Saturday, February 2, 2013

HTC?s flagship M7 smartphone will reportedly launch on March 8th

HTC M7 Release DateHTC

HTC (2498) is expected to unveil its latest smartphone, code-named M7, at a press conference in New York City next month. Earlier leaks have suggested that the device will be similar to the DROID DNA?and will be equipped with a 4.7-inch full HD 1080p display, 1.7GHz quad-core Snapdragon S4 Pro processor, 13-megapixel rear camera and a 2,300 mAh battery. According to HTC Source, the company will release the M7 in Europe on March 8th and the handset will arrive in the U.S. shortly thereafter, giving HTC a few months lead against Samsung?s upcoming Galaxy S IV smartphone. It was also reported that the M7 will be available in either black or white. HTC is scheduled to hold a press conference in New York City on February 19th.

[More from BGR: A room full of Android and iPhone users try to figure out BlackBerry 10 [video]]

This article was originally published on BGR.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/htc-flagship-m7-smartphone-reportedly-launch-march-8th-185009666.html

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Scientific genius is extinct, expert argues

Modern-day science has little room for the likes of Galileo, who first used the telescope to study the sky, or Charles Darwin, who put forward the theory of evolution, argues a psychologist and expert in scientific genius.

Dean Keith Simonton of the University of California, Davis, says that just like the ill-fated dodo, scientific geniuses like these men have gone extinct.

"Future advances are likely to build on what is already known rather than alter the foundations of knowledge," Simonton writes in a commentary published in Thursday?s issue of the journal Nature.

An end to momentous leaps forward?
For the past century, no truly original disciplines have been created; instead new arrivals are hybrids of existing ones, such as astrophysics or biochemistry. It has also become much more difficult for an individual to make groundbreaking contributions, since cutting-edge work is often done by large, well-funded teams, he argues.

What's more, almost none of the natural sciences appear ripe for a revolution.

"The core disciplines have accumulated not so much anomalies as mere loose ends that will be tidied up one way or another," he writes.

Only theoretical physics shows signs of a "crisis," or accumulation of findings that cannot be explained, that leaves it open for a major paradigm shift, he writes. [ Creative Genius: The World's Greatest Minds ]

Prior predictions
This isn't the first time someone has predicted that science's most exciting days are over.

Before the arrival of quantum mechanics and Einstein's theory of relativity, two theories physicists have not yet been able to reconcile, 19th-century scientists predicted that all major discoveries had been made, Sherrilyn Roush, an associate professor of philosophy at the University of California, Berkeley, pointed out.

"They didn't see the revolution coming, didn't even see the need for it," Roush told LiveScience in an email, adding, "Above all, revolution and genius, like accidents, are not predictable. You often don't even know you need them until they show up."?

She did not find Simonton's argument persuasive, noting that geniuses aren't necessarily crucial for revolutions in thinking, and she questioned the importance he placed on the creation of new disciplines.

  1. Science news from NBCNews.com

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      Nearly 2,000 years ago, at a time when Egypt was under the control of the Roman Empire, a young woman with an elaborate hairstyle was laid to rest only yards away from a king's pyramid, researchers report.

    2. Elusive giant squid is still a deep mystery
    3. Goggle-wearing rats learn predictive skills
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"People are dazzled by revolutions and have too little appreciation of 'normal science,' where we accumulate lasting, and often useful, knowledge," she wrote in the email.

Coping with increasing information
While he sees diminished opportunity for genius, Simonton says that the demands of science are increasing.

"If anything, scientists today might require more raw intelligence to become a first-rate researcher than it took to become a genius during the 'heroic age' of the scientific revolution in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, given how much information and experience researchers must now acquire to become proficient," he writes.

Roush agreed, saying that nowadays reading all of the literature published in a particular field may no longer be possible.

Individual researchers, and human society, in general, may be adapting to the increasing demands by redistributing the work both to other people and to computers, she told LiveScience.

Given the increasing use of computers to process information, ?who knows that the ability to see it all and abstract to new ideas is not increasing?" she wrote in the email.

Follow ?LiveScience? on Twitter @livescience. We're also on Facebook? and Google+.

? 2012 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/id/50670351/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Friday, February 1, 2013

Today?s iPad 2 / iPad wallpapers 30/01/2013

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'No sell-off' for public forests

The government has announced that it will not sell off publicly owned forests in England.

It says it will create a new public body that will hold in trust the nation's forests for future generations.

Environment Secretary Owen Paterson was responding to a report that called the estate a "national asset" that should not be sold off.

He also announced that the policy of selling off 15% of the estate to cover costs would be rescinded.

Mr Paterson gave few details of the new, independent body that would own, maintain and safeguard the public forest estate except that it would be set up in the longer term.

"The new body will have greater independence from Government and greater freedom to manage its resources and maximise its income but with the right safeguards in place to operate for the long-term benefit of people, nature and the economy," he said.

The Independent Panel on Forestry (IPF) was established in March 2011 after a ministerial U-turn on plans to dispose of a chunk of its woodlands.

The Rt Rev James Jones, Bishop of Liverpool and who chaired the Panel, welcomed the government's response saying it was an "unequivocal endorsement" of the IPF's recommendations.

"I welcome the rescinding of the policy for disposal of 15% of the estate. This is a recognition that the public benefits that flow from forests and woodlands have a legitimate claim on the public purse," he said.

Hen Anderson, co-founder of campaign group Save Our Woods also welcomed the government's response, recognising that it was a vindication of the 500,000 who signed an online petition against the proposal to sell the estate.

"Very positive - an exciting result for us. Two years ago they were flogging off the lot, but a half a million people kicked them in the pants, amazing result."

The IPF also recommended that woodland cover should increase from 10% to 15% by 2060. But the government says it will only increase this to 12%.

However the government is increasing the amount of money that will be spent on forests, boosting the Forestry Commission's budget by ?3.5m next year to make up for lost income from sales of woodland. They are also allocating ?2m to recognise the additional pressures arising from the outbreak of Ash dieback disease.

This increased emphasis on protection was a concern for the Woodland Trust. A spokesperson said they were "broadly happy" with the government's approach but they were concerned that ministers were not putting enough emphasis on improvement and expansions in forestry.

"We need urgent clarification on the government's plans on the future of forest services," said the spokesperson.

Among the other recommendations in last year's IPF report:

  • Measurably increasing the quantity and quality of access to public and privately owned woodlands;
  • Ensuring every child "has an element of woodland-based learning";
  • Protecting current funding for woodland management and creation;
  • Increasing England's woodland cover from 10% to 15% by 2060;
  • Creating a charter, stating that the public forest estate should be "held in trust for the nation".

There are in excess of 1,000 publicly owned forests in England, covering an estimated 258,000 hectares.

The Public Forest Estate (PFE) accounts for 18% of English woodlands, and covers about 9% of the nation - one of the lowest percentages in Europe.

The estate has been valued at about ?700m and costs about ?15m per year to manage, equivalent to about 30p per year per person in England.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-21275432#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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The Grieving Child-MN. Parent Magazine ? Kelly Jo McDonnell

Image

As I stood in the quiet Iowa cemetery, I watched my 10-year-old son as he flitted around my Father?s tombstone.? Grandpa had suddenly and unexpectedly had an aortic aneurism this year, and before we knew it, was gone from our lives.? My sons Grandpa was a larger than life personality, and while I wrestled with my own grief, I worried about the large void left for my son, who was 10 and had been very close to his Grandpa. The whole experience was so sudden and a blur, and I wondered if I had traumatized his grief process since I was still running to catch up with my own.

Out of the corner of my eye, I noticed Hayden catching the glowing fireflies that had popped out during the twilight hours. He was cupping them to his mouth, saying something, and then releasing them into the air. As I shuffled closer, curious, I over heard him whispering to the fireflies ?Protect Grandpa?, before releasing them.? That bittersweet moment is etched into my memory, and for some reason, left me feeling a bit more peaceful. Perhaps Hayden was coping better than I had thought. Better than his Mother, anyway.

Grief is a tricky business, for both adults and children. And let?s face it; nothing prepares you for this business until your knee-deep in it.? But don?t make the mistake in thinking that kids don?t grasp the grieving process. Kids can grieve at any age, and it depends on their age, developmental stage and life experiences.

Inez Bersie-Mize, a licensed family therapist with Midwest Center in St. Paul, agrees that the child?s age makes a big difference. ?Their cognitive abilities, and the ability to understand and comprehend makes a big difference,? she explained, ?around 7 and 8 they still have that magical thinking, that the person could come back, or that ?Grandpa looks like he?s sleeping?. It?s very common for that age to have that thinking. Their capacity to tolerate pain, and whom they have around them also makes a difference. Their relationship to the person who died comes into play.? Kids are very tuned into their sense of pain, and if they think the person died, had a great deal of pain or trauma, then they?ll have a harder time getting over it then someone who died in their sleep.?

Come to think of it, son Hayden?s first questions about Grandpa?s passing was pain-related.? Questions such as ?Did it hurt??? ?Did Grandpa know what was happening to his heart?? Other kids, who have witnessed someone battle an illness, deal with different questions.? When Molly Sproull lost her Father to bone cancer, her son was 6 and daughter was in 3rd grade. ?My Father was in hospice, so we all knew it was coming,? Sproull remembered, ?So Ben got to say goodbye. I didn?t really pay much attention growing through the process. He was on his best behavior (during the illness) because of what I was going through. But after the funeral, that?s when he really started acting out.?

Sproull said the calls from teacher started coming soon after the funeral, and involved throwing objects and reacting to other kids. ?I look back, and I realize he was grieving,? said Sproull, ?he was just not himself.? I always tried to answer his questions (about Grandpa) without scaring him. It was hard. My daughter Abby had more tears. She understood a bit more, and I didn?t really see any negative reactions with her. She was more Mothering to me, asking if I was OK. She recognized I was grieving, even as a 3rd grader.?

Bersie-Mize said that?s the fine line that parents must walk while going through their own grief process. ?It?s better to explain it then to hide it,? stressed Bersie-Mitze, ?they need to know what?s happening, what the wake will look like, and have a choice to go or not to go. They need to be informed. A lot of kids fear crying, but when everyone else is crying, it helps them make that decision. They need to be informed.?

Brent and Christie Cuttell, Cottage Grove, are advocates of being informed. Brent lost his Father last year after an extended illness, and the couple?s three children range in age from 7 to teenagers.?? ?Kids grieve in a similar sense that we do, but it?s more pronounced. Everything a child does is more pronounced?they are louder and faster than we are, and their minds are sharper,? said Brent Cuttell, ?youngest son Camden was 7 and a half when Grandpa died. He?s a visual kid, so whenever he sees a red hat, like his Grandpa Cuttell used to wear, he gets emotional. He?ll say ?I miss Grandpa?, or ?That guy in the red hat looks just like Grandpa?. They figure out that stepping stone ? you have a Grandpa, you might even have a Great Grandpa. Now that Grandpa?s gone, that void is filled with Dad or Mom. That stepping stone and known, rock solid entity is gone.?

Christie Cuttell, who is a social worker at Psyche Recovery, Inc. in St. Paul, says her knowledge of the grief business helped her cope with her own family?s journey. ?Americans are horrible at death and dying,? she explained, ?we don?t like to talk about it, we don?t plan for it, yet it?s the only thing that is absolutely sure. It?s very frustrating when you work on death and dying. The more open we are with our kids and each other, the smoother it is going to go.?

She said youngest son Camden?s grief comes and goes in short waves and bursts, usually associated with visual triggers. ?At first he was very careful not to grieve in front of us,? remembered Christie, ?he didn?t want to upset people more. But when he went back to school and the teacher had given him an assignment to write about feelings, Camden could only get through 2 sentences, before he burst out crying.? I do think kids generally grieve better than adults. They are not at all selfish. Their genuine, and to them, it?s very literal.?

The Cuttell?s said their older teenagers took on a different grieving pattern.? ?Myles, being the boy, was more non-verbal,? remembered Christie, ?but his actions were kinder. He was not causing trouble, and would let things go that he usually wouldn?t. He was just quieter. Daughter Abby just cried her brains out, night and day. The teenaged kids had a very difference connection with Grandpa, as they are so much older than Camden. They saw Grandpa healthy, and he wasn?t sick in their memories.?

?Some of it is really just talking with them,? explained Bersie-Mize, ?it really is. It?s OK that it hurts or that it?s scary. It?s OK to say those things to kids. The more they are involved in the planning, the better. It?s important not to exclude them from your own grief. Explain how you feel inside, so they don?t feel alone or isolated.?

Through the whole process, watch for warning signs of something deeper than ?healthy? grief. ?Watch how long they are staying in grief,? explained Bersie-Mize, ?and if they are functioning in school and with friends. Are they isolating, or getting angry. Things like that should not be ignored, and sometime professional support is needed.?? Other factors to watch include inability to sleep, or loss of appetite, acting much younger for an extended period, repeated statements for wanting to join the dead person, or excessively imitating the deceased family member.

She went on to explain that it wasn?t until around the 1950?s or later that children were included at all in the whole grieving process, and until then was kept very separated from the whole ordeal. ?Including them in the process, perhaps picking out flowers, or writing poems to put in the casket, are all closure activities. Talk about how sad it feels, and the hurt inside. Let them see the tears.?

With our family, we included all the grandsons as much as we could in the planning, and communicated what would be going on during the wake and the funeral itself. Hayden had the choice of viewing Grandpa during the wake. He sat in the back of the church in the last pew for a short time before making up his mind and marching up the aisle resolutely next to me. We also let each of the grandsons choose a ?Grandpa treasure? from his dresser, and they all carried them in their pockets during the funeral. I noticed Hayden rubbing his Grandpa?s favorite pocketknife during the funeral.

After our visit to the cemetery that day, Hayden asked if Grandpa had known we were there visiting him, or if he was too busy up in heaven.

I guess only the fireflies and my dad really know the answer to that question.

Side Bar:

Kids books that help cope with grief:

?

The Fall of Freddie the Leaf ? Leo Buscaglia

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The Next Place ? Warren Hanson

?

The Old Coyote by Nancy Wood

?

Papa?s New Home ? Jessica Lynn Curtis

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Source: http://kellyjomcdonnell.com/2013/01/31/the-grieving-child-mn-parent-magazine/

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Want to hop the pond? Europe ?still reasonably priced?

6 hrs.

There's?good?news?for?budget-conscious?travelers?who?want?to?hop?the?pond?to?Europe:?Two new rankings show?many?top?destinations?are?downright?affordable.

"Most?of?Europe?is?still?reasonably?priced?for?Americans,"?with?costs?in?many?cities?similar?to?those?in?North?America,?said?Roger?Wade,?who?researched?and?compiled?two?recently?released?lists?that?rate?47?major?European?cities?based?on?affordability.

Bucharest (Romania), Sofia (Bulgaria) and Krakow (Poland)?are the cheapest major tourist cities on the?European Backpacker Index?for 2013, while Zurich (Switzerland), Oslo (Norway)?and Venice (Italy)?ranked as the most expensive.?

Sofia, Bucharest and Budapest (Hungary) are?the?most?affordable?destinations?on?the?Europe 3-Star Traveler Index for 2013, and Zurich, Paris and Venice are costliest.

?In places like Krakow, Budapest, and Prague, it's still very easy to get a meal for $5 and a beer for under $2 -- in very pleasant surroundings,? said Wade, founder of Price of Travel, a website that?helps?travelers compare expenses in major?cities around the world.

Europe's cheapest cities cost about a quarter as much as its most expensive,?the indices show.?

The Daily Backpacker Index daily rate for Bucharest is currently $23.38 a day; for Zurich, it?s $119.78 a day.

Sofia is the least expensive city on the 3-Star Traveler Index, due to well-located and well-reviewed hotels that can frequently be found for about $40 per night. A similar 3-star hotel room in Zurich starts at around $155 per night in shoulder season, Wade said.?Prices crept up very little overall for food, attractions and transportation, he?added.?

Rates?for?hostels?and?hotels?in?some?European?cities?have?been?declining,?data?show.

Hostels have come down in Bucharest, Krakow, Zagreb (Croatia), Barcelona (Spain) and even Rome, Wade said. ?It seems like more new hostels continue to open up (often converted from under-performing hotels), and hostel customers tend to be more price sensitive so the expensive places just don't fill up.?

Deals for 3-star hotels are good in St. Petersburg (Russia), Athens (Greece), Berlin and Barcelona, he said. ?The most dramatic difference by far is Moscow, which is?15th cheapest for backpackers, but 34th for 3-star hotels. The city has some good and cheap hostels, and things like public transportation and food are quite cheap if you follow the locals," Wade said. "But international-standard hotels in Moscow are notoriously expensive so it's in a whole different price category for those seeking comfort and English-language menus.??

The Backpacker Index is based on the price of a hostel bed (one night in a good location with good reviews), two public transportation rides, three budget meals, one cultural attraction and three inexpensive beers (or wine) for each day in each city.??

The 3-Star Index uses a centrally located and well-rated 3-star hotel room, taxi rides and a higher allowance for food prices.

These types of resources "appeal because they intrigue us and speak to the armchair traveler in us all, said?Jonathon Day, an assistant professor at Purdue University?s School of Hospitality and Tourism Management.

But they also are practical for planning, to help people organize and sort through an overwhelming amount of information.

It is ?really hard to compare prices of complex things like a visit to a city,? Day said. And by offering new options beyond the iconic locations, which are often expensive, it encourages experimentation. ?Lists like these place destinations that aren't 'top of mind' in front of potential travelers,? he said. ?This is good news for destinations competing for attention ... and ultimately visitors.?

The dollar is at a 13-month low?versus the euro, said Neil S. Martin, editor of the Trans-Atlantic newsletter, which reports twice a month on the U.S. market for travel to Europe. ?But that doesn't seem to dissuade very many Americans? from traveling to Europe. U.S. visits to Europe were up 3.9 percent to 11.2 million last year,? ?according to the Commerce Department --?probably the best year since 2007, he said.

European countries going through tough economic?times?--?Greece, Spain, Portugal, Ireland?--?are all very pro-tourist and welcoming, he said. The best deals are likely in Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria, "where local currencies have probably dropped versus the dollar."?

But saving money may not be the only benefit of budget travel. ?Rick Steves is famous for saying that the more money you spend, the larger the barrier you create between you and the local people, and I totally agree with that,? said Wade. ?If you have lunch in a cafe on the main town square you'll probably be surrounded by business travelers and other tourists, but if you walk a few blocks in any direction you can probably find the same meal (or better) for half the price and you might be the only foreigner in the place.??

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/travel/itineraries/most-least-affordable-cities-europe-1B8168002

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New order found in quantum electronic material: May lead to new materials, magnets and superconductors

Jan. 30, 2013 ? Two Rutgers physics professors have proposed an explanation for a new type of order, or symmetry, in an exotic material made with uranium -- a theory that may one day lead to enhanced computer displays and data storage systems and more powerful superconducting magnets for medical imaging and levitating high-speed trains.

Their discovery, published in this week's issue of the journal Nature, has piqued the interest of scientists worldwide. It is one of the rare theory-only papers that this selective publication accepts.

Collaborating with the Rutgers professors was a postdoctoral researcher at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) who earned her doctorate at Rutgers.

"Scientists have seen this behavior for 25 years, but it has eluded explanation." said Piers Coleman, professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy in the School of Arts and Sciences. When cooled to 17.5 degrees above absolute zero or lower (a bone-chilling minus 428 degrees Fahrenheit), the flow of electricity through this material changes subtly.

The material essentially acts like an electronic version of polarized sunglasses, he explains. Electrons behave like tiny magnets, and normally these magnets can point in any direction. But when they flow through this cooled material, they come out with their magnetic fields aligned with the material's main crystal axis.

This effect, claims Coleman, comes from a new type of hidden order, or symmetry, in this material's magnetic and electronic properties. Changes in order are what make liquid crystals, magnetic materials and superconductors work and perform useful functions.

"Our quest to understand new types of order is a vital part of understanding how materials can be developed to benefit the world around us," he said.

Similar discoveries have led to technologies such as liquid crystal displays, which are now ubiquitous in flat-screen TVs, computers and smart phones, although the scientists are quick to acknowledge that their theoretical discovery won't transform high-tech products overnight.

Coleman, along with Rutgers colleague Premala Chandra and MIT collaborator Rebecca Flint, describe what they call a "hidden order" in this compound of uranium, ruthenium and silicon. Uranium is commonly known for being nuclear reactor fuel or weapons material, but in this case physicists value it as a heavy metal with electrons that behave differently than those in common metals.

Recent experiments on the material at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico provided the three physicists with data to refine their discovery.

"We've dubbed our fundamental new order 'hastatic' order, named after the Greek word for spear," said Chandra, also a professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy. The name reflects the highly ordered properties of the material and its effect on aligning electrons that flow through it.

"This new category of order may open the world to new kinds of materials, magnets, superconductors and states of matter with properties yet unknown," she said. The scientists have predicted other instances where hastatic order may show up, and physicists are beginning to test for it.

The scientists' work was funded by the National Science Foundation and the Simons Foundation. Flint is a Simons Postdoctoral Fellow in physics at MIT.

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

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Journal Reference:

  1. Premala Chandra, Piers Coleman, Rebecca Flint. Hastatic order in the heavy-fermion compound URu2Si2. Nature, 2013; 493 (7434): 621 DOI: 10.1038/nature11820

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Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/physics/~3/T3kcgVXVD2k/130130184410.htm

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