Sunday, June 30, 2013

Gates


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Syrian troops launch wide offensive on Homs

BEIRUT (AP) ? Government troops launched a series of attacks in central Syria Saturday, striking with artillery, tanks and warplanes in a drive to capture rebel-held neighborhoods in the country's third largest city of Homs, with activists said.

The army of President Bashar Assad has been on the offensive in Homs province in recent weeks, reclaiming some of the territory it has lost to the rebels since Syria's crisis began 27 months ago.

The military, building on its capture of the strategic town of Qusair between the Lebanese border and Homs at the beginning of this month, has overrun a number of nearby villages. It also has hammered the center of the city, a rebel stronghold since the uprising against Assad began in March 2011.

Homs, a city of about 1 million, has shown great sympathy for the opposition since the early days of the uprising. A month after it started, protesters carried mattresses, food and water to the main Clock Square, hoping to emulate Cairo's Tahrir Square, the epicenter of Egypt's revolt that overthrew Hosni Mubarak.

Security forces quickly raided the encampment, shooting at protesters and chasing them through the streets. The onslaught only boosted the intensity of the protests, fueling a revolt that has posed the most serious challenge to date to the Assad family dynasty that has ruled Syria since 1970.

Homs is the capital of Syria's largest province, which carries the same name and stretches from the Lebanese border to the frontier with Jordan and Iraq.

Activists in the city said all cellular lines were cut early Saturday before warplanes pounded rebel-held areas. The air raids were followed by intense shelling with artillery, mortars and tanks, before troops tried to advance.

Several activists in the city said the regime began bringing in reinforcements since last week, apparently in preparation for the attack.

Two activists said about 400 shells struck rebel-held areas such as Qusour, Jouret el-Shayah, Old Homs and Khaldiyeh.

"This is the worst campaign against the city since the revolution began," said an activist in the rebel-held old quarter of the city via Skype. "They are using all types of weapons," said the man on condition of anonymity for fear of government reprisals.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said air strikes hit two districts in the center of the city. It said the army also fired mortar shells into the neighborhoods.

An activist from the neighborhood of Khaldiyeh said tanks were also involved in the bombardment, and that the military was trying to push into the area from all sides.

Shelling has been continuous since 10 a.m. in that area and in nearby Old Homs, activist Tariq Bardakhan told The Associated Press via Skype.

"Today is one of the most violent days that Homs has witnessed since the beginning of the revolution," he said.

In an activists' video of the bombardment, several large explosions can be heard as plumes of grey smoke rise from buildings in a densely built-up area of the city.

The narrator of the video says: "These are heavy explosions that hit Homs, God is great." Another shell lands and smoke can be seen rising from behind a mosque. Two minarets are seen in the distance and the narrator says they belong to the historic Khalid Ibn al-Walid mosque in Khaldiyeh.

The video was posted on the Internet on Saturday and appears consistent with AP's reporting from the area.

The Observatory confirmed clashes around the mosque, and said that part of the building, which dates back to the 13th century and has been damaged in previous fighting, was engulfed in flames. It added that troops tried to storm the mosque with no success.

The Observatory said both sides have sustained casualties, but did not have numbers.

Syrian state TV said the army has had "great success" in the battle for Homs after "killing many terrorists in the Khaldiyeh district."

Syrian state media refers to rebels fighting to oust Assad from power as "terrorists" and say they are mercenaries of the West and their Gulf Arab allies who are conspiring against Damascus.

Before the fighting moved to the capital Damascus and the northern city of Aleppo in July last year, Homs was the center of the uprising and became known as "the capital of the Syrian revolution."

Rebels received a major blow in March last year when troops captured the Baba Amr neighborhood after weeks of fighting that left scores dead. Among those killed in Baba Amr last year were French photographer Remi Ochlik and Britain's Sunday Times correspondent Marie Colvin.

After the army captured the neighborhood, Assad paid a visit to the area in a show of how important Homs is for the government. The city lies along a land corridor linking two of Assad's strongholds, the capital of Damascus and an area along the Mediterranean coast that is the heartland of his minority Alawite sect.

The Observatory says more than 100,000 people have been killed in the Syrian conflict since it began as peaceful protests against the Assad regime more than two years ago. It became an armed rebellion after the opposition supporters took up arms to fight a government crackdown.

The United Nations puts the number of casualties at 93,000.

Also Saturday, the Observatory and the Aleppo Media Center said a missile hit Aleppo's Katourji neighborhood, killing and wounding several people. The Observatory said at least three people were killed while the AMC said the death toll could be as high as 15.

An amateur video showed two buildings that had several top stories knocked out. Panicked residents ran to help evacuate wounded people, including children. A boy, his head covered with a bloodied white cloth was being rushed away as people chanted "God is great."

Another man carried a wounded child and ran in a street filled with debris. At least one dead person was seen carried away.

The video appeared genuine and corresponded to other AP reporting on the events depicted.

The military has gained momentum after capturing Qusair earlier this month with the help of fighters from Lebanon's Hezbollah group, capturing villages on the roads linking the capital to the border area with Jordan and Lebanon.

The rebels have also claimed some victories, marking a successful end to a two-week battle in the south Friday by capturing an army checkpoint in the city of Daraa, the provincial capital of the region that carries the same name.

Daraa is the birthplace of the uprising against Assad and rebels hope to one day launch an offensive from there to take the capital.

The Observatory reported heavy fighting around the province on Saturday with clashes between the rebels and army troops concentrated in the town of Jassem after the army brought in reinforcements.

___

Associated Press writers Barbara Surk and Yasmin Saker in Beirut contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syrian-troops-launch-wide-offensive-homs-181141355.html

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Explore Twitter's Hidden Landscape In These Gorgeous Interactive Maps

Explore Twitter's Hidden Landscape In These Gorgeous Interactive Maps

Twitter never tires of finding clever new ways to show off its mountains of tweets, it's going literal with actual mountains of tweets. Twitter's in-house data visualization scientist Nicolas Belmonte put together these new, interactive, topographical maps of tweet history, and the result is a digital mountain range like you've never seen.

Drawing from the same data that shows off the whole world in geo-tagged tweets, Belmonte whipped up three-dimensional mountain ranges for three of Twitter's biggest cities: New York, San Francisco, and Istanbul.

Explore Twitter's Hidden Landscape In These Gorgeous Interactive Maps

Over on Twitter's site for the project, you can choose between a number of different layouts and settings that range from very traditionally mappy to almost completely abstract. If you take a peak peek, you'll see triumphant spires in obvious places like midtown Manhattan and San Fran's financial district, but also weird little features, like ridges of tweets rising up from the ocean thanks to bridges.

It's not every day you'll find mountains that you can help shape a mountain range. So go take a look, and?if you happen to be living in one of these invisible mountain ranges?add your own pebble to the pile. [Twitter]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/explore-twitters-hidden-landscape-in-these-gorgeous-in-610156127

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

Video: Advancing Research at London?s Global University

In this video from the DDN User Group Meeting at ISC?13, Dr. Daniel Hanlon from the University College of London presents: Advancing Research at London?s Global University.

As UCL?s storage demands grow, the university expects to build a storage foundation that will scale up to 100PB. Looking for a storage solution that was massively scalable yet simple to manage as part of the first phase of the infrastructure build out, UCL will use DDN object storage technology to store up to 600TB of research data. DDN object storage capabilities also will be able to empower UCL researchers to collaborate without having to worry about data reliability, compliance obligations or long-term retention of critical research assets.?

Read the Full Story * View the slides * Check out our ISC?13 Video Gallery.



Share this with your friends.

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Source: http://inside-bigdata.com/video-advancing-research-at-londons-global-university/

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Studio Calico July Kits >> Scrapbook Layouts - MAGGIE HOLMES ...

The July kits are now available at Studio Calico!

There are a lot of things I love about this month... but especially that floral paper in the Molly add on and the confetti in the main scrapbook kit.

Not to mention the stamp sets! They are all super cute which presents a problem when you take the kits with you out of town to work with and then realize that you forgot to bring your inks and acrylic blocks. Yep, that's what I did and I was at a cabin so there wasn't a local scrapbook store I could run to down the street. I added a few little stamps to my pages after I got home but for the most part, the pages were done and the chance was lost. Bummer!?

Here are my scrapbook pages. I will share my cards and Project Life pages in separate posts.

MHSCJuly2013-5

MHSCJuly2013-7

MHSCJuly2013-9

MHSCJuly2013-11

MHSCJuly2013-13

MHSCJuly2013-15

MHSCJuly2013-17

MHSCJuly2013-19

MHSCJuly2013-21

All of the specifics about which kits and shop items I used for each layout can be found in my gallery at Studio Calico. Just click on each layout over there and it will link you up!

In addition I've been told that there are extra subscriptions and Project Life kits available this month in an effort to let everyone get their hands on a kit!

SPECIAL OFFER >> New Subscribers can get $5 off each kit by entering the following codes!

Valley High Scrapbook Subscription: SCRAPBOOKVALLEY

Valley High Card Subscription: CARDVALLEY

Valley High Project Life Subscription: PLVALLEY

But hurry because the codes expire June 30th at Midnight EST.

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Source: http://maggieholmes.typepad.com/my_weblog/2013/06/studio-calico-july-kits-scrapbook-layouts.html

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BlackBerry Shipped Just 2.7M BB10 Handsets In Q1 2014

z10-13BlackBerry didn't break out its individual BB10 device sales in its quarterly earnings report released earlier this morning, but during its conference call to discuss its performance CEO Thorsten Heins revealed that it shipped 2.7 million handsets during the quarter, which is not a great number. Nokia shipped 5.6 million Lumia devices in Q1 of 2013, for instance, and AT&T reported 4.8 million iPhone activations alone during its Q1 reporting.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/DdFuEP2zlOo/

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PTSD tied to raised heart disease risk

By Andrew M. Seaman

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - People suffering from posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) may also be at increased risk of heart attacks and strokes, according to a new study of Vietnam War veterans.

After following nearly 300 pairs of male twins, all Vietnam vets, for more than a decade, researchers found that almost a quarter of the men diagnosed with PTSD also had heart disease, compared to less than a tenth of the men without the combat-related stress disorder.

"As time goes by, it's become more and more clear that PTSD is not just something that impacts psychological health. It has broad repercussions throughout the body," said Dr. Viola Vaccarino from the Emory University School of Public Health in Atlanta, the study's lead author.

Behavioral symptoms of PTSD include reliving the traumatic event in memories or nightmares, avoiding situations that may trigger those memories and feelings of paranoia, fearfulness and guilt, according to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

The symptoms tend to start shortly after a person experiences a traumatic event, such as combat, terrorist attacks, serious accidents, natural disasters and personal violence or abuse.

Physically, Vaccarino's team notes, PTSD sufferers are known to often have raised levels of stress hormones and other chemicals signaling overactivation in the fight-or-flight pathways of the nervous system.

Previous research, including one study examining U.S. veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan, have found that people diagnosed with PTSD and other stress disorders are more likely to develop heart troubles (see Reuters Health story of August 5, 2009 here:).

Vaccarino said, however, that other studies found conflicting results and some relied on data from interviews and questionnaires, which may provide inaccurate information.

For its study, Vaccarino's group used data from a study of twins who were all Vietnam War veterans born between 1946 and 1956. None of the men in the new analysis had heart disease when the study started, between 1987 and 1992.

The 281 twin pairs were asked to return for follow-up exams and interviews between 2002 and 2010 - about 13 years later - and were tested to see how many of the men had developed heart disease.

Overall, 137 participants had met the diagnostic criteria for PTSD at the start of the study and 69 men developed heart disease by the time of their follow-up exam.

About 23 percent of those with PTSD had heart disease, compared to about 9 percent of those without the stress disorder.

The results translated to those with PTSD at the outset being twice as likely as men without the disorder to develop heart disease by the end of the study.

That difference remained even after the researchers accounted for the higher rates of smoking, drinking and high blood pressure among the PTSD sufferers, which could also contribute to heart risks.

Vaccarino told Reuters Health that she and her colleagues were able to confirm their findings by imaging the participants' hearts and showing reduced blood flow in the men with PTSD.

While their study cannot prove that PTSD caused heart disease in the men, she said, people should know the two conditions share an association.

"This study and the other studies provide pretty good evidence that there's an association here and it's likely to be causal, but we don't have the proof," said Dr. Stephen Sidney, director for research clinics at the Kaiser Permanente Northern California Division of Research in Oakland.

"There is enough of an association that physicians should be aware of it," said Sidney, who wrote an editorial accompanying the new study in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

Vaccarino said more research is needed to find out exactly how the two conditions are related, but "in the meantime, we need to act on those things that are protective against heart disease in general."

"Patients with PTSD need to realize that they need to take care of their heart, because they are at a higher risk," she said.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/11AIhhY Journal of the American College of Cardiology, online June 2013.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ptsd-tied-raised-heart-disease-risk-205231393.html

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Weddings Used To Be Sacred And Other Lessons About Internet Journalism

wedding photoEditor's note: Sean Parker is the executive general partner at Founder's Fund. Previously he was co-founder of Napster and the founding president of Facebook. He currently serves as a director of Spotify. My wife and I met 5 years ago and almost immediately began fantasizing about having a wedding in an enchanted forest. But life rarely works out the way it does in fairy tales.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/A94CyFTQZDk/

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Naverrette: On immigration, GOP offers fear, not ideas (CNN)

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A long way from Stonewall, and sometimes a slog

WASHINGTON (AP) ? From Stonewall in New York in 1969 to the marble walls of the Supreme Court, the push to advance gay rights has moved forward, often glacially but recently at a quickening pace. A look at episodes in the modern history of that movement and how attitudes have changed along the way in the larger culture:

FLASH BACK

Fifty years ago, gay sex was a crime in almost every state, homosexuality was designated a mental disorder, federal workers could easily lose their jobs for being gay and only the outliers were out of the closet, a risky if not dangerous place to be.

FLASH FORWARD

Gay marriage is legal in a dozen states and the District of Columbia, and could soon be again in California after the court's ruling Wednesday.

Gays can serve openly in the armed forces and do so in high office, including Congress. Eight people who have served as a U.S. ambassador or been nominated for that post are openly gay. Openly gay entertainers are commonplace, athletes less so.

It can still be dangerous to be out of the closet, which is why Congress expanded federal hate-crimes legislation in 2009 to cover crimes motivated by bias against gays, lesbians and transgender people. The law is named after Matthew Shepard, a gay college student tied to a fence, beaten and left to die in a 1998 case that sparked hate-crimes laws around the country.

IN THE COURT

The Supreme Court turned a stone cold face to Frank Kameny in 1961, declining to hear his appeal after he was fired as a government astronomer for being gay. It did so again in 1970, dismissing an appeal by two men in Minnesota who fought for the right to marry. And in 1986, the court upheld a Georgia law criminalizing sodomy, part of a patchwork of laws around the nation that once made gay sex a crime coast to coast.

The tide began to shift in the 1990s. In 1996, a ruling by the high court opened an avenue for states to protect gays as a class against discrimination. It struck down a Colorado measure that sought to bar homosexuals from gaining protections that are extended to other groups based on their race or religion.

In 2003, 10 years to the day before Wednesday's rulings, the Supreme Court stripped away the taboo at the heart of gay relationships, ruling that consensual sex between adults was not a crime so state sodomy laws could not stand. The court reversed its ruling of 17 years earlier on the Georgia law, and Justice Antonin Scalia, in a pointed and seemingly prophetic dissent, predicted it would clear the way for same-sex marriage.

Two years before his death in 2011, Kameny received an apology from the government for firing him. The apology came from John Berry, then director of the Office of Personnel Management, now nominated as ambassador to Australia, himself openly gay.

The rulings Wednesday extend federal recognition to gay marriages in the states where they are legal and seem bound to add California back into that category. But they leave same-sex marriage prohibitions standing in 35 states ? 29 under state constitutions, six under state laws ? and the overarching question of marriage equality as a national right unresolved. Two states, New Mexico and New Jersey, neither approve nor ban gay marriage.

IN THE COURT OF PUBLIC OPINION

In 1996, when the Defense of Marriage Act became law, the University of Chicago's General Social Survey reported that 60 percent of respondents considered homosexual sex "always wrong." With political opinion closely tracking public sentiments in that election year, the ground was hardly fertile for something as far-reaching as gay marriage.

In September of that year, the Senate backed DOMA and its prohibition of federal recognition of same-sex gay marriage by a lopsided 85-14 vote, and later that month President Bill Clinton signed it. Although he said he didn't like the law, he made clear ? as did almost everyone else in both parties ? that he considered marriage to be a union between a man and a woman.

That was the prevailing bottom line in Washington right up until last year, when President Barack Obama endorsed gay marriage in a flip-flop that he called an evolution.

Separately in 1996, a bill to establish anti-discrimination measures in the workplace for gays failed, though the vote was much closer.

Grim as the picture appeared then for gay rights activists, there were signs of a slow thaw in public attitudes. A few years earlier, fully 75 percent frowned on gay sex in the Social Survey. In 1996, more people thought extramarital sex was wrong than opposed gay sex.

Social scientists found that Americans were more open to a situation or a behavior when it was distant from their daily lives. So support for employment equality was stronger for the gay airline pilot than for the grade school teacher, stronger for gays in the armed forces than for gays adopting children, stronger for domestic partnership benefits in the workplace than for the right of a gay couple to get an apartment in your building.

Public attitudes have changed dramatically ? and in part for reasons that turn out to be close to home.

An Associated Press-National Constitution Center poll in the fall found 53 percent favored legal recognition of same-sex marriage and 63 percent favored granting gay couples the same legal benefits straight couples had. Other polls, too, pointed to a switch to majority support for gay marriage. In March, the Pew Research Center, which pegged support for marriage equality at 49 percent, found that support had grown in large measure because more people knew someone who was gay ? a family member, friend or acquaintance. Familiarity had bred acceptance.

MILESTONES

What became known as the gay liberation movement traces its roots to the 1969 police crackdown of patrons at the Stonewall Inn gay bar in New York City and three days of riots that followed. Also in 1969, a U.S. Court of Appeals ruling barred the firing of civil servants solely because they were gay.

By then, the Mattachine Society, considered the first national gay rights organization, had been around for nearly two decades but activists largely stayed out of the public eye until the 1970s, a decade of change, bold demands for more and the first national gay rights march on Washington.

In 1973, the American Psychiatric Association declassified homosexuality as a mental disorder.

The decade saw the first openly gay people elected to public office as well as the election of other officials committed to the cause. In the 1980s, the spread of AIDS and its devastating toll among gay men galvanized calls for action, not just to control the epidemic but to redress the absence of legal protections for gays who could not visit their partners in hospital rooms, attend their funerals or keep shared possessions after death.

The election of a Democratic president in 1992 held out the promise of a change in course for gay activists frustrated by the years of Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush. But Clinton was not about to upend the social order.

As a leader promoting a "third way" somewhere between the usual politics of the left and the right, Clinton took measured steps on gay rights, perhaps most notably his compromise on gays in the military. The "don't ask, don't tell" policy that allowed gays to serve as long as they weren't open seemed to please no one on either side ? though for such an unpopular step, it survived a long time.

The pace of federally financed AIDS research picked up; Clinton established an AIDS policy office in the White House.

More politicians began supporting the recognition of same-sex civil unions while drawing a line against marriage equality. But a court case through the early 1990s in Hawaii, in which three same-sex couples fought for the right to marry, prompted a rush to the ramparts by opponents of gay marriage and set the stage for enactment of the law barring federal recognition of such unions.

That law and the swirling circumstances around it were a catalyst for action for supporters and opponents alike.

In 1998, Hawaii voters overwhelmingly approved a constitutional amendment giving lawmakers the power to deny same-sex marriage, making the court case irrelevant. Thirty other states would pass amendments against gay marriage in years to come. Among them: California, where the ability for gays to marry is expected to be restored because of the Supreme Court ruling.

Massachusetts, in 2004, became the first state to permit gay marriage. More followed suit.

In 2010, a court struck down Florida's three-decade-old ban on adoptions by gays.

In 2011, Obama ended the Clinton-era compromise in military policy by opening the forces to people who are openly gay.

In 2012, voters approved same-sex marriage in Maine, Maryland and Washington state. This year, Rhode Island, Delaware and Minnesota are coming on board.

Because of the Supreme Court's action Wednesday, 30 percent of Americans will live in states recognizing same-sex marriage once California legalizes it.

That's a long journey in time, and attitudes, from Stonewall 44 years ago. But these are far from the final steps for either side.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/long-way-stonewall-sometimes-slog-071317208.html

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Friday, June 28, 2013

Take our Apps Survey for a chance to win a $100 Best Buy Gift Card!

Talk Mobile 2013

We're fans of numbers and quantifiable data here at Mobile Nations, and so following after the second week of Talk Mobile 2013, we're turning to our good friend the survey to help compile some data. Week two was focused on apps, apps, apps and developers, developers, developers. If you missed any of the content, be sure to click over to our Talk Mobile hub and check it out.

The mobile apps survey will only take a minute or two to complete, and as an extra incentive (not that you guys and gals need it, but we like to give things away), by completing the survey you'll be entered for a chance to win a $100 Best Buy Gift Card. Hit the link below to take the survey!

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/TUomNJ-QTks/story01.htm

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'Don't touch my junk DNA!' says gene signal sequence

Scientists at MIT say they have discovered a mechanism that prevents noncoding DNA from being copied, by pointing the copying in the right direction.?

By Eoin O'Carroll,?Staff / June 25, 2013

A computer illustration of the double-helix structure of DNA. Scientists say that they have uncovered a mechanism that prevents cells from copying so-called junk DNA.

The Wellcome Trust/Reuters

Enlarge

Almost all of the human genome is made of noncoding, or "junk" DNA, that is, DNA that usually doesn't get copied and encoded into proteins.?

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So when copying DNA, how do cells tell the diference between actual genes and non-coding DNA??

Transcription begins at regions on the DNA molecule called promoters, sequences located at the beginning of genes that are to be copied. The enzyme that copies DNA, called RNA polymerase, latches on to the promoter and starts unzipping the DNA double helix, spooling out a chain of what will become messenger RNA ? mRNA for short ? that contains the information of the gene. [Editor's note: The original version of this paragraph used the term "replication" instead of "transcription." DNA replication is a different process. The Monitor regrets the error.] ?

But how does the RNA polymerase know which direction to go? Until now, scientists didn't know. But in research published in the current issue of the scientific journal Nature,?MIT biologists say they have discovered the mechanism that points transcription in the right direction.?

In all living things except bacteria, the RNA polymerase continues unzipping the DNA until it reaches a stop signal, at which point it stops copying and begins adding a chain of adenine bases to the pre-mRNA molecule, usually a couple hundred links long. This "poly-A" tail protects the mRNA as it exits the nucleus and travels to the ribosome, where the molecule's information is synthesized into proteins.

By sequencing mRNA of mouse embryonic stem cells, the researchers found that the signal sequences for creating poly-A tails ? a process known as polyadenylation ? are also prevalent "upstream" from the promoter. An RNA polymerase that encounters these sequences will chop up its pre-mRNA. Sequences of DNA that are to be coded into genes, by contrast, have a low density of?polyadenylation signal sequences.

The researchers also found that the?polyadenylation signal sequences are more likely to be?ignored when they appear within coding sequences, thanks to a tiny protein complex called U1 snRNP. When?U1 snRNP binds to an RNA polymerase,?polyadenylation is supressed. The researchers discovered that binding sites for?U1 snRNP are more prevalent in coding sequences than noncoding ones.

?Once you see some data like this, it raises many more questions to be investigated, which I?m hoping will lead us to deeper insights into how our cells carry out their normal functions and how they change in malignancy,? says?Phillip Sharp, a professor at MIT's Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research and a co-author of the study, in a statement.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/yhaeIJ_jQoc/Don-t-touch-my-junk-DNA!-says-gene-signal-sequence

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Thursday, June 27, 2013

?MythBusters? revisit previously busted case

TV

June 26, 2013 at 10:07 AM ET

What "MythBusters" fans want, "MythBusters" will give! In 2007, the hit Discovery show took on the case of the "Bifurcated Boat." A man who was driving a speedboat had crashed into a channel marker, and the accident had nearly split the boat in two. Sounds like speed was involved, right? Maybe not. The man claimed that he was going just a measly 25 MPH.

"MythBusters" to the rescue! With some tests, the gang busted the tale after their model boat merely glanced off their marker with little damage. But viewers complained about the bust, so the show is now revisiting the myth in its 10th season, and Discovery is sharing an exclusive look at the second attempt to bust the myth with TODAY.com.

"Our results were less than spectacular," Grant Imahara admits in the clip. "But according to you fans, that's because our methodology was totally wrong!"

"Because we didn't do it on water!" Kari Byron adds in the video.

Testing damage to a boat and not using a body of water of some sort? No wonder fans wanted a redo!

And it turns out there were some other problems too when testing the myth the first time. (Including an accident involving dropping one boat. Oops!) Take a look at some of the blunders, as well as what the "MythBusters" plan to do to make this attempt more accurate:

"MythBusters" airs Wednesdays at 9 p.m. on Discovery.

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/mythbusters-revisit-previously-busted-case-bifurcated-boat-6C10448418

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Xinjiang's Deadliest Violence in Years Renews Focus on Ethnic Tensions (Voice Of America)

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Your Top Plays for Today

Your Top Plays for Today: AP's Sports Guide

?BIG NAME EXODUS CONTINUES AT WIMBLEDON

Roger Federer and Maria Sharapova head the list of players exiting Wimbledon after a day of upsets and injuries.

http://apne.ws/14yjyw8

?BRAZIL INTO CONFEDERATIONS CUP FINAL

Brazil says the hard-fought win over an experienced Uruguayan squad has helped the team mature and gain more confidence for next year's World Cup, also being staged on home ground.

http://apne.ws/124AEiX

?PATRIOTS TIGHT END CHARGED WITH MURDER

New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez has been charged with murder in the shooting death of a friend prosecutors say had angered the player at a nightclub a few days earlier by talking to the wrong people.

http://apne.ws/19tehfX

?ANCELOTTI HAILED AS SAGE UPON REAL MADRID ARRIVAL

New coach Carlo Ancelotti has been tagged as "a true sage" of football by Real Madrid president Florentino Perez as he takes up his job at the Spanish giants.

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/soccer/news/20130626/carlo-ancelotti-real-madrid.ap/

?TEVEZ ARRIVES AT NEW CLUB JUVENTUS

Carlos Tevez arrives in Turin after agreeing to a three-year contract with Italian champion Juventus

http://apne.ws/124ADvn

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/top-plays-today-070246380.html

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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Twitter Is Experimenting With New Live Events Platform, ?DVR Mode? For Using Twitter With TV & More

twitter tvTwitter CEO Dick Costolo today?hinted at several upcoming features for the social media platform, including plans to address cyberbullying and better ways to filter the "signal from the noise" during live events, including something he referred to as a "DVR mode" for Twitter. These comments were made during a?moderated panel this morning at the?Center for Technology Innovation?at Brookings.

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

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Filibuster broken against abortion bill

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) ? Texas' lieutenant governor has suspended a filibuster against wide-ranging abortion restrictions, but Democrats moved quickly to appeal the decision.

Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst made the decision Tuesday night after determining that Democratic Sen. Wendy Davis strayed off the topic.

Democrats immediately appealed the decision and set off a heated debate about the rules and whether they could vote on the bill.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/filibuster-broken-against-abortion-bill-032707439.html

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Xbox Music For Windows 8.1 Preview Adds Pandora-Like Radio Feature

xbox-muusic-previewOne of the redesigned apps Microsoft is introducing in the Windows 8.1 Preview is an update to its Xbox Music app that now puts the emphasis back on your own music – whether in the cloud or on your local machine – and less on music discovery, which the previous version focused on. When you first open the app, you’ll immediately notice that it’s now designed around your music collection, and while the ‘explore’ feature is still available, it has been somewhat de-emphasized in this update. As Microsoft notes, this new version now lets you play your music with just two clicks, while before, it often took six clicks or more to listen to your collection. The main new feature in this update, however, is the introduction of a Pandora-like radio feature that lets you pick any song in the Xbox Music collection and start a new station with related results. This feature, it’s worth noting, is even available when you don’t have an Xbox Music subscription. This means, of course, that you will have to watch an ad every now and then, similar to when you listen to other free radio-like services. One thing Xbox Music doesn’t seem to allow you to do, however, is to vote songs up or down to influence the song selection for a given station. In return, though, there doesn’t seem to be a limit on how many songs you can skip per hour per station. Turning Websites Into Playlists The coolest feature of Xbox Music, however, is sadly not in the Windows 8.1 Preview yet. At a press event before today’s official unveiling Microsoft showed a feature that allows you to take a website about music (think a top-10 list, review, set list or something similar) and automatically turn it into a playlist for Xbox Music. From Internet Explorer, you can simply invoke the regular Share charm, click on ‘Music’ and the service will scan the page for artists’ names, songs and other information to put together this playlist. Microsoft says this feature will launch “by the end of this year” but didn’t provide an exact date. It’s fair to assume that it’ll be available by the time the final version of Windows 8.1 launches.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/ly_-IlSoI64/

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Mills Fleet Farm executive to vie for Congress (Star Tribune)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/315215642?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Germany probes model plane attack suspects

BERLIN (AP) ? German prosecutors said Tuesday they are investigating two men suspected of planning terrorist attacks using model airplanes, and authorities in Germany and neighboring Belgium conducted a series of searches.

No one was arrested in Tuesday's raids, which were carried out to gather "evidence for possible attack plans and preparations" and information on terrorist financing, federal prosecutors said in a statement.

Prosecutors said the investigation involves possible charges of "preparation of a serious, state-threatening act of violence," but not membership of or supporting any terrorist organization.

In all, nine properties were searched in the Stuttgart and Munich areas of southern Germany, in eastern Germany's Saxony state and in Belgium.

The two men of Tunisian origin are suspected of "procuring information and objects to commit Islamic extremist explosive attacks with remote-controlled model airplanes," prosecutors added. They gave no further information on the two men and didn't identify them.

The apartments of four acquaintances of the men, suspected of financing Islamic extremism, were searched in Germany. The investigation also targets a further acquaintance suspected of money laundering. None of the suspects was identified.

Last November a U.S. man, Rezwan Ferdaus, was sentenced to 17 years in prison over a plot to fly remote-controlled model planes packed with explosives into the Pentagon and U.S. Capitol.

Germany has seen only one successful attack by an Islamic radical ? the fatal shooting of two U.S. airmen at Frankfurt airport in 2011 by a Kosovo native who grew up in Germany and became radicalized on his own by watching jihadist propaganda on the Internet.

However, there have been several attempted attacks in the country, which is a major contributor to international forces in Afghanistan.

Separately Tuesday, French authorities said police detained six people in the Paris region on suspicion of plotting terrorist attacks in France.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-06-25-EU-Germany-Terrorism/id-8fed0730f3b44be0ad3e5a083eabeddf

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Tuesday, June 25, 2013

New Android apps worth downloading: Vine and Clean Master updates, Nat Geo QuizUp

Android users who have been getting into the newly ported Vine app will want to grab the update that leads today's Apps Worth Downloading list, which adds new sharing capabilities and hashtags. We've also got Clean Master, an app that can help you delete data and apps from your devices. Finally, there's Nat Geo QuizUp, a trivia game about wildlife in which you can challenge other players from around the world.

Vine update (Free)

VineWhat?s it about? Twitter's video-recording app, Vine, has added new features that make searching for videos and haring them even easier.

What?s cool? Vine takes a Twitter approach to video. The app s built for shooting and sharing super-short clips with your Android device -- only six seconds total. You can create your vines from various clips or make one continuous shot, and when you share it through social networks such as Twitter, the video plays in a continuous loop. The new update to Vine lets users share their videos to Facebook, and you can also now add searchable hashtags to them.

Who?s it for? If you like sharing images, try Vine's short videos as a means of capturing cool things.

What?s it like? Try SocialCam and Instagram's new video feature for more video sharing.

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Clean MasterWhat?s it about? Keep your privacy protected by efficiently removing histories, files and apps from your android device with Clean Master.

What?s cool? Mobile devices are somewhat notorious for holding data that users aren't aware of, and there are some serious security concerns with Android devices that can stem from saved personal data that apps can access without your knowledge. Clean Master is great for helping you eliminate data, browsing histories, and all kinds of other data from your device - including g fully removing apps. With Clean Master's new update, users can be sure to clear cached data saved by Instagram's new video features, and now has a browser to show you what files you're removing before you trash them.

Who?s it for? If you could use some help speeding up your device and clearing out apps, check out Clean Master.

What?s it like? Check out Battery Doctor and App Cache Cleaner for more tools to get the most out of your Android device.

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NatGeo Wild QuizUpWhat?s it about? Test your knowledge of the natural world with NatGeo Wild QuizUp's huge number of trivia questions.

What?s cool? NatGeo Wild QuizUp takes a trivia game about wildlife and makes it highly social. The game includes more than 500 questions about animals from all over the world, challenging players' knowledge in a variety of different categories. You'll also take on picture-based questions as well as text ones, and you'll be able to see how you stack up against players from around the world with online leaderboards, both for your country and for the entire world. You will also be able to challenge friends and see how you stack up against them when it comes to your wildlife quiz skills.

Who?s it for? If you like your gameplay intelligent, deep and tactical, you should try Frozen Synapse.

What?s it like? For another interesting and informative app on wildlife, try Nat Geo Explorer for Schools.

Download the Appolicious Android app

Source: http://www.androidapps.com/tech/articles/13555-new-android-apps-worth-downloading-vine-and-clean-master-updates-nat-geo-quizup

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