armstrong's boyhood effects, which were saved and consigned for auction by a third party, the majority of the lots being offered by Heritage represent the holdings of a collector, rather than the astronauts themselves.

Three hundred out of the more than 550 lots for sale were consigned by the Steven R. Belasco estate.

"The collection is a tribute to the incredible prowess of its collector," Michael Riley, Heritage senior historian and its chief cataloger for space exploration, said in a statement. "He was as well known and dedicated a collector as any of us ever encountered."

Belasco died in 2012 due to an acute respiratory infection. In 2004, he bid $16,000 on a toothbrush that flew to the moon, which drew media attention ? not only because of the price he paid, but because he was a vice president at Colgate-Palmolive, a company known for its oral hygiene products.

That same dental instrument, a light blue Lactona "Tooth Tip" brush that astronaut Buzz Aldrin used throughout the Apollo 11 mission he flew with Armstrong in 1969, is now estimated to sell for upward of $24,000.

Another Aldrin space artifact?highlighted by Heritage is a flown flashlight from the Gemini 12 mission, estimated to sell for $10,000 to $15,000. The Velcro-wrapped torch was originally purchased by Belasco in 1999 for $9,200.

The other items from Belasco's 13 years collecting space memorabilia span Mercury, Gemini and Apollo missions, including a significant grouping of artifacts that flew to the moon's surface.

Den mother's memorabilia
In addition to the Armstrong and Belasco lots, Heritage is also selling more than two dozen items from Lola Morrow, the 1960's "den mother to the astronauts" who served as the crew members' secretary in Cape Canaveral, Fla.

The Morrow lots include astronaut-autographed books and photos, as well as letters and mission patch charms.

The highlight item may be the humorous drawing that was gifted to her upon her retirement from NASA in 1969. The caricature, which shows Morrow at her desk with six arms typing, writing, paging, talking on the phone, waving, and handling reports ? all at once, is signed by 26 astronauts including Armstrong, Aldrin and eight other moonwalkers. It is estimated to sell for $6,000 to $10,000.

Click through to CollectSpace.com for a video preview of Heritage Auctions 2013 April 18 Space Exploration Signature Auction. For more details, see Heritage?s website at HA.com.

Follow CollectSpace.com on?Facebook?and on Twitter at @collectSpace. Copyright 2013 CollectSpace.com. Distributed by Space.com. All rights reserved.

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Lomography Belair X 6-12 Jetsetter


The Lomography Belair X 6-12 Jetsetter ($299.99 direct) is a bold design from a company known for its toy cameras. It's an interchangable lens camera that captures 6-by-12-centimeter images on standard 120 medium format film. Previously you'd have search out a specialized camera from the likes of Linhof or Horesman to get such a big, wide negative. And those cameras sell for several thousand dollars, even on the used market.

For only a few hundred dollars, don't expect the Belair to operate with the same precision as its expensive competition, and you won't get the same image quality out of its compact plastic lenses as you will from a German-made Rodenstock optic that can cover a large format negative. The plastic lenses that are included with the Belair will satisify the needs of film lovers looking to make smaller prints or share on the Web, but they don't resolve as much fine detail as a glass lens would. There are a pair of Russian-made glass lenses available for the Belair for shooters who desire a bit more detail in their images.

The Belair is currently available in two editions. We reviewed the metal-bodied Jetsetter, which has a tan leatherette covering. There's also the plastic City Slicker model ($249.99), which has a black body and black leatherette. The two models are functionally identical, but if you plan on shooting with the camera on a regular basis it's not a bad idea to spend the extra money on the metal version. The Jetsetter's two-tone look is a bit more retro than the all-black City Slicker. The tan leatherette is on the lower end of the quality spectrum; it's easily dented and feels a bit slick in the hand. If you want a covering that will hold up better and give you a better grip, the folks at CameraLeather?should be able to hook you up with an uncut sheet that you can easily cut to size with an exacto knife. Lomography even has an online tutorial about how to recover the Belair yourself.

When collapsed, the camera measures 3.5 by 7 by 2 inches (HWD) without a lens or finder attached. The finder and lens add about an inch to each the height and depth, and the depth is 5 inches when the bellows are extended for shooting. The lens board extends outward with a single press of a button on the bottom of the Belair, but closing it back up is a bit trickier. You need to hold down buttons on the top and bottom of the hinge mechanism and push the lens board back towards the body. Some care is required to push the board back evenly, but it's a skill that is mastered pretty quickly.

Loading film is straightforward, there are two catches on the bottom plate that allow you to remove the back and load the roll. Film masks for 6-by-9 and 6-by-6 shooting are included if you'd rather not shoot in 6 by 12. You'll only get six shots per roll when shooting at the widest format, so narrowing the camera's field of view will help you get more frames out of each roll. Shooting in 6 by 9 extends your roll to eight shots, and your photos will be captured at a more print-friendly aspect ratio. Shooting square gives you twelve shots per roll.

The included optical viewfinders have markings to show each of the narrower formats, but they're a bit hard to see. If you find yourself shooting in something other than 6 by 12 with regularity you may want to use a thin strip of tape to better mark the frame line, just be careful to use a type that won't leave a sticky residue on the front of the viewfinder. Viewfinder framing is approximate, and just what the camera captures will vary based on your distance from the subject. It's best to frame a little bit loose, just to be safe.

Physical controls are minimal. There's a dial to set the desired ISO; it ranges from 100 to 1600 in one-stop increments, and there's a bulb setting that will keep the shutter open as long as you hold the release down. There's no manual shutter speed dial, aside from the bulb, you'll have to rely on the meter to deliver a correct exposure; the meter requires two LR44 batteries to operate. There's no way to preview the shutter speed before you fire a shot, so you'll have to trust your photographic skills (or a handheld light meter) to decide whether you'll want to use a tripod for a particular shot or if hand holding will do. The Belair takes photos in a single exposure without any sort of lens movement?so you won't have to worry about holding the camera steady as its lens swings from one end to other like you do with the Horizon Kompakt.

A simple dial advances the film; you'll need to peer through the frame window on the rear of the camera to determine how many times to turn it to advance to the next frame. This red window is familiar to medium format shooters; it shows you the frame numbers that are printed on the film's backing paper.?There's a standard hot shoe for a flash, but you'll have to experiment with your particular strobe and film to get your exposures down as the camera's meter will always assume that you're not using a flash. You may prefer to set the ISO much higher than the actual film speed for a shorter exposure that relies heavily on the illumination provided by your flashgun. Or you could set the meter to the actual ISO, which will generally result in a longer exposure in dim environments where you use the flash. This can be a fun effect, as you'll the flash exposure will freeze the motion of your subject, but the long exposure will surround it by a bit of motion blur.?

The Belair ships with a 58mm f/8 and a 90mm f/8 lens. Both feature plastic optics and can be stopped down to f/16. Each is impressively small, especially when you consider the size of the 6-by-12 negative. The 58mm provides a field of view that's not too far off from a 21mm lens on a full-frame digital or 35mm film camera. I did notice a good deal of barrel distortion when shooting with the 58mm, but I was able to fix it pretty easily in Lightroom by setting the distortion slider to +40 and lines that curved outwards straightened. If you're wet printing in a darkroom you'll just have to live with this; to get a lens that wide in this format that is perfectly corrected for distortion requires you to start looking at those pricey Linhof and Horseman cameras.?

The 90mm is a bit narrower, its equivalent focal length is about 32mm. You'll have to focus by scale, that is by approximating the distance between the film plane and your subject. There are marks on each lens for 1 meter, 1.5 meters, 3 meters, and infinity. There is also a pair of glass lenses available, although we haven't had a chance to review them as of yet. The Belairgon 90mm f/8 and 114mm f/8 have just been released and are each priced at $199.

We didn't run formal resolution tests on the included lenses?this isn't a camera that you buy if you're concerned about test charts. To my eye the images had decent sharpness, especially when shooting at f/16. I could see larger text with ease, but the ability to capture extremely fine detail and texture isn't there. The images don't have the low-fi look that you get from the Diana F+, but they also won't keep up with medium-format shots from the good glass you get from classic medium format cameras big lenses. It will be interesting to see how much detail that Lomo's glass lenses bring to the table.

The Lomography Belair X 6-12 Jetsetter is a refreshing change of pace for Lomography. Even though it ships with plastic lenses, it is not at all a toy camera?the images are a bit too refined for that. They aren't tack sharp, but the dreamy, hazy "Lomo look" is nowhere to be found. Distortion is a bit of an issue with the ultra-wide 58mm lens, but it's easily corrected if you're working with the photos digitally. A manual shutter setting would go a long way to improve the functionality for shooters who like to use a flash, and a shutter speed indicator would be a welcome addition. If shooting in a panoramic format is appealing to you and you're a fan of medium format film, the Belair is right up your alley. If you can't live without technical perfection in a camera, spend the money and get a Horseman SW-612 system?just realize that even used, they can sell for thousands of dollars.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/IBO5nrxA5ec/0,2817,2417296,00.asp

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