Tuesday, April 30, 2013

BikeSpike: LoJack for the Bicycling Set

More than a million bicycles are stolen each year, according to various law enforcement agencies, and few ever find their way back to their owners. After a successful Kickstarter campaign earlier this year, one new startup hopes to change that.

The BikeSpike uses a tiny GPS chip that will monitor your bicycling speed and distance during rides, but will also track your bike if it's stolen or, if you crash, alert specified contacts from your smartphone.

After having multiple bikes stolen over the years, company founders Clay Neigher and Bill Fienup decided to fight back with technology. "We were just sick of people stealing something we were endlessly tweaking and modifying," Fienup says. "It'd be frustrating even if it were just a steel-frame beater bike; it's still ours."

The unassuming three-ounce BikeSpike attaches to your bicycle's bottle-cage mount; anyone attempting to steal your bicycle would probably miss it. If a thief takes off with your ride, you can track it yourself or temporarily share the location data with law enforcement officials to get it back. The company also sells a specially designed carbon cage that better integrates with the unit.

If the BikeSpike's built-in accelerometer detects a crash, it will send a message via Bluetooth to your phone. If you don't respond within a specified time frame, it sends a text message to predetermined contacts on your phone, alerting them you've been in an accident. The team added this crash-detection feature after a conversation with U.S. Olympic cyclist Evelyn Stevens, who rides for the professional Specialized-lululemon team.

"She told us she often rides at 4 a.m. alone," Fienup says. "If she gets nicked on the road, she could be unconscious and unable to call for help."

Recharging takes about 4 hours via a standard AC cord. Depending on how much bicycling time you're putting in, you might need to do this only about once a month. More frequent riders would need to recharge a bit more often, depending on signal strength, update frequency and other variables.

The device has earned comparisons with General Motors' OnStar, Apple's Find My Mac, and LoJack (which actually makes its own bicycle-identification product called ReuniteIt, which is not a GPS tracker but merely an identification label that points the finder to the National Bike Registry.) Fienup says motorcycle riders have also been enthusiastic about the BikeSpike, opening up an unanticipated and potentially lucrative market.

By using an open software platform, BikeSpike's creators are encouraging third-party developers to create downloadable gaming and fitness apps or better integrate with existing programs and sites, such as Strava.

More than 630 Kickstarter users helped the fledgling company exceed its $150,000 goal in early April, with those funds earmarked for certification and tool costs. The BikeSpike should retail for about $150. Shipping starts in October. A monthly monitoring fee, starting at $4 for Kickstarter benefactors, will be needed as well. Options include the Daily Commuter plan that provides basic theft-recovery services, and the Pro Plan that adds live updates and training options. Fienup expects up to 3500 units could be sold in the first year.

Source: http://www.popularmechanics.com/outdoors/sports/technology/bikespike-loJack-for-the-bicycling-set-15408933?src=rss

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How Developers Coded in 1985

Programmer John Graham-Cumming tells a fascinating story about what coding like was back in 1985. Unlike today's programmers who wear hoodies, down energy drinks and use a paper thin computer, programmers in 1985 had to code by hand... with actual paper.

The story behind the handwritten code is fascinating. Graham-Cumming was tasked with making the software for a machine that put labels on bottles without any fancy futuristic tools. He had to write code for the software by hand because there wasn't an assembler and the KIM-1 singleboard computer he was using to prototype computer control only had a hex keypad and a small display. It was a time consuming process, to say the least.

John Graham-Cumming writes:

Of course, writing code like this is a pain. You first had to write the code (the blue), then turn it into machine code (the red) and work out memory locations for each instruction and relative jumps. At the time I didn't own a calculator capable of doing hex so I did most of the calculations needed (such as for relative jumps in my head).

In our world that's become littered with gadgets, it's always mind blowing to see how far we've come in the past 30 years. It's like creating technology with nothing! [John Graham-Cumming]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/how-developers-coded-in-1985-485041376

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Microsoft working on redesigns for Xbox, Yammer, Skype and Bing

Microsoft working on redesigns for Xbox, Yammer, Skype and Bing

Considering Microsoft's efforts to rebrand, redesign and rebuild its Windows platform, it's no surprise to hear the company is tweaking the visual aesthetics of its other brands, too. Speaking at Design Day 2013, Wolff Olins creative director Todd Simmons and Windows Phone design studio manager Albert Shum talked about the challenges of rebranding a company like Microsoft. "We're still trying to figure out how to put a consumer face on this brand, as an ecosystem," Simmons said, explaining how the team wanted to get away from the idea of Microsoft being a top-down, monolithic entity. The discussion touched on the creation of the Windows 8 logo, but also shed light on efforts to revamp other Microsoft brands. "Other brands are coming along too," Simmons explained, teasing the audience with a pair of sketches. "Bing, Skype, Yammer, Xbox -- everything is under development." With Microsoft's next generation gaming hardware lurking just around the corner, the time for a new logo might just be nigh. Read on to see the pair's full 45-minute presentation for yourself.

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Via: Verge, Travis Lowdermilk (Twitter)

Source: Vimeo, Design Day 2013

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/28/microsoft-working-on-brand-redesigns-for-xbox-yammer-skype/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Monday, April 29, 2013

Jason Aldean Files for Divorce From Jessica Ussery

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/04/jason-aldean-files-for-divorce/

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Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 announced, joins the Android tablet line-up with a low-resolution 7-inch screen

Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 announced, joins the Android tablet lineup with a 7inch screen


If an 8-inch stylus-enabled Galaxy Tablet wasn't your cup of tea, perhaps Samsung's new seven-inch model will hit your screen-size sweet spot. The Galaxy Tab 3 has gone official and the third iteration of the company's first Android tablet arrives with a dual-core 1.2GHz processor, 8GB or 16GB of storage (with expansion up to 64GB), a 3- and 1.3-megapixel camera array and a substantial 4,000mAh battery. That 7-inch WSVGA (1,024 x 600) TFT display suggests it's likely to be a keenly-priced slate, although we're still waiting to hear on specifics. Samsung's loaded up the Galaxy Tab 3 with Android 4.1 and says that the WiFi version will launch "globally" in May, while an incoming 3G model (no LTE at this point, but it'll be able to make calls) will follow in June.

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Via: The Verge

Source: Samsung Mobile

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/rOIHDTII034/

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Bangladesh building collapse death toll hits 359

SAVAR, Bangladesh (AP) ? Police in Bangladesh took six people into custody in connection with the collapse of a shoddily-constructed building that killed at least 359 people, as rescue workers admitted that voices of survivors are getting weaker after four days of being pinned under the increasingly unstable rubble.

Still, in a boost for the rescuers, 29 survivors were pulled out Saturday, said army spokesman Shahinul Islam.

Most of the victims were crushed by massive blocks of concrete and mortar falling on them when the 8-story structure came down on Wednesday morning ? a time many of the garment factories in the building were packed with workers. It was the worst tragedy to hit Bangladesh's massive garment industry, and focused attention on the poor working conditions of the employees who toil for $38 a month to produce clothing for top international brands.

Among those arrested Saturday were two owners of a garment factory, who a Dhaka court ruled can be questioned by police for 12 days without charges being filed. Also detained are two government engineers and the wife of the building owner, who is on the run, in an attempt to force him to surrender. Late Saturday, police arrested another factory owner. Violent public protests continued sporadically in Dhaka and spread to the southeastern city of Chittagong where several vehicles were set on fire.

Working round-the-clock since Wednesday through heat and a thunderstorm, rescuers on Saturday finally reached the ground floor from the top of the mountainous rubble through 25 narrow holes they have drilled, said Brig. Gen. Ali Ahmed Khan, the head of the fire services.

"We are still getting response from survivors though they are becoming weaker slowly," he said, adding that rescue workers were now able to see cars that were parked at the ground level.

"The building is very vulnerable. Any time the floors could collapse. We are performing an impossible task, but we are glad that we are able to rescue so many survivors." He said the operations will continue overnight as chances fade of people surviving for a fifth day with possibly grievous injuries and the heat.

The building site was a hive of frenzied activity all day with soldiers, police and medical workers in lab coats working non-stop. Rescuers passed bottles of water and small cylinders of oxygen up a ladder leaning against the side of the building to be given to possible survivors inside.

They used bare hands and shovels, passing chunks of brick and concrete down a human chain away from the collapsed structure. On the ground, mixed in the debris were several pairs of pink cotton pants, a mud-covered navy blue sock and a pile of green uncut fabric.

Every once in a while a badly decomposed body would be brought out, covered in cloth and plastic, to a spot where ambulances were parked. Workers furiously sprayed air-fresheners on the bodies to cover the stench, leaving the air thick with the smell of death and cheap perfume.

The bodies were kept at a makeshift morgue at the nearby Adharchandra High School before being handed over to families. Many people milled around at the school, waving photos of their missing loved ones.

Officials at a rescue control center at the scene said Sunday that the death toll had risen to 359. Military spokesman Shahinul Islam said 2,429 survivors were accounted for.

Junior Home Minister Shamsul Haque Tuku said police had arrested Bazlus Samad, managing director of New Wave Apparels Ltd., and Mahmudur Rahman Tapash, the company chairman. He told reporters that police had also detained the wife of Mohammed Sohel Rana, the owner of the collapsed Rana Plaza building, for questioning. The top three floors of the eight-story building were illegally constructed. Military spokesman Shahinul Islam said officials arrested Aminul Islam, chairman of Phantom Apparels Ltd., late Saturday in Dhaka.

Authorities are still searching for Rana, a local politician, who hasn't been seen publicly since the building collapsed. Negligence cases have been filed against him. Police in Bangladesh often detain relatives of missing suspects as a way to pressure them to surrender.

Dhaka police superintendent Habibur Rahman said Rana was a local leader of ruling Awami League's youth front. His arrest, and that of the factory owners, was ordered by Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, who is also the Awami League leader.

Police said they detained for questioning two engineers working for the Savar municipality, Imtemam Hossain and Alam Ali. They did not say what role they played in approving the design of the building but it was clear that the arrests amounted to a widening crackdown. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to speak to the media.

A garment manufacturers' group said the factories in the building employed 3,122 workers, but it was not clear how many were inside it when it collapsed.

Police say they ordered an evacuation of the building on Tuesday after cracks in Rana Plaza were found, but the factories ignored the order and were operating when it collapsed the next day. Video before the collapse shows cracks in walls, with apparent attempts at repair. It also shows columns missing chunks of concrete and police talking to building operators.

Officials said soon after the collapse that numerous construction regulations had been violated.

The disaster is the worst ever for the country's booming and powerful garment industry, surpassing a fire five months ago that killed 112 people and brought widespread pledges to improve worker-safety standards. Since then, very little has changed in Bangladesh, where low wages have made it a magnet for numerous global brands.

Bangladesh's garment industry was the third largest in the world in 2011, after China and Italy, having grown rapidly in the past decade. The country's minimum wage is the equivalent of about $38 a month.

Among the garment makers in the building were Phantom Apparels, Phantom Tac, Ether Tex, New Wave Style and New Wave Bottoms. Altogether, they produced several million shirts, pants and other garments a year.

The New Wave companies, according to their website, make clothing for several major North American and European retailers.

Britain's Primark acknowledged it was using a factory in Rana Plaza, but many other retailers distanced themselves from the disaster, saying they were not involved with the factories at the time of the collapse or had not recently ordered garments from them.

Wal-Mart said none of its clothing had been authorized to be made in the facility, but it is investigating whether there was any unauthorized production.

__

AP writers Chris Blake and Gillian Wong in Dhaka, and Kay Johnson in Mumbai contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bangladesh-building-collapse-death-toll-hits-359-033425257.html

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UK concerned over treatment of suspects in UAE

LONDON (AP) ? The British government says it has expressed concern to United Arab Emirates authorities over allegations that three Britons held in Dubai on drug charges were abused.

Grant Cameron, Suneet Jeerh and Karl Williams were arrested while on holiday in July and accused of possessing synthetic cannabis.

Legal charity Reprieve says Williams was given electric shocks to his testicles, while all three men were threatened with guns and made to sign documents in Arabic, a language they do not understand.

The men deny the drug charges. A judge is due to deliver verdicts in their trial on Monday.

The Foreign Office said Sunday that British officials "have raised, and continue to raise, these allegations at the most senior levels."

?It called for a "full, impartial and independent" inquiry into the claims.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/uk-concerned-over-treatment-suspects-uae-134519669.html

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Sunday, April 28, 2013

DNA at 60: Still Much to Learn

On the diamond jubilee of the double helix, we should admit that we don't fully understand how evolution works at the molecular level, suggests Philip Ball


DNA

Image: Wikimedia Commons/Yikrazuul

This week's diamond jubilee of the discovery of DNA's molecular structure rightly celebrates how Francis Crick, James Watson and their collaborators launched the 'genomic age' by revealing how hereditary information is encoded in the double helix. Yet the conventional narrative ? in which their 1953 Nature paper led inexorably to the Human Genome Project and the dawn of personalized medicine ? is as misleading as the popular narrative of gene function itself, in which the DNA sequence is translated into proteins and ultimately into an organism's observable characteristics, or phenotype.

Sixty years on, the very definition of 'gene' is hotly debated. We do not know what most of our DNA does, nor how, or to what extent it governs traits. In other words, we do not fully understand how evolution works at the molecular level.

That sounds to me like an extraordinarily exciting state of affairs, comparable perhaps to the disruptive discovery in cosmology in 1998 that the expansion of the Universe is accelerating rather than decelerating, as astronomers had believed since the late 1920s. Yet, while specialists debate what the latest findings mean, the rhetoric of popular discussions of DNA, genomics and evolution remains largely unchanged, and the public continues to be fed assurances that DNA is as solipsistic a blueprint as ever.

The more complex picture now emerging raises difficult questions that this outsider knows he can barely discern. But I can tell that the usual tidy tale of how 'DNA makes RNA makes protein' is sanitized to the point of distortion. Instead of occasional, muted confessions from genomics boosters and popularizers of evolution that the story has turned out to be a little more complex, there should be a bolder admission ? indeed a celebration ? of the known unknowns.

DNA dispute
A student referring to textbook discussions of genetics and evolution could be forgiven for thinking that the 'central dogma' devised by Crick and others in the 1960s ? in which information flows in a linear, traceable fashion from DNA sequence to messenger RNA to protein, to manifest finally as phenotype ? remains the solid foundation of the genomic revolution. In fact, it is beginning to look more like a casualty of it.

Although it remains beyond serious doubt that Darwinian natural selection drives much, perhaps most, evolutionary change, it is often unclear at which phenotypic level selection operates, and particularly how it plays out at the molecular level.

Take the Encyclopedia of DNA Elements (ENCODE) project, a public research consortium launched by the US National Human Genome Research Institute in Bethesda, Maryland. Starting in 2003, ENCODE researchers set out to map which parts of human chromosomes are transcribed, how transcription is regulated and how the process is affected by the way the DNA is packaged in the cell nucleus. Last year, the group revealed that there is much more to genome function than is encompassed in the roughly 1% of our DNA that contains some 20,000 protein-coding genes ? challenging the old idea that much of the genome is junk. At least 80% of the genome is transcribed into RNA.

Some geneticists and evolutionary biologists say that all this extra transcription may simply be noise, irrelevant to function and evolution. But, drawing on the fact that regulatory roles have been pinned to some of the non-coding RNA transcripts discovered in pilot projects, the ENCODE team argues that at least some of this transcription could provide a reservoir of molecules with regulatory functions ? in other words, a pool of potentially 'useful' variation. ENCODE researchers even propose, to the consternation of some, that the transcript should be considered the basic unit of inheritance, with 'gene' denoting not a piece of DNA but a higher-order concept pertaining to all the transcripts that contribute to a given phenotypic trait.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=22468e1a163e79ec52d768c51bb020a7

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Weekly paycheck but monthly bills? Here's how to budget.

Many employees receive their pay on a weekly or biweekly schedule, Hamm writes. Meanwhile, most bills come on a monthly basis, some even less frequently. There are some tips for reconciling the two.

By Trent Hamm,?Guest blogger / April 28, 2013

Some workers struggle to create a monthly budget when they are paid on a weekly or bi-weekly basis.

Ann Hermes/Staff

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Every so often, I?ll get a question like this one, from Gina:

Skip to next paragraph Trent Hamm

The Simple Dollar is a blog for those of us who need both cents and sense: people fighting debt and bad spending habits while building a financially secure future and still affording a latte or two. Our busy lives are crazy enough without having to compare five hundred mutual funds ? we just want simple ways to manage our finances and save a little money.

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I am a federal employee and I get my paycheck every two weeks but all of my bills are monthly. What?s an easy budgeting system?

This is a pretty consistent problem, actually.?Many?employees receive their pay on a weekly or biweekly schedule. Meanwhile,?most?bills come on a monthly basis, some even less frequently.

How do you easily reconcile the two and take on a budgeting plan?

This is a problem I had to deal with in the past. Prior to 2008, I was employed in a situation that paid me every two weeks. It was a bit of a struggle to find a good balance between the paycheck and the monthly bills. My wife was also on a biweekly system, but her paydays were on different days than mine.?

MS Dhoni not satisfied with his bowlers' performance ? Cricket News ...

MS Dhoni not satisfied with his bowlers? performance ? Cricket News Update

Despite having won last night?s match against Sunrisers Hyderabad comprehensively by five wickets, Chennai Super Kings? skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni was not happy with his side?s performance in the match.

The R Ashwin led Chennai attack has a history of struggling to finish at the death and they did the same during the match against debutant Sunrisers as they ended up giving away more than 60 runs in the last five overs. The tourists were struggling at 98 for 5 in 15.3 overs but they finished their innings at 159 for 6, courtesy Shikhar Dhawan?s belligerent 63 off 45 balls. Dhawan was ably supported by Ashish Reddy who played a pugnacious knock of 36 runs from just 16 balls, plundering three sixes and two fours.

Dwayne Bravo, who has been Chennai?s most consistent wicket taker this year, turned out to be the most expensive bowler last night, conceding 37 runs in his allotted quota of four overs, he managed to claim two wickets though. MS Dhoni was visibly disappointed as he walked off the field after the innings break, shaking his head in disbelief.

"We started off well with the ball but in the death overs, we conceded too many runs. The bowlers did not perform well. The performances have been good but we have to improve our death bowling,? said the Ranchi wicketkeeper batsman at the post-match presentation ceremony.

"Not one bowler has bowled yorkers and it will be a critical factor as the tournament progresses. We have been consistent in the fielding department," added Dhoni.

However, Dhoni led his side from the front with the bat, playing a stupendous innings of 67 not out off just 37 deliveries to help Chennai get the better of the Sunrisers Hyderabad by five wickets. Michael Hussey was the other notable performer with the bat from the home side, scoring 45 runs off just 26 balls.

Chennai Super Kings Mentor Stephen Fleming lauded Dhoni for playing a match winning knock.

"We lost wickets at crucial intervals but the key was the Dhoni cameo. We would like to improve in some areas but I am happy that we are in the top half of the table at the start of the tournament," Fleming said after the match.

With six wins from eight matches, Super Kings currently find themselves at No. 2 on the tournament?s points table, just behind Royal Challengers Bangalore, who also have six wins from eight games but find themselves ahead of CSK on the basis of a better net run rate.

Source: http://blogs.bettor.com/MS-Dhoni-not-satisfied-with-his-bowlers-performance-Cricket-News-Update-a214867

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Humane Society for Greater Nashua recognized for volunteerism ...

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Nashua;46.0;http://forecast.weather.gov/images/wtf/small/nfew.png. The Telegraph · Home ... Franks has been a volunteer at the Humane Society for eight years, and logged 2,439 volunteer hours in 2011. Enlarge. NASHUA ...

Source: http://www.nashuatelegraph.com/news/1001830-469/humane-society-for-greater-nashua-recognized-for.html

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Majority of SKoreans in NKorean factory to return

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) ? Roughly three quarters of the 175 South Koreans still at a shuttered factory park in North Korea are scheduled to return Saturday after Seoul decided to withdraw them over Pyongyang's rejection of its demand for talks on the last symbol of inter-Korean cooperation, the government said.

The industrial complex in the border city of Kaesong bustled with more than 53,000 North Korean workers and 800 South Korean managers before Pyongyang pulled its entire work force out and banned South Koreans from entering it earlier this month.

The park, the biggest employer in Kaesong with a population of 200,000 according to North Korean officials, is the most significant casualty in the recent deterioration of ties between the Koreas. Operating with South Korean know-how and technology and with cheap labor from North Korea since 2004, it has weathered past cycles of hostility between the rivals, including two attacks blamed on North Korea in 2010 that killed 50 South Koreans.

On Thursday, Seoul issued a Friday deadline for North Korea to respond to its call for talks because it was worried about its workers not having access to food and medicine. North Korea hasn't allowed South Korea to send supplies to its managers in Kaesong since the ban.

Just hours after Pyongyang dismissed Seoul's demand for talks as "deceptive," Ryoo Kihl-jae, South Korea's top official on relations with North Korea, said Friday in a televised statement his government decided to pull all the remaining South Koreans in Kaesong.

"We've made the inevitable decision to bring back all the remaining personnel in Kaesong for the protection of our people as their difficulties continue to grow," Unification Minister Ryoo said, urging the North to protect the property of South Korean companies at Kaesong and ensure the safe return of South Koreans home.

His ministry said later Friday in a text message that 127 of the remaining South Koreans in Kaesong would return Saturday. The remaining workers are expected to leave Kaesong on Sunday.

In Friday's statement, a spokesman for the North's powerful National Defense Commission promised the workers' safety if they withdrew, while lashing out at Seoul over ongoing U.S.-South Korean military drills and the spreading of anti-North Korea leaflets at the border as proof of Seoul's insincerity.

"If they are truly worried about the lives of South Korean personnel in the (complex), they may withdraw all of them to the south side where there are stockpiles of food and raw materials and sound medical conditions," said the statement carried by official media.

"If the South's puppet group looks away from reality and pursues the worsening of the situation, we will be compelled to first take final and decisive grave measures," it said.

Impoverished North Korea has objected to views in South Korea that the Kaesong park is a source of badly needed hard currency. South Korean companies paid salaries to North Korean workers averaging $127 a month, according to South Korea's government. That is less than one-sixteenth of the average salary of South Korean manufacturer workers.

The complex, conceived following the historic 2000 summit between late North Korean leader Kim Jong Il and late South Korean President Kim Dae-jung, broke ground in 2003. The plan was for South Korean firms to build 500 factories as part of a pledge to help develop North Korea's economy, Pak Chol Su, vice director of the General Bureau for Central Guidance, which manages Kaesong, told the Associated Press in September.

The statements on Kaesong this week follow what had been something of a lull after a weeks-long tirade of warlike North Korean rhetoric that included threats of nuclear war and missile strikes. Tension rose as Seoul responded with its own tough language to Pyongyang's outburst, which was unusually violent, even by the standards of the already hostile relationship between the Koreas.

"This is a war of pride between the Koreas, but they are conducting it while leaving some room for talks," Lee Hochul, a political science professor at Incheon National University in South Korea, said, adding neither side is mentioning a permanent shutdown of the industrial complex.

Meanwhile, North Korea said Saturday it will soon put a detained American on trial for allegedly trying to overthrow the government, further complicating its already tense relations with the United States. Earlier in Washington, Republican and Democratic lawmakers introduced a bill calling for the punishment of companies, banks and governments that engage in illicit dealings with North Korea. Pyongyang has already come under a series of U.N. and U.S. sanctions for its three nuclear tests since 2006, including the latest in February.

In South Korea, regular U.S.-South Korean military drills, which Pyongyang complained bitterly about, are set to end Tuesday.

"Even at this moment, South Korea is ramping up the intensity of coastal landing drills with the United States in the east, driving the already tense situation to a point of explosion," North Korea said in its statement, complaining about alleged South Korean military plans in the event the North held the Kaesong managers hostage.

__

AP writer Youkyung Lee contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/majority-skoreans-nkorean-factory-return-035959799.html

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Video: Obama: "Planned Parenthood isn't going anywhere" (cbsnews)

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Saturday, April 27, 2013

New excavations indicate use of fertilizers 5,000 years ago

New excavations indicate use of fertilizers 5,000 years ago [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 26-Apr-2013
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Contact: Tony Axelsson
tony.axelsson@gu.se
46-070-585-4494
University of Gothenburg

Researchers from the University of Gothenburg, Sweden, have spent many years studying the remains of a Stone Age community in Karleby outside the town of Falkping, Sweden. The researchers have for example tried to identify parts of the inhabitants' diet. Right now they are looking for evidence that fertilisers were used already during the Scandinavian Stone Age, and the results of their first analyses may be exactly what they are looking for.

Using remains of grains and other plants and some highly advanced analysis techniques, the two researchers and archaeologists Tony Axelsson and Karl-Gran Sjgren have been able to identify parts of the diet of their Stone Age ancestors.

'Our first task was to find so-called macrofossils, such as old weed seeds or pieces of grain. By analysing macrofossils, we can learn a lot about Stone Age farming and how important farming was in relation to livestock ranching,' says Axelsson.

Another aim has been to collect animal bone material or simply 5,000 year old food remains. The researchers know that pieces of bones from cattle, pigs and sheep can be found at the site.

'By studying the levels of isotopes in the bones, we can for example find out where the animals were raised, which in turn can give important information about their role in trade,' says Sjgren.

The results of the first grain analyses have now been presented, and besides revealing that both barley and wheat were farmed at the site, they point to elevated levels of the isotope N15 (nitrogen 15). The elevated levels may indicate that fertilisers were used in the area of Karleby already 5,000 years ago.

'We will continue our analyses both in the field and in the lab, and are hoping to find more macrofossils. Hopefully we'll find some weed seeds, as they may help confirm that fertilisers were indeed used since the type of weeds found in a field can signal whether fertilisers or some other method was used,' says Axelsson.

###

The site is located east of the Logrden farm Karleby outside the town of Falkping. Click the link to view a map: http://kartor.eniro.se/m/9gC0J

Contact person: Tony Axelsson, tel. +46 (0)70 585 44 94, e-mail tony.axelsson@gu.se


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New excavations indicate use of fertilizers 5,000 years ago [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 26-Apr-2013
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Contact: Tony Axelsson
tony.axelsson@gu.se
46-070-585-4494
University of Gothenburg

Researchers from the University of Gothenburg, Sweden, have spent many years studying the remains of a Stone Age community in Karleby outside the town of Falkping, Sweden. The researchers have for example tried to identify parts of the inhabitants' diet. Right now they are looking for evidence that fertilisers were used already during the Scandinavian Stone Age, and the results of their first analyses may be exactly what they are looking for.

Using remains of grains and other plants and some highly advanced analysis techniques, the two researchers and archaeologists Tony Axelsson and Karl-Gran Sjgren have been able to identify parts of the diet of their Stone Age ancestors.

'Our first task was to find so-called macrofossils, such as old weed seeds or pieces of grain. By analysing macrofossils, we can learn a lot about Stone Age farming and how important farming was in relation to livestock ranching,' says Axelsson.

Another aim has been to collect animal bone material or simply 5,000 year old food remains. The researchers know that pieces of bones from cattle, pigs and sheep can be found at the site.

'By studying the levels of isotopes in the bones, we can for example find out where the animals were raised, which in turn can give important information about their role in trade,' says Sjgren.

The results of the first grain analyses have now been presented, and besides revealing that both barley and wheat were farmed at the site, they point to elevated levels of the isotope N15 (nitrogen 15). The elevated levels may indicate that fertilisers were used in the area of Karleby already 5,000 years ago.

'We will continue our analyses both in the field and in the lab, and are hoping to find more macrofossils. Hopefully we'll find some weed seeds, as they may help confirm that fertilisers were indeed used since the type of weeds found in a field can signal whether fertilisers or some other method was used,' says Axelsson.

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The site is located east of the Logrden farm Karleby outside the town of Falkping. Click the link to view a map: http://kartor.eniro.se/m/9gC0J

Contact person: Tony Axelsson, tel. +46 (0)70 585 44 94, e-mail tony.axelsson@gu.se


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


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-04/uog-nei042613.php

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Friday, April 26, 2013

Uruguay fret over Suarez's fitness for Confed. Cup

Liverpool's Suarez reacts after missing a chance to score during their English Premier League soccer match against West Bromwich Albion in Liverpool

updated 5:23 p.m. ET April 25, 2013

MONTEVIDEO (Reuters) - South American champions Uruguay are worried Luis Suarez will lose match fitness during his 10-match ban for biting with the Confederations Cup looming in June.

Suarez is already suspended for Uruguay's South American World Cup qualifier in Venezuela on June 11 and they go from there to Brazil for the June 15-30 tournament.

The English FA handed the Liverpool striker the hefty suspension after he bit Chelsea defender Branislav Ivanovic's arm during the sides' 2-2 draw in the Premier League at Anfield on Sunday.

"The fact that he won't be playing, that he won't have matches for a long time, disadvantages him and us," Uruguay physical fitness trainer Jose Herrera said on Thursday.

"We're thinking of Luis for the Confederations Cup because, as is well known, he is suspended for the qualifier against Venezuela. And the Cup is little more than a month away, he could lose his physical shape," Herrera was quoted as saying by the Uruguayan daily El Pais's website (www.ovaciondigital.com.uy).

Uruguay coach Oscar Tabarez's staff hope Liverpool will release Suarez before the end of the Premier League season since they have only four matches left.

"We have to see if they want him to stay there training with them and playing some friendlies or if they will hand him over sooner," Herrera said.

Uruguay are also awaiting a verdict from world body FIFA over Suarez being caught on video punching Chile's Gonzalo Jara in a qualifier in Santiago last month, an incident missed by the referee.

Uruguayan FA (AUF) president Sebastian Bauza, who presented FIFA with the AUF's view of the incident in which Suarez reacted to aggression from Jara, was reported as being confident FIFA will close the case without punishing the striker.

The Confederations Cup, involving the champions of the six continents, World Cup hosts Brazil and holders Spain, is a of dress rehearsal for next year's World Cup.

The other nations taking part are Mexico, Nigeria, Japan, Tahiti and Italy, who qualified for Europe after losing the Euro 2012 final to Spain.

(Reporting by Felipe Llambias; Writing by Rex Gowar in Buenos Aires, editing by Ed Osmond)

(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2013. Check for restrictions at: http://about.reuters.com/fulllegal.asp


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