Sunday, March 17, 2013

Ronda Rousey and winner of Miesha Tate/Cat Zingano to coach coed version of ?The Ultimate Fighter?

During the broadcast of UFC 158, UFC president Dana White announced that women's bantamweight champ Ronda Rousey and the winner of an upcoming bout between Cat Zingano and Miesha Tate will coach on the next season of "The Ultimate Fighter." The new UFC division made its debut just weeks ago at UFC 157, and this will be the first time women act as coaches on the show that helped launch the UFC to the company it is today.

White said the show will feature both male and female bantamweights who are trying to win a UFC contract. They will train together and live together in a house in Las Vegas. Tryouts for bantamweight hopefuls will take place on April 15 in Las Vegas.

The longtime staple of the UFC had faltered in ratings in recent seasons. However, the season currently airing, coached by UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones and his upcoming opponent Chael Sonnen, has injected new life into the show.

Adding women to the mix for the first time should continue to boost ratings. If Tate wins her Apr. 13 bout against Zingano, it will add bad blood between the coaches. Tate and Rousey fought for the Strikeforce bantamweight belt last March, and had plenty of animosity with each other before the bout.

But Rousey will be a draw no matter who she coaches against. She is known for her outspoken personality, and drew a ton of interest for her UFC debut in late February.

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Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/ronda-rousey-winner-miesha-tate-cat-zingano-coach-022121554--mma.html

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Saturday, March 16, 2013

Tips about Employing The correct Home Remodeling Licensed ...

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Source: http://www.hellofour.com/blog/125884/tips-about-employing-the-correct-home-remodeling-licensed-contractor/

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Shuttering of Google Reader prompts petitions, outrage

Google has said it will?permanently close the Google Reader app as of July 1. And that has made a lot of users very unhappy indeed.?

By Matthew Shaer / March 15, 2013

Google is facing criticism over its decision to shutter the Google Reader app.

Reuters

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Earlier this week, Google announced it would do away with Google Reader, an RSS and news aggregation application launched way back in 2005.

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In a blog post,?Alan Green, a software engineer at Google, blamed the demise of Reader on declining usership numbers ? not particularly surprising in an age when a whole lot of folks get their news through social platforms such as Twitter and Facebook.?

"We know Reader has a devoted following who will be very sad to see it go. We?re sad too," Mr. Green wrote, adding that "as a company we?re pouring all of our energy into fewer products. We think that kind of focus will make for a better user experience."?

But Green may not have anticipated exactly how "sad" people would get.

"If Google won't keep Google Reader alive, then let's get them to open source the code and we will run it ourselves!" reads text?posted to KeepGoogleReader.com. "Who is with me?" More than 30,000 users have already registered their dissent.?

Meanwhile, a "keep Google Reader running" petition posted to Change.org garnered more than 100,000 signatures in two days.?

"Our confidence in Google's other products ? Gmail, YouTube, and yes, even Plus ? requires that we trust you in respecting how and why we use your other products," that petition reads. "This isn't just about our data in Reader. This is about us using your product because we love it, because it makes our lives better, and because we trust you not to nuke it."?

Perhaps the most scathing criticism of Google's decision to power down reader came from a freelance journalist named Rupert Goodwins, who penned an acerbic column for the Guardian. Google, Goodwins fears, is shifting its focus away from Reader in part because the platform isn't particularly profitable (as opposed to Google+, which he says can be more easily used to sell advertising).

Here's Goodwins:?

Google exists, it says, to encourage everyone to use the internet. It isn't in the business of supporting small groups of specialists, except through general purpose tools. But by angering and disenfranchising the very people who keep the internet fruitful and productive, it is poisoning its own fields ? and those of others. It betrays itself as not understanding that "social" isn't just about numbers, it's about?people?? people who might be hard to sell advertising to, but who create the conditions in which advertising can work.

The big question, of course, is whether Google is going to pay heed to all the criticism. The Next Web has called the petitions "pointless," and predicted that Google will stand by the cancellation of Reader. Google might have been able to avoid a mild racket, but the reaction to Reader's shuttering is more of an uproar.?

It's not an exact analogue, but it may be useful to look back at the firestorm faced in 2010 by Facebook. Users were upset about sweeping privacy changes; petitions were distributed and signed; Facebook was swamped with angry messages; and eventually, the social network "drastically simplified" its privacy settings. So there is power in the outrage of the crowds.?

For?more tech news, follow us on?Twitter @venturenaut.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/byChTaLqBQk/Shuttering-of-Google-Reader-prompts-petitions-outrage

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Friday, March 15, 2013

Fun Marketing Projects for Accounting Practices - CPA Site Solutions

The Internet has undoubtedly quickened the pace at which we communicate, and changed the volume of messages we get on any given day. But how can we cut through all the noise? At the end of the day, marketing still has the same foundation, even if the delivery methods have changed: human relationships.

The competition for clients in the accountant?s world can be cut-throat. This makes an effective marketing strategy all the more important. To reach potential clients, and to communicate the quality of services you?re able to provide, your business needs a comprehensive outreach strategy.

The following suggestions for marketing projects balance out creative (dare we say ?fun??) strategies that utilize online communication, yet still forge meaningful relationships with clients and potential clients.

Give free (or low-cost) workshops, podcasts, or webinars.
It?s tax season, which means clients are likely to reach out to you for advice before they file. Now is the time to flaunt your expertise and earn your client?s loyalty! You can give in-person workshops with frequently asked tax questions, or you can digitize your presentation to make it more accessible. A podcast is a downloadable file that can be voice-only (think of an NPR broadcast), or a full video. A webinar is a live, interactive online forum that usually involves a slideshow that the presenter narrates for an audience. Slideshare is one free resource you may use for this marketing project.

Whether you are sharing your skills and knowledge in-person or over the Internet, be sure to include an evaluation component. Really listen to your clients, and adjust your educational outreach services to best fit their needs.

Create a Digital Press Kit.
A generation ago, businesses created packets of documents, kept in brown envelopes, with letters of introduction to the community, or press releases announcing the launch of a new business venture. Today, you can upload all of these documents, and more, onto your web site, and have interested people from all over the world download them instantly.

Consider adding these links on your professional web site. You might create separate pages for different types of users?a page for potential clients, current clients, news media, and so on.

Take advantage of social media.
If you incorporate a social media component of your marketing plan, this will encourage anyone from the public to find and interact with your business online.

LinkedIn is a professional social network, and probably the best place for a CPA or small accountant firm to start. Upload your professional credentials to this page, and link to your LinkedIn profile from your company?s web site. This lets potential clients feel empowered, since they can easily review all of your professional experience before they decide to work with you.

Facebook, YouTube and Twitter are other popular social media sites which may or may not make sense for you to utilize in your accounting firm.

Here are some ways an accountant or CPA might use Facebook or Twitter in marketing:

  • Ask other users what their biggest financial questions are.
  • Post live updates from events, talks or other events
  • Gather customer service feedback
  • Post positive testimonials from clients
  • Offer helpful tax and financial advice

How can you tell if your new marketing methods are working? There are lots of fun, and measurable, ways to find out. For example, use them to promote an in-person event like an open house, pot luck, barbecue, or cocktail party. You can measure your results by your turnout.

Take this online marketing concept to heart. Ideally you want all your digital interactions to eventually translate to in-person relationships with clients.

by Kenny Marshall

Kenny is a marketing consultant and blogger who specializes in marketing for accountants. To learn more visit his website at www.marketing-for-accountants.com.

Related posts:

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  3. Creativity Can Buff Your CPA Firm?s Marketing Punch When you think of ?accounting websites? the word ?creativity? probably...
  4. Developing a Marketing Plan for Your CPA Practice by Brian O?Connell Every business must develop a marketing plan....
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Source: http://www.cpasitesolutions.com/cpa-websites/2013/03/fun-marketing-projects-accounting-practices/

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International gender difference in math and reading scores persists regardless of gender equality

Mar. 13, 2013 ? Malala Yousafzai, the teenaged advocate for Pakistani girls' education, was released from the hospital earlier this month. Most of the world's girls don't have to fight as hard as Yousafzai for their education.

However, even in countries with high gender equality, sex differences in math and reading scores persisted in the 75 nations examined by a University of Missouri and University of Leeds study. Girls consistently scored higher in reading, while boys got higher scores in math, but these gaps are linked and vary with overall social and economic conditions of the nation. A better understanding of these gaps and how they are related could help educators design curricula to help students of both genders apply their talents and deal with their weaknesses.

"Educational systems could be improved by acknowledging that, in general, boys and girls are different," said David Geary, MU professor of psychological science. "For example, in trying to close the sex gap in math scores, the reading gap was left behind. Now, our study has found that the difference between girls' and boys' reading scores was three times larger than the sex difference in math scores. Girls' higher scores in reading could lead to advantages in admissions to certain university programs, such as marketing, journalism or literature, and subsequently careers in those fields. Boys lower reading scores could correlate to problems in any career, since reading is essential in most jobs."

Generally, when conditions are good, the math gap increases and the reading gap decreases and when conditions are bad the math gap decreases and the reading gap increases. This pattern remained consistent within nations as well as among them, according to the study by Geary and Gijsbert Stoet of the University of Leeds that included testing performance data from 1.5 million 15-year-olds in 75 nations. The top five percent of scores within nations generally showed girls to be lower in math and boys to be lower in reading. That pattern continued in lower scoring groups until reaching the lowest scoring students, where the math achievement of boys and girls evened out but the reading gap increased, according to Geary.

"The consistent pattern within nations suggests the sex differences are not simply related to socio-economic factors," said Geary. Socio-economic and cultural factors are important in that they influence the performance of all students, but boys, as a group, respond more strongly than girls, perhaps due to a biological difference in sensitivity to wider conditions." For example, in nations with impoverished or violent conditions, boys' scores tended to fall faster and further than girls. On the other hand, in wealthier, socially stable nations boys' scores benefitted more than girls. This resulted in boys reducing the reading gap and widening the math gap.

"This finding has important implications for how we interpret the math gap of other countries," said co-author Gijsbert Stoet of the University of Leeds. "For example, policy makers often take Sweden as an example of being particularly good for reducing the gender gap in science, technology, engineering and math, but they do not realize that Swedish boys fall behind in reading more so than in most other highly developed nations. This is a good example of the inverse relation between the math and reading gaps. This phenomenon urgently needs more attention."

"In adult life, there are more male CEOs, but also more homeless men," said Geary. "Boys' prospects in life seem to react more intensely to positive and negative social conditions, hence we see more variation in boys' testing scores, especially when conditions are bad."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Missouri-Columbia.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Gijsbert Stoet, David C. Geary. Sex Differences in Mathematics and Reading Achievement Are Inversely Related: Within- and Across-Nation Assessment of 10 Years of PISA Data. PLoS ONE, 2013; 8 (3): e57988 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0057988

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/FLpqOfMJvis/130314111853.htm

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Samsung Galaxy S 4 wireless charging pad and S Health scale hands-on

Samsung Galaxy S 4 accessories

No phone launch is complete without a few accessories added to the mix. Samsung had a whole bunch to announce alongside its Galaxy S 4, but only a few were on hand to check out up close and personal. We did, however, find a nice surprise hiding under those glossy white table covers -- a wireless charging pad. Yes, it turns out the the GS 4 does in fact have Qi wireless charging capabilities. Provided its available in your region and your carrier chooses to support it. The charging pad itself has a glossy plastic base that matches the phone, but there's a nice rubbery gray top that keeps the handset from sliding around too much while it's juicing up.

We also got to check out the companion wireless scale that looks quite a bit like the Fitbit Aria. Though, with a square LCD and a healthy-sized Samsung logo on it. The scale is just one part of the larger S Health equation which also includes a Jawbone Up-like monitor (S Band), which was sadly nowhere to be found in the demo pit. The scale of course sync with the baked in S Health app over Bluetooth, which makes it quite a bit easier to track how that diet of yours is going. In addition to simply tracking your total poundage, there will be bands for tracking heart rate and the S 4's various sensor can help judge the comfort level of your environment. The requisite glut of photos can be found below in the gallery.

Edgar Alvarez contributed to this report.

Check out our event hub for all the action from Samsung's Galaxy S 4 event.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/14/Galaxy-S-4-accessories-hands-on/

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For When Motherhood Asks You to Be Brave ? We are THAT Family

My teenager stood at my bedroom door unsure if she should come into the war zone. She was the only child in the house who didn?t have a fever or her own puke bowl.

We were on day six of the Apocalypse, also known as the stomach bug from the pit of Hell. Believe me, you don?t want details. But if it can be washed, it has been. And I?ve cried twice.

We canceled Spring Break plans and I warned people at the door that we were quarantined to our home.

My bedroom was littered with pillows and pallets and pathetic little people.

And I was in the middle of it.

brave

?Mom, aren?t you afraid to catch it?? My teen asked from a safe distance. I had Lysol in one hand and an empty gatorade bottle in the other. I look down at my rumpled shirt and blew my unwashed hair out of my eyes, ?Honey, I?m the Mom.?

It was a simple answer that held volumes of truth. It said:

Mothers push past our own fear of sickness, intimidating laundry piles, smells that turn our stomach and we snuggle up to sick breaths and feverish brows because?that?s what we do.?

We run straight into danger?whether it?s sickness, hurting kids, temper tantrums or math homework? ?we fight the battles instead of turning away from them.?

Some days we long to hold up a white flag of surrender. But instead, we mother on.

Motherhood is about sacrifice. It?s about putting someone else?s needs in front of our own. It?s about risk. It?s about bravery.

It?s about facing our fears head on.

And sometimes it?s a very real danger-the kind that asks you to kneel beside the bed of a desperately ill child or on your knees for a desperately wayward one. The battle can be bloody and heart wrenching.

We don?t always feel strong or courageous. Some days we cry and rant, but we don?t quit. Most days, we feel outnumbered and out of ammo. But our inadequacies don?t make us any less a mother-soldier.

Motherhood is about reaching deep and when you find nothing left to give, you reach for God.

The battle of life is, in most cases, fought uphill; and to win it without a struggle were perhaps to win it without honor. If there were no difficulties there would be no success; if there were nothing to struggle for, there would be nothing to be achieved. -Samuel Smiles

I?m tired. I hurt for my kids. I?m disappointed sickness consumed our week.?(But I am rejoicing that my little sick platoon can aim their vomit in a container now-silver lining).

I?m learning: When God stops you in your tracks, it?s time to slow down and pull close.

Just not too close, ifyouknowwhatImean.

My daughter returned to the Sick Room, holding two bright balloons she?d decorated for her siblings. She crossed over and handed them the simple gift and it made us all smile. Then she said the words I dreaded, ?Mom, I don?t feel so well?? My husband came home a couple of hours later with the same confession.

And even though this battle is small and fleeting, I?ll conquer it. It will strengthen me for the unseen ones ahead.

Because it?s not if I?ll need to be brave again, it?s just a matter of when.

Source: http://wearethatfamily.com/2013/03/for-when-motherhood-asks-you-to-be-brave/

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PFT: Pats, Amendola agree to 5-year deal

Washington Redskins Lorenzo Alexander reacts after a big hit on Cleveland Browns Josh Cribbs during the second quarter of their NFL football game in ClevelandReuters

New Cardinals linebacker Lorenzo Alexander didn?t necessarily want to leave the Redskins, but said he felt he had no choice when his old team changed their offer at the last minute.

Alexander told David Elfin of 106.7 The Fan that the Redskins went from offering $2.6 million in guarantees on a three-year deal to $1.4 million Monday, which made him take another look at his loyalty.

?I was ready to sign back with the Redskins on Monday night, but it wound up not being close at all,? Alexander said. ?They were offering $2.6 [million guaranteed] with an overall contract of $7.5 million over three years. The next day, they called back and said they would only guarantee $1.4 [million] of that. Dropping more than a million dollars overnight without any reason, I couldn?t take that money out of my kids? mouths. Based on everything I?ve done [for] this organization, doing everything the right way, it was just a bad way to treat me.

?I understand the business, but, . . . it didn?t sit right at all with me.?

A Redskins spokesman denied that, saying Alexander?s ?statement is not true.?

But the cow?s out of the barn now, as Alexander signed a three-year deal with the Cardinals worth $9.5 million, with $3 million in guarantees.

?They were there from the beginning,? Alexander said of the Cardinals. ?They really wanted me. They were head and shoulders above most teams financially other than San Francisco where I would have played mostly on special teams.

?The Cardinals have already kind of pegged me in a starting role which is very exciting for me. I?ll be a linebacker that helps out on special teams instead of special teams being my bread and butter. It?s going to allow me to grow as a player. I won?t be tired when I?m on defense.?

And even if he is, he?ll be able to rest easier knowing he?s working for someone who values him more highly.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/03/13/patriots-danny-amendola-agree-to-five-year-31-million-deal/related/

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Thursday, March 14, 2013

Bat disease: More accurate, sensitive DNA test allows early identification of fungus causing white nose syndrome

Mar. 13, 2013 ? Even after researchers studying White Nose Syndrome (WNS) established that a fungus called Geomyces destructans is at the heart of the devastating disease, detecting it depended largely on finding dead or dying bats.

This month, the journal Mycologia will publish research by a team of U.S. Forest Service scientists and partners identifying additional species of Geomyces and describing development of a highly sensitive DNA-based technique for early identification of Geomyces destructans on bats as well as in soils and on cave walls.

"The significance of the Forest Service's recent research will have an immediate and direct benefit to WNS response at a national scale," according to Katie Gillies, imperiled species coordinator at Bat Conservation International. "This will allow managers to sample soil and substrates to test for the presence of Geomyces destructans, freeing up limited surveillance funds and time. Additionally, this opens the door to examine the use of gene silencing as a control mechanism for this devastating fungus. Research like this, that directly benefits resource managers and guides us to controlling this fungus, is critically needed."

Daniel Lindner, a research plant pathologist with the Forest Service's Northern Research Station, led research that identified 35 species of Geomyces, more than doubling the number of known species. Lindner and partners used that research to develop a DNA-based detection test for Geomyces destructans that is much more sensitive and accurate than previous tests. Forest Service scientists collaborated with the U.S. Geological Survey and the University of Wisconsin for both studies.

"At best, only 5 to10 percent of fungal species on earth have been named and scientifically described," Lindner said. "Developing a specific test for this fungus was difficult because we found that every sample from bats and caves contained a huge diversity of unidentified, unnamed fungi, and these were interfering with detection."

White Nose Syndrome was first identified in Upstate New York in 2006. Since then it has spread to caves throughout the East Coast and killed millions of bats, and it continues to spread.

"White Nose Syndrome is arguably the most devastating wildlife disease we've faced," said Michael T. Rains, Director of the Forest Service's Northern Research Station. "Forest Service scientists are conducting research to halt this disease and save bats, which are so important to agriculture and forest ecosystems."

Scientists identified Geomyces destructans as the cause of WNS in 2012. Conclusively identifying the fungus either on a bat or in soil has been difficult and time consuming because a variety of closely related Geomyces species found where bats hibernate have the potential to cause false positives using previous DNA testing. Previous tests also lacked sensitivity, making it possible to miss the fungus in some samples. The new test is 100-times more sensitive than previous tests and can detect a single spore of the fungus.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by USDA Forest Service - Northern Research Station.

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


Journal References:

  1. Muller, Laura K; Lorch, Jeffrey M.; Lindner, Daniel L.; O'Connor, Michael; Gargas, Andrea; Blehert, David S. Bat white-nose syndrome: A real-time TaqMan polymerase chain reaction test targeting the intergenic spacer region of Geomyces destructans. Mycologia, 2013 [link]
  2. Lorch, Jeffrey M.; Lindner, Daniel L.; Gargas, Andrea; Muller, Laura K; Minnis, Andrew M.; Blehert, David S. A culture-based survey of fungi in soil from bat hibernacula in the eastern United States and its implications for detection of Geomyces destructans, the causal agent of bat white-nose syndrome. Mycologia, 2013 (in press) [link]

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/ExH05uZ2m1w/130313160910.htm

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Wednesday, March 13, 2013

The Highest Quality Limousine Services in Palm Coast | Article Talks

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US-based 'Pope TV' to zero in on papal selection

Members of a German broadcast team for the Alabama-based Eternal Word Television Network, Martin Rothweiler and Christina Blumrath, hold a discussion outside the Vatican on Friday, March 3, 2013, in preparation for the papal election. Eternal Word Television Network isn't just talking about Vatican politics or the church sex scandal in its run-up to the papal vote. Rather, "Pope TV" is airing shows about how the new man may affect church liturgy, teachings and Vatican diplomacy. The network, with 336 total employees, has about 50 staffers in Rome working on conclave coverage being aired in English, Spanish and German, said chief executive Michael Warsaw. (Jeffery Bruno/EWTN)

Members of a German broadcast team for the Alabama-based Eternal Word Television Network, Martin Rothweiler and Christina Blumrath, hold a discussion outside the Vatican on Friday, March 3, 2013, in preparation for the papal election. Eternal Word Television Network isn't just talking about Vatican politics or the church sex scandal in its run-up to the papal vote. Rather, "Pope TV" is airing shows about how the new man may affect church liturgy, teachings and Vatican diplomacy. The network, with 336 total employees, has about 50 staffers in Rome working on conclave coverage being aired in English, Spanish and German, said chief executive Michael Warsaw. (Jeffery Bruno/EWTN)

Stephen Beaumont, production manager at Eternal World Television Network in Irondale, Ala., prepares to air video of the papal conclave from the Vatican on Monday, March 11, 2013. The network, with 336 total employees, has about 50 staffers in Rome working on conclave coverage being aired in English, Spanish and German, said chief executive Michael Warsaw. Eternal Word Television Network isn't just talking about Vatican politics or the church sex scandal in its run-up to the papal vote. Rather, "Pope TV" is airing shows about how the new man may affect church liturgy, teachings and Vatican diplomacy. (AP Photo/Jay Reeves)

IRONDALE, Ala. (AP) ? A global broadcasting operation based in Alabama is offering a different kind of news coverage of the election of a new pope.

Nestled among the Protestants and pine trees of suburban Birmingham, Eternal Word Television Network isn't just talking about Vatican politics or the church sex scandal in its run-up to the papal vote. Rather, "Pope TV" is airing shows about how the new man may affect church liturgy, teachings and Vatican diplomacy.

While other media explained the basics of the smoke signals used at the Vatican to signal the vote outcome ? white puffs mean there's a new pope, dark smoke means there isn't yet ? EWTN analysts discussed the pontiff's influence on the use of candles and crucifixes during worship. In a live Mass aired Tuesday, a priest asked viewers to pray for the conclave in Rome.

Faith and religious practices are a constant theme on the non-profit EWTN, which doesn't air commercials but does broadcast papal appearances and pronouncements the way ordinary U.S. cable news channels cover an American president.

Started by a nun in a cramped garage more than three decades ago, EWTN now produces television broadcasts available in 225 million households in more than 140 counties and territories. The network, with 336 total employees, has about 50 staffers in Rome working on conclave coverage being aired in English, Spanish and German, said chief executive Michael Warsaw.

Aside from its television side, EWTN also operates two radio networks and a shortwave broadcasting operation; web-based programs; and a U.S.-based newspaper, the National Catholic Register.

Warsaw said EWTN's coverage of the conclave is purposely different from that in the secular media, focusing more on how a new pope might affect faith practices and how that translates into the lives of believers.

"It's a spiritual moment in the life of the church. It's, we believe, the Holy Spirit guiding the cardinal electors to choose the right man," he said.

EWTN is sometimes on the upper reaches of the cable dial and isn't available in many homes, but many Catholics pay attention nonetheless.

Surveys show about 9 percent of adult U.S. Catholics, or about 5 million people, watch EWTN at least once every six months, and EWTN.com is one of the most-visited Catholic websites in the United States, according to Mark Gray, a senior researcher at the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate at Georgetown University.

"As Catholic media go, they draw a huge audience," said Gray. Audience numbers will likely go up because of all the news from the Vatican, he said.

Critics fault the network for focusing too much on what's happening in America and at the Vatican while essentially ignoring the rest of the world's Catholics.

Faithful viewer Louis Sanchez, however, keeps coming back. Sanchez said he likes EWTN because it focuses not just on the politics and controversy within the church but also on faith, the church's very reason for being.

"The regular media is managed so they can show only one side of the story," said Sanchez, of Memphis, Tenn., who visited the EWTN studios with his wife and two children Monday. "They don't show you the religious side, and EWTN does."

Plus, Sanchez said, he's a big fan of the "Vatican Insider" of EWTN, Rome bureau chief Joan Lewis.

"It's like she has access to everything," he said.

Founded by Mother Angelica in 1981, EWTN is located in conservative, Deep South state. Though Hispanic immigrants have helped expand parishes statewide in recent years, Alabama's coast was the center of the state's Catholic population for generations.

EWTN looks much like any other TV operation: There's a control room with TV screens in front of big desks filled with brightly lit buttons; a studio with stage lights hanging overheard; a forest of satellite dishes in the back of the 10-acre complex.

But it has other things you don't see at secular operations, like white statues of angels and saints scattered around the exterior. There are indoor and outdoor chapels for Mass; crucifixes hanging in hallways; and photos of Mother Angelica, who is retired from the media and lives in a convent in north Alabama.

The network operates on a nonprofit basis and neither sells ads nor accepts money for its programming, yet it brings in millions annually. Federal tax forms filed by nonprofit groups show EWTN took in $36.3 million in 2011, nearly all of it in donations, and ended the year with more than $40 million in assets.

Warsaw said the network's 24/7 focus on Roman Catholicism gives it an advantage when big events happen, such as the retirement of Pope Benedict XVI and the selection of a successor. But while the network is tweeting and offering live updates about the selection process, just like other media outlets, it won't necessarily worry about being the first to break all the big news leading up to the announcement of a new pontiff.

"Our mission is not to be first, our mission is to be right and to provide the right perspective and context," said Warsaw, who will be in Rome for the conclave.

Massimo Faggioli, an Italian who teaches theology at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minn., said EWTN is unique in its size and reach, but he faults the operation for being too hesitant to air opinions outside Vatican orthodoxy.

"I can't even watch it. It gives always an official version of how thing should be: The Vatican version and the American Catholic version," said Faggioli.

EWTN's stated goal on federal tax forms is to "communicate the teachings and the beauty of the Catholic church and to help people grow in their love and understanding of God and his infinite mercy," and Warsaw doesn't make any apology for communicating Vatican beliefs to viewers.

The papal election gives the network another chance to put church business into spiritual terms for a wide audience, he said.

"While you certainly can't deny that there is an aspect of the election of the pope that is political, it's not entirely political," said Warsaw.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-03-12-Pope%20TV/id-5520f2b807f746a7999d4235e7a8b938

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Kim Dotcom is anti-Zuckerberg: Share nothing, encrypt all

Appearing like a retro-futuristic apparition, digitally transmitted through pneumatic tubes from a future that was but will never be, the disembodied head of Kim Dotcom, the Osama bin Laden of file sharing, bobbed and hovered amiably from his lair in the Antipodes.

Given his, er, legal troubles, Dotcom's public appearances are rare, and always virtual. If his name rings a bell, you may recall an incident that occurred in New Zealand in January 2012: Two helicopters, attack dogs and 76 New Zealand SWAT police descended on Dotcom's home.

Dispatched by the New Zealand Security Intelligence, acting on a request for extradition by the American FBI, the team was to shut down Dotcom's Web operation, Megaupload, and seize its assets. The charges, which span 72 pages of a federal indictment personally signed by then-Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, boil down to this: Dotcom created the Napster of video.

He's now under house arrest, awaiting a prolonged extradition process, but his mind is as always on the future. Will the Internet be transparent, like Facebook, where data is freely available to everyone who wants to see it, and then some? Or will it be encrypted and protected ? safe from the prying eyes of government spooks and other spies?

"The problem that we are facing today is that more and more of your data is being unsafely stored," the Megaupload founder said Monday via Skype, hovering above a South by Southwest panel in Austin.

"Part of it is kept by commercial companies like Google and Facebook that slice and sell your data. And the government has access to all your data as well. That's part of what Megaupload was trying to change. We want to give you access to your data in real time, on the fly. The government doesn't want you to have that. They want to have that. They want to collect everything, control everything you know and produce."

The legally beleaguered German-Finn is defensive about the now-shuttered Megaupload, once valued at around $2.6 billion.

"All I sold was storage space and bandwidth," he told the audience at SXSW, and partly blames the fact that he's "a flamboyant character" for his predicament. "I had cars with 'Mafia' and 'Guilty' [vanity] license plates," he ruefully recalled. "Maybe they took that stuff a little too seriously." (When Dotcom and four associates were arrested, $17 million in assets, including 18 cars, were seized at his home. The government also froze $175 million in 64 bank accounts.)

Dotcom faces up to 55 years in an American federal prison because of it, accused of online piracy, racketeering and two acts of conspiracy: to commit copyright infringement and launder money. He called this a "political case," and vowed to look forward to his upcoming extradition hearing, where he promised startling new revelations about sleazy dealings between the American movie industry and the highest levels of the American and New Zealand governments.

The feds say Dotcom purposefully built a platform that he knew would be used for pirating movies and other intellectual property on an epic scale so that he could profit lavishly from the labors of others ? mainly in Hollywood. At one point Megaupload was estimated to carry four percent of all traffic on the Internet.

"The Internet is about now," Dotcom said in Austin, blaming Hollywood for encouraging piracy by, for example, not releasing U.S. movies overseas for months after their stateside openings. Whether Dotcom will remain free and part of that "now" remains to be seen.

Certainly, piracy and illegal file trading were part of Megaupload's culture, but when it was shut down, many legitimate users, including 15,000 U.S. soldiers who used it to send personal video to their families, lost access to their files. Dotcom also said that thousands of government agencies around the world that used the service to store documents. Pointing to the fact that 50 percent of all files on Megaupload were never downloaded even once, he says the service had a lot of customers who used it legally, the way most people use Dropbox and Google Drive today.

However history labels Megaupload and its possibly piratical activities, Dotcom is working on tools that can be put to good as well as no-good. Encryption is the name of the game: Keeping private data private, and away from prying eyes of governments, marketers, hackers and exes.

Dotcom is busy working on Mega, his recently launched encrypted file storage site. He also hopes to roll out MegaBox, an iTunes-like music service on which musicians would receive 90 percent of revenues and could sell their songs directly to fans, within six months.

Andthough he didn't mention at the conference, he's also working on an email service that ? he's quoted by The Guardian UK as saying? is"fully encrypted so that you won't have to worry that a government or Internet service provider will be looking at your email."

Helen A.S. Popkin goes blah blah blah about the Internet. Tell her to get a real job on Twitter and/or Facebook.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/kim-dotcom-anti-zuckerberg-share-nothing-encrypt-everything-be-happy-1C8814434

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Tuesday, March 12, 2013

PFT: Kruger to join Browns for $8-9M per season

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The Ryan Fitzpatrick era is over, and Buffalo needs a new quarterback.

The Bills have announced that they cut Ryan Fitzpatrick today, on the first day of the new league year.

Cutting Fitzpatrick isn?t a big surprise, considering that the Bills owed him a $3 million roster bonus if he was still on the team tomorrow, and that Bills G.M. Buddy Nix was surreptitiously taped talking about, among other things, his frustration that the quarterback was holding the team back.

The six-year, $59 million contract extension Fitzpatrick signed in October of 2011 turned out to be an expensive mistake ? and a reminder that sometimes in the NFL, ?six-year contracts? last less than a year and a half. If the Bills give this move a post-June 1 designation, Fitpatrick?s cap hit would be $3 million this year and $7 million in 2014.

Now the question is where the Bills will look for their next starting quarterback. This isn?t viewed as a great year to draft one, but the Bills may decide to spend their first-round draft pick on a passer they hope will be their franchise quarterback.

And the question for Fitzpatrick is whether any team wants him. If any team does, it will likely be as a backup ? and will definitely be for a lot less money than the Bills paid him.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/03/12/kruger-will-strike-it-richf-in-cleveland/related/

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